Sermon manuscript for Green Lake Church of Seventh-day Adventists
For Sabbath, August 9, 2014
Wednesday evening I peddled my bicycle
the few block from here [Green Lake Church] to Teddy's Bigger
Burgers. I locked up my bike, ordered my usual vegeburger and fries,
then headed back outside to my usual table on the sidewalk. It was a
glorious evening, warm and sunny. The sidewalk was busy with people
pushing strollers, walking dogs, or headed to one of the restaurants
in the neighborhood.
At some point I looked up and noticed
way down the block at the corner a couple embracing, then kissing.
A few minutes later I noticed them
leisurely walking up the block toward me. They were both fit. Maybe
they had run around the lake together. She was tall, red hair, a rich
smile on her face. He was muscular, just a bit shorter than she was.
Obviously happy. They stopped at the bike rack opposite me and he
began turning the dials on the cable lock on his bike, explaining to
this beautiful woman why he preferred combination locks to keyed
locks. He was in no hurry and as he continued talking and messing
with his bike, I turned my attention back to my burger and fries,
smiling at the magic of romance.
Only romance would fool a guy into
thinking a beautiful woman was interested in a lecture on the
relative merits of combination versus keyed bike locks. Only romance
or motherhood, would prompt a smart woman to acted interested in said
lecture. But that's what romance does. That's what love does.
One of my physician friends likes to
talk about romance in terms of hormones and brain chemistry. The
brain can sustain the fiery intensity of romance only so long, he
says. It's his way of explaining away “the truth” of love as seen
through the eyes of young lovers.
A few months ago I listened to a
psychologist seated next to me at a dinner table explain that fMRIs
show that the brains of people in love are “disordered.” That was
her word. She went on to speak dismissively of the starry-eyed dreams
of lovers. I think the older people at the table were supposed to nod
their heads and wisely agree that romance is an exercise in insanity.
But I wasn't persuaded. I'm a hopeless, shameless romantic.
Obviously, what we see through the lenses of romance is not
objective. But that does not make it false or undesirable. Human life
purged of the magic and charm of romance would not be an improvement.
And the language of hormones and brain chemistry, and electrical
activity in the brain function is utterly inadequate for conversation
about the human experience of love.
Given the neighborhood where I was
eating my vegeburger and witnessed the charming scene I just
described, it's possible the red head was neurologist and the
muscular guy was a psychiatrist. If that's who they were, let's
imagine listening to either of them describe their afternoon to their
respective friends.
They would have at their disposal all
the language of science to describe their afternoon, but I doubt we
would words about hormones and pheromones. We wouldn't hear about
mate selection in pursuit of the propagation of genes. Instead we
would hear the language of love and romance and friendship—the only
language remotely adequate for this wonderous human experience.
It is the same with spirituality.
You can study human spirituality using
various scientific tools—neurology, biochemistry, psychology,
sociology. These scientific disciplines can give us useful insights.
They can identify various predictable correlates with spiritual
experience, but when you sit down to talk with someone who has had a
direct experience with God, the language of science quickly becomes
utterly inadequate. The concrete language of science can at best
describe only pieces of the experience. And all of the pieces
together do not equal the experience any more than an analysis of
hormones or a map of electrical activity in the brain is adequate for
talking about love.
Which is a long way round to get to
today's scripture, Acts 9
Meanwhile, Saul
was uttering threats with every breath and was eager to kill the
Lord's followers. So he went to the high priest. He requested letters
addressed to the synagogues in Damascus, asking for their cooperation
in the arrest of any followers of the Way he found there. He wanted
to bring them--both men and women--back to Jerusalem in chains.
As he was
approaching Damascus on this mission, a light from heaven suddenly
shone down around him. He fell to the ground and heard a voice saying
to him, "Saul! Saul! Why are you persecuting me?"
"Who are you,
lord?" Saul asked.
The voice replied,
"I am Jesus, the one you are persecuting! Now get up and go into
the city, and you will be told what you must do."
