Earth Day

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Sermon: B Lent 4, March 14, 2021, "May your bowl be full"

B Lent 4 OL SJUCC 2021
Mark 8:6; 14:3-9, 23
March 14, 2021

It is the 90-year-old Benedictine monastic, Brother David Steindl-Rast who is considered the world’s expert on gratefulness.  Along with several books, Steindl-Rast has a 15-minute TED talk that has been seen over 6 million times.  In that TED talk, he shares that it is gratefulness which makes us happy.[1]  In a culture that is predicated on violence and consumerism, however, gratefulness or gratitude is not something that happens by default.  Gratefulness or gratitude, is something we must intentionally practice, turn our attention toward.

As Christ teaches, non-violence is intrinsic to the nature of God.  And so, contrary to the popular culture, God does not shout or scream or pound or try to knock down the door.  Though God does not offer violently, God does offer love and life consistently, dependably, and persistently.  Steindl-Rast says,

 

Every moment is a new gift, over and over again, and if you miss the opportunity of this moment, another moment is given to us, and another moment. We can avail ourselves of this opportunity, or we can miss it, and if we avail ourselves of the opportunity, it is the key to happiness.  Behold the master key to our happiness in our own hands. Moment by moment, we can be grateful for this gift.[2]

 

If this is the nature of God, we will not be attune to the gifts of God, given opportunity over and over again, unless we focus our attention and practice, listening and seeing in a way that understands each moment, each particular beautiful piece of creation, as a gift.  We do these practices consistently, dependably, like water dripping on concrete.  Who would guess that water can carve rock so profoundly, and yet, we know that the persistent drip can mold and shape, much like how the Colorado River carves out a path in the Grand Canyon.  I have heard many people refer to me in that way, “Yes, that pastor guy, he is a persistent drip!” 

           Seriously, this is the will and work of God.  In contrast to what cultural Christianity tells us, God does not come in fire, hurricane, or lightning bolt.  Rather, God is like the persistent drip which, over time, changes not only our interior, gets into our blood stream, but then through who we become as the persistent drip, transforms the world.  Joining with others then, we become a river, an ever-flowing stream, that molds and shapes our world. 

           Steindl-Rast talks about the process of gratitude.  In that process,  we fill to an overflowing. And as we are filled, the heart fills, like the bowl of a fountain, there is this quiet and calm. Finally, when the bowl overflows it begins to sing and sparkle and ripple down and out.  Joy becomes articulate.  It comes to itself.  In our imperial, consumeristic culture, however, we are always taught that we need a new and improved bowl, a bigger bowl, a never satisfied with what we have bowl, and so we never have a bowl that fills to overflowing.  Joy never comes to itself.  Gratitude never becomes us because it is something else or something bigger we want.[3]  The attention and practice of gratitude is like that of the monastic practice of simplicity which helps us release what hinders us from entering into prayer.[4]  We become available to joy. 

           Lent is often a call to look for God within ourselves and within our daily experience.  One of my favorite lines from the old television sitcom, “Taxi”, was when Rev. Jim asked Alex, “Hey, Alex, guess how many gumballs I can hold in my mouth at one time?” 

“I don’t know.  How many, Jim?”

Rev. Jim shakes his head.  “Well, I guess I’ll have to ask someone else.”

           Sometimes we look too long outside of ourselves for answers when we should most appropriately look inside ourselves or to our own power and resources for the answers. 

           The prayer form of examen is an ancient spiritual form begun by St. Ignatius of Loyola and continued by the Jesuit community.  It is the persistent drip, expecting to find the presence and activity of God in our lives.  It is like rummaging through a drawer.  We rummage through a drawer expecting to find something.  We rummage through the drawer of our daily lives, expecting to find the presence and activity of God.  “’Rummaging for God’ is an expression that suggests going through a drawer full of stuff, feeling around, looking for something that you are sure must be in there somewhere.[5]

           Examen contemplates the words from Psalm 95, “If today you would hear our Liberator’s voice, do not harden your hearts as you did in the place of quarreling and trial.”[6]  It is to remember that the person with the proverbially hardened heart, the one full of violence, was Pharaoh.  Psalm 95 is a prayer that if we hear God’s voice, our hearts would be softened, molded, and sculpted into a kindness and tenderness for one another.  Do not let your consciousness become like Pharaoh, a hardened heart,  full of violence, for one another.

Spiritual writers have long noted that the word for “conscience” in English is a much broader term in French and Spanish that means something more like the term for when we are fully awake and alive, a consciousness, a recognition and realization of the way God is truly present and moving in the world.  Therefore, in examen, we pray backward, sure that as we rummage through our day, God has been present and moving. 

We give thanks for God’s presence and moving.  We notice and take charge of our feelings so that we respond in freedom rather than letting our feelings take charge of us.  We confess our complicit nature in brokenness without making that brokenness and sin the focus of our lives.  Finally, we look forward to the day coming or the next day, fully expecting God to be present and moving as we think about that day ahead. 

In another pastorate, I actively taught the confirmands how to use the spiritual practice of examen, and I was completely taken by surprise when several of them told me they were using it and enjoying it on an every day basis.  As I reflect back on that, I realize how powerful that practice must have been for them.  In a youth culture that must push on them to understand that they are not enough or to want more, examen helps them to behold their world and the goodness found in it.  They stop to take stock of the light of goodness in their world, express gratitude for that goodness, and then follow that bliss into the future. 

I want us to practice examen today, this ancient pre-literate practice of gratitude that I think has resonance for our post-literate world.  If you have a pen or pencil handy to write with on a stray piece of paper, you might want to use that.  And maybe it is something you can take with you throughout the week.  Perhaps begin or continue in a journal of your own.  Ignatius counseled the Jesuits to practice it at noon and at the end of their day.  Maybe we could all begin with just once a day, recognizing the very full days we have, and, if it gives you life, maybe extend it to twice a day. 

