Thursday, March 26, 2009

The Church of the Dead

On my way home from class this afternoon, I took time to notice the old graveyard on the left. Surrounded by a simple wrought iron fence, the burying ground (that's what they're called out here) is a small church yard of rolling hills punctuated haphazardly by slim stone grave markers. For the first time in weeks all the snow has finally melted away, revealing the depressingly brown grass beneath. When I had reached the far end, I glanced backwards toward the burying ground and the church steeple caught my eye. Suddenly a thought popped into my head:

Too often the church is a graveyard.

One of the tragic things about the church is that it can be so oriented toward the hereafter that Christians begin to rest-in-peace here in this life. People get saved in the pews and die right there in the sanctuary—and before long the church begins to stink.

In a few of my classes, death comes up frequently in conversation. The idea of living our lives oriented toward death is often tied up with ideas of nihilism and meaninglessness. For thinkers like Nietzsche and Heidegger, there is something about this crushing reality, when grasped in all its weight and finality, that throws into sharp relief the value and beauty of our present life. Living toward death necessitates creating meaning and saying a bold "Yes!" to the time that we have.

What is odd is that Christianity is also oriented toward death—but too often with the opposite result. Instead of generating a life-affirming "Yes!" to our lives here and now, Christianity too often casts an austere, reprimanding glance toward this life and then stares soberly ahead toward what is yet to come.

Honestly, this sort of attitude makes no sense to me. There is no reason that the anticipation of a grand future has to cast a grim shadow on the present. This life needs to be reclaimed. God has placed us here on this earth in this particular place at this particular time with these particular people for a reason. To neglect this life—with its great blessings as well as its great adversities—is to shrug off our connectedness with God. This life is where we meet our fellow humans in a deep and intimate way. This life is where we do the work of God. This life is where we first truly see God.

God is not the God of corpse-like living, of sitting and rotting in the church pews while the organist's dirge echoes around the sanctuary. God is the God of yes-saying, of vibrant and engaged living here and now. God has given us life—it is our responsibility to live.

2 comments:

  1. First of all, beautifully written. I especially like your line, "People get saved in the pews then die right there in the sanctuary..." I far too often have heard what you are talking about here -- the emphasis on making sure people have a "ticket to heaven" (that expression really bothers me, but that's another blog, maybe) with the sole focus of trying to "save" an entire group of people, "presumably" non-Christian, proclaiming them as "lost" or looking toward a "Christless eternity." Those types of proclamations make my skin crawl. I agree. We are HERE. We are NOW. There is so much that can be missed, right next to you, that can draw you closer to the Great Mystery, God.

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  2. Well put, I think, both Matt and Troy. One of the things that I am finally beginning to take so much more seriously as I ponder the "here and now" is how my personal theology is shaping itself up right along these lines. My assumptions about God certainly figure in about the afterlife, but there is nothing that can supplant the incredible value of the present moment. If we are creatures who are obviously created in such a way that we can't help living in the present moment, why bother looking very far into the future, something we have so little control or understanding about to begin with?

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