Saturday, November 27, 2021

receiving the gift with open hands...

"Gratitude" suggests Kisha James, a member of the Aquinnah Wampanoag tribe in New England, "is how we embrace beauty without clutching it so tightly that we strangle it."

To receive life as a gift is to acknowledge that we do not — and indeed cannot — hold our world together out of our sheer effort, will and strength. Most of the best things in life can only be received and held with open hands. (NYTimes)

About three inches of fresh, powdery snow fell on our retreat home today: the wind is blowing vigorously, the fire is now blazing, and the sky is a uniform gray preventing any sense of direction. Setting off for an artisan Christmas fair, we chose not to go up the mountain given road conditions and the possibility of freezing. Instead, we wandered the back roads for a spell before winding up at one of our favorite Benedictine monasteries. "Apparently," Di noted, "we needed to make pilgrimage." That felt right to me, too. In addition to an Advent candle for my evening prayer live-streaming tomorrow at 4 pm and some monk-made fresh cheese, we found a children's interfaith book that will become part of our grandchildren's Massachusetts library.

There is something meditative about watching the snow fall against pine trees, expansive dairy farms, and an opaque horizon. It is a gift that can only be recognized and then received with open hands. Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer puts it like this in her poem: "Belonging."

And if it’s true we are alone,
we are alone together,
the way blades of grass
are alone, but exist as a field.
Sometimes I feel it,
the green fuse that ignites us,
the wild thrum that unites us,
an inner hum that reminds us
of our shared humanity.
Just as thirty-five trillion
red blood cells join in one body
to become one blood.
Just as one hundred thirty-six thousand
notes make up one symphony.
Alone as we are, our small voices
weave into the one big conversation.
Our actions are essential
to the one infinite story of what it is
to be alive. When we feel alone,
we belong to the grand communion
of those who sometimes feel alone—
we are the dust, the dust that hopes,
a rising of dust, a thrill of dust,
the dust that dances in the light
with all other dust, the dust
that makes the world.



Friday, November 26, 2021

from naivete to grief into solidarity: decolonizing thanksgiving

For some of us from the USA, this "Thanksgiving weekend" has been a time of quiet gratitude mixed with introspection, moments of grief, gratitude, and questions re: how to "decolonize" this holiday. For Di and myself, we chose to slip away from both the Black Friday madness and the cacophonous choruses of competing feast day narratives for a quiet time of solitude in a small country town surrounded by 
hills, trees, and rivers. Like the Celtic heretic, Pelagius, advised: if you want to know the Creator, spend time with Creation. Our banquet was modest - tourtière (meat pie), fresh veggies, and a crusty baguette - but our gratitude knew no bounds. 

Thanksgiving has been a holiday in transition for me. As a child coming of age in Congregational New England, the myth of noble Native Americans feasting with my Pilgrim ancestors - and saving these colonizing settlers from starvation - was normative: we made paper headdresses and Pilgrim hats for the annual Pilgrim Pageants, the story was told and retold in church, and the media informed how my parents explained the "why" of this feast day. For years I considered it to be an American Eucharist, the origins of the sacred melting pot where all types of people could find a resting place free from discrimination and fear. It was the driving reason for memorizing Hawthorne's 1855 epic poem, "The Song of Hiawatha" in first grade. I was genuinely grateful to the Indians and wanted to know more about the people who literally made my America possible.

I didn't know otherwise for a full decade because in bourgeois white Connecticut and Massachusetts alternatives were not discussed. I grew-up water-skiing on Lake Chargoggagoggmanchauggagoggchaubunagungamaugg, the sacred fishing center and unceded ancestral home of the Nipmuck Indians. I watched countless Westerns with my dad on our black and white TV and came to respect Tonto as much as the Lone Ranger. The trust built between Indian agent, Tom Jeffords, and Apache Chief, Cochise, on Broken Arrow showed me it was possible for an Anglo and an Indian to become blood brothers. Even my hippie inclinations romanticized First Nations realities by the counter culture's rip off of faux Native fashion. I still failed to grasp the lies of the dominant culture concerning indigenous people even after 
devouring Dee Brown's Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee in 1970. I simply could not connect the dots linking the genocide of the American Plains Indians to what had occurred n my own backyard.

