Monday, November 17, 2008

The Church is Catholic

I looked around my parsih yesterday and saw something my Dad would have loved. He often preached (for new readers, my Dad was a pentecostal preacher for more than 50 years.) against peer-group churches. He didn't like churches that only had young people. He didn't like churches that only had people from the same economic strata. Why would he have loved what I saw in my parish yesterday? Because there were very rich people, very poor people, new converts, old (I mean thousand year old) Orthodox families, three Kenyan women, lots of old people, many many children under 10. Then there are those who serve in the Altar: Our priest is Japanese, three of our acolytes are Eritrean, two are the children of European immigrants, one id my son, one subdeacon is from Nigeria, one reader is tall, blond, broadshouldered, and youthful; the sterotypical californian. The other reader is old, crooked, and fled war in the Horn of Africa. One subdeacon is a psychologist, another is a cop, another is a painter. Our deacon is an engineer. Bankers and laborers, those with education and those without, hale and infirm, young and old, from four continents. But one Gospel. One Chalice. Ond Cross. One King.

6 comments:

DebD said...

Matt, while my parish isn't quite as diverse as your's seems to be, its similar...and it's one of the things I love about it.

Athanasia said...

Sounds like a really neat parish to belong to. A very nice eclectic mix.

Very dissimiliar to ours.

Matt said...

I think my parish simply reflects the city where it is located. The holy spirit draws everyone. If we welcome them they might stay and become part of us.

Anonymous said...

His Beatitude, Metropolitan Jonah [then Igumen Jonah] delivered a paper at the Conference of the Fellowship of St. Alban and St. Sergius that was held at St Vladimir’s Seminary, June 4 to 8, 2008 addressing the issues of the Catholicity of Orthodoxy in America (both good and bad, and not just within the OCA). The paper (16 pages long) is well worth reading for anyone in North America who is Orthodox, not simply a member of the OCA. His penultimate paragraph echoes your thoughts:
"The Church is not a civil society, with its programs, political and social influence, and worldly goals. It is rather a community built on faith in Jesus Christ, united in the common mission of the Gospel. The Church is composed of those who share an identity that comes from faith, and transcends all worldly and secular, ethnic, social, economic and racial divisions. It is the living incarnation of the Kingdom of God on earth. It embraces all human diversity, bringing all to unity in Christ."

Anonymous said...

Matt,i have been to sevral churchs and out of all of them i have to say Orthodox is the least pleasant.
the ppl were never super friendly
not mean but would llok at me strange becuase of how i dressed?
or maybe cuz i dont understand latin or russian or watever was being spoken half the time?im not sure why
i didnt like the fact that it seems so religon based which is man made mind you.
the bowing and swaying,it was like watching robots or something
and they dont seem really happy the ppl listening to the sermon.
the young ppl i saw didnt really seem to be into what was being said,it seemed that they were being forced to go which is the worse way to make someone like something,well to me it the worse way
but i could be wrong just stating some things i noticed not that there right just how i feel about it.
and also the prists or pastors of father or watever there call at Orthdox parishs look kinda interresting at best but besides that its to annoying.
and the parish goers..are they made to wear that stuff?
i mean i dont even own such dull clothing its like there at a funeral...

Matt said...

Anonymous, you write like we know each other well. Are you one of my cousins?