Somewhere along my journey, I was in a town that held an annual “Brotherhood Breakfast” (the name shows it was quite some time ago). The idea, as I recall, was to invite Christian, Jewish, Muslim, and other religious folks together to share a meal and listen to a guest speaker addressing the theme.
One year I arrived early, sat down at a table, took a drink from the glass of water at my place, and waited for a colleague I was meeting, prior to getting food from the buffet. My friend was late arriving, and I decided to join others who were dishing up their eggs and bacon.
When I returned to my seat, the table was filled was other folks. I gently mentioned to the person in my seat that I was sitting there already. He ignored me completely. It was as if I were invisible. I spoke again, and got the same lack of response. So, I kind of shrugged my shoulders and went to find another place, which wasn’t simple since the room was filling up with guests.
After placing my food at the new seat, I returned to my original seat, reached across the man who ignored me, picked up the glass of water, and said, “I already drank from this glass.” Again, no response, no acknowledgment that I even existed.
When my friend finally arrived, I told him what happened, and we shared a laugh as we envisioned a headline in the next day’s newspaper: “Fistfight Breaks Out Over Seating At Brotherhood Breakfast.”
It turns out there is actual, physical fighting between Christians at the designated sites of Jesus’ birthplace and tomb. Shrines were built at both places, and Greek and Armenian church leaders jealously protect what they perceive as their “rights” there. An agreement forged many years ago supposedly spell out those rights, and the agreement is known as the “status quo.”
How ironic. So many church fights are centered on issues pertaining to the “status quo” of tradition, theology, and biblical interpretation. Many church folks resist change, in whatever form it occurs, and they resort to varieties of disruptive behavior. But violence between Christians at the manger and tomb of Jesus?
Multitudes claim to worship the Prince of Peace, but they don’t follow him. It occurs to me that he would rather have it the other way around.
Updated: Tuesday, 22 April 2008 10:46 AM EDT
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