Sunday 8 August 2021

A watchword

 When I was a little child, our family did not attend church, though my mother had an unshakeable faith in the unseen world — fairies mostly.

My father's father was a church organist, who knew the book of Psalms by heart, but was proud of his unbelief and used to leave the church to smoke his pipe during the sermon. I don't know what my father believed; he never spoke of it.

My family came from humble roots. My mother's family had worked their way up from poverty to substantial land-owning wealth by hard graft, thrift, and shrewd strategic decisions. Her father had paid for the fields he first rented then bought by working as a silver-service waiter on a cruise ship; so he moved through life close to affluence and watched its ways, which he then imposed on his family. When she left school, my mother trained as a nursery nurse (she would not say 'nanny') and moved from there into employment caring for the children of families who were either aristocratic or simply rich. She, like her father, watched and learned — determined to climb the social ladder and make her way in the world. She raised me and my sister strictly in accordance with all she had seen and absorbed, and shepherded us away from bad influences like poor children and Enid Blyton books. My sister rebelled and bought Enid Blyton at jumble sales. I couldn't tell the difference between poor children and rich ones — but she did her best with us. She wanted us to do well.

When I was eight, the chance came (I think my mother inherited some money) to move from the market town where we lived to a rich village characterised by social exclusivity. Some seriously upmarket people lived there. The village straggled around a road about a mile or two in length, and the end around the church had large imposing homes, some medieval, while the other end had council houses. At first we lived in the middle, but my mother had her eyes on the prize of the church end. Over time she achieved this, and by the time I was a teenager we lived in the medieval bishop's palace (but only the groom's cottage – ha!) built just behind the church.

When we made this move to the village, we immediately began to attend church. Over time my mother — who was charming, beautiful and delightful — became firm friends with several of the ladies there. My father became what they call a 'sidesman' (gave out hymn books to people coming in and cleared them away at the end). I don't think either of them really believed in the Christian faith, ever, but my mother absolutely perceived the social advantage of attending the village church. It was, if you see what I mean, culture you didn't have to pay for (we never had much money) and gave us access to established and socially admired families — our state school education lacked those entrées.

So it was that I started going to church and hearing the Bible read, and getting to know the humble pragmatism and beautiful language of Cranmer's Book of Common Prayer.

One day when I was about eleven, our parish priest (one Canon Leslie Dewar) said something that arrested my attention. 

It was not the done thing to laugh in church, or clap, or do anything vulgar and populist. We had to conduct ourselves with hushed modesty and dignity — actually I remember once when we were out for a walk near the church on a summer's day, my mother wanted to pop in to speak to someone she knew would be there cleaning it, but my sister had to sit outside on the bench in the porch because her shirt had short sleeves. There were unwritten rules, and customs, and I suppose that was why we went really.

But sometimes the no laughing was awkward because it was polite to laugh if a clergyman made a joke, and on this occasion Canon Dewar did, in his sermon.

He began it by saying, "A schoolboy once said that 'faith is believing in something you know isn't true'."

This was clearly intended to be amusing, which stimulated the curious response the congregation had evolved for such awkward moments when you must laugh because it's a joke but mustn't because it's church. A sort of undertone susurration of mirth, enough to encourage the speaker but not offend against the solemnity of sanctity.

I can't remember anything else our rector said in his sermon (or at any other time), but that entered my soul like an arrow and lodged there — permanently; it's still there. "Faith is believing in something you know isn't true."

It is one of the most useful things I have ever heard in a sermon. It's the thing that I believe to be the root of the child abuse that has been so widespread in the church — the habit church affiliation teaches you of stifling judgement, observation, thought, deduction, insight, logic and experience, in favour of doctrine and adherence/submission to tradition and ecclesiastical authority. It is, in my view, morally and intellectually dangerous.

In every church I have ever been (lots), most of the people, most of the time, say things they don't believe as though they were true, and have been doing so such a long time that they can no longer spot the difference.