My hunch is it took Tom Hayden's 1972 book, The Love of Possession is Like a Disease with Them, to awaken me. The title was taken from "an 1877 speech by Sitting Bull (where) Hayden masterfully draws compelling parallels between the Vietnam War and the genocide of Native Americans." (Good Reads) As a conscientious objector to Vietnam (who was granted noncombatant status but was never called to serve) I was leaving the safe and sheltered world of white, middle class New England behind. I read feminist analysis alongside civil rights histories, the polemics of 20th century pacifists with the same gusto as the anti-racist jeremiads of MLK, Malcolm X, and Angela Davis, In time, I gave a number of years to the crusades of Cesar Chavez and finally completed my undergraduate degree in political science, writing my thesis on non-violent social change. And still I did not know the true story of Thanksgiving.

Langston Hughes took me to a new awareness with his poem: Let America be America again - it's never been America to me. Studying with Cornel West, Dorothee Soelle, James Washington, James Cone, and Walter Wink at Union Theological Seminary continued my awakening. But it wasn't until TV's Northern Exposure aired a Thanksgiving episode deconstructing the lies of our white dominant culture that I grasped why decolonizing Thanksgiving had to become a priority for me. 
An open-hearted and clear-headed dialogue between Edgar Villanueva and Hilary Giovale in YES Magazine is the single best articulation of what is at stake in decolonizing Thanksgiving. And I am of the opinion that this matters whether or not you have been shaped by the romantic mythology of dominant culture or not. Mr. Villanueva notes:

As a Native American, I’m often troubled by the way that (many) Americans approach Thanksgiving. By holding onto an idealized image of a harmonious feast between the Pilgrims and Wampanoag, we’ve overlooked the brutality that Native people have faced since the arrival of Europeans. For many Native Americans, Thanksgiving is a day of mourning and remembrance—a reminder of the genocide of our people, the loss of our way of life, and the theft of our ancestral lands. We cannot change the past––but by changing how we tell the story of the past, we can avoid repeating a history that erases the trauma Indigenous peoples have experienced. While traditional decolonization hinges on returning stolen land and autonomy to Indigenous peoples, today our lives as Indigenous peoples and settlers are so intertwined that decolonization is more complex.

Ms. Giovale builds on this stating:

European-descended settlers have unique opportunities to bridge the colonial gap. It can begin by simply changing how we introduce ourselves. The first time I said out loud, “I am a ninth-generation American settler. All my life, and ever since 1739, our family has been living on stolen Indigenous land,” my worldview started changing dramatically. Within White settler culture, our identities as settlers tend to be invisible to ourselves. We are entangled with systemic White supremacy and national mythologies designed to keep us comfortable and complicit. Many of us have developed multi-generational bubbles of denial and amnesia about the genocide, broken treaties, and stolen land that enabled us to stay. Our opportunity is to willingly pop those bubbles so we can collectively decolonize and make repairs.

Their dialogue goes on to suggest seven life-changing ways that settlers and indigenous peoples can live together as allies in healing: grieve, apologize, listen, relate, represent, invest, and repair. (You can read the full article here and I encourage you to do so: https://www.yesmagazine.org/opinion/ 2019/11/27/thanksgiving-colonial-gap-heal) In The Gatherings: Reimagining Indigenous-Settler Relations a Wabanaki wisdom keeper suggests that one of the ways a person from an Irish settler background might begin to make peace with her family's legacy in real time is to first become grounded in her own roots. As she grew more and more comfortable in her own skin, she was able to move into solidarity with the still thriving resistant Wampanoag nation of Cape Cod. I find solace and hope in this story.  (Read more here: https://utorontopress.com/blog/2021/06/17/excerpt-the-gatherings/) If you're able, take some time with this You Tube overview, too.
This Thanksgiving, I find myself resonating with Kaitlin Curtice, a Potawatomie woman who finds the grace of God revealed in the universal Christ, when she confesses:

This, the universal Christ who, in grace and love, holds all things and all people and all creatures in that grace, is what gives me hope in this world. The universal Christ, who is not a colonizer, who does not seek after profit or create empires to rule over the poor or to oppress people, is constantly asking us to see ourselves as we fit in this sacredly created world. It is what my Potawatomi ancestors saw when they prayed to Kche Mnedo, to Mamogosnan, and is what our relatives still see when they pray today, a sacred belonging that spans time and generations and is called by many names. Today, it is what I continue to see in my own faith—not a Christianity bound by a sinner’s prayer and an everyday existence ruled by gender-divided Bible studies and accountability meetings but a story of faith that’s always bigger, always more inclusive, always making room at a bigger and better table full of lavish food that has already been prepared for everyone and for every created thing.

