Think Globally – Worship Locally
by Corey Nelson
A
couple of years ago, I had the opportunity to worship in
a local congregation in which the choir sang an arrangement
of the South African song, “Siyahamba.” As I
looked around the sanctuary I saw some smiles and even a
few toes tapping while people enjoyed this apparently unusual
contribution to worship. However, when the service had concluded
and I reflected on the entire experience, I just couldn’t
help but feel that the anthem seemed very out of place.
I wasn’t just considering the now redundant observation
that Presbyterians don’t move or clap or (God forbid)
dance in worship. It was something deeper that seemed to
be missing, but I could not find words to describe the hollowness
I felt. Several months later, as I began to explore ways
in which we might assist local churches in “globalizing”
their regular worship life, I had this fear in the back
of my mind that we might be recreating the same problem
for others as the one described above.
I taught a three day course
at a conference the following summer entitled Global Worship
in the Local Church. During our first session we talked
about general issues around global worship. Some of the
participants expressed concern that using music, prayers
or symbols from other cultures can sometimes feel like token
gestures – lacking integrity. I agreed, remembering
my previous Siyahamba experience. The next segment of our
workshop addressed the desire to lift up the needs of the
global church in minutes for mission and in prayer, both
spoken and sung.
As an example, we talked about
Northern Ireland. We read a brief overview of the civil
war and talked about possibilities for interpretation during
worship. I had planned for us to sing, “Canticle of
the Turning,” a contemporary hymn by Rory Cooney set
to a Northern Irish traditional tune. But, before we sang,
we gathered in a circle to pray for Northern Ireland as
a part of our Prayers for the People. I had made previous
arrangements to have a telephone set up in our workshop
room. We called Doug Baker, a PCUSA missionary in Belfast
for the past 15 years. Doug joined us by speaker phone and
shared the latest news and prayer concerns with us. We bowed
our heads and began to pray. Doug began by offering thanksgiving
for all that God had already done and intercession for the
coming weeks of predicted violence. Soon, others around
the room began to pray. Some prayed for Belfast and for
the church and its members there. Some prayed for the Bakers
and their continued ministry. Prayers were mentioned for
the conference that we were a part of and its leadership.
At the end, Doug closed with a prayer for peace that was
going to be read in every Presbyterian Church in Northern
Ireland the following Sunday. When we all finally said,
“Amen,” I raised my head to see many misty eyes
around the room. As I wiped my own tears away, I thanked
Doug for joining us and we said good bye. Everyone gathered
their music and we began to sing The Canticle of the Turning
with a passion and energy that had not been present just
a few moments before. I looked around in amazement. “So,
this is global worship,” I thought.
I was reminded of a report
that I had read recently from the Lutheran World Federation.
It said, “True cross-cultural sharing is motivated
by the desire to know and love Christian brothers and sisters
from other cultures. We share in each others cultures in
worship as a means of embracing the people of that culture
and to gain new insights into the Gospel. God calls us into
koinonia with our brothers and sisters in Christ from various
cultures and not into koinonia with cultures and cultural
components extrapolated from those who embody them,”
(Lutheran World Federation Worship and Culture report –
Nairobi, 1996).
Some of my previous experiences
of “global worship” had felt empty because either
a) the focus had been entirely on what our local church
gets out of it. In other words, we use these songs or prayers
almost as a novelty to “jazz things up a little bit,”
but without the intention to actually lift up the people
from whom these resources come, or b) the focus is entirely
on “those people over there” during times of
prayer and singing as if we were not all part of the one
body of Christ and as if our actions and lifestyles did
not directly affect the lives of those people. Global worship
can not be about us here or them there, but must affirm
our membership in the global, ecumenical, organic, dynamic
and transforming family of God. Can I get an Amen?
After September 11, 2001 there
was some concern for staff about traveling in general and
a re-evaluation of the necessity of some kinds of work in
particular. I was scheduled to lead a global worship workshop
for Heartland Presbytery, hosted by Second Presbyterian
Church in Kansas City, on September 22nd. I called Rev.
Catherine Price, the primary organizer for the upcoming
event, and asked her if I should still plan to come. “Do
you think people will show up?” I inquired. She responded,
“I think this event is even more important now than
it was before. You should certainly come.”
During the days and weeks that
followed, I realized that Catherine was right. For better
or worse, many people began to realize in a new way on September
11th that we are all a part of a global community. The news
media, educational institutions, and our society in general
have been working to help us to understand what it means
to be a faithful citizen in a ‘global village.’
However, I have begun to wonder, “Who helps us understand
what it means to be a faithful Christian within this interconnected
world-wide Body of Christ?”
I believe that many Presbyterians
receive the majority of their spiritual faith formation
while they are sitting in the pews on Sunday morning. Of
course, it would be ideal if everyone was involved in Christian
Education, committee work, Bible study, mission and outreach
programs, conferences, etc., but that is not true for many.
In other words, if people don’t get it in worship,
they may not get it at all. As a result, I wonder how those
of us who plan and lead worship can do so in a way that
nurtures and sustains globally-conscious, mission-minded,
culturally-inclusive Presbyterians. This challenge is exactly
the one that we are trying to address in our Global Worship
workshops, worship planning and leadership and our collection
and distribution of international resources.
If you are interested in sponsoring
or hosting Global Worship workshops, retreats and worship
services for your congregation, Presbytery of conference,
please feel free to contact me at: Corey Nelson, 100 Witherspoon
Street, Louisville, KY 40202, 502.569.5308, cnelson@ctr.pcusa.org.
Corey Nelson is a
mission educator and the creator and director of the Thuma
Mina Mission Theater Company. A former high school music
director, he has worked as a Young Adult Volunteer in Belfast,
Northern Ireland and Ghana, West Africa. Corey received
his B.A. from Whitworth College and M.Div. from McCormick
Theological Seminary.