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April 14, 2007

HE IS RISEN! – AND AMONG US…..

I would not have noticed her as I passed by had I not heard a faint “can you help?” I turned and saw a short, thin women of 70+ years. When I turned, she said again in what appeared to be embarrassment “can you help?” Strands of her thin, gray hair were almost floating and softly moving in the light breeze along the street. Her left eye was so faded in color that it was almost hard to distinguish from the white of her eye. And she had little control over its direction. I was in downtown Portland, it was Holy Saturday afternoon, and there was a lot of foot traffic around the shopping district. Her frail, well-worn hands extended out toward me and offered a small knit cap for my offering.

He is risen and among us…….

She struggled to look me in the eye. I wanted to engage her in conversation as one human being to another, not just drop an offering and move on without acknowledging her. I asked her how it happened that she’s on the street here.
“I can’t make it month to month.”
“Do you have a place to live?”
“I have a little studio apartment over there.” (She pointed down several blocks to a tougher neighborhood.)
“What about Social Security?”
“It’s not enough to live on. I have no other money.”

He is risen and among us…….

There was so much more I wanted to know. What about her family? Did she have children? Why was she alone and on the verge of homelessness? But I could see she was already embarrassed by my initial questions, so I shared some of what I had in my pocket - not enough, I’m ashamed to say - and I tried to wish her well, although it was hard to do without sounding trite.

He is risen and among us…….

I doubt if she was concerned that the day before was Good Friday, or that the following day was Easter. I sensed she was probably more concerned about how long before she would be on the street permanently. I wondered what it must be like to be at the end of your days, living in a meager studio apartment, deciding whether to eat or pay the rent. Yet, even in her sad condition, she is better off than millions all over the world who are displaced, dying in wars, suffering from the cruelty and hubrus of dictators, from starvation and disease.

He is risen and among us…….

It’s been a week since my encounter with her. I’ve thought about her often. She was very frail and vulnerable, not aggressive and insistent as are many of those asking for a handout. I barely heard her as I passed. Her voice was faint - much like the voice of God buried in the chaotic and soul-numbing din of our daily commerce. Perhaps she remains in my mind because she reminds me of my own frailty and vulnerability. I can choose to walk past such frailty, pretend not to notice, pretend I’m somehow immune to it. Or, I can embrace it, share in it, even for a moment, and in that moment, meet the One who bore our frailty and vulnerability, the one who is risen and among us.

April 02, 2007

HOLY WEEK REFLECTIONS

I wonder if Jesus had allergies. You know, all those olive trees and blowing dust. I know when my allergies act up I get irritable. Maybe cursing the fig tree and turning over the money changers’ tables was just bad allergies. Maybe the apostles stood back and said to one another, “boy, he’s really upset today!” “Yeah, I think his allergies are bothering him.” “We better find something for that before he gets us all in trouble.”

I enjoy imagining Jesus experiencing some of the same things that I do. It makes him more real and compelling for me. That’s why I enjoy reading books by scholars who weave the social and political aspects of Jesus’ world and ministry into their discussions. I am especially impressed to see how Jesus was so integrated into his culture and world rather than aloof or removed from “worldly things.” And I am much more compelled to follow him as a result.

Such was my reaction to reading “The Last Week” by Marcus Borg and John Dominic Crossan. If you think you know well the significance of all the events of Holy Week, this book will rock your spiritual and intellectual security. Using primarily the gospel of Mark, the first Gospel written, “The Last Week” is a chronicle of the activities and experiences of Jesus from Palm Sunday to Easter. As I read the descriptions of these events by these two world-renowned scripture scholars, I found Jesus to be even more real and compelling to me. Given the current situation of our world and our nation, it is also very clear how Jesus is relevant for this time in history as well. It is also very clear to me how the “cooperation” of church and state that has existed since Constantine in the 4th Century has domesticated Jesus and diluted the full meaning of both his words and actions. And how convenient. That domestication seems to support the military, economic, and social activities of many cultures and governments.
Hmmmmm.

In the concluding sections of the book, the authors stress how Jesus was about personal and political transformation driven by his passion for God and God’s kingdom. They also stress that the two go hand in hand. In other words, it is not enough to seek personal transformation and union with God without seeking political transformation in this world as God would have it. In the same way, it is dangerous to seek political transformation without been transformed personally.

