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"Then,....as now...."-- Matthew 28:1-10-- 10 a.m. Easter 2014

"Then,....as now...."-- Matthew 28:1-10-- 10 a.m. Easter 2014

 

When I was growing up, there was a Clairol commercial that focused in on a lovely, vibrant woman with great hair, and "the hook" was, "Does she, or doesn’t she?"  Does she color her hair, or is that her natural hair color?  And, the answer was that, if she used Clairol products, "only her hairdresser knows for sure."

The implication was that one should only color–or dye–one’s hair discreetly.  You wouldn’t want people to know that that wasn’t your own natural, beautiful hair.  Of course, things have changed.  When our son Alex was a teen-ager, I was absolutely relieved to know that he dyed his hair, because, dear God,  if that electric blue color was his own natural color, we had a far bigger problem than adolescent self-expression!

"Does she, or doesn’t she?"  "Did he, or didn’t he?"  That’s the question that has been asked over and over on Easter Sundays throughout the centuries.  Did Jesus physically rise from the dead, or didn’t he? Or Did somebody actually steal the body?  or Was it just in the imagination of his followers, or was it just a metaphor, or did he rise in some other body?  You can spin yourself dizzy pondering those questions, and you’re welcome to do that.

But, as Fr. Richard Rohr writes, "Up to now, it has been common, with little skin off anyone’s back, to intellectually argue or religiously believe that Jesus’ physical body could really ‘resurrect.’  That was much easier than to ask whether we could really change or resurrect.  It got us off the hook–the hook of growing up, of taking the search for our True Selves seriously."  (Rohr, Immortal Diamond, p. ix) So, rather than asking, "Did he, or didn’t he?" it might be more important to ask, "Are we, or aren’t we?"  Or even, "Is he, or isn’t he?"  Is Christ still being raised today, in our world?  Have you seen Him?

Matthew says that when the Risen Christ appeared to the women, they took hold of his feet and worshipped him.  There is a bronze sculpture of a homeless Christ, created by the Canadian sculptor Timothy Schmalz.   The only U.S.statue is in Davidson, NC, in front of St. Albans Episcopal Church.  Jesus is depicted as a vagrant, "huddled under a blanket, his face and hands obscured; only the crucifixion wounds on his uncovered feet give him away." (John Burnett, NPR)   St. Albans Church is in a fairly wealthy neighborhood, and one lady actually called the police the first time she saw it while driving by–there was a man sleeping on a bench out in front of the church! Scandal! Another neighbor, who lives down the block from the church, wrote a letter to the editor, saying the statue "creeps him out."

The sculptor took a miniature version of the statue to the Vatican to see if they might be interested in having the sculpture there.  Pope Francis immediately put his hands on the knees of Jesus the Homeless, closed his eyes, and prayed.  Not surprisingly, there will be an installation of the statue on the avenue leading up to St. Peter’s Basilica.

Meanwhile, back in Davidson, the rector says that, despite those few negative reactions, "It is now common to see people come, sit on the bench, rest their hand on the bronze feet and pray."

The question isn’t "Did he or didn’t he?" but rather "Is he, or isn’t he" being raised and appearing in the midst of our world today, even, as he said, in the guise of those who live on the margins? Do we have eyes to see him here and now? Is he or isn’t he being raised in your life?  If, as Fr. Rohr contends, the Risen Christ is an icon–a charged image-- of full consciousness, the resurrection of our True Selves, then just as the Christ Risen in formerly fearful and dense disciples became a threat to the empire, so the Christ Risen in us, as our True Selves, may be a risk and threat to the world as we’ve constructed it.  "After any ‘raising up’ of our True Selves,’ [he writes] we will no longer fit into many groups [like our families or former groups of friends], even much of religious society."  (X-xi.)

Taking our own growth seriously is a threat to others who haven’t made that decision for themselves.   What do you mean, you don’t want to.... whatever–have another beer or joint, you don’t want to hang out with so and so, Are you too good for us now?  Who do you think you are? We’d rather have your old self back, not this new "True Self."  Those are Good Friday words.

"We know how to live in a Good Friday world," one writer says, "where innocent people get killed and the weak get stepped on, but to live in a world where love is victorious over hate, where hope is stronger than despair, is difficult, a challenge to conventional wisdom." (Joseph S. Harvard, Journal for Preachers, Easter 2014, p 4)    We live in a Good Friday world of inevitable climate change and loss of species.  We live in a Good Friday world of money equaling power, let alone speech, and where fewer and fewer people have most of the money and therefore most of the power.  We live in a Good Friday world where bad news is the only news.

And the news is grim every day–this senseless act of violence here, that tale of human negligence or weakness or stupidity or depravity there, this ecosystem poisoned and doomed, those children weakened with hunger and disease. Or closer to home, this ongoing struggle with addiction, a family torn apart by abuse and dysfunction, my own failures and sorrows.  We get the stuff that leads to Good Friday.

But the Good News of Easter is that Easter "is utter newness," as Walter Brueggemann says. And the really good news is that "It does not depend on us, not even on our expectation.  It is given to us....[and] Given our culture of deep and honest despair that is bereft of expectation, the news of Jesus is both urgent and credible." [Brueggemann, Journal for Preachers, Easter 2014, p. 2)

Utter newness.  It sure seems like the same old same old.  Our eyes and ears have grown dim to the really Real, so accustomed we are to the air-brushing and smoke and mirrors and spin. But Easter "does not depend on us, not even on our expectation.  It is given to us."   So we must not close our eyes and ears to the new life that even now is emerging from the most unlikely places.  Keep your heart open to the softening that God’s melody and love seek to sing in you.