The men with Saul
stood speechless, for they heard the sound of someone's voice but saw
no one! Saul picked himself up off the ground, but when he opened his
eyes he was blind. So his companions led him by the hand to Damascus.
He remained there blind for three days and did not eat or drink. [Act
9:1-9 New Living Translation, accessed through Blue Letter Bible.com]
This story of Paul's encounter on the
Damascus Road sets the stage for us to understand the most
influential missionary in the history of Christianity. Paul had been
a devout, brilliant, implacable enemy of the Jesus People. Then
traveling from Jerusalem to Damascus to continue his crusade against
these corrupters of religion, he had his own, personal encounter with
the Risen Jesus. He changes course 180 degrees and becomes a
Christian preacher.
The early Christian church was founded
by people who had dramatic spiritual experiences. The church grew
because of the attractive force of dramatic personal stories. People
experienced miraculous healings. They experienced ecstasy and had
visions. The early Christian Church was not a club of Bible scholars
and philosophers. It was filled with people who had direct encounters
with the divine that was persuasive and attractive.
You can try to account for all these
stories using various psychological and sociological descriptions and
explanations, but in the end they fail to tell the story. It's like
describing a rainbow in terms of wave lengths of light and diameters
of rain drops. You haven't said anything about the why we rush to
grab our cameras.
We are sitting here today because of
experiences people had 2000 years ago, and because the experiences
did not stop happening 2000 years ago.
I sat down yesterday in Starbucks to
finish my sermon. I noticed a book on the table next to me, “Living
with a Wild God” by Barbara Ehrenreich. It grabbed my attention. I
thought Barbara Ehrenriech was an atheist. I asked the woman at the
table if she had read the book. She had. She found it difficult to
read, but fascinating. “You can have a look, if you like,” she
said motioning to the book. I picked it up and read the blurbs on the
dust jacket and the description on the inside front cover.
Then I got on line and read several
reviews. I was right, Barbara Ehrenreich was famous as a curmudgeonly
atheist. And yes, this book was about her teenage encounters with
God. They did not fit any of the categories of experience people she
knew talked about. A couple of times she had tried to talk about
them, but people thought she was crazy. So, for decades she had
ignored those encounters. Finally, she went back and looked again at
the journals she had kept in those days, trying to make sense of
experiences that did not fit any of her secular categories.
Here is Barbara's description of one of
those encounters:
The world flamed
into life. How else to describe it? There were no visions, no
prophetic voices or visits by totemic animals, just this blazing
everywhere. Something poured into me and I poured out into it. This
was not the passive beatific merger with the ‘All,’ as promised
by the Eastern mystics. It was a furious encounter with a living
substance that was coming at me through all things at once, and one
reason for the terrible wordlessness of the experience is that you
cannot observe fire really closely without becoming part of it.
Whether you start as a twig or a gorgeous tapestry, you will be
recruited into the flame and made indistinguishable from the rest of
the blaze.
The book is not a conversion story.
Barbara still does not have confident, helpful language for talking
about what happened. But honestly confronting her own experience has
led to a late-in-life admission that rationalism and scientism are
not adequate for describing her own life. The fullness of her
humanity cannot be accounted for without resorting to language of God
and spirituality.
Late in the book, Barbara writes: “It
took an inexcusably long time for me to figure out that what happened
to me when I was 17 represents a widespread, if not exactly
respectable, category of human experience.”
To which one reviewer responded: “It
took Ehrenreich so long to learn that her visions were a part of
human experience not because the visions were so foreign, but because
human experience was altogether foreign to her, too.”
(NY Times Book Review: “Vision
Quest,” a review of ‘Living With a Wild God,’ by Barbara
Ehrenreich. By Parul Sehgal. April 25, 2014)
Just as love and romance are essential
to the richest, sweetest experience of humanity, so religion and
spirituality are essential to living fully human lives. And the
language of God and spirituality are necessary for rich, meaningful
conversations about these kinds of experiences.
When we use the word atheism to
describe insistence by young people that we be honest about
unanswered questions, it has powerful appeal. Our religious answers
don't always work. Just as some people have rich experiences of the
presence and favor of God, others have devastating experiences of the
absence or inaction of God
Just last week I met a woman after
church who needed some financial assistance. She told me her story.