In the domesticated version of Holy Week, Jesus comes to Jerusalem because he knows he has to in order to be crucified and die for our sins so that God will forgive us and let us in to heaven and show us how much God loves us. Each event of Holy Week is seen in that light. If, however, we take a broader, more expansive and educated view of these events with a full understanding of the political and social climate in which they unfold, we see, Borg and Crossan tell us, a much deeper and more powerful message in these events. According to the authors, Jesus activities were well thought out and each had a specific message and meaning to convey. He wasn’t swept along by events in a sort of predestined sequence, but rather skillfully chose these activities and words, knowing full well the risk involved. He knew the risk, but his passion for God and God’s kingdom gave him the courage to face that risk. He chose to use a time when Jerusalem would be packed with pilgrims and his message would receive a wide audience as well as a lot of attention from the authorities. I cannot due the book justice by trying to summarize each of the events. But I would strongly suggest you read it. It is out in paperback and available at most bookstores or online. And it doesn’t have to be read just during Holy Week. I guarantee it will have a deep impact on your understanding of Jesus and his message no matter when you read it.

I am grateful to Marcus Borg and John Dominic Crossan for helping to make Jesus more real and compelling. They portray a Jesus passionate about God and about God’s kingdom, a Jesus who careful planned his words and actions to make powerful social and political statements based on that passion because, I believe, he was teaching that we cannot separate the spiritual from the political. As the authors point out, Jesus was teaching personal and political transformation. I don’t think we are going to hear that very often from our spiritual or political leaders. What Thomas Merton said over 40 years ago rings true today: “Centuries of identification between Christian and civil life have done more to secularize Christianity than to sanctify civil life.”

March 12, 2007

LENTEN REFLECTIONS

It’s a beautifully clear and cool morning in downtown Phoenix. The hum and thumping of construction equipment is muffled by the big glass windows of the Fair Trade Café where I sit writing these words. If I look to the right, I see Trinity Episcopal Cathedral, a nearly century old building with several Palo Verde trees at the property edge – it’s quite stately and peaceful looking. However, if I look to the left, I watch construction traffic backed up for two blocks in either direction, construction equipment and several dozen workers moving through barricades, stacks of light rail track and other construction materials. Finally, there are the homeless, mostly lone individuals – some on old bikes weighed down with all their possessions as well as bottles and aluminum cans. As I am writing this, there is one elderly homeless woman struggling down the brick sidewalk with a very wobbly walker and, just now, refusing the assistance of a passer by. In all, quite a contrast: the calm of a spiritual center, the chaos of ongoing building, expanding, and acquiring, and, finally, the marginalized who appear removed and detached from it all.

It’s also nearly three weeks into Lent. And themes of lent as well as the view outside the café window call me back to the topic of simplicity. This time, however, I add the concepts of surrender and detachment. I hope I haven’t lost you by the mention of those two words. They are, at times, frightening I’ll admit. They often have very unpleasant connotations, especially for those of us growing up Catholic in the 50’s and 60’s. It’s a shame. They can really be quite pleasant – even calming – concepts when seen in their true light. They also shed light on the deeper, sometimes forgotten, meaning of the Lenten Season.

Thomas Merton said that the purpose of lent, with its call to surrender, detachment, and simplicity of heart and life, is to “lead us to a positive increase of spiritual energy and life.” And Diana Butler Bass recently stated, “Lent is not a program, but a way of being.” Here again we come to understand surrender, simplicity, and detachment, not as isolated acts confined to a 40-day period, but as “a way of being.” Still with me?

Now in case you’re thinking that I am about to suggest that we all live like the homeless persons I mentioned above, let me be very clear. No one should be homeless – especially in our society. And, as a psychologist, I would be concerned about anyone who chose the harsh conditions of homelessness simply for its own sake. But what I am saying is what Alan Jones says: “To possess nothing, this is your end, and it IS good news. This is the mysterious freedom of possessing nothing that we may truly possess the world.” This sense of detachment, simplicity, and surrender leads Jones to further state: “I tend to trust people more for their vulnerability than for their virtue.” I would add; those who recognize and accept their vulnerability rather than those who attempt to deny and mask it. Being vulnerable, surrendering to/accepting what is in our self and in the world, and being detached from the NEED for it all, this is the source of true peace.

