Tuesday, March 31, 2020

heading towards palm sunday and holy week: live streaming blessings...

One of the blessings of being a retired clergy person is the chance to freelance from time to time and help out in ways that make sense. For a few years most of my volunteering has gone into sharing music, presence and prayers with my friends at L'Arche Ottawa. Given the travel restrictions and self-isolation that is essential during this new reality, however, I have not been able to be in Canada since mid-February. Beyond some teleconferencing - and a wonderful Zoom prayer and music gathering last Friday - my current sharing during this season of contagion has taken the form of live-streaming worship reflections, music and prayer on Sunday mornings using Facebook. It is my version of what Martha Wainwright is doing in Montreal ( https://www.facebook.com/popmontreal/and a host of other musicians and artists are doing every day on Facebook: sharing a hopeful presence in this unsettling time.

It is small - and as you know I believe small is holy. Most of today was given over to working out an online liturgy for Palm Sunday Eucharist. I am grateful that the Book of Common Prayer is not copyright bound. I am also pleased that the wise and poetic pastor, Maren Tirabassi, has given folk the right to use her words - and adapt them as is needed. I am blending both these two resources with some of my own spoken reflections and gave most of the day over to working on this. If you do not have a place of your own to explore the radical wisdom of Jesus, if your own worship community is not going digital during this season, or if you are curious about my simple take on all of this: 

+ Join me on Sunday, April 5th @ 9:55 am. I am trying to broadcast from my spiritual direction Facebook page:  https://www.facebook.com/Be-Still-and-Know-913217865701531/) The reason I suggest 9:55 is in case there are any technical issues - and they always seem to show up just before I go live. I will be linking a simple liturgy for you to use, too sometime tomorrow (either the whole text, or, a file you can copy.) You will need some bread and wine/juice to share Holy Communion.

+ Those who are liturgically sensitive might find this link useful: it is a personalized way to be a part of the wider worshiping community on this high holy day. Check it out @ https://thedeaconsbench.com/a-beautiful-idea-for-palm-sunday/?

+ I am also looking for permission from local musicians I know who are willing to cut a deal with me re: using their music. I am keenly aware of copyright issues so I would like to work something out with you - a modest but fair fee - so that I could set up my program with some of your wisdom and beauty. If you are interested, please let me know and shoot me a note.

My hunch is that I will keep this up at least until some time in May when new evaluations about our corporate solitude are in order. I must confess that I have a fantasy about when this is over: I would love to invite everyone who has joined in these live-streaming gatherings to come to our home - or another appropriate place - and celebrate by singing together, praying and breaking bread. More on that as the next month unfolds.

Monday, March 30, 2020

learning to dance without knowing...

Monday, March 30th 2020 is apparently the last day for us to be out in the wetland scrub until the first frost of autumn arrives. Dianne found a deer tick on her keyboard. As best we can figure, the little bastard jumped off the sweatshirt she was wearing when earlier in the day, during a break in the rain, we took Lucie out for a romp. We, ourselves, needed some exercise as well and love to take-in the solitude surrounded by the grays, browns and hints of purple mixed into the fields of early spring. And now that season is over: off came the clothes, into the shower we leapt to dislodge any tiny intruders, making certain to toss the bed linens and winter comforter down the basement stairs for a fresh washing, too.

Saturday evening, while watching TV, from out of nowhere came an unholy gnawing sound from under the sun room floor. We had a baby skunk come into life last summer in the same vicinity as this scraping, prompting the purchase of coyote urine pellets as well as my modest attempt at repair. That worked - so after some research on what might make such a terrifying racket, we went into full attack mode again. There are now five mini-spot lights under this floor and the obvious entrances well blocked. We shall see but we certainly need to move the composter farther away from the garage. I am delighted that spring is arriving after the fullness of winter. And yet there are always surprises when you live this close to Mother Nature. I am ready to start working the soil for this year's gardens - and repair the damage winter did to my improvised terraces. There's a ton of leaves and dead branches to be hauled back to the wetlands border, too. I am so ready.

A phrase from one of Ralph Waldo Emerson's 1836 journals has been running around my head for about a month: “Make your own Bible. Select and collect all the words and sentences that in all your readings have been to you like the blast of a trumpet.” I heard the poet, Gregory Orr, speak of this in an interview on Krista Tippett's "On Being" podcast. And when the world changed completely over night three weeks ago, it seemed like the right time to follow this advice. Orr suggested it was a way of making "our own play list. As one who loved to make tape mixes back in the day, this resonated - and I have been collecting snippets and poems online non-stop without any rhyme or reason. Today I started to gather them all in one place in my "Solitude Collection" file. As this week unfolds I will likely turn it into a hard copy collection with a binder and artsy cover as I cherish the tactile experience of reading almost as much as the visual and intellectual encounter. Two quotes caught my attention again as I was sorting:

+ One is from Elvis Francois, the singing doctor/orthopedic intern at the Mayo Clinic, who tells us: In life, there are so many things that divide us: Religion, race, politics, social status and so much more. But today a global pandemic brings us all together as one. Over the next few months our health care system will be tested. Millions of lives will be lost. Health care providers will be under an incredible amount of stress to save thousands of people. But when times are as dark as they are today, nothing shines brighter than the human spirit. There is something beautiful about a collective struggle. And the beauty in what we are facing today is that the only way to overcome this pandemic is for us to all come together as one. Nurses, doctors, students, research scientists, politicians, Uber eats drivers, cashiers, factory workers etc.....Getting through this will be hard but one thing is certain...the only way we will get through it is together, as one.

+ The other is graffiti taken from a subway station in Japan: We can't return to normal, because the normal that we had was precisely the problem.

Both are true at the same time, yes? We will get through this together - as one - but we cannot ever return to normal. These two truths are amplified by two other quotes I have collected suggesting that uncertainty and solidarity must embrace even if we don't know what that fully means. Even if we have no idea how to do it. Even if the mere suggestion is terrifying. Gregory Orr puts it like this:

To be alive: not just the carcass
But the spark.
That's crudely put, but…
If we're not supposed to dance,
Why all this music?

And Orr's companion, Carrie Newcomer, adds:

I’m Learning to Sit With Not Knowing
I’m learning to sit with not knowing.
When I don't see where its going
Cool my heels and start slowing
I am learning to sit with not knowing

I'm learning to sit with what’s next
What if and my best guess
Be kinder when it’s a process
I'm learning to live with what’s next

 Here's a clear space I've chosen
Where the denseness of this world opens
Where there's something holding steady and true
Regardless of me or you

I’m learning live with the high stakes
Befriending my mistakes
Lay my hand where my heart aches
I’m learning live with the high stakes

I'm learning to live with what takes time
No ribbon across some finish line
Stop feeling I'm always a day behind
I'm learning to live with what takes time
I’m learning to sit with not knowing.
When I don't see where its going
Cool my heels and start slowing
I am learning to sit with not knowing

Me, too, my friends, me too:  dancing with uncertainty - putting spotlights under the floor to ward off squirrels (or skunks) with laughter and trust - noting and honoring the fact that the ticks have awakened so now it is time to hit the Rail Trail for a season instead of the wetlands - figuring out how to call the grocery store to make a delivery at week's end because I ought not to be going out into public - and opening my heart to trust God that as we move through this unknowing we will come out as those who cannot return to the normal that was precisely the problem.

