Sunday, January 24, 2016

reality, grief, hope series: part three...

NOTE:  Today's worship notes in part three of a series inspired by Walter Brueggemann's, Reality - Grief - Hope: Three Urgent Prophetic Tasks.

Introduction
The great and wise Jewish scholar, Abraham Joshua Heschel, counselor to Dr. King and conscience of America’s theologians in the 50s and 60s, said of the ancient Hebrew prophets: “A prophet's true greatness is his ability to hold God and humanity in a single thought.”  For these servants of God there is no business separate ethic and private morality, no double-standard of justice that gives Caucasians a pass but throws the book at everyone else, no exemption from doing our part in caring for the whole of God’s creation:  few are ever guilty, he observed, but all are responsible. To borrow a phrase from our Roman Catholic sisters and brothers the prophets celebrated a seamless ethic for life. In his life’s work, The Prophets, Heschel put it like this:

The sort of crimes and even the amount of delinquency that fill the prophets of Israel with dismay do not go beyond that which we regard as normal, as typical ingredients of social dynamics. To us a single act of injustice--cheating in business, exploitation of the poor--is slight; to the prophets, a disaster. To us injustice is injurious to the welfare of the people; to the prophets it is a death blow to existence: to us, an episode; to them, a catastrophe, a threat to the world.

So we turn again today to ponder the parallels between the prophets of ancient Israel and the problems of 21st century America.  I am increasingly convinced that if we elect to ignore what the prophets of old challenged in their day – if we consciously or capriciously opt for social amnesia in our own time – we will thoroughly banishes the Lord’s wisdom from our realm and experience consequences of catastrophic proportion.  Pope Francis wasn’t fooling when he noted the bond between our imagination, our morality and our mortality: We have continued to perfect our weapons, while our conscience has fallen asleep; we have sharpened our ideas to justify ourselves as if it were normal to continue to sow destruction, pain, death… Ours, therefore, must become an age of mercy because suffering, greed and violence are now out of control.

Insights
It is remarkable to me – and frightening – that the problems the prophets of ancient Israel confronted evoke a bewildering congruence with our own.  For nearly 500 years, they railed against the pursuit of empire because it drained resources, time, love, food and imagination away from actions that would deepen compassion and social justice.

Did you know that for the first roughly 400 years of ancient Israel’s existence public worship took place either outside or in a tent? David did not have a grand temple when he created Israel’s capital in Jerusalem:  he had a cloth pavilion. Solomon, whose name means man of peace when he was anything but, decided that a pup tent was not regal enough for a king. So, after David’s death, he levied taxes, conscripted peasants into an army, made treaties with his enemies to secure cedars from Lebanon and used forced labor to build himself a temple on Mt. Zion that would rival anything in Egypt or Babylon.

Did you know after the first Temple was constructed, the kings of Israel, not foreign invaders, expropriated land from their own Jewish peasants in order to feed the priests, musicians, soldiers and custodians of the new Temple? If you read the sociology of those times, the average person HATED the Temple and resented the increasing taxes needed to keep it afloat. And let’s not overlook their disdain for the military draft that kept fighting forces in the field for wars that Israel could no longer afford.

This is the social context of the early prophets – and the later prophets who sang from the same hymnal – sound so much like the daily New York Times it is staggering. They warned Israel’s elite that if the ruling class kept bleeding the poor and avoiding compassion, they would weaken themselves internally and compromise their security in the world.  Of course, no one listened because they were certain that they were God’s chosen – the elect and first – who would rule over the land of Israel forever.  But it didn’t work out that way, right?  In time, the rich and powerful were led off to Babylon in chains as slaves while the working folk and poor remained in the ruins of a burned out and desecrated Jerusalem.

And here is another place where Professor Walter Brueggemann is most insightful as he reminds us that even after the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem, the prophets still critiqued Israel’s addiction to empire.  The prophetic task, he writes, is to penetrate and expose the destructive ideology of the era by appealing to the reality of our lived experience, “a reality that steadfastly refuses to conform to the claims of that ideology.”  That is, prophets are to point to the pain of our lives, the fear, shame and injustice of our era and ask aloud:  are these of the Lord or are they of our own making? Most of us are stubborn and take a long time before we own our complicity in broken relations whether personal or political. We would much rather blame someone else than accept Heschel’s insight that while few are guilty, all are responsible.

That’s part of what’s going on in the gospel story for today according to St. Luke, right?  Jesus uses words from the prophet Isaiah to challenge his neighbors – and they take offense. Well, not at first… At first they love that the hometown boy is now a preacher. What’s more, he’s using the prophet’s words about God’s favor and many believed that these words applied to them:  we are the ones deserving good news; we need release from bondage and all the rest. 

But Jesus quickly moves from preaching to meddling by telling his home town crowd that they should recall that when God sent the prophet Elijah out to bring bread and healing to a people who had been caught up in famine for over three years, there were a score of widows in need in Israel, but the prophet was sent only to Zarephath, a Gentile widow in Sidon and not one of the so-called chosen ones of Israel. Same was true with the prophet Elisha, Elijah’s protégé, who was sent to heal Naaman the Syrian from leprosy but not one from the bloodline of Father Abraham. Why?  Because God loves all – not just those who think they are the chosen.  At which point the Bible says:  When they heard this all in the synagogue were filled with rage. They got up, drove him out of the town, and led him to the brow of the hill on which their town was built, so that they might hurl him off the cliff. Religious violence and blaming others for our failings has historically been an ugly fact of life whenever racial, cultural, gender or religious superiority becomes more important than the flesh and blood people in need standing or living beside us. 

