When, in bygone years, it was simply the fourth Sunday in Lent, Laetare Sunday, ('Rejoice' Sunday) and a chance to revisit the 'Mother Church' (the main church or cathedral for your area) I doubt anyone leading worship stressed the day before about how many ways they might unwittingly upset people in church the next day, through forgetting to mention mothers; mentioning them too much; forgetting that some have lost their mothers; or never knew them, or were adopted or abused. Or by dwelling on gender stereotypes ('O God we thank you for our mums who always wash up')...Then there are those women who have lost a baby, never wanted one or who want one but can't conceive. If you're not careful, or are an over sensitive church leader yourself, not to mention also a mother, it can soon become a complete minefield.
The glorification of motherhood may well be one of the reasons modern mothers are so stressed, minutely organising every spare moment of their children's lives until they entirely forget the importance of temporary boredom for the developing imagination. We want to have happy, healthy, competent and gifted children otherwise we feel we've failed. So feelings may be running high on Mothering Sunday, especially if at least one family have hot-footed it from the swimming lesson to get there for 11 am.
And if you, as a youngish Church leader, have a slip of the tongue, and call it 'Mother's Day' by mistake, not only will you greatly upset some older brethren but you will also fall foul of the more liturgically sensitive, whatever their age, with cries of 'Americanisation, blah blah; Hallmark Cards; blah, blah...civilization collapsing, blah, blah, blah....
Others are confused too. I know of one pub near here who appear to have thrown caution to the wind and who, either in a fit of utter inspiration or unintentional dyslexia, are advertising a special meal for 'Mothers Sunday' (no apostrophe).
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So whether you're preparing to wear pink Laetare vestments, or to give your mum a bunch of pink flowers, or both, I propose a celebration of the non-stressy, non-clingy and eternally steadfast mothering of God.
No pink vestments for me tomorrow, though the flowers I bought for my Mum (she'll get them on Monday) are pink. Yep. Mothering Sunday is a minefield - rates just behind Remembrance as most anxiety-inducing Sunday of the year for me.
ReplyDeleteGood article sparked some good thoughts and original page layout!
ReplyDeleteNot an easy one for me this year falling the day before my mother's anniversary but our vicar did a very good job encompassing all aspects of the day. He even included a quote from the Simpsons in his address which our two teenagers liked!
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