Credulous: A Journey Through Life, Faith, and the Bulletin
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About this ebook
Now, I am seeing plus one and it is wrecking me. I am the plus one. You are the plus one. It is the gospel message. The stability of the Trinity has become the rhombus, the square, the diamond, and the trapezoid. And it is beautiful.
And now, in this puddle of disorientation, I have found peace in abundance.
God is abundant. Life is abundant.
Come, cast into the abundant deep.
Andrea L. Lingle
Andrea Lingle is a writer, lay theologian, and editor. She lives on a cul-de-sac in North Carolina with her family and neighbors. She is a life-long United Methodist, reader, gardener, and hoper.
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Credulous - Andrea L. Lingle
Credulous
A Journey Through Life, Faith, and the Bulletin
Andrea L. Lingle
10637.pngTo my husband, who unceasingly creates space for me to share my voice.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Prelude
Chapter 2: Call to Worship
Chapter 3: Welcome and Greeting
Chapter 4: Hymn—Nothing but the Blood
Chapter 5: Creed
Chapter 6: Anthem—Sing Me to Heaven
Chapter 7: Prayer of the People
Chapter 8: Offering
Chapter 9: Doxology
Chapter 10: Children’s Time
Chapter 11: Scripture Reading—John 1:1–5
Chapter 12: Sermon
Chapter 13: Communion
Chapter 14: Benediction
Bibliography
Jesus said, Let the little children come to me, and
do not stop them; for it is to such as these that the
kingdom of heaven belongs.
—Matthew 19:14
Preface
Hello. My name is Andrea. I wrote this book.
I wrote this book because I wanted to: I wanted to see if I could, I wanted to share what I see, I wanted to spark questions, and, most of all, I wanted to do so as a lay person. I am a lay theologian. To be a lay theologian is to make two claims: there is a God about which I think and there are many perspectives from which to do so. There is the academic. There is the ordained. There is the lay. Without a balance between perspectives the God we are all seeing flattens into a cartoon. It is only through the interplay between study, authority, and wonder that the ineffable can begin to emerge.
This book was written every afternoon for a year during naptime. It was written in gardens and my imagination. It was written, one moment at a time, and that is the way faith is for me. I will be sitting, exactly where my planner says I should be, trying to parse out Important Ideas, and suddenly tiny handprints on the walls of the church will turn my head around. There! There is God. The church is all aged granite, serious and profound, and there on one of the columns carved into the facade are two twin handprints, thumbs almost touching, perfect in their impertinence—a reminder that incarnation is sweaty, dirty, and invasive.
I’m a retro-church hipster. I went to church after it was cool. I grew up in the church, traded in memory verses for social justice, traded in religion for atheism, and then realized that the whole thing is something else entirely, all while going to church, for life. So, I thought it would be retro-church hipster to write a book about contemplative theology using a church bulletin as a framework. I know, right?!
Just in case you aren’t familiar, a church bulletin is the folded piece of paper the ushers (people standing at the doors) hand you as you walk in so you know what happens when and have a place to put your gum.
The only problem with writing a church book right now is the church scene is a bit untidy. There is senseless argument and decline and bureaucracy. Now that it is no longer cool or assumed that a person would be in church on Sunday morning, there seems to be an impulse to explain why one still goes. But I don’t know how to explain. I am moderately afraid I go out of habit. What interests me is, amid the clamor of arguments and definitions, a quiet pulse of hope that faith and spirituality can be resurrected toward a new way of joy and peace. If we could let go of truth and take hold of mystery, what would we see? If we could abandon our obligation for curiosity, where would we go? If we could see each other in the light of infinite abundance, what would we do?
So, let’s wander in and out of the lines of the Sunday morning bulletin. Let’s stand at the door of the church and wonder about the emptying pews and our own aching hearts. Let’s use the creeds, the hymns, the prayers, and the people to set ourselves a-wondering about the world, faith, and life.
Acknowledgments
I would like to formally thank my children, who are my teachers in all things; Larry Duggins for giving me the opportunity to share these words; my parents, who are always present in my mind; all the people who kept my children to give me time to write; and my dog, Jessie, who never left my side—not once, not ever.
Introduction
My husband, Luke, and I got married in June 2004, and in August Luke started divinity school at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. We were fresh-faced and young. We made friends, went to basketball games, and learned a whole new language for faith. I had a Duke University Spouse ID card. All my friends did too. We knew that once we were let loose on the world, church reform would begin spreading like smiles. The church would not be able to withstand our gentle but firm redirection.
Apparently, someone had already tried gentle but firm redirection. Also: pleading, bribery, guilt, shame, and cookies. And still the church heads toward stagnancy and bureaucratic malaise and we with it. Here we are, trees planted by the stream of our choice, withering. And we have been promised that that was the one thing we wouldn’t do.