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

befriending uncertainty: praying "I really don't know..."

NOTE: Reflection notes from Sunday, November 14 @ "Small is Holy."
While talking recently with a former colleague about the ever-changing challenge of "doing" church in the 21st century, the words "I really don't know..." kept popping up from both of us. When I went home to rake leaves that afternoon, I kept thinking that THIS has become the refrain for our moment in time: I really don’t know. It rings so true with so much of our reality!
+ You may be aware that more and more objective data is being gathered concerning the dramatic departure from all types of public worship that continues to take place 20 months into our COVID pandemic. The Barna Research Group has quantified that nearly 22% of adults who once regularly participated in the life of a faith community quit doing so in 2020. That means one in five among us has given up connecting with their spiritual community virtually, physically, or in a reopened worship context for one reason or another.

+ Something similar has been documented in the staggering social fragmentation that’s now normative in our nation. A recent report from the Pew Research Center shows that what once was a fluid middle ground in our politics – the union of the ambivalent Right, the stressed-out side liners, and the non-ideological Left who combined make up 37% of the electorate – is now so disillusioned that they no longer vote let alone search for common ground.

+ And I can’t help but hear the words, “I really don’t know” in the confusion we experience try-ing to navigate the still unchartered waters of COVID some 20+ months into this mess; in the grief-filled divisions exposed at the UN Climate Change Conference in Glasgow where young and old citizens clash in their commitments and the gulf between developing and developed nation states on our one shared home seems greater than ever.

Even Jesus seems to be saying: “Hmmmm… I really don’t know either!” in the appointed gospel text for today where some in the early Jesus movement are leaving the Temple. In what Bible scholars now call the last extended discourse before the Cross, Jesus tells his friends that the change and healing they’re hoping for is coming – it is built into God’s grace – but nobody, including himself, knows when it will occur. Chapter 13 of St. Mark’s gospel, known as the Little Apocalypse, proclaims: The exact day and hour? No one knows that, not even heaven’s angels, nor even the Son. Only the Father. So, keep a sharp look-out, for we don’t know the timetable… and stay at your post and keep watching.

+ These days I want summarize this saying: I don’t really know. I don’t really know what’s taking place except wars and rumors of wars. I don’t really know when things will get sorted out. I have no idea how to fix the mess we’re in. And almost all the advice from the experts of our tradition is, at best, ambiguous. So, for the time being let’s say: I really don’t know.

+ Chapter 13 opens with this uncertainty, too: as Christ’s entourage departs the Temple, one of the disciples comments on the grand masonry work. “Master, LOOK at these stones – these buildings – aren’t they incredible?” To which Jesus replies: So now you’re impressed by grandiosity? There is not a stone in the whole works that is not going to end up in a heap of rubble.”

That puts an end to the conversation momentarily, but later Peter, James, and John pull Jesus aside while resting on the Mount of Olives and ask: Can you tell us when this collapse is going to take place? We want to know how and when it will happen so we can prepare? To which Jesus says: Watch out for doomsday deceivers who pretend to know God’s plan but are either confused or liars; it’s going to get worse here before it gets better. Eugene Peterson renders this verse in The Message as: Life will go from bad to worse, dog-eat-dog, with everyone at your throat because you carry my name. So, remember that you’ve been placed here as sentinels to truth. But more than that? I really don’t know.

This lack of a coherent action plan is why I interpret the Messiah confessions as: I
really don’t know. And his apparent comfort with this paradox can be unsettling because most of us prefer clarity to ambiguity. Certainty and order rather than the messy darkness of a compost heap that mixes both death and life into the renewal of Mother Earth. But Christ’s confusion is a reminder to me that I’m not in charge – nor are any of us – and that’s what apocalyptic literature strives to let us know. It is NOT about end of the world prophesies as popular culture would have us believe. Not at all. The term apocalypse is a compound Greek word joining apo – meaning un – with kalepsis – to cover – creating a word about a disclosure or revelation of great import that requires careful discernment. In this case, it’s a revelation about the loving but paradoxical and hidden nature of God’s presence in our lives especially in times of tumult.

