The Body of Christ: the Church is One
The Church: Right Here, Right Now! course explores
the theme of oneness in its second week. It’s a highly appropriate theme for
preaching and considering during the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity.
The
Scripture passages chosen for this session are familiar, especially from
their regular appearances during the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. If you
would like to study them yourself, they are John 17: 20-23 and 1 Corinthians
12: 14-30. In this session the image of the body of Christ (taken from the
writing of St Paul) illustrates the unity of the church. But do not limit the
vision of unity to the hopes often expressed at ecumenical meetings for shared
mission or worship or even structures. While Christian unity between Christians
of different traditions is an extremely important area of work, the unity for
which Christ prayed went much deeper, to the heart of the relationship between
every follower of Jesus and his brothers and sisters wherever they may be in
time or space.
In the
Creed we profess a belief in one holy, catholic and apostolic church. It is
easy to take the word ‘one’ in this sentence to mean that there is no
alternative church, that only one church exists. And in one sense that is
correct. But the oneness in which we believe tells us more than that. Not just
that there is ultimately only one corporate body of believers standing around
Jesus our Saviour, but also that the nature of that corporate body is to be one
people united in worshipping and witnessing to our risen Lord. And it goes
deeper.
Archbishop
Rowan Williams, in his address on this theme[1],
spoke of the unique nature of Jesus in his close relationship to the Father.
At
the beginning of John's Gospel, we read 'No-one has seen God at any time, but
the only God who is next to the Father's heart has made him known'. In the best
manuscripts of John's Gospel, that is what is said; 'the only God', not 'the
only Son' monogenis
theos; the unique God who stands next to the Father, in the bosom
of the Father. So from the very first chapter of John's Gospel, we have before
us the image of the only one who is in eternal intimacy with God the Father;
the only one who is next to the Father's heart. Making God the Father Known. So
the oneness of the church is about how the church is the community of those who
are led to the one place at the Father's heart where he can be known, where he
can be seen. St John's Gospel is indeed about the unity of believers but I
think we misunderstand it if we treat that just on a lateral level; unity
between believers. It is about the unity of the community as it exists standing
in that one place where the only God, the menogenis
theos of chapter one of John's Gospel, stands. And so I believe
that one of the external signs of the unity of the church in a sense more basic
than the universal Episcopal order, more basic than the creed, more basic than
the instruments of unity of the Anglican Communion, even, more basic than Holy
Scripture, is that Christians are called and enabled by the Holy Spirit to say
'Our Father' because they stand in the one Christ and are brought next to the
Father's heart, by Christ. 'When you pray say "Our Father"', and when
we pray our Lord's prayer, we affirm we stand with the one Christ, the one
eternal son, the one word in the Father's bosom.
The kind of unity that Archbishop Rowan describes goes beyond
any understanding of fellowship that the world comprehends. The implications of
it are immense for the church as an organisation. We can not behave like any
other human organisation because the depth of our relationship goes far beyond
the depth of relationship that would be considered reasonable in any other
setting.
Jesus’ prayer for those of us who came after him was that we
would have amongst ourselves the unity that he shares with his Father. This is
a unity created out of the love of God the Father for God the Son, our
co-creators. Our unity is not, then,
about structures – whether or not we all serve the same bishops or agree to the
same set of instructions about what robes to wear or what kind of wine to use
at a communion service. It is not about agreements, documents or canons. All
those things will pass, as traditions and canons have come and gone before.
Ultimately, our unity as Christ’s prayed for people is about love. As the
Father and the Son are one in their loving and binding relationship with one
another, so Jesus wants us to be one with each other.
As we consider the nature of the church at this time and in this
place, we need to ask ourselves whether the church where we are enables us to
live as a people in this kind of unity. It is not enough to share together in
worship on a Sunday and all agree that we liked what happened. The unity we
share needs to go much deeper than agreeing that in this church we all like to
do things in a particular way. Our church family needs to be ordered in such a
way that we can develop relationships with the people who are part of our
immediate church community that reflect the commitment of love between the
Father and the Son.
It simply is not possible on this side of heaven for humans to
relate in that way to every single member of a Sunday community. We would
exhaust ourselves trying to give the time and effort that would be needed to
know so many people that well. Only God can love every person with that kind of
depth. However, it is possible to live out deep unity with a small group of
people. It takes time and commitment to get to know a group of people that
well, but within a small group, whether it is a home group or the choir or the
ringers or Knit and Natter or some other church group, relationships can be
developed to a high degree.
And while we can not actually relate to every other Christian in
depth, we need always to bear in mind the specialness of relationship that we
have with every other person who is called to pray ‘Our Father’ with us. The
nature of our oneness as church gives us a connection with Christians across
the globe, no matter what tradition they belong to, and across time. As a
church our oneness is best expressed in the baptism we all share and which is
recognised almost universally. The pouring of water unites us with Jesus,
baptised by St. John .
Jesus later broke bread, telling the disciples ‘this is my body, broken for
you’. The theological implications of considering ourselves as Christ’s body
and yet holding in our hands bread which Jesus asked us also to see as his body
are profound.
During the Common Worship communion service the president breaks the consecrated bread and says:
We break this bread
to share in the body of Christ.
We reply:
Though we are many, we are one body,
because we all share in one bread.
Our unity as the Body of Christ flows from
Christ’s loving gift to us of his own life. He entered into our mortality and
endured suffering and death, and then showed us the way to eternal life in
which we are united in him, a body beyond death.
Archbishop Rowan in his address to the leaders of the Global
South spoke of unity between Christians in relationship to the sacraments.
So our unity is, at its deepest, the unity which the spirit
gives in enabling us to call God 'Father'; it is the unity given in baptism, in
which the spirit is given to us so that we may pray like this; so that we may
pray the prayer of Jesus. It is the unity expressed in Holy Communion, not as
the result of what we share as human beings, but because in Holy Communion we
are drawn into praying the prayer of Jesus, standing where he stands, by the
Holy Spirit, alive with his life.
This is one reason why Christians are – or should be – quick to
respond to emergencies in other parts of the world. Our connectedness to our
brothers and sisters in Christ will make us share in their pain when times are
hard, and it is part of our imperative to take action to support them.
As so many preachers at ecumenical services have said, ‘unity
does not mean uniformity’. St. Paul
gives us the image of the body which is used to illustrate this session. It is
an image which has inspired ideas of human co-operation way beyond the
Christian context. A group of people working together are a ‘corporation’. This
is not a corruption of the word co-operation, but a word meaning body, from the
Latin ‘corpus’. A body is a unity. There is only one BBC, for example, however
many people work there, however many programmes, podcasts, books and websites
they produce. There is only one Church, the Body of Christ. A body is made up of ‘members’ – the
collective phrase for body parts. Though we are familiar with the word member
in its proper usage, for body parts, on a daily basis we use it more often to
refer to people as a part of a corporate grouping of some sort, whether they are
‘members’ of a football team, a political party or indeed a church. The members
are the different limbs of the corporation, and as such are likely to have
different functions.
[1] Friday 28 October
2005 Archbishop's Address to the 3rd Global South to South Encounter Ain al
Sukhna, Egypt to be found at http://www.archbishopofcanterbury.org/1464
(retrieved by the author 21st December 2009)
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