So the movement toward simplicity, surrender, and detachment is really a movement toward personal freedom; a movement outward, rather than inward. It is a striving to get out of and give up what Richard Rohr calls the False Self which needs things, position, privilege, and power to feel somehow better (although it’s never enough). Rohr says we are to rest in the Real Self, which, in the end, really can possess nothing, but has everything in the God who is, as John Shelby Spong says, “the source of all life, all love, and all being.” Feeling a little better about this simplicity, detachment thing? My hope is that you might actually feel relief from an unnecessary but sadly and quite intentionally imposed burden of our Western society.

A few weeks ago, I was reading the New York Times (in this same café by the way) and was struck to the point of both anger and tears by two pictures on the same page in the front section. Fully two thirds of the page was covered with ads for “uber”-expensive diamonds, furs, and automobiles. Tucked in one corner of the same page was a picture of
a 2-year-old naked child crying and crawling on the ground amidst empty ramshackle buildings. Family and neighbors hastily fleeing from an advancing militia in a remote part of Africa had abandoned the child. What a stark difference! What a stark reminder of our human vulnerability! How sad to know it doesn’t have to be like that and that the solution and balance is certainly within the power of the worlds leading nations. And for me, the other pictures on the page demonstrate how far we are willing to go to mask our vulnerability and create a false sense of safety and security.

Am I advocating poverty for all? Certainly not! Do I believe we can live a reasonably comfortable life? Certainly! The problem, as I see it, is when we need possessions to look good and feel good about ourselves, to mask our sense of vulnerability, and when we feel less valuable and worthwhile without all these things. What happens as a result is mass consumption, over consumption, unending consumption for consumption sake because it gives us the illusion that we are less vulnerable, more in control, more worthwhile. Wrong! The more we have and acquire, the more we are vulnerable, the more we have to lose. And we spend more time protecting and defending what we have and we watch with suspicion those who might pose a threat to our “stuff.” And, tragically, in order to protect and defend our possessions and our security, we conspire with powers and principles that reject the core message of the one who’s life, death, and resurrection we are called to contemplate during Lent.

My point is that we should neither be dirt poor nor “uber,” -in your face-wealthy (recent comments by some corporate moguls about their “right” to the latter not withstanding). St. Thomas Aquinas reminded us “in mediat virtutem” – virtue lies in the middle!

So simplicity, surrender, and detachment are not about what we own as much as how attached with are and how much we need our possessions, our “stuff,” to feel better about ourselves – to value ourselves and to avoid our vulnerability. Simplicity, surrender, and detachment are, then, more about awareness that we are part of a whole – something far beyond our selves. Therefore, I believe our focus should be the greater human family, not the individual as we are taught in Western society – especially our American culture.

Global awareness, thinking outside our self and our individual world, sensitivity to the effect our individual choices and lifestyles have globally – this is simplicity, detachment, and surrender.

So perhaps we can dispense with the giving up of meat, beer, soda, or whatever similar resolutions become the focus of our Lenten practice, as if these had any impact on the world around us whatsoever. Instead let’s focus on “giving up” the false self that wants, needs, desires, and has to have to feel better. Perhaps we can also dispense with feeling shame and guilt for “causing” Jesus’ crucifixion and focus instead on the message of the sacred, the Divine, among us – a message he died proclaiming. Perhaps this shame and guilt drive a lot of the need to feel loved and worthwhile the fuels consumerism. Perhaps, in the end, we will see the call to detachment and simplicity not as an isolated 40-day period from which we joyfully retreat at Easter, but embrace it as a challenge to let go of the false sense of self. In this way we can live freely, open to the call to full participation in the kingdom of God among us – a kingdom of justice and peace – the core message proclaimed by the life and ministry of Jesus.

To be detached, to live simply, to accept the vulnerability that we often try to mask or deny is to live the gospel. To believe that the only reason Jesus died was because we are such wretches is to dismiss ourselves (often with some relief and justification) from the true work to which we are called – the work of justice and peace for all people.

I believe that some of the themes from the scripture readings so far this Lent support what I’ve tried to describe about. “Let your hearts be broken” - (vulnerable, detached). “Come back to me with all your heart” - (get out of the false self, come back to the whole, the God of life, love, and being present in all things). “Now is the favorable time!” Not just the “Now” of lent, but every “Now” of our lives……….. And most clearly, the three temptations of Christ really bring the theme home. The misuse/abuse of power, prestige, and religious influence are to be rejected thoroughly.