So center yourself.  Become aware of that good and gracious God encircling you, seeking to sit deep within your being and find a home with you.  Tenderly open to that Spirit and ask with deep gratitude for the Spirit’s leading in your life, just a simple prayer like, “God, life sucks right now.  I could use some help,” or “Creator, help me understand this blooming, buzzing confusion.”  Now in the second movement of examen, review the day, the last 24 hours, with a sense of gratitude—the gift of a new day, work to do, relationships, food, challenges, maybe even the dreams you had upon awakening.  Move from place to place throughout this time, moment to moment, person to person, and write down those opportunities for gratitude, your cup or your bowl being filled to overflowing.  As you practice this, your attention is tuned, your gratitude becomes longer and deeper. 

The third movement of examen is to, as you scan your day, recognize all the feelings that surface, the whole range.  They tell us what is going on in our lives, and our call in examen is not to mute them but to pay attention to what they are telling us.  This leads to the fourth movement.  Choose the feeling which caught your attention and pray from it.  Express spontaneously a short prayer that might be a cry for help or healing, maybe a demand that God show up for an injustice in your life or in the world, a prayer of praise or petition, maybe even a confession of where you feel like you did not show up.  The final movement of examen is to move forward.  You may even want to use your calendar for tomorrow to look at your day and see what it holds.  What does that scheduled day bring up in you?  Anticipation?  Delight?  Dread?  Pray a short prayer for whatever comes spontaneously to you and then give thanks to God for this opportunity.[7] 

That is examen.  It is a spiritual practice used by Christians since the 16th Century.  As you can hear, it is not a spiritual practice meant to tell us what despicable people we are and how evil the world is.  On the contrary, examen is a practice that provides for our attention liberation away from the violence and consumerism threaded through our wider culture to move to  a God who is regularly extending goodness and kindness to us like an underground stream. 

I would like to end with the beautiful writing of Jennifer J. Willhoit, sharing poetic words of gratefulness and gratitude, perhaps shaping and crafting the examen we might all consider in this coming week. 

 

Gratefulness lives in our bodies.
And in the corpus of Earth.

It resides there, next to the aorta or in the gray matter in our skulls.
It moves and rushes and sizzles like lightning all over this planet, in all her beings.

We feel a rush of gratitude in our fiery bellies or in the tingle up our arms.
We bear witness to gratitude painted in the growing pink of sunrise or in the moonlit jewels doing pliés on night-black water.

Sometimes we feel it in the lump that forms in our throats—gratitude moving up from the heart, so substantial that it all but stifles us, choking us up. But we are freed from the constriction as soon as we part our lips to let the gratitude pass through us—out into the ever-needy world—in the form of words, a song, or a kiss.

And though it is as tangible as the bodies of growing, vitally-alive coyotes, or green herons, I am absolutely convinced that gratitude is contagious. Because yesterday when a once-mentor-now-dear-friend literally sobbed out his praiseful appreciation to me, I caught his gratitude—palpably felt it rising into my own mouth—and my arms lifted outward in a broad reach that became an embrace.

Shared gratitude. Contagion. Inheritance.
It’s a germ or a gene. It’s shared, and shareable.

It does not live out there—in the world of circumstances, events, facts, or fiction.

Gratefulness lives right here (notice my hand placed gently over the left side of my chest).

And here (see my palms [turned upward toward the coming of the spring sun and finally, finally feeling its warmth]).

In order to feel it, to cultivate it, to find it within—we must simply attend in presence to what is. Right now. Right here. Abiding in this breath. If you are reading this, if you have breath in your body and another inhalation within you, then there is—indeed—a shining golden nugget of gratefulness just waiting there to be discovered, again.

And if that breath within you guides you to pause in a natural and wild place out of doors, with hands on tree bark, flower, rabbit fur; with eyes on shiny bird feather, crispy leaves, or tracing the dew on a fencepost; with the welcome pungency of humus in your nose or the songbirds’ serenade in your ears … then you will have rediscovered gratitude’s true home.[8]

May these words be a gift to you.  May you see every moment as gift and opportunity.  And may you be grateful.  May your bowl be full.  And, as a result, may you be happy.  Amen. 



[1] David Steindl-Rast, “Want to be happy?  Be grateful,” TEDGlobal 2013, June 2013, https://www.ted.com/talks/david_steindl_rast_want_to_be_happy_be_grateful/transcript.
[2] Ibid.
[3] “Interview with David Steindl-Rast:  Anatomy of Gratitude,” OnBeing with Krista Tippett, January 21, 2016, https://onbeing.org/programs/david-steindl-rast-anatomy-of-gratitude/.
[4] Christine Valters Paintner, Lectio Divina―The Sacred Art: Transforming Words & Images into Heart-Centered Prayer (The Art of Spiritual Living) (Woodstock, Vermont:  Skylight, VT, 2011), p. xiv.
5Dennis Hamm, S.J., “Rummaging for God:  Praying Backwards through Your Day,” America, May 14, 1994.  A more extended and detailed version can be found here:  https://www.bc.edu/content/dam/files/top/church21/pdf/C-%5Cfakepath%5CThe%20Ignatian%20Examen_Scala.pdf.
[6] Psalm 95:7b-8, Meribah and Massah, literally mean quarreling (contention) and trial.
[7] Hamm, https://www.bc.edu/content/dam/files/top/church21/pdf/C-%5Cfakepath%5CThe%20Ignatian%20Examen_Scala.pdf.
[8] Jennifer J. Willhoit, Ph.D., “Where Gratefulness Resides,” Gratefulness, March 1, 2018, https://gratefulness.org/explore/blog_news_more/


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