It is the inevitable consequence of condescension as Amos states so clearly: 
The Lord God showed me a basket of summer fruit saying:  ‘Amos, what do you see?’ And I said, ‘A basket of summer fruit.’* Then the Lord said to me, ‘The end has come upon my people Israel; I will never again pass them by. The songs of the temple shall become wailings on that day... ‘the dead bodies shall be many, cast out in every place… so hear this, you that trample on the needy and bring to ruin the poor of the land, saying, ‘When will the new moon be over so that we may sell grain; and the Sabbath, so that we may offer wheat for sale?

Amos gives us the prophetic challenge with clarity.  He states that the ruling class in ancient Israel had become so arrogant – so certain of their superiority over everyone else including their own sisters and brothers who were poor – that they couldn’t wait for the Sabbath celebrations to be over so that they could get back to buying and selling. Addiction to the bottom line and obsession with business models is not something new – neither is the moral arrogance that allows us to look the other way while our vision and capacity for compassion are corrupted. I think of this every time any crop of politicians – but the current ones in particular – try to blame economic stagnation or domestic terrorism on President Obama. Look, he has made his share of mistakes – and they have hurt us – but it is simply a lie to say he caused the stock market to crash 8 years ago. Or that he is really a Muslim terrorist working undercover to destroy our well-being.  That is the rash and vicious talk of hatred – and it isn’t new to our generation.

+ When the prophet Jeremiah warned Israel’s king and priests that their arrogance and greed was going to come tumbling down upon them, first he was slandered and dismissed. Then, when Jeremiah showed up in the public square wearing an oxen’s yoke to symbolize the burden the Temple and the military had placed upon the working poor, they put him in jail and smashed his prop.  But when he got out, he went back to a protesting in public by pulling out the hairs of his own beard to represent the pain Israel’s leaders were inflicting upon people of the truth.

+ He was relentless – he was the Michael Moore of his day taking on GM, Flint, Michigan, the gun lobby and all the rest.  Isaiah was no less challenging in his context either – that’s what prophets do:  To us a single act of injustice--cheating in business, exploitation of the poor--is slight; to the prophets, a disaster. To us injustice is injurious to the welfare of the people; to the prophets it is a death blow to existence: to us, an episode; to them, a catastrophe, a threat to the world.

Now you would think that people of compassion would ease up after the walls of the city of Jerusalem were sacked and the Temple on Mt. Zion were burned to the ground, right? I mean, come on, you guys:  enough is enough!  But they didn’t quit – and the fundamental reason why they remained relentless is that their leaders – the politicians and the priests who formed the cream of the crop – refused to accept their new reality. They wouldn’t weep. They wouldn’t grieve. They wouldn’t become blues people who know that something happening sacred can happen when you accept reality. For generations those who lost control of their lives would only sing: 

How long, O God, how long?  Why do you cast us off forever? Why does your anger smoke against the sheep of your pasture?  Remember your congregation, which you acquired long ago, which you redeemed to be the tribe of your heritage. Remember Mount Zion, where you came to dwell…How long, O God, how long?

So like a counselor in an AA program, the prophets demanded acceptance of reality as a condition for serenity: as long as the movers and shakers of ancient Israel chose to live in the house of denial, the prophets were unrelenting. They knew that the theological and political mistakes their society proclaimed about God and country had to die.  They grasped that within their own broken-ness were the seeds of new life if first their people would grieve.  They needed to illuminate how the healing of the Lord within them would mature only through humility.  As Father Richard Rohr says:  call it falling upward, metamorphosis, conversion or transformation: some form of losses always precedes rejuvenation.

+ So first the prophet exposes the gap between a society’s promise and the real pain of ordinary people. Second the prophetic task is “to encourage, permit and engage the practice of public grief over a world that is gone – or never was.” 

+ It is to stop singing the Songs of Zion and learn to play the blues.  It is to welcome the Psalms of Lament and let them wash over us so that we express a “voiced grief… The task in death is to let go of what is finished, dead, and failed.” And this applies to all false notions of exceptionalism, chosenness and being first in politics or religion.

For about eight years, beloved of God, I have been attempting to help us learn to sing the blues.  We are no long first – except name only and some history books. That doesn’t mean we’re done with ministry or worship or serving the Lord in our generation. But it does mean we must truly put away all pretenses of our chosen-ness and get on with the work of being in solidarity with the pain of this place.  Because the third prophetic task – the blessing of the blues in my parlance or the encounter with despair in Brueggemann’s words – changes us.  We can either become more humble and joyful servants of the Lord or else we’ll turn into cranky and embittered cynics who are no earthly good to anyone.

Brueggemann writes that for “the generation who lived through and looked back on the destruction of Jerusalem, they drew very close to despair. And how could they not! The destruction of the holy city and the deportation of the king visibly negated all of the certitudes upon which they had counted.” So a season of grief work began wherein the cream of the crop had to learn to trust God more than their own intellect, wealth, social status, bloodline, or business models. The time has come to pay careful attention as a congregation and a nation. The prophets are calling us into a similar grieving time as we note our loss of status and influence, our loss of security and wealth, our loss of power and specialness.

