Sunday, 12 July 2009

Aspects of my Story - 12th of July & the Orange

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For quite a while now i've considered writing snip-bits of my story up. Not a whole biography but a few choice things (most of will probably be boring, after all what does a 31 year old have to bring to the table?) Today seems a fitting day to write about my little chapter of orangism.


Growing Up Orange
My orange roots run deep, going back, i guess as far as anyone can trace the Boal family tree. The *12th of July, for the first 18 years of my life meant parades, 'God save the Queen' (although i'm not sure which god they really mean), 'The Sash my father wore' , playing a lambeg drum and carrying a banner or a sword, which is pretty cool when you love swashbuckling movies & books.

As expected by family tradition i joined the order when i was old enough & everyone was happy, especially my dad who is, & has been for as long as i remember, the worshipful master of the lodge he is in.

Change
But then the most traumatic event happened in my life; Jesus!

Jesus came & changed everything, now i wanted to worship Him alone as my Master, and to live primarily a life for His Kingdom & not for the country i live in. To glorify Him; not so called Protestantism, and to distance myself from any organisation that claimed Him and His name falsely, demeaningly, shamefully & hypocritically making people swear oaths, that if true meant that person was a follower of Christ.

I know that there are many Christian's within the orange & i by no means am saying that you cannot be a christian & orange. But for me i could not be a part of something that had 'christian' hanging as a banner at the core of it, yet was an excuse for drunken revelries, sin and called someone other than Jesus worshipful master (even if it was my dad).
So i took the plunge & left, knowing that i'd deeply hurt my parents.

The 'South' & Me
Up to this point i had pretty much refused to even cross the border from N.Ireland into the South, & if i did venture across i'd exit the car as soon as we returned back to the 'promised land' and kiss the roadside. I tell no lie!

But with Jesus came freedom & before long i was helping at CEF camps filled with catholic kids from the South Dublin area.

Here seems a good place to confess that one of these teenagers met Jesus, grew into a fine young woman & married me a few years ago (you can read that story here). This was never an issue to my family although, i believe a letter was submitted by my dad explaining that although raised catholic, Babs was now a Christian. I guess this was in case anyone questioned that his son had married a 'Free-Stater' and so question his membership of the lodge.

Protestant?
I would say that i feel that the orange, though not alone & not the primary cause, has contributed to how the meaning of 'protestant' has changed over the years. We no longer mean those reformed Christians who protest against false religions & doctrines. But in N.Ireland use it to promote a political view, a dislike of roman catholics & even attach it, at times, as a label to terrorist organisations.

In recent days threats have even been issued to other ethnic groups living in Belfast, claiming that N.Ireland should be for white protestants only. This is a huge failure & oversight of what the protestant reformation was truly about & if those guys truly were protestants they would repent. They would also seek to love other ethnicity's & to bring them to Jesus.

Worship

On the 12th of July i'd ask you to bow your knee & worship the One True and Only Worshipful Master; Jesus Christ the Son of the Living God.*It is an interesting fact that during the 1859 revival in Ireland the twelfth day parades were cancelled. Crowds did still gather, but without any regalia of orangism and to both pray & hear the Word of God preached.
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About Boaly
Gary has been involved in printing the Scriptures for 20 years, enjoys photography and rambling online

8 comments:

Family Blogs said...

Wow, Gary. A very frank, courageous and encouraging post. These issues are not easy to write about, and for many of us from a Protestant background in NI it is hard to either embrace or reject your cultural identity. I admire your honesty here, and the balance you strike.

When I was at Queens I disavowed all mention of Protestantism with regard to my identity - simply calling myself an evangelical Christian. Since then I've learned, mainly through Banner of Truth and other Reformed publishers, that it is possible to celebrate truly Protestant culture and its (hugely beneficial) contribution to world history - without the sectarian trappings of NI!

May God bless you as you continue to find your identity and citizenship in Christ alone.
A

Boaly said...

Thanks Andrew, wasn't sure how the post would go or if i'd even written it in an understandable way.

I would tend to do what you done at Queens and refer to myself as an evangelical Christian, although i love reading the reformers etc so much it's hard not to love the old meaning of 'protestant'. NI is a tightrope in areas such as this.

Thanks again for your encouragement, trust alls well in Peru.

John Fitzsimmons. said...

Thanks for posting that Gary.

Sorry I havn't blogged about Just Do Something yet. My Laptop is in getting fixed and my old one is very tempermental. So I'll post when i hopefully get it back in the next couple of days.

Anonymous said...

This is great stuff Gary.

Joel said...

Gary, when I saw the title of your post I was afraid I was going to read something that would make me wish I hadn't. I'm not Irish, so I only understand the sectarian hostility in an abstract way, but from my side of the river the Orange Order looks very different. My great-grandfather was a member of the Ku Klux Klan, which was much more down on Catholics than on blacks. (He'd be appalled at me, his heir.)

But I really appreciated the way you said:
Jesus came & changed everything, now i wanted to worship Him alone as my Master, and to live primarily a life for His Kingdom & not for the country i live in. To glorify Him; not so called Protestantism...

That is so absolutely on the mark. Jesus is not confined to either Catholic or Protestant. We may have different beliefs about Him (and those aren't trivial), but He's neither an Orangeman nor a Knight of Columbus. Anything that takes our first allegiance away from Him and makes Him an adjunct to some man-made creed is unacceptable. Christianity is not an excuse for drum-beating and parades. I can get along fine with someone who loves Jesus more than he hates my church. In the end, Jesus is what matters.

(I'm not sure that made sense, but I hope the idea got through.)

Boaly said...

Absolutely Joel!
I love how you say "I can get along fine with someone who loves Jesus more than he hates my church." Brilliant!

Many times disagreement becomes an excuse to hate! I'm not sure that we have to take it to that level, even if we have strong doctrinal differences etc.

Appreciate your comment and i'm finding alot of encouragement from all the comments on this post. I really didn't know how this would be taken -

just glad my little sister karen doesnt read my blog - she'd probably burn me out haha - Karen if you do read this, that last phrase was a joke so...

Boaly said...

I should have said as well that i think you said something brilliant in

"Jesus is not confined to either Catholic or Protestant. We may have different beliefs about Him (and those aren't trivial), but He's neither an Orangeman nor a Knight of Columbus. Anything that takes our first allegiance away from Him and makes Him an adjunct to some man-made creed is unacceptable."

Jesus, being God, is far above any, and i mean any, religious beliefs about Him. He is defined by Himself and describes Himself for us in the Bible and perhaps most clearly in the name He & the Father used: 'I AM'.

I cannot see Jesus being an Orangeman or a member of the kkk. And something tells me that if Jesus was here in person we'd all have to seriously re-align our lives & beliefs etc. (or else team up and kill Him again, which is probably what many would want).

Peter P said...

Wow.

That's a great testimony, Gary.

It's amazing how little people on the internet actually know about each other.

I know you're from NI but stuff like this hadn't even occured to me.

Thank you for sharing.