“The Treachery of Images” (French: La Trahison des images), René Magritte’s famous painting of a pipe, is one of the defining images of the surrealist movement. Painted in 1929, the image of a pipe is captioned, "Ceci n'est pas une pipe" ("This is not a pipe").
Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Image: Wikipedia |
It’s playing a game with us. If
we were asked unawares “what is that?”, we would probably reply, “a pipe”. But
it isn’t. It’s a painting of a pipe. Commenting on this, Magritte said, “The
famous pipe. How people reproached me for it! And yet, could you stuff my pipe?
No, it's just a representation, is it not? So if I had written on my picture
‘This is a pipe’, I'd have been lying!” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Treachery_of_Images, accessed 27/4/20)
In this playful way Magritte,
and surrealism generally, was posing a profound question about the nature of
reality. What is real? How do we know it? How can we interact with it? What is
the role of representation in mediating reality?
Magritte’s picture came to mind
while thinking about some of the debates and suggestions in the Church that
have been occasioned by our current state of dispersal and lockdown. Questions
such as: Is watching a service by live-streaming the same as being there? Can
community be created on the internet? Can “Church” happen virtually? Can the
Eucharist be celebrated remotely? Can anyone celebrate the Eucharist?
Because these questions are
important, touching on the nature of the Church and the means of grace, and
because some people are bandying them about as though the answer is an obvious
“yes”, it is necessary to look more rigorously at the underlying theology. We really
ought to have a clear grasp of this before we start launching out into the deep
on our own initiative.
It is troubling that some in
the Church have suggested that an emergency situation somehow justifies putting
theology to one side and dealing with it later. In Chesterton’s “The Blue Cross”,
Father Brown unmasks the thief Flambeau as a fake priest because he attacks
reason, which no real priest would ever do. Flambeau argues, “who can look at
those millions of worlds and not feel that there may well be wonderful
universes above us where reason is utterly unreasonable?” “No”, Brown responds,
“reason is always reasonable, even in the last limbo, in the lost borderland of
things. I know that people charge the Church with lowering reason, but it is
just the other way. Alone on earth, the Church makes reason really supreme.
Alone on earth, the Church affirms that God himself is bound by reason”.
Questions about what the Church
might do differently in a time of social distancing must be bound by
theological reason, and hinge on fundamental questions about the nature of reality,
and how we engage with it. We are engaging with people differently, online
rather than in person, so it is pertinent to ask whether that changed mode of
engagement changes also the very nature of the Church that we are.
Questions about reality and how
we engage with it are, however, nothing new, whereas the internet is very new. Philosophers
down the ages have posed different theories of the nature of reality and
epistemology, how we know things, the relationship between what is out there
and what is in our heads.
The philosophical foundation
that this builds underlies every other discipline. Science, for example, depends
on being able to explore the universe and from that exploration communicate
ideas which can be independently verified by others. Science assumes as a
postulate, its foundational frame of reference, that objects “out there” are
real, and that they are intelligible in a way that is consistent between
observers.
Christian theology, too,
affirms the reality of things in a robust and positive way, and this undergirds
everything that Christian theology has to say. This is rooted in the doctrine
of creation: God is consistent and rational, and so too is the creation. The Nicene
Creed states: “I believe in one God, the Father almighty, maker of heaven and
earth, of all things visible and invisible”. In its very first paragraph, the
Creed affirms belief, not only in God, but also in things. That objects are
real, that they are what they are, is not only our common-sense experience, it
is also, for Christians, an article of faith.
The doctrine of creation is
further exalted and dignified by the Incarnation. The Eternal Son was made man,
assuming created nature, becoming a thing whist remaining God. Now an actual
body, a soul, flesh and blood, were not only objectively real, but also joined
indissolubly in a new way to the first cause of their reality. This human
nature was not an idea, but a concrete fact: incarnate of the holy Spirit, born
of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, crucified, died and buried,
and he rose again. It’s very particular: the Incarnation happened at a
particular place and time, and if you happened to be there was visible and
tangible, “What we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes, what we have
looked at and touched with our hands”, says the First letter of John. A
symbolic star in the Grotto of the Nativity in Bethlehem marks the traditional
spot where the Incarnate Word first touched the earth. It is very small, and
whether or not it is the actual place doesn’t really matter. It says to us that
God touched the world, really touched, because God for the first time was
joined to creation in the Baby that rested for the first time on the earth that
was created out of nothing. Small it may be, but that star changes the whole
relationship between God and the world. It tells us that we have been met where
we are, in the particular nature that is ours, and that the purpose of this
meeting is our salvation.
