Archive | November 2023

At the Heart of Generosity

At the Heart of Generosity
David R. Weiss – Sunday, November 19
For Michael Servetus Unitarian Society

[NOTE: PDF is here. The readings I selected for the service are appended at the end of the post and on the pdf.]

If you read my teaser in the Thursday email or watched the video, you already know where we’re going. At the heart of generosity, in fact, in the exact middle of the word itself, sits Eros. The Greek word that we associate with sexual—erotic—love.

And, yes, I’m going to claim that Eros is at the heart of healthy, human, just generosity. But I can assure any of you starting to squirm in your seats that, NO, despite the past week’s unseasonably warm weather, it’s NOT going to get steamy in here during my message today.

STILL—my thoughts on Eros and its relationship to generosity didn’t fall from the sky. They unfolded in my life. And since most of you don’t know much about me yet, we’ll get to the heart of generosity, but we’ll get there by way of the classroom … and the bedroom.

***

I have been nothing in my life if not an excellent student. Indeed, recovering from that “excellence” has been the focus of my therapy for some time now. But that’s another story.

This story—about generosity—begins with Agape. The highest love. Self-giving love. Unconditional. Non-preferential. Sacrificial. Perfect love. Reserved for God, as I learned about it in my teens. And yet, paradoxically, held up as the measure of human love. By which human love inevitably fell short.

It was almost as though Agape got center stage for the precise purpose of showing us up.

Don’t get me wrong. Philia (literally, “brotherly love,” but more broadly, love between friends) had its own legitimate nobility. And Eros (at least in its “cleaned up” expression of rather sexless romantic love) had its place. Although, Eros was more casually recognized as “love gone wild,” lust, insatiable desire, self-centered longing. Best give Eros a wide berth. And parents, at least, got a temporary gift pass to Agape (in their better moments)—on account of taking care of helpless little ones.

But Agape—at least as I learned, excellent student that I was—Agape was perfect love. Did I say unconditional, self-giving love, sacrificial, holy love? Beyond reach of all but saints. So, of course, excellent student that I was, I took a big gulp and said, “Hold my beer.”

Sadly, I think it’s fair to say that the wreckage of my first two marriages, both of which ended in divorce, accompanied by differing degrees of harm to those involved, is indebted in no small part to my persistent and persistently unsuccessful emulation of Agape.

I only began to see that years later, when Eros stole my heart. Well, Margaret stole my heart. But Eros came along for the ride. Thank God for that. But we’re not done in the classroom yet. Because after two decades as an excellent student, with two master’s degrees completed, I became a professor of religion.

What happens next is a little like origami artwork. A whole bunch of creases get made, and all of sudden those individual folds rather unexpectedly allow a flat sheet of paper to become a three-dimensional something entirely new.

These are the creases.

I had a fifth grade Sunday school teacher who, in essence, taught me to pray. Not long after he went off to seminary … only to be kicked out for being gay. Years later, after a couple decades of drowning the sorrow of a ruptured vocation in food and drink, he suffered a massive stroke. I spent many hours over the last months of his life at his bedside until he died at age 46.

In seminary, I counted at least half-a-dozen gay or lesbian classmates among my close friends. They were pursuing ministry in a church that demanded a sort of self-sacrificial secrecy of them in exchange permitting them to declare good news to virtually everyone except themselves.

A decade later, early in my grad studies at Notre Dame, the national ELCA Lutheran church decided to talk about sexuality. Having just used a Ph.D. seminar in Christian Ethics to clarify my views and sharpen my voice, I found myself nervous but driven to speak up in my congregation on behalf of those seminary friendships.

A couple years later, still at Notre Dame, I found myself weeping over a poem written by an anonymous gay senior and published in a campus magazine. I wrote a response that lit my own soul on fire. Published a week later in the same magazine, it became the first of a series of pieces I wrote as an Ally while at Notre Dame.

Those are all—or at least most—of the creases in place when I showed up at Luther College, fresh out of Notre Dame, in the fall of 1998.

Now the “all-of-a-sudden” folding.

