Building Gates of Enough

These great mysteries that surround us.  They are not trivial things that are to be forgotten; they are not the sort of things for which there is a solution.  Instead, they are those things that ring around us with so many answers.  They are the mysteries of Father, Son, Spirit – or perhaps you prefer something less concrete to describe the mysterious three.  Perhaps something along the lines of Creator, Word, Wisdom.  Those very mysteries that invite us, call us, beckon us to come closer, deeper.

The mystery of the Holy Trinity is one that continues to baffle us in the most appropriate ways.  It is a mystery that serves us by not giving us clear cut answers to the question, posed by Douglas Adams in The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, “Who is this God person anyway?”  Instead of giving us clear cut answers about the nature of God’s person, the Trinity calls us deeper and deeper into the reality of God’s being through our own questions that we bring to God in our prayers, in our daily living, and in the ways that we practice relationship with friends, family, strangers.  It is a mystery that serves us in the way that all holy mysteries serve us – by drawing us ever deeper into the mystery of God and by encouraging us to come up with our own words to make claims about who we understand God to be.

The Trinity is how we come to enumerate the reality of the three persons of God – Father, Son, and Spirit.  But, it is also a way for us to understand how God desires us to be in relationship with each other and with creation.  It is a way for us to understand the movements of God’s ruling passion – the passion of deep, sacrificial love.  The Trinity is a way for us to enter into the reality of the divine, and it is a way for us to understand the depths of God’s love for God’s creation.  At the same time, it is something that confounds us precisely because it teaches us differently than the world teaches.

In an article in The Atlantic this week, Uri Friedman writes about the walls within the current era.  In fact, quite startlingly, Uri reports that walls and border fences are going up across the world at the fastest rate since the Cold War.  The borderlands of the world – whether those are borders between countries or between cultures – have become a major focus of leaders in the world today.  The borderlands are a place that inspire a sense of fear, a sense of danger.  In response, we are building walls around those borderlands and trying to create the best form of wall technology to keep the differences at bay for as long as we can.  We look out across the borderlands and realize that in order to protect what we have in the now, we must create some

US-Mexico Border Fence courtesy of University of California, Berkeley.
US-Mexico Border Fence courtesy of University of California, Berkeley.

kind of barrier against that which would encroach upon it.  Interestingly enough, the border fences and walls that have been built between 2000 and 2014 are most commonly built by wealthier nations in order to keep out the citizens of poorer nations.  Examples of such structures are to be found in the United States along the U.S.-Mexico border, in Israel on the border of the West Bank, and in Saudi Arabia along its border with Yemen.

These walls of protection go against what we learn from the life of the Trinity in the way that the Trinity enters into our lives.  The Father, Son, and Spirit work, in the Biblical narratives and in our lives today, to bring down the walls that emphasize difference as threat.  The Trinity works within the reality of our lives to teach us that the differences that we notice between persons are the very gifts of the Spirit that we inherit as adopted daughters and sons of God the Father through the life, death, and resurrection of God the Son and the granting of God the Spirit to us to continue the work that the Son began in his earthly pilgrimage.  The differences that are currently understood as threats are, in the life of the Trinity, the very things that make up the entirety of the image of God, the image in which we are created.

The Trinity alters our understanding of other persons we meet because the Trinity works within the boundaries of human creation to knit us together in the unified life of Father, Son, and Spirit.  The persons of the Trinity work together, in a single mission, to call us into the reality of God’s ruling passion – the passion of love that destroys the barriers between us and God.  The ruling passion of the Trinity enters into our own realities, realities characterized by suffering, pain, disease, and works to invite us into the reality of God’s abundance.  It is an invitation to share in the work of Christ by inviting others into God’s abundance in the ways that we pray our own lives.

And while God’s reality, the reality of the love that is shared by Father, Son, and Spirit, is a reality of abundance, it is an abundance that flows out to us in the form of enough.  The life of the Trinity teaches us that the worldview of scarcity, through which we understand the world, is not the way that God speaks creation into existence.  Instead, the abundance of God, found within the movements of the Trinity, is also true within the boundaries of creation in the here and now.  It is an abundance of love and grace that flows out from the Father, Son, and Spirit and enters into our lives.  It is an abundance that spills over into creation and calls creation into existence.  It is an abundance that promises us that there is enough.  It is an abundance that is true because the Father, Son, and Spirit continue to walk with us in the midst of the pain, suffering, and death that is easily found in our own experiences of life.