It is, further, Christian
belief that the Incarnate Son founded a Church, “one, holy, catholic and
apostolic”. This too is in the Creed. The Church not only exists, it is “one”,
signifying not only its interior unity, but also its status as a concrete
ontological fact. The church is a thing, not just an idea. It can be actually
encountered. The reality of God, the reality of things, the reality of the
Church, are the foundation of what we believe as Christians. Indeed, there are
no abstractions in the Creed, for in it epistemological principle frames an
historical narrative anchored in space and time. Creation, Incarnation, and the
Church, are entirely to do with this real world we are part of. “Our
salvation”, also in the Creed, is not a diffuse idea, but a concrete reality. Were
it not, we would be of all people most to be pitied. No, we acknowledge “one
baptism”, the sacramental washing of actual bodies as a means of grace, “we
look for the resurrection of the dead” (“of the flesh”, as the Apostles Creed
insists), “and the life of the world to come”. Not a vague idea, this, not some
distant hope in a spirit world that somehow survives, not some preservation of “me”
in the memories of others. No, creation made new, “In my flesh I shall see
God”. Scandalous that may seem, and you may take it or leave it as you please, but
it is the Christian faith.
It is notable, then, that the
New Testament calls the Church “The Body of Christ”. A body is an objective
reality, visible, tangible, having form and substance. That it is the Body of Christ adds to this a Divine life, a
vivifying principle that joins this Body, unlike all others, indissolubly to
the first cause and source of its life. The Church indeed, in a sense, is Christ, “the whole Christ” in St
Augustine’s expression, an extension of the Incarnation into creation, and a
gathering in of creation into the life of the Most Holy Trinity. Augustine may
sound audacious, but what he says is rooted in scripture. God “has made [Christ]
the head over all things for the church, which is his body, the fullness of him
who fills all in all’ (Ephesians 1.22-23);
“through the church the wisdom of God in its rich variety might now be made
known to the rulers and authorities in the heavenly places” (Ephesians 3.10).
This high doctrine of the
Church is no haughty expression from the ages of worldly ecclesiastical power. Ephesians
was written when there were perhaps no more than a few dozen local churches
scattered around the Mediterranean world, and some two and a half centuries
before the conversion of Constantine made Christianity a tolerated religion. The
Church was small, but, like the Star in the Grotto of Bethlehem, was so many
touching places where the Incarnate God extended his saving work through the visible,
tangible presence of his Body that was the Church. Ephesians gives us a
profound statement of faith about how Christ, the new Head of creation, is
saving the universe through participation in the Divine-human hypostasis that
is his Body, and that as such is destined to draw all creation into the life of
God. The Church in the fullest sense is cosmic, because Christ has ascended to
fill all things, and the Church, ultimately, is all things being drawn into
their eschatological fulfilment. As the Russian theologian Vladimir Lossky
said, “the entire universe is called to enter within the Church... that it may
be transformed into the eternal Kingdom of God” (Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church)
The Body of Christ in the form
of the Church, cosmic in its eschatological realisation, has, like the Body of
Christ in His earthly life, a visible form on earth in this passing age. And, like
all bodies, it has a form, a structure, and an organisation. The shape of the
Church is something that appears right from the start, and is elucidated
through the New Testament.
