February 8, 2007

Friends Journal essay:
On the significance of benches

This article appeared in the February 2007 issue of Friends Journal. Copyright © 2007 Friends Publishing Corporation; reprinted with permission. For further information: www.friendsjournal.org.
In the final worship at a recent session of Iowa Yearly Meeting (Conservative), I found myself reflecting on the keynote presenter’s tender words of gratitude for the benches on which more than a hundred of us sat, aware of the generations of Friends who had sat upon them for decades before us, in waiting worship, seeking to be brought into the arms of the Divine.

During these Iowa sessions, I’d had to submit to sharing a bench with at least three Friends, and often shared the bench with four or even five. I never had a bench to myself for more than a minute, and I could not fidget as readily as I can when I am sitting in a chair. At first I was spiritually claustrophobic—how could I worship with someone sitting so close to me? I wanted more elbow room so I could be alone with my worship! Eventually I made do with the Friends sitting on either side of me and yielded to the reason we were there: to worship together.

The benches were hard, even beneath the hand-sewn foam cushion that ran the length of each, but they provided me with some comfort and a peculiar sense of being connected with the Friends with whom I shared a bench for the hour.

In a covenantal religious society, the Divine, rather than the pressure to conform, instructs us. Among Friends, our gratification delayed, waiting until led to act, unprogrammed time in our day and in our week, faithfulness, being present to one another, and wrestling with issues large and small—all these elements of the Quaker faith community are part of the salve to heal wounds and spiritual deficits we seldom understand.

In the United States, society trumpets the power of the individual and all that we have at our fingertips. I can join the tens of thousands of others in Minneapolis who jump into their cars to go to work, to exercise, or to attend committee meetings. I can come home and flip on the television, prepare my own supper while my partner eats what she wants, and then retire to the computer, read some Quaker weblogs, listen to Mozart while she listens to Michael Franti in another room. With caller ID, I can decide whether or not to talk to my mother, who will likely ask when I spoke with my grandmother last. I can find an issue that irks me, draw up a poster with a few choice words, and attend a rally or vigil. I can speak out because the First Amendment says I can. And I can practice religion in the way I want because the Bill of Rights says I can.

In contrast, Quaker society and tradition calls us away from our individual lives so that we might worship, labor, play, and be nourished in a gathered community. Significant decisions are made through the discernment of the gathered community, not by a privileged and well-paid few; and a decision to take action may be held over from month to month, so that together we may test and season our understandings of how the Light is leading us.

In worship, despite the personal desire to push on, listening and waiting together can amplify the still, small voice in a way that disconnected individuals, tempted by our own freedoms and separated from a corporate body that yearns to move together, might not be able to hear. At times we are compelled to be present not only with other Friends but also with friends and strangers beyond the walls of the meetinghouse, to lift one another—any “other”—up with a tender hand.

I remember a time, on a quiet but busy road during rush hour, when a minivan and a bike scraped each other enough to disrupt traffic. As I drove past, I saw on the roadside the driver and the biker point fingers, trade angry looks, and exchange words. I wanted to pass them by like the drivers did in the oncoming traffic, but I was compelled to stop. I asked if they were all right, and I acknowledged the surprise they each must have felt when they were aware, too late, of each other’s presence in their respective paths.

At first, they looked at me as if I had just walked into their bedroom during an intimate embrace. Eventually, each of them took a big breath, checked for scrapes and bruised egos, shared their phone numbers, and apologized for yelling at each other. They were beginning to express care for one another. When we each got back to our own vehicles and parted ways, I wondered, were we too eager to forget about what had happened so we could return to our independent, insulated lives?

I’ve been keeping a small dry-erase board on my desk, where I write the names of F/friends with whom I wish to keep in touch, or who need a helping hand. At the top is the word I use to organize the list: “Community.” I still must discipline myself to reach out to them and carve out some time to sit or talk with them. I’ve been trained to focus on me, me, me, and I am frustrated and easily lulled by the U.S. anthems of individualism and instant gratification.

It occurs to me that I must apply this same discipline to meeting for worship, since the same isolating forces are at work there, too. In other meetinghouses where I have worshiped, there are more often chairs than benches for worshipers. But during those few days at Iowa Conservative’s midyear meeting, I sank into the Seed and felt the unity of being yoked together on that bench.

Sharing a bench brought home for me the necessity to join other Friends in the act of corporate waiting worship. I hungered to keep to and share in that unspoken agreement. The temptation, though, was to pressure myself to be extra quiet, to be extra un-fidgety, like forcing myself not to think of a pink elephant and then only being able to think of one.

