Monday, September 8, 2014

#1: Why Gather in 2 or 3?

Why does Jesus say he will be with us when “2 or 3 of us gather” – isn’t God present when I pray alone too? 

None of us can come to God on our own, all by ourselves.   Today Jesus stresses the deep significance of community and the importance of effective conflict resolution for all those who wish to follow him and understand what he so passionately wishes to share with us about God and the nature of God’s kingdom.   Of course God is with us when we pray as an individual, but something essential to our growth as believers happens in community that is a non-negotiable component of our faith.  But why?

First, as Michael Himes so brilliantly points out in his fabulous 90-page, power-packed, itty-bitty book entitled The Mystery of Faith: An Introduction to Catholicism “Christianity is not a series of conclusions that any one of us could have reached by simply sitting down and thinking about them very seriously and carefully for a long time.  Christianity is a report, a Gospel, ‘good news’ that requires that someone bring the news to us.”  The first reason that community is intrinsic to Christianity is that we need to hear the news from someone else.

Secondly, have you ever heard the quote from Merton that says something like “A tree gives glory to God by being a tree…in being what God means it to be?”  Well, so too us. 
We give praise to our creator when we grow into the very best “Lisa, John, Karen, Joe, Tom, <insert your name here>” that we can possibly be.  ALL of us are made in God’s image:  this is one of our most ancient and foundational beliefs.   AND, also very ancient and foundational, is our belief that God is a community of persons in equal and loving relationship.  This is the essence and significance of our doctrine of the Trinity.  God, in and of God’s self, is a community, not an individual, and we are made in God’s image.   So what does this mean?

Well, heck if I know.  Personally I think you can get a professor with a PhD in Trinitarian Theology to commit total heresy in about 15 minutes of deep conversation.  But, Jesus tells us today that community means SOMETHING to our walk with him.  “Being community” reveals important things about God’s nature and our calling that cannot be revealed anywhere else.   Though it is hard sometimes to find God in the messiness of our shared life as family, church, etc. with all our conflicts and awkwardness, nonetheless Jesus tells us that is precisely where we need to look.  Being church is like throwing a bunch of jagged rocks in a burlap bag and shaking them for 20 years: all our edges get smoother if we resist the urge to “take our toys and go home.”  Jesus tells us we discover and draw nearer to God in and through our relationships with one another (where 2 or 3 gather and argue…and then hug it out).

Questions to ponder in prayer:  Do you think “being church” and “being community” draws us nearer to becoming our best selves:  our “true self” made in God’s image?   If God were to come again today, what form do you think God would take?  

If you haven’t guessed already, this little bulletin article is written by your new Director of Religious Education, or “Director of the Office of Family Ministry” as I am called here at Christ the Redeemer.  My name is Lisa Brown, I’m a wife and mother of three lovely daughters ages 12, 9 & 4.  I could NOT be more delighted, excited, grateful, terrified (big shoes to fill) and honored to be here and be a part of this amazing CTR community.  I am coming from 16 years of work as a University Minister at St. John Fisher serving the OU community.  I hold a Master’s Degree in Theology from Loyola University of Chicago and have picked up a few other various certificates along the way.   I genuinely look forward to getting to know you.   

Send your “Crazy Catholic Questions” to dre@ctredeemer.org.


3 comments:

  1. Heck if I know either, Lisa, but I agree with everything you had to say. To me, the bottom line is Love and Compassion. And those imply relationship, right? Well, but then there is becoming more loving and compassionate towards ourselves. The older I get and the more experience I have, the more I recognize the truth of that old saw: "We can only love others to the extent that we love ourselves". Recognizing that in myself helps me to be more compassionate towards others and their failures to love, especially when I am on the receiving end! I'm less likely to take it personally. Anyway, some of the best commentary I've read on why church community is essential to practicing our faith is Amazing Grace by Kathleen Norris, Holy Longing by Ron Rolheiser, and practically ANYTHING by Anne Lamott.

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  2. Anne Lamott is my hero! And Ron Rolheiser is my very favorite theologian/author! I own "Amazing Grace" but have yet to read it....but going to pull it off the shelf soon based on your recommendation :) Blessings to you and thanks for the comment (the very first comment!!!)

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    1. It's a year late sure, but I'm glad that you're part of CtR and I'm looking forward to reading (and becoming enlightened by) these q&a's in the the coming weeks.

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