(NOTE: today's pictures are of the wetlands behind our home and St. Brigid's cross on our front door. I made three Brigid's crosses on Candlemas because I love the design. As the lesser known saint of Ireland I wanted to honor her legacy in our spirituality.)

Sunday, March 29, 2020

small is holy: fifth week of lent 2020

Well, week number three for live-streaming and... still some opening glitches with the FB live connection accessing my camera. It worked last night - and AFTER my broadcast - but just as I was getting ready to go live... nothing! I quickly raced into the bedroom, Di help me access my page on her camera and I regrouped. But I wasn't able to start things off with the planned music. Damn. Oh well, keep it simple I guess is the way to go. Here is the actual event followed by my written text for the Fifth Sunday in Lent. 


Introduction
Two weeks ago, when I shared my first live-streaming reflection with you, most of us were just starting to come to terms with our brave, new world: besides our bewildered awareness that life was changing around us so fast that we could hardly imagine, let alone articulate, what it all meant, we experienced ourselves as a people adrift. It was as if a hazy surrealism shaped each day – and that impelled us to grasp whatever illusions offered a semblance of order for our lives: 


+ We washed our hands obsessively and stockpiled hand-sanitizers and toilet paper. We struggled to get our tongues around new expressions like social distancing and self-quarantine. 

+ And almost overnight millions of older Americans began asking children, grandchildren or neighbors how to make the once ignored, but now essential, intricacies of social media their friend.

By week two, some of the haze had burned off and we practiced maintaining at least six feet of separation between one another save our own families. Solitude had become the new normal – a paradoxical discipline of self-care as well as compassion for our community and country – and college classes were cancelled, elementary schools and restaurants shuttered, states of emergency declared, and cities and states came under mandatory lock-down orders. Anxiety and fear replaced disorientation. Restlessness, too, as Americans are not well practiced at staying still. Strip malls and city centers became ghost towns. Hoarding pushed our frazzled feelings out into the public; causing us to wonder how we, ourselves, would act should push come to shove. Morality and social ethics was no longer an abstraction.

And now, three weeks into the crisis, heroes have emerged – leaders who clearly care for the common good more than self and status – while callous charlatans have been exposed as posers who would condemn the least among us to painful and unnecessary deaths simply to enhance the possibility of re-election or short-term profit. We now know that our time set-apart will not be just weeks, but more likely months, and that the worst is yet to come. Small wonder that many of us are waking up within the grip of an inchoate grief we prayed could never be the truth. And that is what I want to talk about with you this morning: grief – and what the ancient prophets have to say about its healing role in our lives and culture if we embrace it honestly. 


Insights

There is a startling confluence between what the prophets of ancient Israel discovered about grief and what our contemporary pioneers into grief work have learned. The Harvard Business Review recently interviewed Dr. David Kessler, who with Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, helped modern medicine come to terms with what is called the “stages of grief.” In this interview, Kessler notes that given the magnitude of the changes we’ve experienced in such a short time, grief is not only natural to feel now, but we should understand that there are a number of types of grief. He tells us:

We feel the world has changed, and it has. We know this is temporary, but it doesn’t feel that way, and we realize things will be different. Just as going to the airport is forever different from how it was before 9/11, things will change and this is the point at which they changed: The loss of normalcy; the fear of economic toll; the loss of connection. This is hitting us all and we’re grieving. Collectively. We are not used to this kind of collective grief in the air… especially anticipatory grief. Anticipatory grief is that feeling we get about what the future holds when we’re uncertain… Anticipatory grief understands that there is a storm coming and there’s something bad out there. With a virus, this kind of grief is so confusing because while our primitive mind knows something bad is happening, we can’t see it – and this breaks our sense of safety. I don’t think we’ve collectively lost our sense of general safety like this before. Individually or as smaller groups, people have felt this. But all together, this is new for we are grieving on a micro and a macro level.

He concludes his interview by saying that when individuals – and cultures – live into the wisdom of grief not only is there a time when we find a peace in accepting realities beyond our control – much like the Serenity Prayer of the 12 Step process in AA – but that there is meaning to be mined from this encounter. “We realize that grief and tragedy are temporary – and they are survivable.” That’s important to keep in mind so that we don’t get locked in the loop of anxiety. But more than that, Kessler concludes that:

We will find meaning in it. (Beyond the fifth stage of grief, acceptance, there is another: meaning. There can be) meaning in those dark hours. And I believe we find light in those times, too. Even now people are realizing they can connect through technology. They are not as remote as they thought. They are realizing they can use their phones for long conversations. They’re appreciating walks. I believe we will continue to find meaning now and when this is over.


I believe Kessler is right. Already all over the Internet some of our finest musicians – students, amateurs and professionals – are sharing songs every day to help us connect the wisdom of our feelings with the reality of this moment in time. One of the most powerful comes from young students in Italy – who know this season of grief better than any of us dare imagine – and they sing an a capella version of a Steven Stills song: “Helplessly Hoping.” Have you seen it and heard it and felt it? It is chilling and tragic and somberly hopeful all at once. (I’ve added it to this Facebook link for those who haven’t seen it.)


When a friend sent me the link, I wept while watching it – again and again – for the courage and grace these young people are tapping into with beauty and tenderness point precisely to the meaning we might re-discover as we; too go deeper into this time of grief. Just this week, the poet, Jane Hirschfield, published this poem that links the wisdom of the grief we feel in our hearts and flesh with our better angels. She calls it: “Today, When I Could Do Nothing.”

Today, when I could do nothing,
I saved an ant.

It must have come in with the morning paper,
still being delivered
to those who shelter in place.

A morning paper is still an essential service.

I am not an essential service.

I have coffee and books,
time,
a garden,
silence enough to fill cisterns.

It must have first walked
the morning paper, as if loosened ink
taking the shape of an ant.

Then across the laptop computer — warm —
then onto the back of a cushion.

Small black ant, alone,
crossing a navy cushion,
moving steadily because that is what it could do.

Set outside in the sun,
it could not have found again its nest.
What then did I save?

It did not move as if it was frightened,
even while walking my hand,
which moved it through swiftness and air.

Ant, alone, without companions,
whose ant-heart I could not fathom—
how is your life, I wanted to ask.

I lifted it, took it outside.

This first day when I could do nothing,
contribute nothing
beyond staying distant from my own kind,
I did this. 


Helplessly hoping – the artists, poets, dancers, musicians, painters and sculptors know what we so long ago sacrificed on the altar of bottom lines and balance sheets – that we NEED artists to help give shape and form to what we feel because we can’t yet articulate it. And that is exactly what the prophets of ancient Israel discovered as they lived through slavery, exile, the destruction of the Temple, captivity in the kingdom of Babylon and decades of grief.

Some of you know the Psalms of the Bible – not everyone, of course, because we all know different things as part of the interconnected human community – but some know the Psalms. And ancient Israel’s grief was expressed with agonizing clarity in Psalm 137. As the Euphrates and Tigris rivers flowed, the Psalmist wept this lament: By the rivers of Babylon – there we sat down and wept when we remembered Zion. (That is, Israel.) On the willows there we hung up our harps. For there our captors asked us songs, and our tormentors laughed, saying: “Sing for us one of the songs of Zion now!” Oh my God, how can we sing the Lord’s song in a foreign land? 


