The Church of the Good Shepherd, (Anglican) Toronto
1149 Weston Road, Toronto Ontario, Canada, M6N 3S3
Contact us at (416) 766-1887   or  click here to email us

 

Home

Church
Location

Service
Times

Parish
Contacts

Homilies

Church
Activities

Church
News

Articles

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Homilies

Back to Homilies menu

If Ye Break Faith

In 1998 a private member’s bill was introduced in the Parliament which called for the formal recognition of two minutes of silence on Remembrance Day.  The custom of observing a day to contemplate the sacrifices made by Canadian soldiers in the service of our country is now more important than ever, as our troops risk their lives to bring peace and stability to Afghanistan. 
            But polls suggest that the collective memory of Canadian military valor is in danger of being lost.  Today, with the tragic prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease, we are well aware of what happens when people lose their memory.  They are no longer the same persons, even though their physical bodies may look the same. 
            Even more tragic than an individual’s loss of memory is the loss of memory by a society, which no longer knows where it has come from and no longer remembers the sacrifices which have contributed to the “good life” which it presently enjoys. 
            The loss of the collective memory of Canadian military valor is paralleled by the loss of collective memory within our Anglican church.  When I was conducting Laura Benton’s funeral here last month, I thought of how few Anglican parishes in our diocese still use the traditional Anglican burial service. 
            The extraordinarily moving collection of Biblical passages contained in this service provided the text for the third part of Handel’s “Messiah.”  Has something new come along which so obviously surpasses this service as to make it obsolete, or has our church forgotten the precious legacy which has been entrusted to its care?
            There are those who think it pointless in the current ecumenical climate to try to preserve Anglicanism’s special identity, and they proudly proclaim the end of denominationalism.  Now it is perfectly true that Christian identity is more important than confessional identity.  What makes a person a Christian is more important than what makes a person an Anglican, a Roman Catholic, or a Presbyterian. 
            However, it is also true that the Christian church, as such, does not esist.  Christianity takes on reality only in the particular Christian churches which do exist.  One can only be a Christian by being a Roman Catholic, a Presbyterian, a Greek Orthodox, an Anglican, or a member of some other denomination.  Confessional identity is a prior condition for Christian identity.
            Forgetting our history, whether as a nation or as a church, means the loss of our identity.  Religious sensibility, on the other hand, is dependent in large measure on associations built up over a lifetime which are hallowed by those whom we have come to love and respect, and from whom we have received our faith. 
            Radical change severs the historical connections on which religion is based, and particularly in our present culture, where religion is already on the periphery, such change can have a devastating effect. 
            Here at the Church of the Good Shepherd memory appears to be intact.  Since joining this parish I have marveled at how faithfully history is remembered and tradition preserved.  This is as it should be, for without tradition there can be no civilization, and without attachment to our history, religious culture is impossible. 
            My prayer on this Remembrance Day is that we can help our Anglican Church to keep faith with its past, that we may help restore our Anglican tradition and preserve its memory, before it passes irretrievably into oblivion. 
 

           

November 5, 2006

 

back to top