Walbrook Talk 3
Walbrook Talk 3
Walbrook Talk 3
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2. Each Christian is the liturgy
When Christians gather and give thanks we call it the
eucharist. They gather around Christ and where he is, there is
the whole company of heaven. When any single Christian
prays, that company prays with him, so each Christian is the
whole worshipping assembly and the uninterrupted service of
God in miniature. When a Church service ends, each member
of the congregation takes that worship out into the world. The
worshipping assembly can divide into as many little assemblies
as there are Christians, each of whom takes the whole church
service, and the whole service of Christ, with them wherever
they go.
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ourselves by our denial that we are also inflicting this pain on
our own fellows: as long as we intend to escape this
confinement, while inflicting this same pain on our fellow, we
take our prison cell with us.
But man is not left there alone. Christ is with him. Christ abides
and withstands what we inflict. He takes on the full force and
weight of this process of dissolution and lifts it from man. The
whole violence of man is directed finally against Christ, and he
alone is able to suffer it until it is over. The violence that we
released and that was coming back to us, he suffered, and he
overcame. He has taken our conflict and destruction, lifted it
and taken it away from us.
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Yet when we look around, at London, we see man crucifying
man. A slow disintegration and dissolution is taking place all
around us. Our society is afraid to receive the love of God, to
whom all love belongs and to whom all love returns. It wants to
be loved, but it also fears and wants to remain in control, ready
to withdraw from love. Our society is that figure on the cross,
squirming there, trapped by our own anxiety. As long as we are
unable to see this pain is not merely inflicted on us by others,
but comes from us, and that we inflict it on one another and so
on ourselves, we are caught and we remain the source of our
own misery. This disaster is sustained by our denial and failure
to take responsibility, our inability to say that we sin against
one another. Each of us is a battleground on which our
passions fight for possession of us: as we pass on our fear,
rage and resentment we are slowly engulfed by them. That
body on the cross is an entire culture.
The passion of Christ gives the Church its viewfinder, and only
so it is able to discern the suffering that our society puts itself
through. The Church can see that our society is on the rack.
And when the Church looks at London it also sees the
crucifixion of man lifted and removed. Christ’s passion is the
human passion taken and suffered, well and fully, to the end,
and all human fear mastered and rage overcome. Christ now
leads his people, away from their captivity to all passions and
powers. In Christ man receives the love of God: in that love all
may uncurl and turn outwards, to receive all men in
confidence.
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The Spirit enables us to take what we are given, so that we do
not kick back and pass the violence on; in this way the Lord
now makes our suffering purposeful so that it forms us into
those who now bring the love of God into the world. The body
of Christ is the entrance opened for the world and the
passageway through which the world may proceed into its
redemption. Christ leads his people through this public passion
so that the world can see and decide in all freedom, either to
shun them or to join this people.
For Christ sees the world as his own, his own people and his
own body. He identifies their suffering as his own, for he
entirely identifies himself with the world. The world is the body
that belongs to Christ, but which, since it does not yet
recognise itself as Christ recognises it, refuses to believe itself
loved and wounds itself pointlessly. So the Church sees
London, inflicting this cross on itself, but sees also Christ
refusing to leave London alone with it, but standing there, with
London and taking all that London metes out instead of
London. And where Christ is, there must his people be.
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If you are coy or mealy-mouthed or ironic or self-defensive
about this, their sins will remain with them, and you with
yours. When you drop your Englishness and you speak as
Christians, in the name of the Lord, this Church ceases to be a
cultural artefact, and starts to form in us the culture of
Christians. You are the Church, and the custodians of the
Church and the communicators of Christ. You are to hand on
what you have received and to strengthen your brothers. You
are the body of Christ. Do you not recognise yourselves yet?
The Church is watching the world in pain, cut off from God and
dying. By processing through the city, singing and praying, the
Church displays this dying in order that the resurrection-life of
Christ also be made visible. The Church does this together on
public feast days, and does so in a less visible way every day.
The Church carries this cross through the streets of every city,
as though it were a large exclamation mark or question-mark
raised over everything that it passes. The cross is the straight
line held up against all our undertakings and agendas. So in
our public intercessions we ask each person, each business
and institution whether humankind may truly receive the love
and grace of God through them, or whether humankind is
denying and being denied this love and so being hurt and
broken here. The Church asks whether we are building a
culture that can receive its judgment and correction and so be
renewed and confident, or whether in a spirit of self-disgust,
mutual estrangement, resentment and victimhood, we are
simply dismantling the culture we received. The Church invites
people to judge themselves.
As the Church travels through its streets, we tell the city that
mankind belongs to God. But that this body is presently
alienated from Christ, divided, preyed upon and the home of
other spirits. But we insist, to anyone, no matter how resistant
to this they are, that they carry this image, and belong to this
body. We look at their faces and we see Christ there, and we
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tell them so. We tell them that they are the hidden body of
Christ, and the lost body of Christ, scattered and demoralised,
contorting themselves to escape and hold out against this
realisation. And when they prevent others from coming to this
conversion and salvation, we tell them that we see Christ
hidden, tortured and buried in them. We see every man
wrestling with the question of his own identity and trying to be
alone with a burden too big to bear. However determined they
are to fight off all comfort, Christ is with them, and like it or
lump it, we tell them that we, his people, are with them. Christ
gives the world his body, and that we, his people, are that
body. So when the world looks at us, they may see Christ. They
may see Christ in us, if they desire to.
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ideological projects that do not serve the whole nation. Of
course we all want to keep the temperature down as much as
possible, but the Church is foolish whenever it tries to make
itself less offensive, for there is no escaping the odium
attached to Christ. We Christians are on public display, we
have become a spectacle to the world, says St Paul (1
Corinthians 4.9). It is up to the world to decide whether it is
death or life that they see.