In the Acts of the Apostles,
for example, it is notable how, from the Day of Pentecost onwards, the Church
is seen to take the place of Jesus as the visible proclamation of God’s Kingdom
in the world. That is to say, the story of Acts is of how one visible form of
Christ’s Body is replaced by another. That remarkable story-teller Luke draws
this out in a series of parallels: The Spirit descends visibly on the Church in
the Upper Room, just as on Jesus at his baptism, extending the revealed
identity of the “beloved Son” to the community of believers. Preaching, signs,
miracles, crowds of new believers, follow. The death of the first martyr,
Stephen, almost exactly parallels that of Jesus: the trial before the
Sanhedrin; the false witnesses; the judicial murder outside the city, the sole
exception being the manner of his death, for the Roman power, responsible for
the death of Jesus in Luke’s Gospel, has been tamed by his resurrection and
ascension and from then on is seen to assist the spread of the Church at every
turn. “From now on the Son of Man will be seated at the right hand of the power
of God”, says Jesus at his trial (Luke 22.69); echoed by Stephen, “’Look,’ he
said, ‘I see the heavens opened and the Son of Man standing at the right hand
of God!’” (Acts 7.56).
Even when developments happen
outside the organisation of the Church, it remains the proper task of the
Church alone to proclaim and make real the Gospel of Salvation. Where people know
something of the Gospel and have started a local initiative, it still needs to
be brought within the stream of Apostolic life, as in the case of the new
disciples in Samaria baptised by Philip, to whom the Apostles go to lay on
hands (Act 8.14-16), or the preacher
Apollos who needs to be “instructed more fully in the Way” (Acts 18.24-26).
This same principle even applies where there is direct supernatural intervention from God. An angel is sent to Cornelius to prepare him for faith in Christ (Acts 10), but it is not the business of the angel to make known the Gospel. Rather, his message is to send to Joppa and fetch Simon Peter, the Apostle, to whom this task belongs. As in the Shepherd’s field at Bethlehem (another delightful Lukan parallel!) the angelic instruction from heaven is to go and encounter a human body on earth, and so be saved.
This same principle even applies where there is direct supernatural intervention from God. An angel is sent to Cornelius to prepare him for faith in Christ (Acts 10), but it is not the business of the angel to make known the Gospel. Rather, his message is to send to Joppa and fetch Simon Peter, the Apostle, to whom this task belongs. As in the Shepherd’s field at Bethlehem (another delightful Lukan parallel!) the angelic instruction from heaven is to go and encounter a human body on earth, and so be saved.
This Church, this Body which is
the new way in which Christ is visible, has a priestly ministry to offer.
Naturally it does, for Christ is its Head, and its priesthood is the
continuation of the one priestly ministry of Christ through his Body in the
world. “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 him who called you
out of darkness into his marvellous light” (1
Peter 2.9). Saint Paul declares himself “a minister of Christ Jesus to the
Gentiles in the priestly service of the gospel of God” (Romans 15.16). The priesthood of Christ, and therefore of the Church
in Christ, as the Letter to the Hebrews makes clear, is not a priesthood like
that of Aaron with its purifications and sacrifices. Rather, it is a priesthood
like that of Melchizedek, rooted in an indestructible life, Melchizedek whose
offering was not sacrificial animals but bread and wine.
The chief tasks of the Church’s priestly ministry, as they appear in Acts, are the proclamation of the Gospel, the baptising of new disciples, and the form of worship given by Christ in the Eucharist: the breaking of bread that has taken place every first day of the week from the beginning (tangential evidence, incidentally, for the historicity of the Resurrection, for how otherwise could the persistent practice of celebrating the Eucharist every Sunday have started?).
The Church is an organised society, and within the royal priesthood of the whole Church there have from the beginning been distinctive roles, with some members invested with authority to preside, to rule, govern and sanctify the People of God. Initially these were the Apostles themselves, having their authority direct from Christ, but as the Church grew the Apostles appointed others to assist and succeed them in presiding in the increasing number of local churches. These ministers are in various places called presbyters (=elders) and bishops (=overseers). It is well known that in New Testament times these terms were not used precisely to distinguish two ranks of the ministry, but that does not mean that they were equivalent. It is also clear that there were two ranks in the ministry: those presbyter/bishops such as the Apostles themselves, or Timothy and Titus, who had oversight over a number of local churches, and exercised a monarchical ministry; and those presbyter/bishops whose ministry was usually in one local church, often exercised collegially alongside others. Those of the second rank were appointed by those of the first, by prayer with laying on of hands, and all, initially, had been appointed by the Apostles. It belongs to presbyter/bishops to preside in the church and to exercise authoritative ministry (1 Timothy 5.16; James 5.14), and the chief gathering of the Church was the weekly breaking of bread on the day of Resurrection. The unbroken practice of the Church, that presbyters and bishops alone preside at the Eucharist, is evident in the New Testament as a matter of Church order, as is the embryonic principle of Apostolic Succession.