+ Bono of the rock band U2 used to say that he learned about the blues first from these ancient songs – the Psalter and, of course, Elvis, too – but the Psalms were right up there!

+ Some know this tune from the realm of reggae, others as an American folk song, and you really old timers know it as “On the Willows” from the Broadway musical, “Godspell.”

Its origins, however, take us back to a time when ancient Israel’s best and brightest were led out of the holy city of Jerusalem in chains for 70 years of bondage in Babylon beginning in 586 BCE. This is the era in which Ezekiel, born into the tribe of Israel’s priests, received his inspiration to live as a prophet to the exiles. Prior to Israel’s captivity, a prophet’s calling was to warn the religious, political and economic leadership of the land that their culture was no longer acting in harmony with God’s grace. The poor and broken were forgotten and left out of the nation’s prosperity. Interpersonal ethics had become crass and merely utilitarian. And a social decadence had taken hold where once justice and compassion guided the day.

According to Old Testament professor, Walter Brueggemann, it was the prophet’s first task to warn their leaders that living out of balance – celebrating excess and ignoring the consequences of selfishness – had consequences. It could not endure forever. When the walls of Jerusalem were “breached, however, and the city plundered,” the era of warning came to a close. Brueggemann suggests that what was true in ancient Israel is equally true today in his book: Reality, Hope and Grief. “I have delineated three contemporary prophetic tasks,” he says, “by paying careful attention to what the Old Testament prophets were doing in the context of their society. It is my conclusion that the three recurring actions of the prophets… are in fact prophetic responses to social conditions and social policy in both the ancient and contemporary realm.” So let me summarize Brueggemann’s insights and then connect them to the sacred texts for this fifth Sunday in Lent.

First, a prophet is called to name reality as it is known by the facts on the ground – especially the reality of those who are most vulnerable. The prophet passionately calls out the “bubble of illusion” people of privilege prefer over radical solidarity. The lies of this reality, Brueggemann ads, are “voiced in endless propaganda and advertising, commending a system of private gratification at the expense of the common good. But this system of fearful greed no longer works, nor does it make anyone happy. It is a fraudulent theory of social relationships.”  And don’t we know that now when practicing social distancing and self-isolation incarnates healing for the whole nation while living out in public just for ourselves endangers us all? And what about the sacrilege of telling the old that we should sacrifice ourselves for the greed of the managerial class? I’m with Cuomo when he said, “I will NOT put a price tag on my mother’s life!” Can’t you hear the prophet Isaiah in the 58th chapter of his book shouting to the power brokers of his day: I the Lord HATE your fasts and phony religious ceremonies. I despise them. Is not this the fast that is holy to loose the bonds of injustice, to undo the thongs of the yoke, to let the oppressed go free? Is it not to share your bread with the hungry and bring the homeless poor into your house; when you see the naked, to cover them and not to hide yourself from your own kin? Do this and then your light shall break forth like the dawn, and your healing shall spring up quickly. First, the prophet is called to name reality without illusion.

Second, the prophet works to overcome our personal and social inclination to deny our broken reality and maintain the “bubble of illusion.” This is what is now known as the six stages of “grief work” where we move from denial into anger at the mess we’re in. Then from anger into trying to bargain with God or anyone else to get us out of this pain; from bargaining another stage is depression where we are overwhelmed by the magnitude of our suffering – then, as the Serenity Prayer says, acceptance – God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference – which is where we can find the meaning of grief in for our lives. Brueggemann writes that even in the face of calamities like the pandemic there are those, like the President, who will continue to lie to us, asking us to trust the old “pathologies that have produced immense suffering,” while benefiting only a few. They “keep reiterating the mantras of greed all the while disregarding the huge loss, in terms of human possibility, that is happening before our very eyes — the loss of moral possibility, the loss of generous neighborliness, and the loss of well-being that depends upon a viable human fabric of solidarity.” Another prophet, Jeremiah, cut to the chase in chapter 7 when he said: “If you truly amend your ways, if you execute right relationships and respect with one with another, if you do not oppress the alien, the orphan or the widow, or shed innocent blood… then I will let you dwell in a place of safety, the land that I gave of old to your fathers and mothers forever.” Owning our loss honestly – and grieving it in full – is the second prophetic task.

And third, the prophet is called to help us practice patience and prayer – what the wisdom keepers call self-emptying – so that free from ego and ideology there is space within to listen for the holy. I am moved by the way Eugene Peterson reworks some of the old wise words of Jesus with great insight about this self-emptying in The Message. Again and again I keep going back to his restatement of the opening verses of the Sermon on the Mount. The old way tells us: “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” The newer parsing by Peterson puts it like this: “You’re blessed when you’re at the end of your rope because with less of you there is more of God and God’s grace.” There is more room within us without all that inner chatter and fear, shame and denial that drowns out our ability to hear the holy in a solemn stillness. Grief often comes to us to clear out the clutter so that when a word of hope is articulated, we can honor it.  And this is the real genius in Brueggemann’s analysis: he is convinced – and has convinced me, too – that time and again God speaks to us from our grief through the dreamers and artists of our generation. We will not hear a healing word from those in power nor from elected officials or even the preachers and teachers. Rather, the healing word – the hopeful song – the movie, novel, poem, dance or work of art that points us in a new direction will come from our artists who are uniquely attuned to the prophetic imagination.

Think what you may of Paul Tillich, the German theologian who was an early

critic of Nazi fascism and eventually fled Germany for my alma mater in 1933. But in the dark days after the First World War he discerned that God was no longer speaking in the churches, but rather had now taken up residence in the abstract expressionist painters of his generation who were expressing real horror of greed as well as the promise of new freedom. T.S. Eliot did much the same in 1934 with his extended prose poem, “The Rock,” and we’re just beginning to get it 86 years later.

O world of spring and autumn, birth and dying!
The endless cycle of idea and action,
Endless invention, endless experiment,
Brings knowledge of motion, but not of stillness;
Knowledge of speech, but not of silence;
Knowledge of words, and ignorance of the Word.
All our knowledge brings us nearer to death,
But nearness to death no nearer to God.
Where is the Life we have lost in living?
Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?
Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?
The cycles of heaven in twenty centuries
Brings us farther from God and nearer to the Dust.


Reality – grief – and hope – naming the source of our wounds, entering into them with humility and courage, and nourishing emptiness and silence in order to hear the still small voice of the Lord calling to us from our artists and dreamers: these are the three prophetic tasks for our generation. Now I know that’s a lot of analysis for a Sunday morning– especially in a culture that wants quick fixes and sentimental spirituality. But as we feel this grief – and it is real – the magnitude of this moment cries out that we not waste it. Like Fr. Richard Rohr says: this is a teachable moment – one in which our values can play a significant part in the rebuilding of our culture, our economics and even our faith communities. Heather Cox Richardson, American historian at Boston College, articulated it well:

Our country is reordering itself as we hunker down for this crisis. Already our work habits, our social habits, our shopping habits, and our personal lives have been knocked into new grooves. It is a mistake, I think, to imagine that when we finally get a handle on this disease, America will go back to what it was before coronavirus... We are learning that many of us can work from home—how will that change our urban and rural spaces? We are learning that our lives depend on a strong government response to pandemics and economic dislocation—how will that change our government? We are learning that our families and friends are even more important than even we knew—how will that change our priorities? The questions raised by this life-changing crisis are open… and so, suddenly, is America’s future.