Now let me make this very personal. Last week I spoke about how the blues washed over me during the planning and implementation of our 250th anniversary, right?  My soul knew that something had to change but I didn’t know what it was.  So, I held on and tried to keep my heart open until we left for sabbatical. And as I’ve said before:  sabbatical was grand – liberating – joy-filled and totally restful for both Dianne and me.  About halfway through that time I began to sense that maybe – just maybe – if God had called me into ministry when I was 16, then maybe God was now calling me out of ministry at age 63. After all, nearly 50 years is a long time and maybe I didn’t have the mojo needed to grow in the Lord and encourage God’s people at this point in time. So when we returned, that question was deep in my heart – and it pushed me deeper into a blue state that could have cut me to the quick.

Conclusion
But I’ve been singing the blues since the first time I heard Elvis or Leadbelly or Dylan or the Stones. And I now, even as a suburban white boy, that when you sing the blues something outside my control, something from beyond my imagination and prayers, can take place:  and over the fall I started to see small signs of hope within our shared ministry.  It began with those who regularly gathered around the table with me each Wednesday for midday Eucharist. I can’t fully name it – and I still don’t grasp its significance – but being around the Lord’s Table each week, owning our brokenness and calling out to God in prayer, being silent but tender with one another, began to give me the sense that not only was I NOT yet being called out of ministry, but that I should actually be spending MORE time nourishing what is good, pure, compassionate and kindhearted among us. 

So I started a list of where I experienced the grace, joy and hope of the Lord in this place and it includes:  being with you in Sunday worship – not so much our budget hearings – but here where we meet in humility and honesty. I jotted down that I see something of the Lord in my collaboration with Carlton every week, in the raggedy humility of our Epiphany Pageant, and the bold beauty of this year’s Missa Gaia concert. Spending time feeling and singing the blues, you see, clears our eyes about what is important.  It pushed me to get over myself, too so that I could grasp the new thing the Lord was bringing to birth among us: the little things, the simple things, the beautiful things.

You see, these blessings have nothing to do with being special or exceptional and everything to do with tender love. And this is the closing truth that the ancient prophets want us to make our own:  we cannot solve all of our problems all by ourselves.
Relying only upon our own wisdom or the paradigms of our culture is insufficient. God has promised to break into our imaginations and history if we are free and humble enough to pay attention. I like the way Eugene Peterson reworks the opening of the Sermon on the Mount:  Blessed are you when you’re at the end of your rope. With less of you there is more of God and his rule. And blessed are you when you feel you’ve lost what is most dear to you. Only then can you be embraced by the One most dear to you.”

When life was at its most grim – when the elite of ancient Israel knew they no longer controlled their own destiny and could no longer count on their old answers to get them out of their despair – when they had fully entered into the grief work essential for trusting the Lord and really started to sing the blues: then the prophets were inspired by God to sing a new song unto the Lord that celebrated the return of God’s grace. “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me to preach good news to the poor, release to the captive and recovery of sight to the blind.”

“Their utterances, of course, contradicted the evident facts on the ground, contradicted what the listeners in exile expected to hear, and contradicted even what the prophets intended to say out loud.” Because, you see, what was articulated was an alternative to despair given from above – elsewhere – beyond human control and imagination. This was the hopeful imagination that is always born of the Holy Spirit rather than human striving. Brueggemann has written:   “the goodness of God’s world transcends one’s limited and vulnerable attempts to understand life… primarily because God’s truth lies beyond the horizons of our historically situated understanding … Faith renews a commitment to transcend understanding… and leads us to a third way between resignation and denial.”

From out of the blues comes an emptiness that God is waiting to fill from beyond all our limitations.  And that is exactly what the prophet Isaiah proclaimed to his broken and fractured people:  Youth may faint and fall by the wayside, but those who wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength, they shall mount up with wings as the eagle, they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not be faint:  teach me, Lord, teach me, Lord to wait.  And that is what I sense God is teaching us right now, beloved, to wait. To not rush into every situation thinking it is a problem to be solved; but rather to wait and feel what is really happening – even grief and sorrow – because in God’s time a new blessing will be born greater than anything we can imagine.

That is why I’ve chosen this as a symbol for this week: the pottery chalice and paten first given to me by my family at my ordination.  If you look closely you’ll see that the chalice has been shattered – and then repaired. A deacon in our church in Cleveland accidentally dropped it one Sunday – but chose not to tell me and threw it away in the trash. Sounds almost like a Hebrew parable of sin, yes?

Well, thanks be to God my secretary found it later that week and was horrified.  Without my knowledge, she reassembled it with epoxy – lovingly fitting the broken pieces back together – and making whole what had been destroyed and then cast away. With tears in her eyes, Maryanne gave it back to me saying:  I know this will never be whole again, but maybe it can still hold something of God’s love for us and nourish us in our brokenness.

That’s what keeps me doing this with you!  Not the budget hearings and annual meetings, not the denial or trying to throw our brokenness away in the trash or toss Jesus over the cliff:  just the unexpected and undeserved grace that breaks into our wounds and makes us whole. In our busyness God waits to bring us rest. In our fear God waits to give us peace. And in our emptiness God waits to fill us full. 

After 40 chapters of lament, blues, acerbic challenge and oracles against denial, out of nothing created except the love of God, the prophet Isaiah is inspired to sing:  Comfort, comfort O my people.  And he wraps up his song like this:

Why would you ever complain, O Jacob, or, whine, Israel, saying, God has lost track of me and doesn’t care what happens to me”? Don’t you know anything? Haven’t you been listening? God doesn’t come and go. God lasts. God is the Creator of all you can see or imagine. God doesn’t get tired out, doesn’t pause to catch his breath. And those who wait upon God get fresh a fresh start and new strength. They spread their wings and soar like eagles, they run and don’t get tired, they walk and don’t lag behind.