At the same time, Eucharistic presidency is not only a matter of order, but also of power, and this too appears in the New Testament. It was to the Apostles, and not to the believers generally, that Christ at the Last Supper gave the command to “do this is remembrance of me”; and as it was the Incarnate Word who spoke, he also gave, with the command, the power to do what was commanded, which was subsequently handed on by the Apostles. The bishop Timothy is reminded by the Apostle Paul to “rekindle the gift of God that is within you through the laying on of my hands; for God did not give us a spirit of cowardice, but rather a spirit of power and of love and of self-discipline” (2 Timothy 1.6-7).
If presiding in the church belongs properly only to presbyters and bishops, by reasons both of order and of a particular charism received for this ministry, the ministries of preaching and baptism on the other hand are exercised more widely in the New Testament Church. The deacons Stephen and Philip preach the word of God, Philip baptises (Acts 7-8). This is distinct from the Eucharist, but these are ministries of outreach and of initiation, rather than of presiding within the Church. They happen, as it were, on the margins of the Church, and are directed outwards, calling people in. The Eucharist is associated from the beginning with the gathered Church, the believers meeting to break bread, in which it belonged to the presbyter/bishops to preside.
That presbyters and bishops are called “priests”, in a way distinguished from the general priesthood of the Church, is something of a red herring. This usage appears explicitly only after New Testament times. Polycrates of Ephesus (c.190) referred to the Apostle John as a priest (“hiereus”). The heretical gnostic “Gospel of Judas” (late second century) mocks the “priesthood” of the Apostles and the Eucharistic “sacrifice” they offer over their “altar”, saying “A baker cannot feed all creation” (Gnosticism regarded matter as evil, and sacraments as the deceits of an evil deity). The Gospel of Judas is a polemic against orthodox Christianity, but it illustrates the terminology that had already, clearly, come into regular use. It confuses matters, that, in English, the word presbyter, meaning “elder”, became anglicised as “priest”, a word which also translates the Greek hiereus and Latin sacerdos, words which have various meanings not all of them the same as the Christian concept of priesthood.
The chief tasks of the Church’s priestly ministry, as they appear in Acts, are the proclamation of the Gospel, the baptising of new disciples, and the form of worship given by Christ in the Eucharist: the breaking of bread that has taken place every first day of the week from the beginning (tangential evidence, incidentally, for the historicity of the Resurrection, for how otherwise could the persistent practice of celebrating the Eucharist every Sunday have started?).
The Church is an organised society, and within the royal priesthood of the whole Church there have from the beginning been distinctive roles, with some members invested with authority to preside, to rule, govern and sanctify the People of God. Initially these were the Apostles themselves, having their authority direct from Christ, but as the Church grew the Apostles appointed others to assist and succeed them in presiding in the increasing number of local churches. These ministers are in various places called presbyters (=elders) and bishops (=overseers). It is well known that in New Testament times these terms were not used precisely to distinguish two ranks of the ministry, but that does not mean that they were equivalent. It is also clear that there were two ranks in the ministry: those presbyter/bishops such as the Apostles themselves, or Timothy and Titus, who had oversight over a number of local churches, and exercised a monarchical ministry; and those presbyter/bishops whose ministry was usually in one local church, often exercised collegially alongside others. Those of the second rank were appointed by those of the first, by prayer with laying on of hands, and all, initially, had been appointed by the Apostles. It belongs to presbyter/bishops to preside in the church and to exercise authoritative ministry (1 Timothy 5.16; James 5.14), and the chief gathering of the Church was the weekly breaking of bread on the day of Resurrection. The unbroken practice of the Church, that presbyters and bishops alone preside at the Eucharist, is evident in the New Testament as a matter of Church order, as is the embryonic principle of Apostolic Succession.