I felt a Life and a Power that seemed to unite Friends at the midyear meeting, and I attribute it to the sense of our having being joined together in our love of the Spirit and in our love of one another. There seemed to be an unspoken, common understanding that our individual freedoms took a back seat to God’s call and to our involvement within the Quaker community. The bench became a symbol of that covenantal yoke for me. Our joy came from being yoked to one another, learning from each other, and sharing in the work of helping a group of individuals be joined together as a faith community.

Is it too easy for us as modern Friends to slip into chairs that can be moved slightly this way or that, in rooms that are large enough to accommodate not just our worshipers but all of our supersized personal space? Is there a discipline we can practice to keep society’s freedoms an arm’s length away and allow ourselves the treasure of knowing one another inside and outside of worship, in that which is Eternal?

Blessings,
Liz

RELATED POSTS:

2006 Midyear Meeting at IYM(C)

Chairs on Quaker Street

9 comments:

  1. Absolutely wonderful article. It is often hard to remember the larger community that we are a part of and to step outside of our comfort zone to do for others or to be there for someone we don't even know. And there are too many excuses on why not to. What good are we if we aren't sharing who we are with others.

    Thanks for sharing.
    Jodi

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  2. Hey, Jodi, thanks for dropping by and for taking the time to comment. And just so you know: I still have the "too many excuses" syndrome. I'm working on it, though God is really the one working through me, all the time.

    Blessings,
    Liz

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  3. Friends Journal is fortunate to have your contribution; terrific article and many thanks.

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  4. Liz, thank you for this post... it spoke to a few questions and concerns I've had on my mind lately... the ego telling me to insulate myself and stand out versus my heart telling me to sink in, be still, and learn. I am still new to Friends' Meetings and occasionally find myself overwhelmed or confused when faced with what I must learn and what I should discard.

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  5. Liz--Just "delurking" to say thanks for the post. You said some things that I really needed to hear--I've been making excuses for not reaching out to people lately. I'll be keeping your words in mind.

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  6. Christine -

    Thanks for dropping by and corresponding with me offline. I appreciate it.

    Nonsequitor and Linds -

    I feel rather humbled by your comments. I simply was writing about my experience because it had transformed me. ...Well, that and because another blogger fFriend encouraged me to submit something to Friends Journal.

    I think that both of your responses point to why I believe it is important that--as difficult or tender as it is--we share parts of our journey towards faithfulness with other Friends: We cannot be Friends in isolation, and we can never know how our own description of how Spirit is moving within us may open others to consider the life of the Spirit for themselves. I hope that makes sense.

    Then again, we have to be intentional about when and how we share those bits and pieces of our journey--some things are meant to be held in order to be understood and integrated, at least in part, before sharing them, lest we share them prematurely.

    Blessings,
    Liz

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  7. Liz,

    Your article (which I just read in Friends Journal--I still like to read on actual paper) spoke to a concern I have been feeling. We have a large, old meeting house with a small meeting. The result, of course (just like on a half-empty bus) is people scattered about the room. I've been wondering recently if we might have deeper shared worship if we cordoned off part of the room, forcing people to sit together. Your article may finally get me to talk with M&C in my meeting--though I can only imagine the uproar if I propose it in meeting for business! At the very least, though, it would provoke people to think about the state of our meeting.

    Thanks for the article. As you can see, it spoke to my condition.

    David

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  8. Dear Liz,

    Your article is wonderful. But you knew that. One thing this teaches me is that we should be less shy about speaking of the things we are learning in meeting for worship and in traveling among Friends.

    Keep up the good writing!

    Robin M.

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  9. David -

    I'm glad you are thinking of sharing your concern with M&C. I have learned that when I share ideas and concerns with others, sometimes they have other pieces, other insights of what might help. No single individual has the whole Truth, as you know. It's just as much about living into the questions as it is about waiting for an opening to suggest doing something different, then seeing if a small group or larger one is ready to come under the weight of that concern, and then taking the risk as a community of engaging in an experiment and reflecting on how it went.

    Robin -

    Like you, I agree that there is some benefit to sharing with others what we learn by traveling among Friends. Hooray for the renewal of intervisitation!

    Blessings,
    Liz

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I am moderating comments for posts older than 30 days, so you may not necessarily see your comment online right away. I retain the right to choose *not* to publish comments, especially if they are for particularly old posts, and/or if the comment repeats points made in earlier comments. --Liz