For 40 years she had worked, bought groceries, paid her rent, went on
vacation. Then three years ago the business she was working for
closed. No problem. She figured she would get another job. But it
didn't happen. Now she's on the streets. Where is God, she asked. “I
prayed,” she said. “And prayed and prayed. But either God won't
help me or he can't.”
I winced when she said that. I felt the
sting. Her experience seems to contradict the promises of God we
celebrate here at church. When atheism is a label for our willingness
to hear this kind of story and not discount it, then atheism is a
label worthy of respect.
But atheism falls apart when it
imagines we can account for the entire range of human experience
without invoking the language of God and spirituality. There is far
too much human experience that can only be explored and celebrated
through the language of God and spirituality.
In fact, the very commitment of
atheists to the pursuit of truth and justice makes most sense against
a background of the reality of that fiery presence Barbara Ehrenreich
experienced decades ago.
So to my atheist friends I offer this:
If you have not had a direct experience
with the divine, we will not ask you to pretend. We share your
commitment to honesty. We will not pretend that your lack of
experience of God is evidence of bad character or bad judgment.
On the other hand we will encourage you
to respect the stories of others who have had such experiences. Don't
pretend that psychology, sociology and neurology can provide adequate
language for the entire human experience. Don't narrow your world to
things that can be counted, weighed and measured with a tape measure
or micrometer. Don't imagine that a world without romance is an
improvement.
In church we celebrate the reality of
God. We honor the stories people tell. We prize the stories of God's
involvement in the world. We love the stories of the fiery presence.
We also respect the stories
of God's absence. For those who feel the weight of God's absence, we
join you in your longing.
Remember the couple I saw on Green Lake
Way? The beautiful woman and muscular guy. The guy was unlocking his
bicycle and talking about why he preferred combination locks to keyed
locks. The next time I glanced their direction, he had his lock
stowed, his bike away from the bike stand and was preparing to get on
and ride away. That much was entirely unremarkable. It was the woman
who caught my eye. She was standing there looking at him getting on
his bicycle and I instantly saw she was wanting one more kiss. Her
body language was as eloquent and unmistakable as a movie scene. He
was utterly oblivious. They had had a wonderful time running or
playing ball or frisbee across the street at the park. The date was
over. He had kissed her good down the street. Now he had places to
go, things to do. He was preparing to ride away, but she wanted
another kiss. To me sitting ten feet away, it was plain as day and
sweet as jam. I'm thinking, how can he not see it? He throws
his leg over his bicycle and calls over his shoulder, “Love you.”
And was stopped in his tracks. She said something. I didn't hear her
words. I saw the effect. He planted both feet and opened his arms.
I was not watching chemistry or
neurology. I was watching love.
And when we come to church or climb a
mountain or sit on a park bench and open our hearts, we are not
chasing an illusion. We are not merely activating a fossil neural
pathway, we are opening our hearts toward a reality called in
English, God. We are longing for the kiss of the divine.
May you not be forever kept waiting.
2 comments:
I think what Atheists object to, is the notion that because theists own the language of human experience, according to theists, is that theists can define the human experience. In a way it's insulting, to wrap up all the wonder, and love, and majesty, and the sheer unadulterated awesomeness of the human experience, dress it up, give it a name, and say this is what it must be for everyone and all time. Atheists are atheists only in the sense that they've rejected that description of the universe, not that they've rejected the breadth of the universe.
To Anonymous: Well said. I don't mean to imply that using the language of God/religion/spirituality we can offer a tidy, comprehensive description of reality. On the other hand it seems to me there are essential elements of human experience that are expressed most aptly using the language of God/religion/spirituality. I'm hoping to engage in conversation over the next year, both literally face-to-face and through reading, in exploring how atheists construct a philosophical foundation for their highest ideals--including the ideal of truth. If you are local to Seattle, I'd welcome the opportunity to dialogue. (Call or text 253-350-1211). Or if you can recommend particularly cogent articles or books.
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