Protestants tend to brace themselves at the mention of the R-word: ritual. The word is a trigger evoking a Reformation history that has sunk into our bones. We associate ritual with dead orthodoxy, âvain repetition,â the denial of grace, trying to earn salvation, scoring points with God, âgoing through the motions,â and various other forms of spiritual insincerity.
Anyone who has mastered a golf swing or a Bach fugue is a ritual animal.
And yet we affirm, even celebrate, ritual in other spheres. We recognize that the pursuit of excellence often requires devotion to a regime of routines and disciplines that are formative precisely because they are repetitive. Anyone who has mastered a golf swing or a Bach fugue is a ritual animal: one simply doesnât achieve such excellence otherwise. In both cases, ritual is marked by embodied repetition. Ritual recruits our will through our body: the cellistâs fingers become habituated by moving through scale after scale; the golferâs whole body is trained by a million practice swings.
Because we are embodied creatures of habitâGod created us that wayâwe are profoundly shaped by ritual. Thatâs why ritual can de-form us, too: we know firsthand the destructive power of routines and rhythms that can hold us captive and make us someone we donât want to be.
In all of these cases we intuit that rituals are not just something that we do; they do something to us. And their formative power works on the body, not just the mind. So why should we be allergic to ritual when it comes to our spiritual life? Could we redeem ritual?
Habitations of the Spirit
Our negative evaluation of ritual stems from a couple of bad assumptions. First, when it comes to religious devotion we tend to see ritual observance as mere obedience to duty, a way of scoring points with God and earning spiritual credit. We see ritual as a bottom-up effortâand âeffortâ starts to sound like âwork.â It doesnât take long before this all seems part of an elaborate system of âsalvation by works.â
Letâs grant that some religious folk undoubtedly observe ritual with such misguided intent. We join Luther and Calvin and the Reformers in rejecting such superstitious attempts to curry Godâs favor. But why should we settle for simply identifying ritual with âworks righteousness?â
We have a more nuanced take on ritual in other spheres of our life. We can tell when someone is âjust going through the motions,â but we donât see the motions themselves as the problem. We know the difference between the piano student practicing scales because she âhas toâ and the student who does so in pursuit of excellence.
If I commit myself to the âritualâ of playing scales for an hour a day for years on end, itâs because I know this is a way for me to become something I want to be. Itâs not just a bottom-up exercise on my part; itâs also a kind of top-down force that makes me and molds me and transforms me. Itâs a way for me to be caught up in the musicâa way for my fingers and hands and mind and imagination to be recruited into the symphony that I want to play.
If that is true on a ânaturalâ level, why shouldnât it also be true for our spiritual life? Historic Christian devotion bequeaths to us rituals and rhythms and routines that are what Craig Dykstra calls âhabitations of the Spiritââconcrete practices that are conduits of the power of the Spirit and the transformative grace of God.
Think of some âho-humâ rituals in Reformed worship. Week after week some congregations are asked to stand to hear the Word of God. Why? That shift in bodily posture sends a little unconscious signal: Listen upâsomething important is coming. After speaking the Word, the preacher announces: âThis is the Word of the Lord.â To which the people reply, âThanks be to God.â You might say it without thinking about it. But that doesnât mean itâs not doing something. That little ritual trains your body to learn something about the authority of Godâs Word, and to respond in gratitude.
Spirit-charged rituals are tangible ways that God gets hold of us, reorients us, and empowers us to be his imagebearers. They are ways for the Spirit to meet us where we areâas embodied creatures.
Worship Is for Bodies
A second reason we Reformed folks devalue ritual is because we tend to reduce Christian faith to a set of beliefs and believers to primarily thinking beings.
Canadian philosopher Charles Taylor would describe this intellectualism as one of those Frankensteinish outcomes of the Protestant Reformationâa sort of unintended monster that outruns the good intentions of the Reformers themselves. Rightly criticizing superstition and âmagicalâ views of ritual, the Reformers unleashed an impetus toward what Taylor calls âexcarnationââa dis-embodiment of spiritual life that reduced âtrue religionâ to âright belief.â
The eventual result was a complete reconfiguration of worship and devotion. Christian worship was no longer a full-orbed exercise that recruited the body and touched all of the senses. Instead, Protestants designed worship as if believers were little more than brains-on-a-stick. The primary target was the mind; the primary means was a lecture-like sermon; and the primary goal was to deposit the right doctrines and beliefs into our heads so that we could then go out into the world to carry out the mission of God.
The problem with that, however, is that we are not created as brains-on-a-stick; we are created as embodied, tactile, visceral creatures who are more than cognitive processors or belief machines. As full-bodied imagebearers of God, our center of gravity is located as much in our bodies as in our minds. This is precisely why the body is the way to our heart, and this âincarnationalâ intuition has long informed the rich history of spiritual disciplines and liturgical formation.
Some of this incarnational intuition already shapes what we do. Congregations that celebrate the Lordâs Supper weekly (as they did in John Calvinâs Geneva) have a deep appreciation for the tactile nature of the practice. Here is a ritual that pictures the gospel and that activates every one of our senses: taste, touch, smell, hearing, and sight. It is a ritual whose repetition is a gift, not a bore. Through our immersion in it, the gospel sinks into our bones. We absorb the story of Godâs grace in ways we donât even realize.
Or consider the value of a simple ritual of confession that involves both repetition and the body, one that might be especially appropriate for Lent. By adopting a standard prayer of confession, worship constantly puts a prayer on our lips that seeps into our hearts and comes forth from our hearts throughout the week. When we kneel to confess, our physical posture both expresses and encourages humility before God. We know Godâs grace differently because it is inscribed in our bodies.
We need not be afraid of ritual. If we appreciate that God created us as incarnate, embodied creatures, then we will recognize his grace lovingly extended to us in ways that meet us where we are: in the tangible, embodied practice of Spirit-charged rituals. Reframed in this way, we might be able to redeem rituals as gifts of God for the people of God.
For Discussion
- What comes to your mind when you hear the word âritualâ? How do you define the word?
- What are some of the rituals you routinely experience in worship?
- Does the ritual you participate in engage your body as well as your mind? What is the benefit of âembodied repetitionâ?
- Jamie Smith says that âProtestants designed worship as if believers were little more than brains on a stick.â Do you think that the goal of worship should be to âdeposit right doctrines and belief into our headsâ? What is the goal of worship?
- What ritual practices are most meaningful to you? How do they mold and transform you?
- Has your understanding of ritual changed through this discussion? What new insights do you have?
About the Author
James K.A. Smith holds the Byker Chair in Applied Reformed Theology & Worldview at Calvin College and is editor of Comment magazine. His new book, You Are What You Love: The Spiritual Power of Habit (Brazos) will be published in April. He attends Sherman Street CRC in Grand Rapids, Mich.