Teach us, Lord, teach us, Lord… to wait.



Friday, January 22, 2016

from the "there's no accounting for taste" department...

In a nation where Sarah Palin AND Donald Trump are actually popular, it should come as no big surprise that I sense the state of music appreciation in the US is at an all time low. This isn't to say that good music isn't available - truly it is - and in more accessible and diverse ways than ever before. Spotify and You Tube alone open listening options in ways that just 10 years ago were unimaginable. Add into the mix tools like Amazon and Apple Tunes and there is a virtual cornucopia of good music just waiting to be purchased.

But while the 'Net has expanded our listening possibilities, let me argue that our cultural habits have shrunken our willingness to move beyond our comfort zones. When life is stressed, overly anxious and perpetually filled with tasks to complete under a deadline, it is small wonder that: 

1) music is reduced to one among many soothing distractions; 


2) fewer and fewer people have the intellectual and emotional space to listen to new and/or challenging music;  


3) even fewer people make or take the time to encounter a live musical experience. 


Add to this the loss of public school music education as part of the core curriculum along with both the increasing segregation of sound according to race, class and politics in our land and the ubiquity of background music designed for shopping, commercials and video montages in the middle of a dramatic TV/movie, and you have a dumbed down musical culture.

Am I a music snob?  Of course - and proud of it!  Did I come of age when FM radio exposed me to Ravi Shankar, Frank Zappa, Pearls Before Swine, the Doors alongside of the Byrds, the Beatles, the Stones and Joni Mitchell? Hell yes!  Was I introduced to "Danse Macabre" and "Scheherazade" in fourth grade? Bet your ass I was - and won the music appreciation prize that year, too.Was there show music, American folk songs and "Sing-along-with- Mitch" available in my house? Count on it! We even had 78 RPM recordings of the Moscow Men's Chorus singing "The Internationale" along with Johnny Cash, Herb Alpert and Tchaikovsky. Every month when I was small, I would go to the grocery store with my father and we would pick out a new classical album from the $1 rack. But back in the day, at least in our bourgeois world, these things did not qualify us as part of the cognoscenti, just well rounded ,middle class kids.

It was expected and encouraged that we learn to play an instrument - and read music - as children. In first grade we played "tonettes" and then recorders. By second grade I was taking accordion lessons (which I quit so that I could watch Tarzan movies with my Dad on Saturday afternoons.)  In fourth grade I gave the cello a shot - my brother was on trumpet and my sister on violin - and while none of that lasted beyond a year, a foundation was built that has had lasting consequences. By the time the Beatles hit Ed Sullivan's Sunday night TV show in February 1964, my fate was sealed:  I got my first guitar for Christmas that year and there's been no turning back.  To be sure, I realized I would never be as smooth as those dudes; so, like Lil Steven in Springsteen's shop, it took the Stones to convince me that I could play raggedy rock and roll like they did - and I did, too.

So what's the point of my nostalgic rant through a by-gone era when heroes weren't zeroes and women were glad of it? Simply the slogan that Zappa used to put on the bottom of all his records:  The modern day composer REFUSES to die. These words from Edgar Varese point to the importance in culture, politics and religion of having regular access to sounds that carry us into ecstasy, songs that challenge our domesticated aesthetics, music that opens new cultural and intellectual truths as well as gentle songs of comfort and joy. I know that if I hadn't regularly heard the bold music of Bach on church organs, I never would have taken the time to listen to Messiaen. If the only thing I knew came from my favorite comfort zone radio station, I would have stuck to "Hang On Sloopy" and been apprehensive about Marvin Gaye's later works to say nothing of Funkadelic and Prince. If my first concert hadn't been Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention, I would never have given Coltrane or Monk a second chance..

I know that there is no accounting for taste - musically or otherwise - and I refuse to be a music bully (a snob, yes, but a bully? NO!) And let me be clear that I am not asking everyone to like what I like. I dig Gil-Scott Heron AND The Monkees. I can spend time mixing both Rhiannon and Oscar Peterson. And it is fun to put on some Meshell Ngegeocello followed by Laura Nyro, U2 and Arvo Paart. Unanimity, self-censorship and acquiescence is not the drill.

No my lament is over the culture of shallowness that has emerged in America over the past 40 years because it trains us to be narrow rather than wildly open to new visions and possibilities. Complex music takes time - something so many of us feel compromised to share - it also takes encouragement - and that is in short supply, too. Listen to jazz radio, or classical radio or even top 40 radio and there is NO adventure taking place. Public worship may be one of the few places left where a diverse group of people are given the permission and opportunity to hear sounds they would never have considered before - and THAT is one of the reasons I believe it is important to keep on keeping on.

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

emerging thoughts about good friday...

In an hour I will hold a conversation with some of the musician/artists in my congregation about
doing Coltrane's "A Love Supreme" - plus other music and readings - for this year's Good Friday worship. There are four, inter-related reasons for this:

+ First, I have been experimenting with reshaping Good Friday worship for 20 years. Finding ways of blending contemporary, non-church music with once well-known but now ignored sacred readings as well as Taize chant, poetry, silence, candlelight and body prayers has become a way of reinterpreting an ancient holy day into a 21st century context. It allows us to alter an outdated theology of atonement without disrespecting the ever-resent challenge of hope in the midst of human and planetary suffering. And, of equal importance, it allows our artists - including myself - a way to create new liturgy in community.

