Ramez Mikhail
posted on Nov 09, 2011 - 10:32 PM
Hi Mike,
Thanks for understanding what I meant. Let's see where we agree and where we differ.
Can we agree that the Church is to be beyond the world? Yes, definitely, hence the prayer you mentioned and countless others, as well as our theology of icons, and so on. But beyond the world in what way? And what do we mean by "the world"? I disagree that technology, strictly speaking, is what is meant here. I feel we have to dig much deeper than that. To me, the most prominent aspect of the Church's "metaphysicality" in the literal sense is that She binds and unites all as the body of Christ, the Ekklesia, the new people of Israel, whereas the world is all about fragmenting, separating, segregating. We are segregated in every way in the world, by time zones, space, backgrounds, life's responsibilities, misunderstandings, and ultimately sin, while the Church transcends all these circumstances that have become the defining characteristics of a fallen world. Another huge point, as I mentioned before, is the Church as the Sacrament of Offering, transforming our very relationship and use of nature from lustful consumerism to Eucharistic offering to God. I know these are not mutually exclusive aspects of our Church, but I feel that when we keep these truly transcendent issues in mind, technology as such pales in comparison.
I am sorry if I implied that you thought technology was "heretical", I know that is not what you meant and you have no strictly doctrinal opposition to technology. Believe me, I think I know the feeling you convey in your posts. We all love our church, and until recently the only "technology" we used were microphones, speakers, and occasionally TV screens in adjacent rooms. The gradual encroachment of projectors, screens, laptops and ipads have left our churches looking more like offices or lecture halls than the heaven on earth we are used to. I get it. These may be very valid reasons to avoid certain technological applications in certain contexts, but we should be careful from dogmatizing our opinions, or from assuming our experience and preferences would be true and edifying for every congregation anywhere. We should also be careful not to base our argument on a wrong understanding of the Church and the world (which you already agreed with me on), or on the basis that "this is not traditional". The Church is alive and the Holy Spirit is alive yesterday, today, and tomorrow, so there is always room for new things that edify and fit, as long as they don't contradict our Ecclesiology and are done in the right spirit.
I personally think the biggest problem with this trend is that it institutionalizes and condones the weakness of not memorizing the prayers and making them one's own expressions of their relationship with God. When we only had books, they were individual aids for specific people if they happen to not know the prayers (visitors, catechumens, inquirers, and those of us who have not yet memorized the liturgy). Now, there is a big screen, the most visually over-bearing sight in the church, almost forcing you to look at it, rather than at icons or the altar themselves. It is implicitly saying "don't bother memorizing prayers...just look up and there they are". But again, I would be careful not to discount the possibility that it may be needed for some, at various stages of maturity in the faith, and that depending on the demographics of a particular parish and their situation, it might be too harsh to subject them to a rigorous anti-technology for the sake of an ethos they may not even understand except gradually and after years.
Joined: Sep 15, 2002 | Posts: 1838