Saturday, April 30, 2022

Defeating doubt with hope

 The Doubting Thomas of Climate Change


“Unless I see a mountainside burn from west to east and smolder for a month, unless I put my finger to the ashen ground where wildflowers once bloomed and put my hand into the dry hole where a spring once gushed forth, well, even then, I will not believe!”


I wonder. Do you think Thomas was a bit of an Eeyore? Bush pilot Dave Olesen, reminiscing on a 1977 conversation with climate activist Edward Abbey, wrote, "Big soft-spoken man--he seems almost depressed...." Then a quote from him to underscore this: "I'm an optimist. Things are a lot better now than they will be."


Ed, I don’t think that word means what you think it means.


If Thomas was at all like this, no wonder he was disbelieving of what the other disciples told him. 


And if we were the kind of “optimists” Edward Abbey claimed to be, we might decide the story ends right there. 



But we are children of the living God and so children of hope. 


As it says in the book of the prophet Jeremiah, "For surely I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord, plans for your welfare and not for harm, to give you a future with hope."


Today’s Doubting Thomases close their minds to the actionable knowledge that forms the impetus for our response. And if we were the kind of “optimists” Edward Abbey claimed to be, we might decide the story ends right there. 


But the story of the Apostle Thomas does not end in desperation. It is a story of restoration. It is a story of renewal and, ultimately, it is a story of resurrection


Jesus came and stood among them and said, "Peace be with you." Then he said to Thomas, “Put your finger here and see the blackened soil. Reach out your hand and touch the ground. Feel the smoldering heat. Smell the ash. Do not doubt but believe.” Thomas answered him, “My Lord and my God!”


We are not Ed’s optimists, we are Christ’s people - and we know, even after he ceased appearing to those first followers of the gospel, his story continues. His challenge, and his promise. 


And becomes our own.


Almighty and everlasting God, you made the universe with

all its marvelous order, its atoms, worlds, and galaxies, and

the infinite complexity of living creatures: Grant that, as we

probe the mysteries of your creation, we may come to know

you more truly, and more surely fulfill our role in your

eternal purpose; in the name of Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. (BCP page 827)


Written for Climate Change Forum V as closing meditation and prayer. 4/30/22 JRL+


Published in the Arizona Daily Star, Sunday May 15, 2o22, page E3, as "Defeating doubt with hope". 


"Rev. John Leech. The Rev. John Leech is ordained in the Episcopal branch of the Jesus movement and has served as a pastor in Northern California and western Washington, and now in Southern Arizona."

Sunday, April 24, 2022

The Second Sunday of Easter

  


Looking north to the Santa Catalina Mountains during the Bighorn Fire


The Second Sunday after Easter Day

The Doubting Thomas of Climate Change


“Unless I see a mountainside burn from west to east and smolder for a month, unless I put my finger to the ashen ground where wildflowers once bloomed and put my hand into the dry hole where a spring once gushed forth, well, even then, I will not believe!”


I wonder. Do you think Thomas was a bit of an Eeyore? Bush pilot Dave Olesen, reminiscing on a 1977 conversation with climate activist Edward Abbey, wrote, "Big soft-spoken man--he seems almost depressed...." Then a quote from him to underscore this: "I'm an optimist. Things are a lot better now than they will be."


Ed, I don’t think that word means what you think it means.


If Thomas was at all like this, no wonder he was disbelieving of what the other disciples told him. 


And if we were the kind of “optimists” Edward Abbey claimed to be, we might decide the story ends right there. 


The doubting Thomas is a familiar figure from popular culture and it comes of course from this Sunday’s gospel reading of the appearance of Jesus to his disciples —except Thomas — and his disbelieving reaction to news of the resurrection until he can see and touch for himself the man he once knew as his teacher.


However. We are people of the resurrection. We know that the story continues. 


Because what happened was a lot more than what we might associate with the events of the past eight days, if we just shopped at a grocery or pharmacy, and saw lots of yellow and lavender and white decorations - and merchandise!


Colored eggs. Bunnies. Fragrant flowers. We are not celebrating the resuscitation of a corpse. Scholars say it is unlikely Jesus’ body did not decay - and yet, somehow… 


Jesus lives. 


There are more things in heaven and earth, old friend, than are dreamt of in your philosophy. 


What the disciples experienced, from the women at dawn on that first Sunday morning, through the disciples’ disbelief and amazement, to the ongoing miracle of divine presence among us, is ever a mystery - and yet.


He lives.