+ Second, it is the 50th anniversary of "A Love Supreme." For the past few years, we have been working with more and more jazz in worship so Coltrane's composition resonates with the arc of our work. But not just for historic reasons: Coltrane celebrated a bold theological universalism that I want to affirm and our era needs.  In an age of such xenophobia and Muslim-bashing, I want to lift up the Christian universalism of Karl Barth, Jesus, Rob Bell, Barbara Brown Taylor and Diana Butler Bass for people who might not know what these thinkers have to say about our moment in time.

+ Third, blending jazz with rock, folk, poetry and chant expands the genre-bending experiment that is at the core of Coltrane's mature work. Further, this type of aesthetic integration offers others a visceral encounter with the paradoxical unity of God's grace alongside an experience of the ancient being honored in the experimental. This is worship that is multi-sensory and works on multiple levels, too.

+ And fourth this gives us a chance to work with some of the most creative musicians in our region again as we did with "Missa Gaia." One of the signs of hope I see in our way of being the church is through these experiments in radical creativity.  We take artistic and intellectual risks.  We bring together wildly different types of artists and give them a path to create beauty and hope. In a word, this type of liturgy suggests a spiritual path for me that includes trust, practice, listening, patience, respect and risk-taking in pursuit of hope.

And that is what I sense is at the heart of Good Friday: it makes no obvious sense to remain faithful in the darkness of death and agony. But that is what Christ teaches. Good Friday is our way of celebrating the truth of the solstice - or the phases of the moon - as it liturgically affirms that "to everything there is a season: hope and despair, light and darkness, joy and sorrow." It is an experiential call to trust the rhythm of salvation God set into motion in the first word - creation - and in message of the Christ.

Sunday, January 17, 2016

reality, grief and prophetic hope - part two

NOTE:  Here are my worship notes for part two of a five part series using Walter
Brueggemann's  book, Reality  - Grief - Hope - Three Urgent Prophetic Tasks, as our guide. This week I talk about embracing the blues - grief and lament - as a way to accept reality. It is how our hearts and lives get ready for humility - and then the unexpected blessings of hope.

Introduction
When I came back from Montreal to serve God in this community with you, I knew something had to change – I just didn’t know what. I sensed that a long smoldering fuse was starting to ignite within me and possibly among us, too but I wasn’t sure how it would manifest itself. You see, back at our 250th anniversary, I came down with a case of the blues that I couldn’t wrap my head around. I understand now that this is what Walter Brueggemann calls the obligatory season of prophetic grieving - a necessary inward lament that, in God’s own time, can work as a catalyst to propel usoutward into the world with renewed tenderness – but for a while I was flummoxed – and blue.

The prophets of ancient Israel, however, understood that to everything there is a season:  a time for conscientious contemplation, a time for engagement with the world; a time to laugh and a time to cry – a season for the blues that shows us how to join our neighbors as allies in songs of hope, and a moment in history when we forsake once and for all our obsession with privilege and being… first. Exceptional. Chosen. The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. proclaimed the wisdom of the prophets to his generation like this:

It really boils down to this:  all life is interrelated. We are all caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied together into a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly. So we are made to live together because of the interrelated structure of reality . . . Before you finish eating breakfast in the morning, you’ve depended on more than half the world. This is the way our universe is structured; this is its interrelated quality. And we aren’t going to have peace on Earth until we recognize the basic fact of the interrelated structure of all reality.

But it was only upon returning from sabbatical that I began to comprehend what this network of mutuality might mean for me and you at this moment in time. Only now, in retrospect, do I know why we invited mission partners to be with us at our festival of faith rather than just those who would repeat the same old stories about our same old past. Only now do I grasp why we had to sing contemporary songs of peace and commonality at our feast alongside the memory bank hymns of spiritual glory. Only after our shared sabbatical did I comprehend why it was imperative to ask our old friends at Second Congregational Church not simply to join us for the party, but to accept our sincere and heart-felt repentance in a public confession of our sin of racism.  It seems that part of God’s mysterious plan for our liberation required a season of the blues so that we’re prepared to let go and let God.

Clearly that celebration two years ago initiated a season of prophetic grief in me that took a few years to comprehend.  It takes time to hear God’s call into such a complex sorrow. The prophet Isaiah tells us the blues is what it feels like when we “wait upon the Lord” for we’re not in control. Jeremiah cuts deeper and says that only a minority ever willingly follows this sacred invitation to introspection – most of the rest of us have to be dragged kicking and screaming beyond the confines of fear or nostalgia. And all of the prophets affirm that only a remnant will ever grasp the radically apocalyptic hope the Holy Spirit seeks to bring to birth from out of our blues. 

And I know this to be true because on the morning after our sestercentennial party, when those of us who still read newspapers opened them up and saw NOTHING about our beloved 250th anniversary, we felt hurt, angry and frustrated.  I felt it – and so did many of you – because you told me multiple times: “Damn it, we’re FIRST Church and we deserve better than to be ignored." Back when First Church celebrated our 100th anniversary, not only were the town reporters present, but we literally stopped traffic in the center town as all the other church leaders paraded behind us in their religious regalia as we  marched into our Sanctuary to celebrate our special place in this small community. But today, only a handful of people even know we exist.

