So, if you read my last blog, the one where I give a very
tongue in cheek account regarding what I learned during my first year in
seminary, I need to warn you: You're about to think I'm schizophrenic. I want to say, first, that while I enjoy
incredible community among my colleagues and I have never felt so affirmed
regarding my call into ministry, I spent the majority of my first year in
seminary really pissed off. I was prone
to bouts of foulness and one never knew when I would just up and start howling
at the moon. And now, about three weeks
past clicking send on that email to my professor containing my final paper for
the semester, I thought I could just
move past the "angry me", but I'll be damned if she didn't
show up again today...of all places on my front porch...while I was
reading...theology.
I should explain. One of the sources for my anger during
this past year was a class called History of Christian Thought, better known to
Candler students as HT501 and HT503; don't ask me what happened to 502 because
I have no idea. Anyway, during semester
number one we had the laborious task of muddling our way through 1500 years of
church history...Two. Times. You would think that once would be enough, but
after we had a skeletal framework of the historical timeline, we then went back
and read primary documents from the Church fathers with a few female voices like Mechtilde of Magdeburg mixed in so we could hear about how she mystically made love to the Divine and wrote some trippy God porn, but I digress. It was during
this time that we studied the church early church councils. Now, I know that no one really likes church
assemblies or synod meetings, and these councils were no different. The Council of Nicaea that happened way back
in 325CE was called not to celebrate Christian unity and charity but to codify
the rules surrounding Christianity.
These rules were crafted by the powerful lest any "heretics" go around
spreading some "bad" theology. Decisions had to be made regarding who was in and who was out. Unfortunately,
this action of in-ing and out-ing never stopped.
It still happens, it is still ridiculous, and it still sucks. So, to be
at a place where I'm supposed to be learning how to be an instrument for unity,
a place where we're all like "rah-rah we're all one body", and be confronted with a
history of heresy was to say the least, frustrating.
Fast forward back to today and me being pissed
off...again. I have been reading
"Take This Bread" by Sara Miles.
Miles converted to Christianity in a unique way. She is Episcopalian, founded several food pantries in the San
Francisco area, and is a proficient swearer. Thus, I loved her book. Anyway, as Miles was not a cradle Episcopalian, and did
not attend a traditional church that followed a formal liturgy, she never said
the creeds. Not the Nicene, not the
Apostle's, she did not say them, nor does she.
Reading about the experiences of Sara Miles was liberating. Someone else out there did not say the creeds
because they found them divisive. During worship over the past six months when it came to the place in the liturgy where the
congregation recites the creeds together, I have either not been able to
breathe, or I have said them through gritted teeth and tears in my eyes. People may want to argue for the communal
aspect of saying the creeds, but one cannot deny that these statements which some see as beautiful statements about what the church, catholic, believes about our Lord and Savior are codifications. They represent rules that have become
fetishized rituals that often serve to separate more than they unite. So, while I'm not entirely sure how this will
play out with an ordination board I do not think I will be able to say the
creeds. There have to be other people for whom going
through the motions because of tradition is not an option. I don't think I'm the only one. There have to be more people like me out there. I hope there are.