Well, if you think last week's readings were rapturous, what shall we call this week's?
Chapter 14 is titled Words of Living W-a-t-e-r, The Liturgy as Poetic Reality that Transforms. As I told the group that morning, when I find something in a book I'm marking that is really good I write Yes. If it's even better I write Yes! And sometimes I'll even write Yes, yes, yes!. This chapter had a bunch of them. Although I must say that already in the previous chapter they did start popping up with some regularity, and really to one degree or another throughout the book.
Remembering: On page 112 Galli recalls the story of Helen Keller when she made the connection between the word and what the word describes. "Suddenly I felt a misty consciousness as of something forgotten, a thrill of returning thought, and somehow the mystery of language was revealed to me...I knew then that 'w-a-t-e-r' meant the wonderful cool something that was flowing over my hand...That living word awakened my soul, gave it light, hope, joy, set it free!" p. 112
The thrill of returning thought, the mystery of language, that living word, revealed, awakened, these are words of life that reach back and connect us to the rootstock: "In the beginning was the Word." And reminded me of some words found in Psalm 22: "All the ends of the earth shall remember and turn unto the Lord: and all the kindreds of the nations shall worship before thee." v. 27 Shall remember...
What a promise and what a delight to experience such revelation and such remembering. And to think how in the liturgy week in week out we rehearse this unfolding drama of redemption and do it in remembrance of Him.
"The liturgy can call up those thoughts and feelings 'far beyond us' because it traffics in biblical language...But even when the words of liturgy are not literally biblical, the words, like all truthful words, work on us over time, like a steady, unrelenting stream slowly reshapes the banks of a river. The words do something to us even when we're not paying attention." p. 114
The power of words, the wonder of language: "We human beings are, as the late Abraham Heschel insisted, the cantors of the universe," writes Richard John Neuhouse. "And language is our instrument." quoted on p. 117
And finally: "The words of the liturgy, of course, are more than a beautiful tablecloth and flowers. They constitute even the meal itself. This is the feast to which we are invited in the Gathering, at which the host speaks to us in his Word, during which we are sustained by the Eucharist, from which we are sent forth in the Dismissal to gather others into the community of the Trinity and the Church, who now together anticipate the great forever feast in the kingdom that comes." p. 118
We wrapped things up by praying together the General Thanksgiving from the Book of Common Prayer. Everything we had been talking about seemed to be captured, and released, in that great prayer.
As we were breaking up we noted how helpful even the Appendices of this book were, one a Liturgy Primer with definitions and explanations and another on the Christian Year.
We all agreed this had been a very profitable time together with a very helpful book. Methinks we may be revisitng it again sometime and inviting others to discover more fully and enjoy more thoroughly the wonder and power of Christian Liturgy.
Sunday, March 29
17 years ago
