A Reflection for the First Sunday of Christmas All Saints’ Church, Southern Shores, NC
December 31, 2017 Thomas
E. Wilson, Rector
Theology
For People In A Hurry.
For my birthday, Pat gave me a book by Neil De
Grasse Tyson, Astrophysics For People In
A Hurry, which begins, “In the beginning, nearly fourteen billion years
ago, all the space and all the energy and all the matter of the known universe,
was contained in a volume less than one trillionth of the size of the period at
the end of this sentence.”
I looked at that period for a while and could not
even imagine what one trillionth would look like. Then I decided that the title
of this reflection and poem would be Theology
For People In A Hurry. This is the poem that my prayers gave me:
Theology
For People In A Hurry.
In the beginning there
was loving
searching for a way of
expression,
Verb moving makes an
impression
on the empty without
any shoving.
Implied Promise echoes
into Being
in an explosion of
energy’s matter
that the empty is
filled with scatter,
expressing love into
order freeing.
Verb fashioning planets
and stars
through the new
breathing shared
so honor of all
wouldn’t be spared
by intending sacred
life to be ours.
Verb reminding “THIS is
the pattern
of living. Now is time
for your turn.”
“In the
beginning was the Word”. So begins the
prologue to the Gospel of St. John. Before the beginning there was God, and the
Word was the beginning. God gave God’s Word as the beginning of all creation.
Then revisiting creation with the person of Jesus as an
outward and visible sign of the Word becoming flesh, God shows us what life is
like living into WORD. So what is like for us, made in the image of God, to
give our Word?
The idea of giving our word is that what we say is
not idle chatter, but each syllable is an outward and audible sound of the
spiritual nature of our very soul. The Community of the Beloved Disciple
reflected on the Jesus experience and they saw this Jesus as the outward expression
of the soul/ spirit of God, the Christ. This is the one who walks along the
dusty roads. This is the one who breathes life into those who seem to be living
dead lives. This is the one who weeps, whose heart is broken time and again,
but does not become bitter. This is the one who is betrayed time and time again
and yet forgives. This is the one who loves the enemy. This is the one who
pours out himself for the help of brothers, sisters, and strangers. The
Community said that this is what God is like and therefore this is what life is
like and how we live into giving our word, our life.
But it is hard to follow that path and, at times, we
are like Jesus in the Gospel accounts when our human natures want to say “enough
is enough, I don't want to keep facing the hard facts of living in this broken
world”. I say broken because, as in the last two lines of my sonnet, “Verb
reminding, THIS is the pattern/ of living. Now is time for your turn.”. God, Verb, Being's very self tells us how to
live, and we fall short as individuals and as societies all over the world. We
open our papers or news feeds and read how at times all seems to be falling
apart, and yet we speak the WORD of our lives.
In 1920 William Butler Yeats, reflecting on the
First World War, the Irish Rebellion, and the Russian Revolution, wrote in his
poem, The Second Coming:
Turning
and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
Sounds familiar doesn't it? The poem continues, and
Yeats leaves it open to see if he has the strength, the faith, to hope for some
sort of redemption. Yet he continues to write and in the fourth section of one
of his last poems, Under Ben Bulben, he writes urgently:
Poet and sculptor do
the work
Nor let the modish
painter shirk
What his great
forefathers did,
Bring the soul of man
to God,
Make him fill the
cradles right.
Measurement began our
might:
When
I read that, I realize that all of the words we speak are meant to bring the
soul of our fellow humans to God so that we might fill the cradles right of our
lives.
In
the Liturgical Calendar for the week after Christmas, there are two events set
as Holy Days in this week of celebration, the end of the old year and the
beginning of the new. December 27th is the remembrance of the
Martyrdom of Stephen, who was stoned because he kept giving the word about
Jesus. This is a reminder of how the
world does not like to be reminded of the availability of God's hope because
that might get in the way of the agenda of the religious establishments of this
world and of how we must continue to give our
word of hope. The second remembrance is of the Holy Innocents on December 28,
the story of the children slaughtered by King Herod in his fear that the birth
of Jesus might get in the way of the agendas of the rulers of this world and
that we must continue to give our word of hope.
As
we end this year of 2017 and begin 2018, let us give our WORD again. In this past month we have had two families
have to bury a child, and I wrote a poem reflecting on that:
Weeping
With Rachel In Ramah
Scholars tell us there was no historical
evidence
of Bible's Slaughter of Innocents
in
Bethlehem from Herod's fear,
and
it was only a myth to have
Jesus
come across as the new Moses
by Matthew's church finding solace
when
their friend died before his mother.
Burying child is obscene, a perversion
of
all we have tried to do as parents
when
we used to put them to bed
kiss
them good night, sleep tight.
All
the worry we did, all the advice
all
the cheering, the yelling,
sighing
and crying
all the mistakes,
all
the missed opportunities we wasted,
all
the hugs deferred and missed again,
all
the secrets shared and kept,
all
the birthdays still to come,
all
the joys still to be found,
all
the what-if's crowding in.
We were not able to fully protect them
from
all the threats of inattention,
disease,
broken hearts and violence.
Yet
we give thanks for all the love given
and
received to and from products of love,
hope
and grace of these precious gifts
in
this, our fleeting gifted universe
where it is no myth to join Rachel weeping in Ramah.
Theology
for people in a hurry is that God, the Verb of all, is here wherever we areas we give our word.