WORSHIP NOTES:
Jazz for the Journey Sabbatical #2 - April 19, 2015
Introduction
That song – All
Blues – cuts to the heart of
what our shared sabbatical means to me. It expresses to me the way that
music can uncover common ground between people of who start off on very
different shores. It speaks of the earth and sky, the sea and you and me
who all know that the blues is sometimes sad and some-times glad. And it does
so with finesse and earthiness.
The
blues - they're the moan of pain and a taste of strife
A sad refrain which in the night is playing
A sad refrain which in the night is playing
Because
the blues, Lord, can be the living dues we all are paying!
This morning my message is about what our
shared sabbatical means… for me. It will mean and be something very
different for you – and that is how it should be – because we are all unique
and blessed – every one and every hue. I don’t pray the same way you pray. My
soul is fed in ways that are wondrously made – and so too for you – but not in
exactly the same way. How does the Psalmist put it?
As a
deer longs for flowing streams so my soul longs for you, O God.
My soul thirsts for the Lord, for the living God.
When shall I come and behold the face of God
My soul thirsts for the Lord, for the living God.
When shall I come and behold the face of God
After
my tears have become my food both day and night…
Oh do I love those words – and the groove – and
the melancholy nature of the whole song! They capture a piece of my
longing and my quest for deep intimacy with God. You see, my spirituality is
sensual and earthy, filled with sound and experience, and when that thirst is
not sated – deeply – I grieve. I ache. I pant with longing: As a deer longs and thirsts for
streams of refreshment and renewal so my soul thirsts for you, O God.
For me an essential aspect of this sabbatical
experience is time to be saturated in the spirit of the Lord through music –
the visual arts – quiet contemplation – rest – time with my beloved – and
creating and practicing my chosen instrument: the upright bass. When I play in
concert with others – and you need to practice a lot by yourself so that
when you do play with others you have something to say that is creative and
beautiful - it almost always elicits within me the words of Jesus you heard
earlier: Go and learn what this means; I desire mercy not sacrifice. Compassion and soul food
rather than rules and rituals – relief and release from the burdens of fear and
sin instead of more guilt and shame: Eugene Peterson goes
so far as to retranslate that into: Go and learn what this means, I desire
mercy NOT religion. And THAT is what I hear Jesus saying to me about my
life: it is all about creating and sharing
love in ways that are so real that we sense the holy within our humanity. And
to do that consistently, to do that with verve and vigor, I need time to saturate
my soul in music like “All Blues.” In so many ways this is what this sabbatical means to me.
Insights
Now
as you probably have noticed, I’m speaking a LOT about this sabbatical and myself
today – that is intentional – next week I’ll be sharing some thoughts
about what this might hold for you and our community. But today I want
to be wildly personal. And as I am want to do, I want to push the edges of my
thoughts deeper – not necessarily in a linear or didactic fashion – but rather in
an experiential way. This morning I want
you to listen and experience some of the prayer songs that sing of God’s mercy
in my soul as a tutorial into
in my hopes and dreams about
this sabbatical. Most of the time preachers need to speak to the whole
community – that is our calling – but today I need to be wildly personal with
you in the hopes that what is most personal is also most true for our community.
In addition to “All
Blues,” the heart of this sabbatical is shaped by two other songs that are aesthetically,
ethically, artistically and experientially at the core of my spirituality of
music. The
first is Paul Winter’s composition called “Canticle of the Sun and the Moon.”
It was commissioned by the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine in NYC to be part
of an Earth Mass – Missa Gaia – and
when Winter received this commission he didn’t know a thing about the structure
or theology of the Mass. He didn’t
know that the Mass retells the story of Christ’s sacrifice and gift of love for
the whole world. He didn’t know ancient Latin. And he didn’t know much about
the contemporary church of Jesus Christ. So as anyone with an iota of insight
knows, rather than try to re-invent the wheel, he first studied the ancient
traditions before beginning his composition.
He went to the root of historic Christian liturgy.
·
St.
Bob Dylan once sang that “I will know my song well before I start singing.” That is, I will take the time to appreciate,
understand and come to love my roots. I
will practice them, honor them and be able to articulate their blessings – and
failures – before I start to do something new with them.
·
Aesthetically,
Winter made time to listen to the great choral masses of Bach and Mozart,
Schubert and Faure as well as the older liturgical works of the world of
Gregorian Chant.
·
Aesthetically
he honored the tradition before taking it in new directions – and that is
important to me, too. Before I can do
something new, I have to saturate myself in the foundation.
After
getting grounded in the aesthetics, Winter set about having conversations with
people from different spiritual traditions to find out how the ancient ways
might best be restated for a new generation:
he took the ethical
challenge of his music seriously. In today’s composition he integrates the
earth-centered words of St. Francis of Assisi with the poetry of the Hebrew
Bible’s story of Job AND the classical hymnody of the 19th century
we know as “For the Beauty of the Earth. There is ancient and modern, classical
and improvisational music embracing the songs of nature, Scripture, church
tradition and the latest headlines in the NY Times – and it never sounds weird
or chaotic – because Winter honored both the aesthetics and ethics of his
prayer music.
