In my opinion those that choose to adopt these “new” postures should have some sort of reason for doing so. And in my reading of the above posts, the only reason I’ve seen can be summed up as “it doesn’t say anywhere that I can’t”.
While I can’t speak for anyone else here, I can speak for myself and the people I know who prefer to hold hands. The only reason I hadn’t brought it up earlier is that the demand had been for documentation on why it was acceptable to do so, so I stuck to documentation rather than personal reasons.
The people with whom I associate and who were mostly responsible for changing my position on this, since I used to intentionally place myself in places where I would not be asked to participate, see the hand holding as a visible sign of the community we share as the Body of Christ as we pray this unique prayer of praise and petition to Our Father.
There are many who say we do not need this sign, and I can totally agree that we don’t “need” it, just as we don’t “need” the many other signs and rituals that we have in the celebration of our faith. We don’t “need” the sign of the cross, or genuflecting, or the beating of the breast, or incense, or bells, or the washing of the hands, or the blessing of throats, or the kissing of the cross, etc, etc. But the fact is that signs, symbols, and rituals resonate with us. And different ones resonate more with some people than others. Not all us resonate with the same symbols and signs; thus many of us perform some of them mechanically or just skip them altogether. That doesn’t mean though that we should abandon them just because everybody doesn’t respond the same.
The fact is that through the centuries, wise liturgists have recognized that different people respond to different signs and symbols and have thus mixed in many different types so that the entire congregation will be engaged in at least some of them and drawn into the liturgy.
I understand that, and understand equally why many don’t resonate with holding hands. It truly isn’t a matter of “false chumminess” or being “touchy feely”, though I can understand why some people don’t want to participate simply because they do not identify with that level of physical contact–and that is perfectly fine!
It truly does sadden me that so many are so caught up with judging other’s attempts to come to God, and so unwilling or unable to understand that different people approach God in differenet ways, just as we approach our earthly brothers and sisters in different ways.
Some of us will sit at our Thanksgiving dinners with our families in very formal settings, and without any hugging with family members on arrival or departure. Others of us will express our joy and thanksgiving in very physical ways, and with what might seem to some to be a “free for all” at the dinner table. And sometimes you’ll have a mixture of both since some family members might be more prone to expressing their affection physically or verbally than others. Neither is right or wrong or inappropriate, as long as we don’t make them feel uncomfortable by trying to push them into something they prefer to avoid.
It really shouldn’t be much different as we come to our Abba’s table. We may express our joy and love for Him differently, but that really should be a cause for joy that we are there rather than a time to be condemning because someone responds differently.
Is that a good enough reason? Each will have to decide for themselves, but charity calls me to not judge anyone’s motivation or devotion but rather to rejoice that they are there to worship and build up the Body of Christ.
Peace,