Theological Journal – May 30 Pentecost Once More – A Reflection by Brian Walsh
The
question got my back up.
It
set off a passionate response
disproportionate to the question itself.
disproportionate to the question itself.
There
was nothing aggressive
about the question, nor the questioner.
Indeed, the questioner
was a former student of mine,
for whom I have very high regard.
about the question, nor the questioner.
Indeed, the questioner
was a former student of mine,
for whom I have very high regard.
Dave
Krause, Amanda Jagt and I were leading a workshop on liturgy
for the Christian Reformed community.
We were sharing some of the resources that had emerged out of our worship life at Wine Before Breakfast.
for the Christian Reformed community.
We were sharing some of the resources that had emerged out of our worship life at Wine Before Breakfast.
Dave
played some music, Amanda led a prayer litany and we talked about how we
shape words in our liturgies.
The
question came early in the discussion:
“Is
there room for spontaneity in this kind of worship? Is there room for the
Spirit when the liturgy is written out like this?”
I
could feel my blood pressure rise.
There was something about this question that bothered me deeply.
There was something about this question that bothered me deeply.
Was
it a sense of defensiveness for the WBB community?
Did
I have a notion of liturgical ‘correctness’ that was threatened by this
question?
I
don’t think so.
I
responded by saying that I thought that the question was itself rooted in a
particularly prevalent heresy in the church that identified the Holy Spirit
with spontaneity.
And
not only does this view of the Spirit’s ‘spontaneous’ freedom in fact constrict
the work and ministry of the Spirit, but also, so many of these ‘spontaneous’
experiences of the Spirit in worship seem to me to be carefully manufactured
and manipulated by a certain style of worship leading.
As
I said this, I commented on the fact that my emotions were rather intense in my
response.
Don’t
get me wrong, I’m not against spontaneity.
I
just don’t think that the identification of the Spirit and spontaneity in
worship is right.
Forgive me, but in my experience (for what its worth) I find much of this kind of worship to be neither spontaneous nor very much of the Spirit.
Forgive me, but in my experience (for what its worth) I find much of this kind of worship to be neither spontaneous nor very much of the Spirit.
Alright,
alright, that is a terrible overstatement,
and I’m even feeling grouchy as I write it.
and I’m even feeling grouchy as I write it.
But
here’s the problem.
When
we make the Spirit into our own personal pipeline to God,
providing us access to daily, moment by moment divine guidance,
then the Spirit becomes party to our own spiritual narcissism.
providing us access to daily, moment by moment divine guidance,
then the Spirit becomes party to our own spiritual narcissism.
Or
when the Spirit is identified as the source of spontaneous ecstasy,
the holy provider of psycho-spiritual highs,
then the Spirit becomes something of a divine drug dealer.
the holy provider of psycho-spiritual highs,
then the Spirit becomes something of a divine drug dealer.
I
don’t know, it just seems to me that all of this ends up domesticating the
Holy Spirit, not setting the Spirit free.
It
is all so tame.
It is all so safe.
It is all so contrived.
It is all so safe.
It is all so contrived.
And
… for all of its sense of spiritual immediacy,
its sense of a deeply personal
intimacy with the Spirit,
much of this kind of spirituality strikes me as abstract, disconnected, ethereal.
its sense of a deeply personal
intimacy with the Spirit,
much of this kind of spirituality strikes me as abstract, disconnected, ethereal.
Am
I alone in this?
Do you know what I mean?
Do you know what I mean?
If
the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters at the dawn of creation;
if the Spirit of God was leading the Israelites out of Egyptian bondage;
if the Spirit of God inspired Jesus to preach good news to the poor and liberty to captives;
then shouldn’t our experience of this Spirit have something to do with
creational flourishing in the midst of ecological despoliation,
liberation in the face of geo-political violence,
and justice in contrast to oppression?
if the Spirit of God was leading the Israelites out of Egyptian bondage;
if the Spirit of God inspired Jesus to preach good news to the poor and liberty to captives;
then shouldn’t our experience of this Spirit have something to do with
creational flourishing in the midst of ecological despoliation,
liberation in the face of geo-political violence,
and justice in contrast to oppression?
Don’t
get me wrong.
I’m not trying to set up a personal/political dichotomy here.
If there is a division it is between abstract and concrete,
between an ethereal spirituality and an earthly one.
I’m not trying to set up a personal/political dichotomy here.
If there is a division it is between abstract and concrete,
between an ethereal spirituality and an earthly one.
And
it is all deeply, deeply personal.
I mean, don’t you find it hard to believe in a Creator God
when you live in a world facing ecological collapse on so many levels?
I mean, don’t you find it hard to believe in a Creator God
when you live in a world facing ecological collapse on so many levels?
Don’t
you find it hard to believe in a God of love in a world of such insidious and
pervasive violence?
Doesn’t
injustice on our streets and in the very systems of our world make you
doubt all this talk about the Kingdom of God?
This
is why we need the Spirit of God.
We
need a power that comes from beyond our powerlessness.
We need a vision that we are unable to produce for ourselves.
We need a confirmation of the truth, against the evidence.
We need a vision that we are unable to produce for ourselves.
We need a confirmation of the truth, against the evidence.
This
is why we need Pentecost.
Brian
Walsh (http://empireremixed.com/2020/05/30/the-spirit-spontaneity-and-justice-2/?fbclid=IwAR3lThD9Yt0Hf8yvbRTtBeGeo7unO5L6PC8VjAbvfvTyb95rJmlZEKrHD4Y
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