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22 January 2014

Setting the Lord's Table: Reflections on Altar Guild Ministry

Detail of miniature of the Marriage of the Lamb, "Dyson Perrins Apocalypse"
(England, 13th c.) [J. Paul Getty Museum]
by Audra Yoder


I

Feasts hosted by lords or kings in medieval England were occasions of great pomp and ceremony. Elaborate rituals governed every aspect of the decking of a great feudal hall. The rites of preparation began in the morning with the laying of the tablecloth, and culminated in the evening with the ceremonial uncovering of the lord’s bread and utensils in preparation for eating.

The retainers charged with the task of laying the tablecloth had the highest honor. While the hall was being prepared, these retainers—known collectively as the “affinity” of their lord—were required and expected to behave as though they were in the presence of the lord himself. They were to bow, to avoid turning their backs to the high table, and to observe every detail of etiquette even in their master’s absence. In ceremonial practice, the presence of the lord’s table was equivalent to the presence of the lord himself.

In the same way, altar guilds are charged with assuming the Lord’s presence as they handle his dishes and table linens. As a generous host delights both in the anticipation of beloved guests and in their presence, altar guild members solemnly rejoice in the preparation of the Table, knowing that its Guest and Head is already present. When we approach Christ’s Table, we approach Christ himself. The technicalities of our Eucharistic theology ought not to affect how we behave in the Lord’s presence.

There is a unique joy in altar guild ministry, because it affords the opportunity of serving Christ, the clergy, and fellow parishioners on different levels simultaneously. In a lower sense than the Sacrament itself, altar guild service brings into being that which it represents—the communal Supper of the Lamb. Truly, those with whom we Commune are our companions in the highest sense—the word “companion” means literally “one who breaks bread with another.” In the Eucharist, Christ is simultaneously the Host, the Guest of honor, and the Meal itself. Like the medieval host, he shares his bread with his companions in order to communicate and realize two essential truths: that he is the provider of the food, and the one who elevates his companions by sharing his bread, and by extension his life, with them.

II

In 1939, a German sociologist named Norbert Elias published a massive work that would later be translated into English as The Civilizing Process. Elias attempted to trace the evolution of modern manners and thereby to articulate what exactly differentiated the “civilized” from the “uncivilized” in the European mind. Like any good scholar, Elias avoided placing value judgments on changes wrought by centuries-long historical processes. Still, it seems to me that some of his arguments point to what our contemporary society has to gain by communing together at the Eucharist:
“People who ate together in the way customary in the Middle Ages, taking meat with their fingers from the same dish, wine from the same goblet, soup from the same pot or the same plate…such people stood in a different relationship to one another than we do. And this involves not only the level of clear, rational consciousness; their emotional life also had a different structure and character. Their affects were conditioned to forms of relationship and conduct which, by today’s standard of conditioning, are embarrassing or at least unattractive. What was lacking in this courtois world, or at least had not been developed to the same degree, was the invisible wall of affects which seems now to rise between one human body and another, repelling and separating, the wall which is often perceptible today at the mere approach of something that has been in contact with the mouth or hands of someone else, and which manifests itself as embarrassment at the mere sight of many bodily functions of others, and often at their mere mention, or as a feeling of shame when one’s own functions are exposed to the gaze of others, and by no means only then.” [1]
A great deal has been written on the multitude of ways in which the Eucharist breaks down barriers between people, and between people and God. I am expressing no new insight when I say that the Eucharist both transcends and transforms human cultures, overcoming prejudices and divisions wrought by sin and uniting people to each other and to God. Just as Christ’s Incarnation shattered the barrier between human flesh and Divinity, the Eucharist feeds and unites us physically and spiritually, nourishing our whole selves, our souls, bodies, and relationships.


[1] Norbert Elias, The Civilizing Process: Sociogenetic and Psychogenetic Investigations, vol. 1, trans. Edmund Jephcott (Oxford: Blackwell, 2000), 60. I hope readers can forgive me for taking Elias’ words out of context and using them in a way he certainly did not intend. The entire work is a most thought-provoking and interesting read, and remains very influential, although sociologists and historians today object to his arguments and methodology.

06 January 2014

Notes on the Epiphany

Adoration of the Magi, "Leiden Saint Louis Psalter,"
(England, 12th c.) [Leiden University Library]

“‘Where is the child who has been born king of the Jews?  For we observed his star at its rising, and have come to pay him homage’.” — Matthew 2:2


I
Observing the star of the one born “king of the Jews,” magi come to pay him homage.  Led by “the Love that moves the sun and the other stars,” [1] they come to pay homage to the star come out of Jacob (cf. Num 24:17).  These stargazing Gentiles, these wise men from the land of the sunrise, come to give gifts to the newborn king of Israel.  