That October, the college Pride group’s “National Coming Out Day” celebration sparked some ugly backlash on campus. In my classes I addressed it in a way that made clear I was an Ally. One thing led to another and before I’d even been on campus for two months, I found myself speaking at a campus-wide convocation. After that quite a few LGBTQ students started emailing me and I freely shared the handful of essays I’d written at Notre Dame affirming LGBTQ persons from a theological perspective.

The following spring one of my colleagues in Religion taught a course on “Religion, Sex, and Power.” To his surprise (and mine, too) several of his gay and lesbian students wrote final papers citing my unpublished essays in their references. Years before Facebook came along, my words had gone viral, and I didn’t even know it. Until that colleague told me, and suggested that I approach our department chair about teaching a course focused on Homosexuality and Christian Theology since the students were clearly hungry to learn. I asked, and the chair said yes.

So, all of a sudden, or so it seemed, as summer 1999 began I was educating myself to teach a course titled “LGBT Voices in Theology” the following spring. We’d be reading Christian theology written by gay and lesbian theologians to hear how their theology was shaped by their sexuality. And I was about to meet Eros on her own terms. Center stage. With Agape nowhere in sight.

That same summer I was also about to meet Margaret. Well, that’s a whole other story in itself. We’d actually dated quite seriously twenty years earlier in college. Went our separate ways. Married. Became parents. Divorced. And here we were, reconnecting at 39, happily surprised when romance began to blossom again despite the 150 miles between us. Old enough to have known real heartbreak—and to recognize the gift of new love on the cusp of forty. And young enough to still feel like mischievous teenagers as that new love unfolded.

AND—this is the crucial thing—as we were navigating the wonder of our intimacy, I was also reading lesbian and gay theology, and Margaret and I were talking about it together. Well, we did more than just talk, but I’ve promised you a PG-rated message. Let’s just say, we talked and “talked” and “talked” some more. As I said earlier, Margaret stole my heart. Eros came along for the ride.

Let me tell you about that.

Many of us my age and older—if we grew up Christian and straight—grew up learning that Eros was not “proper love.” Eros was about desire, lust, pleasure, and satisfaction, which we unfortunately—and inaccurately—paired exclusively with sexual desire, lust, pleasure, and satisfaction. And then framed it as selfish sexual desire, lust, pleasure, and satisfaction. Still, being straight comes with privileges. So, because our straight sexuality was affirmed by church and society, if a little Eros crept into our bedrooms, we could just be discreet. Eros could be kept in the shadows.

But if you were gay or lesbian, as far as church and society were concerned, your sexuality was defined by Eros—and moreover condemned as perverse and selfish. And if you were gay or lesbian and determined not only to stay in the church, but even to write theology—well, because your sexuality was the very grounds for your condemnation, keeping Eros in the shadows was not an option. You needed to make a vigorous defense of why Eros was not some fatal flaw in your character, but an essential part of the created goodness you carried. If you were gay or lesbian, you needed to redeem Eros in a way that no straight person had to. And these theologians, writing out of their own experience—including the profound goodness they knew within their sexuality—they redeemed Eros and then some.

For me and Margaret, that redemption of Eros was life-giving. Tutored, as it were, by gay and lesbian theologians sitting (metaphorically, of course!) on our nightstand, we learned to savor our longing and our touching in ways the discrete affirmation of our straight sexuality had never dreamed of. We were blessed.

But ALSO, my understanding of generosity was transformed. So, NOW we’re ready to talk about the heart of generosity: EROS

Eros is love grounded in the blessing of finitude. Yes, within sexuality, Eros guides the love that carries me beyond myself and gifts me with an exquisite completion that lies in another. But Eros is so much more than that. Eros is the viscerally felt, the sensually known satisfying connection between us and the world. From physical need to emotional hope to intellectual excitement and aesthetic aspiration, eros is the human being fully inhabiting its embodied humanity.