We are United Methodists. Luke was a first career
pastor, and I always referred to his appointments as our
ministry. Technically, there was the year that I was the music director at his church and it was our ministry, but, mostly, I was the eager-puppy type—trotting alongside with my leash in my mouth, absurdly proud of how much I was helping. And we were trotting right along for a while, then we slowed to a walk, and now we are just hoping that the detour signs lead somewhere.
People everywhere are leaving church. When asked why, most say there is nothing in church for them; they are spiritual but not religious, and the church is not relevant. There is a rising sense of dissatisfaction with truth traditions,
¹ or religions that claim to have a singular, exclusive truth. The Nones,
the group of people who select none
for religious affiliation,
now have a cultural identity. They are unaffiliated, not uninterested. Or not all of them are uninterested.
For two years, Luke was a Church Vitality Strategist. His job was to go into a church, do some diagnostics, and make a plan to increase the church’s vitality. The plan was to have him work with as many churches as possible, but the reality was he was called into the churches that were dying. Churches that were refusing to live. After his assessment, he would talk to his team and make a recommendation. Sometimes that recommendation was to close the church. No church was ever closed. Because the vision of the church is to stay alive. Stay alive at all costs. Even if your indicator for success, the weekly attendance, indicates you should close.
The church may be called to do God’s work, but it never goes anywhere but back to committee. Back and forth. Always planning to do something while empty, aging buildings become megaliths.
The church we serve was built almost one hundred years ago.
Aside: The trouble with discussing religion and spirituality is that the words we use are full of guilt and shame. If you grew up in the church, you undoubtedly sprawled, in forced stillness and quiet, on the floor at the front of the sanctuary and were asked this question: is the church the building or the people? Of course the child-you, if you had been there long enough, knew that the answer was the people,
but there was always that kid who let the horrifying truth slip out into that sacred space: the church is the building. Who doesn’t think of it that way?
Here is the church and here is the steeple.
Open it up and see all the people.
It’s a language problem. You simply never think: here are the church. We have homophones with baggage.
Okay. Sorry.
In the particular old building where we gather with our worshipping community (there . . . fixed it), the hilly terrain and the many phases of construction have rendered the building somewhat bewildering. For example, if you wanted to get from the nursery to the youth room, you can take two flights of stairs or an elevator from the first floor to the third floor. Then you have to walk from the education wing, through the offices, down a few steps into the original education wing, and then up another flight of stairs.
The stairs from the nursery to the third floor are an industrial stairwell. Echo-y cinderblock stairs with pipe handrails. The ones that make you feel like you could grab both hand rails and slide down like the hero, fugitive, gymnast you are. I can get my feet off the floor, but I can never slide. Maybe I need chalk.
The stairwell has large picture windows on the second- and third-floor landings overlooking the memorial garden. The second floor is ground level in that section of the building and the window is filled with a stained-glass picture of an apple tree. I think the tree is supposed to be depicting the seasons because one section has blossoms and two have fruit. It bothers me.
There is no winter.
No winter?
Winter. It is nature’s liminal space. A liminal space is rest, reflection, suffering, hunger, stillness, discomfort. Winter is important. It gives the beset gardener a chance to catch up—to mulch, to prune, to plan. Winter is dark. The birds fly away, the leaves blow away, the animals sleep. Gone is the hilarity of watermelon and tomato and cucumber, those watery fruits of summer, too delicate to preserve in their freshness. Now comes resolute stew. Broths thick with onion and garlic and bone. We need this in the winter. It is a difficult time.
It is winter for the Christian church. A time of decline. The church has been around for almost two thousand years and there are cycles of growth and decline.² Its history is a tumble of the best and worst of what humanity is. Because the church is the people.
Many are beginning to ask if the church is dying. Things are moving downward: membership, ordination, giving. But all things look like they are dying in the winter.
In her book The Mystic Way of Evangelism, Elaine Heath talks about this season as a dark night of the soul,
quoting St. John of the Cross. Heath goes on to say that the fruit of the night is about the transformation of relationships into expressions of love of God and neighbor, and love of self for the sake of God.
³ This gives me hope. But it is a tentative hope. I have no doubt that the eternal, uncreated, triune God will endure, but will we?
Winter isn’t a nap. It is a life-and-death struggle. Things die in the winter. Winter is cold and sharp and dangerous. The grain of a tree holds the marks of the dark and cold. Ring upon ring. At first those rings are small, but each year they expand. Apparently, there are those who can look at the rings on a tree and tell things about the past. Eighty years ago the cold was harsh and lasted much longer than normal. Ten years ago the cold never truly came. Dark, light, dark, light, cold, hot, cold, hot. This is the way of things.
Yes, the Christian church is in a liminal space right now. It is awkward. Exposed. Vulnerable. Dangerous. So many things could