Apocalypse asks us to make peace with paradox so that we can chill-out while saying: I really don’t know. It encourages us to slow down to watch, wait, and listen, cultivating a little more tenderness – and a little less judgment – towards ourselves and others. Try some more silence instead of sound it slyly whispers. Perhaps that’s why this poem by Andrea Potos felt like an epiphany.

When beginning the poem may there be a listening rather than a making
curiosity over expectation, lightness and ease,
no straining toward some glut of air.
May you step aside like a watcher at the meadow’s edge
as the doe finds her way to the center.


When I started to craft today’s reflection, it quickly became overly academic, wordy, and ponderous. I knew it was a limp biscuit right away but didn’t know how to fix it – and that’s when I stumbled upon her poem. It invited me to watch, wait, and trust that the doe shall find her way to the center of the meadow because the timing is hers and totally beyond my comprehension. Through the lens of this poem, I started to hear that Christ’s uncertainty was not just a mystery, but also an invitation to live each day with more curiosity than expectation. In this, the words, I really don’t know, become a mantra, a prayer, and even a spiritual practice because If Jesus didn’t know… well, that’s good enough for me.

Some of you know that I volunteer as part of the community of L’Arche Ottawa: a gathering of women and men with and without intellectual and physical disabilities. If these past 20+ months of COVID have been hard for you and me – and they have – imagine what the various lock-downs, social distancing, and medical costumes like masking, hospital gowns, and all the rest have meant to the core members – those with various disabilities – or the young people who have been locked down in community 24/7 as assistants. Sometimes it’s been agonizing. Exhausting and depressing, too. And while we gather virtually every Friday to pray and sing and tell stories, Zoom and Skype are NOT the same as physical presence and intimacy. I am grateful for the technology – and love seeing my friends – but two weeks ago when I was finally able to spend a week in Ottawa now that the border has been opened my heart was full to overflowing in ways that have been buried during this ordeal.

On the five plus hour journey northward, I wondered what I might do while in community again. I wanted to help and be useful. But you know what the core members wanted more than anything else from me? They wanted me to visit with them in person, with no specific agenda except to share a simple meal, sing a few songs live and up close and personal, and laugh together. Nothing grandiose. Nothing dramatic. Just the simple gift of being together. And I was able to make that happen in four of the six homes where we sang – and laughed – and prayed – and even wept a little bit as well. Being present without a plan spontaneously became holy ground and I felt the presence of Jesus within and among us. He showed up in small and hidden ways, but real nonetheless.

Terry, who is normally gregarious by nature, has long been frustrated by having to stay at home in various modes of solitude for nearly two years, so he reveled in the chance to do his Johnny Cash impressions with me and play some air guitar. Cecile danced and sang with delight when we sang “Felice Navidad.” Mark kept a killer backbeat with both hands and feet when I played Roy Orbison’s “Pretty Woman.” And silent Eric smiled serenely and encouraged me to play a few of his favorite gentle songs. It was holy ground – I left each home feeling fortified and blessed – mostly because I waited and listened and trusted my heart that said: I don’t really know what to do right now so just show up. On the way home it was clear that my visits didn’t bring the pandemic to an end. It didn’t heal any of our political divides nor ease the mess in the environment. It was, in fact, a very small blessing – but a blessing nonetheless– that gave us all a little more strength to do it one more time, one day at a time.

When I got home from Ottawa a FB memory reminded me that last Christmas Eve I shared a homily on Zoom with the community while we were still struggling to get our heads around sheltering in place and what the solitude it enforced might mean for us. I said in part:

As I join you all in praying, wishing, hoping, social distancing, masking,
and hand-washing that this dark time of disease will be over soon, I am aware that in ways that are mysterious and far greater than my understanding, the contagion is showing me just how much we are like the vul-nerable Christ Child born this night in the city of David as our Savior. What I mean is that God came into the world for us as a baby – a small, helpless child born into a cold night to humble parents who were trying to make sense of life in a nation occupied by a cruel and demanding invading army – and this wasn’t an accident. For this infant to thrive, it was essential that some-one held and caressed him, loved and clothed him, changed his messy diapers, sang to him, fed and nurtured him because he couldn’t do it himself. The smallness of the one we call Messiah was not an accident…