Eros is in the thirst that longs for—and relishes cool water. Eros is in the quiet glee of curling up with a good book. Eros is in the aroma of fresh baked bread or that first brewed cup of coffee in the morning. It’s in the symphony of birdsong at the break of dawn—or the symphony of an orchestra. Eros is in the purr of a cat or the contented sigh of a dog when you rub it in that special place. It’s in the beauty of the sunset—or the twinkling of stars on a dark night. Eros is even in the sweat and sore muscles after a long hike or a hard day of work. Eros is love grounded in the blessing of finitude.

Eros is love drenched in the wonder of what is. It is the love—the joy-gratitude-awe—that we know at the many places where our senses join us to the world around us. Eros is the bridge to the other (whether person, pet, or other planetary wonder)—whose company we might savor in a multitude of ways.

What a tragedy then that we have so narrowed Eros down to sex! And yet further to the selfish side of sexuality that, in truth, contradicts the rich meaning of Eros itself. One almost wonders whether Eros was so twisted and diminished … in order to prevent us from accessing its power.

I mentioned at the start that my relationship with Agape has been checkered at best. There is no doubt: expressions of self-giving love are a good thing. Every parent, friend, sibling, and lover knows that the relationships we prize most require the occasional gift of selfless love to really flourish. I have known this, too. But as the singular ideal, as the defining pattern of Love, Agape has serious flaws. Dislodged from its proper place—as surprising grace within the life of Eros—Agape tempts us to believe we are only optionally members of a community larger than ourself.

In fact, I have come to suspect that Agape love—at least when made the pinnacle of love, the measure by which other loves are found wanting—when that happens Agape is the mirror … of patriarchal love. When cast as pure, perfect love, Agape expects and needs nothing in return. It is always and only self-giving. It is a view of love that says it is both possible and even desirable to have no need of others. And this is a notion of love ideal for perpetuating patterns of domination. What Agape offers in its spirit of generosity is always charity, never justice. And as my friend Colin says, “Charity requires disparity.” It requires a situation in which some have extra, while others are desperately in need. Agape is rooted in disparity.

Eros, however, because it is rooted in honest human need, knows something about vulnerability from the inside. Hence, Eros is the love that powers healthy, human, just generosity that responds to needs without waiting for disparity to spur it into action.

This is love that relishes the humble awareness that both need and gift are universal—and move (circulate!) universally among us. In one moment, my need receives its completion from another—person, creature, or element of the world. And in the next moment my gift completes the need of another—person, creature, or element of the world. But wait, the mystery is that sometimes, fairly often, almost always if we attend to it—need and gift overlap in the miracle of Mutuality. And Mutuality, born of Eros, is truly at the heart of generosity fit for finitude.

Indeed, mutuality is the presence and practice of justice because it is life erotically reflecting the truth of an interdependent reality. And mutuality is also the presence and practice of love because in its rich diversity this interdependent reality longs erotically to feel Itself folded into embrace upon embrace upon embrace. And from the perspective of this erotic interdependent Mutuality, it becomes clear that finitude is not simply our lot in life, as though it were bad fortune. It is our luck, our extraordinary good fortune to be given lives that lure us into other lives, human and nonhuman.

Eros aims to restore authentic intimacy as the very ground of our relationships, from self to other to Earth. And in a world beset by systems and structures of power, whose survival and profit depend on our disconnection, this is yet more than good fortune. In such a world, to make Mutuality the heartfelt measure of our humanity is, in fact, an act of holy resistance.

For mutuality is the fulness of Eros manifest in vibrant community. It is the seed of “the forces deep within that call us to become more than we have been up to now.” As the mundane-yet-sacred mode of our creaturely existence, it is the way we bear “witness to all that we must hold the world in our hands.” In the face of adversity and oppression, Mutuality becomes solidarity. On a finite planet, across diverse ecosystems, up and down food chains, from wilderness to urban settings, Mutuality is both the pursuit and the practice of harmony and humility, justice and joy, care and compassion.

At the heart of our generosity is not the abundance of what we have—for in the realm of finitude what we ought to have is simply enough. At the heart of our generosity is not the desperate need of others. That need is a cry for justice, to which we respond not with charity but with solidarity.

