Showing posts with label death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death. Show all posts

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Instruments of death





One evening last week I looked in on my daughter’s room, and found her lying on her bed, watching a YouTube video on Meg’s tablet.  She’d finished her homework, and you might not be surprised to hear that, from her point of view, there was nothing wrong with what she was doing.  But obviously I saw it somewhat differently, because I went over to grab the device out of her hand.  She put up just the briefest moment’s worth of resistance before letting it go, and I took it out and put it in the living room.  Now to my mind, I was simply setting a limit, not meting out punishment, and I went back as if nothing unusual had happened and asked if she’d like to play a game, or maybe have me read a book aloud.  But she was upset with me, and, once the heat of the moment had passed I could understand why. 
Because, while grabbing away the iPad was hardly a blip on the scale of harm people do to each other, it was violent.  I didn’t ask; I didn’t explain; I just went and took it from her because I’m stronger than her and I could.  Of course I had my reasons, but violence always does.   And it is true that, as a father, I do have a responsibility for setting and maintaining appropriate boundaries around my child’s consumption of digital media.  Meg and I have standards around that stuff that are more restrictive than some parents we know, and less so than others.  Those standards have changed as our daughter has gotten older, and have become more complicated as internet-enabled devices have slowly but inexorably accumulated in our house.  Which explains how Risa and I had different interpretations of the rules the other night, and whether she was breaking them, or not.
But it doesn’t explain why my frustration boiled over the way it did.  Because it wasn’t really about her, and whether she was being disobedient.  As I thought about it later, tossing and turning at 3 and 4 o’clock in the morning, I could see that underneath my impatience and anger was a sense of helplessness.  It was a reaction to my feeling that digital information devices and the form of culture they represent and communicate, has become a power beyond my control.  It has invaded the most intimate spaces of my life: my home and my family relationships.  It has become a defining influence on my daughter’s development, imprinting the way she understands and interacts with the world, even to the point of shaping the physiology of her brain. 
And it feels like this is something I did not choose.  At the beginning of the sixth grade her school gave her an iPad and began requiring her to do most of her homework on it.  That same year her friends—and she has lots of those, who are very important to her—all started getting their own smart phones or internet-enabled mp3 players, on which they communicate outside of school by text message or video chat, and we knuckled under to the pressure and got her one, too.  And it’s not like her mother and I are Amish or something.  We have a land-line as an emergency backup and for the fax machine, but if it rings we know it’s a telemarketer, because no one we know has the number.  I myself would have to look it up on my mobile phone to tell you what it is. 
I access the internet from my laptop, or Meg’s infamous tablet, and I have to say, I find it a great convenience.  I like being able to instantaneously access the surf report, and the menu from Hector’s Pizza; or to renew my library books from the kitchen table.  I enjoy watching highlights on YouTube of the basketball game I heard parts of on the radio last night, and streaming my telenovelas (for Spanish-language learning purposes only, of course).  But on the nights when I look around my house at each one of us in a separate room, alone, on a different device, I don’t see entertainment and convenience.  I see erosion at the very foundations of what it means to be a society, and have a living culture.  I see death.    
It’s strange how the forces we harness and devices we employ to secure and enlarge our sphere of life become instruments of death.  The technological revolutions of the industrial age furnish no end of examples.  To take just one more, the automobile freed us from the crowded confines of the city, from the inconvenience of traveling on someone else’s schedule and rubbing elbows with strangers, only to exile us to sprawling cultural deserts devoid of common spaces, where nothing is within walking distance, or to trap us on freeways choked with traffic, pollution, and rage.  And now we come to find that the waste products of burning the fossil fuel that makes this way of life possible have so disrupted the world’s climate that we face the real prospect of extinction.
But this experience, of seeing what we intended for our benefit rebound to our destruction, is not limited to the sphere of technological “progress.”  This are just illustrations of what the Bible reveals as the universal tragedy of our existence.  The world is beautiful and good, and we were made to be sovereign in it, for our blessing and our joy; and yet somehow in taking hold of it and subjecting it to our control, it has twisted in our grasp.  The letters of St. Paul, and especially Romans, bear witness to a shattering realization: even the religious law, God’s gift to the Hebrew people, the seal of their covenant, the path of righteousness and peace to which Paul had zealously devoted his entire life, had become in human hands a hostile alien power of condemnation and of death.  
Death, in the sense that Paul speaks of it, is not the end or the opposite of life.  It is the shadow clinging close to every aspect of life itself, staining everything we create, all the good we do, all our best intentions and self-improvement projects, continually threatening to cancel them out, or turn them to unforeseen baneful consequences.  We were made for sharing the infinite life of God, and yet we continually try to grasp hold of and carve out a little piece of life to possess entirely on our own terms.  And to seek life that is not offered back to the giver of life, or to take power, without consecrating it to the source of all power, or to do work, even for the sake of the good, the true, or the beautiful, that is not conceived and carried out in the Spirit who is goodness, and truth, and beauty itself, is what Paul calls “setting one’s mind on the flesh.” 
And this fundamentally-flawed orientation to life, leads, sooner or later, into a trap—into being bound and gagged and imprisoned in the airless darkness of futility.  It is into the depths of this prison that Jesus cried, in a loud voice, “Come out!”  But before he did that, Jesus wept.  He wept for love of his friend Lazarus.  He wept with Mary and Martha, whom he also loved, and with the Judeans who had come down from Jerusalem to console them, some of whom were spies of the men who wanted him killed.  He wept with outrage and compassion at the whole sad, anguished mess that is human life under the tyranny of death.   And maybe he wept for himself, for he knew he would soon take Lazarus’ place in the tomb. 
Because calling one man back from the grave, even after four days, would not be enough to break death’s hold on the rest of us.   That was something Jesus could only do by meeting the powers of death head on.  Only he could reveal their sway over the world, at such cost to our hopes for wisdom and love, for justice, peace, and fulfillment.  It was up to him to pay that cost in full, in his own divine human person, and so to unmask the lies of the powers of death, and reveal their impotence.  But also to reveal, to the people who believed in him, the salvation that is coming into the world—a life so full of grace and truth that death cannot touch it, on either side of the grave.      
   

