BOTH-AND
By Mary Porter,
Hospice Music Practitioner,
Retired Pastor
The Lord has sent me to comfort all who mourn. . . . . I the
LORD love justice.. (Isa 61:1-2, 8) Rejoice always. Pray without
ceasing, (1 Thess 5:16-17)
Preparation for the in-breaking Christ calls for a BOTH-AND
orientation: attention to loss AND hope, mourning AND rejoicing, action
AND prayer. My recent learning includes:
•
PEC eco-tour and climate change conference in Alaska in early
September. Beginning and ending each day in worship (rejoicing) we
focused on Signposts of Hope and agreed to immediate concrete actions--using
refillable water bottles, eating locally grown and low on the food chain (vegetarian).
•
September 21, People’s Climate March. The exuberant, sometimes
boisterous activists paused –all 310,000+ of us--for a moment of eerie
silence, mourning for those affected by climate change.
•
Sidelines of the march. One group remained in silence,
legs crossed Eastern style, meditating/praying--holding the psychic
space for protesters.
As we work for justice AND pray without ceasing (individually
and communally), I suggest another BOTH-AND; that along with our revealed texts of scripture we
read (with the help of contemporary science) the texts of creation, what
Michael Dowd and others call Big History, the “13.8 billion-year
science-based tale of cosmic genesis—from the formation of galaxies and the
origin of life to the development of consciousness and culture, and onward…”
Through Big History we learn that we are made of stardust
and that we’re related to everything.* What a profound sense of kinship
might overcome us with such a reading! (Who is my neighbor?) What awe
and reverence might bowl us over! (Oh God, how majestic is your name in all
the earth! What are humans that you are mindful of them!) I suggest
that such dual reading provides a firm basis for dealing with BOTH the
challenges of our times (fossil fuels, water, climate change) AND
entering into more intimate communion with God and all that God made and loves.
Prayer: God, who never ceases to awe and amaze, heal us, guide us, use
us.
Use our failures as compost for the new Earth you are creating. In the name
of the Christ in whom all things are created and through whom all things hold
together. Amen.
Contributor: Mary McQueen Porter is a retired pastor and a
former director/chaplain of Ruth and Naomi Senior Outreach, the non-profit in
Birmingham, Alabama, she co-founded. Grandmother, poet, Certified
Sage-ing Leader and Certified Music Practitioner, she leads workshops in
Conscious Aging and works part-time for VITAS Hospice, playing Celtic harp at
the bedside.
*Dowd, Michael. “Evidential Mysticism and the Future of
Earth,” in Oneing: An Alternative Orthodoxy, A Publication of the Center
for Action and Contemplation, Vol. 2, No. 2 (2014), 18.
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