Religion and Unity, or A Brief Apology for Open Communion
A thought from the day - not a new one:
Religion, of course, functions as an instrument of both unity and division - it unifies the folks inside and divides them off from the folks outside. The goal for good religion these days, along w/professing things that are true (cough), is throwing the doors open more widely on the unity side - bringing more people together.
In the Christian tradition - and particularly the Anglican/Catholic traditions - the key symbol of unity is the Eucharist - the physical act of 'communion' with bread and wine. Historically our communion has been 'closed', meaning only 'members' (or sometimes professing Christians) can have it. This, of course, is scandalous and crazy. The Eucharist, shared w/all who would take it, is a way that Christianity can present a universal God to the world - open to all and present in all, regardless of their confession. Members only crap is wrong - unchristian, I think.
Religion, of course, functions as an instrument of both unity and division - it unifies the folks inside and divides them off from the folks outside. The goal for good religion these days, along w/professing things that are true (cough), is throwing the doors open more widely on the unity side - bringing more people together.
In the Christian tradition - and particularly the Anglican/Catholic traditions - the key symbol of unity is the Eucharist - the physical act of 'communion' with bread and wine. Historically our communion has been 'closed', meaning only 'members' (or sometimes professing Christians) can have it. This, of course, is scandalous and crazy. The Eucharist, shared w/all who would take it, is a way that Christianity can present a universal God to the world - open to all and present in all, regardless of their confession. Members only crap is wrong - unchristian, I think.
Comments
Open Table Anglicans are the catholic-est!
Catholics and Orthodox also believe the Creed unequivocally. Episcopalians don't and it's not infrequent to see the drop it altogether (very honest of them, actually). If you can't say all the things that lead up to receiving communion, why bother. It's very clear in the liturgy of Catholics and Orthodox, the common faith is first proclaimed, then communion is received, not before. If one doesn't think marriage is real (Episcopalians think any two of anything can be married) then the marriage imagery means nothing. So it will continue to be confusing to Episcopalians as to why they should receive communion only with those who believe (or don't) as they do. You notice few if any Catholics or Orthodox feel the same need, to commune with Anglicans? Open communion is just as sensible as open marriage. And Episcopalians do both. Catholics and Orthodox don't. It's a religious thing.
I am confused. What does taking communion have to do with kissing? And why does sharing communion with all who want it mean that you're not taking it seriously? Putting thought into whom we include and why is taking it seriously. It brings forth awareness and discernment of what could otherwise become a rote act, performed on autopilot.
I believe in a theology of the real presence, which is one of the motivators behind an 'open table'.
Who'd of thunk this would be one of my most controversial posts ever?