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Showing posts with label St. Matthew's Enid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. Matthew's Enid. Show all posts

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Who are my mother and brothers?

I come from a traditional family.   My parents have been married for forty years.  My grandparents were married for longer.   The only step anything I have are nieces/nephews, and one cousin, who I do not call my step cousin, just my cousin.  I have seen--and benefited from--effects of a traditional two parent home.   I know what it means to belong without actually fitting in to a family.   I have also noticed that the older I get the more I realize how absolutely blessed I am to have been born to these people.   We have our problems, same as everybody else, but at the core of it we still love each other and when it hits the fan, we back each other up. 

I'm convinced that's what makes my family functional.   Functional in the sense  that at the moment everyone is speaking to everyone else and that we're all part of each other's lives.   Today's gospel reading made me think today that maybe Jesus' family was functional in the same way.   They may have thought he was nuts, but in the end, especially in the end, they showed up anyway.   Jesus, likewise, seems annoyed but uses the moment to make a point:
  Mark 3:31 Then his mother and his brothers came; and standing outside, they sent to him and called him.
3:32 A crowd was sitting around him; and they said to him, "Your mother and your brothers and sisters are outside, asking for you."
3:33 And he replied, "Who are my mother and my brothers?"
3:34 And looking at those who sat around him, he said, "Here are my mother and my brothers!
3:35 Whoever does the will of God is my brother and sister and mother."
Notice that the ties that bind could not have possibly been severed completely because we have his brother James showing up in the Book of Acts at the Council of Jerusalem and his mother follows him to the cross.  No one is throwing anyone away here.    He's just widening the circle.  Widening the circle big time.

I once had the big brass lady balls to say at church that my family never shows up and I have no one to spend Midnight Mass with.   I was immediately corrected.   I say big brass lady balls because those people have been putting up with me since I was 15 years old.   I should know by now that those people are my family.   Put a qualifier of church family on it if you must, at this point, I think we're stuck with each other.

There's more than one way to be family.   I saw La Cage aux Folles Friday night with my good friend and her fiance and saw that played out on the stage.  The crazy maid, the straight son, the drag queen mother, and the father trying to play referee between his son's desire to get past his future in-laws and his partner's need for recognition for his role in raising the boy.   What makes a family?  Is it children?  Long suffering each other's company?  Who was more of a mother?  We didn't see much of her, but I think Ann's mother was more interested in keeping that corn cob in its place than in making her daughter happy.  I think in that family it was the mother.  He wasn't just his father's partner, he was the one who turned their house into a home.  That deserved respect.   Jean Michael deserved respect too.  He turned out different than his parents without turning his back on them, and dealt with all the trauma and drama that comes from the way people reacted to his family when he was growing up.  

There's more to raising kids and living right than being in a traditional relationship and having the equipment to produce offspring.  I know families that are incredibly dysfunctional that are not broken homes in the sense that the parents are divorced.  They are broken in the sense that the love just isn't there.   The father tries to kill the daughter and no one, especially not the mother, calls the cops.  The daughter doesn't think she has any business getting angry about not being protected.  It's just broken.  Never mind that there's not a divorce decree involved, that family is broken.

So what makes a family?  Blood?  Affection?  In the case of Jesus, whoever does the will of God?


Sunday, February 6, 2011

Dangerous pastimes.

Annual meeting got me thinking again. This time I'm going to tell you all the reasons why cool people need to be Episcopalians, especially in Enid.

Seriously. All you folks my age? The ones who are spiritual but not religious because some idiot in a wide tie tried to tell you that good girls don't wear all black clothes? Yeah. I'm talking to you.
I don't know what flipped guys my age out about church but people telling me how to dress seemed like a good reason to stay away from certain places when I was 16.

That's been a while, so consider:

1. We have interesting music. It's never just seven words eleven times. Unless we're singing Taize music and we typically don't do that all the time.

2. We will NEVER make you wear a name tag or stand up because you're new. Once you're a member, we may at some point make you one, but wearing it can be avoided by donning a choir robe. (just kidding, wearing it can be avoided by leaving it in your car in the sun though.)

3. We won't actually try to convert you. I think this is probably because we're going to assume you're either already converted or that you'll come around in your own time. Especially if you're showing up at a church without a gun to your head.

4. You can ask questions. Thinking is encouraged.

5. You don't have to dress up. You can if you want to, but it's optional. Did I mention you can if you want to? One thing I've noticed about St. Matt's is that we have no norm when it comes to that sort of thing, at least when it's cold outside.

6. We have a dearth of stupidity in our parish. Yes, I'm telling you that we are running low on stupid people. There will be no argument about whether we'll be raptured with or without clothes.

7. Worship in our church is actually different from anything you'll encounter outside. No projector screens, no stage, no stage lighting, no neon signs, and no trap set. There was a djembe in the old youth room this morning. We have candles, incense, and wine.

8. We have really cool old people. We've been hoarding them all for ourselves. Sometimes, I don't even realize they're old until someone points out their actual age.

9. God trusts us with alcohol.

10. We have actual theology. It goes beyond saying the magic words to get into heaven, getting rich, and being happy clappy. There is light and life.