The scene outside the café hasn’t changed much in the last couple of hours, except for the movement of shadows and light across the front of the café, the cathedral, and the street scene. Other homeless have appeared as well. I am, however, aware that during these three hours 5200 children in this world have died of hunger, nearly 1000 people have died of AIDS, and it is estimated that twice that many children have become orphans as a result. In this last three hours, thousands have died as a result of war, lack of drinking water, lack of basic medicines, and curable diseases. And, during this same time, our environment has gotten a little more damaged and threatening.

Somehow, in light of all this, giving up chocolate, soda, etc., - while a tempting alternative to the real challenge of lent to see simplicity and detachment as a “way of being” - just doesn’t seem to cut it?

January 15, 2007

Simplicity and M.L.K.

“Tis a gift to be simple……”

I have been reading from Quaker writers recently – especially J. Brent Bill. I find a peace in the simplicity of Quaker teaching. Quakers (The Society of Friends) believe that there exists an element of God's spirit in every human soul. Thus, all persons have inherent worth, independent of their gender, race, age, nationality, religion, and sexual orientation. Their opposition to sexism, racism, religious intolerance, warfare, and the death penalty comes from this belief.

Simplicity, pacifism, and inner revelation are long standing Quaker beliefs. Their religion does not consist of accepting specific beliefs or of engaging in certain practices; it involves each person's direct experience of God.

They do not have a specific creed; however, many of the coordinating groups have created statements of faith. The statement by the largest Quaker body, the Friends United Meeting includes the beliefs in:

true religion as a personal encounter with God, rather than ritual and ceremony
individual worth before God
worship as an act of seeking
the virtues of moral purity, integrity, honesty, simplicity and humility
Christian love and goodness
concern for the suffering and unfortunate
continuing revelation through the Holy Spirit

Many do not regard the Bible as the only source of belief and conduct. They rely upon their Inner Light to resolve what they perceive as the Bible's many contradictions. They also feel free to take advantage of scientific and philosophical findings from other sources.

Individual Quakers hold diverse views concerning life after death. Few believe in the eternal punishment of individuals in a Hell.

All aspects of life are sacramental; they do not differentiate between the secular and the religious. No one day or one place or one activity is any more spiritual than any other.

Quakers have had a tradition of opposing war. They have followed the beliefs of the early Christian movement which was strongly pacifist. Early Christians even refused to bring charges against others if there was a possibility of the death penalty being exercised. Together with the Amish, Church of the Brethren, and Mennonites, they made it possible for men to be classified as conscientious objectors.

Although most of my friends would consider me complex, I long for and find comfort in simplicity, perhaps because I am so complex. Perhaps part of that longing is because, as I grow older, it becomes more difficult for me to remember all the rules, regulations, and expectations of the religion of my birth and early formation. While I have felt for sometime that the complexity of many religions’ expectations is overwhelming and often adds burdens rather than eases them, I also felt it was mostly my problem and had a sense of guilty for even thinking such heretical thoughts.

But, over the years, I have come to truly believe that, in matters of faith, as in most aspects of life, there is a beauty in simplicity. Hence my attraction to words, phrases, and simple instructions that sum up all the other “stuff” that is more the work and will of institutions than of the Jesus of the Gospel – the Jesus before Christianity as Albert Nolan named him.

The core of Jesus’ teaching focused on the poor, the marginated and those who have no voice, no advocate. Thus, Jesus was able to sum up the requirements of life in God as feeding the hungry, giving comfort to the dying, visiting the prisoners, clothing the naked, and caring for the widows and orphans. He also said, when asked the most important “law,” that we “love God with our whole heart, soul, and mind, and our neighbor as ourself.” And finally, to the rich young man who was careful to follow all the “rules” yet still sought to be “saved” Jesus said: “sell what you have and give it to the poor.”

While I would much rather say novena’s and rosaries than sell what I have, I understand that the more simple, uncluttered, and unattached I live, the more I am aware of the presence of God, and the more I can respond to that presence in freedom because I am less distracted from that presence.

It is Martin Luther King day. So the focus is on equality, justice, liberty, and respect for all people. It’s tragic that the principle of equality is such a struggle for our world, that brave, visionary people have died in their efforts to promote equality for all. MLK lived the principle of Jesus that all people have a spark of the divine life, that they are created equal and are to be treated so. He was a committed Christian. And he was hated, resented, despised, attacked, jailed, and eventually killed – by “committed Christians” who believed segregation was a moral, and yes even a family value ordained by the almighty.