They come to Jerusalem in the time of Herod, Rome’s client king in Judea. [2]  Herod, whose brutality evinced his insecurity, is troubled to learn of their search for “the one born king of the Jews.”  And with Herod, “all Jerusalem” is in turmoil, much as the city will later be when her king comes to her, fully grown, “and mounted on a donkey” (Mt 2:3; cf. Mt 21:10).  Herod shrewdly gathers the chief priests and scribes to take counsel “against the Lord, and against his Anointed” (Ps 2:2), using the Scriptures and the strangers in his effort to find the child and to destroy this new threat to his power.  Desperate to maintain an always slipping grip on power, Herod seeks vainly to destroy the newborn Messiah, who “shall live as long as the sun and moon endure” (Ps 72:5).

Upon setting out from Jerusalem, the wise men see again “the star that they had seen at its rising” now “stopped over the place where the child was” (Mt 2:9).  Having found the child “with the help of the Scriptures,” [3] they rejoice with a great joy (v. 10).  The wise men are overjoyed because they have been led beyond their ken to the Truth in person, to the Christ, “the desire of all nations” (Hag 2:7). [4]  Joyfully, they kneel down and pay homage to the child.  In their gifts and their obeisance, the magi anticipate the day when
          All kings shall bow down before him,
              and all the nations do him service. (Ps 72:11)
          They shall bring gold and frankincense,
               and shall proclaim the praise of the Lord. (Isa 60:6)

Yet the wise men, like Balaam—that soothsayer from the East who said of the star to come out of Jacob, “I see him, but not now” (Num 24:17)—catch only a glimpse of the coming King.  They “see (but not now) the one whose kingship would not be visible historically until he had hung on the cross beneath the title The King of the Jews and would not be communicable until he had been elevated to God’s right hand through the resurrection.” [5]  The light of the resurrection will reveal Jesus of Nazareth to be “the Messiah, the Son of David, the Son of Abraham” (Mt. 1:10).


II
Detail of Miniature of the Adoration of the Magi
(England, early 13th c.) [British Library]
“Mary’s virginity was hidden from the prince of this world; so was her child-bearing, and so was the death of the Lord.  All these three trumpet-tongued secrets were brought to pass in the deep silence of God.  How then were they made known to the world?  Up in the heavens a star gleamed out, more brilliant than all the rest; no words could describe its lustre, and the strangeness of it left men bewildered.  The other stars and the sun and moon gathered round it in chorus, but this star outshone them all.  Great was the ensuing perplexity; where could this newcomer have come from, so unlike its fellows? […] The age-old empire of evil was overthrown, for God was now appearing in human form to bring in a new order, even life without end.  Now that which had been perfected in the Divine counsels began its work; and all creation was thrown into a ferment over this plan for the utter destruction of death.”
Ignatius of Antioch, Ephesians 19 [6]


III
“…were we led all that way for
Birth or Death?  There was a Birth, certainly,
We had evidence and no doubt.  I had seen birth and death,
But had thought they were different; this Birth was
Hard and bitter agony for us, like Death, our death.
We returned to our places, these Kingdoms,
But no longer at ease here, in the old dispensation,
With an alien people clutching their gods.”
— T.S. Eliot, from “Journey of the Magi”


[1] Dante, Paradiso, 33.145.
[2] Cf. Stanley Hauerwas, Matthew. Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible (Brazos, 2007), p. 38: “Jesus is born into time, threatening the time of Herod and Rome.”
[3] Raymond E. Brown, “Magi and the Star,” in An Adult Christ at Christmas: Essays on the Three Biblical Christmas Stories–Matthew 2 and Luke 2 (Liturgical Press, 1978), p. 14.
[4] Cf. Benedict XVI, Jesus of Nazareth: The Infancy Narratives (Image, 2012), p. 97:  “...the wise men from the east are a new beginning.  They represent the journeying of humanity toward Christ.  They initiate a procession that continues throughout history.  Not only do they represent the people who have found the way to Christ: the represent the inner aspiration of the human spirit, the dynamism of religions and human reason toward him.”
[5] Brown, op. cit., p. 14.
[6] English translation from Andrew Louth, ed., The Apostolic Fathers: Early Christian Writings (Penguin, 1987).