“It’s a Beautiful Day”

Tuesday. 4th of July, 2023. American Independence Day. Three days after Canada Day. The day before tomorrow, also known as, today. Always a good place to start I figure.

My itinerary:

Pages of Bono’s “we-moir”, Surrender. He is perhaps the most compelling artist-writer of a generation or two.

A cafetière of the good stuff to settle accounts with the day.

Black ink on blank pages to begin my regular process of over-thinking my under-living.

Perhaps a few quiet moments presenting myself to myself, huddled up, tucked in, and rolled up in the bosom of Jesus.

Then, another slow journey to and through my weekly practice of Sabbath – my Tuesday hunt for shalom.

Today is North Berwick – Scotland’s version of tea ‘n tidy posh b’ gosh along her sniffling east coast. The North Sea is never satisfied to sit still but insists upon itself in childish guffaws, jumping around in an effort to stretch her restless legs.

My mind, gradually calling itself back to ground zero, is settled on few things these days. If age reveals anything at all (if you’re open to its ranting) it is that wisdom is about the law of misdirection, of diminishing returns. The longer we live, the less we have left to live. The older we get, the younger we wish we were. The more we know, the less we truly know. The more we pursue it, the farther away it appears. The wider we open our eyes to see, the more blinded are we by the light of all there is to see. Says Bono, “Wisdom is the recovery of innocence at the far end of experience” (Surrender, pg. 527).

I am under no false illusions that these days of reflection, reading, writing, pretentious decaf oat lattés in pretentious places, and mental gymnastics are making me smarter, let alone wiser, let alone better. But they do, in a sense, grease the skids for what might inevitably do so. Usually it shows up as failure, naïveté wrapped in narcissism, or just willful blindness. I take ordinary days for ordinary things so that, somewhere along the road, befuddled and betwixt and bemused as it may be, I might transform into something marginally better than I am right here, right now. God’s alchemy of extraordinary from ordinary. Divinity from detritus.

And, I’m good with that. I guess I’ll have to be since it appears God is seldom in the mood to reveal trade secrets. She loves to stay at the center of things but play in our peripheral vision. That way, we’re never caught like a deer in the headlights of God’s withering gaze. Instead, our head is pressed up tight to Her bosom, listening to that cosmic heart of perfect love.

I come to North Berwick often. Set upon gently sloping shoulders bared to the North Sea, it boasts a braggadocious profile in a golf swing swagger. A country club smile with tea cozy sensibilities. It is, in a word, sublime. Better still, it is pouring. Only my fellow petrichorians understand why this is so delightful.

The sea and I have an understanding. It needs to do nothing other than slosh about in its normal routine, twerking her waves at me while I lollygag at its shores sufficiently attentive to the needs of my soul. Rough ‘n tumble or quaint ‘n quiet, I’ll take it how it comes. I didn’t grow up near the ocean (the sea here in Scotland), having instead the daily reminder of my ineptitude as either a cowboy, oil roughneck, geologist, or economist, the generals in Calgary, Alberta’s army. That only made my lifelong yearning for ocean that much hotter, more insistent.

On these days of Sabbath, my thoughts inevitably drift to matters of faith and fury. My bugaboos bashing at heaven’s door in search of understanding. I reflect, usually with book and journal in hand, upon the life I’ve been given; the one I’m living, the places from which I’ve come, those toward which I’m heading, and the life to which I’m called in my best moments. Increasingly, I see them all as one. We are always living the life to which we are called. Our holiest moments are the same as our most mundane. When everything is holy, nothing is wasted, everything belongs (thank you Richard Rohr), and we can live in constant gratitude.

I end these brief recollections with Bono’s words:

“…faith is…more like a daily discipline, a daily surrender and rebirth. It’s more likely that church is not a place but a practice, and the practice becomes the place. There is no promised land. Only the promised journey, the pilgrimage. We search through the noise for signal, and we learn to ask better questions of ourselves and each other.

   I call the signal “God” and search my life for clues that betray the location of the eternal presence. For starters we look to who is standing beside us or down the road, the ones whose roof we share or the ones around the corner who have no roof. The mystics tell us God is present in the present, what Dr. King described as “the fierce urgency of now.”