And we continue to witness this paradox. The strongest supporters and detractors of the war in Iraq, immigration issues, poverty programs, same sex unions, and global warming to name a few are, on both sides, Christians who believe that they are being loyal to their beliefs. Richard Rohr provides the best answer as to which side to “come down on.” He says: “It’s those with the power and the money who are the most threatened.” In other words those with the most to lose – position, prestige, power, credibility – are the ones to be suspect. They are the ones whose argument is most often self-serving. The ones who have nothing to lose and who only seek what is just and fair – those who seek equality and justice are those to be supported. That’s how we tell which side to support.

That is what brings me back to simplicity – that is where I find solace in this tension, peace in my confusion and anger, and a North Star to lead me along the challenging path of discipleship.

So here are a few of my favorite, simple, words to live by:

“It is merely bad luck not to be loved, it is tragedy not to love.” Albert Camus
“Do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with your God.” Micah 6:8
“Be careful how you live your life, it may be the only Gospel most people will ever read.” Dom Helder Camera

December 27, 2006

Advent Reflections - 2006 Week Four and Christmas

The fourth Sunday of Advent and Christmas happened right on top of each other this year…. “bada-bing, bada-boom.” There wasn’t a lot of time to sit and reflect on the readings from the prophet reminding us that “the Lord himself will be peace” and from Paul saying “God, here I am, I come to do your will” and from St. Luke reminding us that “Blessed is the one who believes that the promise made to him/her by the Lord will be fulfilled.”

It’s too bad. We need time to reflect on these words.

Then, boom, in less than 12 hours, we’re hearing the great news about light overpowering darkness, God being enfleshed – taking visible form in this world. Promises are being fulfilled, not because we “earned them” but because God wants us, loves us, pours God's generosity over us for no other reason other than God wants to. Period. This is not easy to hear. We’re used to “fairness” and “tit for tat.” Even as we listen to those words, we’re making sure we give a gift of equal value to the gift given us by our friends. We are not used to “just because I love you.”

We are told by some that the first Christmas happened, that God came in the tiny baby in Bethlehem, so that God could save us from our sins, from hell, from the consequences of our weak human nature. I believe God came to teach us how to love, because we just weren’t getting it. Look at our world today! We still don’t get it. God came not because we sinned, but because God “so loved us.” And I believe when we die, we will be asked “did you love?” not “did you sin?” In other words “Did you get it?”

To get it means to live it and pass it on. In other words, we are called to continually incarnate – enflesh – God in this world. Where is God made manifest in this world? In the parking lots of crowded pre-Christmas malls? At the return counter on Dec 26th? How much more is the unconditional, inclusive, embracing love of God tangible in this world because of our actions and words? Do we add to the light or diminish it? Is God any more believable because of us? Or are we in a world where as William Butler Yates says, “the best lack all conviction while the worst are full of passionate intensity.”

Again, these are the question upon which we need time to reflect between the last Sunday of Advent and Christmas. But it’s not too late. We can still reflect as we enter a new year.

We are told that the Kingdom of God provides a light that “darkness cannot overcome,” that will only happen if each of us is such a light. I know of several times during the shopping, spending, and preparation for Christmas where my light quickly became a smoldering wick. I got caught up in the nonsense, the frustration, the tension of it all. I lost sight. I didn’t get it, or got it and lost it. I had to “re-light” several times.

It has been said that Christianity is not a spectator sport. If it is not lived, fully entered into, passionately joined, it is nothing more than any other commercial endeavor. Incarnation was not a one-time event. It must continue if God is to be known and believed. Each of us is a potential spark of Divine life and love. Each of us is, potentially, is a reflection of the source of life, love, and being. We contribute to the light or the darkness – there’s no in between.

I end these Advent reflections where I began – Dom Helder Camera: “Be careful how you live your life. It is the only gospel that most people will ever read.” It’s that difficult. It’s that simple. Incarnation is a collaborative effort. It’s not something God does and we watch, but something in which to participate – fully, passionately, and consciously. It happens when we care for the poor, the alien (the immigrant), the widow, the prisoner, the hungry. It happens when we refuse to participate in an eye for an eye. It happens when we love inclusively. It happens when we demonstrate by our lives that there is, as Alan Jones of Grace Episcopal Cathedral in San Francisco says, “something else going on in the world other than getting and spending, killing and dying.”