It is said often that the opposite of scarcity is abundance.  The reality is that the opposite of scarcity is enough.  The abundance of God’s love is the opposite of scarcity in the sense that it is through the abundance of God’s grace that we have enough to enter into the Divine life of Father, Son, and Spirit.  It is the only abundance that comes without expense to another, and it is the kind of abundance that teaches us all we need to do is to put our faith in God.  In putting all of our faith in God, we will be granted enough, and we will find that we enter into a renewed creation as we ascend into the life of the Divine through the life of the Trinity.

In a way, the Trinity itself becomes a metaphor for us to follow in living our own lives within the boundaries of creation.  Though we do not share in the same nature as God, we are able to enter into the life of the Divine through our adoption as children of the Father.  We are able to look at the life of Christ, a life powered by the Spirit, to see what complete faithfulness to the Father looks like.  We are able to look at the Cross and see that it is ourselves that we have crucified, and we are able to finally recognize that the gifts of Son and Spirit invite us to join them in the mission of the Father – a mission of love and salvation for creation.  It is a mission that came from the abundance of God’s self – the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit – and promises enough.  It is a mission of love, of sacrifice, of invitation, and of service.  It is a mission that beckons to us and pleads with us to bring down the walls of scarcity in order to erect the gates of enough.

Leaning into the Uncomfortable

You know, we Episcopalians tend to be a fairly ordered group of people. For example, how many of you sit in, approximately, the same spot week in and week out? I know that I always had “my pew” that I sat in every single Sunday unless I was serving at the altar. It was my place in the congregation, and I expected to sit in that place. I left little to chance when I was going to church. I always got to church early enough to secure my spot and to settle into my pew before worship began. And like many of you, I appreciate being able to go to just about any Episcopal Church in the nation and immediately recognize the form of worship and the prayers being used. I like having the comfort of the prayer book and being able to turn to the well-worn pages towards the center.

Yes, we Episcopalians are ordered people, and we tend to like things in measured ways. We are less likely to shout out an “Amen!” in the middle of a sermon being preached or while a prayer is being offered. Obviously, we will wait for the appropriate time – that is – until the end of the prayer or sermon to utter our “Amens” just barely above a whisper but enough to be heard. It is our way, and if I am being honest, it is something that I absolutely love about our church. It brings me a great sense of comfort to know that I will be able to easily recognize worship no matter what parish I attend – although there are some exceptions to that rule EVEN in The Episcopal Church. Continue reading

A Pilgrimage

The drone of the engines rumbled underneath pushing us across the pale, grey ocean.  With each passing minute, the sun crept closer, and the once dark grey horizon of the ocean slowly began turning silver and then silvery white as the new dawn approached.

IMG_0126I turned to look out of the left side window, and as the sun broke the horizon of white waves of air, the sharp teeth of an unknown predator broke through the surface.  The teeth continued to rise high above the waves beckoning us closer and closer as we sailed on towards our destination.  The descent felt like it took forever.  the jolt of the wheels on the pavement below awakened us all as we coasted towards the port of entry.  As we rolled closer to the port, once glance outside the windows confirmed that we were now inside the mouth of those giant, silver teeth.  As I peered out of the window, I looked upon a new horizon, a new land filled with new people.  Though our journey was not at an end, the first landing in Bolivia brought us closer to meeting, and for some of us reuniting, with a group of children at Villa Amistad in Cochabamba, Bolivia.

The thing about arriving in a new land with new people is that you are not quite sure what they are going to teach you about life and about God.  It is easy to have facile expectations and to overlook the real lessons of the journey when you go on a pilgrimage like the one we took to Bolivia.  It is also easy to over simplify the lives of the people who you are visiting, and it is easy to make simplistic platitudes about the lives of the people you are meeting because their lives seem so much simpler than life in the United States.  Of course, the challenge is to understand how life in a place like Bolivia is so much more challenging than life in the United States.  The challenge is to look beyond the surface of the “simple” life in Bolivia and understand that it is simple not from choice but from scarcity of circumstances. Continue reading