Churches are institutions, organisations, big groupings — it stands to reason that one person's real view on life will never be an exact profile match with the institution's creeds and tradition: so the church requires the suffocation of what a person really thinks in favour of what the church teaches. If you want to belong, you have to conform. During the years I was a Methodist minister, the Faith and Order Committee moved from requiring that ordained people not teach anything contrary to Methodist doctrine to requiring that they not think anything contrary to it. If your family home and income depend on what you think and teach, it does concentrate the mind in the required direction.

In general in church circles, though, what you actually believe is not of great importance. So my grandfather who didn't believe a thing, my father who (I think) was a sceptic, and my mother whose only certainty was fairies, were all included and accepted because they wanted to belong. My grandfather wanted the stipend to augment the money he made as a greengrocer, and my mother wanted to climb the social tree, and my father went along with it. And they never said what they actually thought or believed, indeed it was not socially comme-il-faut to discuss religion; a hangover, perhaps, from the days when dissension meant certain death.

Recently, I have been exploring into the Orthodox Church. There is so much I love about it. I love the Catholic Church too (I was a Catholic for a decade of my life). I have thought wistfully about going back to Catholicism, but my inner watcher murmurs, "Yeah, but what about when Pope Francis dies and there's a pendulum swing back to conservatism?" So I've been reading and watching and listening about Orthodoxy.

I was suppressing in myself (faith means believing in things you know aren't true, remember?) how the Russian Orthodox Church turns a blind eye to gay-bashing, and the Orthodox Church rolls out the old tired rationales for excluding women from priesthood and refuses gay marriage; and I am very sorry that I permitted that voice inside me to be silenced. I suppressed in myself the reservations I felt about kissing the priest's ring and the warnings to the laity never to criticise bishops, and the veneration of relics; I thought I could get over that — because I wanted to. I set aside the instinct in me against clutter and paraphernalia and religion-by-stuff. I mean, I like icons and a bit of ecclesiastical bling and the actual monastics and hermits and priests seem to be humble and gentle and kind and good. I suppressed my misgivings about the Orthodox habit of constantly declaring one's own uselessness and sinfulness and inadequacy and unimportance — I understand the good motive it arises from, but it has a shadow side, I think, too.

I was drawn, most of all, by the utter luminosity I have seen in a friend who is progressing through to ordination — the authentic peaceful joy, that I recognise as indwelling Holy Spirit. That, I trust.

But then this morning I asked Google about the Orthodox Church stance on astrology; because this is always revealing. A friend of mine, a gay priest in London, once said to me, "Homosexuality is a touchstone," and the same is true of astrology. 

Astrology and homosexuality are reliable ideological touchstones. I read article after article explaining why astrology is sinful and wrong from the Orthodox Church point of view. I respect their view as a view, what they had to say about astrology was based and argued on presuppositions I know for a fact are incorrect. What I read was arrogant, and mistaken.

And my eleven-year-old self, sitting in the sunlight filtering through stained glass set into stone-mullioned windows in an old flint church, looking up at a wooden pulpit, remembered those words: "Faith is believing in what you know isn't true." My inner snail drew silently back into its shell. 

The Orthodox Church — beautiful, holy, shimmering, admirable, and showing forth so much from which I can learn; but, as a tribe, a sanctuary to which I could entrust my heart, not for me. "This also os Thou; neither is this Thou." Lord Jesus, lead me on. Help me find my tribe.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

I feel like Orthodoxy will enjoy a brief uptick, if for no other reason than because the Evangelicals are so ridiculous now. But I searched and prayed, and in the end after many decades on the inside of various flavors of Christianity have decided none of it is of any use. Too much mental gymnastics to either endure or ignore. While somebody named "Jesus" might have been a worthy teacher, the endless embroidery which has been applied to him is not at all worthy. I actually think he might have spent that missing time between 12 and 30 in India studying Vedanta. The words attributed to him (not the interpretations of same) seem very much sometimes from the Upanishads.

Pen Wilcock said...

Hiya
Just to say I much prefer if people who comment here identify themselves — sometimes people think they have because of the security hoops one jumps through to comment on Google, and are then surprised to discover their comment is entirely anonymous.
Thank you for your comment — I certainly know what you mean about mental gymnastics to endure or ignore; well put!
I think of myself as part of the church, and I find much to honour and admire in the different expressions of its family of faith; but at the present moment, after a lifetime in one denomination or another, I am temporarily unaffiliated.