Nobody was there when he awoke into the resurrected life - as Stewart McDonald points out. Nobody was there at that moment. But soon, in the lightening of the dawn, Mary Magdalene and others who had gone down to the tomb found it empty. And they were not alone. There was someone standing nearby.


Kind of gives you chills doesn’t it? If you had see Jesus die on Friday, and that was not enough to frighten you, seeing him risen from the dead might scare you out of your wits.


Intrepid Mary did not panic. Although it took a while to convince the guys, who were still hunkered down against possible further police action, Peter and another disciple did go and see the tomb empty. And then things started to happen. New things.


None of us has seen the Father. Jesus returned from the grave for only a short while. Granted he packed a lot into those few days, if the Gospels are historical documents, but soon enough he ascended like Elijah and was lost to sight. And that means the way we experience God is through the Holy Spirit, the comforter and guide that Jesus sent us disciples after his final disappearance. 


So the new order of the ages begins. The story of Jesus continues, in his disciples and through the holy Spirit. Until it envelops us, and gives us a continuing mission. 


We are the disciples now. We are called to follow Jesus.


The challenge, the call, are unmistakable and unshakable. Jesus said and did things no one had ever done before. As well as performing the proper rituals on festivals and fasts of his family calendar, and saying and praying things in accordance with ancient practice, he, well he raised the dead. So they tell us. He healed people. And most outrageously of all, he proclaimed that the reign of God, the kingdom that has no end, the kingdom that makes all other kingdoms and rules and rulers and governments seem small and contingent, has come into being even as he speaks. 


Of course we know now that that challenge includes care of creation, this planet we share and inhabit. Its other animals, its plant life and bacteria, its viruses, and its own integrity, all of these are in our area of responsibility. The doubting Thomases of climate change reject the evidence of science. 


Today’s Doubting Thomases close their minds to the actionable knowledge that forms the impetus for our response. And if we were the kind of “optimists” Edward Abbey claimed to be, we might decide the story ends right there. 


But the story of the Apostle Thomas does not end in desperation. It is a story of restoration. It is a story of renewal and, ultimately, it is a story of resurrection


Jesus came and stood among them and said, "Peace be with you." Then he said to Thomas, “Put your finger here and see the blackened soil. Reach out your hand and touch the ground. Feel the smoldering heat. Smell the ash. Do not doubt but believe.” Thomas answered him, “My Lord and my God!”


We are not Ed’s optimists, we are Christ’s people - and we know, even after he ceased appearing to those first followers of the gospel, his story continues. His challenge, and his promise. 


And becomes our own.


And so we can sing, doubters and over-impetuous among us, about something more miraculous, more incredible and more life-giving,  than the resuscitation of a corpse could ever be.


Christ is risen from the dead, 

trampling down death by death 

and on those in the tombs 

bestowing life, bestowing life! 


AMEN.


Wonder, Love, and Praise #817 (Rick Fabian)

https://www.lectionarypage.net/YearC_RCL/Easter/CEaster2_RCL.html

https://sermonoats.blogspot.com/2022/04/the-doubting-thomas-of-climate-change.html

Dave Olesen, "Trespassing with Edward Abbey", Northland College Magazine, Spring 2022, 20. https://bushedpilotblog.ca/

 Katherine Willis Pershey. Living the Word. April 24, Easter 2C (Revelation 1:4-8; John 20:19-31. The Christian Century. https://www.christiancentury.org/article/living-word/april-24-easter-2c-revelation-14-8-john-2019-31 

The Second Sunday after Easter Day. The Episcopal Church of Saint Matthew, Tucson. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWI48qhKGZc5dZVf5elsRPw


JRL+


An edited, abridged version of this essay appears in the Arizona Daily Star, Sunday May 15, 2o22, page E3, as "Defeating doubt with hope".

Friday, April 22, 2022

The Doubting Thomas of Climate Change


Bighorn Fire, Santa Catalina Mountains

“Unless I see a mountainside burn from west to east and smolder for a month, unless I put my finger to the ashen ground where wildflowers once bloomed and put my hand into the dry hole where a spring once gushed forth, well, even then, I will not believe!”

Jesus came and stood among them and said, "Peace be with you." Then he said to Thomas, “Put your finger here and see the blackened soil. Reach out your hand and touch the ground. Feel the smoldering heat. Smell the ash. Do not doubt but believe.” Thomas answered him, “My Lord and my God!”

 

Friday, April 15, 2022

Good Friday

 The Stone Pavement


Are there yet tears?


