I could write a book about the encounters I've had in the eighteen years I've been doing this ministry, but I won't. Just one example, though.
Yesterday I helped a woman who wanted a copy of a prayer that was printed inside the back cover of our service book, "O God, who accepted the gifts of Abel, the sacrifice of Noah and of Abram, the incense of Aaron and of Zachariah, accept also from the hand of us sinners these gifts…" (a prayer based on one in the Liturgy of James, the brother of Jesus). She asked if the prayer was printed anywhere, in a pamphlet or tract, that she could have a copy of. I didn't think so, but I told her I'd copy it out longhand on the back of a tract and give it to her. While I was doing this she told me about herself.
Thelma is sixty-five years old. Her husband is deceased. She does street ministry, on her own, without church endorsement, but also works with churches in various ministries, as the Lord directs. Since her husband died, she has been a missionary, having gone to China twelve times, and many other countries. She was with another elderly lady. She had just made a decision to accept an invitation to join some missionaries going to Mozambique, and will be leaving soon. Besides telling me about herself, she also told me about many things she had encountered in her ministry. It was hard for me to stay concentrated copying this long prayer while listening to her, and my back was starting to ache because I was bent over a low table.
She startled me when she asked, "Have you ever been to the Throne Room?"
I responded, "No, how do you get there?" and she told me, "When you go to your private room to speak to the Father, become as a little child, and ask Him!"
At another point she asked me if I knew that Paradise (the Garden of Eden) was still in existence? I said, the Bible doesn't say it is not, and the Orthodox Church says it is, so "Yes," I told her, "I know it still exists." She asked if I'd ever been there, and I said, "No," but I told her I'd read of someone who had, the monk Euphrósynos, and asked her if she'd ever heard of him. Her eyes just lit up, she smiled and nodded, "Yes!" That really startled me. A non-Orthodox Christian elderly woman missionary knows about an obscure ancient father who was allowed to enter Paradise while still alive! And she also claims that if one becomes as a little child and asks the heavenly Father, He would do even that, and He has done that for her! This may all sound like hysteria, but I was with the woman, and it really wasn't. I don't know what it was, but the Lord wanted me to meet this woman to know that she exists, and I've just shared the story with you.
So, I'm going back to the festival in about forty-five minutes, and what I wanted to write in this post still hasn't been written yet. Here it is.
The Greek Festival is successful for many reasons and in many ways. To some, it's the money that matters. For others, it's the whole community pulling together, each according to his or her ability, to roll out a huge welcome mat for others to see what the Greek culture is about, to practice "philoxenía" (hospitality, literally "love of strangers"), the most highly valued of virtues to the Greek mind. These people really do live up to this ideal, they are willing to help and to accept others, even incorporating them into the Greek kinonía if they want to be. But sometimes I wonder if they are too welcoming, too accepting.
I wonder if they are susceptible to a kind of Trojan Horse in reverse. They know that the world is patronizing them as a cultural and religious relic, a beautiful anomaly in today's world, a kind of harmless entertainment. It doesn't seem to bother them.
The sanctuary being open to the public has been a part of the Festival as long as I've been in this community. It symbolizes what is at the heart of any of the goodness we are perceived by others to have. The church tours we have are informative, and delivered in a spirit of modesty, tailored to the audience's background whenever possible. But to witness to our guests about Jesus Christ is left to the laypeople who man the sanctuary. The clergy will tell you everything about the church, its history, its culture, its tradition, even its understanding of scripture and theology, but that's the extent of it. People can listen and even ask questions and carry away just a little bit more knowledge about something beautiful and arcane, but what of Jesus Christ? Did anything they heard produce faith in them? Was the seed of the Word planted in them? Let's hope that it was and is, and may God give the increase.
But are we just playing into the world's matrix, letting it turn our faith into a commodity, Christianity as religious artifact?
Take Jesus out of the equation, and that's what you have, whether we're talking about Orthodox Christianity, or any other. Our form of church just has more tools than some of the others, but without Christ, those tools become mere toys, something for the world, or for us, to play with.