What’s more, religion itself has fallen on hard times in the Commonwealth: there are more citizens who mistrust and hate religion than attend worship. In our realm more people self-identify as spiritual but not religious than any of the other major faith traditions in America. This shift has created financial worries and problems to say nothing of a loss of status and perspective.  It has inverted our understanding of Christ’s mission of compassion and justice in our neighbors and driven good souls to worship the idol of fear rather than the Lord who created heaven and earth ex nihilo.  Sociology of Religion professor, Jaco Hamman, writes in his penetrating analysis, When Steeples Cry, that since 1971: “the United Methodist Church has lost more than 3.3 million members. The Presbyterian Church has lost more than 2.3 million members… The Episcopal Church has lost more than 1.1 million members… and the United Church of Christ has been reduced by more than half.”

Most of these denominations – and local congregations – he concludes are living in denial, neither owning our losses past or present, nor grieving them. “And in this our grief remains unnamed and unmourned: frozen in time and place and unable to respond to God’s spirit in this generation.”
Ancient Israel faced a similar addiction to denial when it, too experienced devastation and loss.  And one of the fundamental reasons why we keep consulting our ancient texts is because they describe how people like you and me tend to react to the challenges of real life. Not much has really changed, beloved, in 3,000 years. So the prophets keep talking to us about God’s alternative vision. From their tears, poetry and creative oracles we are shown not only how to grieve in a holy and healing way, but what such grief evokes in our broken hearts: namely, the blues lead us into humility, solidarity with the suffering and a radical trust in God is in charge. The prophet Hosea neither minced words in his day nor suffered fools gladly when he sang these blues:

O people of God, hear that the Lord has a controversy with the inhabitants of the land. There is no longer faithfulness or kindness among us – and no knowledge of God’s way in our nation. There is only swearing, lying, killing, stealing and committing adultery, breaking all bounds so that murder follows murder. Is it any wonder that the land itself mourns… and also the beasts of the field, the birds of the air and the fish of the sea?

Now I don’t know about you, but this sounds all too contemporary to me:  global warming, social dysfunction, profound public mistrust of politicians and institutions to say nothing of anger and fear and a willful ignorance of God’s alternative to the chaos and tragedy.  So, in part two of my Sunday series exploring what the ancient prophets of Israel have to say about our renewal, I want to first highlight what the prophets teach about denial; and second show us how they urge us to use the arts to break through our lies.

Insights
So let’s get grounded in the prophetic methodology of a hopeful imagination right out of the gate by doing what Hosea and Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Mary and Isaiah did on a regular basis: let’s sing a NEW song unto the Lord. This opens us up to the Spirit in fresh ways and refreshes our minds for the complex work required a prophetic imagination.  Listen – and join in if you feel inspired – to the old lament of Psalm 137 made new:

By the waters, the waters of Babylon
We lay down and wept, and wept for Thee Zion
We remember, we remember, we remember Thee Zion

This Psalm is a double-whammy:  part one is a heart-breaking blues with universal implications, while part two is the only recorded curse allowed to remain in the Hebrew Bible. It was written while the elite of Jerusalem were being held captive in Babylon after 587 BCE. In what we know as contemporary Iran, those who had burned down the sacred Jewish Temple on Mt. Zion taunted their captives saying:  sing to us now your once triumphant songs of Zion. And to be clear: besides being provocative and mean-spirited, this call for the Songs of Zion refers to a specific set of Psalms once offered to God in the Temple concerning the invincibility of Israel’s king and the eternal dominance of Israel’s God over all creation.

+  These were worship Psalms amplifying the so-called exceptionalism of the nation, celebrating the chosen and honoring the uniquely beloved status of ancient Israel; in other words, they were tools of the reigning ideology of that generation. The proclaimed what the politicians wanted the people to believe. So when the Temple was sacked, it became politically, theologically and psychologically earth-shattering for those who had learned to think of themselves as God’s chosen but now found themselves shamed into singing songs to their captors.  It was as degrading as the Jewish musicians forced to form orchestras for the Nazis during the Holocaust.

+  Small wonder the Psalm concludes with tears of rage and bravado. Israel’s elite hand not yet learned the wisdom of the blues so they focused their venomous invectives against their conquerors in the cruelest way: O Lord, remember against the Edomites that day of Jerusalem when they shouted:  Raze it, raze it to its foundations! O daughters of Babylon, you devastator: happy shall be those who requite you for what you have done to us. Blessed shall be those who take your little ones and dash them against the rock!

Robert Alter, Professor of Hebrew and Comparative Literature at UC-Berkley, has written: “No moral justification can be offered for this notorious conclusion.” For this is the repulsive song of a privileged religious class expressing their embittered despair. Rather than take stock and wait upon the Lord they gave in to the acid feelings that enmeshed them in anger. This is the shadow side of exceptionality exposed, the dangerous and demonic side of denial dragged into the light. It is the polar opposite of what God’s prophets commend to those who are suffering – and this is where Professor Brueggemann can really help us by refocusing our energies upon the love of God and God’s alternative vision for creation.

In the book – Reality, Grief and Hope: Three Urgent Prophetic Tasks for Our Time
Brueggemann shows us how the ruling elite of ancient Israel had worked hand-in-glove with the king and his priests to maintain social inequality and confuse the ceremonies of the Temple with life-changing spiritual integrity and compassion. Not unlike aspects of our own economic inequalities, in the era before Babylon scaled the walls of Jerusalem and burned the Temple to the ground, Jews were burdened beyond their ability to pay by some of the Temple taxes and worked beyond their capacity to sustain loving lives because more and more of their wealth was being taken from their rural farms and delivered to the markets of the city. If you read the prophets critically you find a story of people becoming weary, emotionally exhausted and spiritual dissatisfied because their leaders insisted on teaching them that the economic exploita-tion they knew all too well was the ordained order of reality:  your lot of suffering is really God’s peace. To which Brueggemann replies: au contraire!