Imagine then a pavement scored for gaming: counters fit in slots, die is cast; cloak is torn, garments shared out. Shouldering the cross-piece of his death, a condemned man is led, taunted, through the narrow streets of a busy marketplace. The curious stare. The indifferent turn away, or don’t bother. The guards shove the man forward. Stumbling, he drags his sandals up the stones of the street. Twists and turns. There is the city wall, and outside it his fate. And ours.


They lay him flat on a stone, the better to attach him to his engine of destruction. Up and in and down he goes, just another one of thousands, this one in full view of spectators. How long will this one live? More gaming. 


Either side of him, thieves, murderers, rapists - they hang together, good and evil. They will all die, one by one, gasping, suspended, a spectacle. And then, the bodies are checked. Thorough work. The soldiers lance his body. They’re sure, and can report.


Down later onto a slab of rock, weeping mother and friends place his violated body, so sweet and precious to them however it appears to the bystander. They prepare it - him - for the tomb, carved in the rock, donated, nearby, perhaps in a garden. 


That’s it for now.


Are there tears yet? Can they still flow? Can we join such sorrow to our own?


We cannot escape it. Shove it down, deny it, however angrily, however numb; it will out. 


And that is why we are here today at the foot of that self-same cross, wanting to touch it, the places of the nails, the binding, the torn and bleeding body. Or feel the sorrow. 


We don’t need to see it; we know it, in our own bones. We too have grieved, will grieve. 


For our world, for ourselves, for strangers and friends. For mothers and fathers, children, hope. 


And that too is why we are here. Because however hopeless and awful this scene of destruction, of humiliation, of death-dealing merchants and military men, the one they sought to kill yet lives. 


Hope there is still, and faith, though all will be taken away. Only love will be left. Only love endures. 


Loss, Grief, and Trauma 


Grief and loss begin in shock and disbelief; numbness. As reality seeps through that first pain-saving moment, various feelings emerge: emptiness, loneliness, isolation; abandonment - the feeling of being cut off:

“Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?” (My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?) Ps 22.1; fear, anxiety, desolation: worry for the future both of ourselves and of our community; anger; sadness and despair; and the physical toll of grief: exhaustion, inertia.


The friends of Jesus and those whom he loved felt these immediately and strongly at his arrest, condemnation, and death. Personal heartbreak - the loss of a son, a brother, a teacher, a friend, and the cosmic catastrophe of the crucifixion of the Christ, were coming together that Dark Day.


Massive communal and personal grief is why we cannot just fast forward past Good Friday. But how the Church has handled that grief is why we can be here today - and why the truth of Jesus endures.


The Death of Jesus


“The fact of the death of Jesus as a consequence of crucifixion is indisputable, despite hypotheses of a pseudo-death or a deception which are sometimes put forward.” (Gerd Lüdemann, What Really Happened to Jesus: A Historical Approach to the Resurrection. Louisville KY: Westminster John Knox Press. 1995. 17.)


.82 red. Jesus’ body decayed” - consensus of the Jesus Seminar, Holy Saturday 1995.


What happened - what happened after that - what came before: we cannot let go of these questions. And as when a friend tells us that the end of something familiar, something we have counted on, is at hand, we ask ourselves, not only what will happen to you, but what will happen to me. What shall I do now? 


And these questions will come back to haunt us in three days - but not yet, not yet.


Right now we ask ourselves, what does it mean that Jesus has been killed? For another proposition the Jesus Seminar strongly affirmed was this: “He was crucified under Pontius Pilate, suffered death, and was buried.”


You have heard that one before. It is in the Apostles’ Creed. And however skeptical you are - better however scientific and critical and rational and objective you hope and purport to be - this is historical fact. There was a man named Jesus. The Roman governor of Judea had him executed. He was crucified and he was buried.


We would like to squirm out of this - to say he was a myth, like Alexander or Napoleon or Shakespeare - or George Washington and Alexander Hamilton. He only exists in our minds because we need him to exist. There is no reality. There is no future. There is no hope.


But we would be liars to say so. And that is our hope even in the midst of despair.


He died. So - he lived. 


Annoying isn’t it? Would it not be easier if he were myth, even true myth, like something that rings true in a story, but we know for a fact is carrying only a truth through feeling, not reality?


