{"id":1830,"date":"2003-07-14T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2003-07-14T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/banneroftruth.co\/us\/resources\/articles\/2003\/celtic-worship"},"modified":"2003-07-14T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2003-07-14T00:00:00","slug":"celtic-worship","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/staging.banneroftruth.org\/us\/resources\/articles\/2003\/celtic-worship\/","title":{"rendered":"Celtic Worship?"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>Postmodern believers want to use all of their senses, stressed Hall.         They want smells and bells. They want to see icons and statues, as well         as drama and digital clips from movies. They look for God in nature, as         well as scripture. <\/strong>       <\/p>\n<p> Geoff Thomas writes, &quot;I am a Celt, born and bred in Wales. We Welsh,         along        with the Scottish, Irish, the inhabitants of the Isle of Man, the Cornish        and Bretons make up the living remnants of the Celtic civilization which        dates back 2,000 years. The Christians amongst us look in surpise at what        is claimed to be &#8216;Celtic spirituality&#8217; which has developed a cult status        amongst such groupings as the Southern Baptists in the USA. For example,        the following article of Terry Mattingly describes one such church&quot;:      <\/p>\n<p> The first thing people do after entering the quiet sanctuary is pause         at a        table to light prayer candles for friends and loved ones, the tiny flames        adding to the glow of nearby candle trees.The ministers wear oat-colored,        hooded robes tied at the waist with ropes and guide their flock through        ancient prayers, a litany of confession and silent meditations marked         by a        series of bells. Hymns are accompanied by an ensemble that includes fiddle,        acoustic guitar, wind chimes, pennywhistles, a Bodhran, and even         bagpipes.      <\/p>\n<p> This coming Sunday is the day before the feast of St. Patrick.Thus,        worshippers at Rivermont Avenue Baptist Church in Lynchburg, Va., will         sing        the great prayer of Ireland&#8217;s missionary bishop:&quot;Christ with me,         Christ        before me, Christ behind me, Christ in me, Christ beneath me, Christ above        me. &#8230; I arise today through a mighty strength, the invocation of the        Trinity, through a belief in the Threeness, through a confession of the        Oneness of the Creator of creation.&quot;      <\/p>\n<p> This is not your typical Southern Baptist service. Nevertheless, this        Celtic service is held every Sunday at this historic church. The goal         is to        use ancient rituals to touch postmodern souls.&quot;Postmodern people         &#8211; like        Baptists in general &#8211; like to take some of the old and mix it up with         some        of the new and then put it all together. We&#8217;re comfortable with the unusual        juxtapositions that may occur when you do that,&quot; said Karen Swallow         Prior,        who selects and reads many of the rite&#8217;s Celtic prayers. She is an English        professor at nearby Liberty University.&quot;We don&#8217;t think that what         we&#8217;re        doing is getting back to the ancient ways. We think that we&#8217;re using        elements of the past in ways that make sense to people who are alive today.        The goal is to create something new.&quot;      <\/p>\n<p> In the lingo of Southern Baptist life, Rivermont is known as a &quot;moderate,&quot;        or even progressive, congregation. In addition to the Celtic service,         it        also offers the plugged-in, energetic contemporary worship common in        &quot;seeker-friendly&quot; congregations across America. The bottom line:         Different        kinds of people worship in different ways.The contemporary service is        larger and the pews are         filled with Baby Boomers who have become the established, middle-aged         core        of the congregation. For them, pop praise choruses and a chatty atmosphere        have become normal. What was once &quot;modern&quot; is now strangely        &quot;traditional.&quot;Meanwhile, said Prior, the Celtic service is attracting         a        unique blend of young adults, who are drawn by its beauty and mysticism,        and the elderly, who appreciate peace and quiet.       <\/p>\n<p> Church leaders refer to this as a gathering of the &quot;pre-moderns         and the        postmoderns.&quot; What was once &quot;traditional&quot; is now strangely        &quot;innovative.&quot;&quot;How will the postmodern church worship?&quot;         asked Chad Hall of        the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina, writing at        www.coolchurches.com. &quot;One thing we know about postmoderns is that         they are        extremely experiential.That is, they learn, grow, develop and commit based        on their own experience with truth not according to someone else&#8217;s        encounter or someone else&#8217;s retelling of an encounter.&quot;      <\/p>\n<p> Postmodern believers want to use all of their senses, stressed Hall.         They        want smells and bells. They want to see icons and statues, as well as         drama        and digital clips from movies. They look for God in nature, as well as        scripture. They want to encounter God, not mere words about God.But this        doesn&#8217;t mean they want to change their beliefs.       <\/p>\n<p> The faithful at Rivermont Avenue remain steadfastly Baptist, said music        minister Wayne Bulson. While they use elements of ancient liturgy, they        believe that the Irish Bannock bread is still bread and the grape juice         is        still grape juice. They are embracing symbols, not sacraments.&quot;People         want        a sense of the ancient, but they still want something that they feel is        appropriate to their lives, today,&quot; said Bulson. &quot;I mean, we&#8217;re         still        Baptists. We&#8217;re not Catholic or Orthodox or anything else. . . We&#8217;re not        pushing for Baptist monasteries. What we&#8217;re trying to do is find out what        will be meaningful to our people, what will help them experience God         in their lives.&quot;We&#8217;re not proud. We&#8217;re willing to borrow things from         all        kinds of traditions, as long as they work for us.&quot;      <\/p>\n<p> By TERRY MATTINGLY Scripps Howard News Service March 12, 2003.        Terry Mattingly (www.tmatt.net) teaches at Palm Beach Atlantic University         and is senior fellow for journalism at the Council)      <\/p>\n<p>, , , , , , , , , &#8211;      <\/p>\n<p> In the recent Journal of Welsh Religious History New Series, Vol. 2:2002        published by the Centre for the Advanced Study of Religion in Wales,        Department of Theology and Religious Studies, University of Wales, Bangor,        LL57 2DG the following important review was published and is reprinted         here        by permission of both the author and the publishers:      <\/p>\n<p> Celtic Dilemmas: The Quest for Celtic Christianity by Donald E. Meek      <\/p>\n<p> A. M. Allchin      <\/p>\n<p> This is an important and valuable book for all those who are concerned         with        the study and understanding of the Christianity of the Celtic peoples        during the last fifteen or sixteen centuries, and also for those who are        concerned with the constantly growing interest in this subject which has        characterised the last twenty or thirty years. As the writer of the book        himself says, his &#8216;work was stimulated by the wave of intense popular        enthusiasm for matters &quot;Celtic&quot; which began to emerge in the         British Isles        in the late 1970s&#8217; (p.1).      <\/p>\n<p> The book is written by a man who is in many ways exceptionally well        equipped to speak on this subject. He is a distinguished professor of        Celtic studies, and at the same time someone who grew up in a Gaelic        speaking family on the island of Tiree, where his father was a crofter         and        a Baptist minister. It is evident at once that the writer feels intensely        dissatisfied with the common interpretation of &#8216;Celtic Christianity&#8217; given        in much of the popular writing which has been published on this subject         in        the last twenty years. As a scholar he finds it slipshod and superficial,        as a believer he finds it sentimental and subjectivist, and as a lover         of        his country he finds it insulting and neo-colonialist. We discover in         these        pages a man who sometimes feels angry at what seems to him the        falsification of things that are dear to him, at times pained by the way         in        which people with no right to these treasures, seem to have wanted to        appropriate and exploit them for their own ends.      <\/p>\n<p> As will, I hope, become clear in the course of this article, the last         thing        I wish to do is to present this book in a primarily polemical context.         It        is evidently intended to initiate a debate, but it is a debate which I        believe could easily have become a friendly and constructive discussion,        and that is how I think it needs to be read. But it is important to        recognise at the outset that at least from time to time the book has a        strongly polemical edge to it. I quote an account of a compilation of        &#8216;Celtic&#8217; prayers and devotions, published in 1994.      <\/p>\n<p> &quot;The book bears as close a relationship to genuine Celtic tradition         (as        defined in terms of language and culture) as sand does to moon-dust, the        use of the word &#8216;Celtic&#8217; here seems to denote no more than a haggis of        citations which defy definition by any other designation. Yet, in some        quarters it is nevertheless acceptable &#8211; and evidently profitable &#8211; to         slap        the term Celtic on hybrid complications of this kind, and to present them        to the unknowing public. In this way the term &#8216;Celtic&#8217; is further emptied        of meaning, and rather than being strengthened, genuine Celtic culture         is        being undermined by covering it with layers of highly dubious        interpretation. This is a particularly obvious example of the manner in        which the more insensitive wing of the Celtic Christianity movement,        operating within a majority mass culture and under the cloak of religious        acceptability, adopts certain characteristics of a minority culture and        exploits them shamelessly for its own commercial ends.