GordW
Church-Geek-Oramus
- Pronouns
- He/Him/His
Over in the Splintered thread we ended up with some discussion of the passage about putting new wine in old wineskins and why that is a problematic thing to do. THe teaching in question starts with a question about fasting and is paired with a teaching about putting a patch on an old garment. It comes (apparently) from the Marcan tradition/source and is found in all three Synoptic Gospels (Matthew 9, Mark 2 and, Luke 5).
One of the readings one can take from this pair of teachings is that you need to let go of the old to make room for the new. The old and new cloth shrink differently and will tear, making the damage worse than before the patch. The new wine will ferment and expand, causing the old, less flexible wineskin to rupture and then the wine is wasted.
I do find it interesting that Mark (and Matthew and Luke following him) pairs this with the teaching about to fast or not to fast when the bridegroom is present. I think there are two very different sermons that could be preached from the two different pieces in the section of the story. I need to do more reflection on how they relate to each other. (Or maybe Mark just happened to put them in that order but did not think they are related, all paragraph divisions and the little section titles we find in our English translations are interpretive choices)
But the cloth and the wine make me ponder how we mix the new with the old. At our Worship Committee meeting last week we encountered a situation where we needed to find a path forward that would respect the family who wanted to do things in a more inclusive way AND respect the people in the congregation who were not ready to move to that place (in this particular case it was about whether children could serve communion or not). Such issues arise in communities of all sorts fairly regularly.
Sometimes we can find a way through the minefield of balancing the old and the new. But sometimes I wonder if what is really needed is to blow it all up and start fresh. Is it better to patch up and try to reform an old community that maybe has started to falter or is it better to let the old die a natural death and start something new altogether. The next question is, how do you actually start something new if a bunch of people from the old are a part of the start-up? A few years back, as this congregation was wrestling with "are we actually viable anymore?", I asked the Council "If you were starting up a new congregation of the United Church what would you include, what would it look like?" It was a really hard question for many of them to answer, because they really wanted something that looked like what was familiar.
In reality we add new cloth to old garments all the time. We top up to wine skins with new wine frequently. We evolve and change as organizations, mixing old and new and trying to find a balance.
But when do we know it is time to start afresh? When does the blending become unsustainable? When do the tears get to big or things rupture and spill all over the place?
One of the readings one can take from this pair of teachings is that you need to let go of the old to make room for the new. The old and new cloth shrink differently and will tear, making the damage worse than before the patch. The new wine will ferment and expand, causing the old, less flexible wineskin to rupture and then the wine is wasted.
I do find it interesting that Mark (and Matthew and Luke following him) pairs this with the teaching about to fast or not to fast when the bridegroom is present. I think there are two very different sermons that could be preached from the two different pieces in the section of the story. I need to do more reflection on how they relate to each other. (Or maybe Mark just happened to put them in that order but did not think they are related, all paragraph divisions and the little section titles we find in our English translations are interpretive choices)
But the cloth and the wine make me ponder how we mix the new with the old. At our Worship Committee meeting last week we encountered a situation where we needed to find a path forward that would respect the family who wanted to do things in a more inclusive way AND respect the people in the congregation who were not ready to move to that place (in this particular case it was about whether children could serve communion or not). Such issues arise in communities of all sorts fairly regularly.
Sometimes we can find a way through the minefield of balancing the old and the new. But sometimes I wonder if what is really needed is to blow it all up and start fresh. Is it better to patch up and try to reform an old community that maybe has started to falter or is it better to let the old die a natural death and start something new altogether. The next question is, how do you actually start something new if a bunch of people from the old are a part of the start-up? A few years back, as this congregation was wrestling with "are we actually viable anymore?", I asked the Council "If you were starting up a new congregation of the United Church what would you include, what would it look like?" It was a really hard question for many of them to answer, because they really wanted something that looked like what was familiar.
In reality we add new cloth to old garments all the time. We top up to wine skins with new wine frequently. We evolve and change as organizations, mixing old and new and trying to find a balance.
But when do we know it is time to start afresh? When does the blending become unsustainable? When do the tears get to big or things rupture and spill all over the place?