What's Worship Got to Do with It?: Interpreting Life Liturgically
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About this ebook
Cláudio Carvalhaes
Claudio Carvalhaes was born and raised in Sao Paulo, Brazil. A former shoeshining boy, he is also a liturgist, theologian, and artist. After serving churches in Brazil and the United States for almost ten years, Carvalhaes did his doctoral studies at Union Theological Seminary in New York. He has published two books and edited a third in his native Brazil. Currently, he is the Associate Professor of Worship and Liturgy at the Lutheran Theological Seminary in Philadelphia.
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What's Worship Got to Do with It? - Cláudio Carvalhaes
Prelude
One of the great insights of liturgical studies over the last couple of decades has been a growing awareness of the liturgical diversity in the life and practice of the early church. Increasingly, the recognition of the distinct practices of early Christians in different communities in the ancient world stands in stark contrast to the demands by many in the contemporary liturgical guild to identify a liturgical core that can be preserved and promulgated in the liturgies of churches of diverse historical and theological lineages.
During the twentieth century, the emergence of the liturgical renewal movement (coupled with the ecumenical movement) pressed scholars to search for and establish a reducible core shared by the church.
¹
In the mid-twentieth century, the classic work of Dom Gregory Dix in The Shape of the Liturgy provided a nearly evangelical interpretation of a transhistorical liturgical core. Dix’s thesis on the historical foundation of the mass and its preservation through history and culture continues to hold influence on the development of liturgical resources that seek to preserve an ecumenical and historical common ground.
Recently, the work of Paul Bradshaw has challenged the dominance of Dix’s hypothesis.
So seductive has been the picture painted by Dix that it has tended to blind us to its shortcomings and thus mislead us. . . . For the truth is that there is no really firm evidence that primitive Eucharistic practice ever did conform to the sevenfold shape of the Last Supper, whereas there are signs of the existence of early Christian ritual meals that do not seem to relate themselves to this event or to be patterned according to its model.
²
Bradshaw’s methodical critique of Dix’s historical reconstruction of a unilinear transmission of the mass has been joined by a growing body of work that underscores the significance of other cultural influences on the meal practice of early Christian communities, especially the Greco-Roman banquet. In particular, the work of Dennis Smith and Hal Taussig has strengthened the understanding of the diverse influences on the development of Eucharistic practices in the early Christian movement.
³
Similar patterns have emerged in the research around baptism that underscores the diversity of practices in different parts of the ancient world. The New Testament includes a variety of images, formulas, and patterns for baptism. As with communion, Christians adapted ritual elements from surrounding cultures in diverse ways. Christian baptism was influenced by the ritual practices of other religious traditions as well as by Roman bathing customs.
There is a growing recognition among scholars that as the Christian movement spread across the Roman Empire, baptismal practice took on the unique features of local communities. Liturgical scholar Bryan Spinks concludes his analysis of the documents from the first three centuries, The different ritual patterns found in the early Christian evidences mirror secular bathing customs.
⁴
For example, some Christian communities used incense; others, ritual lamps and torches. Anointing before and/or after bathing quickly became a customary part of baptism. Local communities of Christians, however, likely followed regional, cultural habits in their choices about when to anoint the individual and in other actions associated with bathing customs that became part of the baptismal liturgy. Over time these ritual elements were given theological interpretations. For example, oil’s use for sealing and preservation is interpreted as the Spirit’s work of redeeming us, and a lighted candle is for illumination, just as Christ’s light leads us out of darkness. After surveying the biblical images of baptism, liturgical scholar Bryan Spinks concludes,
The New Testament is both the fulcrum from which emerges all theological reflection on baptism and all Christian baptismal rites, and the touchstone, or norming norm
against which they may be tested. However, the books of the New Testament present neither a single doctrine of baptism, nor some archetypal liturgical rite.
