Why not an ‘online Eucharist’?: A Scottish-Episcopal perspective on presence

Michaela Hull
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Abstract

The experience of Covid-19’s lockdowns, especially living through a period without the Eucharist on Sunday lays behind this theological reflection from the perspective of a Scottish Episcopalian about so-called online Eucharists with remote consecrations. The question I set is simple: ‘Can the elements of bread and wine be consecrated outwith the gathered community?’ Simple too is my answer: ‘No, they cannot.’ The pandemic has tested the fault lines of God’s presence in our worship, our presence in community and those presences in the Eucharist. I argue that God’s presence with us was unchanged by lockdown. I also argue that although many of us began to use ‘onsite’, ‘online’ and a variety of related terms in unprecedented ways vis-à-vis liturgies, our presence to one another was changed during lockdown. When we could not gather as a community, even if we were able to communicate via the internet, we could neither celebrate the Eucharist nor consecrate the elements. Theological reflection will, I hope, hone our appreciation of the significance of our humanity, the Incarnation, and the Body and Blood of Christ in the sacramental economy.
为什么不办一个“网上圣餐”呢?苏格兰圣公会对临在的看法
这位苏格兰圣公会教徒从神学的角度对所谓的远程祝圣的在线圣餐进行了反思,这背后是新冠肺炎封锁的经历,特别是在没有周日圣餐的一段时间里。我提出的问题很简单:“面包和酒的元素能否与聚集的社区一起被奉献出来?”我的回答也很简单:“不,他们不能。”“疫情考验了上帝在我们敬拜中的存在、在社区中的存在以及在圣餐中的存在。我认为上帝与我们同在即使被封锁也没有改变。我还认为,虽然我们中的许多人开始以前所未有的方式在-à-vis礼拜仪式上使用“现场”、“在线”和各种相关术语,但在封锁期间,我们彼此之间的存在发生了变化。当我们不能作为一个团体聚集在一起时,即使我们能够通过互联网进行交流,我们也不能庆祝圣餐,也不能圣化元素。我希望,神学上的反思能磨练我们对人性、道成肉身、基督的身体和宝血在圣礼经济中的重要性的鉴赏力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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