I realize that I haven't talked much about the religious aspect of Quilt Camp. Even though it's held at Lutheridge, a Lutheran retreat center, it's less overtly religious than some of the adult programming there. I've spent some time wondering if my friends of other faiths would like the retreat. I think that all but my friends who are strict atheists (the type annoyed by religious people) would.
The room was set up with this space under the rock climbing wall. From a distance, it looks like a simple stage, barely elevated, a display platform for quilts and rocking chairs--a way to give the huge room a touch of hominess.
But it was where we faced for evening devotions, which were optional. The last night we had communion. We were able to do this because one of our participants is ordained by the Baptist church--during that brief moment when the Southern Baptists ordained women.
We had a wide variety of Christians in the group; if anyone was of another faith, or atheist, or agnostic, she didn't say. After communion, one of the younger women made a group announcement. She said that she had never been to a service where a woman handed her the elements for communion, and then, with her voice cracking into tears, she talked about how meaningful it was.
Unlike other retreats, there was no Bible study, no group work; we spent most of our time at our individual tables sewing and sewing and sewing. Occasionally there would be conversations, which occasionally turned to the topic of God. One woman said to me, "It's in the Bible, right? So therefore, we know it's true, right?"
Well, she did ask me, and so I gave her the gentle version of why we can't assert that, or at least why I can't assert that if she means true as in factual. I talked about how I view the Bible as the writer of the text telling us of an experience of God, but not the only experience, and perhaps not even a true experience as we would define it today. Having spent months studying the letters of Paul, I am not the person to lead your Bible study, if you want a leader who will tell you that God dictated the words to the Bible writer, so of course there's no bias.
She didn't run away in horror; in fact, we had a good conversation. But I was also relieved that it was a casual conversation. At the God Spa retreat, I heard some genuinely crummy theology (as in "God never gives us more than we can handle" and "The Lord gives and the Lord takes away"), but as a regular participant, I didn't see my role during group Bible study time to be the one who rips everyone's theological crutches out from under them.
I write this post on Maundy Thursday, a time when I might be writing about foot washing or meal sharing. But the community I experienced at Quilt Camp seemed just as vivid a witness of the power of love in the world. We were able to be together, in all of our variations of age, skill, knowledge, and resources. We were able to cheer each other on. We had lots of advice, for those who wanted it.
I would love to see more Christian churches expand the vision of what it means to be a community based in love. What would Maundy Thursday look like if we celebrated more than Jesus and 12 disciples and a last meal and a footwashing?
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