⁵
While the grip of Dix’s hypothesis about the development and preservation of Eucharistic prayer is finally beginning to recede, a more nuanced approach that argues for the recognition and priority of universal elements throughout the history of Christian worship has taken its place. Gordon Lathrop follows a similar trajectory as Dix’s work in arguing for a universal shape of the liturgy, which Lathrop identifies as the ordo. Lathrop discovers an implicit grounding of this fourfold pattern (gathering, word, thanksgiving, sending) in Scripture itself. Lathrop proceeds to move beyond merely recognizing these transcultural elements to arguing for their priority over contextual practices and local customs.
We need to require local traditions . . . to take second place to thanksgiving at table and the shared holy meal. We need to require local traditions to circle around and serve the central matters of our communion, the word and sacraments that bear us into the very life of the triune God. The church is always local, but the local reality must be broken open toward the one who holds all localities together and so is the ground of our koinonia.
⁶
Such an approach presumes a universal core to the thanksgiving at table. Like Dix, Lathrop claims a divine mandate for a liturgical ordo that comes as God’s gift to the church. Lathrop quotes from the Ditchington Report (which he helped write): "The pattern of this gathering and sending has come to all the churches as a common and shared inheritance. That received pattern resides in the basic outlines of what may be called the ordo of Christian worship . . ."
⁷
The question must be asked whether the cost of suppressing diversity to promote a kind of unity of enforced Christian liturgical practice is true either to the life and witness of early Christian practice or to the needs and expectations of diverse Christian communities in the twenty-first century. It is precisely at this point that liturgical scholars and worship leaders have so much to learn from this collection of essays from Cláudio Carvalhaes.
The remarkable thing about this collection of essays is not simply that they point to the diversity of liturgical practices that the Church needs to embrace as a way of making room for Christian faith to respond to the particular and distinct needs of local communities of faith. The truly remarkable thing is that the essays foreshadow a way that Carvalhaes’s liturgical theology is diverse in its own right (in esse). This is not simply a contrast to the insistence on uniformity by some in the liturgical guild. This is an embodied witness to a pluriform exposition of liturgical theology in the life of one extraordinary scholar. From theology to politics to gender identity to race to philosophy to postmodernity, Cláudio Carvalhaes shows a dexterity and fluency rarely exhibited in this age of micro-specialization. He does so not to create a single trajectory or to establish a correct
way of doing liturgical scholarship. He does so to expand and expose the narrow ways in which we have become accustomed to thinking and operating.
Some readers will be frustrated by the lack of a single trajectory and a singular thematic argument in this collection. Personally, I find this approach refreshing since it opens up and alludes to multiple possibilities for ways to move forward and embrace truly diverse liturgical agendas and audiences. Readers will discover their own favorite essays in this monograph. My own favorite is the astonishing essay Gimme de kneebone bent,
which combines liturgical scholarship, postcolonial criticism, postmodernity, and gender theory in a way that I had never considered previously. Here the call for full, embodied participation by all in worship opens up the possibility for the assembly to demand and take its rightful place. No longer can order and rules be handed down and enforced by a hierarchy that seeks to impose a single way in which participants can properly worship God. Instead, those in leadership roles are invited to open up space so that all can respond and contribute in ways that enrich the congregation.
I invite you to partake of this smorgasbord of essays from one of the most creative thinkers of our times. But be forewarned that this collection is not for the faint of heart. Your preconceptions and practices will be shaken and challenged. The end result, however, is to inspire your theological and liturgical imagination to reach out to discover new ways in which worship moves beyond the narrow confines of the walls of our church buildings and begins to encompass all of life.
Paul Galbreath
Professor of Theology, Union Presbyterian Seminary
1
. Interestingly, the search for a liturgical core mined the riches of early church history to establish a prototype which was then promulgated through the production of worship books and resources in mainline Protestant denominations.
2
. Bradshaw, Eucharistic Origins, vi.
3
. Smith and Taussig published a brief examination of their thesis in Many Tables. Since that time, they have separately published major works on the influence of Greco-Roman meals on the development of early Eucharistic practice. See Smith, From Symposium to Eucharist, and Taussig, In the Beginning Was the Meal.
4
. Spinks, Theologies of Baptism,
35
–
36
.
5
. Spinks, Theologies of Baptism,
12
.
