Thursday, June 30, 2016

Second Readings



A Reflection for Independence Day                                 All Saints’ Church, Southern Shores, NC July 3, 2016                                                                      Thomas E. Wilson, Rector
Deuteronomy 10:17-21           Hebrews 11:8-16         Matthew 5:43-48        Psalm 145:1-9
Second Readings
I made an executive decision and switched the lessons that were scheduled for the 7th Sunday after Pentecost and inserted the lessons for tomorrow, Independence Day.  However, later on, I am including an excerpt from one of the original readings. The Hebrew Testament Lesson for Independence Day Celebration is from the Book of Deuteronomy. The word “Deuteronomy”, meaning “second reading of the Law”, comes from the Greek translations of the Hebrew Testaments around the 3rd Century BC when many of the Jews living outside of Judea could no longer read Hebrew and spoke mainly Greek. The Hebrew name would have been chosen from the first words of the text, “These are the Words”, in the same way Genesis was, “In the Beginning”. 

Deuteronomy was an attempt by later generations to look back at Moses and reinterpret Moses for their present time. This is a necessary task for all societies - the redefinition of the past for the present and the future. It is the task of bringing all of the unconscious things that we do and assume, both light and dark, understood and repressed, to conscious light and making a decision on how to proceed. Carl Jung reflected: “Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate.”


Documentary filmmaker Ken Burns, who has spent his whole professional life looking at our past to understand our present,  said in his commencement address to graduates at Stanford University on June 16:
Each generation rediscovers and reexamines that part of its past that gives its present new meaning, new possibility and new power. The question becomes for us now—for you especially—what will we choose as our inspiration? Which distant events and long dead figures will provide us with the greatest help, the most coherent context, and the wisdom to go forward?  

In Shakespeare’s The Tempest, there is a shipwreck and some of the waterlogged survivors gather together to reflect on why it happened, but Antonio introjects:
We all were sea-swallow'd, though some cast again,
And by that destiny to perform an act
Whereof what's past is prologue, what to come
In yours and my discharge.

Much of the Book of Deuteronomy is like a bunch of sermons on the subject of how they were to live their lives being faithful to the mosaic covenant of being God’s representatives in this world. As God cared for the poor, the widows, and orphans, so were they to care for the poor, the widows, and orphans. As God’s arc of the universe bends toward justice, they are to bend toward justice. As they had periods in their lives when they received no justice from others, so they were not to let this happen to others. As they were loved by God when they were strangers in Egypt, they were also to love the strangers living in their land. Their past was their prologue to their dreams of their future and their discharge.

The author James Michener was not a religious man, but he loved the Book of Deuteronomy and the first Chapter of the Epistle of James as a guide on how to live a good and decent life and as an outline for a just society. In his book, The Source, a character says: “If you want to understand what it is to be Jewish, re-read the Book of Deuteronomy five times in a row.”

Many of my forbears were Scotch-Irish who, out of economic deprivation, had come from lowland Scotland and Northern English border areas to settle in the Ulster plantation region of Ireland. There they met exploitation and abuse from the English absentee landowners and resentment from the native Irish, especially during the English Civil War and the Irish Confederate Wars. After decades of strife, they came to America where all the land was already settled, so they went to the frontier Appalachian region of the Alleghenies and Blue Ridge where land was cheap and they hoped they would be free from injustice. The sentiments in the Declaration of Independence appealed to them, a nation committed to Justice, care for the downcast, and welcome for the stranger. They wanted to be free and serve God in peace. Their past was their prologue to the hearing the words that came in July of 1776: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”

Over the years, some of the people unconsciously edited that call to say that, of course, “Men” meant only white, land-owning males.  Only they were equal, and everybody else less than equal. Thomas Jefferson himself who penned those words and, even though a slaveholder himself, was deeply troubled by slavery wrote: "Indeed, I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just: that his justice cannot sleep forever." As Paul, the writer of the Galatians reading for today, the 7th Sunday after Pentecost (I told you I would bring it in…) warned about this unconscious editing for one’s own agenda:
Do not be deceived; God is not mocked, for you reap whatever you sow. If you sow to your own flesh, you will reap corruption from the flesh; but if you sow to the Spirit, you will reap eternal life from the Spirit. So let us not grow weary in doing what is right, for we will reap at harvest-time, if we do not give up. So then, whenever we have an opportunity, let us work for the good of all, and especially for those of the family of faith.

That harvest time came for our country when what we had sown was reaped by that lazy, and at the time, a convenient unconscious editing. The nation had to revisit its prologue and had to bring back to the light of consciousness all of the dark and denied and, in its refusal, fought a great civil war. Lincoln in Gettysburg, reflecting on the fact that the Union victories at Vicksburg and Gettysburg were accomplished on the anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, revisited that prologue of “Four Score and seven years ago”, calling the people to revision what is to come and our discharge in order that “that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom -- and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”

Ken Burns continued in that commencement address:
You know, it is terribly fashionable these days to criticize the United States government, the institution Lincoln was trying to save, to blame it for all the ills known to humankind, and, my goodness, ladies and gentlemen, it has made more than its fair share of catastrophic mistakes. But you would be hard pressed to find—in all of human history—a greater force for good. From our Declaration of Independence to our Constitution and Bill of Rights; from Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation and the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth and Nineteenth Amendments to the Land Grant College and Homestead Acts; from the transcontinental railroad and our national parks to child labor laws, Social Security and the National Labor Relations Act; from the GI Bill and the interstate highway system to putting a man on the moon and the Affordable Care Act, the United States government has been the author of many of the best aspects of our public and personal lives. But if you tune in to politics, if you listen to the rhetoric of this election cycle, you are made painfully aware that everything is going to hell in a handbasket and the chief culprit is our evil government.

I don’t think politics is a dirty word. I am honored to have met, known, and admired people of both major parties who have offered themselves for public service, and I pray for all of our elected leaders. I pray that we will have the wisdom to know that we will reap what we sow. If we sow division and hatred to promote our own selfish agendas, that is what we will reap. If we sow justice and mercy, then that is what we will reap. I am under no illusion that my elected representatives will always agree with me, and all of us have flaws. We are very fortunate in that we have had elections in this country for the last 12 score years. While we are ill-served by sound bites, slogans, and huge outpourings of campaign moneys, elections are a flawed but necessary exercise to revisit the prologues of our past, to bring to full consciousness our dark and light, and to discharge the attaining of the dreams of our future.

Second Readings (poem)
The Voter reviews the options in election.
The Vestry retreats to ask about mission.
The Searcher retraces steps to larger home.
The Worshipper returns to give new thanks.
The Memory recasts the plots in old stories.
The Reader rereads and more understands.
The Prayer resounds all those names said.
The Thanker redoubles with deeper praise.
The Priest recalls of becoming a Parson.
The Pastor remembers the visits made.
The Husband revisits his marriage vows.
The Father relooks at daughter’s pictures.
The Neighbor relates a family connection.
The Enemy’s reassesses anew as a sibling.
They all refine again thinking second again.
Trusting refinding deeper meaning to yes,
To renewing prologues of a newer dream.



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