The Gospel, Victims and Common Worship by Janet Fife

What has the gospel got to offer victims of abuse? What is ‘good news’ for those whose most urgent problem is not their own sin, but the damage done by someone else’s sin against them? 

A survivor attending a Common Worship Holy Communion service (and many parishes offer nothing else) might well conclude that Christianity cannot help them. The focus is entirely on sin and forgiveness, and the work of Jesus presented almost solely as saving us from our sins. The theme runs through the service from the penitential material at the beginning to the prayers before the distribution of the consecrated elements, and is sometimes repeated in the post-communion collect.

Undoubtedly salvation from sin is a key theme both in the Bible and in Christianity generally. I would argue, however, that to narrow the gospel down just to forgiveness from sin as the Church is currently doing, is to seriously distort it.  I’ll illustrate this by looking at two examples from Common Worship.

The first is the introduction to the confession in Holy Communion Order One: God so loved the world that he gave his only Son Jesus Christ to save us from our sins, to be our advocate in heaven, and to bring us to eternal life.

Contrast it with John 3:16, which it quotes: For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life.

Verse 17 continues: Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.

The original in John offers relief from the fear of death, with the implication of a new quality of life now, and freedom from condemnation ‘to those who believe’. The invitation to confession more specifically names Jesus’ mission as ‘to save us from our sins’, with ‘to bring us to eternal life’ second, and as a delayed prospect. It also introduces the idea of Jesus as our ‘advocate’ – lawyer – in heaven. The whole mood of the passage has changed from freedom and relief, provided for us by God’s overwhelming love, to apprehension of appearing in the dock in a cosmic courtroom with God as Judge – a daunting prospect, even with Christ as our barrister.

Moreover, rather than approaching our advocate directly, we are supposed to rely on an intermediary – the priest – to dispense absolution. The idea of an intermediary other than Christ is foreign to this passage from John, and scarcely present in the New Testament.

Our second example is the options given for prayer before the distribution of Holy Communion. Both distort the lesson to be gained from the tale of the Syrophoenician widow in Mt. 15 and Mk 7. The point of the story is that God’s grace is so abundant that it’s available to all – ‘even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their master’s table’. Even Syrophoenician women are ‘worthy’ to eat the crumbs – how much more so the children of the household! And yet, after confession, absolution, sermon, declaring our faith, exchanging the Peace and all – we are supposed to say we are less worthy than dogs. This is hardly Good News, especially for those downtrodden and lacking confidence.

The virtues of Common Worship are that there is supplementary material, and that it allows freedom to borrow from external liturgical sources, especially during the ante-communion.  Few clergy make the most of this freedom, however. The core of the liturgy used in most parishes shows a very limited understanding of the mission of Jesus.  Understandably, then, even regular worshippers can assume that Jesus was born and died solely so that our sins can be forgiven.

Contrast this assumption with Jesus’ own declaration of his mission: “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,   because he has anointed me  to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favour.” Luke 4:18-19

There is nothing in this passage about sin. Jesus speaks here of being sent to the poor, the prisoners, the blind, and the oppressed; and he speaks not of forgiving them but of healing them and setting them free.

Likewise, the Sermon on the Mount, the core of Jesus’ teaching, begins with words of blessing for the poor (Luke) or poor in spirit (Matthew); the meek; the persecuted; mourners; and the hungry (Luke; Matthew has ‘those who hunger and thirst for righteousness’).  It is clear that Jesus is concerned for those who suffer, whether physically or emotionally, and meeting their needs.

Jesus challenged some people regarding their sin, especially religious leaders. However, he healed and delivered many to whom he does not seem to have mentioned sin. He resisted the others’ attempts to reduce everything to a question of sin and guilt, and frequently criticised religious leaders for laying heavy burdens on ‘ordinary’ people and the poor.

The concept of salvation itself has been narrowed to a focus on the forgiveness of sin. The principal Hebrew term for salvation, (yesa’) means ‘to make room for’ or ‘to bring into a spacious environment’. It connotes freedom from things which restrict or limit. It is the word from which the name ‘Jesus’ is derived.The Greek term sozein originally meant ‘to deliver from danger’ or ‘to make safe’. In both Hebrew and Greek the word used for ‘salvation’ meant safety, deliverance from danger, and freedom from restriction. 

