Thursday, February 24, 2022

Filled With Light: Speaking to the Soul February 24, 2022



In her lovely book, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, Annie Dillard talks about how individuals who had been blinded by cataracts, some from birth, reacted to being given the ability to see when those operations to remove cataracts were first available in the late 1970s through implantation of a new lens. For people who had been sighted most of their lives, the operations were miraculous enough. But, as you can imagine, the most shocking was the effect that was visited upon people who had no real memory of sight.

The surgeons found that those blind since birth had no understanding of space and depth perception, no way to name shapes or shadows or tell the difference between them. Instead, they were dazzled by the sheer brightness of the light that now flooded their eyes—vision was more a physically overwhelming sensation rather than a fully functional one of the five senses. Some were filled with delight everywhere they looked. She tells of a girl who sees a tree in a garden and stands before it, transfixed. She takes a hold of it, and at the touch of the leaves and bark names it as a tree, but then refers to it as “The tree with the lights in it.”

Dillard herself seeks to be visually amazed in her perception of the woods and creek near her home, where she walks daily. She seeks particularly to try to untrain her mind for just a moment to see the two-dimensional yet carnival-like swirl of colors and brightness of what is before her described by those with restored vision.

She searches for her own “tree with the lights in it,” what the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins described as “kingfishers catching fire,” to see beneath the recognition of objects as objects and instead to behold the spark within all creation. Sometimes, she manages the un-knowing of the objects around her until they broke down into their constituent colors and brightness, but only fleetingly, for an instant at a time.

Finally, one day it happened when she had all but given up after years of effort:
“Then one day I was walking along Tinker Creek thinking of nothing at all and I saw the tree with the lights in it. I saw the backyard cedar where the mourning doves roost charged and transfigured, each cell buzzing with flame. I stood on the grass with the lights in it, grass that was holy fire, utterly focused and utterly dreamed. It was less like seeing than like being for the first time seen, not breathless by a powerful glance.” (Dillard, p. 35)

Dillard, in other words, was looking for the spark of the divine that is embedded in and that makes holy everything in creation. She goes from seeing a tree to seeing the essence of the life throbbing within the tree, and it creates a sensual and visual experience of the holy.

This coming Sunday, we will hear the story of Jesus’s Transfiguration in Luke’s gospel, and if you let your imagination really loose, to try to see as the disciples with Jesus saw, you can easily imagine a scene in which light and color similarly writhes and swirl as the true essence of Jesus is revealed to his companions. Perhaps it is that they too experience a seeing with their hearts that reveals the true nature of what usually The veil of our knowing perception is pulled back to reveal that which has not been seen before, and those who witness it are both charged and changed forever. What are we to learn from these stories of the revealing of God’s presence in the world, what is known as a “theophany,” or showing of God?

As we prepare to enter into Lent, too often people focus on the idea of deprivation and “giving up” treasured things that give us pleasure as a means of self-mortification. And after these last two years of pandemic, who can really look forward to more of that kind of experience? But what if we use the story of the Transfiguration on the Sunday before the start of Lent as a guide into a deeper, richer experience of the possibilities that Lent holds for our own transformation? What if, instead, we are encouraged to lean into the creative power of darkness in order to expand our perception?

We end the season after Epiphany each year with stories of transfiguration to give us the courage to allow our eyes to adjust to the seeing of who Jesus REALLY is in our lives, much like those disciples who witness his transfiguration. Too often we seem to expect a bearded man, wearing a loose linen tunic, sandals, gorgeously-tressed hair. We fail to perceive him in other guises: the frazzled mom working three jobs to help put food on the table; the teenager hungry for someone to take her under their wing and counter the story she hears at home about being ugly inside and out; the neighbor with whom we have been feuding for so long we no longer remember why; the panhandler on the corner we sneer at for having a cell phone. All of them are not just mundane, but holy. All of them are not just made of the common stuff of matter, but interiorly pulsing with the truth that they are children of God, right along with us ourselves. We only have to be open to perceiving it. We are all filled with light, the imprint of the holiness God breathed into our dust from the beginning.

The point of the stories of the Transfiguration is not to focus on how Jesus has been changed. Rather, what if we looked upon him and realize that the veil has been pulled back: Jesus reveals just a tiny bit of who he really is, and once we perceive that, it is we who have been changed. In a time when even the everyday and commonplace has too often become a struggle, we may not perceive the ways in which the Christ-light has been revealed to us, much less within us.

The season of Epiphany is about drawing back the veil and joyfully encouraging us to see God’s presence everywhere and for everyone. Jesus’s transfiguration calls us to embrace our own, so that we ourselves may perceive that that same glory and light resides within each of us. As Jesus transfigures us, he urges us to leave behind the gods of this world. “Come, follow me. Be the light you need to see within the world.”



Citation: Dillard, Annie, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, New York: Harper Perennial, 1998.



This was first published at Episcopal Cafe's Speaking to the Soul on February 24, 2022.

Image: Transfiguration, by Armando Alemdar Are.