But alas, we cannot honestly say that. And even skeptics can tell us, oh, yes, he lived. He said the prayer over the meal, Baruch atah Adonai, Eloheinu melech ha’olam, hamotzi lechem min ha’aretz. Blessed are you, LORD, our God, King of the Universe, who brings forth bread from the earth.. He said:  Amen. 


And he called God, the eternal and ineffable source of Being, the one beyond names, he called God “Abba” - father, the intimate and loving name a Son calls his Daddy. 


And then - as the hermeneutic of suspicion goes to work - we realize he is being treated as a historical personage - like Alexander, Shakespeare, Lincoln - and we can sort out what he really said and what he really did as we might (should we be such wet blankets) sort out the authentic and the apocryphal sayings of Lincoln, Gandhi, Churchill, Einstein, and Groucho Marx.


Jesus said the most outrageous and original things - as well as things any good Jew would - and those are so challenging and so original that we must face them or simply walk away.


These sayings have come down to us in altered form, admittedly. As the first followers faced the full impact of his teachings by body and word, they somewhat absorbed that force into their bodies, their souls, and what they transmitted to us comes through that medium.


Peter, head down, was crucified, the hymn tells us. And, John on Patmos died. They stumbled forth into the early morning, the news of the women sounding strange in their ears, to a new world, one day. One day. Soon. But not yet. Today we must face the fact. Jesus was crucified. 


His tomb was right over there. You can touch it. Or touch your forehead (as I have done) to the stone above the stone that protects the place where they think he was buried. 


But he is not there. The tomb in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher is empty. An empty box.


The church has another name. We can learn it. But not yet, not today. Jesus was crucified.


And why? What hope does that death give us?


“I came into the world for this: to bear witness to the truth” - and that fidelity cost his life.


Somehow his willingness to accept death, even the death of a criminal on the cross, became part of that witness. Nothing could stop him, not even death, from proclaiming the truth.


And part of that truth is this: Love is strong as death. Death does not have the upper hand. 


The kingdoms of death will not survive. Nor will their servants. That will all be swept away.


And what will be left standing is this: the hope beyond hope, the love beyond need, the faith beyond faithfulness, the truth that endures. Even in death.

 

JRL+

Good Friday 2022. 


Michael Fick, “Living the Word”, April 15, Good Friday (John 18:1-19:42). The Christian Century.

https://www.christiancentury.org/article/living-word/april-15-good-friday-john-181-1942


Amy-Jill Levine, “Holy Week and the hatred of the Jews: How to avoid anti-Judaism this Easter” ABC Religion and Ethics.

https://www.abc.net.au/religion/holy-week-and-the-hatred-of-the-jews/11029900


Jennifer Reddall,” Bishop’s Epistle: No Christian Seders”.

https://azdiocese.org/2022/04/bishops-e-pistle-no-christian-seders/


Kenneth R. Mitchel, Herbert Anderson, All Our Losses, All Our Griefs: Resources for Pastoral Care. Louisville KY: Westminster John Knox Press 1983.


Lessons appointed for Good Friday.

https://www.lectionarypage.net/YearABC_RCL/HolyWk/GoodFri_RCL.html

https://youtu.be/tJClsrnzJII

Sunday, April 10, 2022

finding the doorway to our homeplace

 Mary Anoints Jesus


Six days before the Passover Jesus came to Bethany, the home of Lazarus, whom he had raised from the dead. There they gave a dinner for him. Martha served, and Lazarus was one of those at the table with him. Mary took a pound of costly perfume made of pure nard, anointed Jesus' feet, and wiped them with her hair. The house was filled with the fragrance of the perfume. But Judas Iscariot, one of his disciples (the one who was about to betray him), said, "Why was this perfume not sold for three hundred denarii and the money given to the poor?" (John 12:1-6)


Why was this ointment not turned into cash?

Don't the poor deserve it?

One of the anecdotes I heard from my mother, probably passed on from her father, was of the episode in Tortilla Flat when John Steinbeck's ne'er-do-wells find something good to do with their money beside pooling it for a dollar gallon of California red.

They buy a candlestick for the altar of the church.

What did they do that for? Poor deluded souls, misguided by the authorities. They could have spent that on themselves, maybe pulled themselves up out of the pot-swilling life they were leading.

They choose instead to do something beautiful for God.

And I think, now that I have reflected on it, they put something beautiful into their own lives. For them, the sanctuary of the church was the most permanent interior they knew. And it was therefore a refuge for them, a homeplace.

One Wednesday evening when I was volunteering as a counselor at the evening shelter for the homeless, it was movie night. So the screen was set up, and a movie chosen. I noted, and remarked to one of the patrons, that the videocassette said on it, only for home use, not for public display. And he replied, this is our living room.