Sin is one of the things which threatens and restricts us, and saving us from sin was certainly part of Jesus’ purpose. But other things also threaten and restrict us, and particularly the survivor of sexual abuse:  fear, shame, despair, self-loathing, poor decision-making. Children and young people who are abused are not given the right conditions for growth, and their development into psychologically healthy adults is restricted. A true sense of self must be given space to develop. For them maturing into Christ will mean not sacrificing self, as much traditional teaching demands, but learning who they are and what they want. Psychological limitations such as the inability to set boundaries, trust one’s own perceptions, or seek to have one’s needs met are properly a part of the work of salvation. As Kathleen Fischer commented, ‘the movement of God in our lives emerges as we come to know our deepest selves’ (Women at the Well:  Feminist Perspectives on Spiritual Direction, p. 114)

We seldom see this wider picture of salvation reflected in our liturgy, which is the ‘shop window’ of our Church and both reflects and moulds our theology and spirituality.  The seasonal material, including collects and Bible readings, does draw on themes such as events in the life of Jesus and the doctrine of the Trinity, but these are still set within a framework which is almost exclusively about the sins and need for forgiveness of the worshipper. 

Imagine the effect of this skewed emphasis on those who come to church hurting physically and emotionally, frightened, with no sense of self respect, and never having had a chance to discover who they really are. They are faced almost immediately with a prayer saying God knows all our secrets, and are then required to search their own hearts and minds for the things they have done wrong. For an individual in such a condition the confession can be a further abasement. Imagine if, instead, they were greeted with:  ‘Jesus said, the Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor…to let the oppressed go free…’, and the rest of the liturgy took its theme from that. It would be liberating not only for sexual abuse survivors, but for many others:  the poor, the depressed, the sick, and those struggling with all kinds of problems. 

This article is an excerpt from the chapter of the same title in Letters to a Broken Church.

About Stephen Parsons

Stephen is a retired Anglican priest living at present in Cumbria. He has taken a special interest in the issues around health and healing in the Church but also when the Church is a place of harm and abuse. He has published books on both these issues and is at present particularly interested in understanding how power works at every level in the Church. He is always interested in making contact with others who are concerned with these issues.

6 thoughts on “The Gospel, Victims and Common Worship by Janet Fife

  1. An excellent article by Janet Fife, thank you so much Janet.

    Following on from Janet’s powerful and necessary points, comparing and contrasting these three collects for Holy Innocents Day (28 December) is illuminating:

    From An Anglican Prayer Book 1989 (Church of the Province of Southern Africa)

    Heavenly Father,
    children suffered at the hands of Herod,
    though they had done no wrong;
    give us grace not to be indifferent
    in the face of cruelty and oppression
    but to defend the weak
    from the tyranny of the strong;
    through Jesus our Lord.

    From the C of E’s Alternative Service Book 1980:

    Heavenly Father,
    whose children suffered at cruel hands,
    though they had done no wrong;
    give us grace neither to act cruelly
    nor to stand indifferently by,
    but to defend the weak from the tyranny of the strong;
    in the name of Jesus Christ who suffered for us,
    who is alive and reigns with you,
    but is alive and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
    one God, now and for ever.

    From the C of E’s Common Worship 2000:

    Heavenly Father,
    whose children suffered at the hands of Herod,
    though they had done no wrong:
    by the suffering of your Son
    and by the innocence of our lives
    frustrate all evil designs
    and establish your reign of justice and peace;
    through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
    who is alive and reigns with you,
    in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
    one God, now and for ever.

    Funny how the C of E in Common Worship contradicted the ASB and South African approaches by passing responsibility for responding to injustice away from us humans, isn’t it? It’s fairly obvious why in South Africa in 1989 it seemed important to name justice issues concretely, and ask for God’s help for us humans to take up our responsibility to confront them.

    Does the Common Worship collect reflect or undermine the Gospel of Jesus Christ?

    1. The Common Worship collects were so dire they had to be rewritten and a second set issued a few years later. I gave up on them and used the excellent ICEL ‘Opening Prayers’ instead, or occasionally Janet Morley or New Zealand Prayer Book collects.

      The trouble with with compiling liturgy in General Synod committees, and then having to get it past votes of the full Synod, is that the liturgy then reflects Synod politics. You can see this if you compare CW eucharistic prayers (written for different churchmanships and theologies) with Scottish Episcopal eucharistic prayers (written for different church seasons).

      Fortunately CW allows a lot of latitude for using alternatives. I used it to the full.

  2. This is the ever-excellent Janet Morley’s Holy Innocents collect in All Desires Known (1992):

    God of the dispossessed, defender of the helpless,
    children died at the hands of Herod;
    you grieve with all who weep
    and when creation suffers at cruel hands.
    Give us grace neither to act cruelly,
    nor to stand indifferently by
    in the face of cruelty and oppression,
    but to defend the powerless and weak
    from tyranny by the powerful,
    to confound violence and set broken victims free;
    in the name of Jesus Christ who died for us,
    but is alive and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
    one God, now and for ever. Amen.

  3. Oh wow. Brilliant article Janet. And I love the other Janet’s collect. One of my tutors used to call the prayer of humble access, “Another bit of grovelling” that you had to do before you were fit to receive. No sense of the theology of “Bold I approach the Eternal Throne” there. I attended a workshop this weekend at which the question was posed, “Why is the Good News good?” The point being that that is what we have to tell people.

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