Saturday, December 28, 2013

A Sunday Due Unto Beijing




The bishoprics of Worcester and Wells met in medieval Bristol at the Avon River.  The civic jurisdiction extended into both diocese but what went on in either bishopric's churches were matters for the bishop to decide, not Bristol nor London.  There were, in effect, three different jurisdictions within the city, and even more if you consider monasteries like the Augustinian one there in the city that was not beholden to either bishopric.  Generally they kept to their own worlds, but when pressures rose, for example in the early fifteenth century and Lollards were inciting heretical ideas about the land, claiming things like transubstantiation was nonsense, and the views of Rome and London diverged these distinct jurisdictions complicated matters greatly for those who wanted order and they allowed for some interesting possibilities.  


Increasingly prosperous medieval weavers in that town could thumb their nose at the civic officials, and hide out in a church or monastery, knowing they wouldn’t be molested.  Someone who’d caused offense in one diocese could hop the river to the adjoining one, depending on the view of either bishop, etc.  This tension between royal power and Roman power waxed and waned to one side or the other throughout the Middle Ages, and from the fall of Rome till the Reformation, this division between holy and secular authority defined the European experience.  “Give unto Caesar . . . “



Well, it’s Sunday here in Beijing.  But once again, the central authorities have decreed that it shall operate like a Friday.  This, so the nation can enjoy a three-day holiday for New Years.   I don’t worship anything on Sunday.  But I do think I have a subtle worship for Sunday and I get annoyed when it is toyed with.

Chinese dynastic history tolerates no such division between church and state.  During the same period when angry Lollards were jumping over the Avon and Frome Rivers, ducking out here, and finding refuge there, the Ming was the Celestial Empire and it was the one seat of power.  The mighty Yongle emperor would have been in power at that time, sending out his Muslim, eunuch Admiral Zheng He on tribute voyages to South East Asia, East Africa and the Middle East.  Buddhist and Daoist monasteries were unquestionably subservient to Beijing.  Competing political, or religious claims to power might gather momentum, but were always subdued by the center or if successful, like the Manchu people were to become, they became the center. 


So I’m struck by the fact that the center, the central authorities, the Federal government in the United States, could and would never tell the nation it must work on Sunday, so that it could enjoy a Monday off.  Nor would a state or a city government.  (An exception might be in war or national emergency, I suppose).  It is unthinkable that the state would do that.  Rome certainly has no power to curb Obama from doing so.  Nor does any one of the myriad of different Christian faiths that regard the day as one of holy obligation have definitive sway.  Rather it is tradition.  Church and state are separated officially, not perhaps unlike medieval Bristol, but quite unlike England under Henry VIII.  The State, in the U.S. knows without asking that it would get its hands burnt if it messed with Sunday. 

And I think it is fair to say that U.S. government at any level would be very unlikely to mess with a Saturday either.  (we just had ours taken here, yesterday).  That is not out of respect for any Christian ideal, nor do I think it has to do with deference to Orthodox Jews, but rather it is the legacy of the labor movement who won (thank you very much) rights to a five-day workweek one hundred years ago.   The Chinese Communist Party know a thing or two about labor movements, and guaranteeing workers things, but Saturday itself is just another calendar day for them.  Whereas it is treated with nearly the same sanctity in America that Sunday is.  I don’t think you’re average Joe would be willing to give up a Saturday, to earn an extra Wednesday off.   Instead, U.S. authorities, 率由旧章[1]

Here, the center has no hesitation to dole out holidays as it sees fit.  Indeed, manipulation of the work week does, I believe, crudely reinforce the overwhelming majesty of the center.  As in the case of one time zone for the whole country, (Yes, China's policy means that fall of the U.S. including Hawaii would need to go to work and get off work according to Eastern Standard Time) the center has no limits and claims the power to alter time itself.



No one of course is “making” me work today.  I impose it upon myself.  I am, essentially held up here in my own Augustinian monastery, holding out for the day under my own make believe jurisdiction, where Sunday is still Sunday.  A friend turned me on to some ambient music by a gent named Jon Hopkins, who lives in London, in the medieval bishopric of Winchester.  I’m listening to a tune called “Cold Out There” and indeed it is.  Spatial, as I told my friend last night it sounds like a three-year old’s experience with Christmas morning.  Or perhaps just a three year old’s random Sunday at home. 





[1] shuàiyóujiùzhāng: act in accordance with the old rules (idiom) / to follow a proven formula

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