I think Ezekiel was challenged to rethink his world, too when looking out upon the valley of dry bones: this is not a literal story from history, of course, but an artistic rendering about how God empowers us to trust and love when all around us fear rules the day. This is a story about rebuild-ing human community by God’s grace in God’s time rather than relying upon the pathologies and ideologies that brought us here in the first place. Looking out upon the brokenness of his people the prophet imagines the Lord asking: Can these bones live. To which the bewildered Ezekiel says: “Only Thou knowest, Lord.”

Well then, get to it, man: prophesy to these bones – listen and speak in my love rather than your fears – and let’s see what happens. “So I prophesied as I had been commanded; and as I did, suddenly there was a noise, a rattling, and the bones came together, bone to its bone. I looked, and there were sinews on them, and flesh had come upon them, and skin had covered them; but there was no breath in them.” You get what’s going on, right? This is a prophetic dream – a revelation about trust and reclaiming God’s vision for our era – and it is coming to the people through Ezekiel’s creative imagination, one of ancient Israel’s first blues artists. Like John Lennon, Ezekiel starts singing, “Imagine all the people, living for today aha you may say I’m a dreamer, but I’m ot the only one.” Are you with me on this?

I think something similar is happening in the story from St. John’s gospel where Jesus weeps and his friend Lazarus is brought back from the dead. The action in this story is a personalized restatement of the valley of dry bones. A first century Jewish/Christian artistic midrash on Ezekiel. Three quick insights: 


+ First, the focus of this story is Lazarus – brother of Mary and Martha of Bethany – and one whom the text tells us, “Jesus loved.” Scholars point out that Lazarus is the first person we’re told that Jesus loved. Up until this point, Jesus acts as a teacher – compassionate but still a bit removed – but now he’s acting in love. And notice who he loves: Lazarus whom the Bible describes as sickly from the Greek word, asthenes, which can be translated: diseased, without strength or insignificant. This is a story about paying attention to those who are vulnerable and forgotten with love so that the facts on the ground can make God’s love flesh. 

+ Second, when Jesus sees how broken-hearted Mary and Martha are over the death of their brother we’re told that Jesus wept. And that little word, wept, is deceptive and genteel in English. But in Greek it means to grieve with an agitated shudder. An excruciating cry of pain that shakes the whole body. The death of Lazarus upsets the equanimity of Jesus and rips his heart apart. 

+ And third, in this agitated state, the broken-heart of Jesus cries out like Ezekiel for Lazarus to rise up! Like the prophets before him, Jesus trusts God’s love and prophesies to the corpse in a cave behind a stone to come into NEW life. And however you make sense of this story – and I trust in multiple layers with all my heart, soul, strength and might – Lazarus does exactly that. He steps out of death into new life. And just so that we don’t miss the radical and upside down meaning of this story: do you recall what Lazarus, Jesus, Mary and Martha do after this restoration of life? They retire back in Bethany to partake of the Passover Feast. After all the death – after the grief and the anguish and the fear and the heart-break – there is a festival of freedom and feasting at the table of new life. The symbolism is just too strong to ignore.

Conclusion
I believe that is part of the promise for those of us honoring our collective grief: a new way of living shaped by love. Just last week there was a hand-printed sign taped to a pole in Pennsylvania that said: “And then the whole world walked inside and shut their doors and said, ‘We will stop it all!’ Everything – to protect our weaker ones – our sicker ones – our insignificant ones – and our older ones.! And nothing, NOTHING, in the history of humankind ever felt more like love than this.” But to get there we have live into this extended, shared Lent for this is how we shall be emptied, cleansed and moved beyond denial. I think that’s what our artists are helping us to see: by honoring their wounds and grief they are helping us open our hearts to love and tenderness and creativity.

When I do that, open my heart to grief, a little song I wrote called “Small Is Holy” keeps popping up. It comes from my experiencing God’s healing love at a time when I felt insignificant and vulnerable. It comes from my being a volunteer at L’Arche Ottawa and sharing love with people who only ask me if I can be trusted in love. And it comes from discovering that because I can only do a very little bit to make anything better, that small is holy. This song has been swimming around in my head for a while and I could never find a way to really share it in public until right now. It just didn’t feel right – but now it does – this small song about the enormity of God’s love in my little and quiet life. May it be a little blessing for you…


Thinking big and acting strong – led me into all that’s wrong
Hitting bottom taught me well strategies to get through hell.
Touch the wound in front of you – that’s all you can really do
Hold it close – don’t turn away – make room for what is real today.

Small is me, small is you, small is holy and rings true
Small is hard, small reveals the way our hearts can be healed

I been bullied, I been screwed – lost sometimes but won a few
Paid it forward, grabbed it back – hit the jack pot, got the sack
Hurt those who are dear to me – broke their hearts so bitterly
Been forgiven but don’t know why: grace trumps karma - most every time…

   The blues has its own beauty if I have the ears to hear
   The song inside my sorrow’s singing: let go of your fear.
   The wisdom of the sacred is often upside down
   So many times I missed her… when she tried to come to town

I tend to trust too slowly while the sting of shame it lasts
My heart gives up its habits incrementally not fast
Don’t push too hard – don’t say too much
Don’t go too fast – trust human touch
And when I fall, get up again let losing be the way to win.

Small is me, small is you, small is holy and rings true
Small is hard, small reveals the way our hearts can be healed





Friday, March 27, 2020

reflections on breathing as God's breath within and among us...

Last night we watched Valerie Kaur's "zoom" cast re: Revolutionary Love in this
time of pandemic. It was, in essence, her book launch, but also a shared time for meditation together. I resonate with her message. I rejoice that much of the work being done comes from women of color from all over the world. And I trust that her insight that our current darkness is more womb than tomb is right. A new world is being born from this struggle. This hand drawn sign taped to a tree in Pennsylvania says it clearly.

I have been working on my reflection for this coming Sunday when I launch my "Small is Holy" broadcast using live-streaming on Facebook. For the past two weeks I have done this in service to a neighboring congregation as they move into an interim ministry time. I was grateful for the opportunity and sense that there is still room to do this again. So... here are my written notes from last week as prelude to what is still to come. If you're game, join me at 10 am.

Small Is Holy
Live Streaming Reflections on Spirituality for an Unsettling Season
Sundays @ 10 AM on Facebook
Be Still and Know – James Lumsden
(https://www.facebook.com/Be-Still-and-Know-913217865701531)

SERMON NOTES: Breathe on me breath of life (March 22, 2020)

Introduction
What a beautiful, demanding, terrifying, blessed, confusing, troubling, frustrating, generous, open-hearted, close-minded, complicated, compassionate and sacred week this has been for me: you, too? It has been ALL of these things – and more – all at once. There were times last week when I was in awe at the grace of God being revealed and reclaimed within and among us – and I rejoiced. And there were other times when I literally burst into tears of sorrow and uncertainty.

