Thursday, August 21, 2014

Grace in the Wilderness

GRACE IN THE WILDERNESS



 Thus says the LORD:

 The people who survived the sword   
  found grace in the wilderness;
  when Israel sought for rest,
  the LORD appeared to him from far away.

Jer 31:2–3a


      Our U.S. culture, our society, can be a wilderness:  the university, the government, business, malls and restaurants, highways, sports, the media: journals and newspapers/radio/television/the Internet ...
 I feel lost in this wilderness.
       The sword in the wilderness carries more weight: I can die from greed, from anxiety, from fear, from loneliness.  Born in 1931, I continually glance expectantly at my IRA…hoping for it to swell. Anxieties and fears multiply and are more painful as one faces them alone.
         Once, when I faced a particularly lonely, ominous moment of fear and anxiety, and wailed at being alone in the struggle, my dear priest, Diane, challenged me: “Perhaps you are looking for help and companionship in the wrong places, Jane. Perhaps you must find God.”
         Grace in the wilderness! 
        Walter Brueggemann suggests that God redefined the wilderness when manna (man hu? What’s that?)  fell daily from the sky to feed the wandering, hungry people of Israel.  Exodus 16
WB suggests that only a magnificently generous action can redefine
our scarcity-based, consumer primed culture.
          Where is God redefining the wilderness that is our national culture?  Watch for it!  Celebrate it!  Notice the shockingly generous actions that fly in the face of anxiety and fearful self-reliance. Like these:
       I pulled my lawnmower out in April two years ago, to mow my small patch of lawn. Three neighbours came at me from three sides of my street:  We don’t think so!”   Al, who lives across the street from me laughed as he gently pushed my ancient lawnmower back into the toolshed: “When I mow my lawn, I’ll come across the street to mow yours.”  Tom and Kerry conceded that Al had won the day. 
         Grace in the wilderness – redefining the place!
         My friend Rita tells the story of her ninety-year old husband Dave whom she could not find early one morning. When he finally appeared, she asked: “Where have you been?”        
          “Oh, honey, I thought I had told you. An old man needed a ride to the station so I picked him up at his house and drove him to the train.”
         Grace in the wilderness – redefining the place!
          A Conference of United States military medical doctors from all services: Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Coast Guard – all – are considering how to serve their patients and teach their peers more efficiently.  They have invited the Dean of the Medical School of the Catholic University of Chile to offer the keynote address to the 2014 conference because of his skill, knowledge and experience as a medical doctor and educator using dialogue.
            Grace in the wilderness – redefining the place: no north, no south…just us on a journey to the common good.
             Nelson Mandela and his team heard the barred gates of Robbins Island slam on them as they faced a long prison term – punishment for their search for freedom.  Mandela gathered his friends around him to offer one imperative: Our first agenda is to learn to speak and understand Afrikaans. We must communicate with our jailors.
              Unbelievable grace in the wilderness – redefining the place – even Robbins Island!
             We are the means of this grace in the wilderness for and to one another. The grace is from God. We are the universal UPS delivery service, built to use our fertile imagination and courageous hearts to redefine the wilderness as neigborhood, as did Mandela and Dave and Al and the military medical doctors. Consider recent actions you have seen where a courageous man or woman was
redefining the place; changing our wilderness culture into a warm, caring neighborhood.