When a building or room is dedicated to God as a “sacred space” where members of the community of faith will gather for worship, study, and the administration of sacraments, what are the limits of what is allowable or appropriate to occur there? In other words, what can or cannot be done in sacred space?
Hateful words often are spoken in sacred spaces. Sermons vilifying groups or individuals are not uncommon in some churches. I once was included in a conversation, held in a church sanctuary, in which a denominational leader uttered the “N-word.” Nasty glares, filled with daggers, get tossed around if a child makes a noise, someone says “Amen” during the sermon, or if a young person isn’t dressed according to standard. Is there sacredness in these occurrences?
Once, at the chapel at the Disciples conference center at Bethany Beach, Delaware, I observed from a distance as a local production of The Wizard of Oz was underway. Through the screen along the side of the building I could see “backstage,” where someone provided sound effects by pounding the communion table with a broomstick. On another communion table in another sacred space, a not-so-young mother changed her baby’s diaper. Sacred or not sacred?
It seems a lot of the vagaries of life take place in church buildings.
Some churches across the continent are opening their doors to a court-sponsored program whereby fugitives can show up for “Safe Surrender.” According to reports, “The program does not offer amnesty, but gives people a chance to resolve cases amid promises from authorities of ‘favorable consideration.’” Temporary “court rooms” are set up, participants are assigned defense lawyers, and judges hear the arguments. For some of the defendants, this seems less of a threatening experience than actually showing up at a courthouse, and it helps to close out unresolved matters for both the courts and the accused. Not that everyone is allowed to wiggle off the hook, however.
Is this an appropriate activity for a sacred space? I think it is. But for some, it’s also a reminder that more sacred work needs to occur in churches. One person, an elder in a church where Safe Surrender was taking place, remarked that folks “in government and the church…have to continually find ways to connect with people before they make bad choices.”
“We dropped the ball somewhere,” he said. “I think we could have done more.”
