
“But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s own people, in order that you may proclaim the mighty acts of the one who called you out of darkness into God’s marvelous light.
Once you were not a people,
but now you are God’s people;
once you had not received mercy,
but now you have received mercy.”
1 Peter 2:9-10
New technology often promotes revolutionary change. The development of the printing press spurred the Protestant reformation. With the printed Word of God available to individuals, believers could begin to read scripture for themselves and not rely upon the authority of church leaders. When English monarchs, as leaders of the English Reformation, authorized and commissioned the printing of English translations of the Bible, individual believers were able to understand and interpret the word in their own language. All of this reinforced the idea of a priesthood of all believers. Individuals in community had both the authority and the responsibility to be in relationship with God and to be servants of God in the world.
Of course there were limits to this new technology. It was expensive. Printing presses were cumbersome and slow to work. Only the wealthy could afford complete Bibles. Only those able to read could make use of a printed Bible. More importantly, there would be a sense of loss of the full experience of hearing the Word spoken aloud in a community of believers.
We have been blessed in this time of crisis with new technology to help us stay connected. We are participating in a forced revolution in our lives of work and worship. And yet there are great limits to this technology. Facebook, which is a free service, can be cumbersome. It often slows our feed, so you get glitches and pauses in the stream when you watch at home. Many of us have had to buy new equipment in order to see and be seen, to hear and to be heard online. The learning curve is often steep, and we find ourselves spending the first 25% of a meeting reminding each other how to use Zoom. So, manageability, affordability, and literacy remain blocks to complete participation.
Worst of all is the loss of experience. Zoom meetings are exhausting for many, because they feel so different from being in the room with our coworkers. Streamed worship is not the same as being in the worship space with fellow believers.
— just as I typed these words, my wife shared that there will be no in-person summer camp for the kids, and they have chosen not to participate in the online offering, because it will not be the same experience as being there –
And yet. And yet. It was through that clunky printing press — and through that expensive and demanding printed Word — that a new community came to be. People began to understand that the word and work of God were in their hands. Now it can be through this technology that we understand that we don’t have to be in a room together to be in community together. Through this technology we can understand that every one of our homes is a sanctuary, every one of our hearts is a temple, every one of us is a priest and a servant of God!
And, when we do gather together in person, we will understand in new ways, that we truly are the Body of Christ!
Of course we will always have access to the oldest, simplest, purest, least expensive, and surest means of communicating with the Almighty: prayer.
Gracious and loving God, creator of life, author of innovation, move in our hearts and minds as we open ourselves to new ways of being the church. Help us to remember our core beliefs, and to act on them. Strengthen us as we deepen our relationships with you, with each other, and to the world. We hurt for those whose lives have been taken or harmed by this disease and by the racial animus that motivates so many. Grant us wisdom and courage to speak up, speak out, and act for healing and justice. This we pray through Christ our Savior. Amen.
(Now please excuse me, I need to get to work on a backyard summer camp for the kids!)
Pastor George