   God is present in the love between us…In the way we meet the world.”

This has been an extraordinarily ordinary day. I’ll take it.

Carry Each Other – A Prayer

I love when my wife brings the Prayers of the People in our liturgy. They are prayers that live in that uncomfortable space between pastoral nurture and prophetic nudging. This was her prayer from our service this morning, Sunday, December 29, 2019.

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Preamble

The first time I stepped into a Covenant Church in December 2003, I was struck by how it felt both evangelical and liturgical, like a Baptist Oreo cookie with a Lutheran Center. Afterwards, a man explained that one of the denominational distinctives is the reality of freedom in Christ. Essentially, what that means is that, on many issues we can agree to disagree agreeably. Our new Brazilian friend, Fabio, on the Serve Globally Europe team, calls the Covenant, ‘the Dog with the least fleas.’

This morning, instead of the Lord’s prayer, we’ll close with lyrics written by U2. Bono, the lead singer grew up in Dublin in the Catholic south of Ireland the product of a scandalous marriage during the height of IRA terrorism. His father, Catholic. His mother Protestant.

From our side of the pond, we can see the fighting has little do with Christianity, and everything to do with religious tribalism. Because he’s seen the human cost of not seeking peace, his background uniquely shaped him to write songs about it.

“One” was written at a time when the band were fighting over their direction. The core lyric, ‘we’re one, but we’re not the same, we get to carry each other, carry each other.’  It makes Bono an ideal Covenanter!

Will you join me in prayer?

Carry each other – a prayer

Our beloved Father in heaven,

We’re closer than ever before in history to people all over the world, and yet there are growing divisions and the rise of tribalism where once there was peace. Help your church in the world to answer conflicts and divisions with love and justice. Send workers where needed to bring physical and spiritual healing, and help Christians who live in places with surplus to provide for those who go without. May the smallest pinprick of light we bring swallow much darkness (thanks to my hubby for that line!).

It seems each time it’s my turn to pray, our nation is more divided than the previous time. Across our nation, churches and communities, Lord, we thank you for those who serve graciously and honestly. We pray that where leaders fail to do their tasks well, or uphold the oaths they take, may they be replaced.

Whether we identify as conservative, moderate or liberal, let us each conserve the rule of law, be moderate in our judgement of others and wise of those who seek to use the church for their own political ends. Let us be liberal in our love toward each other, especially those who aren’t part of our tribe.

Lord, in this time of division, let us hold onto hope and not be hijacked by our fears. Let us be wary of those who tell us who is out to get us and who we should blame. Let us remember those who seek to froth up our grievances with a paycheque attached to promoting those views. Help us to remember that conflict sells.

Lord, let us remember our nation is built upon the separation of church and state and that history shows us again and again when the church gets too close to power it is weakened. Therefore, help us to be cautious of Christian leaders who have become intoxicated by the proximity to power.

And we pray for those in our own church across the nation who once attended but have lost their way. Many see the church being committed partisans, blaming others, instead of committed Christians. May we show them, Lord, that our allegiance lies to Christ above all else, and that despite our differences, in you we are one. We are not the same. We get to carry each other, carry each other.

Amen.

 

Learning to Live Dis-Labeled

Today, I proudly welcome my wonderful writer wife, Rae (her nom de plum: Wren Kenny) as guest blogger. What follows is a prayer she spent many hours composing to pray during the “Prayers of the People” segment of our liturgy. 
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These are always tricky, especially in our present environment of toxicity and constantly germinating hatred. But, she wrote it. Prayed it. And the people – well, at least the many who showered their praise – loved it.

So, with that, I give you:

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The first time I visited a Covenant Church, I adored the blend of liturgy and evangelicalism. A man I spoke with after the service told me, “the Covenant allows for differences of opinion over non-essential theological issues.” He gave the example of baptizing both infants and adults.

This really appealed to my moderate personality, which bristles at extremes in either direction. I fact-checked with Pastor Dean. This denominational principle is called The Reality Of Freedom In Christwhere we focus on what unites us as followers of Jesus instead of what separates us.

It’s with this spirit I bring the prayers of the people this morning. 