No, finally, at the heart of our generosity is Eros, love that links us—indeed lures us—into Mutuality with other lives, into that symphony where need and gift blend seamlessly as notes of the same song, in which this chorus rises again and again to declare with knowing delight: “Nothing belongs to any of us … except as we belong to one another.”

Generosity is that chorus sung out in the whole of our lives.

May it be so. And Blessed be.

***

The opening reading, to go with the Chalice Lighting—
Let us be mindful of the forces deep within which call us to become more than we are. May this hour bring rest and renewal, comfort and challenge. May we be reminded here of our highest aspirations and inspired to bring our gifts of love and service to the altar of humanity. May we know once again that we are not isolated beings, but that we are connected – in mystery and in wonder to each other, to this community and to the universe.
—Anonymous, from the UUA website, a slightly expanded version of Reading #434 in Singing the Living Tradition

The message reading—
Our reading is from Audre Lorde, who identified herself as a “black, lesbian, feminist, socialist, mother, warrior, poet”:

There are many kinds of power, used and unused, acknowledged or otherwise. The erotic is a resource that lies deep within each of us, firmly rooted in the power of our feeling.
The erotic connects the spiritual and communal and political dimensions of our lives—at the sensual level. Here we touch and are touched by the physical, emotional, and psychic expressions of what is deepest and strongest and richest within each of us.
The erotic moves in the power which comes from sharing deeply any pursuit with another person, forming a bridge of shared joy. The erotic is the open and fearless underlining of my own capacity for joy—experienced in the way my body stretches to music or dancing, or when building a bookcase, writing a poem, examining an idea, or moving into sunlight against the body of a woman I love.
In touch with the erotic, I become less willing to accept powerlessness, resignation, despair, self-effacement, or self-denial.
This is one reason why the erotic is so feared, and so often relegated to the bedroom alone, when it is recognized at all. For once we begin to feel deeply all the aspects of our lives, we begin to demand from ourselves and from our life-pursuits that they feel in accordance with that joy which we know ourselves to be capable of.
When we begin to live from within outward, in touch with the power of the erotic within ourselves, and allowing that power to inform and illuminate our actions upon the world around us, then we begin to be responsible to ourselves in the deepest sense.
—Audre Lorde, excerpts from the short essay, “Use of the Erotic”

The closing reading, before the Extinguishing of the Chalice—
This is the mission of our faith: to teach the fragile art of hospitality; to revere both the critical mind and the generous heart; to prove that diversity need not mean divisiveness; and to witness to all that we must hold the world in our hands.
—William F. Schultz, UUA minister and former president of the UUA, Reading #459 in Singing the Living Tradition

***

David Weiss is a theologian, writer, poet and hymnist, “writing into the whirlwind” of contemporary challenges, joys, and sorrows around climate crisis, sexuality, justice, peace, and family. Reach him at drw59mn@gmail.com. Read more at www.davidrweiss.com where he blogs under the theme, “Full Frontal Faith: Erring on the Edge of Honest.” Support him in Writing into the Whirlwind at www.patreon.com/fullfrontalfaith.

Earth Grief – A Book After My Heart

Earth Grief – A Book After My Heart
David R. Weiss – November 10, 2023
Book Review: Earth Grief: The Journey Into and Through Ecological Loss by Stephen Harrod Buhner, Raven Press, 2022.

Earth Grief by Stephen Harrod Buhner is a book after my heart. Purchased on a relative whim during Chelsea Green Publishing’s fall sale, I was (of course) drawn to the title which resonates so closely with my own intuition about what this moment requires of us. That whim proved providential as Earth Grief abounds with insight, wisdom, and love.

Buhner’s background includes a bit of everything. As the byline on the back cover succinctly summarizes, he is “the award-winning author of 24 books on plant medicines, Earth ecosystem dynamics, emerging diseases, and the states of mind and being necessary for successful habitation of Earth.” Not mentioned there but essential for this book: his knowledge of language and his study of death and dying.

