[The message I gave out of open worship at the Friends World Committee for Consultation Section of the Americas consultation in High Point, NC.]
At Freedom Friends Church, we always begin with gratitude. I am grateful to be here with all of you this evening. I am grateful for safe travels and warm welcomes. I am grateful for Deborah S, who is eldering for me, and for all of the Friends who are holding me in prayer. I am grateful for all of you, for the joy and hope and love you bring to this gathering. I am grateful that God is not finished with us yet.
At Freedom Friends Church, we always begin with gratitude. I am grateful to be here with all of you this evening. I am grateful for safe travels and warm welcomes. I am grateful for Deborah S, who is eldering for me, and for all of the Friends who are holding me in prayer. I am grateful for all of you, for the joy and hope and love you bring to this gathering. I am grateful that God is not finished with us yet.
In Jeremiah 2:13, the prophet Jeremiah speaks the word of
the Lord, saying, “My people have committed two sins: They have forsaken me, the spring of living water, and they have
dug their own cisterns, cisterns that cannot hold water.”
As I was preparing this message, two images from the natural
world came to me. The first is of dead
trees filled with salt in Alaska.
I was born and raised in Alaska, and so was my mother, and
so were her parents. That place is deep
in my bones. There are certain colors
and smells and images that I associate with it, and when I see them or smell
them, I know that I am home.
One of the most haunting images of my childhood was of these
dead trees. They are a result of the
1964 earthquake. That earthquake was
9.2 and lasted for four minutes. My
grandparents and my mother thought that it was the end of the world. They ran outside as their house fell off its
foundation. The destruction was incredible.
In one part of Alaska, the ground sank below sea level, and
the trees’ root systems filled with salt water. Decades later, you could drive by and see these ghost trees,
standing exactly as they stood during the earthquake. It is a haunting image and one that seemed like it would last
forever.
This was a natural reaction to a natural disaster. The water that killed those trees had been
living water, but it was no longer life-giving for those trees.
Sometimes when we encounter God, it feels a little like
that: overwhelming.
There is a story in the Bible where Jesus takes three of his
disciples up onto a mountain to pray, and while they are there, they have an
encounter with the living God. As Jesus
was praying, his face was transformed and his clothes became as bright as a
flash of lightening. (Luke 9:29)
This story is like another story in the Bible, where Moses
also went up a mountain to encounter God.
After he did, his face also glowed.
His face was radiant because he had spoken with the Lord. (Exodus 34:29)
But the first time Moses went down from the mountain, he
found that the people had built a golden calf and were worshiping it. (Exodus 32:5-6)
The question that people always ask is, How could the
Israelites do that? They had just had
an incredible encounter with the living God; God had just rescued them from
slavery in Egypt and performed miracle after miracle. But I think it is not in spite of that encounter with God that
the Israelites built the golden calf, but because of it.
A phrase you often hear Quaker ministers say to each other
is, “Watch what you fill up on.” When
we encounter the living God, that experience changes us, inside and out, and
others can see it. We feel different
and we look and sound different.
Afterward, there is a strong impulse to recreate the
experience, to fill the hole that was so recently filled by the presence of
God.
And, in the story of Jesus on the mountain, this is what
Peter wanted to do. He saw Jesus’
radiant face and the two men with him and said, “Master, it is good for us to
be here. Let us put up three
shelters―one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.” The Bible says that he did not know what he
was saying. (Luke 9:33)
But Peter knew that he had encountered the living God. He wanted to mark the experience and hold on
to it by making a tabernacle, but the spirit of God had moved on.
I began with Jeremiah 2:13, a passage that has been
important to me. But when I was in
North Carolina a couple years ago, a Friend from Ohio Yearly Meeting reminded
me of another passage about water.
Proverbs 5:15 instructs us to “drink water from your own cistern,
running water from your own well.”
The context of this verse is faithfulness to one’s spouse,
but I think it works for the Religious Society as Friends as well. We are all here because we have found
something, we have encountered the living God, we have found the living water
here among Friends. Where have we found
it? Where have we abandoned it? Where do we find it now?
Even if we have abandoned the living water or we have set up
monuments to the past, there is always hope.
Even those ghost trees that haunted my childhood won’t last
forever. When I was a teenager, an
artist began to make salt and pepper shakers out of the trees.
The second image from the natural world that came to me is
of a place that I used to pass by in Salem, Oregon when I would take walks on
my lunch break. It was a place that had
been a concrete driveway, but the concrete had been taken away and there was
grass growing where it had been. After
a while, you couldn’t even see where the concrete had been, it was just grass.
Concrete seems permanent.
It is heavy and it seems like it will last forever, but it doesn’t. It is possible for grass to grow where there
was once concrete.
Transformation is always possible.
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