Listen to the words of a woman whose broken heart has become fertile soil for new life.  Leigh Knauert endured the unspeakable tragedy of losing her husband to illness and then a brief time later her 14-year-old son Peter committed suicide.  Talk about your Good Friday.  At Peter’s memorial service, Leigh spoke of the power of her faith and her community of faith.

...I stand here today to tell you that even in the unspeakable awfulness of what has happened to Peter, death will not have the final word, not in my house and not in my family.  Horrific images and haunting questions of why will not be my focus, even if they manage to creep in sometimes.  Darkness and evil and horror and sadness and guilt and pain will not be the last thing left at the end of the day.  I will continue to tell them that they have no place in a life and in a family that has been won over by Jesus’ message of triumphant love.  That love will triumph over everything, even this.

‘Where, O Death, is your sting?’  That I can answer.  The sting of death has been and will continue to be a big part of my life experience.  However, I can also answer the question asked next to that one in I Corinthians 15: Where, O Death, is your victory?’  And my answer is, ‘Not here.’  I hope that you as my community can keep answering this question with me this way.  Death will have to find another place to settle in.  We will keep choosing life together, and we will move ahead in our faith in the One that will, one day, banish all death forever, the day when we meet Peter again face to face and see that beaming smile and know that all of this is behind us, and love has won once and for all.

[Journal of Preachers, Easter 2014, pp. 39-40]

 

You don’t get to such a place overnight.  You don’t get to such a place alone. You need a community.  You have to train your eyes and ears and heart to perceive this kind of new life emerging from the dry, painful places.  You have to practice this kind of resurrection.

So, here, in closing, are "Twelve Ways to Practice Resurrection Now," again from Fr. Richard Rohr–

1. Refuse to identify with negative, blaming, antagonistic, or fearful thoughts (you cannot stop ‘having’ them).

2. Apologize when you hurt another person or situation.

3.  Undo your mistakes by some positive action toward the offended person or situation.

4.  Do not indulge or believe your False Self–that which is concocted by your mind and society’s expectations.

5.  Choose your True Self–your radical union with God–as often as possible throughout the day.

6.  Always seek to change yourself before trying to change others.

7.  Choose as much as possible to serve rather than be served.

8.  Whenever possible, seek the common good over your mere private good.

9.  Give preference to those in pain, excluded, or disabled in any way

10.  Seek just systems and policies over mere charity.

11. Make sure your medium is the same as your message.

12.  Never doubt that it is all about love in the end.

Did he or didn’t he rise from the dead?  Is he or isn’t he still being raised in our midst, in our world, in us?  Are we or aren’t we being raised to new life right now?  It takes practice, but ultimately, thank God, it’s not up to us.  God is the Resurrecting One, appearing all around us, lying on park benches, in lives that refuse to give death the last word, in the growing number of people who know their lives are connected to the earth, in your life and in mine.  Christ is risen!  Christ is risen indeed.

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark

 
Sunday April 20th

Sunday April 20th

Sunday April 20th Holy Sunday:

Resurrection of the Lord—Easter Day:
Acts 10:34-43 or Jeremiah 31:1-6, Psalm 118:1-2, 14-24 , Colossians 3:1-4 or Acts 10:34-43, John 20:1-18 or Matthew 28:1-10 read texts

Resurrection of Our Lord—Easter Evening
Isaiah 25:6-9 Psalm 114 1 Corinthians 5:6b-8 Luke 24:13-49 read texts

or all readings
Saturday April 19th

Saturday April 19th

Saturday April 19th Holy Saturday:

Holy Saturday (other than the Vigil):
Job 14:1-14 or Lamentations 3:1-9, 19-24, Psalm 31:1-4, 15-16, 1 Peter 4:1-8, Matthew 27:57-66 or John 19:38-42 read texts

Resurrection of the Lord—Easter Vigil:
Genesis 1:1—2:4a, Psalm 136:1-9, 23-26, Genesis 7:1-5, 11-18; 8:6-18; 9:8-13, Psalm 46, Genesis 22:1-18, Psalm 16, Exodus 14:10-31; 15:20-21 , Exodus 15:1b-13, 17-18, Isaiah 55:1-11, Isaiah 12:2-6, Baruch 3:9-15, 32—4:4 or Proverbs 8:1-8, 19-21; 9:4b-6 , Psalm 19, Ezekiel 36:24-28, Psalm 42 and 43, Ezekiel 37:1-14, Psalm 143, Zephaniah 3:14-20, Psalm 98, Romans 6:3-11, Psalm 114, Matthew 28:1-10 read texts

or all readings
Kids help conserve energy by insulating electrical outlets

Kids help conserve energy by insulating electrical outlets

As part of our Lenten activities, to raise awareness and promote earth sustaining activity, the Eaarth Advocate Group sponsored an after church activity. All the (accessible) electrical outlets and switch plates were insulated. Thanks
to all who helped, especially David Durfee for organizing, Tom Steffen for supplies and our two youth representatives pictured here.
"Calling Out New Life" -- John 11:1-45 -- April 6, 2014

"Calling Out New Life" -- John 11:1-45 -- April 6, 2014

 

We’ve been working our way through John’s gospel this Lent, stopping along the way to listen in on those long conversations or stories that take place during Jesus’ journey to Jerusalem.  We’ve overheard his nighttime conversation with Nicodemus about being born anew, with all the  complexities and struggles involved with that.  We’ve stopped at a well in Samaria and witnessed that remarkable conversation between Jesus and the Samaritan woman there about water and living water and what really quenches our thirst.  We’ve witnessed a remarkable healing of a man born blind, who comes to see in a way that those who are sighted have chosen not to.  And we’ve been reminded, at each stop, of the ways that these topics and conversations and stories take place not on some abstract, "spiritual" plane, but are deeply connected with embodied life on earth–our need for water and sustenance, how we are all part of web of existence, how we see or don’t see what is around us.