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Not all there is to the egg




As religious holidays go, Easter is a bit of a challenge.  People often compare it to Christmas, and—let’s face it—Christmas wins.  Because Christmas is easy to understand.  It is about the birth of a child, and that needs no explanation.  All of us remember what it was like to be a child, and we know what it is like to hold a child.  You can make a picture of a baby, and put a mother and father in the picture, with a donkey and cow, and maybe a star or an angel, and you can write “Merry Christmas!” on it and send it to a friend.  And even if that friend is not a Christian, they can admire the pretty picture, and understand what it is about, and why it makes you happy.

But Easter is different.  The story of Easter begins at a tomb, and who wants to think about a tomb?  Who wants to draw that on a card and send it to a friend?  And that tomb is empty, because the man who was dead in the tomb came out, and now he is alive.  So you could send a picture of the man, but while the baby in the manger is sweet and lovable, the living man of Easter is controversial.  He always was—that’s why he ended up in tomb in the first place. 
And I think that even for us who are attracted to that man, who try to believe in the things he died for, and are glad to hear he is alive, it is still hard to know exactly how to talk about it.  Easter is about finding that the house of death, that we thought was full, is actually empty, and how do you talk about emptiness? It’s about a man whose life is not closed off, but open and infinite.  And how do you make a picture of infinite openness?  If he is alive he has a future, and how do you celebrate what you don’t yet know? 
One way to talk about it is in terms of freedom.  Easter comes from Passover, the ancient Jewish festival of Spring, but also of freedom; and the Jewish story of freedom begins with a voice that speaks to Moses out of a bush that burns but is not consumed.  And the voice tells Moses its name, a name you can’t pronounce, a name that means “I will be who I will be.”  The body of Jesus that rose from the tomb is like that bush and that voice.  It lives and lives and is never used up.  Its future is open and free.       
Or you can think about Easter as transformation, like that ancient image of the egg.  The egg, that is so perfect and complete.  It is closed, and contains within itself everything that is needed, so it is hard to imagine it ever changing at all.  So it is only when something stirs unexpectedly inside the egg, and suddenly a tiny beak starts pecking through, that we realize that the egg is not all there is to the egg. It only exists for the sake of the new thing that breaks the shell and bursts out, fluffy and yellow and peeping, and totally alive.  
Yesterday I thought of another image for Easter, of freedom and transformation, which is the universe.  People used to think that the physical universe was closed, like an egg.  But in recent times we have learned that the universe is actually expanding in all directions.  Some of the scientists who study these things say that it will keep expanding and expanding forever, and some say that, as it does, the fires of the universe will get colder and colder until they go out, one by one.  To them the universe is a tomb.  But no one really knows, and I prefer to think the expansion is a sign that the universe is open.  It is free.  And maybe it really is an egg, hatching something unexpected, entirely new.