6
. Lathrop, Holy People,
127
. I am not sure whom Lathrop is referencing with the pronoun we.
7. Lathrop, Holy People,
125
.
Introduction
My wish is that you may be loved to the point of madness.
—André Breton
The liminality of ritual is the power of transcendence, of no-saying, of expressing what society and culture deny, of unmasking pretension, of elevating persons and things of low degree,
of putting down the mighty from their seats
(Luke 1:52–53). It is the power Shakespeare called imaginative, to give to aery nothing a local habitation and a name.
—Tom F. Driver
The Presbyterian congregation of Morro Doce, a neighborhood in the outskirts of São Paulo, Brazil, was made up of people living inches above utter poverty. The church had a deep commitment to its own people and the larger community. They took care of each other in many ways. By the third month I was there as a pastor they couldn’t pay my salary. When the congregation realized it, they started to cook and buy basic things for my house and my family. Every Sunday night after the evening service when I got on the bus to head home, I always carried several bags of goodies, food for the whole week. During the week, people would be at each other’s houses caring for their kids when the parents needed to go to work. The very few who had cars came to church and left loaded with twice as many people than their cars could carry. Every Sunday morning, the kids were at the bus stop waiting for me screaming with joy and expectation. Sunday afternoon, I would visit families; I was always received with a banquet.
When I came as pastor, the congregation met in a small, rented room. After six months, we wanted our own building. To buy a piece of land and build four walls and a roof would cost us about five thousand dollars. We started saving as much as we could. However, we didn’t make much progress. Every month there was a more urgent need for a member of the church. One Sunday, a family from the favela, whose six kids came to church every week, asked us if we could help them redo their fallen roof. All of our small savings and the money of almost our entire budget went to that roof. Not long after that, most of our kids got lice in school. We had to provide a haircut to almost all of our kids and make arrangements for the families to go to the drugstore and get the necessary soap and medicine for their kids. Every Sunday, eighty percent of our money went to that need. Then we realized that almost all our kids didn’t have breakfast on Sundays because there was no school. Then we started using the money to pay for breakfast and the church would be crowded every Sunday morning. Even the local bus driver knew that Sunday at 8 a.m. he would have his bus loaded with kids from the favela coming to our church.
Nonetheless, the church was happy to even imagine a new building where we could offer more services to the community. We did everything to raise money, from pizza night to yard sale, ice cream and cakes, clown evenings, clothing, etc. But due to the constant needs of the congregation, we could never save enough money. At the end of three hard years raising money for the building, we had less than $100 saved. Everything in that congregation, including the budget, was geared towards the immediate needs of the people and the community around them. No one even went hungry there!
Our liturgical life changed in relation to the needs of the community. We had a proper reformed liturgical order for every Sunday but I soon realized that it was the life of the people that would give shape to the liturgy in ways that happened organically. One day we would spend more time praying for each other than doing anything else because the needs were such that everybody needed prayer. One day when I was preaching, I asked an elder to tell a story of his experience living in Argentina, since he was the first member to go abroad in a mission from his work. His story was so funny that the whole congregation started laughing so hard I couldn’t finish the sermon. In the midst of loud laughing we barely had breath to sing the last hymn. Of course, not everything went smoothly; we had problems, too. Nevertheless, empowered for its daily life by the priorities of the liturgy (work of the people) at Morro Doce congregation I saw a community (church-world-neighbor) empowered.
What I am trying to do in this book is to give voice to the possibilities of communities to make a difference to the people who worship together and to the communities around them. With this book I invite conversations about different approaches to our own lives and our liturgies, and about how our ecclesiologies, civil life, and worship services are all intertwined and interconnected. This book is a series of imaginings, sometimes surely idealized, that offer ways to think and plan our liturgies differently and do things differently.