May it shock my readers to view the image below, from Phoenix Home & Garden magazine (July 2001 issue).
Here is a room decorated with a collection of authentic icons, on the wall arranged in a cross-like pattern.
Notice the icon of the Resurrection is at the very bottom, near the floor. On the coffee table lie five icons just as artifacts to be handled (one of them in a glass frame). Let's hope they're not being used as coasters! (Of course not, that'd ruin the finish!)
To the right of the arranged wall icons is an art piece of what looks like a male nude, and there are other objets d'art all over the room.
Brothers, this is where we are headed, if we don't reveal to the world the One in whom we live and move and have our being (cf. Acts 17:28), not just at the festival, but every day, wherever we are sent. The world will love us if we make it feel better, on its terms, but like the icons in an Arizona businessman's great room we may find ourselves hung, arranged in a cross, and ignored.
Without Jesus, welcome to the world "as it is."
4 comments:
So good finally meeting you in person at the Greek Festival, Romanós!
Yeah, it's hard to worship in a sanctuary where many folks are there to see a museum artifact. But there's blessing at the core anyway.
It's satisfying to have heard your telling yesterday about the old woman missionary before reading it now in your blog. This statement just popped into my mind Right Now:
"Today you will be with me in Paradise." Not a day later, not a day earlier, ever, forever. But we only realize this on the Cross.
Suelo, thanks for your comments. Yes, it was very good to finally meet you in person. Thanks also for setting me straight on the spelling of "artifact". I had a suspicion that "artefact" just didn't look right somehow. After reading your comment, I went and corrected my post. See you again soon.
What a treat...(and delight in the providence of God) to know that you two have met in the flesh. I pray for you two to know our Lord as one. What a glory that would be!
Randy
Yes, Randy, it was good for Daniel and I to meet "in the flesh", that is, in person.
There I was at my station inside the inner porch of the temple wearing my silly smile and trying to look folks in the eyes as they passed by on their way in or out, and there he was, with a hesitant (at first) smile and then a broader grin, Daniel aka Suelo coming towards me out of the temple. The only thing unexpected was the glasses. After a few strong man-hugs and hand-shakes, I took a break and we walked down to a nearby park to visit for the first time, sorting out in person what was sometimes a muddled mess in cyberspace. It was a delight to see him in person. That was Saturday evening.
Daniel was thinking he would come to the Sunday liturgy with his friend Satya (who is interested in Greek Orthodoxy), but he went to a Quaker meeting instead. Nonetheless we got together on Monday afternoon at my home near the summit of Mount Tabor, an extinct volcano in the center of Portland. I was sitting out on the front porch reading the Greek New Testament out loud when a bicycle pulled up. "I heard someone speaking Greek, so I knew this must be the place!" After visiting over a cup of tea, Daniel and I took a hike over the top of Mount Tabor (puff, puff… that was me), and then stopped at the summit for another long, leisurely conversation. After that we walked down the eastward slope of the mountain and back into town, to share a late afternoon lunch of lamb souvlákia (kabobs), rice, taboúli (salad), dolmádhes (stuffed grape leaves), and Turkish coffee at a little Lebanese restaurant, Ya Hala, where Brock and I and our friends and family often dine together. We walked all the food off during our return to my house on the westward slope, bypassing the summit and skirting the mountain on its northern face, all the while getting to know each other.
Back at my house, I showed Daniel a few things… my office (the cave) with its "treasures", and where I sleep nearby in the basement, living as a part-time ascetic. Before leaving, we looked thru a large photographic volume from Agion Oros, the Holy Mountain of Athos, in Macedonia, a Christian republic of male-only monastics, an autonomous region under the protection of Greece, and the last surviving remnant of Byzantium. I wanted Daniel to see this and start thinking about the possibility of visiting it sometime. Who knows, since they are moneyless as he is, he might like to stay.
Anyway, this comment really deserves its own post, I suppose, but I'm too lazy to put it up. Thanks, Randy, for visiting my blog, and for your encouragement and prayers.
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