By June Butler
I commend the bishops’ choice of New Orleans for the House of Bishops meeting.
The theme for last night’s ecumenical prayer service was “Humanity Renewed, Restored, Re-centered in God”. The use of the Morial Convention Center as the site of the ecumenical service was symbolic of the partial recovery of the city, because the Center, along with the Superdome were the two largest shelters of misery for those seeking to escape the flood waters.
No help came for 4 days. I’m sure you remember the scenes from TV. I have never yet figured out how the press could be there filming the misery, but help was so long in coming.
To make certain that we were there on time, we arrived early at the Convention Center. While we waited for the service to start, we were entertained by a choir singing Gospel music. The white folks in the choir were grooving right along with the black folks. I give them points for keeping up.
As the bishops processed into the auditorium, I had to suppress a desire to stand up and cheer when Bishop Katharine passed. She has presence – a quiet dignity and grace about her – that comes through, literally, in passing.
Bishop Duncan Gray of Mississippi read the first lesson, Zechariah (8:3-13), and Bishop Katharine read the Gospel reading, Matthew (25:34-40).
The invocation and the pastoral prayer were given by Bishop Douglas Wiley and Elder John Pierce, neither of whom were Episcopalians. Black preachers often have a way of praying that draws God and his people into an intimate circle. Bishop Wiley’s invocation of the presence of the Holy Spirit, and Elder Pierce’s prayer did just that. Both were beautiful, and I experienced the powerful presence of God.
When Bishop Charles Jenkins introduced Archbishop Rowan Williams, he reminded us that Archbishop Williams was the 104th archbishop of Canterbury, whereas Bishop Jenkins was the 10th bishop of Louisiana. A tad more history on the side of the archbishop, no?
Archbishop Williams had toured the Lower Ninth Ward in New Orleans, and thus was aware of desolation which still remains, for only a very few brave souls have had the courage to rebuild in that area. The archbishop spoke of what we owe to one another. “The bottom line is that what we owe to one another most deeply of all is gratitude – not even respect, not even the recognition of dignity so much as gratitude,” he said. “We are indebted to one another.
I am indebted to your existence because I would not be myself without you. A community, a society, that can get to that level of recognition is one that lives from a deeper place.” He went on, “If the church does not live by thanksgiving, I don’t what it lives by.” We owe each other, but most of all we owe Jesus Christ – for life, hope, strength, and joy. As Williams said, “We owe Christ big time, as they say.”
He said the help to the city was to buy time for renewal, reconstruction, and restoration of the city of New Orleans, to help it once again to become “a place for the people”. He quoted from the passage from Zechariah:
“Thus says the Lord of hosts: Old men and old women shall again sit in the streets of Jerusalem, each with staff in hand because of their great age.
And the streets of the city shall be full of boys and girls playing in the streets.”
He said, “What makes a great, godly city is that it is a safe place for older people to sit and children to play in the streets.”
After his speech, the bishops went forward with their donations to Dioceses of Louisiana and Mississippi.
The finale was a musical presentation by the Irvin Mayfield Quartet of a slow Just a Closer Walk, I’ll Fly Away, and a rousing When The Saints Go Marching In, which brought out the white handkerchiefs waving in the air and drew folks into the aisles in a second line, marching and waving their white handkerchiefs. I caught a glimpse of a couple of purple shirts in the marching group. I’ll wager that this conclusion was unique for a House of Bishops prayer service.
June Butler, better known online as Grandmere Mimi, is a native of New Orleans who blogs at Wounded Bird.