+ The creative outpouring of holy human love that has been released all over the world during this shared crisis is breath-taking. Perhaps you’ve seen on the Internet or the news scenes of Italians in strict lockdown sectors opening their windows and filling their empty streets with sweet songs of tenderness and hope? Remarkable and brilliant. 

+ In Iran, doctors and nurses in some of the most dangerous and infected “red zones” have been posting videos of themselves dancing to wild music in what is being called the Covid 19 dance challenge! They want to keep their patients engaged in life – and encourage their colleagues to keep fighting this battle – so with humble good humor they are dancing in hazmat suits, helping to restore their neighbor’s spirits with laughter and delight. Other medical staff brought in their musical instruments to serenade patients in quarantined areas.

The evolutionary anthropologist, Agustin Fuentes at the University of Notre Dame, says that built into our human nature is a capacity for creative connections. “One of the amazing things about the human species,” he told Robin Wright at the New Yorker, “is that these once harmless critters, not much more than monkeys running around have, in time become… incredibly imaginative in finding connections even when we’re not in the same physical space together.” One of the poems of the pandemic that went viral last week was by Kitty O’Meara who wrote:

And the people stayed home. And read books, and listened, and rested and exercised and made art, and played games, and learned new ways of being – and were still. And listened more deeply. Some meditated, some prayed, some danced. Some even met their shadows: and the people began to think differently. And the people healed. And, in the absence of people living in ignorant, dangerous, mindless and heartless ways, the earth began to heal. And when the danger passed, and the people joined together again, they grieved their losses, and made new choices and dreamed new images, and created new ways to live and heal the earth fully as they had been healed.

Like Wavy Gravy said back at Woodstock: “There’s always a little bit of heaven in a disaster area, man.” Listening to the pre-debate reporters a week ago talk about the statistical consequences of the coronavirus pandemic in the United States, however, was much more sobering. Perhaps for the first time I finally heard that in the worst case scenario millions of deaths could take place in our country – millions - and out of nowhere I burst into tears. They washed over me spontaneously like a thunder storm on a lake in the summer and I sat alone in front of my TV in the dark and wept for grandmas and grampas, friends with kidney or heart disease, neighbors with high blood pressure or autoimmune problems, those in treatment for cancer. Millions.

A few nights later I awoke from a sound sleep with anxiety coursing through my veins: I had been dreaming about my friends in Pittsfield – and Montreal – who run restaurants, jazz clubs and coffee shops. Most of them have been pleading on-line with their customers to stop by, make a “to go” purchase or buy up some of their food stock that will otherwise rot. They were grieving not simply because they had to close down their businesses, but because they love their employees and have no way to pay them during this shut down – and I work up in a cold, aching sweat.

I think the American Buddhist master, Pema Chodren, got it right when she Tweeted: if you haven’t wept deeply, you haven’t begun to meditate. And I wouldn’t be surprised if you too have been on a comparable emotional roller coaster: we are living into a time of unprecedented suffering that was unimaginable just two weeks ago. The bard of Vermont, author Frederick Buechner, likes to say that the best way to discern the presence of the Lord is by listening to our lives. He writes:

I believe that there is NO event so commonplace but that God is present within it – always hiddenly, always reaching out to you compellingly and haughtingly, asking you to listen to your life. See it for the fathomless mystery that it is. In the boredom and pain of it no less than in the excitement and gladness: touch, taste, and smell you way into the holy and hidden heart of it because in the last analysis all moments are key moments – and life itself is grace. Buechner then cuts deeper adding…: YOU NEVER KNOW what may cause them. The sight of the Atlantic Ocean can do it, or a piece of music, or a face you've never seen before. A pair of somebody's old shoes (or the words on the TV) … almost any movie made before the great sadness that came over the world after the Second World War, a horse cantering across a meadow, the high school basketball team running out onto the gym floor at the start of a game. You can never be sure. But of this you can be sure: whenever you find tears in your eyes, especially unexpected tears, it is well to pay the closest attention.

This morning our texts in Scripture invite us to do precisely this: pay attention to our tears, listen to our lives, that we might discern what the holy is saying to all of us in the scandal of our particularities. So first let me share a Biblical insight with you concerning the Shepherd’s Psalm, Psalm 23, and how it can help get us grounded in our most anxious moments. Second, a few of the challenges set before us in the story of the blind beggar in St. John’s gospel.

Insights

Today, on the Fourth Sunday of Lent, we’re halfway through a journey with Jesus into Jerusalem and the Cross that culminates on Easter. It is not yet clear whether that journey will take place on-line or in person. However it happens, we know that it is a slow pilgrimage, intentionally paced to help us acquire eyes to see God’s love being revealed within and among us in the most unlikely places. St. Paul used to tell his friends that he was certain that God worked something good for all those who lived by faith. By faith he did NOT mean doctrine or theology, but rather trust. And please be careful to note that St. Paul never said that all things WERE good, or that God forced bad things to happen to teach us some cruel, cosmic lesson.

No, taking the Cross as his guide, he clearly confessed that: God can bring blessing into every situation for those who trust the Lord and have eyes to see the holy emerging in the most unexpected places. And that is my prayer for us at this moment in time: that we don’t waste this crisis with distractions or misdirected action. Rather that we choose to listen for God in our lives and trust that the one who brought new life into the world after the Cross will do so for us, too.

Psalm 23 in the songbook of ancient Israel offers three settings where we might see, feel, smell, taste, and touch the presence of God’s love in our ordinary lives if we are paying attention: a meadow, a valley, and a banquet table. I want to consider just the meadow with you because this prayer/song is so familiar we might miss its message. 


+ Notice that the Psalm opens in nature – not the Temple, not a sanctuary, not a tent or a residence – just a grassy meadow and a quiet stream. We know that being outside – for a walk, doing yard work, tending the garden – is restorative. What we forget is that nature is God’s first word of love to us. The 13th century Italian Dominican priest, Thomas Aquinas, told us that, “Creation is the primary and most perfect revelation of the Divine.” It is the FIRST word of God – the organic Bible, if you will – for creation itself reveals to us the true heart of the Lord. Dare I suggest that simply going outside is a prayer? Communion? An act of worship we share with everyone and everything else on the planet? 

+ One of the reasons why Psalm 23 encourages us to get out into the beauty of nature - especially whenever our spirits are troubled – is that it heals our soul. “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want. In grassy meadows God helps me lie down and rest, by quiet streams of water God guides me and restores my trust so that my life can be saturated in peace.”

Robert Alter, master of the Bible’s poetry, teaches that the traditional words – maketh me to lie down – come from a unique Hebrew verb having to do with the way a shepherd helps his or her herd prepare for sleep: the shepherd calms the fears of the flock by creating a place of safety. Then – and only then – can they rest in the experiential assurance that even in the darkest night they will not be left alone.

They do not have to fend for themselves because they have been comforted by a loving presence greater than themselves. They don’t fully know how the shepherd does this, mind you. They just sense – trust and experience – that the shepherd’s security is real. That’s why the Psalmist tells us that the Lord restoreth my soul. The Hebrew word here is nefesh – not soul – but the very breath of life. It is the same word used in the second creation story of Genesis where the Lord breathes spirit into the being formed of mud. When that happens, when the Spirit/ breath of God fills us, we become NEPHESH CHAYAH: a living, breathing being animated from the inside out by God’s spirit.