He suggests that the first prophetic task is to puncture the people’s grief with a vision of God’s shalom that breaks through the denial and lies. Such reality talk, however, requires creativity and poetry because so many have been lulled into acquiesce.  Until our hearts are awakened, you see, we rarely question the double-speak of our culture’s euphemisms that distort reality by never calling things by their true names. A street poet who goes by the name of Rev. Billy says that our hearts:

Can’t believe that bombs bring security or that monopoly is the same thing as democracy, that foreign policy is ruled by gasoline prices and that police violence is the best way to fight racism. Our hearts refuse to accept that sweatshops are the way to efficiency, that the mall is better than the neighborhood, that corporations are the same as individual human beings and that love is for sale to the highest bidder… but such is the truth of the status quo.

To which Brueggemann says the time has come to learn from the unqualified master of truth telling: the ancient prophet Jeremiah. He boldly asserts to ancient Israel and contemporary America alike that God’s shalom trumps the status quo every day of the week. Paraphrasing and mocking one of the official worship liturgies of his generation, Jeremiah tells the people:

From the least to the greatest of them, everyone is greedy for unjust gain; and from prophet to priest, everyone deals falsely. They have treated the wound of my people carelessly saying, ‘Peace, peace’, when there is no peace. They acted shamefully, they committed abomination; yet they were not ashamed, they did not know how to blush. Therefore they shall fall among those who fall;  at the time that I punish them, they shall be overthrown, says the Lord…Stand at the crossroads, and look, and ask for the ancient paths, where the good way lies; and walk in it, and find rest for your souls. But they said, ‘We will not walk in it.’ 

The key here is the promise of peace when there is no peace by those who are so shameful they don’t even know how to blush.  The prophet calls out the lies and deception of his empire so that ordinary people know they aren’t going crazy! Brueggemann puts like this: People of denial create a façade with policy. They provide the slogans and mantras (and euphemisms) that link the whole of God’s order to their false assurances that obscure their illegitimate policies… They want us to believe that all manner of things will be well because their order is what God has promised” forever. But injustice is NEVER what the Lord promises:  God’s way is NEVER about doing evil.

The way of the Lord is to set the people free – it is exodus not bondage - a light in the darkness not moral obscurity – a vision of hopeful imagination rather than stagnation, fear and exploitation. So God’s prophets always speak the truth beyond denial – and their words always start with peace:  shalom – right relations between neighbors.

Now pay attention here: while the Lord’s prophet exposes denial and lies, the prophet never speaks with overblown zeal or hyperbolic anger, for this too would be a proclamation of peace where there is no peace, right? The words of an authentic prophet are saturated with truth, hope and beauty.  And that’s another Biblical clue to take to the bank: a real prophet speaks of a shared grief in terms of solidarity with those most wounded. The cry of the Lord gives voice to the condition of the most vulnerable, forgotten and broken of our neighbors.  

And this is where Jeremiah really shines: first he tells us that prophetic grief is born in the quest for true peace; second he reminds us that God’s true prophets always grieve in solidarity rather than rant in anger and ego; and third he confesses that our greed, denial and violence towards one another breaks God’s heart.  Listen carefully to the way the prophet speaks of the Lord’s pain at the close of chapter four of Jeremiah. It is an image that should rattle and destabilize us all:

For I heard a cry as of a woman in labor, anguish as of one bringing forth her first child, the cry of daughter Zion gasping for breath, stretching out her hands, ‘Woe is me! I am fainting before killers!’ 

If you don’t already know the brilliant new theologian and writer, Lauren Winner, you need to – especially in her recent book, Wearing God. She teaches at Duke Theological Seminary and serves as an Episcopalian priest. And in what is the longest essay in this book, Winner unpacks what it means for God to be described as a woman in labor. Using both the prophecies of Jeremiah and Isaiah, she writes that for too long we have avoided hearing the word of the Lord in the sounds of an anguished woman in labor as she breathes: The first word for God’s breath, used just once in the whole Bible is pu’ah, often translated as cry out – but to groan or bellow is a better translation. I have often heard women describe the sounds they make in labor in animal terms. Mooing is the only sort of deep moaning noise that made my whole body feel good (some say.) Deep guttural, almost animal-noises came from within me… Noises I soon had no control over” say others.

Winner goes on to note that this word pu’ah has Aramaic and Arabic cognates: the Arabic means to hiss, which sounds like some of the breathing exercises women use during natural child birth; while the Aramaic root means to bleat or to bellow.  Other Biblical words used “stress that God’s breath is not at ease; it is, indeed, labored. God gasps – nasham – God pants – sha’aph – because the bringing forth of new life does not come without effort and cost on God’s part.” 

Please take this into your heart as well as your head – into your guts and into your brain – because this beautiful albeit unsettling truth announces that:  God comes to us, identifies with us and brings to “birth a new creation among us, through bellowing and painting and laboring. God, like a woman in travail, does not fight the pain (of life) bur rather works from within that pain” to set us free.

