Saturday, 10 March 2018

Vision upon Vision by George Guiver




The blurb on the back refers to this as a “magisterial book” - and I guess it is, the trouble is that also means that for those with anything more that a passing interest in liturgy and worship the ground it covers is pretty familiar. I found myself often going “yes, exactly” and very rarely, if at all, “I never thought of that”.

In the consideration of the changes in worship that went along side the Reformation and the Enlightenment Guiver regrets the general reduction of the liturgy to the words alone. The lost of the involvement of the whole body. Even today we see this, but it can be overlooked by worship leaders as the clergy (and servers) are at the heart of action – meanwhile the laity are sat looking on from a distance resulting in “much of the detail can be lost to them, there is much less immediacy, and the experience easily becomes simply boring. Even what little corporality survives today in now coming under assault of laziness – the people catch it from the clergy. Often a congregation simply sit through most of the service. That kind of sitting shows a lack of confidence in taking active part – it expresses sitting back, non-involvement of the body…”

This is a theme I have reflected on before and entirely agree with.

Guiver also, to my mind, correctly notes that “Creative worship often runs into problems... The paradoxical result is limited creativity or a lack of edge… we are then left with a repetitive falling-back on common gambits – candles, stones, projecting pictures” and, I would add writing our sins on post-it notes – something I have been refusing to do for the best part of a decade .

Thinking about the faith that worship is responding to, Guiver provides the neat quote that “Anything that can be reduced to static formulas and a fixed system was not true tradition but a caricature of it”

While I also liked his phrase that “The faith once delivered to the saints and preserved in the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church, is called to go forward balanced forever wobblingly on the narrow line of trust.”
So now at Church I quietly amend the Creed, so it begins “We believe, wobblingly, in one God, the Father, the Almighty...”

And on the importance of worship – he suggests that if there is any point at all (and for many that is a big “if”) then it is of the highest importance – as he puts it “If we need motivation for throwing all our efforts into creating a vibrant, dedicated and praying Church, we need only keep society’s problems before our eyes. For society to change, it needs a vibrant and thriving Church in its midst”

While, he also notes that “If worship is in these ways to be compared with art, then as in the arts nothing but the best will do. It might seem obvious to say that worship should always be of the best, but we have habits, which we even sometimes justify, of offering less.”

The points that he makes might not be particularly original – but he does make them well.

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