Further,
Winter melds musical disciplines that sometimes have been held in opposition in
order to show how the whole can be greater than the individual parts. This is
what St. Paul teaches about the Body of Christ: we need ALL the parts – the
minds and tongues, the hands and unmentionable organs – in order to make a healthy, loving, holy body. Too
often people think we must choose between classical music and jazz, rock and
roll over folk songs. But Winter trusts that what is good, true and beautiful
in every style can work to complement and strengthen something new. So
just like my band mates, he takes his skill as a jazz artist and writes choral
music, he links the classical virtues of high art with the organic beauty of
songs composed by the wolf and whale. And he puts them right alongside world
music from cultures that are very different from our own.
When
you hear this work – and we will share one part now and the whole Earth Mass in
early November as part of the culmination of our sabbatical – you can’t help
but celebrate the blessings of common ground. Experientially – without even
knowing it – this music takes you on a journey of radical integration through
your senses. This work not only celebrates the mercy and compassion Jesus wants
for you and me, but it does so in a way that makes clear the aesthetic, ethical,
artistic and spiritual essentials of this sabbatical.
Now
there are two other truths in this Canticle I need to say out loud for you
before we play it: Winter saturates his
song with complexity and simplicity. In this he honors the wisdom of
paradox. Sometimes
you will hear the singers in unison, sometimes they will be in harmony – there
will be moments when their voices fit easily with the score and other times
when they are singing in completion with the music or working against the rhythm.
Sometimes the song is very straight forward – like the words of the hymn “For
the Beauty of the Earth” – and at other times – if we get it right – it will be
highly syncopated and complex.
·
And
just so that it remains fun, Winter builds in a time for instrumental improvisation:
it wouldn’t really be jazz without a chance for some of the players to playful
compose what they are feeling on the spot, right?
·
We
won’t do much of that today – but we will when we do the whole Mass in November
– but remember: improvisation always tells a story – it lets us know what the
musicians are feeling and experiencing in the moment: sometimes it is hope,
other times despair. Often it is playful but sometimes it is anguishing and
poignant. And all of that is taking place in real time.
Ok,
let’s give it a shot – and please note that there WILL be a test after we
finish!
“Canticle for
Brother Sun and Sister Moon”
Now
because this sabbatical is so important to me – and to us all as a faith
community – I’m going to throw away any reference to the clock at this point
and say if you need to leave, you have my permission. But learning about the
ethics of aesthetics and spirituality is too important to overlook. So did you
hear or feel ANY of what I was explaining when we played this song? What did
you GET from this composition?
What we just shared with you in this composition is exactly
what I hope to experience during part of this sabbatical. It is ALL about being so refreshed that my creativity might advance mercy not religion. You
see, as your pastor I long for times of deep, extended, quiet and sensual communion
with my God. I have my own ways of being
in prayer throughout the year but they are rarely sustained enough to nourish
and heal my whole being. That’s what the Hebrew of Psalm 42 tells us: it begins with the first person singular
word, nafshi, which is usually translated “I” but actually means “with
my whole being.” For me this sabbatical – and that songs– speak about
trusting God’s creative love with my whole being so that what I live is mercy
not religion.
So,
because we only have one more Sunday together before our four months of being apart
– I need to tell you one more thing about the marriage of this thirsty deer and
God’s commitment to mercy rather than religion:
it must be embodied. It must be owned in our hearts and our flesh as
well as our minds and our souls. If
God’s mercy – what I often call grace – is just an idea, it will be
compromised. Betrayed. Abandoned. Look at the difference between Palm Sunday
and Good Friday. Ideas and words evaporate.
But,
love that is felt – love that is deep calling to deep – the bread of our tears
nourished by our whole being – that love is stronger than death. That love is
what Easter is all about. So please don’t ever think that Jesus is being poetic
when he tells us to love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul, mind and
strength. He’s rephrasing Psalm 42: you must love the Lord with NAFSHI – your whole being. That’s why
Dianne and I are taking four months away – we need to rest in that love with
our whole being again – stop thinking so much and just trust.
And
if there was ever one song that FEELS like the truth of this Psalm more than
any other, it is “Don’t Give Up.” It not only FEELS like Psalm 42 to me, it
FEELS like Christ’s call to be about mercy not religion, too. And because some
people have told me that don’t “get” what I mean when I talk about the feeling
of a song, let me be explicit:
·
This
is not a literal song about mercy and on the surface it has nothing
to do with Jesus – so don’t stay up in your head and worry about how I hear the
voice of Jesus in these words. I don’t – but I FEEL the movement of the Lord’s
energy in this song because it moves just like the tension in Psalm 42.
·
The
verses state the longing and emptiness while the chorus expresses the
promise of hope: it is a call and
response – an aching followed by grace – the bread of our tears followed by
mercy. Even the arrangement and vocal
harmonies give shape and form to this rhythm:
solo verses of lament are gently followed by a chorus of compassion.
·
And
just so that we can’t help
but get this – and I am
talking sensually not abstractly –
after an extended instrumental improvisation in a minor key, we all come back
together in a major key that sounds like a gospel choir proclaiming the
presence of faith, hope and love in our midst. See if you can hear that – and feel that – in
“Don’t Give Up.”
My sabbatical is defined
by the songs we’ve played today: I wanted to share them with my colleagues
and you in the hope that their beauty will evoke in you an aching for more of God’s
mercy. For when your whole being longs for the Lord, you will not be content
with compromise or abstractions: you will be read to follow Jesus who said: go
and learn what this means, I desire mercy not religion…
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