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Why The Church Is Beyond Defending

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  • Why The Church Is Beyond Defending

    WHY THE CHURCH IS BEYOND DEFENDING
    By Giles Fraser

    Ekklesia
    Nov 12 2008
    UK

    Every few years there's an almightily punch up at the Church of the
    Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. This year's scrap was a classic. On
    Monday 10 November 2008, monks from the Armenian and Greek Orthodox
    churches were arrested by Israeli riot police for brawling in the
    very place where Christ was supposed to have been buried.

    Apparently, there was some infringement of the intricate rules that
    govern the running of the place. For the denominations that share
    responsibility for the church this was obviously a weighty matter -
    though, to me, it seemed as inconsequential as the wrong monk being
    in the wrong procession. Whatever the explanation, the scenes of
    chaos were shaming to all.

    So given the pugnacious reputation of the church of the Holy Sepulchre,
    it was with some trepidation that I agreed recently to give a talk
    to the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre. Founded around 1099,
    at the conclusion of the incredibly bloody first crusade, the order
    was set up to be a military presence at Christ's tomb. However,
    back in the nineteenth century, Pope Pious 9th gave the order a
    new mission. No longer would its members be a religious army in the
    Holy Land. Instead, they would guard Christ's sepulchre by expressing
    their solidarity with indigenous Christians. Today, this means raising
    money to plant olive trees and supporting educational projects.

    Pope Pious 9th was absolutely spot-on about how one defends the
    church. One defends it best by not defending it, by not being obsessed
    with it and instead by looking outward, looking towards the needs of
    the others.

    Jesus said that only those who are prepared to loose their life will
    find it. The logic is counter intuitive. The more you give away the
    more you have. The more your focus in life is outside of yourself, the
    more your own soul will flourish. This is why the introverted piety
    of churchyness is, in the end, a complete betrayal of the message of
    the church - which is exactly what happened with those warring monks.

    But surely also, there's a lesson here for a huge number of us. For
    many of us do spend a great deal of our time and energy, at work
    and at home, defending some pathetic little patch of turf which,
    in the great scheme of things, means precious little. If we're not
    careful we can easily find that we've invested our lives in battling
    for some shrinking space that is, ultimately, as inconsequential as
    the place of a monk in a procession.

    How do we guard against becoming like this? The Christian answer is
    that that we find freedom from the ego's ever narrowing obsessions by
    placing our centre of interest outside of ourselves. Indeed, this is
    precisely the sort of freedom to which the monastic life is supposed
    to point - and, at its best, it still does.
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