But none of these images of Easter can really take the place of the stories of Jesus’ resurrection.  They are stories of freedom, because the thing that was supposed to be closed forever is open.  Even Death can’t hold Jesus captive, thanks to the freedom of God.   And they are stories of transformation.  Mary Magdalene doesn’t know that it’s Jesus at first.  She thinks it’s the gardener, because even though it’s definitely him, he’s not the same.  And when she recognizes him, she tries to hold him, but she can’t, because he is still on his way.
And that’s really the whole point, isn’t it?--that Jesus is not a character in a story that once was written in a book and now is over.  We don’t close the book and say, “okay, that was a nice story—now what?”  We keep the book open because Jesus is the “now what?”  And this resurrection story tells us what that means.  Because the climax of the story, the moment when Mary sees the risen Lord, comes after Jesus calls her by her name.  The freedom and transformation of the resurrection is not just something that happened to Jesus—it’s something that happened for us.  It is not the story of someone else’s past—it is the story of our future, the future we all have together in God.
We Christians sometimes talk about this future as if it will come from outside of us, as if Jesus is some kind of superweapon who will come down from heaven and blow everything way.  But the Jesus of the Easter Gospel is a future that opens out from within and among us.  He hatches out of our human story like a chick out of an egg.  We don’t recognize him, because we keep looking for the corpse that should be in the tomb.  But all the while he is alive and calling us by name.
When Mary hears her name and sees that it is Jesus, she cries out “Teacher!”  And that is what he is.  It is his voice speaking in our hearts that tells us we are not captive to the mistakes we have made, or our bad habits, or our worn out old images of ourselves, but in every moment our life is open and we are free.  Our teacher is calling us to follow his path of transformation, a journey that embraces our gifts and our weaknesses, our struggles and our victories, our doubts and our faith, our sorrows as well as our joys.  It even embraces death, the one aspect of our future we think we know with certainty.  But his life swallows death, and clothes our mortal bodies with the glory of God.   
And because it is the same Christ who is calling each and every one, what is coming into being in us is not just a new person.  It is a new world—a world from which the curse of destruction and the fear of death have been lifted; a world of unity, compassion, and justice, of deep and abiding peace; a world in which the fullness of God’s glory dwells for everyone to see, in all beings, in every cell and molecule, every drop of water and grain of sand.   This inconceivable future comes into the world in a single person, but through his death and resurrection it comes to all of us.  And so this celebration itself is a living symbol of what it celebrates.  If you want to see Christ’s resurrection, look around you.  We act it out in public every Sunday, the eighth day of the week, the first day of a new creation. 
Called by Christ we gather here, each one called by name, and we blend our voices into one song, the song of resurrection.  We open the book, the book that no hate or fear or prejudice can ever close, the book of resurrection.  We hear the living words of Christ, and keep them in our hearts; we proclaim again that these are our words, for our generation, our world, our future.  We bless the bread and wine, the gifts our teacher gave the night before his death, to be the ever-present signs of his coming.  We break and share one imperishable food, we pass one ever-flowing cup.  We take them into our bodies, to become our bodies, the many bodies of the risen Christ.  And in those bodies we go out, as witnesses of resurrection, emissaries, sent to be the freedom and the transformation of the world.   


Wednesday, May 21, 2014

How can we know the way?




I have preached many times on today’s reading from the Gospel of John.  It is one of the passages that the Book of Common Prayer recommends for funerals.  For those who are grieving, it is reassuring to hear the words of Jesus that there are many dwelling places in his Father’s house, and that he is going there to prepare a place for us.  It is good news, under those circumstances, and my job is to proclaim it, for strength and consolation. 
But it is a little different to read this passage today, on a Sunday morning in Easter season.  Granted, the spring it not as fresh as it was five weeks ago, when the green on the hills had not begun to fade, and the roses that are losing their petals now were just breaking their first bloom.   Maybe the light that burst forth from the empty tomb has dimmed just a bit, and the shadows are stealing back in around the edges of the world.  But when Thomas says to Jesus, "Lord, we do not know where you are going. How can we know the way?" he is not yet thinking of the martyr’s death that he will someday die.  That is still far away. 
Thomas asks this question because he has learned that Jesus, whom he followed along the roads of Galilee, Samaria, and Judea, out across the Jordan and back again, who has led him and his friends here to Jerusalem, whom Thomas was ready to follow even to death, is going away, and leaving him behind.  Thomas’ question is not about the fate of Jesus’ soul, or about how to cope with his own grief and loss.  It is a question about how to continue the journey they have begun.  It is about carrying on in Jesus’ absence.  It’s a question about discipleship. 
It is a question we might ask, knowing that Christ is risen, but our lives are still in the midst of death.  Where we live, the Father’s house seems far away.  Jesus says he is going there to prepare a place for us, but there’s no getting around the fact that he is going and we are staying here.  He says he’s coming back for us, but he doesn’t say when.  And then he tells us that we know the way to the place where he is going, as if to say it will not be enough for us to simply wait around for him to get back, but we need to keep moving forward and he’ll meet us on the way. 
 
