I grew up in a Congregationalist church, and the prayers of
the congregation were usually pretty general.
Whatever list the minister had of who was sick or needed work or was
lonely, no one would be mentioned by name.
Once you had died we would mention – once – to pray for your
family. Otherwise, it was never Edna,
who feels desperately onely now that her husband has died and her children have
moved away, but only “Those who.” Those
who are out of work, those who care for relatives, those who
seek justice.
It was a little different when we went to prayer meetings in
the 70’s, when suddenly you were hearing more than enough detail, thank you
very much, and more than enough personal information. But even those settled down into the strictly
medical, plus occasionally, prayers for the salvation of someone-or-other, or
thankfulness that a job or a car or a needed item had been found. It became a family story forever when we
visited a Baptist church on Testimony Sunday and I sat steaming as we passed
the 2.5 hour mark and one woman was heading to the microphone for the third
time. But my eight-year old loved
it. This was far more intersting than
most church stories! Drunken fathers,
beatings, cheating husbands. Whoa, way
better than listening to Psalty, http://psalty.com/ eh?
Our small congregation in Concord dared a bit more in
openness, over time. But it comes naturally
for neither Swedes nor New Englanders, so for evangelicals even we were on the
high-privacy end of the scale. In my
current congregation we are back to medical-with-narrow-exceptions. We don’t really want much more broadcast.
So it hit me like a wall when we had worship at the state
hospital today and when prayer requests were sought a woman blurted “I just
want reconciliation with my son,” and another said “I just wish I could go
home.” I know the stories behind
both. In both cases their mental illness
is a factor, but less than half of why their lives are ripped apart. The selfishness and stupidity of others is
the greater portion – and not very obviously fixable. Still, they prayed and sang and lit the Hope
Candle.
Tears well up whenever I worship with deeply broken
people. I can barely endure even
remembering it or thinking about it. I
think you should remember to try it.
3 comments:
Interesting, before I got the end of your post, the following occurred to me: In my previous (RC) parish, daily Mass broke with the usual RC approach of the priest briefly announcing 'intentions' from the altar. At these Masses, anyone who wished to speak could do so at intention time. I really liked that because it made me feel more connected to the daily congregation. There would be maybe 25-30 people max at these Masses, and there would always be several people who appeared to be among the chronically mentally ill. During intention time, they could go on a bit long, losing us as they got more tangential. Sometimes the priest would have to tactfully move things along. But I was most impressed with the fact that as far as I could tell, everyone there was very accepting of the mentally ill who were present.
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