Flowers surround the Chalice ready for distribution. Tree of Life Religious Education Director Sam Jones is at the pulpit. |
Yesterday
we held our annual Flower Communion at
the Tree of Life Unitarian Universalist
Congregation in McHenry. It is a Unitarian
Universalist tradition, one of the few original
one that we didn’t inherit from
our more conventional Christian roots or
simply rip off from somebody else’s tradition.
The
Unitarian Universalist Association explains
it thusly:
The Flower Ceremony, sometimes referred to
as Flower Communion or Flower Festival,
is an annual ritual that celebrates beauty, human uniqueness, diversity,
and community.
Originally created in 1923 by Unitarian minister Norbert Capek of Prague, Czechoslovakia, the Flower Ceremony was introduced to the United States by Rev. Maya
Capek, Norbert’s widow. [Capek died
in a Nazi concentration camp.]
In this
ceremony, everyone in the congregation brings a flower. Each person places a flower on the altar or in a shared vase. The congregation and minister bless the flowers, and they’re redistributed. Each person brings home a different flower than the
one they brought.
Yesterday
as I watched it unfold again, I
began to scratch note in my Order of Service.
Flower Communion
Tree
of Life Unitarian Universalist Congregation
April
17, 2016
Those Unitarians
have a thing,
a ritual if you will—
yeah, I know, hard to
imagine.
They call it
Flower Communion
or if that gives the congregation
hives
for sounding damned
you know, churchy and Christian,
the Flower Service—
like FTD delivery
But don’t worry,
you know the details
are fuzzy
and it will be
different everywhere
you know—
no Pope or Book of Common Prayer
to set the rules just so.
They can’t even
agree on a date
though most of ‘em do it in the
Spring
sometime around when,
if your lucky,
it has been warm long enough
to pluck some blossom
from your yard—
If you have one.
Where I have
parked my ass
on Sunday mornings
these last several years,
Spring cheated us
unless you planted daffodils
or are unashamed
by a handful of dandelions.
The supermarket
flower wagons
got a work out this year
I’m guessing
by the bright look
of the vases and baskets
on the table by the Chalice.
In some churches
they try
For proper liturgy—
prayers
or meditations
if they are queasy,
songs and
blessings.
Folks file
orderly
to lay their blooms in baskets
or fill lovely vases
and then some tidy system
is employed to deal they out again.
But at our place
we defy order
and occasional attempts
to impose it—
the poseys are supposed
to go in the baskets
before the bell is rung.
But a lot of us
are late
or left the bouquets in the car,
wander in
and add their nosegays
to haphazard
piles
after things a
have started.
The timid and
confused
have to be called up
for last moment deposits.
Then the
Children and the Youth
are beckoned from their seats
toddlers and
teens
grab fistfuls and plunge randomly
among the seats
offering flowers
and bouncing off
each other
like bumper cars
until ever one
has a flower—
or three or four
and the kids can’t
find
anymore takers.
Ah, the happy
chaos.
—Patrick
Murfin
Happy chaos.... |
What a lovely tradition!
ReplyDeleteMy parents attended the UU in Marin County for years. Don't recall any mention of this; am sure I would have if it happened as my mom was an avid gardener. Maybe they didn't know of this. Too bad