At the same time, Eucharistic presidency is not only a matter of order, but also of power, and this too appears in the New Testament. It was to the Apostles, and not to the believers generally, that Christ at the Last Supper gave the command to “do this is remembrance of me”; and as it was the Incarnate Word who spoke, he also gave, with the command, the power to do what was commanded, which was subsequently handed on by the Apostles. The bishop Timothy is reminded by the Apostle Paul to “rekindle the gift of God that is within you through the laying on of my hands; for God did not give us a spirit of cowardice, but rather a spirit of power and of love and of self-discipline” (2 Timothy 1.6-7).
If presiding in the church belongs properly only to presbyters and bishops, by reasons both of order and of a particular charism received for this ministry, the ministries of preaching and baptism on the other hand are exercised more widely in the New Testament Church. The deacons Stephen and Philip preach the word of God, Philip baptises (Acts 7-8). This is distinct from the Eucharist, but these are ministries of outreach and of initiation, rather than of presiding within the Church. They happen, as it were, on the margins of the Church, and are directed outwards, calling people in. The Eucharist is associated from the beginning with the gathered Church, the believers meeting to break bread, in which it belonged to the presbyter/bishops to preside.
That presbyters and bishops are called “priests”, in a way distinguished from the general priesthood of the Church, is something of a red herring. This usage appears explicitly only after New Testament times. Polycrates of Ephesus (c.190) referred to the Apostle John as a priest (“hiereus”). The heretical gnostic “Gospel of Judas” (late second century) mocks the “priesthood” of the Apostles and the Eucharistic “sacrifice” they offer over their “altar”, saying “A baker cannot feed all creation” (Gnosticism regarded matter as evil, and sacraments as the deceits of an evil deity). The Gospel of Judas is a polemic against orthodox Christianity, but it illustrates the terminology that had already, clearly, come into regular use. It confuses matters, that, in English, the word presbyter, meaning “elder”, became anglicised as “priest”, a word which also translates the Greek hiereus and Latin sacerdos, words which have various meanings not all of them the same as the Christian concept of priesthood.
This is the Church we have
received, founded by Christ and having an objective reality and definite form
and organisation. But in our own day this is not always well received or
understood. If we insist on the presiding ministry of presbyters and bishops,
we can be accused of clericalism, or told, facilely, that “we are all priests”
(that could be argued, in a sense – but we are not all presbyters). The modern
appeal is to autonomy, and what is more autonomous, more democratic, than the
free subject sitting before a computer screen, monarch of his or her own world.
Who needs a priest? But such a supposition is completely detached from the life
of the Church. There is no organic continuity or connection with the Body. “Cut
off from me, you can do nothing” (John
15.5).
If we insist on the essential
form of the liturgy as something we receive, not something we can devise or
change, we can be accused of nostalgia and inflexibility. In this post-modern age
of democracy, consumer power and choice, are we not exalting a merely human
institution, an institution which, moreover, historically has so often failed
to live up to its own teachings? Should we, can we, not change this institution
according to what we imagine our own needs to be?
These thoughts and questions
have been around for a good few years. When I was training for the priesthood
they were prominent in the reading lists and course assignments devised by
academic staff, many approaching retirement, for whom these had been lively
ideas when they themselves were first studying theology. They have certainly
gained ground in the Church of England. The 2004 report “Mission Shaped Church”
was widely criticised for its theological lightness, but gave all the impetus
that was needed to the “Fresh Expressions” movement. “Fresh Expressions of
Church” (without the article that the noun “Church” requires) are described as
“new forms of church that emerge within contemporary culture and engage
primarily with those who don’t ‘go to church’”. They “may look different and
seem different to what’s been done before, but they make discipleship a
priority – valuing people’s different faith journeys and supporting them as
they wonder, explore and encounter”. (https://freshexpressions.org.uk) .
Fresh Expressions are usually sacramentally
light, as that preamble makes clear. Discipleship, the individual’s journey,
are to the fore. The website only once mentions “The eucharistic heart of the church”
– in a short piece drawing heavily on the theology of Archbishop Rowan
Williams, and which seems to have had little impact on the movement after being
filed on the website. (https://freshexpressions.org.uk/find-out-more/going-deep-1-the-mixed-economy/) .