So today we are nearing Jerusalem with Jesus in this Lenten journey–just two miles away, in fact, we are told; and just a week away from Jesus’ entrance into Jerusalem and the beginning of those awesome and awe-full events we remember during Holy Week.  The way forward is narrowing.  The humanity of Jesus is in full view as he confronts that most human of events–the death of a loved one.  "Grief puts us in the largest company on earth," Helen Keller said.

"Lord, he whom you love is ill," the message said.  It was that 3 a.m. phone call that we all dread.  The dividing line between before and after that we’ll remember for years afterwards.  There’s no going back to sleep after such a call.  But, "Accordingly [John tells us] though Jesus loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus, after having heard that Lazarus was ill, he stayed two days longer in the place where he was."

Wow, interesting call.  No one can blame Martha and Mary for blurting out when Jesus finally arrives, "Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died."  If only you had come.  If only you had dropped everything to come rescue us or at least be with us, to talk to the doctor, to help us make those terrible decisions.  Have you been part of a conversation like that?

"Though Jesus loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus, after having heard that Lazarus

was ill, he stayed two days longer in the place where he was."  Someone has suggested that a decoder ring would be helpful in reading John’s gospel, because he uses certain code words throughout.  Stayed is one of those code words.  "Where are you staying?" the first disciples asked him.  Stay or Abide in me, Jesus said.  Jesus was staying or abiding in God before going to Bethany, before facing that death and the death that he knew was coming after that.

There’s no Garden of Gethsemane scene in John’s gospel, no "tears like blood" falling on the ground before Jesus’ arrest, but here in this story about Lazarus’ illness and death is John’s scene or insight into the humanity of Jesus....how he was fully human and yet so open–emptied really–so that he could be fully open to God.

It takes prayer to empty yourself of survival-at-all-cost

[writes one commentator].  It takes prayer to put yourself in harm’s way for another’s sake.  It takes abiding in God even if you’re the Christ, to ready yourself to face untruth, torture, and death.  Indeed, that is perhaps what makes Christ the Christ–patiently abiding in God rather than running off at every request to save the world, every suggestion that he could and should. [Liz Goodman in Journal for Preachers, Lent 2014, p. 9]

So, Jesus needs those two days before going off to Judea, to Bethany, to abide in God if he is to glorify God through this death and in his own.  Glorify is another one of John’s code words, and unlike the other gospels who talk about Jesus’ being glorified by sitting on a throne at the right hand of God, in John Jesus is glorified when he is lifted up on the cross, utterly emptying himself to be filled with God.   Jesus tells the disciples, "Lazarus is dead.  For your sake I am glad I was not there, so that you may believe.  But let us go to him."  And Thomas, who gets such a bad rap for being "The Doubter," is the one who really sees–"Let us also go," he says to the other disciples, "that we may die with him."

The scene that awaits them in Bethany is not unlike other scenes of mourning and grief.  The community has gathered to support the sisters. Martha meets Jesus on the road and simply states, "Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.  But even now I know that God will give you whatever you ask of him."  "Your brother will rise again," Jesus assures her, and Martha recites the creed, what she knows in her head. "I know that he will rise again in the resurrection on the last day."  Jesus cups her face with his hands and says, "I am the resurrection and the life."  In this moment, I am–the name of God.  God is. Now.  Here.  Not just in the future.

Martha returns to her sister and tells her that Jesus is asking for her, so Mary too goes out to meet Jesus.  Mary lives less in her head and more in her heart than Martha, so she is weeping when she comes to Jesus, as is pretty much everyone else.  "Where have you laid him," he asks. And when they say, "Come and see"–another theme in John’s gospel– Jesus weeps.   Jesus, who lives completely in both head and heart, is overcome with compassion and begins to weep as well.  Here are his tears, for them, for Lazarus, for himself, for all of us.

The actual raising of Lazarus occupies only 2 verses of this whole long story.  Lazarus himself doesn’t speak or indicate how he feels about being raised from death.  And we can imagine, it’s not a totally positive experience.

Writer Mary Karr describes a similar experience–

If you live in the dark a long time

[maybe the dark of addiction, or grief, or anxiety] and the sun comes out, you do not cross into it whistling.  There is an initial uprush of relief at first, then–for me anyway–a profound dislocation.  My old assumptions about how the world works are buried, yet my new ones aren’t yet operational.  There’s been a death of sorts, but without a few days in hell, no resurrection is possible." [cited in Sermon Seeds, 4/6/14]

After giving thanks for God’s abiding presence, Jesus cries with a loud voice, "Lazarus, come out!"  One can only imagine what the scene was like.  Wonderful?  Horrible?  Terrifying? "Dislocating," at best, as Mary Karr says.  This is a temporary resurrection, Lazarus still needs to be unbound by the community, and he will die again.  This is a practice run for Jesus, as empty as he is, but he will empty himself even more when it comes time for him to die.

"Many of the Jews who had come with Mary [John tells us] and had seen what Jesus did, believed in him." But if we read on, we know that it was this raising of the dead that sealed Jesus’ fate.  It’s not the cleansing of the Temple here in John that is the final straw–he’s already done that in Chap. 2–but the raising of the dead.  Death is in charge of death, the Powers say, not  God, and certainly not a God who empties himself.