In this, the ancient Psalmist is telling us about two time-tested ways to reconnect our hearts, souls, minds, and bodies to a trust that evokes rest even within the darkness of our current crisis: 1) we are called to reconnect with nature, and, 2) to use the breath God gave us to become a centering prayer for God’s peace. It is a poetic invitation to practice two simple spiritual disciplines that help us move through hard times with grace and tenderness.

This time of solitude and distance socializing are great for reclaiming God’s restoration of our souls. Many of us have lost touch with this aspect of the sacred. With 24/7 electricity – and the security of warm, safe homes – we don’t have to go to sleep when it’s dark or get up when it’s light. Most of us rarely have to worry about building fires when it’s cold or constructing shelter from the storm. Small wonder we have forgotten the spirituality of the seasons – what it means to build a life honoring the first word of God in the ebb and flow of summer and winter, autumn and spring – let alone how to overcome our alienation from what is taking place in the ground below our feet or the very air we breathe.

I am a big fan of the Quaker author and teacher, Parker Palmer, who suggests that listening to and living into the spirituality of the seasons is essential for the restoration of our souls. “Seasons,” he writes, “Is a wise metaphor for the movement of life."

It suggests that life is neither a battlefield nor a game of chance but something infinitely richer, more promising, more real. The notion that our lives are like the eternal cycle of the seasons does not deny the struggle or the joy, the loss or the gain, the darkness or the light, but encourages us to embrace it all and to find within the seasons opportunities to go deeper into lives of peace. I love the fact that the word “humus”– the decayed vegetable matter that feeds the roots of plants – comes from the same word root that gives rise to the word “humility” as well as “humor.” It is a blessed etymology. It helps me understand that the humiliating events of life, the events that leave “mud on my face” or that “make my name mud,” may create the fertile soil in which something new can grow.

That’s an earthy way of saying we humans can learn how to get it right from our mistakes – or to use theological language – that we are all being made whole by forgiveness and grace. He goes on to say:

Though spring begins slowly and tentatively, it grows with a tenacity that never fails to touch me. The smallest and most tender shoots insist on having their way, coming up through ground that looked, only a few weeks earlier, as if it would never grow anything again. The crocuses and snowdrops do not bloom for long. But their mere appearance, however brief, is always a harbinger of hope.

Nature is telling us exactly what St. Paul confessed: that God can redeem all wounds for those who trust God’s presence within and among all of creation. Which tells me that now – especially now – it would be wise for us to get out into some of that sacred, blessed mud - or at least the fresh air – and soak up some of that grace!  A Kentucky farmer by the name of Wendell Berry celebrates the holiness of God’s earth in poetry. He knows that God’s first word is not only revealed in nature, but it brings us restoration, too.

When despair for the world grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
And I feel above me the day-blind stars
waiting with their light. For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.


The ancient wisdom of our tradition teaches that to be healed we must step away from the clutter of a culture obsessed with control and consumption to “come back into the peace of wild things.” It is a time-tested way to pray, worship with the whole of creation even when we can’t be in church, and open our hearts for the Lord who yearns to “restoreth our souls.” The same is true every moment of the day when we breathe: like the soil, water, air, meadows and woodlands, our breath is a gift from God that centers us so that we experience the peace that passes understanding from the inside out. Some of the older folk – like me – who are listening right now know an old hymn by Edwin Hatch that goes: “Breathe on me, breath of God, fill me with life anew, that I may love what Thou dost love, and do what Thou wouldst do.”

So how does that happen? How can our breath become a prayer that soothes our anxieties, quiets our minds and restores our souls? The late Benedictine master, Thomas Keating, called it centering prayer – the simplest version of which uses our breathing in and breathing out with a few simple words – as a natural way to reconnect with grace. It wasn’t an accident, you know, that the modern rendering of this psalm says: you help me catch my breath and set me off in the right direction. When I used to visit people in the hospital back in the day, I often asked what practice did they use to stay grounded while waiting for surgery and then during the long wait afterwards in recovery? More often than not they would pause, shake their heads and say something like: I just try to endure it.

So let me teach you now what I taught them then so you can use it whenever you feel rattled, ok? If you already know about centering prayer with your breath, let this be a refresher course, ok? Here’s what you can do: 


+ Whenever you feel yourself bracing, becoming tense or slipping into uncertainty: just close your eyes. When you breathe in, think: “God of peace” – and when you breathe out, think: “Fill my heart.” In and out: God of peace – fill my heart. 

+ You can use any words that help ground you trust and tenderness, too ok? These are just the ones that work best for me. I used them the other night when I woke up with a panic attack: God of peace, fill my heart. And it works. It takes a little practice and time, but whenever the anxiety flares up – and it will – just feel it, own it as true and then move into that gentle in and out breathing prayer for God’s peace.

Now let me say something that is obvious but important: it is perfectly natural and normal during days like these to feel overwhelmed and anxious. It means you’re alive – and fully human. It happened to Jesus all the time, too you know? That’s one of the reasons he was always wandering off into the hills, gardens or deserts to pray. He, like you and me, needed time to practice what we now call centering prayer so that he could enter into the suffering of his generation with equanimity and trust. I think that’s one of the reasons this story about the beggar born blind is included in St. John’s gospel: it shows what trust as well as anxiety looks like in the extended movement of events

You see, this story doesn’t start off with the healing of the blind beggar. It begins back in chapter eight of St. John’s gospel where Jesus finds himself in an argument with the religious authorities of his day. While honoring his own Jewish tradition, Jesus also trusts that the way of love sometimes has to break the rules. For a number of reasons, those in charge of the tradition at that time vigorously disagreed with Jesus: they insisted that there are those who are ritually clean and those who are unclean, those who are morally right and those who are morally bankrupt, those who are for us and those who are just nasty people. To which Jesus said: Look, we both agree that Abraham was the father of our tradition, but please remember that even he started his journey by faith – by trust – through an inner experience of God’s presence, not a set of rules. He left his home by God’s inspiration before there ever were rules – so I have come to trust this truth as much as the later rules – which infuriated his adversaries so much they tried to stone him to death.

That’s the on-going problem with fundamentalism of any variety: its heart is good, its intentions are holy, but it can so quickly become cruel. So Jesus gets out of town as quickly as possible – for some quiet time. Some Psalm 23/Centering Prayer/restoration of his soul time. And on the outskirts of the city his own disciples start a similar argument when they see a beggar born blind: “Who sinned, rabbi?” they ask: “This beggar or his parents?” Can’t you feel the tension surging through Jesus at this moment?

I really don’t think it is outside the scope of the gospel to say that after being violently threatened and banished from the temple, Jesus was particularly open to the pain that this unwanted beggar felt as he sat beside the side of the road crying out for spare change. He too had been excluded and denigrated. I think that when Jesus felt unwanted and alone his feelings and experiences helped him connect with another who was equally isolated and vulnerable. So with love and tenderness, Jesus offered to the beggar what he himself had been denied: vision to see what was really important and acceptance of his humanity beyond his disability.

We’re in one of those moments right now where our suffering can either make us more rigid and afraid, or, cultivate a gravitas and compassion that is salvific. Fr. Richard Rohr recently framed our moment in history like this – and it bears quoting at length. “We are in the midst of a highly teachable moment. There’s no doubt that this period will be referred to for the rest of our lifetimes. We have a chance to go deep and to go broad. Globally, we’re in this together. Depth is being forced on us by great suffering, which as I like to say, always leads to great love.”

