Christ
Episcopal Church
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Riverton, New Jersey |
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A piece of the Lord be always with you. Different
societies have different ways to greet each other: Bowing, waving, kissing,
hugging, shaking each others hands, rubbing
noses. The early church also had its
own greeting, for the Apostle Paul tells his audience to: “Greet one another with a holy kiss” the kiss, the exchange of the peace. This greeting was so important that However, the holy kiss was more than a means of mutual identification
on the street, for as Sweet continues: The kiss symbolized to the ancient Christians the
transmission of the Spirit – its passing on and
surpassing power. Following the
consecration of the Eucharist, the priest spoke the words pax vobiscum [peace be with you – the
equivalent of the Hebrew Shalom aleichem], after
which the members of the body of Christ would kiss one another. Thus they became one in the spirit,
enabling them to receive the eucharistic body of
Christ and ‘one body and one soul’ and be incorporated into [Christ’s]
Spirit. So
the Peace was a piece that contributed to unity of the congregation that
occurred during the Eucharist itself.
This unity was by no means a given.
Rather it needed all the positive reinforcement it could get, as these
assemblies were made up of a wide diversity of people, perhaps more than any
of us have ever experienced. So this
exchange became, according to Sweet, “A way of symbolizing to rich and poor, men
and women, clean and unclean, old and young, morally pure and morally not so
pure, that they were loved by God beyond anything they could imagine and that
God’s Spirit played no favorites”. So
the members of these early churches became vectors of Christ’s redeeming
love, and in the process, acting upon his Great Commandment to ‘love one another
as I have loved you’. Sweet’s contention is bourn
out by Gospel accounts of the first Easter day. The resurrected Christ shares God’s peace
in the context of Holy Communion. The
two men whom Jesus accompanied on the way to Emmaus as found in Luke 24, did
not recognize him until he sat at table with them and blessed, then broke,
the bread. Jesus then departed from
them, and they raced back to So
among his earliest acts as resurrected Christ, our Lord connects the Peace,
the Holy Spirit, and the power of reconciliation along with the Breaking of
the Bread. This then has become the
basis of what the order of our Eucharistic liturgy seeks to recover -- for
the Peace comes right after the Confession and Absolution. So we are forgiven, and we offer
forgiveness to others in return. Note
as well that it comes before the Offertory, so that those who need to have
the need may “first be reconciled to your brother or sister, and then come
and offer your gift” (Matt. 5:23-4).
The
power of this sense of reconciliation at this point of the liturgy is
powerfully illustrated in Bob Libby’s The Forgiveness Book. He had a fight with an old friend, a fellow
priest, in a very public venue. The
rift would not heal in spite of an equally public apology. Several months later he reports, “I was standing in the back of the
cathedral. The bishop declared, ‘The
Peace of the Lord be always with you.’ ‘And also with you,’ we replied. I turned to the right, left, and then the
rear – and there stood Gerald. He was
as uncomfortable as I was. The same
thing happened two months later. This
time, however, when we faced each other for the third time, it finally
happened. We broke into laughter and
almost into tears. Then we threw our
arms around each other. ‘The Peace of the Lord be
with you Gerald.’ ‘And also with you, Bob.’ Historically,
the Peace (Pax) has been a part of the Liturgy
since the first Easter. It remained
part of the Eucharist in our tradition until the second Book of Common
Prayer (BCP) in 1552 (it was in 1549).
With the exception of the unauthorized Anglican Missal, it began a
cautious reappearance for Episcopalians in 1966, and by 1976 its use was
reauthorized in what would become the 1979 edition of the BCP. While it was not greeted with universal
enthusiasm, the passing of the Peace is now virtually universal, not just for
Anglicans throughout the world, but with Roman Catholics, Lutherans and
United Methodists as well. It enables
us as we prepare to gather around our Lord’s table for that most sacred meal
to 1) greet each other, friend or foe as well as acknowledge the stranger as
a Christian, and equal, and as one who is loved by God; 2) share and practice
Jesus’ reconciling love with each other; and 3) discover, discern, acknowledge,
rejoice in that we are all part of the one body of Christ of which we are all
members. It is in the sharing of the peace of the Lord that
makes us closer to God, by being connected with each other. As
we practice sharing the Peace, of course as Episcopalians we want it done
decently and in order, to quote But
the Peace also should not be an empty rite, not only because Episcopalians
are so often accused of such things, but because this is a sacred
exchange. To avoid this, perhaps using
Isaiah’s prediction that “a little child shall lead them” is appropriate. When our daughter Katie was little, she
tended to conceive of things in a very concrete, tangible way. So when she shared the peace with us she
would say “A piece of the Lord be always with
you”. That’s piece, P-I-E-C-E, as in a
piece of pie. So perhaps when you
greet your neighbor, you can share God’s peace by offering a piece of the God
within you to them, as they share that same peace (and piece) with you. May a piece of the Lord be always with
you, and everyone who enters through our doors, always and forever! AMEN. |