I am not making this up: “The Cool Church”. I found it while out visiting my sister in Tucson. It’s not far from her house, and apparently it is one of a chain – there is at least one other like it.
After the heat wave last week, we can all appreciate the appeal of a cool church. If this one in Arizona stays fresh and comfortable even in the crushing desert heat, they obviously have a more powerful air conditioner than I do, though in my defense, they also have a significantly smaller building.
While it may be true that inside it is not hot, I doubt it is the intention of folks who named their church. I have to wonder whether they want to identify their place as the popular church – that is, well liked, especially by all the people who are themselves popular, which is sort of what “cool” meant in high school. Maybe like some innovative gadget or other promising novelty, this church might make some folks marvel that it is “cool” because of some new invention. They also might want to announce that they are not that bothered by or interested in the things that some other church is, since there is an aspect of the word that means certain easygoing unflappability, a carefree aspect.
Doubtless, these folks named their church this because they wanted to make it attractive, make it sound popular, new, and probably even “laid back,” or some other word that means that it makes no demands. Aside from the promise of refreshment, I must confess that few of its characteristics have anything to do with the real Church.
What is attractive about the genuine Church, what she teaches and what she does, is attractive because it is true, not vice versa. In fact, sometimes the truth is not readily appealing, and not popular at all. The Church is popular in the sense that is of and for people, but her foundation and design are from God; she is a divine institution. Popularity in the sense of being well liked is hardly a criterion, since from her very beginning Christ’s Church has been made up of unpopular people, the marginal and excluded, the poor, sick, or ugly.
And while the Church incorporates and embraces everything that is truly human, and that includes many innovations over the centuries, the divine element of her nature is eternal and unchanging. Every human life has a fresh encounter with revelation in Christ Jesus, which is called the Good News because the newness of the experience, not anything recent or invented about the message. Everything that is essential about salvation through Jesus has been consistently present in the Church for two thousand years now, even though that hardly makes it old news.
‘Laid back’ is a term I have never found any evidence in the Gospels for applying to Jesus or His followers. Jesus was most often calm, indeed, but He was always simultaneously intense. He had a deep and abiding concern over the life of every person He encountered, and relentlessly set His face toward Jerusalem to save us from our own sin and its consequences. He sacrificed his own life – not just his own ease, but His life! How is that “laid back?” And who can forget the whip of cords?
So, while you know I am very proud of our HVAC in the church and relieved that it held up during the high temperatures of last week, you won’t hear me trying to convince anyone that the church is “cool.” Nothing finds a place here at Saint Bernadette because of its popular appeal, or because it is new and exciting. Nonetheless, you and I get pretty excited about it, excited enough to take its demands seriously.
No, the faith of the Church is hard to consider cool. But whatever you find here in our outpost of the Church, you can be certain that I am not making it up.
Monsignor Smith