Fresh Expressions are
explicitly defined as complete and self-contained alternatives to “Inherited”
churches (i.e. things like parish congregations), supposedly having everything
that is needed for ecclesial life. Nothing that is simply an outreach
initiative, designed to draw people into an historic liturgical community, can
count as a “Fresh Expression” in the Church of England’s annual “statistics for
mission” roundup. But a monthly meeting in a café for some prayer and Bible study,
even with no sacramental content, apparently can – so long as no-one actually
goes to church afterwards. This is, however, far short of the New Testament
idea of the Church as explored above, and as experienced through Christian
history.
It is against this background
of ecclesiological drift that one has to read, and understand, and be concerned
about, the statement put out by the Archbishops when the suspension of public
worship was first announced. The Church of England was called upon “to become a
different sort of church”; “radically different”; “rooted in prayer and service
to others” – nothing wrong with prayer and service of course, but the Eucharist
was relegated to something to be done “where possible”, meaning implicitly that
it was no longer necessary. (https://www.churchofengland.org/more/media-centre/news/archbishops-call-church-england-become-radically-different-public-worship).
Then followed further letters
closing churches, in accordance with Government requirements that came into
force a few days later, but also – contrary to the Government’s explicit
permission – banning even clergy from entering their own churches to
live-stream services with no-one else present (a ban later “clarified” as “guidance”).
The Archbishops’ statements beg
a huge question: is it really possible for the Church to “become a different
sort of church”? Of course, the Church can and does adapt remarkably to
external circumstances. But it cannot change in its essential nature and remain
the Church founded by Christ. It is a gathering in of people into a new life, not
virtually, but really. The Eucharist is essentially the same if celebrated in a
glorious cathedral to the strains of Mozart, or in secret in the corner of a
prison cell in the Gulag with a few salvaged crumbs of bread. Baptism is
essentially the same if administered at a beach mission in the roaring sea, or in
a silver bowl in the private chapel of a royal palace. The Sacraments were
instituted by Christ and handed on by the Apostles, who may have been startled
had they been able to see some of the ways in which the Dominical commands were
to be fulfilled; but they would, nevertheless, have recognised what was done.
The nature of the Church and its
mission and ministry remains essentially the same, but indeed may vary greatly
in expression, according to circumstances. The term “Fresh expressions of [the] Church”
has a theological value, and it is a pity that is has been so devalued by the indiscriminate
way it has sometimes been used.
It is an easy step – or perhaps
a slippery slope – from “Fresh Expressions” understood so loosely, to proposing
that the Church can become “radically different” or even “go online”. This is
to say, in effect, that the Church has the power to radically change its
nature, to become delocalised, disembodied, virtual. To consist, in fact, of
images on screens, which are representations, not reality.
Many would argue that there is
nothing wrong, per se, in the use of images in Christian worship. The
mainstream position in East and West takes the view that the Commandment to
make no graven image (Exodus 20.4)
has been modified by the Incarnation. God has made an image of himself, Christ
who is “is the image of the invisible God”. Moreover, Jesus himself omitted
this Commandment in his own summary of the Law (Matthew 19.18-19).
Icons in the Christian
tradition are, however, not images of this present time and space, but rather representations
of eschatological realities. It is only as such that they can mediate grace. Eastern
theological traditions affirm a direct, quasi-sacramental grace of images, so that
by meditating before an icon of Christ or a saint, one may come into spiritual
communion with the real person who even now is in God’s Kingdom, whose representation
we gaze on in this passing age. The West, especially since the reforming
Council of Trent, sensitive to protestant criticisms, has tended to emphasise
more the didactic role of holy images as acting on the mind to raise us
indirectly to Divine contemplation. But in both cases it is the eschatological
dimension that makes sacred images a means of grace, mediating a transcendent
power. Images on computer screens of a scene in this passing age are not the
same. They mediate to us, essentially, only where we are now, and are the gateway
to no journey of the spirit, no breaking through of the world to come, as
sacred images can be.