God is telling us a surprising truth about the blessings and responsibilities of being real. You see, the Christ Child makes clear that God is found in what is small, what is weak, what is hidden. Fr. Henri Nouwen, who spent his last years in community at L’Arche Daybreak in Toronto used to say that most of us look for the Lord in big, impressive, and loud happenings that document power. We expect God to show up in “spectacles, power plays, significant and extraordinary events” that will change the course of history in their grandiosity. We, ourselves, are often taken-in by wealth, prestige, and sparkling things that glitter and shine. We can be so easily distracted. Perhaps that is why God chose to come to us as a small child of Palestinian peasants in an insignificant stable surrounded by animals and shepherds. This way we see that God’s kingdom is humble, simple, small, and very vulnerable. One of the gifts and surprises from Jesus is that he shows up for us in the most unlikely little places – and if we refuse to look for holy in what is small, Fr. Nouwen adds, we will likely give-in to despair.

Almost a year later it dawned on me that even back then I was hearing something of Christ’s blessing in the uncertainty of our confusion and anxiety. “I really don’t know” can be a liberating prayer – and here’s why. Do you recall what Jesus asked of his friends whenever he was confronted with uncertainty? Consistently he told them: abide with me. Stay close to me in prayer, stay connected to one another in tenderness, and trust that God is in charge so you don’t have to be. This became one of the Jesus movement’s charism after the Cross when one calamity that could not be changed followed another. Abide in me. Rest and trust in my love. Nothing grandiose. Just a humble call to hold one another in the moment and do so with love.

That’s what Jesus asked of his friends as he headed towards the Cross. That’s what St. John of Patmos wrote in the final book of the Bible that promises a new heaven and a new earth as we abide. That’s what Mary Magdalene taught the disciples in her extra-canonical gospel. And it is what I have heard from pastors in Syria during the bombing, from those who resisted the Nazis in WWII, the liberation theology Christians communities facing persecution and danger throughout Latin America, indigenous men and women confronting the genocide of our founders, coal miners and farm workers fighting to build a union, suffragettes struggling to win the vote, civil rights activists helping us all live into a more perfect union, peace-makers the world over, as well as my friends at L’Arche Ottawa: hold on to one another. Show up. Sing. Pray. Feast. Weep. Celebrate. And dance in THIS moment. Jesus said in his Sermon on the Mount: Do not worry about tomorrow for tomorrow will bring its own worries. Stay grounded in today – and that’s enough.

That’s all we can really do anyhow, right? Especially when uncertainty prevails. Jesus asks us to abide in him and hold one another in love.. St. Mary Oliver condensed Christ’s teaching like this:

you must be able to do three things to live in this world:
to love what is mortal; to hold it against your bones knowing
your own life depends on it;
and, when the time comes to let it go,
to let it go

I’m thinking that one way we could hold on and abide as we enter Advent together would be to use a study guide based on the Advent texts and some of St. Mary Oliver’s poems? Last year, we did a Celtic series, and I would love to do another with you. Let me know if you like that idea. Send me a note because there is so much to love – and so much to relinquish, too. As I was finally finishing up these words yesterday, I saw that a rabbi colleague and friend wrapped up her Sabbath reflection like this:

I wonder whether we will look back on these years as the end of something, or the end of many things. The end of when we could have stopped the global warming juggernaut, the end of the myth that "red" and "blue" America actually understand each other – or even want to try. I think about climate grief and rising authoritarianism and mistrust. And I'm so ready for Shabbat, for 25 hours of setting worries aside. All I can do is trust that when I make Havdalah – (the ritual that closes Shabbat and marks the end of our intentional separation from work and worry) – I'll be ready to pick up the work again – and that the fallen leaves in these hills will sustain growth I can't yet know.

Right now I want to trust this spirituality of uncertainty, saying simply: “I really don’t know” as a prayer. It feels real and honest. Clearly, there will always be wars and rumors of war. There’s still work to be done so that our home on Mother Earth can be healed and respected, too. And God knows chaos and darkness continues to swirl within and among us. So, as the rabbi, the earth, our hearts, the autumn leaves, and Jesus tell us: it’s time to abide – to trust that for this day and this day alone – it is sufficient.

So, take off your thirsty boots and stay for a while
Your feet are hot and wary from a dusty mile
And maybe I can make you laugh, maybe I can try
I’m just lookin’ for the evening, the morning, in your eyes.

all saints and souls day before the election...

NOTE: It's been said that St. Francis encouraged his monastic partners to preach the gospel at all times - using words only when neces...