Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali has challenged the Church of England over a
service that has recently been drawn up to celebrate its first 'Godparent's
day'.
The new service, he says, reflects the Church's "now-familiar
desire to be trendy".
The new liturgy was adopted in hundreds of churches this past Sunday to
celebrate the role of godparents. Although it can be used in Holy Communion,
Bishop Michael has said that the church ought to be a place of reverence as they
come into the presence of God.Lack of 'reverence and awe'.
The suggested liturgy involves members of the congregation being told at
the beginning of the service to act like a football crowd, with a call and
response from the vicar. In response to the call "God
is great!" they are told to
perform "a
double clap with an arm raise" as
they shout out "Let
the people praise you!"
Members then stick Post-it notes with thoughts about godparents onto a
'memory wall', and drawing a heart shape over the front of their bodies and
thinking of members of the community such as teachers or social
workers.
At one point they are told to hold up their hands and move their
fingers "like
twinkling stars" to honour people
that shine in their lives.
Bishop Michael described the service as echoing a primary school class, and said that it would not attract lapsed churchgoers because they would expect "reverence and awe".
Bishop Michael described the service as echoing a primary school class, and said that it would not attract lapsed churchgoers because they would expect "reverence and awe".
He said: "When
they come into a church, worshippers should sense the presence of a holy God,
not the bonhomie they may experience at bingo."
'CofE needs to be vigorously counter-cultural'
Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali expands on his concerns about the Church of
England's move away from biblical truth in his new book, 'Faith, Freedom and the
Future'.
"Since
at least the 1970s," he
writes, "there
has been a fashion in the Church of England to minimise depth and mystery in its
worship because of the alleged need to make its services
'accessible'."
He continues: "The Church's language, worship, pastoral care and
evangelism, rather than simply accommodating to this or that culture, need to be
prepared to be vigorously counter-cultural so that eyes may truly be opened to
the human predicament and to God's way out of it. [...] We must keep commending
the plausibility of Christian views on human dignity, equality and liberty
rather than just capitulating to whatever's fashionable."
You can purchase Bishop Michael's book Faith, Freedom and the Future for as little as £6.95 from Amazon.