There is an iconic significance
also to church buildings, for sacred architecture, too, seeks to express
eschatological realities, a representation in brick and stone of the heavenly
Jerusalem. A church building is a consecrated space, lending itself to no other
purpose than the liturgy, caught up in which, mystically, with angels and
archangels and the whole company of heaven, we pass through the gates of pearl
and tread already the streets of golden glass that we cannot yet see. Of
course, the liturgy does not require a consecrated building, and if need be we
can gather and celebrate anywhere. The power of the liturgy lifts us into the
heavenly places anyway. But, if a building is available, if the sacred
architecture speaking of Divine realities can be seen even by way of a computer
screen, should it not be used?
The frustration and pain felt
by so many clergy at present, constrained by episcopal obedience to stream
services from their homes when in so many cases they could just as easily do so
from nearby churches without any risk to anyone, seems not to be understood. A
secular home interior, however tastefully arranged, reflects back to us our
present realities rather than mediating transcendent ones. The fact that the
Archbishop of Canterbury chose to stream his Easter Day Eucharist from his
kitchen, when all the world knows that he has two functioning, historic and
beautiful chapels in his home, is sadly indicative of the state of
ecclesiological bewilderment in which we find ourselves.
Every time bread and wine are
taken in the Eucharist, part of the creation is drawn through into
eschatological reality: both the bread and wine themselves, which become the
Body and Blood of the Ascended Lord who fills all things; and the faithful who
become what they receive.
But one part of the creation
cannot be detached from another, and the Eucharist, like the Church itself, is
cosmic in its ultimate scope. Certainly, one celebration of the Eucharist, be
it with only a handful of faithful present, or even in exceptional
circumstances celebrated by a priest alone (as representing both apostolic authority
and the people of God), nevertheless embraces the whole Church. Thus, Cranmer’s
Eucharistic Rite in the Book of Common Prayer prays that “we and all thy whole Church may obtain
remission of our sins, and all other benefits of [Christ’s] passion”. Or, as the
congregation prays in the Roman Rite, “May the Lord accept the sacrifice at
your hands, for the praise and glory of his name, for our good and the good of all his holy Church”.
For the Eucharistic action to
happen, for the sacrifice of Christ to be pleaded for those present and absent,
for the whole Church to be caught up in this action, it is necessary that bread
and wine be actually taken and offered, consecrated and received. The tangible
Church offers tangible elements; the real presence of the elements is prior to
the real presence of Christ whose sacramental sign they become. Certainly, believers
who are not present can join in spiritually with the offering being made, and
may make an act of spiritual communion. Spiritual worship may be offered
anywhere, for “God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit
and truth” (John 4.24). It should not need to be pointed out that this does not
depend on the internet, an invention of the mere last few decades. The absent faithful
have always made spiritual intentions in union with the Eucharist being offered
elsewhere. Live-streaming, or having pictures of people watching on screen via
video conference software, makes no difference in principle to this at all. It
is the same thing, aided by new means.
New media may enhance the
experience of remote spiritual participation, but do not change its nature. The
internet, in fact, can add nothing new to the nature of the Church, to the
possibilities of its life, or to the matter and form of its Sacraments. These
were instituted by Christ, and the Church in every age must receive them with
faithfulness and obedience. The internet is nothing more than a tool of
communication, a human invention of recent years. It is a good thing, and a
blessing in a time of social distancing. But it does not, and cannot, add any
new ontological dimension to the Church’s existence in which the Church and the
Sacraments assume a different nature.
In fact, we can express this
more broadly, and say that the internet adds no new ontological dimension to
human existence generally. It is a profound mistake to suppose that it does. Human
persons remain bodies, and community and relationships remain embodied. The
internet is no gnostic “Astral Plane” into which we can project our
consciousness and live some new disembodied reality. There is no such thing as
online existence, only images on screens representing – and who knows if
faithfully or not – a physical reality elsewhere. CS Lewis, in his theological
science fiction trilogy “Out of the Silent Planet”, published in 1945, posits a
race of fallen beings on the moon where, “when a young man takes a maiden in
marriage, they do not lie together, but each lies with a cunningly fashioned
image of the other, made to move and to be warm by devilish arts, for real
flesh will not please them, they are so dainty in their dreams of lust” (That Hideous Strength, 13.1) Lewis knew
nothing of the internet, but his prescience is remarkable. The treacherous
image deceives: in online “relationships” the disembodied representation of a
person is not a person, and true Eros, the love that transcends the boundary of
the self in going out to the other, cannot happen. Bodies do not meet. The two
cannot become one, because they cannot become one flesh.