Thursday, February 17, 2022

The Power of Grace: Speaking to the Soul, February 17, 2022



Luke 6:27-38

Love your enemies,
do good to those who hate you,
bless those who curse you,
pray for those who abuse you.
Do to others as you would have them do to you.
Forgive and you will be forgiven.
Give, and it will be given back to you.

Love. Do good. Bless. Pray. Give. Lend. Forgive.

Of those seven simple admonitions, five from our the first paragraph we will hear this Sunday alone, probably the most familiar is the one known popularly as the “Golden Rule--” the pivot or fulcrum of all the instruction Jesus gives us.

To be clear, the Golden Rule did not originate in Christianity—in fact, I don’t think anyone knows where it first appeared—but it is certain that a similar dictum has been promoted in Judaism in the book of Leviticus, but also Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, the Sikh faith, Taosim, Homer, Philo, Confucius, and even the Code of Hammurabi. That Golden Rule is so ubiquitous that it’s even been name-dropped in a song by the band Men at Work about an ornery kid named Johnny.

But there is more going on here. Jesus calls us to the higher ground: our actions should not be based on reaction to others’ worst selves, but directed from our own will and ethical outlook. When we are confronted by those behaving badly, hurtfully, we cannot control that behavior. We also cannot presume to know the burdens they are themselves carrying. Jesus also calls us to the wisdom that those misshapen by anger, fear, and contempt win when they manage to misshape us, too. We do have enormous power to choose how we would prefer to respond. And that is a far cry from being powerless. It’s the power of choosing a different path—one built on the bedrock of grace.

Jesus offers us the wisdom that we may not be able to control others, but we do have the ability to choose how to respond. That response might not be immediate: sometimes it simply started with determining to not follow in the footsteps and behaviors of the person hurting them—which is, if you look, exactly what Jesus is advocating, too. For those of us who have encountered abuse and dysfunction in our lives, this power of grace is power indeed.

Jesus is not just prescribing but exemplifying how to begin living a God-shaped life. A God-shaped life, possible for anyone. Allowing us to begin freeing ourselves from cycles of pain— haltingly, imperfectly, tottering at times like a toddler, but each step setting out on a different path. A journey that may take a lifetime, but worthy of a lifetime’s practice and care for what it gives not just to ourselves but to those around us.

Jesus calls us always to remember the filigree of grace which undergirds our own lives--- the unearned love and mercy of God toward us no matter how much we screw up. The very foundation of God’s relationship with us is not punishment, but mercy.

And if we let the wonder of that sink into our very marrow, that realization changes us. It helps us let go of our own calculus of inflicting suffering in response to suffering which is so much of the basis of human notions of “justice.” It helps us smooth out the balled fists of our hearts and open to the promise of a faithful God who overlooks our own faithlessness, of the loving God that calls us back from anger, fear, and everyday cruelties and sets us on living out a life based on compassion, empathy and love.

The power of our gospel reading today is in its promise of abundance at the very end: if we live a generous life toward others, we ourselves will find an abundance beyond measure, so much that it spills out of our cupped hands and into our laps.



This was first published at Episcopal Cafe's Speaking to the Soul, February 17, 2022.

Thursday, February 10, 2022

Being Where Jesus Is: Speaking to the Soul February 10, 2022




Sometimes we need to hear a message several times before it sinks in. Perhaps that is what was running through the minds of the group that produced the Revised Common Lectionary as they considered this Sunday’s readings. We hear the same message three times in four readings.

The message embedded in Jeremiah 17:5-10, Psalm 1, and Luke 6:17-26 is this: Those who put their trust in God are those who are blessed, or truly happy. Sounds good, yes?

Consider also the flip side, to help keep ourselves honest: Those who trust in themselves and become the center of their own attention, and thereby turn away from trusting God, will suffer woe.

Blessed are those at the margins, Jesus tells us—and he urges us, and in particular the whole Church, to make those margins our home. Those who are comfortable so often believe in their own ability to put themselves in a position of comfort. Putting trust in God and God’s promises is hard—we tend to come up with work-arounds that in the end undermine and even blunt our sense of God’s presence with us.

The Beatitudes provide another broad brush-stroke in Jesus’s instruction about the priorities of God. Even before Jesus’s birth, in Luke’s Gospel, we hear revelation after revelation about God’s love for those that society might deem “losers:” the poor, the hungry, the homeless, the outcast, the notorious sinner. First there is the Magnificat, with its proclamation that God has filled the hungry with good things, while the rich God has sent away empty. Mary’s is a raised-fist shout of defiance repeated by her son thirty-some years later. We heard it again a few weeks ago, when Jesus read from the scroll of the prophet Isaiah, “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because God has anointed me to bring good news to the poor. God has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.”

Freedom, release, contentment, jubilee. These are the gifts God gives to those who allow themselves to trust in God, rather than trust in the working of the human will.

