by Nancy Corson Carter
We who have lost our sense and our
senses—our touch, our smell, our vision of who we are; we who frantically force
and press all things, without rest for body or spirit, hurting our Earth and
injuring ourselves: we call a halt.
We want to rest. We need to rest and
allow the Earth to rest.
We need to reflect and to rediscover the
mystery that lives in us, that is the ground of every unique expression of
life, the source of the fascination that calls all things to communion.
We declare a Sabbath, a space of quiet:
for simple being and letting be; for recovering the great, forgotten truths;
for learning how to live again.
(Author
unknown; from Creation Justice Ministry’s Earth Day mailing)
Note 2: Walter Brueggemann’s
Sabbath as Resistance:
Saying NO to the CULTURE OF NOW (Westminster John Knox, 2014) speaks
directly to these thoughts. The “limitless
pursuit of consumer goods (and the political, cultural, and military
requirements that go with it) in the interest of satiation necessitates
over-production and abuse of the land, and the squandering of limited
supplies of oil and water. Thus, the environment is savaged by such
restlessness; the ordering creation is skewed, perhaps beyond viability. It is
long since forgotten that rest is the final marking of creator and creation.”
In his final chapter, 6, “The Sabbath and the Tenth Commandment” (where greed
is rejected) Brueggemann presents Psalm 73 as his final text: he sees it as “a
report on a journey from the world of commodity to the world of community.” Verse
23 is his chosen refrain from the repentant psalmist as he turns to address
God:
“Nevertheless I am continually with you; you hold my
right hand.”
Brueggemann warns us (89) that “This is no casual
hand-holding. This is a life-or-death grip that does not let go.”… “Sabbath is
the regular, disciplined, visible, concrete yes to the neighborly reality of
the community beloved by God.”
Note 3: as I thought of the idea of “Practical Steps we
might take to love the Earth,” I looked up “practical” and found this list:
practical (adjective as in realistic, useful) Strongest matches. businesslike constructive
down-to-earth efficient factual feasible functional possible practicable
pragmatic rational reasonable sane sensible sober workable.
As I pondered whether Sabbath is “practical” for Earth
keepers, I found this poem by Wendell Berry from his book SABBATHS (quoted, p.19, in a great teaching
book on Sabbaths, Don Postema’s Catch Your Breath: God’s Invitation to Sabbath Rest—2016, still in print):
The bell calls in the town
Where
forebears cleared the shaded land
And
brought high daylight down
To
shine on field and trodden road.
I
hear, but understand
Contrarily,
and walk into the woods.
I
leave labor and load,
Take
up a different story.
I
keep an inventory
Of
wonders and uncommercial goods.
Nancy Corson Carter, professor emerita of humanities at Eckerd College, has published two
poetry books, Dragon Poems and The Sourdough Dream Kit, and three poetry chapbooks.
Some of her poems, drawings, and photos appear in her nonfiction book, Martha,
Mary, and Jesus: Weaving Action and Contemplation in Daily Life and in her
memoir, The Never-Quite-Ending War: a WWII GI Daughter's Stories.
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