Sunday, for those who read the Mail, is still very much the day of the Lord, whatever the heaving
car parks at retail venues across the country might suggest. That means
anything that might deflect from maintaining the Christian message must be
challenged, even if the paper has had to make it up, as happened with the “BBC Turns Its Back On Year Of Our Lord”
fantasy rant.
Happily for the Mail
On Sunday, today has brought a mainly true story, but with the same
outraged faux horror reaction that will raise little more than an occasional “meh” from the readers. “Welby
Casts Out ‘Sin’ From Christenings” thunders the banner headline, to
the consternation of parents and families who wouldn’t know the text of the
ceremony without a cue card.
So what’s the problem? “Centuries-old
rite rewritten in 'language of EastEnders' for modern congregation ... Parents
and godparents no longer have to ‘repent sins’ and ‘reject devil’ ... New
wording is designed to be easier to understand – but critics stunned”. How
many critics? Er, two, one of whom is former Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali, who is
known to be conservative in such matters.
Seriously, does anyone recall the “repent sins” and “reject the
devil” parts of the christening service? And what’s the “language of EastEnders” rubbish? Does
the new service include “leave it aht”,
“shat eet”, “not on my manor”, “I don’t
believe I’m hearing this”, or “Is ‘e
dahn the pab”? So that’ll be more flannel, then, but a good way of blaming
the BBC for it (again).
And the false assumptions are jaw-dropping: “under the divisive reforms, backed by
Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby and already being practised in 1,000
parishes, parents and godparents are asked to ‘reject evil, and all its many
forms, and all its empty promises’ – with no mention of the devil or sin”.
What’s being “divided” by a wording
ordinary people can understand?
Does the Mail On
Sunday expect to speak in Seventeenth Century English, and that its
readership not only has the ability to figure it out, but would carry on buying
the paper if it did that? Well, the
supporting editorial has the excuse ready: “this sinless, devil-free christening service is not at all the same
sort of thing. The whole point of religion is that it is different from the
normal world”.
That would be why so much organised religion is losing
ground to more secular pursuits. If potential churchgoers are turned off by the
stubborn adherence to the kind of language meant to keep the poor and ignorant
in line in the age before information and democracy, it will keep losing
ground. Justin Welby is, to his credit, trying to make Anglicanism more
relevant to his flock.
Not that the Mail On
Sunday wants to admit that too readily. No
change there, then.
No comments:
Post a Comment