So the four of us sat down—as the complete congregation for this guy's service—and proceeded to participate in what was for me a completely unfamiliiar litany of prayers and recitations.
Cool…Ancient rituals…
Honestly, I was a little uncomfortable with this, but when I thought of a similar situations in a completely foreign spiritual practice, say, Hinduism, I was more comfortable. Ahh, thanks Mom and Dad, for my deep-seated Christian prejudices.
But there was something completely wonderful about this whole thing, and I'm not talking about the holy spirit. We were given specific instructions about what (and when) to read, we moved along briskly, which is good for my short attention span. Sort of paint-by-numbers worship.
Adding to the mystique was the fact that I had no idea how long this was going to take, but since it was 5:30 and the sign out front did say 10am-6pm, I though we were probably not going to be held by the holy all night. Eventually after a variety of litanizing, our guy was true to his word and we got to chant The Lord's Prayer, which I quite massacred, from a tonal standpoint. I thought it was a great opportunity for improvisation, and who knows? I had fun.
Afterwards, the layminister jumped from behind his little pulpit for a little Q&A. He told us how the original bishop of St. John's (who we were told was lying "in state" basically right next to us, which was a little weird) led a congregation out the doors one day and over to another church in Manhattan where a minister was chaining the doors to keep blacks out. As the story goes, the bishop of St. John's and his congregation cut the chains on the doors of this other church, and drug the minister out into the street where he was fired on the spot.
I might go to church more if there was more of the dragging and the firing.
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