"Lord, we do not know where you are going. How can we know the way?"
It is a good question for a group of people, like this one, that is in a year of discernment about its future.  God seems to have some purpose for us at St. John’s because, in spite of innumerable obstacles, we are alive, after decades of debilitating conflict and the death of schism.  But the time is upon us when the miracle of our existence is no longer enough to give us a sense of direction.  We are asking to know the purpose for which God called us back to life.
For the church, the answer to that question will always have something to do with remembering.  We know where we are going, at least in part, because we know the way that we have come.  But there is a danger in this, the danger that we will be satisfied with the answer that has already been given.  We might believe we have already arrived, when the answer that Jesus gives is about being on the way.  “I am the way,” says Jesus, inviting us to keep moving, trusting his guidance;  “and the truth,” he adds, not a truth cast in bronze, or set in stone, but the truth that lives and grows as we journey further with Christ.  And finally “the life”— life that is, by definition, dynamic, and changing, and ever renewing itself, or it is not life at all. 
We are justly proud of the long history of our congregation.  Our parish archives contain handwritten minutes of vestry meetings and ledgers of accounts that go back to the pioneer days of Petaluma.  We also have a collection of old parish newsletters that is not quite that old, but covers the first four years of the 20th century, not long after this structure was built.  And what strikes me, reading those papers, is how entirely focused they are on churchly concerns.  There are little notes about parish life and reports of the rector’s travels, and appeals for the support of missionaries in Yreka, and Alaska and China.  There are long articles about ancient church history, and summaries of doctrine and biblical texts, but not a word about the social changes that are radically transforming everyone’s lives.
In those years this valley, like all of America, was rapidly urbanizing and industrializing, integrating into an expanding national and global system.  Her people were embracing the habits and values of the modern consumer society, but the only clues in the parish newsletter that all this was going on are the paid advertisements in the margins of the page.   It is as if the church lives in a different world, one that looks backward to simpler times, and forward only to heaven.  The unspoken message is that the modern world knows where it is going, and the church is just along for the ride.  And even if the world is not following Jesus, it is not for us to resist or critique.   Our role is to stand on the sidelines, keeping open a place apart for rest and inspiration, where religious culture and family tradition, and beauty, decency, charity and reverence are not completely lost.
The world still needs this from religion, but by itself it is no longer enough.  On Monday, scientists from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory released a report on the melting of glaciers in the Amundsen Sea region of West Antarctica.  Their observations show an ongoing collapse of the ice in the region that has passed the point of no return.  Just this one source is causing a rise in global sea levels of about four feet.  The thing that alarms the scientists the most is that these are changes that used to happen in geological time, in hundreds of millennia, and now they take one or two or three human generations. 
In the face of runaway change, the church can no longer sit on the sidelines.  We must get out on the way.  We have to bear witness, like Stephen in the Book of Acts, that our leaders they do not know what they are doing.   Our civilization does not know where it is going.  It has no map, but is too proud to stop to ask for directions.   Of course, some Christians have been saying this for a long time.  They say, we know a different way, the way to the exits.  We believe the truth—the unchanging, fixed, literal truth of the Bible, and its iron jaws are closing on the world.  We hope for the life, the life that is death.  We know where we are going—to heaven, and you and your world can go to hell.
But there’s another way of being Christian, one that doesn’t hope for the destruction of the world.  It’s a way that reveres what God has created out of reverence for a wisdom and design that we do not understand.  It’s a way of loving what is passing, because it is not passing away to eternal death, but passing over into the house of God.  And wherever that is, we say, with the author of 1st Peter, that it is a house that God is also building here, from living stones.  This place is not forsaken, not if we are to believe what Jesus says about his own future.  Because he doesn’t say that he is going to the Father to chill out, in a state of endless bliss and eternal rest.  He’s says he’s going to get busy. 
“Because I am going to the Father,” Jesus says, “I will do whatever you ask in my name.”  His priestly work, reconciling the world to God, making the love and wisdom, the compassion and justice of God come true and come alive in the world—the work that he used to do, so to speak, from our side, Jesus promises to continue from the other side, the side of God.  So what about us, we who are still here—what do we ask him for?  It’s a good question, since we don’t know where we are going.  I guess we ask him to show us the way.

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.