But for God to reach us, we have to allow this suffering to wound us. Now is no time for academic solidarity with the world. Real solidarity needs to be felt and suffered. That’s the real meaning of the word “suffer” – to allow someone else’s pain to influence us in a real way. We need to let our personal feelings lead us into communion with everyone. What is going to happen to those living in isolated places or for those who don’t have health care? Imagine the fragility of the most marginalized, of people in prisons, the homeless, or even the people performing necessary services, such as ambulance drivers, nurses, and doctors, risking their lives to keep society together? Our feelings of urgency and devastation are not exaggeration: they are responding to the real human situation. We’re not pushing the panic button; we are the panic button. And we have to allow these feelings – listening to our lives and our tears, if you will – as we invite God’s presence to hold and sustain us in a time of collective prayer and lament.

Conclusion
Like Jesus, who knew anxiety, rejection and uncertainty, we must take this time to get ourselves centered in God’s peace. We must weep – and feel all the complexities of this challenge. Do you know the shortest sentence in the Bible? “Jesus wept.” I have come to believe that tears are our most profound prayers of pathos in solidarity with the pain of another, so don’t be afraid of them. We must pray in all kinds of ways – and – we must breathe, beloved. Breathe and breathe and breathe again that we can move forward in God’s love – not our fears – nor the political and economic ideologies of those in power. This is our moment when love must drive the healing, the transformation and restoration of our world.

If we know anything from the arc of the Lenten story it is that the life, death and resurrection of Jesus is at the core of creation. What we’re being asked to do now by God is trust that truth. It has become abundantly clear that we need one another. Over and over I realize in a whole new way during this time of self-isolation and quasi-monastic living that we really are ALL in this together: black and white, Latino and Pacific Rim, adults and children, rich and poor and those in-between, Christians and Jews and Muslims and every other faith tradition as well as atheists, too. Someone from the Sikh tradition by the name of Valerie Kaur is one such person who helps me live by faith. She keeps saying that the darkness of these days is NOT the darkness of the tomb alone, but also the darkness of the womb. Sure there is death – and there will be more – because death is a part of the cycle of life. But so too is new life – and right now it is being shaped and formed in this dark of these days. Recently Kaur wrote:

What I wish for you now is stillness. The blistering pace of the pandemic, the cacophony of commentary, the relentless barrage of breaking news without rest kills the root of our own wisdom, our ability to think clearly. It drives us to act on fear and panic — to hoard, to ban, to isolate, to self-protect, to act on racist impulses. But this is a time to gather the facts, to get quiet and summon our deepest wisdom — and let that wisdom lead us. For we have difficult choices to make in the coming days. This pandemic is testing who we want to be, as individuals and as a people. Will we succumb to fear and self-interest? Or will we double-down on love? Will we let social distancing isolate us? Or will we find new ways to reach out, deepen our connections, step up community care, and tend to the most vulnerable in our communities? Is this the darkness of the tomb — or the darkness of the womb? I believe this is a time to love without limit. This is a time to see no stranger. In doing so, we gather information for the kind of world we want, where no one is uninsured or disposable, where our policies and public institutions protect all of us. And if you get overwhelmed sometimes, it’s ok. It just means that you are alive to what is happening. Our work right now is to breathe through it all. Let it become for us a dance – to panic and then return to wisdom – to retreat and then find the courage to show up with love anyway. For like any long labor, we are going to take this one… one breath at a time.

This rings true for me, my friends, that we are now learning to live into a deeper, life-giving love. It can nourish our connections, strengthen us to feel the sorrow and the suffering, and also unite us in a movement towards new. My friends in AA like to tell me: If you always do what you’ve always done, you’ll always get what you’ve always got. We want to come out of this darkness with a restorative love and that takes time. It takes practice and lots of breathing. We can do this hard thing – one breath at a time. Breathe with me now as an affirmation: God of peace – fill my heart….

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

small words make a huge difference...

What a strange, creative, unsettling and life-changing time this is: we hiked in the snowy woods this afternoon - Lucie was restless to get out and about - and then spent the rest of the day writing, reading, praying and experimenting in preparation for Sunday's live streaming broadcast. I hope to have things ready for editing by tomorrow evening so I can fully participate in Valerie Kaur's "Revolutionary Love" online gathering. (Di ordered me her book for Valentine's Day so we'll be a part of the on-line book launch celebration!)
Each evening I limit myself to one hour of watching the news - NEVER 45's campaign rallies hiding under the name pandemic update - and fill my other time with things like Carrie Newcomer's evening home concerts. Check it out here: https://www.facebook.com/CarrieNewcomer/videos/212875493322396/ 
At some point today I read/heard someone say: please change one word when you speak about this time of being alone - we are not LOCKED at home, we are SAFE at home. Another friend encouraged us to speak of this as a time of solitude and introspection rather than self-isolation. Good words, indeed. 

I hope if you are able you will join me this Sunday @ 10 am for my Facebook live-streaming reflections. It is uncanny to me how the appointed lectionary readings are so relevant for this moment in time. They include Ezekiel's call to raise up the valley of dry bones, and, Jesus weeping in anguish with Mary and Martha over the death of his friend Lazarus. I look forward to being with you.

Small Is Holy

Live Streaming Reflections on Spirituality 
for an Unsettling Season
Sundays @ 10 AM on Facebook
Be Still and Know – James Lumsden
(https://www.facebook.com/Be-Still-and-Know-913217865701531)

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

small is holy... a work in progress

Every day is a precious gift. We used to toss those words off as sappy, pious sentimentality, something my grandmother had on her refrigerator magnets back in the day, but now... now it is the unspoken prayer on most of our lips. As I get ready to expand my on-line Sunday morning, live-streaming contemplative programming on Facebook from a short term local event into something more sustained, I find myself energized by the challenge. Sharing some of the poetry that nourishes me, offering quiet reflection on Scripture, prayers spoken from the hearts of friends near and afar, notes of encouragement and solace as well as music for the soul is church for me. Judging from the notes I have received from all over the place over the past few weeks, it is for many of you, too. I look forward to reconnecting with you in this way. Last Sunday I read this poem by Jane Hirshfield late in the day and it captures something of this moment with an aching clarity:  "Today, Another Universe.

The arborist has determined:

senescence     beetles    canker

quickened by drought

       but in any case

not prunable    not treatable    not to be propped.

And so.

The branch from which the sharp-shinned hawks and their mate-cries.

The trunk where the ant.

The red squirrels’ eighty-foot playground.

The bark    cambium    pine-sap    cluster of needles.

The Japanese patterns    the ink-net.

The dapple on certain fish.

Today, for some, a universe will vanish.
First noisily,
then just another silence.

The silence of after, once the theater has emptied.

Of bewilderment after the glacier,
the species, the star.

Something else, in the scale of quickening things,
will replace it,

this hole of light in the light, the puzzled birds swerving around it.