&quot; (p.11)      <\/p>\n<p> There is no doubt that the writer here is angry, though we observe that         he        has not lost his sense of humour! It seems to me that his anger has perhaps        carried him on to say more than he really meant to. I very much doubt        whether the compilers of the volume in question, or their publishers,         made        a great deal of money out of the project. I doubt still more whether the        two compilers of the book had commercial considerations in their minds         at        all when they first set to work on it. But if we want to understand more        fully the origin of Donald Meek&#8217;s own point of view, then we can turn         to a        wonderful and very personal chapter of this book which he has given us.      <\/p>\n<p> The chapter concerned is the last; chapter 14. In it Donald Meek tells         us        of a day he spent as a school-boy in September 1965, on a day trip from        Oban to Iona via Staffa on &#8216;The King George V, David MacBrayne&#8217;s splendid        but increasingly elderly pleasure steamer&#8217; (p.245). He is there at the        invitation of the Captain, himself a friend of Donald Meek&#8217;s father, and         a        fellow inhabitant of Tiree. As he describes his reactions during the day,        we begin to see how much it means to him to have grown up in a Hebridean        island where the Gaelic language was part of the bread and butter of daily        life and where the experiences of working on a small island farm introduced        him to the hardness and constraints of island life as well as to its beauty        and its deep sense of community. Moreover, he had known from childhood         the        assurance and support of a firm and articulate evangelical faith, and        though in the course of time that faith may have developed in some ways,         it        has never been rejected or fundamentally undermined. He tells us in this        chapter how after school he went on to University, to specialise in Celtic        studies, first in Glasgow and then in Cambridge; it was in Cambridge that        he had the opportunity of working with scholars of the calibre of Peter        Hunter Blair and Kathleen Hughes.      <\/p>\n<p> All this he tells us, in telling us about that memorable day with its         first        visit to Iona. Certainly to be on that island could only be exciting and        even moving for this highly intelligent local boy. But the memory which         has        really stuck in his mind is not the memory of the abbey ruins but the        memory of the ship itself. &#8216;She was so splendid on that particular day,         so        majestic in her black and red livery, with her rust-bespattered lower        plates and her two lofty funnels blowing oily smoke and damp steam. She         was        to me then, and ever will remain, the greatest ship in the world&#8217; (p.249)      <\/p>\n<p> For this impressionable teenager it was the ship itself which remained         the        &#8216;dream image&#8217; from that memorable day. &#8216;Columba gradually lost much of         his        romantic spell, though never his attractive significance as a powerful        figure of history associated with an island that, on a clear day, seemed        almost within easy sailing distance of Tiree. I myself was ultimately        heading away from these islands, away from the Columba of boyhood dreams,        and into a world where the mind and the intellect were prepared for        rational enquiry&#8217; (p.249).      <\/p>\n<p> It is altogether natural that a boy whose childhood had been spent in         the        Hebridean islands should have this sense of intense identification with         the        ship which was taking him out into his first contact with the wide world        outside. But how equally natural that for the great majority of us, whose        experience of childhood has been one of urban and suburban sameness, our        first encounter with the incomparable grandeur of the highlands, and with        the unlooked for presence in such a remote place of monastic buildings         like        those of the Abbey of Iona, will leave very different memories and        impressions!      <\/p>\n<p> I must not give the impression that the whole book is made up of this         kind        of account of personal reactions and impressions. For the most part it         is a        cogently argued refutation of the understanding of &#8216;Celtic Christianity&#8217;        which the writer has been studying with growing fascination and dismay,         in        a large number of mostly popular books, over the last twenty or more years.        But it helps us to understand his particular unease with what seems to         him        their English and Anglican tone of complacency, smoothness, compromise         and        at times sentimentality. Being myself responsible for at least one very        small corner of that large variegated tapestry, I think I know what he         is        reacting against!      <\/p>\n<p> Rather than attempt to give a systematic account of the book as a whole        which is filled with erudition and insight, I should like to give three        examples of particular topics which seem to me unusually interesting and        worthy of attention.       <\/p>\n<p> 1] First, there is his discussion of the influence of Rudolf Steiner,         along        with Matthew Arnold and Ernest Renan, in the development of the whole        contemporary picture of Celticity in general and its spirituality in        particular. It is very typical of Donald Meek&#8217;s careful observation of        things, that he has noticed the way in which the Steiner-influenced        publishing house in Edinburgh, &#8216;Floris Books&#8217;, has had a large part in         the        republication and distribution of the &#8216;Carmina Gadelica&#8217;, a text which         he        rightly sees as playing a fundamental role in the development of the        contemporary understanding of Celtic Christianity. As we might expect,        Donald Meek singles out that aspect of Steiner&#8217;s fascination with the        Celtic past of our two Atlantic islands, which is most deeply unacceptable        to the rational, critical historical mind. That is to say he fastens on         its        links with the lost civilisation and continent of Atlantis.      <\/p>\n<p> &#8216;What happened in the vicinity of the Hebrides, in Ireland and Scotland,         in        ancient Erin, on the neighbouring islands between Ireland and Scotland,         as        well as in northern Scotland itself? It is there we must seek for the        kernel of those peoples of Celtic origin, who had most of all preserved         the        ancient Atlantean clairvoyance in its fullest purity. The others who had        wandered more to the east, having developed further, no longer kept their        earlier connection with the ancient gods. In contrast the Celtic peoples        preserved the capacity to experience the old clairvoyance, and therefore        they were fully immersed in the element of individuality.&#8217; (p.68)      <\/p>\n<p>The psychic gifts which often seem to characterise people from the        Hebridean islands, are here interpreted in terms of the last gifts        inherited from the lost civilisation of Atlantis. These speculations of        Steiner throw light on his interest in other places, such as Tintagel         and        Glastonbury, and help to account for some of the wilder and more esoteric        developments of legend around these places in the last century or so.      <\/p>\n<p> Donald Meek goes on to point out that George MacLeod was attracted to         some        of Steiner&#8217;s ideas about the spiritual dimension of humanity and the        spiritual potential of the natural world. He points too to MacLeod&#8217;s        admiration for the work of the Steiner communities with handicapped people,        an admiration which has been shared by some of those who have been        influenced by the teaching of Jean Vanier in relation to mental and        physical handicap. Is it perhaps possible that in the development of        Steiner&#8217;s vast and all-inclusive system, there were at least some genuine        and indeed precious insights into some of the less obvious elements in         the        development of the human person? Insights which may yet prove worthy of        inclusion in a Christian understanding of the nature of the human person?        That at least is a question which deserves attention and where I and the        author might well come to different conclusions.      <\/p>\n<p> 2] The second point which I would like to look at comes from the second        part of the book where the author is examining the current ideas about         the        saints in &#8216;Celtic Christianity&#8217; in comparison with a more exact view of         the        historical evidence for the period of the first millennium. His chapter         7,        &#8216;Between Faith and Fiction: the Profiles of the Celtic Saints&#8217;. Here as         in        other places the author argues strongly against what he sees as the        tendency to soften and sentimentalise the hard rugged edges of the Celtic        vision of holiness and Christian life. &#8216;The lives of the Celtic saints        reveal a very robust spirituality, demonstrating forcefully that they         were        not soft-centred people, always making friends with paganism, or acting        gently when there was need to be strong. They were tuned to another        wavelength altogether&#8217; (p.175).      <\/p>\n<p> Donald Meek goes on to stress that the primary characteristics of the        Celtic saints are to be found in their devotion to Christ; in that light         he        seeks to understand their qualities as described in the traditional lives.        First among them he sees their power, shown above all in their power over        nature. In their use of that power they could sometimes be not only fierce,        but arbitrary and indeed vengeful. He stresses the elements of conflict        which we find in the lives of the saints, conflict with themselves,        conflict with nature, conflict with the powers of evil. I wondered whether        in this section the author had laid sufficient emphasis on the way which        the Celtic saints are depicted as men and women of prayer, people who        restore communion between heaven and earth, God and humanity, and therefore        who restore communion within the whole family of creation. Was it not        perhaps in this life of prayer, rather than in their feats of asceticism,        that the saints attracted their contemporaries to gather around them,         and        to find their own way towards God? Was it not also perhaps for their        friends and disciples, that the moment of death was not seen to destroy         the        bonds of prayer and affection which had grown up in their life together,        and which hence opened the way for the saint&#8217;s name to be remembered and        cherished in that particular place, a memory which at least in some way        still exists today in so many small and remote places?      <\/p>\n<p> 3] The third point which I should like to mention is one which directs         our        attention towards a later chapter of Donald Meek&#8217;s book, in which he speaks        of the way in which the spiritual life developed in the Evangelical and        Protestant centuries of the life of the Scottish Highlands and Islands.        Here he treats in a preliminary way questions to which I hope he will        return later. There are whole areas here where the great majority of us         can        only wait in hope for the presentation of new material both in prose and        poetry, translated from the Gaelic language. Some elements of this largely        eighteenth and nineteenth century history, seem to be particularly linked        with Scotland. There are other elements where possible comparisons with         the        Evangelical movements of Wales immediately begin to suggest themselves.         One        feature in the story which particularly attracted my own attention, and        which I had found referred to briefly in other books, was &#8216;the motley         band        of local lay leaders, known as &quot;the Men&quot;&#8230; known for their         depth of        insight, unusual utterances and otherworldliness&#8217; (p.221). Donald Meek        recognises that they have been thought by some to have a resemblance to         the        qualities attributed to the earlier Celtic saints, though he himself        believes that resemblance to be largely accidental. Here again there is         a        matter where one would long to know more. This twelfth chapter, &#8216;Reforming        the Wild West: Protestant Perspectives on the Celtic Past&#8217; promises much        for the future.      <\/p>\n<p> I said at the beginning of this review that I believed that this book         would        make a valuable contribution to the ongoing discussion of the large and        complex issues which it raises. Donald Meek himself, in dedicating his         book        to the memory of his two teachers at Cambridge describes them as people        &#8216;who brought the past to life, and who would have enjoyed this debate&#8217;         and        in doing so points us in the same direction. Among the questions it raises        are, how do we in fact bring the past to life? What is the role of the        academic specialist here and what of the popular exponent of historical        themes? Why is it that religious traditions seem to need from time to         time        to renew themselves out of the stories from which they originate? Why         is it        that the changing conditions of today impel us to look back at the past        with new eyes, to ask fresh questions of our inherited tradition? Questions        such as these are also to be found in a more recent publication which         in a        different way covers much of this ground, the collection of studies &#8216;Celts        and Christians: New Approaches to the Religious Traditions of Britain         and        Ireland,&#8217; edited by Mark Atherton of Regent&#8217;s Park College in Oxford,        published by the University of Wales Press in 2002. Here, in an        interdisciplinary collection of essays, containing contributions from        historians and philologists, theologians and students of literature, many        of the questions raised in this book are examined again from a variety         of        view points and with a variety of conclusions. A reading of it might make        an interesting sequel to the reading of Donald Meek&#8217;s remarkable and        thought-provoking work. We seem to be embarked on a process here which         may        lead us further than we had expected.      <\/p>\n<p> The Quest for Celtic Christianity by Donald E. Meek was published in         2000        by Handsell Press, Edinburgh. ISBN 1-8718-2851-1, pp.viii + 273,        illustrated, &pound;9.95.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Postmodern believers want to use all of their senses, stressed Hall. They want smells and bells. They want to see icons and statues, as well as drama and digital clips from movies. They look for God in nature, as well as scripture. Geoff Thomas writes, &quot;I am a Celt, born and bred in Wales. We [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[15],"tags":[],"resource-author":[505],"topic":[],"class_list":["post-1830","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-articles","resource-author-thomas-geoff"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.3 (Yoast SEO v27.3) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Celtic Worship? &#8211; Banner of Truth USA<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"noindex, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Celtic Worship?\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Postmodern believers want to use all of their senses, stressed Hall. They want smells and bells. They want to see icons and statues, as well as drama and digital clips from movies. They look for God in nature, as well as scripture. Geoff Thomas writes, &quot;I am a Celt, born and bred in Wales. 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