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peace and quiet


Authors like Brian McLaren and Robert Webber have written about “ancient-future” worship and spiritual practices. Many churches have added more contemplative vespers or chapel services in addition to the guitars and SermonSpice videos on Sunday morning, and Taize prayer services have started to pop up everywhere from the Unitarians to the Presbyterians.

Clearly, there is a growing desire for simpler, quieter worship options, even (especially?) among the younger generations. Is this symptomatic of larger doctrinal shifts, or simply the inevitable pendulum swing after years of the other extreme in American worship?

I’m guessing both, but for me it’s simply an opportunity to be still and to reflect, and I join hundreds of others the first Friday evening of each month at Christ Cathedral in downtown Nashville. Although all of the services offered at this Episcopal congregation are open to the community, they created the First Friday services as a “sacred space” especially for the city.

To pursue this mission the cathedral also offers violin and organ concerts, choral music performances, quarterly evensong services, and even something called “Liturgical Floral Design.” I’ve attended several of these events (not the floral one) but my favorite is First Friday. Each month the 90-minute service combines traditional elements of Episcopalian and Anglican liturgy, including a complete communion service, with surprisingly modern touches.

For instance, this past Friday’s service focused on the value of story as a way to communicate deep spiritual truths. A guest speaker shared several parables throughout the service (one accompanied by a dance from the church’s Epiphany Dance Company), and songs included not only the expected staid hymns but also a swinging version of “I Love to Tell the Story.” This being Nashville, the music at First Friday is always top-notch, and always different; this service had a jazz and piano feel while other Fridays have featured a bluegrass combo or a children’s choir.

The services include so many simple but effective elements, many of which–like the uptempo “Sanctus” sung three times before communion and accompanied by hand motions–don’t fit the stereotype. And each one also features something different to reinforce the theme; this month the church provided a basket of fabric scraps and encouraged each worshipper to take one and write a word or symbol on it to represent the story of his own life. “At the offertory, you are invited to bring your cloth forward and attach it to a larger cloth that will be placed on the altar in preparation for the Holy Eucharist as a way of offering your life to the One who redeems and makes all things new,” they wrote in the order of service.

Don’t worry, I’m not about to become Episcopalian–the incense alone is enough to put me off that idea. But I do love entering this sacred space every month or two and finding an oasis of quiet where I can slow my racing thoughts and think about that One in a new way. I’ll leave it to our contemporary authors to explore the theological implications of these trends, although Webber’s work is on my should-have-read-a-year-ago list. For now, I’m content to sit in the back of Christ Cathedral, soak in the calm, and appreciate all those liturgical flower arrangements.

September 8, 2008 - Posted by Jennifer | worship | , , | 2 Comments

2 Comments »

  1. I’m jealous! . . . not really. But there’s a space deep inside me that expands when exposed to the uncommon elements of the worship environment you described. While I’m not of “the younger set,” I sometimes yearn for that experience and attempt to create it at home, or even in hotel rooms when I travel. Candles, communion, meditating on a recurring word or Scripture theme from the day. It reminds me of my spirituality. It keeps me connected with my Creator. No, I’m not engaged in the emptying of my spirit for the sake of inviting fallen saints to inhabit my being. Rather, I appreciate engaging my senses, blocking out distractions, so that I can focus my affection toward Christ.

    Comment by ImageBearer | September 8, 2008 | Reply

  2. Jen- That’s awesome! I hadn’t heard about that yet.

    Epiphany danced at Christmas at Belmont last year.

    Comment by Skillful Productions | September 9, 2008 | Reply


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