Lex Agendi: The Law of Agency
This book hopes to be an alternative to the understanding of liturgy as the work of God on behalf of the people (Gottesdienst) where just some privileged scholars have a say in what we are to pray, sing, or do, and with that, define what life is all about. No! Liturgy is indeed the work of the people, who together bring their resources, wisdom, and experience as we mutually learn with one another. We do this with scholars joining different forms of knowledge for that specific context we live in. In that way, there is no dismissal of the academic knowledge from all kinds of scholars, but there is a shift in the relationship. Scholars are not telling us from hierarchical places what they have received from God and people are only to say Amen
to their divine wisdom as if they are safeguarding God, faith, and our lives in some form of liturgical order or understanding. Instead, we tell each other what the will of God might be and how we should have this gathering as we create worlds and faith possibilities.
In that way, liturgists and liturgical theologians should be organic intellectuals
in a Gramscian sense,
⁸
organic theologians who open up organic liturgies, rather than organizers of religion and keepers of tradition. That means that ideas and praxis must go hand in hand, always being concerned with both a certain anti-intellectualism that dismisses ideas and the academic life that is not connected to the streets and to social movements. It is the local situation that demands our attention and knowledge. In that way, the liturgical theologian is demanded to make an oath of allegiance with those who suffer and bring all of the possible sources of power to engage these situations, even if beyond the scope of our beliefs. Life comes first and traditions come after, as a way to sustain the lives of those who suffer; if these sources of tradition don’t pass the ethical test of protection of life in gruesome situations, no tradition is worth living. The very handling of the past must be careful when placing it with the present. As liturgical theologian Jaci Maraschin said,
The liturgical moment is always a kind of center where the memory of the divine lived in the past, faces the challenges and the exigencies of what is to happen. If the gathering emerges from tradition but does not close itself to this tradition, its very nature is to be open to what has not yet happened, and turns tradition into a model for the future with the clear presupposition of a criticism. That is why the judgment of the present proceeds from the celebration of what happened in the times of liberation and it is animated by the hope of what might happen because of our commitment to this common decision . . . But what kind of gatherings do we have now? Assemblies eaten away by the commitment to the powers of this world and captive of the social system, political and economic in which we live. That is why, in general, the liturgical gatherings become tiresome, devoid of the vital element that would make them exulting in joy and interpreters of reality.
⁹
The liturgical theologian, more than holding tradition, interprets reality through rituals with the people. More than keepers of cultural assertions recoded as liturgies received from God, the liturgical theologian must combine the roles of prophet, the priest/pastor, and the scholar. We do not only have to work together to choose the order of our worship that fits our current situation, but more, we need to make connections of our faith and the world in which we live in order to face larger agents of death. Liturgy is not a political party or a political party event. However, since it holds and shows God’s power in the world, liturgy is a local counter-power to the global movements of power that dismantle the basic social systems of life. By affirming God’s imago Dei and equality for all under God’s justice and love, our rituals go against the market and the needs of economic organizations that pipe the flow of wealth to some people and leave the vast majority of the world population without minimal access to the sources of good. With the clash of these many horizons, the rituals of our worship must respond to the lack of glory in the world by stretching horizons of hope, faith, justice, and liberation so communities of excluded people, praying to God for their own liberation and the liberation of the world, can continue to believe that people, especially poor people, like some forms of just societies, must be defended.
Along with Nathan D. Mitchell, I believe that we are not only participants in Christian liturgy but as agents in an evolving human history, as citizens of the world—a universe—whose magnitude and complexity challenge many of our traditional (and comforting) conjectures, about the relation between God, people and planet.
¹⁰
Thus, religious rituals, and in our case Christian rituals, cannot be canned liturgical theologies, even if they claim to be theologia prima. Liturgical knowledge aims to create, share, and construct knowledge together, from the wisdom of our own communities with the thousand traditions of Christianity and other religions, and not as fossilized rituals we keep by talking in circles only to find inner meanings that reconfirm what we already know.
