Skip to main content

Returning to Church

Unlike Barbara Brown Taylor, I am returning to church.  Today was my first day back (at least officially) after maternity leave.  Two wonderful kids gave me the most beautiful cards - one for me and one for Maya - that made me feel so welcome.

In some ways, not much has changed about St. Aidan's.  The place looks the same and of course, being the Episcopal Church, the liturgy is just where I left it.  But it some ways, things do seem different.  There are some new faces -- people that have come to check out St. Aidan's while I've been gone and stuck around.  I look forward to learning their names and getting to know them.  And there are the people that I know well whose lives have changed since I've been gone.  Maybe because a child is about to graduate from high school or because a parent has gotten ill.  I look forward to being back among these people that I have come to know and love and finding out about their lives again. 

Sometimes I hear people talk about how they prefer to conduct their spirituality outside of a religious institution.  How they don't need a church to have God.  And of course, that is absolutely true.  God is there for each of us no matter where we look and being in a dedicated building with a cross and lighted candles isn't necessary to find God.  And yet, having spent the majority of these last 12 weeks floating around different churches and even (gasp!) sometimes going to no church at all, I have a renewed sense of the importance of gathering to worship on a regular basis among a community that knows me.  When we sing a hymn, I can pick out the voices of the people around me.  When we say the Prayers of the People, I can think of the needs I know of the people gathered there and of the people missing.  When we gather around the table for communion, I look at the faces (eyes closed, faces reverent, smiling, unsure, sad, worried - however they might come) and see the people that have become my family.  At coffee hour, I connect with the people that have fed us and cared for us while we've been readjusting to life with our expanded numbers.  It is good to be back! 

Comments

  1. Love those cards. You ARE so cool and I know St. A's is glad to have you back!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Gospel as Stand-Up Comedy

April 8, 2018 Easter 2 John 20:19-31 Today in the church world is often called Low Sunday because of the generally low attendance.  After all, everyone came last week and heard the biggest story of all! So church can be crossed off the to-do list for a while. Have you heard the joke about the man who came out of church on Easter and the minister pulled him aside and said, "You need to join the Army of the Lord!" The man replied, "I'm already in the Army of the Lord."  The minister questioned, “Then how come I don't see you except at Christmas and Easter?" The man whispered back, "I'm in the secret service."   I recently heard a name for today that I much prefer to Low Sunday - Holy Humor Sunday.  Apparently, the early church had a tradition of observing the week following Easter Sunday as "days of joy and laughter" with parties and picnics to celebrate Jesus' resurrection.  And so there is a (small but grow

Shining Like the Sun

Last Epiphany Exodus 34:29-35; Luke 9:28-36 My youngest daughter, Maya, will turn 9 years old on Tuesday.  Which makes me feel a bit nostalgic. Just yesterday she was my baby, happily toddling after her older brother and sister.  A naturally joyful person, she was just as excited about a trip to the grocery store as a trip to the zoo, so she transformed our boring chores into adventures just by her presence.  And now she is this big kid -- a total extrovert who loves making slime and turning cartwheels. Sometimes Maya’s birthday is just a regular day.  Every once in a while it falls on Ash Wednesday (which makes celebrating a little hard).  This year, it’s on Shrove Tuesday, which is perfect for her! Because Maya is our pancake fairy. In our house, whenever we find ourselves with a free Saturday morning, Maya and I make pancakes.  We work side by side, laughing and sniffing and tasting -- and sometimes pretending we are competing on a Chopped championship.  Often there is

Ascension Day for Modern People - the Overview Effect

May 8, 2016 Ascension Day The Ascension of Jesus into heaven is a tricky story for us modern people.  We imagine, maybe, the medieval religious art that shows Jesus wearing his white robe floating up into the sky above the astonished disciples, emerging above the clouds.   Or, maybe instead, we imagine it more like a scene from Star Trek: “Beam me up, God!”   In the early Church’s world view, this story would have made more sense.  Back when people understand the world to be flat and hadn’t yet explored the heavens with space shuttles and satellites and telescopes.  It’s harder now to take this story seriously.  We’ve been above the clouds - we know what’s up there.  Luckily for the modern Church, the Feast of the Ascension falls 10 days before the Feast of Pentecost, which means it’s always on a weekday and is pretty easy to skip.  We can go straight from Easter and the post-resurrection stories to Pentecost and never have to worry about Jesus floating overhead.  Bu