So, this is not really the end of the story; in many ways it’s just the beginning.  But this story of grief and death and regrets and what we do with despair and discouragement has to be part of the story if it’s to become part of our story.  "He whom you love is ill."  "I have some bad news."  "There’s been a terrible accident."  "We’ve found something on the MRI."  "The level of threat to life on this planet as we’ve known it has increased from high to extremely high."  What do we do with news like this?  The time for prevention is over. "Jesus told them plainly, ‘Lazarus is dead,’" not "just fallen asleep."

So, though he loved Lazarus and Mary and Martha, Jesus stayed where he was for 2 days.  He abided in God, he immersed himself in prayer, drenched himself in the Love and Power of God.  We dare not skip this step.  The world is full of people rushing in with "the solution" to our problems, our economy, our image, our whatever.  What the world needs is people drenched in the God of Love and Light and Life, so willing to empty themselves that God can fill them and use them to heal and unbind the world.  For we do have a part in this reclamation.  "Unbind him and let him go," Jesus said to the crowd surrounding Lazarus.  There are so many graveclothes binding us and our brothers and sisters, human and animal, plant and mineral, bindings of pollution and exploitation, of abuse and oppression, of greed and poverty, of deception and false hope.

Sometimes when we have no other hope–when we are finally brought to our knees, utterly discouraged and spent, when "we admitted we had no control over our drinking," when we confess that the situation is way beyond us–it is then that we find that "our help comes from God, who made heaven and earth."  A way appears where there was no way.  Someone offers to help or invites us to join them.  Bread is broken and we recognize the stranger in our midst. A table is set before us.  We discover we are part of something far greater than ourselves.

God is with us.  We are not alone.  Thanks be to God! And let us keep the feast. Amen.

 

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark

 
One Great Hour of Sharing

One Great Hour of Sharing

One Great Hour of Sharing is an offering that makes the love of Christ real for individuals and communities around the world who suffer the effects of disaster, conflict, or severe economic hardship, and for those who serve them through gifts of money and time. Today, projects are underway in more than 100 countries, including the United States and Canada. In the 1990s, receipts have exceeded $20 million annually. While specific allocations differ in each denomination, all use their One Great Hour of Sharing funds to make possible disaster relief, refugee assistance, development aid and more.  Second Congregational Church will take this special offering this Sunday, April 6.  Please participate if you can. 

Frequently Asked Questions:

1. What is One Great Hour of Sharing®?
One Great Hour of Sharing, as part of Our Church's Wider Mission, is the special mission offering of the United Church of Christ that carries God’s message of love and hope to people in 138 countries. The UCC works with international partners to provide sources of clean water and food, education and health care, small business micro-credit, emergency relief, and advocacy and resettlement for refugees and displaced persons. OGHS also supports domestic and international ministries for disaster preparedness and response.

2. Who participates in One Great Hour of Sharing?
Eight Christian denominations - American Baptist Church, African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), Church of the Brethren, Cumberland Presbyterian Church, Presbyterian Church (USA), Reformed Church in America, the United Church of Christ, and Church World Service work together to develop common promotional materials thereby sharing ideas, costs, and a commitment to faithful service.  Each denomination receives and manages its respective OGHS offerings, and together raise about $15 million each year.

3. How is the United Church of Christ's offering used?
Almost 60 percent of the UCC’s offering supports international development initiatives, including annual support for missionaries and U.S. based long-term volunteers serving in the areas of development, disaster, or refugee ministries.  Currently 14 Global Ministries’ missionaries and U.S. based long-term volunteers serve through OGHS-support.

4. Where and how are OGHS funds shared?
The United Church of Christ responds to development, disaster, and refugee needs in 138 countries, and provides disaster relief and immigration assistance in the United States.  Funding decisions are made by asking our worldwide mission partners, "What would you have us do with you?" The United Church of Christ responds as a member of organizations such as Church World Service and the ACT Alliance. We also support the direct mission efforts of churches and church-based organizations that the United Church of Christ and the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) have direct partnerships with through Global Ministries. Nearly one-third of the UCC's offering is shared through Church World Service to support refugee, disaster, development, and advocacy programs.

5. How many dollars are given to the UCC's OGHS offering?
In 2013, the OGHS offering received just over $2.3 million.  Nearly seventy percent of UCC congregations participate annually.  Many individuals donate on-line in addition to offerings through their local congregation.  Regularly, Second Congregational Church gives more that $2000 to the OGHS Offering.

6. What percentage of OGHS donations are used directly for mission?
On average, of every dollar given to One Great Hour of Sharing, 90 cents is used directly for mission programming; 5 cents for interpretation materials and 5 cents for administrative costs. Most administrative costs are paid by gifts to Our Church's Wider Mission National Basic Support and endowment funds.

7. How are decisions made to fund the various projects?
One Great Hour of Sharing is administered through Wider Church Ministries of the UCC national setting.  Partnership, mutual relationship, and effective local impact are criteria for OGHS use.  Partnerships include Bi-lateral relationships with churches and organizations through Global Ministries (UCC/Disciples of Christ) as well as partnership and membership with organizations exercising worldwide scope in development, disaster, and refugee expertise such as Church World Service, ACT Alliance, Foods Resource Bank, and the Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance.

8. How can I contribute to One Great Hour of Sharing?
The OGHS special mission offering is received through local UCC congregations and all UCC members are encouraged to participate in this way. Local churches will forward gifts to the conference office and all gifts will be forwarded to the United Church of Christ, 700 Prospect Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44115-1100.

www.ucc.org/oghs
sharing resources, changing lives.









