The Book of
Revelation is one of the hardest books of the Bible to read and digest. It’s not quite as dry as the endless
census in the aptly named book of Numbers, but the Revelation to John is long
on obscure, hallucinatory code-language, and short on clarity and logic.
It’s full of end
of the world disaster – the famous images of the apocalyptic horsemen: conquest,
war, famine, and death – and cosmic battles – but those are regularly
interrupted by visions of healing and grace, glimpses of eternal life breaking
in to the miserable end of time – like the bit we heard today.
Singing and
praise and celebration and transformation for “those who have come out of the
great ordeal.” These words – all of Revelation – were written for a community
overwhelmed with persecution and suffering – a community that knew murder and
death and pain first-hand, and frequently.
Today’s vision
reminds us that those who have experienced this ordeal live the truth that they
cannot ever be separated from the face to face presence of God, where “they
will hunger no more, and thirst no more; the sun will not strike them, nor any
scorching heat; … the Lamb … will be their shepherd, and he will guide them to
springs of the water of life, and God will wipe away every tear from their
eyes."
These are words
we turn to in the church in times of suffering – at the time of death, and in
the face of tragedy. And I’m so
glad that we hear them this week.
You see, this is
Tragedy Week.
I realized that
on Tuesday when my cousin Betsy proposed on Facebook that it might be time to skip
the third week of April altogether.
She had
reason.
18 years ago
this week, Betsy’s mother, my Aunt Kathy, died far too young.
Just two days
later that year, the Murrah Federal Building was bombed in Oklahoma City – on
April 19, timed for the anniversary of the destruction of the Branch Davidian
compound in Texas in 1993.
A few years
later, on April 20, 1999, two students opened fire at Columbine High School in
Colorado.
Six years ago,
32 students died and 17 were injured in a massacre at Virginia Tech on April
16.
And now, well,
there’s the bombs at the Boston Marathon, and all the sequels.
And an even more
deadly fertilizer plant explosion in West, Texas, that won’t get nearly the
same traction in our national memory as those intentional acts of violence.
An earthquake in
China.
And many of us
here heard the last of that news while dealing with flooded basements – more
stress than tragedy, but still…
It’s too much.
I’m more than
ready to dump this week from the calendar,
and even more
ready to live in a world where the news doesn’t make me cry.
Tragedy is
exhausting.
Personal
tragedy, like a death or diagnosis in the family, the loss of important
relationships or work.
Public tragedy,
like Boston, Oklahoma City, 9/11, Newtown, Virginia, Columbine, Tucson, Aurora….
Or under the
radar tragedy, like Alzheimers and depression, the extinction of another
species, and the hundreds of murders that never make the evening news.
We live with
tragedy, seen and unseen.
But the thing
is, we also live with God.
God, seen and
unseen, just as real, even more present.
That’s why we
still read Revelation, wading through the code,
because
suffering and tragedy inhabit our world,
yours and mine, today and every day.
And if we live
with tragedy, we need to – we have to
– live with hope.
Hope not just
for a cure, or for a change, but hope that is a bedrock trust in the truth that
God is present with us now, to guide
and guard and rejoice in us.
Today, we hear
the vision of “those who have come out of the great ordeal;” those who have
witnessed and experienced murder and oppression, tragic loss and great danger
and fear. These are those for whom
Tragedy Week doesn’t pass, on the calendar.
And they are
singing.
They are
shouting salvation and praise; singing with heart and soul and body.
It’s not denial,
it’s not relief at survival, it’s not even really about comfort, but about the
fundamental hope, the trust that we do
live in the healing presence of God, always, just as much, or even more, than
we live amid suffering and death and ordinary stress.
So they’re
singing.
Because one way
or another, our bodies have to express and respond to healing and hope, just like they respond to tragedy with
tears and exhaustion, and music is one of the best ways our bodies do praise
and joy.
That’s the other
bonus to reading Revelation this week.
I think people sing more in Revelation than any other book of the Bible.
And I’ve been
thinking about music all week because today we’re celebrating the gift of music
that we share at Calvary, declaring “Jeri Kellan Appreciation Day” as we give
thanks for twenty-five years of gifted, caring musical leadership here among us.
It’s a day to
celebrate, because there’s great truth to the holiness and healing power of
music.
Music can carry
our celebrations: as we sing for birthdays or national holidays or Alleluias
and everything in between. And music can heal: restoring joy or bringing
comfort, nurturing memory and hope, as we sing lullabies, laments, and old
favorites. And music makes community, because it needs hearers as well as
performers.
So I want us, like
the saints in the Revelation, to sing.
Will you sing
healing, this week?
You don’t have
to know one note from another or carry a tune to sing healing.
You might want
to offer well-rehearsed, beautiful, elaborate melody and harmony. And if you can, please do!
But you can also
just crank up the volume, tap your feet, drum your fingers, dance, or shout
along to your favorite tune.
Sing Beethoven,
or Beach Boys, or Lady Gaga.
However you do
it, tune your body and your voice to joy, and to hope,
because that’s
what we do in faith, even – or most importantly – when we grieve.
It’s been
Tragedy Week, again, in our public lives.
And tragedy happens
without consulting the calendar in our private lives.
But our story, here
at Calvary, our Revelation, to share with the world, in the aftermath of Boston
and all those other griefs, and in the centuries of faith;
our story is the
song of hope, and healing, and eternal life.
One we live not
in spite of tragedy and ordeals, but in the midst of them,
singing, because
nothing – nothing! – can separate us from the wholeness we find in the presence
of God, where “the Lamb … will be [our] shepherd, and he will guide [us] to
springs of the water of life, and God will wipe away every tear from [our]
eyes."