Is this the way to honor God or mothers? |
I tend to agree with the latter point of view.
Mother’s Day is a great celebration for many. Yet, it is
also a massive can of worms. Seasoned clergy have often told me that they greet
its approach with trepidation. Many parishes have longstanding customs for this
day, and each new cleric is held to those customs with a rigid sense of
vigilance. The priest may get away with heresy and administrative incompetence,
but Mother’s Day will be observed with all the secular pomp possible.
Sentiment, rather than the Gospel, often seems to hold the tiller in parochial
life.
Other clergy will secretly admit that this day ends up being
the cause of all sorts of pastoral follow-up. So many women (and men) had
disastrous relations with their mothers, or lost their mothers. Other women
wanted to be mothers but could not, or never wanted to be mothers and don’t
like to even hear about motherhood. Some lost children; others have served
effectively as mothers, but do not have the official title in law. There are
myriad variations. Awkwardness, painful memories, hurt feelings, political
agendas, and plain old sorrow abound.
Of course, there are many who find Mother’s Day a time of
sweet and joyful gathering—a meal, a family clustering around, gifts of the
home-made and the store-bought varieties being offered, memories being made even as
others are recalled. It can be a delight.
But why make it such a focus in worship?
I can understand why some traditions do this, to a degree.
Bereft of a Liturgical Calendar, each Sunday has to have a “meaning” connected
to something—a sermon series, perhaps. Quite often, though, the source is the
secular calendar…with all of its assumptions and obsessions, acknowledged or
not. Using the Civil Calendar this way shows that there is more than one way
for a Church community to become “culturally conditioned.”
The ancient and undivided Church, as well as The Book of Common Prayer nowhere sets apart a Sunday to
commemorate Mothers or Fathers as a class of person or a vocation. This is not
because we do not honor these ways of life. Indeed, we do. But we do so in the
context of a basic Christian vocation that transcends them. We speak of motherhood most in connection with the Theotokos; indeed, the feasts of Our Lady are, for us, the celebration par excellence of motherhood in connection with faith.
We also focus on Jerusalem, the Church, and any number of holy women as mothers in a wide variety of ways. Some of the saints (Dame Julian and St. Gregory Nyssa come to mind) remind us that God can be spoken of in ways that include attributes of motherhood, as well. Then, of course, there is mid-Lent Sunday, one of whose many names is “Mothering Sunday.” Perhaps this might be the best time to bring the subject up in our tradition?
We also focus on Jerusalem, the Church, and any number of holy women as mothers in a wide variety of ways. Some of the saints (Dame Julian and St. Gregory Nyssa come to mind) remind us that God can be spoken of in ways that include attributes of motherhood, as well. Then, of course, there is mid-Lent Sunday, one of whose many names is “Mothering Sunday.” Perhaps this might be the best time to bring the subject up in our tradition?
In our parish, the appointed collect and lessons take
precedence throughout the year (this is why we still celebrate all of the Principal Feasts in an era when most parishes have dropped anything even slightly "inconvenient"). Mother’s Day is mentioned…usually in the bulletin and as a Mass
intention just before we begin the Eucharistic Prayer. Once in a while it will
find its way into the sermon, but only as a side-point.
It has been the wisdom of
Holy Church to name no Sunday “Mother’s Day Sunday.” Clergy should think long
and hard about surrendering the Liturgy to the vagaries of American
culture, wherever it obtrudes. Doing so in one place invites incursions
elsewhere. How many would be comfortable with a "Singles Sunday," a "Widows/Widowers Sunday," or a "Celibate Sunday," though these are all perfectly honorable and Scripturally-endorsed states of life? This is not an idle question. It must be justified if it is going to be put front-and-center before the People of God in the Eucharist.
Let us honor mothers, but let us honor the Liturgical Year
first. In so doing, we will honor not only mothers, but all vocations in their
proper proportion and with due reverence.
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