So…. the Christmas, incarnational message of every follower of Jesus? “The world doesn’t have to be this way! Let me show you.”

Let me end with a blessing I wrote several years ago.
“May the message of Christmas stir you soul with a renewed sense of purpose.
May the New Year be filled with a passion and enthusiasm for life.
May you maintain a perspective that recognizes what is truly important.
May you have the courage to take risks and expand your possibilities.
May you celebrate your life and reverence all life.
May each new challenge bring growth and deepen your compassion for others.
And may you know the wonder fo small and simple things.”

A Blessed Christmas Season!

December 20, 2006

Advent Reflections 2006 - Week Three

The focus of the readings during the first two Sundays in Advent was preparing the way of the Lord, about promises being fulfilled, and the hungers of the human heart being met by the coming of God. We are told by the readings from the prophets that God will make us a holy people. We are told to take off our clothing of sorry and put on robes of integrity and rejoicing. Finally, these prophets tell us to rejoice and shout aloud with gladness because the Lord our God is in our midst!

St Paul weekly admonishes us to be attentive to the needs of others, to live the life God has called us to live, to let our love for one another increase, and to be happy and evidence tolerance in our lives.

Thusfar, the gospels of the first two weeks of Advent have told us to stay awake, to be watchful, not to let our hearts be “coarsened” by the cares of the world. And John the Baptist admonishes us to prepare the way of the Lord – to make every valley filled, every mountain level, and every crooked way straight. Then, “all mankind shall see the saving power of God.”

Sound good?

Just one thing is missing. How do we do that? And that question is both asked and answered in the Gospel of this Third Week of Advent. We participate in this revelation of God, this incarnation of the divine, this salvific event by caring for the poor, the marginalized, the outcasts, the socially and economically less fortunate than we.

Great, got it! …………Er, ah, how do we do that?

If you have more clothes and food than you need, John tells us, share with someone who does not have enough clothes and food. Conduct your business affairs honestly. Whatever your job, do a good days work, act with integrity, stop complaining. In short, be generous, fair, and grateful. Wonderfully simple, not a lot of ecclesiastical hoops to jump through, no magic potions, incantations, and special rituals, just take care of the poor, be fair in all your dealings with others, do your job with integrity.

How did it all get so complicated? We went from this simple message – one that Jesus reiterated and expanded (see the Beatitudes) – to having huge organizations, multiple layers of leadership, dogmas that oppress, separate, and shame, and a need to be right and have THE truth.

Care for the poor, be fair in all your interactions with others, do your calling with integrity. That’s the core of it. Perhaps to do this genuinely and consistently is a lot harder than all the other “hoopla” I just mentioned. Perhaps preoccupation with being right, with protecting and sustaining our organizations conveniently distracts us from the simple yet very challenging work of the gospel. Over 2000 references to the poor in the scriptures! That blows doors off the air time many of our “hot topics” of today ever got – or deserved for that matter.

Put your shovels, bulldozers, road graders, blasting caps, and other construction materials away. It’s not about real valleys, mountains, and crooked roads. It’s about the various “obstacles” in our human hearts that keep us from truly answering the call of the poor and thus “preparing and making known the way of the Lord.” Those are the real areas of focus. Until we level the hills of apathy, fill in the valleys of unnecessary consumerism and selfishness, and straighten our crooked notions about what will make us happy, safe, and content, the power and presence of God and God’s kingdom will be missed.

The kingdom is among us! God is among us! It’s not about some day in the distant future! But we won’t notice, and others won’t notice either until we head the simple call of the scriptures. Clearing the way within is the answer.

The well known Trappist Monk Thomas Merton said it best when he reminded us that “Advent is the beginning of the end of all in us that is not yet Christ.”

December 12, 2006

Advent Reflections 2006 - WEEK TWO

Following up on my comments of last week, I believe that the responsibility or challenge to live the gospel with our lives ties to our responsibility to “make straight the way of the Lord” – the phrase so often proclaimed in Advent liturgies. Let me explain.

The homilist I heard last Sunday said “don’t think back to Jesus, think forward to Jesus.” I think he still missed the point. Are we to just passively wait for the coming of Jesus? Will there be “pie in the sky by and by?” The preacher stated that the promises of the readings for the week would be fulfilled “on that day when Jesus comes again.”