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Dear Lord, as we pray for the world, a popular culture phrase resounding through our nation right now is Lordy. And Lordy, what a time we live in!

We might be sitting in the pew next to a leftist, a rightist or an orchardist. The news, the Internet and social media have splintered us into tribes where we seek affirmation to support our own world-views rather than for information or friendships.

Everywhere we turn, there is division and labelling. Our Presidents have been white, black and orange. Our States are red, blue, or purple. Our parties are elephants or donkeys. The elephants have Liberals, and Blue Dogs and Progressive Dogs and people concerned we’re culturally-appropriating-cats-for dogs. The donkeys are divided over conservatism. If you’re not conservative enough you’re a RINO and excluded from a Tea Party. Then there’s the Alt Right suspicious of the Deep State and the newly formed Republicans for the Rule of Law. Amidst all of this we have a growing number of Independents and third parties and people of the just-make-it-all-to-go-away-so-we-can-party party.

Lord, how do we pray for the leadership of our nation, fraught with such divisions? Borrowing words of U2‘s Irish prophet, Bono, we pray: Lord, “Heaven on Earth. We need it now. Jesus can you spare a dime and throw a drowning world a line. Peace on Earth.

Conflicts escalate around the world. Most recently we think of chemical weapons attacks on the people of Syria—and we know that “no one cries like a mother cries when her children are living in the ground.” We turn on the television and the pundits fall everywhere, from ramping up military action, to peaceniks worried about a war because of a tweet sent from a toilet. For the leaders in governments around the world, we pray,

Jesus can you take the time and throw a drowning world a line. Peace on Earth.”

In our National leadership, we have those energized to seek election for the first time and others gearing up or fearing for their re-election campaigns. We have an unprecedented rate of retirements, resignations, firings, and indictments. The news comes at us fast and furious, and it’s spun to fit every ideology.

And it’s exhausting.

The days ahead only guarantee they’ll be filled with more division. For the principalities and powers that govern us we pray,

“Jesus can you spare the time and throw a drowning world a line. Peace on Earth.”

Lord, your word in Galatians 3 tells us: “There is no such thing as Jew and Greek, slave and free, male and female, for we are all one person in Christ Jesus.” But in our nation, we’re fighting over whether black lives, blue lives, or all lives matter. We fight over the rights of the unborn, and the born. We fight over the rights of school children and guns. And then we have gay lives and straight lives and Muslim lives and Christian lives and alternative lives.

“Jesus can you take the time to throw a drowning world a line. Peace on Earth.”

Our sports are divided over standing or kneeling. Our bakeries may or may not serve you a cake. We avoid our friends and relatives if their views don’t align with our brand. Your word tells us to encourage one another and build one another up, to be kind, tender hearted, and to forgive one another in Christ. If we’re honest. We’ve failed.

Bigly. For those estranged from others we pray:

“Jesus can you take the time and throw a drowning world a line. Peace on Earth.”

And we pray for those who once dwelled among us but are struggling in their faith. The divisions around us have affected the church. But today, let each person present think of those people who are no longer seated beside them. They might have been elders, deacons, singers, scripture readers.

Many find their faith shipwrecked by the challenges in our nation. From conversations, we’ve gleaned these words which will sting – the word Evangelical in the public perception has become: evangelical – all those associated with Twitter rants, adult entertainment, and attacking teenagers whose friends are laying in the ground.

The church across the nation is hemorrhaging members. “Evangelical” is not a word with which they want to be branded. Instead, life gets in the way and they give themselves an I-have-better-things-to-do-on-a-Sunday mulligan. 

Help us, Lord, to find ways to address the palpable anxiety, put aside our petty differences and reach out to those we no longer see. Help us embrace the freedom in Christ to be comfortable with differences of opinion.

Please, dear Jesus, throw your drowning church a line and let us remember that the gospel is not fake news. It’s the good news, because your word teaches us that “there is nothing in death or life, in the realm of spirits or superhuman powers in the world as it is, or the world as it shall be, in the forces of the universe, in heights or depths—nothing in all creation that can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

Peace on Earth.
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Rae is presently putting the finished touches on her debut novel, Miss Adventured, published likely this year. Stay tuned!