I spent part of the day searching for music to use on my live-stream that is from the public domain. I finally concluded that I will have to just record some of my own tunes until I can figure out the licensing fees. Later I joined my L'Arche Ottawa spirituality team-mates as we played with Zoom in anticipation of our prayer and song time this coming Friday with our friends at Mountainview. All over the world L'Arche communities are in lock down or stay at home and rest mode so we need to find ways to nourish community while practicing distant socializing. After dusting and vacuuming, doing some laundry and straightening up my study, I watched the PBS evening news in prayer. Then I came across these words from Beuchner that also cut deeply:

After lecturing learnedly on miracles, a great theologian was asked to give a specif example of one."There is only one miracle," he answered, "It is life. (So let me ask you) have you wept at anything during the past year? Has your heart beat faster at the sight of young beauty? Have you thought seriously about the face that someday you are going to die? More often than not do you really listen when people are speaking to you instead of just waiting for your turn to talk? Is there anybody you know in whose place, if one of you had to suffer great pain, you would volunteer  yourself? If your answer to all or most of these questions NO, the chances are that you're already dead."

My grandfather used to say to me, "Today is the first day of the rest of your life." Then he would ask me to play "Little Green Apples" for him on my guitar. But I was too cool for such schmaltz and offered "Here Comes the Sun" instead. Which is a great song - but it's not the one Poppa Fred asked for. So on days like this I still regret that I wasn't able to get over myself enough to play that goofy song for him even one time while he was still alive. I would play it over and over today in a heart beat. I am sure you would too.

The live-streaming worship reflections will take place on Sunday mornings at 10 am. I will try using my spiritual direction Facebook page, Be Still and Knowhttps://www.facebook.com/Be-Still-and-Know-913217865701531. I am calling it: Small Is Holy: Reflection on a Spirituality for an Unsettling Season. I hope you can join me.

Monday, March 23, 2020

small is holy live-streaming starts: sunday, 10 am on be still and know...

Yesterday, we pruned dead branches and trimmed raggedy bushes in the late afternoon spring sunshine. Today, it is snowing like nobody's business and best to stay inside where it's warm. Yesterday, I had the privilege of live-streaming my worship reflections and prayers on Facebook; later I learned that some of my friends at L'Arche Ottawa's Mountainview house - Terry and Cecile - were taking it in, too. Today, I was filled with gratitude when I went shopping in stores that were reasonably well-stocked and friendly as I prepared for another two weeks of quiet introspection and solitude. Yesterday, I had a short pity-party as I let myself miss being with my children and grandchildren for however long this season of seclusion lasts. Later that evening, I came upon this meme that put things into better perspective.
While shopping for household goods and pain meds at Wal-Mart this morning, I stood six feet behind an angry Anglo woman who berated the Asian clerk when informed that only one package of hand-wipes could be purchased at a time. "Did you tell everyone ELSE that," demanded the customer? "Your shelves are EMPTY! How did that happen if you can only buy one package at a time?!" And before the clerk could reply, this person of privilege continued, "When did this policy start? How do I know you're telling me the truth? I've gone to three other stores in search of hand-wipes and they were all gone, too." 

At first I looked on in incredulity: was she REALLY only buying hand-wipes? And bitching-out the clerk for a policy that inhibits hoarding? Was she aware at all that her anger was exaggerated? That the cashier didn't set store policy? That this exercise of bourgeois frustration directed at an immigrant employee who HAD to be at work was mean-spirited,ugly and quite likely racist? I nudged my shopping cart forward, bumping hers a bit to interrupt the harangue and said, "Really?" She turned and literally snorted at me, grabbed her small bag and proclaimed to no one in particular and everybody in general, "I don't want to take up any more time here... but this is truly unfair. Doesn't any body else care?" She then stormed off in a fury.

Stepping forward, I tried to catch the cashier's eyes, but she was all too well-acquainted with such inexcusable behavior. I asked, "Are you ok?" And with resignation she nodded saying, "So now she gets to go home and stay safe while I have to work. What about my safety? My family needs to eat, too, you know?" Then she looked at me - and we held one another's eyes for a few awkward seconds. I nodded and replied, "I hope you can be safe, too. I am so grateful for your help today." But by that time she was putting a receipt into my gloved hand, turning to check out the next customer in silence, and steeling herself for what was likely to be more agitation. I read that the Surgeon General warned this morning that "NOW it's going to get much worse." There will be more deaths announced, of course, but there will be more irritation, too. More anxiety, rudeness, public racist belligerence and worse. I wonder how long we will endure before violence breaks out?

Dianne and I sat soberly together before bed last night acknowledging out loud some of our fears for the next few months. For the time being, we will be safe and our income will be relatively stable. But apprehension is growing within and among us: just read some of the fearful comments on Facebook from people living in the Berkshires. We have just entered the second full week of social shut down in Massachusetts and already some of us are rattled. The governor just declared a State of Emergency for our state and that will push the fear level up as well. We don't yet know the ages of those in our community who are now infected - that data will be announced soon - but given the demographics for Berkshire County you know it will be the elderly. The worries on-line about how Covid-19 is being spread here involve the virus being passed on gas pump handles.

Last night, a wise and gentle Martha Wainwright who lives on Rue Marianne in Montreal hosted an eight minute Facebook concert on her balcony. She sang Leonard Cohen's "Goodbye Marianne" as well as another chanson in French that I did not know. Some three thousand people joined her on-line from all over the world - and some out on their balconies, too. I played my guitar along with her and Di and I both belted out the chorus: "Now so long, Marianne, it's time that we began, to laugh and cry and cry and laugh about it all again!"
That was confirmation for me that now really is a good time to take my live-streaming gig beyond helping friends at a local church during their search for an interim clergy. How did St. Paul put it in Philippians 4? "Finally, beloved, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is pleasing, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence and if there is anything worthy of praise, set your mind on these things." The President will keep up the fear-mongering. His toadies will troll the internet and spread more nativist hatred and lies. So why not add some tenderness to the mix? Some beauty and encouragement? I see musicians and artists, actors and poets, museums and concert halls sharing small doses of human dignity every day. When I sensed that God was calling me out of local church ministry, I took a few years to set the stage for a new way of living as I discerned what might come next. At the close of last year, when I felt it was 
time to step away from some of the music I was doing, I didn't know what would follow - just that one path was ending before the new one came into view. Being a part of last spring's California wedding gave me a clue - as did the recent live stream worship - and now even more clarity has arrived. 

My effort won't make much of a difference. I was pleased to see that last week I had 350+ views, but that's not going to endure. Still, this small project makes sense to me. It resonates with my deepest belief even as I  struggle to trust that small is holy. In fact, in writing this I am realizing that this should be the name for my live-streaming project of poetry, prayer and spiritual reflection. I am going to start small - just Facebook streaming for now - before trying to include You Tube. I am going to keep it simple without a lot of technology, too. I still have to find a reasonable way to get a license for using contemporary music as that is foundational to how I practice my spiritual disciplines. But for now I will just use tunes from the Public Domain until I can figure out the legalities and fees. I trust that those things will become clear in time, too.

I will be using my spiritual direction Facebook page to live stream each Sunday morning at 10 am. Tune in and send me your comments as the broadcast unfolds @

https://www.facebook.com/Be-Still-and-Know-913217865701531/

I hope you will choose to join me. Pass this on to others, too if you can. I would appreciate you spreading the news. Until then, let's all keep safe as we practice the wisdom of Pooh.