I have a problem with this thinking……

I agree “don’t think back to Jesus,” but I disagree with “think forward to Jesus coming again.” For me, a central message of Jesus is that the kingdom is among us, that God is among us – we just don’t see! For me, Jesus was teaching us to see God present among us and to be a visible presence of God. Finally, for me, if the way of the Lord is to be made straight, every valley filled, every mountain laid low, and every crooked path made straight, it’s not something that God is going to do independently at some secret time in the future. If this is going to happen, it’s going to happen through us! To view it any other way makes us observers of life who passively, helplessly accept the sorry state of affairs of our world and pray that God will take care of things and then wait for this to happen. Thus, we are relieved of responsibility. “Sorry, my hands are tied, but God will take care of it….. someday.”

I don’t think so…….

Please understand that I do not believe we are all little gods ourselves. I know the distinction. However, I do believe we are all part of the Source of Life, Love, and Being (as Bishop John Spong would say) and, as such, we are called to make known the presence and love of God. To that end, I think we have a few valleys to fill, a few mountains to lay low, and several paths to straighten out – both in our lives as individuals and as a race of human beings on this little speck of dirt spinning in a vast universe – one of innumerable universes.

The readings last Sunday stated “the eyes of all wait upon thee.”

I remember waiting, like most sons in the Western World, for my father to have time to spend with me. Keeping a job, paying the bills, raising a family, holding a marriage together was time consuming. Individual attention was, and regrettably remains, a luxury. I realized that I would have to take care of many things on my own. And now, working with homeless young adults, I often have to help them realize that each of them has to be the one he/she is waiting for to come and rescue him/her.

And this is true, I believe, for all of us. We are the ones for whom we have been waiting. Looking for something to happen by and by, I believe, is missing the point. It sure takes a weight off of our shoulders, but, in reality, I believe the promises and hopes found in the readings of Advent are responsibilities we all share.

So, I ask myself, what am I doing to make valleys filled, mountains level, and crooked roads straight? Do I pray that God will take care of everything? Am I active enough in issues of social justice? Do I make a respectable effort to reflect the presence, love, and compassion of God? Do the people with whom I come in contact daily “see” the Gospel? Is God any more present because of my life? Can people “read the gospel” through my life?

That’s why I don’t believe it’s about looking in the past for Jesus, or looking to the future for Jesus. That’s why I believe it’s about revealing that the God of all the universe is HERE, NOW, in this place and time shadowed, not illuminated, by the current state of our world. That’s why I believe I must be a “do-er” not “wait to be a done to-er.”

The mystery of the incarnation is ongoing and ever evolving. Jesus is the fullest revelation of the mystery of God, and purest example of oneness with God. But Jesus is also an example for us to follow, not the one who does everything for us.

How do I incarnate God in this world? What gospel or “Good News” do I bring to this world through my life? Is the God of all life any more present because of me?

I liked it better when I could just wait for God to come and take care of things……………

December 04, 2006

ADVENT REFLECTIONS 2006 - WEEK ONE

Advent Season – that time in the Christian calendar between Thanksgiving and Christmas, is a paradoxical period. On the one hand, we are called by the weekly scripture readings to penance and preparation for the Lord’s coming. On the other hand, at least in most of Western civilization, we are caught up in a series of parties, gift exchanges, frantic gift buying and card writing, and general celebration.

Blame it on capitalism, commercialism, materialism, one-upmanism, or any other “ism” for that matter. The fact still remains, this time is one of supreme paradox. And often the only real penance that is done is in the mall parking lots, crowded stores and streets, and, yes, when the credit card statements arrive.

Perhaps many of us have not headed the words attributed to Jesus in Luke’s Gospel: “Watch yourselves, or your hearts will be coarsened with….the cares of life.” (Revised Standard Version) I love that word “coarsened.” It so richly captures the true ravages of worry, stress, and overall angst that often results from “keeping up” with it all and remaining vigilant for the next threat against our happiness and peace of mind.

Yet, the scriptures warn us about being vigilant about other things. We are challenged to be vigilant – watchful – about the presence of the Lord. Not by and by, but now, around us, often present without our knowing, in the small and simply things, most often in the needy and the least of our brethren.

But wait, there’s more! We are not only challenged to be aware of the presence of God around us, to stand vigilant to the revelations of God in our midst, but we are called to manifest God in our own lives. St. Paul says “love one another and the whole human race.” The hope, it seems, is that God is truly made know in our love. We have, therefore, a dual responsibility: to the be ever vigilant and sensitive to the presence of God among us and to live in such a way that that presence is more clear to others.

