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Posted On: 6/3/2009 7:06:05 AM
The miracle of communication

Neale Adams, retiring Diocesan Communications Officer
As a lifelong communicator, I've always been intrigued that the word "communicate" has two meanings: to impart information of knowledge, its common meaning, and to receive consecrated bread or wine at the Eucharist.

It turns out that the two meanings, in English, date to the 1500s. But the word "communicate" comes from classical Latin, meaning "to share with," and in fact the Latin word communicare referred to the Eucharist as early as the third century. To me both the Eucharist (or Holy Communion) and communication are mystical. The Eucharist is a mystery because in some sense bread and wine become the body and blood of Christ-although spare me the debate over transubstantiation. But communication is mystical too, for how is it that an idea in my head can somehow be transmitted into yours?

There's a somewhat obscure Finnish professor of communications with the wonderful name of Osmo A. Wiio who is beginning to become know for writing a number of "laws of communications." They're in the same humorous style as Murphy's laws (for example, "Anything that can possibly go wrong, will"). Because they make us laugh doesn't mean they aren't true.

Wiio's first law is this: "Human communication usually fails, except by accident." That's because human beings generally use symbols-like words. And words, although they seem to have a conventional meaning, do have different shades of meaning to different people.

Add to that language differences, cultural differences, and different assumptions about how much each other know about a subject-plus the difficulty of transmitting information at all due to noise, or poor lines, or inattention on the part of one party or the other-and it's a miracle that we can communicate at all.

I use the word "miracle" intentionally. For it seems to me that indeed there are times when we do feel that we are getting through to each other, that we are one with each other, sympatico. In many situations in our lives, and I include our family life, our working lives, and our parish lives, we do seem to communicate. Is it, as Wiio claims, that we get through to each other "by accident"?

In my experience real communication comes only between people who somehow appreciate each other. Lovers, young or old, who are so entirely in sync with each other they can finish each other's sentences.

But people can communicate if they are joined in friendship or a common task. They may not agree, but are willing to listen to each other because they respect each other as human beings. Or you could say they "love" each other as Christians are supposed to. Love of this sort does not guarantee that communication is easy, but it does make it possible. And we all know Who the source of love is.

This perhaps is in part what Bishop Michael was getting at in his commencement speech at Episcopal Divinity School last month when he said that Truth is best "expressed not as a series of propositions, but as a person...Truth is to be found in the person of Jesus Christ." (See page 6.) And getting at the truth of anything should be why we communicate.

This is my last issue as editor of TOPIC and as Communications Officer for the Diocese of New Westminster. In the nine years I've had the privilege of this job, I think we have occasionally communicated well, whether through this paper, the website, or elsewhere. It's been a challenge, as well as a wonderful privilege.

And we have had some spectacular failures. The fallings out we have seen, and the decision of some clergy and people to leave the diocese, have been very sad. Animosity built up for years. The refusal of some clergy to communicate with others-communicate in the Eucharistic sense-several years ago was a very bad sign, perhaps the fatal one.

Still, could we all have shown more love to each other? I think so; we always can.

Neale Adams
Sections:

Articles
Christ Church Cathedral Photo and Mention in the Los Angeles Times
Diocese of Taiwan and Diocese of New Westminster Renew Partnership
New Stained Glass Windows at Christ Church Cathedral
Peace Officer Appreciation Sunday
Christmas Worship and Events Information
Bishop Michael Ingham's Letter
ARC Bishops' Dialogue Featured in The BC Catholic
Clean Water Flows in Haiti
North Vancouver Deanery Combines Ash Wednesday Worship
RAWWG Webpages Up and Running
The Primate's Statement
New Regional Dean of South Fraser
The Order of the Diocese of New Westminster
Concert Brings the Love on Valentine's Day
Japanese Anglicans in Vancouver
Christ Church Cathedral Celebrates 15 Years of Peter Elliott's Ministry
No more parishes may bless same sex couples for forseeable future
Plan 2018: Parishes must be vital, sustainable
150th Anniversary of Anglican Worship in New Westminster.
New Metropolitan Elected
Bishop Michael on The Early Edition
Celebration of Unity
Karen Refugee Families Featured in Community Newspapers
The Reverend Clarence Li Induction, Saturday, February 6th, 3pm
Watoto Children's Choir Visits St. Dunstan, Aldergrove
Two Parishes win “Green Parish” awards at Synod.
Criminal checks to be mandatory in diocese
Richmond Homeless Connect
Lent/Holy Week/Easter Worship and Events
Diocese of British Columbia Announces Changes
New Advent Vestments
The miracle of communication
Diocese of New Westminster Responds to Appeal
A Fond Farewell to St. John the Divine, Burnaby
St. Richard of Chichester, Norgate
Elected at Synod
The flu and the diocese
Toonies from singing go for suicide prevention
Parish nurse ministry grows in diocese
People
St. John's parishioners, dignitaries celebrate 150

   
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