So, the prophets plead with us to understand:  if we deny this pain – if we self-medicate or obfuscate the ubiquity of human suffering – if we lie and pretend that there is peace where there is no peace – then we shut ourselves off from the sacred blessings God is working so hard to bring to birth within and among us. The prophets show us that the way of the Lord – redemption, faith, hope and love – is not easy – even for God.

Winner concludes: while “it makes me uncomfortable to think of God groaning in pain, God bleeding, God’s body uncontrollably shaking, God exhausted” there are signs of such anguish all around us if we have eyes to see and ears to hear – includ-ing the Cross upon which our Savior has been tortured to death..

And this brings me to the closing insight about prophetic grief: if we refuse to see the reality of God’s suffering in the agony we create by greed, guilt, fear and shame the Lord will inspire prophets to find new ways to get our attention. Like a woman in travail, God does not quit. Nor is God silent. And one of the time-tested ways God uses to wake up a sleeping, confused people is through the arts.

All of the ancient Jewish prophets were poets who learned that sometimes the suffering in the house of denial is so oblique and hazardous, that you have to sneak up on it with beauty and song and tenderness before the people can start to hear. You have to lure them towards the Lord as the Process Theologians put it. And if you think I’m making this stuff up, dig chapter nine of Jeremiah, where the prophet organizes a chorus of women keeners who are commissioned to sing the blues so ferociously that tyrants start to quake: Hear, O women, the word of the Lord, and let your ears receive the word of his mouth; teach your daughters a dirge and each to her neighbor a lament. For death has come up into our windows and entered our palaces…

Jeremiah, you see, was one of the first in a long ling of Jewish blues artists who made a point of teaching the daughters of Jerusalem dirges to wail. They needed to sing the blues rather than the songs of Zion because the blues link grief and reality with hope and love.  The late B.B. King said: The blues began out of feeling misused, mistreated, feeling like you had nobody to turn to… and the funny thing is once you start to play or sing the blues, you start to feel better. The lies we tell ourselves are exposed, denial challenged and a humble sense of a love greater than ourselves starts to take hold of our soul.

Conclusion
To me the prophets are the essence of blues masters – and I am more and more certain that
America as well as First Church needs to spend some time singing the blues at this point in our histories.. We need to let go of all the stuff that gets in the way of trusting God’s greater love.  We need to let ourselves be surprised by the Lord.  So let me tell you something that will blow your mind on this weekend dedicated to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Do you know who Coretta Scott King, Dr. King’s widow, once named as one the most important early white ally of the Civil Rights movement?  Are you ready? Elvis Presley. “Out of Tupelo, Mississippi, out of Memphis, Tennessee, came this green, sharkskin-suited girl chaser, wearing eye shadow — a trucker driver, dandy white boy who must have risked his hide to act so black and dress so gay.” In an interview with Bono of the rock band U2, Mrs. King spoke of the cultural apartheid rock & roll was up against back in the 50s…. The hill we had to climb would have been much steeper were it not for the racial inroads black music was making on white pop culture. The Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Creedence Clearwater Revival were all introduced to the blues through Elvis. For he was already doing what the civil-rights movement was demanding: breaking down barriers. And while you don't often think of Elvis as political, that is politics: changing the way people see the world.”

Mrs. King got it – Dr. King got it, too. Bono got it, Jeremiah got it, Isaiah got, Jesus got it and after a long season of prophetic grief, I think I got a little bit of it too. And now I want to try giving some of it to you so that we get out of our own way and let the love of God lead us forward through the blues. And there are two things I want to ask of you today – two things that resonate with the heart and soul of Dr. King – that can keep the dream alive.  In just a moment Jon and I are going to play some white men blues for you and as we do I’ve asked the ushers to distribute an assignment to you.

+  Part One has the address of a website that I’d like you to watch sometime during MLK day.  It asks each of us to consider the difference between being a passive NON-racist and an ACTIVE anti-racist. It is short, compelling and eye opening. (Check it out @ www.youtube. com/watch?v=jm5DWa2bpb)

+  Part Two has to do with an act of moral and political conviction:  Church World Service – sponsor of the CROP Walk and other acts of mercy and hope – have asked their member congregations to place a phone call to their US Senators sometime before Wednesday and ask them NOT to vote for H.R. 4038.  It is one of those ugly, mean-spirited acts of fear with a 1984 double-speak name:  American Security against Foreign Enemies Act that would grind to a halt any US help for Syrian and Iraqi refugees.


Call your Senators TODAY!
The U.S. Senate plans to vote this Wednesday, January 20th on H.R. 4038, “The American Security against Foreign Enemies (SAFE) Act,” which would grind to a halt the resettlement of Syrian and Iraqi refugees. This bill was passed by the House of Representatives in November, so it is critical that it not pass the Senate. Such proposals and the anti-refugee sentiment that has accompanied them are morally reprehensible and go against who we are as a nation. It is critical that Senators hear from their constituents NOW. Call your Senators TODAY & EVERY DAY leading up to the vote: Urge them to vote NO to H.R. 4038 and any legislation that would stop, pause or defund the resettlement of Syrian and Iraqi refugees. 1-866-940-2439

In the spirit of Dr. King - in the spirit of Jeremiah - in the spirit of the daughters of the dirges - and the very presence of Christ: it is time for us sing the blues as we open ourselves to the truth and the heart of the Lord., So, take a look – make a prayer as we play the blues – and let God’s grace guide you on behalf of neighbors who need our loving solidarity.

personalism, nonviolence and seeking the left wing of what is possible...

One of the most complex challenges I experience doing ministry in this ever-shifting moment in history has to do with radical Christian love...