Every year, in
the middle of November, there’s a sudden eruption of chaos and doom in our
worship; and if that doesn’t sound familiar right this minute, that’s because
you didn’t think that today’s gospel reading is about you.
Wars and
insurrections, Jesus says. Nation
against nation, earthquake, famine, plague, portents, persecutions….
I’ll admit, it
doesn’t sound that much like what’s going on in Lombard this week, but there’s
never been a November that I can recall when there weren’t wars or insurrections or famines, plagues, persecutions and
devastating natural disasters in the news, even if it’s not the local news.
This year it’s
the heartbreaking devastation in the Philippines – and of course the ongoing
insurrections and “cold” wars, resurgent plagues around the world, hunger in
our own streets…
To some of us,
this might all seem far away, but the first followers of Jesus, the first
hearers and readers of Luke’s gospel would have been immediately familiar with
the devastation Jesus talks about.
Luke’s gospel first circulated shortly after the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple predicted in this
story. Early Christians knew people who’d been arrested for
their weird new faith – imprisoned, questioned, mocked, abused – and some
betrayed to that pain by family and friends. They knew what it was like to have the world crumble around
them.
Which is why it’s
important to hear Jesus’ recommendations and assurance threaded through this
devastation:
This is not the
end.
Do not over
prepare. I will direct you.
I will support
you. Your soul will survive.
That is SO important.
Because the
devastation left in the Philippines; the shock and world-bending loss of people
and homes and security and normal
really feels like the end when you’re
in the middle of it.
And those little
apocalypses do happen to us, too:
A fire destroys
your home. Your mother dies. Your spouse announces the end of your
marriage. The doctor says
“cancer.”
The world is
full of little apocalypses – those experiences of betrayal, death, destruction,
fear and loss that never make the evening news but still change everything.
Sometimes it
brings out the best – moments of grace and love and hope.
But there’s
still a space when it feels like – when it really is – the end of the world.
That’s when
Jesus’ words today are the words we need:
This is not the
end.
Do not try to do
it by yourself.
I will support
you. Your soul will survive.
It can sometimes
be hard to hear those words.
Because if we
don’t need them, they touch us lightly.
If we do need
them, it’s because they are so hard
to truly believe.
But they are gospel;
good news. And we need to practice
these truths in the times when the devastation seems far away if they will ever
matter to us when we need them most.
Last weekend, I
was at a diocesan “Thrive” meeting with Jan Bruesch, Hester Bury, and Carla
Castle. And the guest speaker at
that event invited us to learn to dance.
Not what you
might have expected at a congregational vitality seminar. But we did.
And after a few
minutes of practice at leading and following, the speaker invited half of us to
close our eyes.
Close my eyes,
and let someone else lead me through a crowded room, full of moving bodies??? (And
unexpected floor-mounted electrical outlets?!) You could feel heart rates and physical tension going up – just
a bit.
But we tried it.
And as the
exercises in leading and following got more complicated, more and more of us
found ourselves closing our eyes even when we were invited to keep them open.
When you close
your eyes, someone reported, it’s easier to follow.
You stop trying
to manage where you’re going. It’s
immensely easier to let your body do the right thing, so much easier to focus.
And when you
surrender that control, when you surrender to the lead, even walking around the
room starts to really feel like dancing.
I never expected
to be talking about surrender at a congregational vitality seminar.
I never expected
to be talking about surrender with a professor of leadership from Northwestern
University’s business school.
But there we
stood, in an empty room in the diocesan center, hands raised in the air to
speak of how helpful it had been to surrender control, to close our eyes, to
trust our bodies and ourselves to casual acquaintances.
We stood and
listened to a business professor talk about surrendering to call, to God, and
the gospel lived and spoke among us.
And that, my
friends, is how we practice for the end of the world.
You practice
focus, and surrender.
Close your eyes,
and listen again to what Jesus says about devastation today:
This is not the end.
This is not the end.
Do not try to do
it by yourself.
I will support
you. Your soul will survive.
Keep your eyes
closed, and remember what those little apocalypses are like.
A fire destroys
your home. Your spouse dies. Your parents announce the end of their
marriage. The doctor says
“cancer.”
The hurricane
comes, or the earthquake, or the plague, and the devastation is beyond anything
you’d imagined.
Listen – with
your eyes closed! – as Jesus says to you:
This is not the
end.
Do not try to do
it by yourself.
I will support
you. Your soul will survive.
It’s hard to
keep your eyes closed, isn’t it? Even sitting still in church.
But keep them
closed if you can, for just a bit longer.
This is the
tiniest leading edge of an Advent practice,
a form of
prayer,
spiritual
training camp.
Jesus calls us
to practice this focus and surrender so that we are ready to hear, and trust,
and follow when we need God most.
Try it this week. (Not when you’re driving!)
But if you have
a boring meeting, put the smartphone or the busywork down, close your eyes, and
surrender to the conversation.
If you can, close
your eyes, and let your child lead you around your house.
Turn off the TV,
the radio, the computer, the stove; sit down and take the hand of someone you
love. Close your eyes and surrender to the conversation, surrender to the
relationship, with all its complexities, joy and pain.
Block off 30
solid minutes. Turn off the
distractions, shut your eyes, and pray: offer God your plans for the afternoon,
for your career, dinner – whatever you happen
to be thinking about – and surrender those plans to God, wholeheartedly, even
if it’s only for thirty minutes.
Memorize the
simple assurance that Jesus offers today:
This is not the end.
This is not the end.
Do not try to do
it by yourself.
I will support
you. Your soul will survive.
Learn that by
heart, and close your eyes, as often as you can, to listen to those words with
your whole heart and mind and soul.
Because the
apocalypse comes.
Sometimes all
around you; sometimes far off on the evening news, sometimes in your own heart.
And Jesus
invites us to practice now for the only thing that matters then:
This is not the
end.
Do not try to do
it by yourself.
I will support
you. Your soul will survive.
No comments:
Post a Comment