Liturgical knowledge, like any other knowledge, is a form of power, with its paradoxes and ambiguities, which goes against the desire to keep the class structures of churches. The call from our worship space is to abandon the allegiance to the middle and upper classes and go work with people on the margins of our brutal society. Thus, the crux of the shaping and formation of this liturgical knowledge must be aware of the sources used, the positions taken, the memories chosen, the actions done, and the relations and partnerships engaged in these meetings as paramount to what we want to think and do about our (liturgical) lives together. My hope is that this book will foster heterogeneity of rituals, a plurality of possibilities for life, and not a singular thought/belief that we must be faithful to, or else perish. In other words, I hope that we will be able to do liturgies that will consider different local sources, multiplicities of languages and perspectives that will entail different sets of questions and needs for different localities, bringing different life experiences into consideration so we can create different worlds, different racial, class, gender and social intersectionalities through a vast array of locally situated liturgies.
While not offering something as definite as how to do worship properly,
I hope that by shuffling resources, references, and unexpected juxtapositions, we will learn to be critical of our forms of doing liturgies and writing liturgical theologies. As we do it, we don’t need to either necessarily set ourselves with the keepers of the tradition or with those who dismiss any traditional form of worship by doing whatever they want for the sake of the new. In other words, we will go against worship forms that reflect the rigidity and righteousness of proper worship orders as well as the self-congratulatory rituals of cultural self-absorption and entitlement. Perhaps we must create something in between, something that helps us place ourselves in the midst of those who are hurting and generate social disciplinary subjects who will tackle the imbalanced forms of common living and fight against the norm of patriarchalism and its hierarchical, heterosexual structures, go vehemently against the racism that breaks the backs of our people, queer our forms of gender and sexualities, and displace forms of imago Dei that associate God’s goodness with certain economic gains in life.
The Rituals/Liturgies of the World, of the Church, and of the Neighbor
Within Christian rituals we are indeed entangled in liturgical knowledges that create worlds and forms of life and living. The world, the church, and our existential life are all implicated and intertwined in our prayers, songs, and celebration of the sacraments. It is at this encountering of many waters that this book is located, as a fragile ecumenical interreligious boat, trying to navigate life and death bursting from all these places. In Nathan D. Mitchell’s spellbinding book Meeting Mystery, we learn about this liturgical encounter:
Christian ritual, prayer and sacrament occur at the confluence of three distinctive yet essentially interdependent liturgies: the liturgy of the world,
the liturgy of the church,
and the liturgy of the neighbor
. . . The Christian community never celebrates its liturgies for itself; it celebrates them in and for the world, for the life of the world.
¹¹
The liturgy of the world encompasses the whole network of connections between countries and the globalized conditions of human life through movements of political systems and nation-states, capitalism and free-trade agreements, militarism, drugs, agribusiness, local and global religions, immigration, labor, and so on.
¹²
The liturgy of the church entails the sources and histories of many traditions that we Christians in the twenty-first century need to deal with in an expansive ecumenical frame and its continuing explosions of identities. The liturgy of the neighbor has to do with the ways in which the existential and confessional forms of my neighbors’ lives are respected and cherished, which includes the multiplicities of religions.
The liturgy of the neighbor is about communities of people and forms of common living within communities that shape the individual and social life in various ways. In these three liturgies, social markers of class, culture, religion, gender, and sexualities operate within forms of power. Life and death are being created, negotiated, dismissed, abused, and empowered.
The connectivity of these three liturgies is the way of thinking at the border. These liturgies and this form of border thinking are fundamental components to the formation of different liturgical assemblages, connecting local sources, diverse groups and ethnicities, and forms of life, feelings, and subjectivities that foment different forms of marginal thinking, thinking that comes from those from the underside of history. This inner-outside circularity of liturgies reflects, challenges, engages, and transforms social realities that end up doing the same things to liturgy.
These intersectionalities and connections imply a multiplicity of sources, symbols, and perspectives coming from below, from local contexts in constant relation to global forces. In this way liturgies are not repetitions of unmarked universal truths, but only ritualized social forms that produce localities,
that is, that enhance forms of power within groups who live together. In this way, the liturgy of the world can only be thought, considered, and ritualized if done in constant tension and relation with the local context of the liturgy of the neighbor, whose body and oikos pertain to a certain liturgy of the church(es). The relation between the world/global and local/church–neighbor must be put in perspective. Ajun Appadurai explains the local in relation to the global:
I stress locality because, in the end, this is where our vitally important archives reside. Localities—in this world, and in this argument—are temporary negotiations between various globally circulating forms. They are not subordinate instances of the global, but in fact the main evidence of its reality. . . . The local is not merely an inert canvas upon which the moving space of globalization is painted, but the local is itself a constant and laborious work in progress, so that the production of locality is fundamental and never completed site of human action.
