Sunday, October 29, 2006

Fobsvithing on the Sabbath

I was going to start this blog post by pointing out that today is Sunday and I am posting from work, but as it turns out I actually spent my time at work today working, which means that I am now posting from home. The moral of the story, though, is that today is the fifth Sunday in a row that I have not attended church because I was working. Ironically*, the last job I had that required me to work on Sundays was at BYU, where the insistence of dorm-living freshmen on eating daily forced us to open the cafeteria on the Sabbath. Never fear, though: on Fast Sundays we opened only for dinner, ensuring that even the non-Mormons fasted through lunch.

Working at the library on Sundays has led to two realizations:

1. I kind of sort of miss church. The main reason I told FoxyJ I'd attend church with her as long as she wants to keep going is so that she is not stuck in the position of having to deal alone with two children during sacrament meeting, but I'm finding there is value to attending church services even if I don't necessarily subscribe to all the tenets of LDS doctrine. Yesterday as I read an essay by Molly Welker on why she attends Sunstone symposiums (symposia?) despite the fact that she left the Mormon church years ago, I was surprised to find that many of her reasons for attending Sunstone are my reasons for attending church. She says:
That's what Sunstone offers me: a forum where I can work to identify and embrace the elements of my religious training that help me live with greater spiritual awareness and maturity, which, admittedly, is something you can do at Church. But Sunstone also offers me a forum where I can ask if there have been elements of my training as a Mormon that get in the way of spiritual maturity, which is something you really can't do at Church. For me, it's about deciding, as consciously and deliberately as possible, what I want to keep and what I want to lose--and in order to do that, it helps to be around people who recognize some value in Mormonism to begin with, who don't think religion as a whole and Mormonism in particular are a waste of time.
Except in my case, I do find that church is a place I can ask if there are elements of my Mormon training that get in the way of spiritual maturity. I just keep the asking to myself. For the past year I have found myself somewhat distanced from the crowd in church meetings, which takes away from the sense of community I once enjoyed, but it also gives me a cognitive distance that allows me to consider for myself which principles I agree with and which ones I don't. It's easier to build an individual belief system around the framework of an existing group belief system, removing pieces here and adding pieces there, than it would be to start from scratch. As I've been figuring out what I believe over the past year, continuing to attend church has helped me avoid throwing the baby out with the bathwater.

2. I think I believe in the principle of the Sabbath. Working seven days a week (well, working five and going to school the other two, which is in effect the same thing) is too much. I enjoy having a day off to spend with my family. The weekend rotation at the library is such that I'll be off a couple Sundays in November, then all the Sundays in December. I'm going to see what I can do about avoiding the Sunday part of the rotation next quarter. And if I don't want to work on Sundays, it only seems fair of me not to require it of others, so I'm going to make a greater effort to avoid shopping or other activities that make people work on Sundays. Of course, if I don't work Sundays next quarter, then I am asking my coworkers to do so, so maybe I'll have to rethink this. Hm.

3. This realization has nothing to do with working on Sundays, but it is another Mormon principle I'm finding that I agree with. Coffee is the nastiest-tasting beverage on the face of the planet. Why on earth do people drink the stuff voluntarily?


*I'm always nervous to use this word, because no doubt someone will point out that the situation I'm referring to is in fact not ironic in the correct sense of the term; if such be the case, rest assured that, like Alanis Morrisette, I am using the term ironically ironically. Isn't it ironic?

5 comments:

TK said...

Excellent blog.

PS: yes, I know I always take your questions more seriously than you intend them, but for the sake of arguing a point . . . Your not working on Sunday does not FORCE others to work on Sunday. If EVERYONE refused to do so, it might be representative of a population that could do without having the library open on Sundays, anyway. Right? :)

But if others didn't mind working on Sundays, it wouldn't matter to them what you did. If you relieved them of working on Sundays just b/c you felt you were forcing them to work by not working yourself, would that neccesarily improve their lives - if it was a result of YOUR decision - not THEIRS?

:)

G'pa Bob said...

I agree with tk in total.

"We can still be friends" even though you do not subscribe to all the tenents of the LDS doctrine.

The single most difficult activity in life is self-evaluation. Being honest about our personal inventory can be a brutal ordeal if we are at the same time trying to please others. I can trust my few really good friends because they trust themselves.

And, attending church to help tend the children is the correct choice for a father. That is putting others ahead of self. And it is in many cases keeping one's word.

To friendship.

Celia Marie (W.) B. said...

I don't agree necessarily. I think a lot of people mind working on Sunday but don't have a choice because their job requires it of them because the consmers want to consume on Sunday.

I've only met a small handful of people in my life who really enjoyed/preferred working on Sunday as opposed to any other given day.

So MFOB, I think its a noble thing for you to try to avoid "making others work" on Sunday, even if you don't necessarily ascribe to "keeping the Sabbath".

Th. said...

.

I feel the same way about black-tar heroin. Man, does that stuff lead to cottonmouth!

svoid said...

I agree with you that people should not work 7 days a week, but I have a hard time believing that church is the right place to be on your seventh day. Over the summer, I spent a lot of time biking on Sunday afternoons. As I was out enjoying a gorgeous afternoon in nature, I would inevitably ride by dozens of church parking lots filled with thousands of cars. And it made me sad to think that while I was out enjoying such a beautiful day that so many others were crammed into a building wearing Sunday dress and pretending to be holy.

I don't believe in God, but if I did, I believe that you are doing far more to glorify God by being out in nature that you ever possibly could from the inside of some stuffy old building. Would God have created such a beautiful place for all of us to live just so that we could lock ourselves inside of a building to worship him? I don't think so.

And about the coffee... Why would you say such a mean and hateful thing about a beverage that I love so much? I'm curious what your experience was that compelled you to voice your opinion about coffee on your blog. It may just be that I've just grown accustomed to the harsh taste of coffee, but at this point, I can't imagine life without it.