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Today is winter solstice. In my little town we’ll have daylight just over nine hours. This summer it was closer to fifteen.
Now, going forward, instead of darkening, the world becomes a little lighter and warmer. Things will grow differently; they will create differently.
More of my ancestors celebrated solstice than Christmas. But when I celebrate Christmas, ghosts of their rituals and festivities, inform me. There is no separation anywhere.
This morning, I nodded at them all as I sipped coffee on the back porch, awaiting the light in which writing becomes possible.
This morning, they nodded back. This morning they said, “hey Sean, what did you mean by “ecclesial reckoning?”
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The phrase “ecclesial reckoning” stunned me a little. It stunned me when I wrote it – I didn’t want to see it. But this morning, my family said, “don’t look away.”
Sawicki is less interested in a therapeutic model for its own sake because of the risk it will devolve into something merely personal, effacing the necessity of ecclesial reckoning. Whatever illusion resurrection penetrates, it must also takes with it the illusion of separate interests. Do you want to see the Lord or not?
I mean yes, I want to see the Lord. I want to look at the Lord. But no, I do not want to go to church. Fuck church.
I mean that.
I know what some folks say here: fine, don’t go to church. You’re an adult. The world doesn’t care. You do you.
But that’s not what I’m saying. Or rather, that’s not what the writing is asking.
The writing invites a “reckoning,” in the archaic sense of “settling up.” There’s a debt somewhere, somewhere justice is being measured and paid out. Expectations and obligations abound but not in the clear light of day and reason but deeper in the psyche, where Grendel lives and great floods begin and certain hugs and kisses have to suffice for lifetimes.
Sometimes I say to people who are lost in moral quandaries, strangling in scrupulosity, or all tied up in someone else’s text, “get right with your God.”
I mean, figure out your moral and ethical stance and then live by it. What does God want? What is God asking? There are answers to those questions but to reach them you have to realize in a deep and sustainable way that a lot of the interior welter is pitched against realizing those answers.
If, when someone asks, what does God ask of me, and you cite A Course in Miracles or some other gospel or self-help guru, then you have not yet gone deep enough. You are still collaborating with ego.
God is incredibly specific and totally transparent: I say this from experience.
When I sit quietly with God – when I go to the well, when I kneel at the altar, when I sip from the confluence of the Alpha and Omega – I do so always in fear and trembling. Why? Because God invites me to live in a way that heals my heart and the world’s but the world doesn’t see it as healing and so actively – sometimes murderously – opposes it.
Love is often mistaken for weakness, naivete, and disorder. To ego and ego’s works, love is a threat. A world constructed by guilt and fear is not going to just say, oh thank the Good Lord, Jesus is here.
Jesus wasn’t killed to atone for our sins or for any other fancy theological reason. He was killed because he lived a life of love that threatened the dominant political and religious culture and so they tortured and killed him. They always do.
The crucifix is no joke, nor is it merely an historical event. And absent the crucifixion, you don’t get resurrection, and it’s resurrection that joins the circle and unites us with all Creation.
Sawicki says, in order to make sense of resurrection, we have to interpret something. We have to learn how to see in a certain way, a new way. That’s the point of all our practice: we want a new way of seeing – a new way of making meaning together out of our living.
The Holy Spirit’s goal gives one interpretation, meaningful to you and to your brother. Thus can you communicate with him, and he with you (T-30.VII.6:2-3).
Sawicki says – it’s the part of her writing that I resist, set aside, it’s the part I forget – that you need a community in which to teach and learn this new way of seeing.
Also, this teaching and learning reflects an active pedagogy – it’s not just we feed the mind with beautiful scripture and deep metaphysics. It includes – it must include – the body.
Crucifixion and resurrection are things that happen to and through bodies. Miracles and meals – the crux of the historical Jesus’s practice of justice and mercy – are also things that happen to and through bodies.
I’m not saying throw A Course in Miracles away! I’m saying, it’s wrong in a vital way about mind/body dualism. But “wrong” is really a cry for help, one to which we are personally called to respond. We want to see it differently, right?
I will write more about this “cry for help” elsewhere later. Here, this morning, I simply want to stand in the light cast by the phrase “ecclesial reckoning.”
What is God asking me here? And is it separate from what God is asking you here?
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Jack Gilbert’s poem “Island and Figs” is a good poem to read on winter solstice. Everything in it is dense and bright and solid – the sun, the rocks, the stone. Even the old woman gathering snails owns an ancient quality, as if she has been there a thousand times a thousand years working to feed us.
Here is how Gilbert ends his poem:
The heart
never fits
the journey.
Always
one ends
first.
Next to Emily Dickinson, Jack Gilbert is my favorite poet. Nobody taught me more about how to see the world by living in it a certain way. My debt (there’s that word again) is large.
And yet.
In Advent, on Solstice – heart weary, mind at range – I wonder. I wonder if Gilbert’s assumption is an error. What if that to which the word “heart” can sometimes point never ends? What if “journey” is merely “seeing another way together?”
I wonder about this fight I’ve been having for going on sixty years. I wonder who am I fighting? I wonder if my enemy is as lonely as I am? I wonder if he, too, wants a reason to lay down his arms?
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I wonder if he, too, has spent a lifetime looking at women – even a woman – waiting for Her to look back and see him? Sawicki again: “The word that became flesh was yes and Mary said it” (Seeing the Lord 326).
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The long night ends but this light, my God, it blinds me.
Nineteen / Twenty-One