¹³
This movement wants to name what is thought of as universal and show it as what it has always been—regional. In that sense, it wants to debunk the power of coloniality with border thinking. Walter Mignolo defines coloniality:
What coloniality
unveiled is the imperial dimension of Western knowledge that has been built, transformed and disseminated over the past
500
years. Coloniality of knowledge and of being.
¹⁴
While this work hints on the work of decoloniality, it also fails miserably. In many cases, instead of producing an epistemological disobedience
as Mignolo says, it ends up reinstating a re-westernization of the liturgical ontological structure, failing to do the work of delinking its connections. In any case this is a work in progress.
The chapters in this book are placed under these three liturgies with the hope that we will point to some of the issues of these immense complexities, hoping to show that they are fully intertwined and cannot be thought/lived without the other. How we organize these liturgies and therefore our faith and our lives is our task. Expanding the understanding of juxtaposition offered by Gordon Lathrop,
¹⁵
the idea is to juxtapose not only what is within a given shape of liturgy but also the many liturgical things we call holy with what is there but goes without being spoken, namely, prayers with race, baptism with economic inequality and civil disobedience, Eucharist with agribusiness and immigration, songs with social freedom, and so on.
These amplified forms of juxtaposition call us to engage the places between the altar/table and the world, asking for what has been silenced, denied or simply not spoken, thus hidden, and not visibly clear to the formation of society but gives full rise to racism, economic disparities, social exclusion, and an eclipse of the poor in most of our liturgies.
In these juxtapositions, we are heightened by the connectivity of what is called the lex orandi, lex credenda, and the lex agendi-vivendi of the church, that is, the connections between the laws of prayer, belief, life, and ethics. The wrestling with these laws altogether is not to find out what comes first but rather how one may live, incite, expand, and respond to the other. As Mitchell says,
The slogan lex orandi, lex credendi does not, then, offer as much light as it may seem to promise. In spite of the tension between them, doxology and doctrine remain a cozy ménage à deus, each partner in the pair defining itself in terms of the other. But the deeper question is not whether faith controls worship, or vice versa, but whether either of them can be verified in the absence of a lex agendi (a rule of action or behavior), an ethical imperative that flows from the Christian encounter with a God who is radically un-God-like,
a God who, in the cross of Jesus and in the bodies of the poor, the hungry, the thirsty, the naked, the imprisoned,
has become everything we believe a God is not. The ethical imperative implied by the phrase lex agenda breaks apart our comfortable faith and worship
duo by introducing that subversive element of indeterminacy.
¹⁶
This claimed indeterminacy neither does away with the ethical imperative nor with beliefs and faith, but rather, it establishes an ethical caution to the liturgical ways in which we believe and hold the sacred, and how rituals relate, or not, to the lives of others, to the living of bio-systems and to senses of justice, solidarity, and peace.
In some ways, this book wants to point back to the revolutionary kernel of Christianity and its connection with the poor. It hopes to connect with a Jesus that had no possessions and was never concerned with the holding of power, or endowments or budgets, but who lived in the midst of the people. We have misplaced Jesus’s movement by making it into an institutional church that has become a rich class operating a wealth operation that supports a certain high class and the larger inequalities of the world, many times mirroring the economic systems of society. The Christian church has failed in so many ways.
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It has, in many instances, sided with the powerful, with economic systems of profit, fought more for power and money than it has to struggle on the side and in the trenches of the poor, the immigrants, the refugees, the homeless, the incarcerated populations, battered women, abused and abandoned children, people with disabilities, the rural small workers, and so on.
In times such as these, we must recall what and where are our allegiances and heighten our ethical awareness to make sure that we don’t retreat to our own