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Sermons at St. John's Presbyterian Church |
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| St. John’s Presbyterian Church 2727 College Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94705 Telephone 510-845-6830 Fax 510-845-6837 http://www.stjohnsberkeley.org |
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And
god saw that it was good
Walking on Water 1 Transcribed from the sermon preached March 6, 2011 The
Reverend Max Lynn, Pastor Scripture
Readings: Genesis 1,
Psalm 98, Colossians
1:11-20 The first time I remember
having a sacred experience in water I was in a backyard pool under the
southern
Californian summer sun. It
was shortly
after I had become a proficient swimmer and I could forget about the
laws of
staying afloat and getting to the side and just graciously float and
weave. I went down
in the deep end and
just stayed down there, slowly rolling around like a baby sea otter
with
nowhere to go. I would take breath and go back down.
Then for a moment the usual rattlings of a boys mind
stopped and
I felt joy, peace, and gratitude.
I
think gratitude is the beginning of our thought of God.
We find ourselves grateful in a Sierra
meadow, in the ocean, in love, as we sit down to eat and then we ask,
who am I
thinking. It might
have been better if
we would have stopped right there, and not tried to put definition to
the one
we thank. On the
other hand, the
stories of when we find ourselves grateful unite us and help give us
meaning.
The stories form us into the grateful community.
My parents raised me in this community we call the
Church, and so
when I found myself saying thank you, I said thank you God for this
gift of
water. Life is a blessing.
I love the image painted in Genesis of a
creative God having fun, drawing forth life, shaping it, stepping back
and
admiring it. And
God saw that it was
good. Creation is
good. Creation is a
blessing. We are a
part of
creation. We are a
blessing and we are blessed
with life, with the world around us.
The Divine Spirit is life. The Divine Spirit gives
life. The Divine
Spirit is in all things. We going to party today,
because this is the last Sunday before Lent, and Lent is traditionally
a time
of giving up, of showing the ability to release things that distract us
from
the Holiness of God. Lent
is a time of
preparation and repentance as we move toward the cross of Christ where
he gave
up his life for us. This lent we invite you to move aside the business
that
pollutes vision and clogs the flow of God and water in through and
around us. This Lent and beyond, we will
be using water as an element, a conduit to focus our attention on God
and God’s
will for our lives. Water
on this
planet is in peril. As
Ecclesiastes
says, there is nothing new under heaven.
But over the last decade we have been shaken by the
power and precarious
nature of our water ecosystems. The
day
after Christmas in 2004 we witnessed the devastating tsunami in the
Indian
Ocean kill over 280,000 people. In
2005
we watched in horror as hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast,
and
stranded people wrote primitive signs, desperately asking for water and
rescue
from water. Last
year over a million
homes were destroyed, 20 million people affected by floods in Pakistan. As the earth warms, not
only do sea levels
continue to rise and storms become stronger, but we have seen an
increase of
drought and desertification, and the melting of glaciers which in many
places
are used for irrigation and drinking water.
In most parts of the world, consumption and
pollution threaten rivers
and the fish that live in them, and most aquifers are being depleted at
an
unsustainable rate. The
BP oil spill in
2010 put over 200 million gallons of oil into the gulf.
Meanwhile corporations recognizing the
increasing value of water have sought to buy fresh water sources at
cheap
rates, and sell them back to us at rates more expensive than gasoline. Then, as we drink our
expensive liquid, and
discard the plastic, it winds up polluting rivers and oceans. There are reports of a
great pacific garbage
patch, or the Pacific Trash Vortex larger than Texas in the center of
the North
pacific. But we don’t have to argue about the size of the trash vortex,
because
we see enough of it on our shores.
You would have to be
illiterate and without a TV to be unaware of these troubles. Magazines and journals, TV
programs and
movies have brought the issue of water to our attention. But why does it matter? Why should we care? Why does the environment
matter? Why is
global warming, oil spills,
pollution, or depletion of aquifers and fisheries bad?