 

You can   find more information at:  http://www.ucc.org/oghs/
EAARTH FRIENDLY LENTEN PRACTICES

EAARTH FRIENDLY LENTEN PRACTICES

Living Lightly on God’s Earth: A Guide to Spiritual Practices Focused on the Environment

 
During Lent, instead of fasting, let's participate in positive efforts to respond to the crisis of the earth and our part in it and to take positive steps in response.  We ask you to consider your use of carbon and other greenhouse gases and to practice ways of reducing your personal impact.

 

Each week a bulletin insert will provide resources for use in your Lenten contemplation and action.  We will provide a statement by a faith community, a scripture reading and a prayer.  There will also be some suggested actions you can take to reduce the greenhouse gases.

            Earth-friendly Ideas to try in Lent

Batch errands
Use a water bottle instead of buying bottled water
Brush your teeth without running the water the whole time
Make/use cloth napkins instead of paper ones
Skip the plastic coffee stirrer ( put sugar and cream in first)
Use your own coffee cup/travel mug
Use cruise control
Buy local
Stop your junk mail- call and be taken off the mailing list
Use vinegar and water to clean instead of harsh/toxic chemicals
Donate or recycle instead of throwing away
Carpool
Go for a walk instead of using a treadmill
Research ways to go organic in your lawn/garden
Listen to the TED radio hour Saturdays at noon on VPR
Turn off devices you are not using
Recycle batteries, bulbs, cartridges
Wash clothes and dishes in cold water
Use reusable bags for all shopping, not just groceries
Plan a "Zero Waste Day"
Plan an organic meal with the family, and trace the origins of your meal - reflect on who has enabled this food to nourish you
Buy or borrow an energy monitor, Turn down the temperature a few degrees
Purchase products from recycled or reused resources
Close doors of rooms not in use, close curtains to help retain heat, use draft dodgers
Slow down when you're driving! Lower speeds use less fuel.
Check your car's tire pressures- under inflated tires also use more fuel
Buy nothing for one day
Walk or bike to work.
Have a travel -free day.
Share lawnmowers, ladders, equipment, books, etc with others in your community
Take a walk. Enjoy the wildlife, sounds, and sights that God has created. Pick up any litter you find and recycle it if you can.
Go without meat for a day
Learn to knit and darn so you can make and repair rather than buying
Investigate and invest in some renewable energy.
Pass on what you have to others in need, rather than being possessed by your possessions.
Switch to LED bulbs
Install low-flow shower head

First Week of Lent

In this first week you are invited to be mindful about the food you eat.  We start with food because it is the usual focus of fasting and can be a strong element in a spiritual practice which encourages us to be self-disciplined and grateful.

Statement of faith from the United Church of Christ

“[United Church of Christ] recognizes the dangers of global warming and our biblical mandate as stewards of God’s creation to be diligent in our efforts to decrease the emission of greenhouse gases; affirms the greater responsibility of industrial nations and especially the United States to reduce greenhouse gas emissions; encourages local churches, Conferences and national agencies to engage in efforts to educate and advocate for ratification of the Kyoto Climate Change Treaty and to address their own lifestyles (institutional and personal) to assure the minimum production of wastes that threaten the environment.” (From “Statement on Global Climate Change,” United Church of Christ 22nd General Synod, http://www.ucc.org/environmental-ministries/

Scripture.   Genesis 1:29 God said, “See, I have given you every plant yielding seed that is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree with seed in its fruit; you shall have them for food.  30 And to every beast of the earth, and to every bird of the air, and to everything that creeps on the earth, everything that has the breath of life, I have given every green plant for food.” And it was so.

Prayer.   Gracious and merciful God, as we commit to this Lenten discipline, grant us the humility and the inspiration to move through authentic mourning for the destruction of so much of your creation. Move us to accept our obligation to restore your creation, and to act with love and care for all that you call sacred.  Let me be mindful of the abundance set before us and move to restore your sacred balance.

Actions.  These actions ask you to be mindful of food.   Our food systems offer us an abundant array of food but much of it has high carbon cost.   Consider undertaking one of the following actions for this week.

  • Eat as locally as possible.   Eating all locally grown food for one year could save the greenhouse gas equivalent of      driving 1,000 miles.   Locally grown food taste better and supports local farms.

  • Eat no or less meat.  Methane is the second most significant greenhouse gas and cows are one of the greatest methane emitters. Their grassy diet and multiple stomachs cause them to produce methane, which they exhale with every breath.

  • Buy organic foods.  Organic soils capture and store carbon dioxide at much higher levels than soils from conventional farms. If we grew all of our corn and soybeans organically,  we’d remove 580 billion pounds of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.


 

Living Lightly on God’s Earth:   Second Week of Lent


Scripture.

James 3:4.  Or look at ships: though they are so large that it takes strong winds to drive them, yet they are guided by a very small rudder wherever the will of the pilot directs. So also the tongue is a small member, yet it boasts of great exploit

John 3:8   The wind[a] blows where it chooses, and you hear the sound of it, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes. So it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit.”

Statement of Environmental Principles from the United Methodist Church.

The Social Principles of The United Methodist Church remind us that "all creation is the Lord's, and we are responsible for the ways in which we use and abuse it" (¶ 160). Development must be centered in the concept of sustainability as defined by the World Commission of Environment and Development: "to meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs." The Christian understanding of sustainability encompasses this concept. Fundamental to our call as faithful witnesses is the meeting of human needs within the capacity of ecosystems. This ensures the security of creation and a just relationship between all people. Sustainable development, therefore, looks toward a healthy future in three vital areas: the social community, the economy, and the environment.    The United Methodist Church will strive for a global sense of community to help achieve social, economic, and ecological justice for all of creation.

Prayer in the Ojibway Tradition.

