Every once in a while I need to read this brief passage written by Dom Gregory Dix, in his major work, The Shape of the Liturgy (published in 1945). There's something about it that's so striking, so nourishing to the soul. He's considering Christ's command to "do this, in memory of me."
Was ever a command so obeyed? For century after century, spreading slowly to every continent and country and among every race on earth, this action has been done, in every conceivable circumstance, for every conceivable human need from infancy and before it to extreme old age and after it, from the pinnacles of human greatness to the refuge of fugitives in the caves and dens of the earth. Men have found no better thing than this to do for kings at their crowning and for criminals going to the scaffold; for armies in triumph or for a bride and bridegroom in a little country church; for the proclamation of a dogma or for a good crop of wheat; for the wisdom of the Parliament of a mighty nation or for a sick old woman afraid to die; for a schoolboy sitting an examination or for Columbus setting out to discover America; for the famine of whole provinces or for the soul of a dead lover; in thankfulness because my father did not die of pneumonia; for a village headman much tempted to return to fetich because the yams had failed; because the Turk was at the gates of Vienna; for the repentance of Margaret; for the settlement of a strike; for a son for a barren woman; for Captain so-and-so, wounded and prisoner-of-war; while the lions roared in the nearby amphitheatre; on the beach at Dunkirk; while the hiss of scythes in the thick June grass came faintly through the windows of the church; tremulously, by an old monk on the fiftieth anniversary of his vows; furtively, by an exiled bishop who had hewn timber all day in a prison camp near Murmansk; gorgeously, for the canonisation of S. Joan of Arc — one could fill many pages with the reasons why men have done this, and not tell a hundredth part of them. And best of all, week by week and month by month, on a hundred thousand successive Sundays, faithfully, unfailingly, across all the parishes of christendom, the pastors have done this just to make the plebs sancta Dei — the holy common people of God.
Absolutely beautiful.
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This is one of my favourite passages from any book. Wonderful. Why is it so many Anglicans are darn good users of the English language??? (Robert scratches his head in bewilderment).
This brings back happy memories, of my former parish priest Fr Jarrett (now Bp of Lismore, N.S.W.) reading this out aloud as a meditation at Exposition of the Bl Sacrament one Sunday afternoon…
I once heard an elderly Antiochian Orthodox priest (former Anglican priest) read out this as a sort fo meditation as well.