Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Spiritual truths of Mothers' Day




There’s a calendar on the wall in the parish office that is illustrated with cartoons that make light of the vagaries of congregational life.   And the cartoon for this month has two panels side by side.  The first has a caption over it that says “Preaching on Mothers’ Day 2016…” and it shows a priest in his alb after the service, and a woman in a red coat with matching hat and a pearl necklace sticking a finger in his face and saying “How dare you fail to preach about Mothers’ Day!  How could you be so heartless!”  The caption on the second panel says “A year later…” and it shows a balding gentleman in a suit with a red bowtie and glasses shaking his finger in the priest’s face and saying “What were you thinking, preaching about Mothers’ Day?  Since when does Hallmark guide the lectionary?”
I’m feeling lucky because I see the opportunity today to talk about both Mothers’ Day and the lectionary.  Because, while Mother’s Day does have that aspect of being just another holiday for the advertising industry to sell flowers, and greeting cards, and chocolates, there’s also a deep religious meaning to the love and devotion we have for our mothers, and if this day gets us thinking about that a little bit, it’s a good thing.   Whether they are living or dead, whether the relationship we have with them is harmonious and loving, or not so much, to honor our mothers is to show respect for our most precious and irreplaceable gift, the one without which no other good can come to us—the gift of life.
The fact that our mothers bore us in their wombs, and gave birth to us in pain and travail, and nursed us and cared for us when we were too small and weak to care for ourselves, reminds us that we do not make ourselves on our own.  And this is true even when we no longer feel that we need our mothers.  No matter how strong and successful and accomplished we become, our lives continually depend on the generosity of other beings, and on the whole nurturing matrix of the universe.  This spiritual truth is recognized by cultures around the world who speak of the Earth, and even of God, as our mother.  And the fact that Mothers’ Day is also observed in countries all over the world might lead us to see that, though we have our billions of separate mothers, we are all children, and all have a mother, and in a sense all our mothers are one.
  
This week on the way to work one morning I was listening to the car radio and I heard part of an interview with a man named Guy McPherson, a professor emeritus from the University of Arizona.  The conversation was about climate change, and Dr. McPherson claimed to have a unique perspective on the problem because he studies it, not as a chemist or physicist or geologist or astronomer, but as a conservation biologist.  That is to say, he looks at it from the point of view of species and their habitat, what ensures their survival, and threatens it, and what causes them to go extinct.  And what Dr. McPherson states in a matter-of-fact way is that it is already too late for us.  The threshold has already been crossed, and the self-reinforcing feedback loops already set in motion, for a runaway climate-change scenario that is already taking human lives.  And it is picking up speed, like a snowball rolling downhill, so that a few years from now, the multiple impacts of rapidly rising global temperatures will cause the human race to be extinct.
As a student of the Bible and the teachings of Jesus I have to say that Guy McPherson may be correct, at least in this limited sense—it is too late for a way of thinking that believes that life must be torn, bleeding, from the body of the earth, that it must be clear cut and strip mined and drenched in poison, and taken under armed guard and hoarded in secret off-shore vaults.  It is too late for human cunning to engineer a way out of catastrophe, just as it has always been.   And it is too late for the belief that the disaster will fall only on others, people who don’t deserve any better, while wealth and privilege entitle some to continue undisturbed to pursue our happiness.  There is no gated community secure enough, or border wall high enough, to preserve some small minority in ease and comfort, while billions perish in misery.
But I also have to say that I believe it’s not too late for life to be received as a gift, in the knowledge that all life is one.  As Christians we are in a good position to be voices for hope, because these spiritual truths of Mothers’ Day are our truths.  The biblical tradition as a whole is very much concerned with the ultimate fate of the earth, and it doesn’t pull punches about the dire consequences for all life of human greed, hubris, and violence.   Yet for all that, it keeps coming back to the deep wisdom and benevolent purpose of God in creating the world in the first place, and giving us our unique place in it.  Jesus stands squarely in this tradition of warning and hope, and the good news about him speaks directly to it.  It tells us of his confrontation with the forces that corrupt human nature, and how by making peace he disarmed them.  In Christ God has shown the way of maternal love that leads to victory for the human race and through us for the whole creation.   
The Revelation to John is a vision of that ultimate victory, so it is strange that so many people, even some Christians, believe it is a vision of the destruction of the world.  Of course, the book does contain a lot of imagery of death on a horrifying scale.  That’s because it was written out of the experience of murderous persecution, and the seer of Revelation saw the violence inflicted by the Empire on the church as a symptom of a larger culture subservience to death, that was sowing a harvest of destruction.   But his vision doesn’t end with the destruction of the earth but with its renewal, with the city of God descending upon it like a bride adorned for her husband, and the tree of life, with its healing leaves and its many kinds of fruit, growing in the city beside the river of life that flows from the throne of God and the lamb and waters the world.  And the invitation goes out, “Come!”  And all who hear say “Come!” “And let everyone who is thirsty come.  Let anyone who wishes take the water of life as a gift.”
So to Guy McPherson our answer is that call, the call to come and drink the water of life that is given to all.  Even if it is too late for us to save ourselves, maybe there’s still time to heed that call.  It may be that Mother Earth has deep springs of resilience and regeneration that our best science doesn’t know about.   Maybe she has learned a thing or two in 4-and-a-half billion years than can help us now, if we turn our human powers from domination and violence to communion and cooperation with life.  And perhaps that wisdom is already in us, as an instinct more powerful than that of flight or fight—a deep capacity for maternal love, for tender care and self-sacrificing protectiveness in service to life not our own. 
This capacity was manifested for us in Jesus, who gave birth on the cross to a new humanity.  The Gospel of John tells how, on the night before he died, he commanded his disciples to love as he loved.  And on the same night he prayed for them, and for all who would come to believe in him through their word, asking the one he called Father to make them all one.  Jesus prayed that this unity will itself be a testimony to the whole world about the purpose for which he was sent, to bring to the earth the gifts he received from his Father.   It is our faith that he, who ascended and abides in the Father’s glory, still prays this prayer.  And this is our further cause for hope, in the face of climate change and nuclear arms and all the other threats of self-destructive human folly—that Christ still calls us to receive the gift of the Father’s glory, the glory that is synonymous with love.  From his divine human heart, broken with sorrowing compassion for us, the joy, health, and peace of victory over death stream continually to earth, watering the seeds of new creation.     

  

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About Me

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Petaluma, California, United States
I am a priest in the Episcopal Church, and have been (among other things) an organic farmer and gardener, and a Zen monk. I have a lifelong interest in social and spiritual renewal on the basis of contemplative discipline, creative nonviolence, and ecological practice. In recent years my work has focused intensely on the responsibility of pastoral ministry in the humanistic, evangelical, and catholic branch of Christianity known as Anglicanism. I'm married with a daughter, and have three brothers and two parents.