I was fascinated last week by
John’s questions for the journey about what language we speak. It was Pentecost last Sunday, with lots of
celebration of fire and wind and the HS touching
our youth in their confirmation…and the Spirit helped people talk in languages
that weren’t natural to them.
On Monday Lisa asked me if I
wanted help getting rid of all the decorations, balloons and ribbons and so on,
since Pentecost was over. And I read
todays readings – the psalm with its flames of fire (ie lightning) and Isaiah 6
with its burning coal—and realized no. Pentecost isn’t over; we are Pentecost people,
and our language is important. What we speak with our lips matters. The fire
keeps on going. The spirit keeps
empowering, God keeps calling.
First the psalm, the song of
the thunderstorm, where the poet realizes that God is present in the very
creation that scares the heck out of us.
God’s incredible power in creation is recognized, and it immediately
leads to recognizing our human smallness.
In the force of a tsunami, what’s a mere human being? God’s power leads us to realize our
smallness: majesty and humility, and that leads the poet to seek strength and
blessing…to understand that something much bigger than me is unleashed in the
world, and I need what that Something has to offer. You
are awesome God, bless me with peace.
Then there’s the Isaiah
text. God experienced in awesome
splendor in worship leads to an understanding that we, like Isaiah, are pretty
messed up. I am a person of unclean lips says Isaiah. In the face of God’s majesty, I’m pretty
puny. Not a comfortable realization for
us today—we are very used to thinking well of ourselves. Sin’s not a particularly popular concept
these days, used as we are to establishing and raising self esteem. But, fact is, we’re not so great. We fail.
We screw up. We say and do stupid
and unhelpful things, sometimes even illegal things.
Isaiah has this vision that
when he realizes he messes up more often with words than anything else, and God
has something much greater than he to offer
(I am a person of unclean lips)—God
comes to him with hot coal to touch his lips, a wonderful image of cleansing
and transformation – so he can be freed to answer the call God has, who shall I
send?
There is nothing quite so
humbling as sitting at Annual Conference on Thursday and Friday, making smart
alec sassy remarks only half under my breath, beside Alice, who has looked at
this text with me on Tuesday at SLB sits beside me and mutters in my ear hot coals on your unclean lips Margaret. My anger at the injustice, my cynicism of the
denomination, my failure to listen to God speaking through unexpected people,
all come out in the lips. Fire on the
lips. Forgive me God and move me forward.
Guard your lips, says Saint
Benedict. Watch what you say.
Positive words spoken may
help a child move forward in trust
Words of confession spoken,
and words of forgiveness received may heal a relationship
Caring words may soften a
hardened heart into love
Prophetic words may move a
church out of its comfort into its call
Daring words spoken out
against injustice may transform a home, a school, a community, a world, into
peace
Unspoken words, unuttered in
silence at another’s side, may open a soul to the hope of God
Fire on the lips. Watch what you say.
Third in the trinity of texts
is a favorite from Romans: when we do not
know what to pray the Spirit intercedes for us with sighs too deep for words
This has to be one of my
favorite pieces of scripture. Our
journey often takes us deep into places where words will not do. Where words cannot even form. Where hurt or fear is so strong our lips
cannot even say words. When language fails us.
I know its hard for you to think that I am ever stuck for words. But I am.
And at that point, like in the psalms awesome awareness of creation, and
the prophets understanding of God’s majesty, I can do nothing myself. I can only say I trust God.
All these texts talk of the
power of God. The power of God to
transform our lives… with the psalmist, God’s power to strengthen and bless us
with peace… with Isaiah God’s power to cleanse us and make us whole, to guard
our lips and call us into ministries of justic….and with the Romans, God’s
power to know us deeply and work in us when we are at our wits end.
This is the awesome God we
trust our lives to.
May our lives be touched by God’s awesome power, causing us to praise
and seek strength and peace
May our lips be touched by
God’s fire of forgiveness and healing, freeing us to speak the language of love
and justice
And may you develop such
closeness with God that the sighs of your soul may be God-breathed, so when
your lips cannot speak, you heart may still know it is beloved.
Amen.
1 comment:
Thanks, Margaret, for sharing. I was not at AC Syracuse. I hear ya on the "injustice of the denomination". I have heard that a lot lately
Post a Comment