In the gospel passage for this Sunday, notice that Jesus addresses his remarks to the disciples–not necessarily to the crowd around him, but to those who will become the Church. Jesus has just finished calling the last of the disciples and is giving them their marching orders: If you want to live a godly life, deposit your hearts and souls into the love of God, into reflecting God’s kingdom values. Jesus, who just a few weeks ago reminded us that his ministry inaugurates the in-breaking of God’s kingdom in the world, now leads us to understand God’s love of those who are marginalized.

As the self-professed heirs of the apostles, Jesus is always with us in ministry. But I want to turn that around for us as well. To be the Church, to truly live a life of faith, we also must be where Jesus is.

Where Jesus is, there we must be also, if we are to actually be disciples, and not just fans (here’s my nod to the Super Bowl). And Jesus calls us out into the deep waters and into the margins. As we seek to witness to the life and vitality of the gospel in our hearts and in our parishes, Jesus calls us, right now, today, to cast our nets our wide in sometimes deep water, and do the hardest thing of all for modern people: to reflect God’s priorities, not our own, in all we do.


This was first published at Episcopal Cafe's Speaking to the Soul, February 10, 2022.

Thursday, February 3, 2022

Morning by Morning New Mercies: Speaking to the Soul, February 3, 2022




Lamentations 3: 22-25

I’m not much of a lass for winter. I love warm, long, sunny days, walking barefoot especially on the earth, the sound of leaves rustling in the breeze, bullfrogs croaking in the pond. And I am buoyed by the fact that in 40 days, the sun will set at 7 pm. As it should be.

But here we are at winter’s midpoint, and Tuesday started out mild, but we knew what was coming—and by today there was an inch of ice followed by four or so inches of snow on the ground. And when the dogs whined at the bedroom door before dawn, we knew they were excited to get out and make some tracks, chase some unfortunate squirrels, hurling themselves headlong into the brush. Finnegan, the black Thunder Twin especially goes zipping along like one of those bouncing balls in the old movie sing-a-longs, running a couple of strides and then flying 15 feet through the air as his stockier sister Dakota struggles to keep up with a sideways lope that reminds me of a college friend’s old tan Volvo with a ruined rear differential and a bent frame—her front feet heading to the north, and her back feet slightly aligned to the north-north-east. Their older brother Kobe trots stiffly out into the deep woods to do what needs to be done and get the heck back in the house—he and I understand each other.

Standing in puffy coat, ivy cap, sweatpants and wellington boots, I realize we all probably look quite a sight were there anyone but some annoyed wildlife to see us. But once the dogs zoom temporarily around the house, the quiet slides like a curtain softly back into place. 

Dawn begins to break to the east, and I notice a large shape move into the trees above me, absolutely silently—and I see the dim silhouette of one of the three barred owls that we can often hear calling back and forth from ridge to grove to pond’s edge. The sound of the snow sizzling to the ground is actually louder than this large bird alighting delicately into the naked crown of a tree. I watch it swiveling its head for a few seconds, and then without so much as disturbing a branch it suddenly flings itself downward and and snaps open its sail-like wings with military efficiency, and disappears from view.

And at that moment, these words sing in my inner ear:

Summer and winter and springtime and harvest--
Sun, moon, and stars in their courses above
Join with all nature in manifold witness
To Thy great faithfulness, mercy and love!
Great is Thy faithfulness, Great is Thy faithfulness
Morning by morning new mercies I see!
All I have needed Thy hand hath provided
Great is Thy faithfulness, Lord, unto me.

Mercy upon grace upon faithfulness swirl with the snowflakes that dance overhead amid the pinwheel of wingtip vortices still unspooling in the air from that one snap of wings—the one reminder that the owl had ever been there. The snowflakes then slide languidly again toward the drift under the cypress tree, but the sense of peace lingers long.

It is as if the Holy Spirit hangs lovingly overhead, gazing in all directions in protection and care. All that I need in this moment is right here: peace and beauty and the mercy of a fresh snow making all things new in this moment. And I might have missed it. If I had not been here to witness it, the miracle of this brake of trees and this ghostly brown apparition sailing silently into the flickering half-light, I would not now be singing into the dawn the praises of our ever-faithful God, our portion and our hope. Let this memory be always a blessing.




This was first published at Episcopal Cafe's Speaking to the Soul on February 3, 2022.


Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Prayer 3292: For the Feast of Candlemas



(Feast of the Presentation of Jesus- Luke 2:22-40)

Most Blessed Savior,
may we praise you in the temple and in the streets,
extolling your many blessings boldly
and witnessing to your abiding loving-kindness
in all we do and say this day.

Make us strong in your wisdom, O God;
let us grow in heart and mind,
sinking deep roots
into the verdant ground of your commandments
loving You and our neighbors
as You love us.
May our own countenance
shine forth with the Light of God's Wisdom,
and with the radiance of your Incarnate Word.

At eventide, let us depart in peace,
having served you humbly, atiently, and with charity,
having looked with eyes of love upon the world,
and knowing that we have seen the Savior
in each face we have encountered.

Keep us all this good day,
and bring us to our rest in safety and assurance,
and pour out your blessing
on those for whom we pray.

Amen.