Grandfather, Look at our brokenness.  We know that in all creation.  Only the human family has strayed from the Sacred Way.  We know that we are the ones who are divided.  We are the ones who must come back together to walk in the Sacred Way.   Grandfather, Sacred One, teach us love, compassion, and honor that we may heal the earth and heal each other.

 

Actions:  This week you are invited to be mindful of your use of energy in your home or your place of work.  There are three suggestions for you to consider.

  • Reduce your thermostat settings by one or two degrees.

  • Insulate your water heater.

  • Unplug charging cords for cell phones, computers, etc. since they are always drawing electricity or plug them into a power strip which you can turn off.

  • Get an energy audit of your home or work place.


 

 

The Third Week of Lent: Emphasis on Water.

 

Scripture.  John 4:4-42.  Isaiah 41: 17-18.

Statement of Faith by the Presbyterian Church (USA) Environmental Policy

God's work in creation is too wonderful, too ancient, too beautiful, too good to be desecrated.  Restoring creation is God's own work in our time, in which God comes both to judge and to restore.  The Creator-Redeemer calls faithful people to become engaged with God in keeping and healing the creation, human and non-human.  In this critical time of transition to a new era, God's new doing may be discerned as a call to earth-keeping, to justice and to community.

 

Prayer.   

 

Water of the earth: tears collected from its birthing in tumult and upheaval.   This water is precious beyond recounting.  Every droplet here is from beyond time.  Wasting it is disrespect.  Polluting it is sacrilege.  Protecting it is prayer.  Let me, who am thoughtless, be thoughtful when I dip my hands into this cherished stuff.  Let me, who am mindless, be mindful when I drink the cup of flowing water.   Let me, who am unconscious, be conscious of my choices.  Let me feel and know the primordial power that water holds and brings.  Let me grateful for this great gift.

 

Suggested Actions

  •   Be mindful of your water use when doing      simple things like washing your hands, rinsing dishes, or brushing teeth.

  • Take showers rather than baths and/or take shorter showers

  • Install a brown water system at your home.

  • Fix leaks.

  • Don’t buy single use water bottles.


 

Sunday Social.  You will find, in the bulletin, a post-it note sheet.  You are invited to write a word, or words that speak to you concerning the environment, climate change, or water.  During Sunday social post the notes on the poster in Webster Hall.  These words will be made into a word “cloud” and posted the following Sunday.

 

Week Four of Lent

Scripture:  John 9:1-41 and Job 12:7-10

From the Office of the Dalai Lama:

I believe that to meet the challenge of our times, human beings will have to develop a greater sense of universal responsibility. Each of us must learn to work not for his or her self, family or nation, but for the benefit of all mankind. Universal responsibility is the real key to human survival. It is the best foundation for world peace, the equitable use of natural resources and through concern for the future generations, the proper care of the environment.

Prayer: Gracious and merciful God, as we proceed through this Lent, grant us the humility and the inspiration to move through authentic mourning for the destruction of so much of your creation. Move us to accept our obligation to restore your creation, and to act with love and care for all that you call sacred.

Suggested Actions:

This week we are being mindful of our use of energy.  Carbon dioxide is created by burning fossil fuels to generate electricity or to drive our cars.  Anything we can do to responsibly use these resources will save carbon emissions.

  • Change incandescent light bulbs for CFLs.  The CFLs cost more but they will last longer and save      carbon emissions.

  • Walk, bike, carpool, or take the bus instead of driving

  • Use a power strip and turn off computers, televisions, etc. as you end your day.

  • Get an energy audit for your home or office.


 

Living Lightly on Gods Earth.  Lent Week Five.

 

Scripture:  John 11:1-45

 

Prayer:  God of all, instill in us the knowledge that we are called upon to tend and care for your garden.  Grant us the wisdom to cultivate it for the good of all, so that all your creatures may be fed from the bounty of your creation as we insure that even those without access may be nourished.

 

Statement by the Faith Community: Roman Catholic.

At its core, global climate change is not about economic theory or political platforms, nor about partisan advantage or interest group pressures.  It is about the future of God’s creation and the one human family.  It is about protecting both “the human environment” and the natural environment.  It is about our human stewardship of God’s creation and our responsibility to those who come after us.

 

Suggested Actions:  This week we are again emphasizing energy use.  There are so many ways to conserve energy and some of them are so simple all they require is a reminder and mindfulness.

•        Properly inflate your car tires.  Properly inflated tires can increase gas mileage by 3.3%..

•        Cover your pots when cooking.  Covering cooking pots keeps the heat in the pot and speeds the process so you are not using as much energy.

•        Wash clothes in cold water whenever possible.  As much as 85% of the energy used to machine-wash clothes goes to heating the water.

•        Use a drying rack or clothesline to save the energy otherwise used during machine drying.

Living Lightly on God’s Earth.


Lent Week Six


Scripture:  Psalm 121:1-2  Ephesians 5:7-10

 

Prayer:  Good and gracious God, we stand in awe of your power to create a magnificent world for us to enjoy during our lifetime. Help us to see it anew as the wonder that it is. Open our eyes and enlighten our minds to understand the power we hold and responsibility we have to keep it as a gift that we only borrow,  and to pass it on to generations that follow.  Send your Holy Spirit to be here as we reflect in our hearts and minds on your call to us as human beings and Christians to keep this treasure, your earth, safe from harm.

 

Statement from a faith community:  Interfaith Statement

As members of the faith community, we have a deep obligation to understand the full dimensions of this growing problem, which the scientific community has documented with overwhelming consensus in the past few decades.