It is the same in the Eros of
the Church, the Deified Body in which the many become one, in which the self is
transcended in the new ecclesial reality which is Christ. It is embodied by its
very nature, and a disembodied church is a contradiction in terms. “Church” – the Church – cannot happen online,
because online is only a representation, an image that may help our communication,
but that becomes a treacherous image if we mistake it for the reality it
represents. If, indeed, what we see represents reality at all. Images can be
changed at will on our computer screens. Even in live streaming I may choose to
appear in a hat and glasses that do not exist, or standing in the Palace of
Versailles or on the mountains of the Moon. This can indeed be done quite
easily by accident, as some live-streaming clergy have discovered…
Sacraments require material
things, really present. Baptism requires real water actually poured over an
actual body. Looking at an image of water being poured on a screen will not do.
Similarly, bread and wine cannot be consecrated remotely by a priest looking at
an image of them on a screen. Why not? Because there is no bread and wine
there! It is only an image. To make the point clearer, consider the problem in
this way: could bread and wine at a remote address have been consecrated by a
priest elsewhere, before the days of the internet? Indeed, might St Paul, in
writing an Institution Narrative in 1 Corinthians 11, be considered to have
consecrated the bread and wine that were in the houses of the people of Corinth,
when his letter got there? The absurdity of the suggestion is its own answer.
If it could not be done before the internet, then it cannot be done after, for
the internet is only a means of communication, changing nothing in the nature
of human society or the Church.
Likewise, some have said, “God
can do anything”: the Holy Spirit is not limited, therefore God can create
“Church” online, can consecrate sacraments remotely, and so on. Now, to write
the words “God can…”, in front of a logical contradiction, is simply to write
nonsense – and see above for the logical contradictions. But if that is not
enough, consider putting it this way: “If I step off the pinnacle of this
Temple, God can hold me up, so that I dash not my foot against a stone,”. I
wouldn’t recommend trying it at home. And in any case the scriptural answer to
that, of course, is, “Do not put the Lord your God to the test.” (Matthew 4.5-7). Belief in the
omnipotence of God also requires belief in, and attention to, what God has in
fact done, and not what we would like God to do according to our fancy.
The current situation of social
distancing and closed churches has brought to the fore theological currents of
thinking that have been building for years, and whose inadequacies are being
exposed. Treating the form of the Church as something almost infinitely mutable
runs the risk of eliminating the Church altogether. Mistaking representation
for reality invites us into a seductive and easy, but surreal, world of
imagination and shifting forms, moulded to our own desires. Whereas the Church
in its reality, its ontological solidity, moulds and changes us. Conversion is only possible in
submitting to a reality that is greater and truer than ourselves.
The online age gives us
powerful new tools for staying in touch, sharing and communicating, and indeed
for reaching out at the boundaries of the Church to draw people in. These are
great blessings. But the treachery of images deceives, if we mistake them for
what they are not. If I cannot smoke it, then it is not a pipe. If I cannot
encounter the life-changing and life-giving Body of Christ in its incarnate reality,
then it is not a church.
Matthew Duckett
1st May 2020
3 comments:
Well said Fr. Bravo.
Good theology and commentary. I'm confused, however, by the relevance of the "Ceci n'est pas une pipe." Is it so obvious to most readers that it refers to a famous commentary by Freud, who used the image of a pipe to refer to something central to his view of psychology, so obvious that it needs no further comment--, or am I the only one who thinks of Freud 's implication when I see that painting? --There was an interesting talk in Pittsburgh a few years ago, that I did not get to see, about an imagined dialogue between CS Lewis and Freud, who had very different "centers of meaning."
Thank you, I wasn't aware of that dimension to the picture, interesting. My point was less sophisticated I'm afraid, just about the trick the image plays: an image of a pipe isn't a pipe.
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