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Roots: A Prayer
Father: Over the years
I have often said, “I am an Anglican first, and an Episcopalian
second.” That declaration and awareness has comforted me in
the past, but what if the Anglican Communion itself is torn asunder?
I am saddened, but not shaken by the prospect, because the fact
is that my roots are sunk even deeper than the few centuries of
our specific Anglican history.
I am on the Canterbury
Trail to the defaced shrine of the Holy Martyr Thomas á Becket.
Well, he understood the problems of royal privilege and its potential
for contaminating the Church in England. As an old colonial boy
I find it frustrating that the royals and parliament have so much
say in the life of the Church, but you know I love the pomp and
ceremony, the skirl of pipes and the rumble of drums
My roots reach back through
the long history of the English Church, through Milton, and through
Blake who prayed, “And did the Countenance Divine Shine forth
upon our clouded hills? And was Jerusalem built here Among these
dark Satanic Mills?” Through John Jewel and “the Coming
Down of the Holy Ghost and the Manifold Gifts Thereof,” through
Cranmer and the Book of Common Prayer, through Julian of Norwich
and Margery Kempe, through Walter Hilton and Richard Rolle, through
blesséd Anselm who teaches me that the strength of my salvation
is the strength of Christ.
My roots reach further
back through Augustine of Canterbury, through Saint Benedict and
the ancient Monks of Nursia, through Antony of the Desert and the
wild-eyed desert hermits. My roots reach back through Canterbury,
past Roman paving stones to ancient Celts and Britons by their smoky
fires smoldering in the damp of an English spring.
My roots reach even further
back through wandering missionaries, Christian tradesmen, and Roman
soldiers who, bearing the cross on their hearts, first tread upon
the soil of the land of my forefathers.
My roots reach even further
back through the long and dreadful glorious history of the martyrs
of the early church, through the letters and missions of Paul and
Peter, Jude and James and John and all the Gospellers now radiant
in glory. “So then you are no longer strangers and aliens,
but you are fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household
of God, built upon the foundation of the Apostles and prophets,
Christ Jesus himself being the cornerstone, in whom the whole structure,
being joined together, grows into a holy temple in the Lord. In
him you also are being built together into a dwelling place for
God by the Spirit” (Ephesians 2:19-20).
It is actually that last
declaration that binds together the whole of this tumultuous history
of the Church catholic and militant that I have loved, and still
love with every fiber of my being. My Father, it is immersion in
your Spirit, poured out upon the Church through the hands of Jesus
our Head that makes sense of the whole. It is one of your miracles
that the Church, in all its brokenness over the centuries, still
survives.
Time and time and time
again you gather the broken shards together and craft again a golden
vessel for honorable use, set apart as holy, useful to the Master
of the house, ready for every good work (2 Timothy 2:21). I find
that instead of grieving or despairing, I am excited by the shaking
of the foundations of our beloved Anglican Communion. When “the
golden bowl is broken, or the pitcher is shattered at the well”
(Ecclesiastes 12:6), nothing less than your holy hands are at work.
My Lord, let me see! Show me the new golden vessel as it rises like
the Phoenix from the ashes. Break us, mold us, make us, fill us
again most glorious Lord and Father. We are yours, through Jesus
Christ our Lord. Amen+++
Father Rob +
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