Lent #21: “Analogue
Church”
When
the fullness of time had come,
God
sent his Son...
(Galatians 4:4-5).
We’ve been spending our “shelter in place” time going
through our stuff and thinning things out. My method is to toss and move on.
Linda’s notion is to hold, discuss, contemplate and then figure out where best
to keep each item. The process has brought us back into our analogue world of vinyl
record albums and printed pictures and eight millimeter film.
These are our agreed upon non-tossables. I’m told the
solution is to digitalize all those albums and prints and film. But, we can’t bring
ourselves to digitalize our analogue life. I recall the first time someone
showed me their digital watch—what wonder. By and by, I got one of my own only
even more so—I could store data like phone numbers in it. Recently, I got a new
watch after being without one for some years. My new one has hands and numbers
one through twelve with twelve at the top and six at the bottom. I can’t store
any data in it. It just tells time as time passes.
I’ve been thinking about such things since last Sunday when
our pastor, during digitized church, said he longs to get back to “analogue
church”. It caused me to think about Lent and the Christian Calendar and the
Fullness of Time. Following the Christian Calendar (Advent, Christmastide,
Epiphany, Lent, Easter Sunday followed by Eastertide and Pentecost), places us into
the Gospel Story. You can’t digitalize it. Like the hands of my new watch, the
Gospel story unfolds within the “fullness of time.”
It caused me to think of our present pandemic suffering. It
would be nice if we could just digitalize the whole thing, hit a few key
strokes, and arrive on the other side. But it wouldn’t be fair—it wouldn’t be
real. Analogue life means we must live through it. We have to participate in
the suffering. That’s Lent. We can’t just jump to Easter mourning. We have to
allow time to play out all the way to Calvary.
I love "in the fullness of time"
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