{"id":57865,"date":"2021-10-14T17:26:14","date_gmt":"2021-10-14T22:26:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/praytellblog.com\/?p=57865"},"modified":"2021-10-18T13:49:47","modified_gmt":"2021-10-18T18:49:47","slug":"what-have-candles-to-do-with-flowers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/praytellblog.com\/index.php\/2021\/10\/14\/what-have-candles-to-do-with-flowers\/","title":{"rendered":"&#8220;What have candles to do with flowers?&#8221;"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>I am often amazed at how rarely academics have a chance (or take the opportunity) to listen to their colleagues speak about their own work, and at the same time, how insightful and edifying the exercise can be to learn unknown aspects of theology and religious studies from someone who knows \u2018other things.\u2019<\/p>\r\n<p>For me it was a talk on Newman (now Saint John Henry Newman) about whom I know only bits and pieces in a chronology of Anglican to Roman. Speaking at the annual Holy Cross Lecture at Huron University College, musicologist and Anglican priest Stephen McClatchie gave an overview of Newman\u2019s theology drawn primarily from musical aesthetics which was fascinating in all its aspects, but, as usual, it was the bits about liturgy which really caught my attention.<\/p>\r\n<p>The title above, \u201cwhat have candles to do with flowers?\u201d is part of a short section of Newman\u2019s <em>The Idea of a University <\/em>(although rarely included in the various editions, and then only in an appendix) in which Newman discusses how liturgy (or \u2018worship\u2019 to use his word) is what makes disparate elements become a unified event. So candles are distinct from flowers, as are vestments from music, and incense from genuflection \u2013 but in the corporate action of liturgy, they are unified in common purpose. How is that? Newman focuses on the worship of God that is the lifting up of one\u2019s heart&#8230;<\/p>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">[But} not of one heart, but of many all at once; next, it is the devotion, not of hearts only, but of bodies too; not of eyes only, or hands only, or voices only, or knees only, but of the whole man; and next, the devotion passes on to more than soul and body\u2026<\/p>\r\n<p>For Newman it is the communal act of responding to God\u2019s initiative with the lifting up of one\u2019s heart, but not alone \u2013 with others \u2013 all at once \u2013 which leads to the whole person and the whole Body of Christ worshiping together. This is what then brings all the elements of liturgy together.<\/p>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Blended together indivisibly, and sealed with the image of unity, by reason of the one idea of worship, in which they live and to which they minister\u2026Take away the idea, and what are they worth? the whole pageant becomes a mummery. The worship made them one\u2026<\/p>\r\n<p>I took a course in Religious Studies as an undergraduate (only because it was required) and I have often wished I could go back and offer my grateful thanks to the professor, Robert Ellwood, for how much his teaching and writing have helped me understand many things, particularly in teaching the distinction between theology and religious studies. In all of his textbooks there is a section on symbol, ritual, music, words, people, attire and more which when combined he calls a rite. A rite can therefore be summarized as the \u201corchestration of symbols\u201d (<em>Introducing Religion: From Inside and Outside<\/em>). In many ways, hearing Newman\u2019s description brought me back to Ellwood and how these two scholars, in very different tasks and circumstances, remind us of something very important. Those of us who are called to gather together to lift up our hearts to God, to worship God, must be participants not just spectators, even if \u201clifting up one\u2019s heart to God,\u201d being attentive, being there, is the whole of the response \u2013 that is sufficient.<\/p>\r\n<p>Newman\u2019s work also reminds why he is often called \u201cthe absent Father of Vatican II\u201d because so many concepts found in his writing find fruition in various conciliar documents. This delayed appreciation is not out of step with Newman\u2019s biography of being viewed with suspicion in two churches through his lifetime; he was either behind his time, ahead of his time, out of step with his time, or simply late to being appreciated for his insights. And it was in hearing his insight about lifting up our hearts \u2013 our whole being \u2013 with the whole church &#8211; that I heard anew the call for active participation as the necessary tension to divine initiative.<\/p>\r\n<p>So much of liturgical and sacramental theology is about balancing two apparent opposites in tension, and in that tension is found the essence of the field. The rediscovered essentiality of God as active in liturgy; God, the actor of efficacious sacramentality, is still balanced by the response of the baptized, individually and above all, in common. To lift up our hearts may not have the precision of doctrinal agreement by what it excludes as impossible to faith or includes of all the qualities of what makes one a member of a particular ecclesial confession, but as a corporate communal act it is an efficacious response. When done with the whole body (individual bodies in \u2018the body\u2019 of presence and proximity) perhaps we begin anew to be the body of Christ that orders things essential and non-essential together as part of the worship of the living God, the efficacious actor of our sanctification.\u00a0<\/p>\r\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>I am often amazed at how rarely academics have a chance (or take the opportunity) to listen to their colleagues speak about their own work, and at the same time, how insightful and edifying the exercise can be to learn unknown aspects of theology and religious studies from someone who knows \u2018other things.\u2019 For me [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":66,"featured_media":57869,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_feature_clip_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false},"categories":[3119,3496,31],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-57865","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-the-plaza-new-ws","category-liturgical-theology","category-sacramental-theology"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.8 - 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Canon Dr. Lizette Larson-Miller is professor of liturgy and sacramental theology at Bexley Seabury Seminary in Chicago, IL, and emeritus Huron Lawson Professor of Liturgy at Huron University College (Ontario, Canada). She is also the Canon Precentor of the Anglican Diocese of Huron, and past president of Societas Liturgica and the IALC (International Anglican Liturgical Consultation). Her particular interests (manifested in her publishing) span liturgical history (especially late antiquity and early medieval liturgical developments), rites and rituals with the sick, the dying, and the dead, and contemporary sacramental theology and sacramentality. She holds two degrees in music, an MA in liturgical studies from St. John's University (Collegeville), and a PhD in liturgical studies from the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California. 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Canon Dr. Lizette Larson-Miller is professor of liturgy and sacramental theology at Bexley Seabury Seminary in Chicago, IL, and emeritus Huron Lawson Professor of Liturgy at Huron University College (Ontario, Canada). She is also the Canon Precentor of the Anglican Diocese of Huron, and past president of Societas Liturgica and the IALC (International Anglican Liturgical Consultation). Her particular interests (manifested in her publishing) span liturgical history (especially late antiquity and early medieval liturgical developments), rites and rituals with the sick, the dying, and the dead, and contemporary sacramental theology and sacramentality. She holds two degrees in music, an MA in liturgical studies from St. John's University (Collegeville), and a PhD in liturgical studies from the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California. 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