Jesus finds us where we are, and makes his home with us. He becomes our living room. And if we find room in our hearts, they can be the doorway to the living room, the safe place in which to dwell, that has room for all of us to share, all of us to be in our homeplace.


An edited version of this article appeared in the Arizona Daily Star feature “Keeping the Faith” under the title “Finding the doorway to Jesus” on Sunday April 10th 2022 page E3.

Thursday, April 7, 2022

The Death of Jesus

Dead Christ with Angels - Manet


“The fact of the death of Jesus as a consequence of crucifixion is indisputable, despite hypotheses of a pseudo-death or a deception which are sometimes put forward.” (Gerd Lüdemann, What Really Happened to Jesus: A Historical Approach to the Resurrection. Louisville KY: Westminster John Knox Press. 1995. 17.)


.82 red. Jesus’ body decayed” - consensus of the Jesus Seminar, Holy Saturday 1995.


What happened - what happened after that - what came before: we cannot let go of these questions. And as when a friend tells us that the end of something familiar, something we have counted on, is at hand, we ask ourselves, not only what will happen to you, but what will happen to me. What shall I do now? 


And these questions will come back to haunt us in three days - but not yet, not yet.


Right now we ask ourselves, what does it mean that Jesus has been killed? For another proposition the Jesus Seminar strongly affirmed was this: “He was crucified under Pontius Pilate, suffered death, and was buried.”


You have heard that one before. It is in the Apostles’ Creed. And however skeptical you are - better however scientific and critical and rational and objective you hope and purport to be - this is historical fact. There was a man named Jesus. The Roman governor of Judea had him executed. He was crucified and he was buried.


We would like to squirm out of this - to say he was a myth, like Alexander or Napoleon or Shakespeare - or George Washington and Alexander Hamilton. He only exists in our minds because we need him to exist. There is no reality. There is no future. There is no hope.


But we would be liars to say so. And that is our hope even in the midst of despair.


He died. So - he lived. 


Annoying isn’t it? Would it not be easier if he were myth, even true myth, like something that rings true in a story, but we know for a fact is carrying only a truth through feeling, not reality?


But alas, we cannot honestly say that. And even skeptics can tell us, oh, yes, he lived. He said the prayer over the meal, Baruch atah Adonai, Eloheinu melech ha’olam, hamotzi lechem min ha’aretz. Blessed are you, LORD, our God, King of the Universe, who brings forth bread from the earth.. He said:  Amen. 


And he called God, the eternal and ineffable source of Being, the one beyond names, he called God “Abba” - father, the intimate and loving name a Son calls his Daddy. 


And then - as the hermeneutic of suspicion goes to work - we realize he is being treated as a historical personage - like Alexander, Shakespeare, Lincoln - and we can sort out what he really said and what he really did as we might (should we be such wet blankets) sort out the authentic and the apocryphal sayings of Lincoln, Gandhi, Churchill, Einstein, and Groucho Marx.


Jesus said the most outrageous and original things - as well as things any good Jew would - and those are so challenging and so original that we must face them or simply walk away.


These sayings have come down to us in altered form, admittedly. As the first followers faced the full impact of his teachings by body and word, they somewhat absorbed that force into their bodies, their souls, and what they transmitted to us comes through that medium.


Peter, head down, was crucified, the hymn tells us. And, John on Patmos died. They stumbled forth into the early morning, the news of the women sounding strange in their ears, to a new world, one day. One day. Soon. But not yet. Today we must face the fact. Jesus was crucified. 


His tomb was right over there. You can touch it. Or touch your forehead (as I have done) to the stone above the stone that protects the place where they think he was buried. 


But he is not there. The tomb in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher is empty. An empty box.


The church has another name. We can learn it. But not yet, not today. Jesus was crucified.


And why? What hope does that death give us?


“I came into the world for this: to bear witness to the truth” - and that fidelity cost his life.


Somehow his willingness to accept death, even the death of a criminal on the cross, became part of that witness. Nothing could stop him, not even death, from proclaiming the truth.


And part of that truth is this: Love is strong as death. Death does not have the upper hand. 


The kingdoms of death will not survive. Nor will their servants. That will all be swept away.


And what will be left standing is this: the hope beyond hope, the love beyond need, the faith beyond faithfulness, the truth that endures. Even in death.



JRL+ Thursday April 7th 2022.