Does reason tell us what is good or bad? Perhaps, as many would
answer, we should
care about our children? But
as Herman
Daly notes in his book, Beyond Growth,
this only begs the question, why do future generations matter? This is an impossible
question to answer
with logic alone. Daly criticizes his non-religious, “materialist” colleagues for missing the point: "There is something fundamentally silly about biologists teaching on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday that everything, including our sense of value and reason, is a mechanical product of genetic chance and environmental necessity, with no purpose whatsoever, and then on Tuesday and Thursday trying to convince the public that they should love some accidental piece of this meaningless puzzle enough to fight and sacrifice to save it." David Malin Roodman in the Faith of an Ecological Economist in
a September ‘97 article for World Watch
magazine writes, “The force of logic can test values for
consistency with
each other, but it cannot produce the values themselves. Rather, values
must
develop from somewhere within us. Thus before environmentalists can
persuade
people to follow their reasoning, we must first work to spread the
values on
which that reasoning is based.” As Christians, our values
begin with the notion that God is the source of all life, that God is
deep
within us, deep within all life, and God is love.
There is sacredness to life.
Life starts out with value.
God
made land and sea, stepped back and said, hey, that is good! And we see that Jesus
embodied the Spirit of
the Creator: [15] He is the image of the invisible
God, the first-born
of all creation; [16] for in him all things were
created, in heaven and
on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or
principalities
or authorities -- all things were created through him and for him. [17]
He is before all things, and in him all things hold together. We are not so concerned with
using the Bible to tell us how things were made.
We will use our friend science for that. But what we want to affirm
the creative
force of life, our relationship with the one from whom we gain those
values,
which help us direct, our application of knowledge.
Life is sacred, filled with the Spirit of God. Life is good. Life is a blessing. God
has called us to love life and love one another as God has loved us and
all
creation. The
Spirit of God and the
Spirit of Christ are in all life. So in our journey through the
waters over the next couple of months, we are not just going to focus
on the
issues, depletion and pollution, not just on our action, on what we can
and
should do to help move toward sustainable use of water, but on water in
the
biblical story, and on our many, many ways of relating to it. I invite you to not just
observe and act on its behalf, but to swim in it, to be lifted up and
ride on
God’s power. Swim
in God. Be nurtured
in God’s Womb. Drink
the Living Water. Get
out of the boat. One of the byproducts of the
Enlightenment is the relegation of God to the heavens.
God was removed from the flow of life, and
we therefore were removed from the flow of God in life, and God was
placed in a
dry box above the sky. The
Creator had
created and has now taken a break, and now it is our turn to move in
and take
over for God…to save God so that others may believe.
But then we ask, what use is this God, why do we
need her, why
believe? It is a
short step from Deism
to atheism and a thirsty world dehydrated of meaning.
In the end our efforts to save God or save water is
like trying
to save the womb in which we are conceived.
Water will still be water and God will still be God
long after we have
sailed over the horizon of history.
To make it plain, I am giving
a call for balance to we liberals who love to focus on our human work. We mustn’t forget the
balance of praxis, the
reflection and worship and Sabbath, which inform our work and
establishes the
values to direct our work. Worship may be seen as ethereal. Too big an
emphasis
on the spiritual put our heads in the clouds. But healthy life is bout
balance,
the clouds of the spirit send the rain, which seed the rivers of work,
which
carry us to the deep sea of God’s love. Jesus took time for himself, to
go sit
by the sea, to play with children, to worship and rest, to party at
wedding and
turn water into wine. So
I invite you
to swim in worship of the Living God, but not a God who sits imprisoned
across
the seas of rational thought, but the one who delights in Creation. We worship the God who,
when we are anxious,
leads us beside still waters and restores our soul.
And when we are oppressed and trapped between the
deep and the
forces of darkness, He parts the sea and leads to liberation. When hunger for profit
sucks the people and
land dry, when lending practices and foreclosures stop the flow of
wealth in a
stagnate pool for the few, he says, “let justice flow like the waters
and
righteousness like and ever flowing stream.
He visits with the outcast at the well and shares
living water, calms
the stormy seas of prejudice and goes with us to bring Good News to the
foreigners on the other side. This
not
a distant God, but the intimate one who bends down to wash our feet,
the one
whose grace cleanses us of our sin; the eternal One who shall bring us
to the
rivers of the water of life, bright as crystal, which feeds the trees
of life
for the healing of nations. This
is intimate
One in whom we live and move and have our being. So this Lent we are going to
invite you to take action on behalf of water and life, which is
dependent on
it. But we are also
going to invite you
to stop and take the time to get intimate, to walk and play and pray
with God
and the water around you. [6] With
trumpets and
the sound of the horn let the hills sing together in
joy In thanks to our God. |
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