Safeguarding all creation on earth is a sacred trust that is placed upon us – to love, to care for and to nurture. We accept this trust as a universal moral imperative, one that we share across all human societies, religious faiths and cultural traditions.

Given the urgency of the current situation, we solemnly pledge to:

  •   Foster a  reflective and prayerful response to the threat of global climate  change.

  • Work together as people of many religions and cultures to live sustainably on planet Earth.

  • Encourage members of our faith to develop and implement energy conservation plans and to use safe, clean, renewable energy.

  • Be an authentic witness for action on climate change and environmental justice through teaching, preaching and by letting our voices be heard in the public sphere.

  • Advocate for local,  state, national and international policies and regulations that enable a swift transition from dependence on fossil fuels to safe, clean, renewable  energy.


Actions:  This week you are asked to continue the work you having been doing during Lent and carry it into the Easter season.

 

  1. Take a walk in your neighborhood and rejoice in all the new life you see.

  2. Read a book or view a video that is informative about climate change or the environment.  There are several books in the church library that may be helpful.

  3. Continue to educate yourself on what you can do, and what others are doing, to “walk lightly o God’s Earth.”  The following internet sites are good resources to help you get started. http://earthministry.org    http://fore.research.yale.edu/climatechange/  http://www.arocha.org/


 

You are invited to write a sorrow, sin, concern, and/or comment you wish to offer to God on the purple sheet in your bulletin.  Fold or roll the sheet and place it between the rocks in the bowl at the back of the Sanctuary on your way out.

 

 
"All Kinds of Blind" -- John 9: 1-41 -- March 30, 2014

"All Kinds of Blind" -- John 9: 1-41 -- March 30, 2014

 

John’s gospel begins with a creation story–"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God and the Word was God....All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being.  What has come into being in him was life, and the life was the light of all people."

There’s no ending to this creation story in John, and no day on which God rests.  In this story of the man born blind which we heard today, God is still creating, bringing life and light to the world.  Through the Word, whom Christians believe was Jesus, God continues to create, even on the Sabbath, since God is not finished with creation.    And in a reprise of the 2nd creation story in Genesis, when "the Lord God formed adam, the earth creature, from the dust of the ground adamah," Jesus makes mud from dust and spit and forms it into ball to press onto the blind man’s eyes.  "Go and wash in the pool of Siloam," he tells him, and the man comes back a new creation, able to see.  The light has come into his darkness.  This "incomplete bit of creation was now made complete," as one commentator writes  (Liz Goodman, Journal for Preachers, Lent 2014, p. 7).

This whole story is a play of metaphor –where "seeing" is "believing," or coming to trust in Jesus– and it is full of irony.  Who really sees here?  The ones who are convinced that "sin" is involved somewhere, somehow, by someone, are the ones who, in the end, are separated from the truth, from God, which is what "sin" is in the first place–separation from God.

What do you see?  What do you choose to see?  "I came into this world for judgment, to make you decide, [Jesus said], so that those who do not see may see, and those who do see may become blind."

There’s a funny thing about seeing.  One social scientist concludes, "What we already know frames what we see, and what we see frames what we understand."  He tells the story of what happened when members of the Me’en tribe in Ethiopia were shown a coloring book that included an illustration of a local antelope.

They didn’t recognize the animal.

[he writes] They would smell the paper, twist it in their hands, feel its texture, listen to its sound, and even taste it gingerly, but they couldn’t discern any animal from its picture alone.  When anthropologists transferred the drawing to cloth, a material with which the tribe was familiar, a few of the tribespeople could make out something.  A twenty-year-old woman gazed at the outline as a scientist traced the animal with her finger, and although she could see a tail, leg, ears, and a horn, when asked what the illustration represented, she had no idea.  Scientific experiments repeatedly show that groups of educated, urbanized people pay no attention to unfamiliar objects directly in front of them if they focus too strongly on familiar ones.  What we already know frames what we see, and what we see frames what we understand.  The Industrial Revolution went unnamed for more than a century, in part because its developments did not fit conventional categories, but also because no one could define what was taking place, even though it was evident everywhere.  (P. 15)

 

"Here is an astonishing thing!" the man born blind said.  "Never since the world began (since the beginning of creation) has it been heard that anyone opened the eyes of a person born blind"– which is maybe why the Pharisees couldn’t believe that the man had been healed.  They were too locked into their carefully prescribed world, where "sin" explains illness and misfortune and where nothing new or creative happens on the Sabbath.  They couldn’t see anything else, even though all the evidence was right in front of them.  They "chose" not to see, but to give them the benefit of the doubt, maybe they honestly just couldn’t see.

There are still people who refuse to see the evidence that human beings have anything to do with climate change.  They refuse to believe what the overwhelming majority of scientists now believe, but they have their own scientists who see otherwise.  They contend that the economic impact of regulating carbon emissions or other environmental safeguards is too big a risk.  Those who are convinced that we humans are indeed the cause or at least part of the problem of climate change argue that the risk of not doing anything is far worse than economic depression.  The risks, in fact, are widespread economic, social, health, and environmental catastrophe.

Who really sees?  And what is it we are able to see?  What shapes our seeing?

In his book Blessed Unrest–How the Largest Movement in the World Came into Being and Why No One Saw It Coming, Paul Hawken documents that there are now between one and two million organizations that are working toward ecological sustainability and social justice.  They are grassroots and corporate.  They are dispersed and often fiercely independent.

