This is the view from the chapel at Mariya uMama weThemba – it makes going to church rather a joy…

Many chapels and churches feature beautiful stained glass windows and I must say I am generally a fan of good stained glass. But our chapel here in South Africa features great picture windows and you can see why.
The thing with a stained glass window is you look at the window, not what is on the other side. They are a window, but also a wall. Clear windows let the world, to a degree, in. On the very windy and rainy days I am grateful that it is only to a degree.
While I love stained glass, there is a danger to the church (or any religious institution) in being blinded to the world. You can not encounter much Christian tradition without being confronted with what is clinically referred to as “the preferential option for the poor.” The clinical nature of that term obfuscates its meaning – Jesus had far more interest and involvement with poor people and seems to have had little patience for “the right sort” of people.
When we are on one side of the stained glass, its easy to feel good about those whom our society rejects because we can’t see them… But as we distance ourselves from the margins of society, we distance ourselves from Jesus as well. Feeling good is not a good thing in a world filled with injustice. Feeling joy, on the other hand, even in a world of injustice and sorrow, is a very good thing.
It is certainly possible to sit in the chapel here and be cocooned in a different sort of beauty than stained glass would provide – but cocooned nonetheless. At the same time, I have seen brush fires working their way up the valley – inching closer and closer to the chapel… all that beauty can also be quite threatening. That can help take away the sweet, sentimental cocoon of beauty.
But today at the Eucharist the second grade students from our school joined us (often on Tuesdays, one of the classes comes to church). They were as you might expect seven-year-olds to be. They sort of jumbled in at the last minute. Since it is winter here, there were a few runny noses. Their ability to sit through the service was commendable, but some of the nuance of Anglican (Episcopal) liturgy was observed more in breach. In other words they were marvelous. While I may have been a little challenged, Jesus surely loved it. These kids are among the great many poor in South Africa. Jesus was utterly at home. And by the end of the service, when I had worked through a bit of my own stuff, I was getting to be a bit more at home.
That is the journey – coming home to who God makes us to be. I’ll let you know when I get there…
