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‘Worship on the land is the fundamental experience of Arctic Christians’

Published by
Matthew Puddister

Note: An earlier version of this article appeared in Contact, newsletter of the Council of the North.

The Northwest Territories saw an explosion of COVID-19 cases last fall. By Oct. 7, health authorities reported the territory had the highest infection rate per capita in Canada, with an average of 50 new cases per day—a reminder that the pandemic was far from over and reaching into the farthest corners of the north.

As Yellowknife imposed new limits on indoor gatherings, those organizing worship services were looking for alternatives. Speaking last fall from Iqaluit in the Anglican diocese of the Arctic—which encompasses the Northwest Territories, Nunavut and northern Quebec—Bishop Joey Royal said that while worship on the radio and internet had become more common during the pandemic, many parishes had taken worship outdoors.

“There are instances of parishes gathering outside for sure … There was certainly worship moving out of the church building, because for the longest time … there were serious limitations on gathering indoors and the limitations were less when you gathered outdoors,” Royal said.

Worship on the land has always been part of life in the Arctic. It is, Royal said, “baked into Arctic Christianity, because the people in this land up until the last century or so were nomadic and lived in family groups on the land.”

He highlighted the role of Inuit catechists, and later Inuit deacons and priests, in travelling long distances to spread Christianity through the Arctic.

“Although missionaries brought [the gospel] here, missionaries often functioned as people who trained local people, who then spread it to their own people across the land,” Royal said.

“That obviously involved worship [outdoors], because there were no church buildings … This was long before there was an Anglican church building or any church building in the Arctic. So worship on the land is the fundamental experience of Arctic Christians, at least when you go back generations.”

Edmund Peck (far right) prays with Inuit at an outdoor service near Blackhead Island in Cumberland Sound, circa 1919. Photo: General Synod Archives

Historian Kenn Harper has written extensively about the Arctic. He noted that the spiritual practices of Inuit shamans in pre-Christian culture often took place outdoors.

“The initiation ceremonies or practices initiating someone into shamanism—that was definitely outdoors in nature and often in extreme privation, like fasting for a number of days out on the land away from other people,” Harper said.

Some of these Inuit traditions of outdoor spiritual practice may have continued after the introduction of Christianity, he said. When camping away from established communities, Harper said, “Inuit maintained the Sabbath even when they were not in the communities under the watchful eye of the missionary. I think it’s safe to assume many of those observations were outside if the weather was nice, or in their tents if the weather wasn’t.”

The cover of Harper’s book In Those Days: Shamans, Spirits, and Faith in the Inuit North depicts a photo of pioneering Anglican missionary Edmund Peck—who founded the church’s first permanent mission on Baffin Island and developed Inuktitut syllabics—presiding over what the historian describes as an “outdoor prayer meeting”.

The presence of a young man and woman holding hands in front of Peck suggests, Harper said, that the gathering was likely an outdoor marriage ceremony.

“This would be an Anglican ceremony held out of doors, and the reason would probably be that indoors was too crowded, quite frankly, because Peck’s premises at Blacklead Island were pretty small,” Harper said. “I know during the wintertime, he crammed people indoors for worship services. But I’m thinking that outdoors would have been much more comfortable.”

More recently, Anglican worship outdoors has taken on a more intentional character. In July 2018, an estimated 25 members of the congregation at St. Jude’s Cathedral in Iqaluit took an hour boat ride outside the city for a three-day parish camping trip.

Campers enjoyed music, prayer and worship outdoors, including an observation of the Eucharist. Photo: Contributed

Between boating, fishing and hiking, parishioners held morning and evening prayer, Bible study and the Eucharist outdoors. Royal, who preached at the Sunday Holy Communion service on the idea of the sea in the Bible, said gathering outside the congregation’s usual context helped build relationships within the parish across generations.

The idea for the trip came from Methuselah Kunuk, then dean of St. Jude’s and later a candidate in the 2021 Nunavut territorial election. Worship outdoors was nothing new for Kunuk, who has served as co-chair of Iqaluit’s Amarok Hunters and Trappers Coalition and the Baffin Fisheries Coalition.

“When I was growing up … when the weather’s good in the summer and spring, we used to do our services outside,” Kunuk said.

While Nunavut had zero cases of COVID-19 at the time this article was written, St. Jude’s has not organized a formal camping trip since 2018 due in large part to the pandemic. And since the arrival of winter, there does not seem to be organized worship taking place in the diocese outdoors, Royal said.

Yet whether worship takes place indoors or outdoors, Kunuk said, the presence of God can be felt equally in both.

“I think it’s the same, because we believe that the Holy Spirit is with us all the time,” Kunuk said. “It doesn’t matter where we are.”

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Published by
Matthew Puddister