Suzan said...

Pen I had to smile. I grew up in the Anglican Church as we call it here. My father was a Catholic but after much soul searching he decided to marry in the Anglican tradition. I always loved the book of Common Prayer and the hymns we sang. It still brings comfort to me. I used to attend a much older church building made from stone but a change of priest brought many changes and it was clear we were no longer welcome. My son was subject to physical abuse. I then attended the local Anglican Church but sit was so bizarre to me. I have been to all varieties religious traditions.

When I was a late teen I attended a Catholic school. I was friend with a girl who was Ukranian Orthodox. The singing was beautiful and I still have the egg I was given after church. For years I wondered if it would break.

I do have one funny memory. Bethany's godfather was studying to become a priest and he read the gospel on Palm Sunday. In front of the Bishop he read, " and he climbed on his arse (ass)" and the tittering was intense. Since our priest was the Archdeacon at the time it was not well received.

Pen Wilcock said...

That was a bad Palm Sunday moment!
It must surely be possible to have solemnity and authenticity without formality, so people don't get anxious and embarrassed. I can imagine a church where such a mistake gave everyone a good laugh — and it didn't matter! x

Suzan said...

I think even the Good Lord would have laughed. After all he gave us a sense of humour.

Sandra Ann said...

Aw Pen sending tea and empathy! In my opinion I don’t think we ever really find our ‘tribe’ I see it more as a case of “does most of this sit right with me?” To coin your valuable phrase - “where is the spirit moving?” In addition one also has the dilemma of being part of a tribe but then the local church has a leadership change and everything is upside down! This is where the overarching belief in that one ideology/doctrine holds sway “and you Peter are you also going to leave me?” “ to whom she would go Lord, you have the message of eternal life”. And so I stay with Jesus in the tabernacle (when I can physically get to church) and attempt to walk alongside him each day xx

Pen Wilcock said...

Amen to that! I think if I were still in a denomination I'd been part of all my life, that's the approach I'd take too. But as things are, I'm looking from the outside in. I do indeed see the Spirit moving, and I regard the Orthodox Church (and all the other denominations) with reverence, but because I am an older person (than I used to be, I mean, not than you), I have had time to observe life and form opinions and beliefs of my own, and there would be areas where acquiescence was required of me that I could not now give. x

Sandra Ann said...

Yes I understand what you are saying, hope you manage to find a community that resonates with you where you can dip in and out as the need arises xx

Shosannah said...

I love your writing. Even if I don’t always think the same way or agree with everything I love how you put things and I always have something to ponder on.
My perspective is a little different. I’m Catholic. I submit to the teachings in faith because they are true, to my understanding, experience and belief. I rebelled for many years, trusted my own heart and it led me down wayward, destructive and dangerous paths. At the time they didn’t seem to be any of those things. I thought I was free. After years of struggle and pain I came back to the church. I was baptised Catholic and thought it must be my home and it has been a good home. At first I was very liberal but now I would consider myself a traditional Catholic, however, I resonate with many Christian traditions and love my Protestant brothers and sisters and have a very soft spot for The Orthodox Church. I’ve just finished reading a brilliant book by Elder Thaddeus called Our thoughts determine our lives.’ And I love the orthodox liturgy. Ultimately, I just put my trust in The Father, Jesus and Mary and pray they will lead me right.
I was also firmly into astrology for many years, even drawing up charts for people. From what I’ve experienced and from what my understanding of the Bible is, it’s dangerous. The lovely sister Emmanuelle Maillard has an incredible testimony on YouTube about her experience with astrology.


Pen Wilcock said...

Thank you, Shosannah — and what a lovely name!
I think there is profound peace in submitting one's own thoughts and evaluations to a great and holy spiritual way, and I am so glad you have found the true home for your soul. I will be grateful if, when our Lady nudges you to do so, you will pray for me. x

Shosannah said...

Of course I will. And please pray for me too xxx

Pen Wilcock said...

Thank you so much; and indeed I will. x