Spirituality and Discipleship
Catholics and Mennonites Bridging the Divide
Third Annual Bridgefolk Gathering
July 29-
Listening Committee Report
The listening
committee consisted of Susan Harrison and Brad Gregory. This report has three sections: an
introduction, a review of what was said in the six main sessions of the
gathering, and a few remarks regarding what was not discussed openly in the
sessions, but which the members of the listening committee considered
important.
1. Introduction
“Listen” is the first word of the Rule of St. Benedict, and listening committees are integral to meetings and conferences among Mennonites. In keeping with the monastic theme of attentiveness, the listening committee tried to listen attentively both to what was said in our common sessions, particularly regarding the overarching theme of spirituality and discipleship, and to be aware of what seems important in our interactions but was not said (or was said only informally, over meals, during free time, etc.).
2. What Was Said: An
Overview of the Six Main Sessions
On Thursday evening, during the session entitled “Meeting the Folk in Bridgefolk,” Eric Massanari spoke about the importance of the influence of church history, his own family history (which includes Italian Catholic ancestors), and the influence of both Buddhist and Catholic spirituality in leading to a reengagement with his Mennonite faith and the pastorate. Sister Merle Nolde mentioned that her first direct interaction with Mennonites was at last year’s Bridgefolk gathering, and noted the influence of Mennonite scholar Alan Kreider and his wife during and after their visit to her religious community in June. Finally, Alice Noe singled out Ivan Kaufmann as the person who led her to Bridgefolk, and mentioned two biblical images relevant to our striving for mutual understanding: the reluctance of Moses, Joshua, and Caleb to enter the promised land (Num. 13-14), and the Church as the disheveled, tattered bride of Christ who regains her beautiful appearance as she proceeds down the aisle with her spouse.
The Friday morning session on “Action and Contemplation” included reflections from Biff Weidman and Abbot Eoin de Bhaldraithe about their choices to live contemplative lives. Biff reflected on the challenge of finding spiritual “breathing space” that nourishes life while living in a culture that validates persons by their roles and actions, sharing his struggle to live with incompleteness in contemplative life as a way of traveling rather than a realized destination. He noted the lack of Mennonite structures that nurture silent prayer, validate contemplation, and combine discipleship with prayer.
Abbot Eoin noted the transformation of contemplative life from medieval claustration to contemporary contemplative life that calls one out into action, with hope as the guiding virtue by which “Contemplation calls one to action and action calls one to contemplation.” He also reflected on the role of hospitality to Christians and strangers as actions that lead towards unity, with particular attention to the need for Christians to move beyond sectarianism. Both contributors reflected on how contemplation is subversive in the way it challenges one to resist conformity to broader cultural influences, whether individual or collective.
In “Families Crossing the Divide,” on Friday afternoon, Ivan and Lois Kauffman shared their story of how they came to the Catholic Church, even though they were raised as traditional Mennonites. Initiated by Ivan’s spiritual restlessness they eventually came to find a home in the Catholic community. Both shared how participation in the Eucharistic celebration and the Roman liturgy came to have a deeper meaning over time. The Kauffmans’ story reflected not only the joy of spiritual homecoming for those who cross over the bridge, but also the costs of going to the other side. Their story included a sense of loss and lament for the isolation they felt during their time of restlessness, the inadequacy of their tradition of origin in attending to their unease, and the inadequacies of their new tradition in bringing them into Catholic parish culture and life. Crossing the bridge from Mennonite to Catholic was difficult for their children, religiously and socially, and placed strain on wider family relationships.
On Friday evening, we heard a report on the joint Mennonite-Catholic document, Called Together to Be Peacemakers, completed in 2003 after five years of intensive ecumenical dialogue between Catholic and Mennonite scholars. Helmut Harder, a participant in the dialogue on the Mennonite side, described the process and procedures entailed in the six week-long meetings over five years that comprised the principal basis for the document. Drew Christiansen, a participant in the dialogue on the Catholic side, highlighted particular contributions to the document by different Mennonite and Catholic scholars who were involved. Tom Finger, as the Mennonite respondent to the document for our gathering, criticized the use of “ordinance” rather than “sacrament” language in the document, arguing that there exists greater latitude to use sacramental language among Mennonites. Finally, Margaret O’Gara began with four brief, positive remarks about the document and its significance, moved on to four areas of strong convergence between Catholics and Mennonites as articulated in the document, and noted that the understanding of the Church with respect to “tradition” might have been more fully developed than in fact it was.
The Saturday morning session, “Psalms and Hymns,” featured presentations by Ken Nafziger and Michael Joncas. Ken spoke about the function of hymns in Mennonite spirituality: they allow one to hear one’s own voice in the congregation, they tap into multiple layers of memories, they go into the center of who Mennonites are, so much so that many Mennonites would regard the loss of their hymnody as the loss of worship as such. Due to changes in how and when Mennonites gather and sing, there needs to be an intentional effort to teach newcomers and younger generations how to sing the four parts necessary for the traditional hymnody to continue. Michael Joncas articulated several different ways in which Psalms are sung in Catholic worship. Scripture in Catholic liturgy and worship is used very deliberately, including the use of the Psalms; when they are set to music, efforts are made to respect them as a genre. Catholicism uses singing as a vehicle of movement through the liturgy, rather than primarily to voice theological propositions or proclamations in and of themselves, the way that much Mennonite hymnody does. Michael also explained how the Psalms (“Ancient Jewish war cries”) can be understood as Christian prayers.
Saturday afternoon’s session was devoted to reports from the leaders of and participants in the four affinity groups that met two times each during the gathering. The Action and Contemplation group mentioned the challenge of integrating spirituality and action as well as of identifying the many ways in which these domains are lived out. The Family Life group devoted its attention to particular stories of Catholic-Mennonite families. The Catholic Spirituality and Sixteenth-Century Anabaptism group noted common themes in excerpts from Johannes Tauler, the Theologia Deutsch, Peter Riedemann, and Pilgram Marpeck. And the group that concentrated on the Peacemakers document discussed ways to share it with church members at the local level of parishes and congregations. This led to a wider discussion regarding the same issue, before Ivan Kaufmann solicited feedback about the Bridgefolk newsletter, The Bridge, and Gerald Schlabach led a discussion about the organizational future of Bridgefolk. There was a general sense that because different people are drawn to the group for different reasons, its character should remain relatively informal.
The listening committee noted five themes pertaining to spirituality that emerged from our sessions:
The listening committee noted three themes that emerged from our sessions with respect to the theme of discipleship:
3. What Was Not Said
(Or Was Not Said Openly)
The listening committee noted several topics or themes that seem critically important but were not discussed during the gathering.
4. Concluding Remarks
There seems to have been a widespread sense that the
overarching theme of Spirituality and Discipleship was productive and
worthwhile. This year’s Bridgefolk gathering
demonstrated its vitality both through the return of participants who had
attended previous gatherings, as well as through the presence of Mennonites as
well as Catholics who were here for the first time. Common music and meals, continuing and new
friendships as well as the sharing of concrete, personal stories are a mutual
gift to one another; they are a road by which to maintain our presence on the
bridge, whatever particular form that presence assumes from person to person.
[1]In July 2004