This movement [if you can call it a movement] doesn’t fit the standard model...It has no manifesto or doctrine, no overriding authority to check with.  It is taking shape in schoolrooms, farms, jungles, villages, companies, deserts, fisheries, slums–and yes, even fancy New York hotels.  One of its distinctive features is that it is tentatively emerging as a global humanitarian movement arising from the bottom up.  Historically social movements have arisen primarily in response to injustice, inequities, and corruption.  Those woes still remain legion, joined by a new condition that has no precedent: the planet has a life-threatening disease, marked by massive ecological degradation and rapid climate change.  As I counted the vast number of organizations it crossed my mind that perhaps I was witnessing the growth of something organic, if not biologic.  Rather than a movement in the conventional sense, could it be an instinctive, collective response to threat?    (P. 3)

In other words, could all of these millions of organizations, which include faith-based ones like our congregation, could they all be a kind of immune system of the planet rallying to our collective defense?

In the story we read from John’s gospel this morning, the man born blind is treated by just about everyone as an object, to be held at arm’s length.  When he came back from the pool of Siloam able to see, "the neighbors and those who had seen him before as a beggar began to ask, ‘Is this not the man who used to sit and beg?’ Some were saying, ‘It is he.’ Others were saying, ‘No, but it is someone like him.’" It’s like one of those plays or movies where the recently departed person attends their own funeral and everyone talks about them in the third person.  "But I’m right here!  Can’t you see me?"

"He kept saying, ‘I am the man.’" "I’m right here!  Can’t you see me?"

Then on to the Pharisees and more questions.  What happened?  Who did this?  He must be a sinner to do this on the Sabbath.   "He is a prophet," the formerly blind man says.  Hello!  Can’t you see me?  I used to be blind–now I can see!  The parents next are questioned as to whether this is actually their son and was he actually born blind, and the parents even keep the man at arm’s length–"He is our son and he was born blind, but who and how he is now–go ask him."

So again the man tells his story, but is beginning to see more clearly in lots of ways.  "Why do you want to hear it again?" he asks the Pharisees.  "Do you also (with me?) want to become his disciples?"  The Pharisees immediately make the lines clear.  "You are his disciple, but we are disciples of Moses."   But the man, clear-sighted now, says, "Here is an astonishing thing!  You do not know where he comes from, and yet he opened my eyes.  We know [he says, putting himself in the same category as the Pharisees and other Jews]–we know that God does not listen to sinners, but he does listen to one who worships him and obeys his will.  Never since the world began has it been heard that anyone opened the eyes of a person born blind.  If this man were not from God, he could do nothing."  This is too much for the Pharisees–"They answered him, ‘You were born entirely in sins, and are you trying to teach us?’  And they drove him out..." just like John’s community had been driven out of the synagogues.

Acknowledging and claiming connection, like the once-blind man has done with the Pharisees, reveals how clear his sight has become.  It is at that point that Jesus comes and seeks him out, to complete his restoration and new creation.  "Do you believe in the Son of Humanity?"  He answered, "And who is he, sir?  Tell me, so that I may believe in him."  Jesus said to him, "you have seen him, and the one speaking with you is he."  He said, "Lord, I believe." And he worshiped him.

This Power that gave sight to the man born blind, that not only restored light to the darkness in his eyes but also let him see that he was no longer set outside the community but was in fact a part of it, this Power is still at work, still creating, in our lives and our world.  You’ve heard the expression, haven’t you?--"Be patient with me, God isn’t finished with me yet."  That is true for each of us.  God is still binding up the wounds, still healing the trauma, still bringing wisdom to our errors, still bringing us to the fullness that God intends us to be.  It is for us to be open to that transformation, let it in, pray for it to come.

And God is still at work, still bringing forth the new creation in our world.  "If you look at the science that describes what is happening on earth today," Paul Hawken writes, " and aren’t pessimistic, you don’t have the correct data.  If you meet the people in this unnamed movement and aren’t optimistic, you haven’t got a heart." (4)   The power and inspiration for this movement has its roots in ancient wisdom which is now reemerging, "what the poet Gary Snyder calls the great underground, a current of humanity that dates back to the Paleolithic.  Its lineage can be traced back to healers, [priests and] priestesses, philosophers, monks, rabbis, poets, and artists ‘who speak for the planet, for other species, for interdependence, a life that courses under and through and around empires.’" (Hawken, op cit., p. 4) And this new emergence involves what Hawken calls the intertwingling of groups, connecting, communicating, in ways only now possible by the vast web of internet communications.

If God was able to form a human being from the mud of a river bank and breathe life into it, so God is still able to gather the myriad groups and shape them into an immune system for the planet, folding in those species and individuals who have given their lives in the process, but also able to bring forth new forms yet to be created. Again, it is for us to be open to this transformation, allow ourselves to be used by God, open up the channels of prayer to invite and urge God to save us from ourselves.  Just as Jesus told the Pharisees that because they were able to see but chose not to see God’s hand at work that their sin or separation remained, so we too must not let blinders of fear or blame or self-interest blind us to the amazing, courageous, creative work that God is doing through so many people and communities to restore and recreate our planet.

When Jesus heard that they had driven the man born blind out, he sought him out.  He came to find him.  So the Holy One continues to seek us out.  "Do you believe in the Son of Humanity?"  Do you trust in the Fully Human One?  He answered, ‘And who is he, sir?  Tell me, so that I may believe in him."  Jesus said to him, "you have seen him, and the one speaking with you is he."  The One who gave you sight–not only in your eyes but in your heart–the One who loves with extravagant love, overflowing all borders and boundaries and possibilities, the One who is so full of God that you might know what God is like, you have seen him."  He said, "Lord, I believe."

May we too believe and trust in the One who is still creating heaven and earth, who is still creating you and me.  May God open our eyes, so that we may see Love’s face all around us.

Amen, and amen.

 

Rev. Mary H. Lee-Clark

 

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