One of my favorite quotes is from Dom Helder Camera, a Catholic archbishop of Recife, Brazil and champion of the poor. He said “Be careful how you live your life, it may be the only gospel that people will ever read.”

Perhaps that is the real penance of Advent or any season for that matter – living the gospel with our lives. I think I’d rather not eat meat on Fridays or give up sweets. Is there another option here?

More next week……

POST-THANKSGIVING REFLECTION

Dec 1, 2006

It has been said that the recovery of a thankful heart is the key to many of our ills. In other words, much of our unhappiness is caused by our focus on what is wrong or not good enough or not fair. Many of us seem to have a special knack for noticing what is missing, falling short, bad, etc., while sometimes being oblivious to what is good and beautiful in our lives and the ways in which we have been fortunate or “blessed.” It’s the old “half empty v. half full” story.

In a recent study, it was found that if we took a few moments just before going to be and recounted three good things that happened in our day, and reflected on what contributed to those events/experiences, we could experience a greater sense of well-being, more pleasant dreams, and more restful sleep.

Clearly, increasing our ability to recognize the good, those eruptions of the Divine if you will, that are all around us, also increases the quality of our lives. Some have described this focus on the good as living in an “attitude of gratitude.” This attitude of gratitude, this regular focus or ritualizing of acknowledgement of the good in our lives has many benefits from better sleep to greater resiliency in difficult times.

Case in point.

Just before Thanksgiving, I asked a group of homeless young adults to write an essay on the importance of having an Attitude of Gratitude. These young people come from a variety of difficult, often harsh, environments. Their lives have often been painful and even traumatic.

While all the responses were a testimony to the resilience of the human spirit, one response in particular, written by a young women who was staying in a crowded shelter along with her mother and sister, focused on the small things that made her happy – things that most of us take for granted like a hot shower, a clean bathroom, laundry facilities, a bed (although one of many in a huge dormitory room) and, most of all, “not having to be separated from my family.” More than that, the writer repeatedly stated how happy she was and how “blessed.” She also prayed for “the really poor people in the world who were in the middle of war, the starving children, and the people suffering from AIDS.”

In the midst of her own need, she prayed for those in greater need – clearly the benefit of an attitude of gratitude. And while she never specifically articulated the benefits of this attitude, she nonetheless demonstrated her awareness of them through the content of her short, yet poignant essay.

I am, in turn, deeply grateful for and humbled by her example.

I’d like to end this brief reflection by quoting a Prayer of Thanksgiving given by The Very Reverend Alan Jones – Dean at this year’s Thanksgiving Day service at Grace Episcopal Cathedral in San Francisco, California.

“The world is one, the world is one family, the world is in labor. Our planet is convulsed, groaning with pain and promise, many have ceased to matter, and, living without hope, find their anger and despair turned into hatred and violence. Greed and revenge have become the corroding currency of the world - the deadly commerce of those whose mentality is a fortress - neglecting our children and laying waste to our planet. We pray for those who suffer and are in danger in the Sudan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel, Palestine, and in these United States – especially the children, especially the children.

And we thank you for those powerful witnesses who show us another way, a way of solidarity with all creation, a way of peace and justice. And so we thank you for large and generous souls who guard the heart of the world. They teach us that each of us can make a difference. The choice is always ours. And they call us out of the fortress into the banquet of life where we are both hosts and guests, welcoming all creatures to the great table where no one is turned away and there is enough for all. And we commend into your gracious keeping the great army of the dead and acknowledge our solidarity with them – our friends, our enemies, and the great congregation of the unknown and unloved, those unmourned and unlamented. We are one. We are your children. For their sake, help us to choose, help us to act, help us to be, help us to give thanks. Amen”

November 15, 2006

Welcome

Welcome to my weblog, a place to talk about being in liminal space - that time/place where the old no longer works and the new is unchartered.

I hope to encourage discussion about this place we visit from time to time in our lives and about how we can use it as a wonderful opportunity for personal and spiritual growth and renewal.

From time to time I will add/delete important links and favorite readings for you to consider. I hope that you will share resources that you have found to be nurturing and even "life changing."

Not all of my reflections will be directly about "liminal space" but will, most likely, reflect my experience of that space in some way.

Thank you for visiting and sharing!