Posted July 7, 2015
The Value and Power of Ritual
Ron Rolheiser
Today we no longer understand
the value and power of ritual. This is more than an individual failing. It's the
cultural air we breathe. In the words of Robert L. Moore, we've gone "ritually
tone-deaf". The effects of this can be seen everywhere: Allow me two
examples:
First, we see this today in the failure by so many couples to grasp
the need to formalize their relationship in a ceremony of marriage. They make a
private commitment to live together but feel no need to formalize this before a
civil authority or inside a church. Their belief is that their love and private
commitment to each other is all that's needed. What does a formal ceremony or a
church blessing add to that commitment? The prevalent feeling is that a formal
ceremony, ideally even in a church, is nice as a celebration and as something to
please others, but, beyond that, it adds little or nothing in terms of anything
important. What does ritual contribute to actual life?
We see this same view
in many current attitudes towards church-going, prayer, and the sacraments.
What's the value of participating in something when seemingly our hearts aren't
in it? What's the value of going to church when we feel it's meaningless? What's
the value of praying formally when, today, our hearts are a million miles away
from what our words are saying? Further still, what's the value in going to
church or in saying prayers at those times when we feel a certain positive
repugnance to what we're doing? Indeed these questions are often expressed as an
accusation: People are just going through the motions of church and prayer,
parroting words that aren't really meaningful to them, going through an empty
ritual! What's the value in that? The value is that the ritual itself can hold
and sustain our hearts in something deeper than the emotions of the
moment.
Matthew Crawford, in his recent book, The World Beyond Your Head,
suggests that ritual acts positively even when our feelings are negative. His
words: "Consider as an example someone who suffers not from some ragging
emotion of lust, resentment, or jealousy . . . but rather sadness, discontent,
boredom, or annoyance. A wife, let us say, feels this way about her husband. But
she observes a certain ritual: she says "I love you" upon retiring at night. She
says this not as a report about her feelings -- it is not sincere -- but neither
it is a lie. What it is is a kind of prayer. She invokes something that she
values -- the marital bond -- and in doing so turns away from her present
discontent and toward this bond, however elusive it may be as an actual
experience. It has been said that ritual (as opposed to sincerity) has
"subjunctive" quality to it: one acts as if some state of affairs were true, or
could be. . . . It relieves one of the burden of 'authenticity'. . . . "The ritual of
saying 'I love you' . . . alters somewhat the marital scene; it may not express love
so much as to invoke it, by incantation. One spouse invites the other to join
with her in honoring the marriage, something one could honor. It is an act of
faith: in one another, but also in a third thing, which is the marriage
itself."
What Crawford highlights here is precisely, "a third thing", that
is, something beyond the emotions of a given moment and our faith in each other,
namely, the institution of marriage itself as a ritual container, as a sacrament
that can hold and sustain a relationship beyond the emotions and feelings of the
moment. Marriage, as an institution, human and divine, is designed to sustain
love inside of and beyond the emotional and affective fluctuations that
inevitably occur inside of every intimate relationship. Marriage allows two
people to continue to love each other despite boredom, irritation, anger,
bitterness, wound, and, in some cases, even infidelity. The ritual act of
getting married places one inside that container.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, when
preaching at marriage ceremonies, would frequently give this counsel to couples:
Today you are much in love and you feel that love will sustain your marriage. It
wouldn't. But marriage can sustain your love. Being ritually tone-deaf, we
struggle to understand that.
The same holds true for church-going, the
sacraments, and private prayer. It's not a question of going through the motions
on days when the feelings aren't there. Rather it's going through the ritual as
an incantation, as an honoring of our relationship to God, and as an act of
faith in prayer.
If we only said "I love you" when we actually felt that
emotion and if we only prayed when we actually felt like it, we wouldn't express
love or pray very often. When we say "I love you" and when we do formal prayer
at those times when our feelings seem to belie our words, we aren't being
hypocritical or simply going through the motions, we're actually expressing some
deeper truths.
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