This article is about taking worship to the streets. St. Philip's own Father Jim wants to give this a try next summer and we would like to know who is interested in participating. Please read the article and let us know what you think.
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Wearing a traditional black clerical shirt and collar, and less- traditional
black shorts and sandals, the Rev. John Mennell sits near a portable altar,
waiting for stragglers. About a dozen people — one with a leashed dog named
Gideon at her feet — sit facing him in two rows of folding chairs. Backed by the
sounds of diners chatting outside a nearby eatery and passing vehicular traffic,
Mennell rises and greets worshipers at the corner of Church Street and South
Fullerton in Montclair, New Jersey, to the July 28 Worship Without Walls.
From the weekends of Memorial Day through Labor Day, St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in
Montclair is holding 5:00 p.m. Sunday Eucharists in public, outdoor spaces.
Similar to “flash mobs,” participants are alerted to the location each week via
text message. Passersby are encouraged to join.
“It’s fun to see different people’s reactions,” said Mennell, the church’s
rector. “Last week, we ended up in the park in a walkway. … This one woman
walked through with her dog, and her dog desperately wanted to join in the
service.”
When the woman walked through a second time, Mennell invited her to join
them. “She politely informed me how the dog leads her to the temple each
Saturday.”
Such invitations, accepted or not, are among the points of Worship Without
Walls, Mennell said. “Part of it is getting people used to inviting people in in
ways that are uncomfortable.”
“In our beautiful Episcopal reticence,” he said, churchgoers don’t stand on
street corners talking about Jesus. “This is about as close as people
comfortably get.”
“If I told my congregation, ‘Go out on a street corner and witness,’ they’d
run me out on a rail,” he said. But worshiping together publicly, “it’s really
doing the same thing.”
On this particular Sunday, nearly 20 people ultimately joined the service,
with a few passersby stopping briefly to check things out.
“As people come by and look curious, invite them into what we’re doing,”
Mennell instructed the congregation. “We will sort of go with the flow.”
Mitch Goodrich was running an errand in town when he stopped and joined the
service with his sons Henry, 8, and Calvin, 19 months. Turns out, he knew
Mennell years ago at Church of the Redeemer in Cincinnati, before the Montclair
priest attended seminary.
“This is fantastic. It’s so good to get out and let people see what’s going
on and see who you are,” Goodrich said. “We need to do more of this in the
Episcopal Church.”
One man in a baseball cap interjected comments several times during the
service. Listening to the Old Testament reading on Abraham bargaining with God
about the fate of Sodom, he announced: “We’re doomed.”
“No we’re not,” Mennell reassured him. “We’re saved.”
Later, during the sermon, the priest asked the congregation what stopped them
from praying.
One woman replied that her concerns are “too small and insignificant.”
“Alcohol and chicks,” said the man in the cap.
“Different addictions often stand in our way,” Mennell replied.
“Guilt,” said another congregant.
“Satan,” added the man in the cap.
“Jesus has power over Satan,” said Mennell, spurring a brief dialogue over
this theological point.
Such engagement, if sometimes challenging, is not unwelcomed.
“Part of breaking down walls [is] we can’t use the walls of the church as a
barrier to keep people out and keep ideas out,” Mennell said later.
For the first time that summer, weather interrupted the service. With the
onset of a rainstorm, the worshipers brought the prayers of the people to a
speedy conclusion. Then about half of them headed to a nearby diner to conclude
the service and eat together. They ordered food, then completed the
Eucharist.
Source: Episcopal News Service
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