Buhner defines Earth grief as “our feeling response to a communication from the heart of Earth urging us … to reinhabit our interbeing with the world.” (14-15) When we suppress this grief—whether in pursuit of scientific objectivity or pressed by cultural norms—we’re actually choosing pathology. Silencing the alarm we ought to be feeling in response to Earth’s wounds. If we instead allow that grief in, permitting it to move through us, it will awaken our deeper self and call forth our unique gifts as needed in this moment. Earth grief is thus a vocational compass, aligning our particular lives with the whole horizon of life.

Buhner writes with a sense of heartfelt urgency. Not because he thinks it’s still possible to avoid ecological-societal collapse (quite the opposite), but because he believes grief can guide us into and through that loss. The warmth of his writing reflects his intimate knowledge and infectious love of Earth, but also an equally genuine love of humanity. The grief he describes is personal grief. His for Earth; his for us.

Buhner says that we (in the West) learn to dissociate from an early age; we set our feelings aside as though we know the world better once we’ve silenced our heart. Taught to be wary of anthropomorphizing the world, we end up mechanomorphizing it instead (reducing it to a machine). He observes how many ecologists distance themselves from their feelings by moving from the immediacy of first-person voice into a more universal second-person voice or a yet more abstract third person voice when speaking or writing about the siege of nature going on all around us. Our world is daily being unworlded, but we are determined to remain calm.

First-person, Buhner would say. My world is daily being unworlded, but I’m being taught/pressured to remain clam. And that calm is killing me and my world. First-person speech owns the experience.

This is part of attending to a “climate of mind,” by which he means the defining ambience of a perspective—or a place. We can adopt a climate of mind that dissociates us from the unfolding disaster … or a climate of mind willing to feel Earth’s pain and grieve in response. Similarly, an old growth forest has a climate of mind that exudes its pungent complex harmony while a swath of clear-cut land has a climate of mind like an anguished scream of abandonment. At heart is the recognition that both people and place exist with rich emotional texture—and the erasure of that texture erases four billion years of evolutionary effort and wisdom.

But there’s nothing sentimental about that wisdom. Life longs to flourish (as whole): that’s what we sense in the old growth forest. But flourishing life involves, demands, simply connotes (without judgment) an abundance of death. That’s as true for us as for any ecosystem. So, let me resume Buhner’s preferred first-person voice. The core truth is that I live by the death of other things and other things will one day in turn live by the death of me. I might prefer to imagine utopias in which death isn’t necessary, but Buhner insists every deathless utopia is dystopian. “Death is not a flaw in the system, it is a feature. It is built into the system and it’s built into the system for a reason.” (201) So long as I refuse to embrace death as part of the bargain of life, I help drive the eco-crisis because that refusal tempts me to live without regard for finitude.

The crucial move happens when I admit that death is always at the table. From that moment on, I can begin to make choices that are responsible to the reality of life in which death is always inevitably present. I can begin to live wisely in a world that runs on the twinned—fully entwined—energies of life/death.

Unfortunately, for too many generations, and with far too much industrial inertia, human civilization has lived otherwise. While Buhner agrees the climate crisis is one consequence of this, he plumbs the depth of our dysfunction by looking at plastics and pharmaceuticals. Our unchecked reliance on both is just as ruinous for the planet’s ecosystems as the unchecked emission of greenhouse gasses. Both plastics and pharmaceuticals move through ecosystems with devastating consequences.

Plastics bond to rock, invade food chains, and take up residence in tissue across all manner of creatures from plankton to person. Most drugs leave our bodies (or animal bodies) or the crop/soil/water on which they’ve been applied without losing their potency meaning they continue to “work” elsewhere—disrupting in just decades finely balanced ecological harmonies achieved over millennia. The rampant use of antibiotics in particular has been teaching(!) bacteria how to survive modern medicine—learning(!) that gets passed from bacteria to bacteria. If the words “teach” and “learn” seem overstated for bacteria, Buhner might say that’s because the words “arrogance” and “folly” are understatements for human civilization.

Unsurprisingly, when he finally delivers his diagnosis, it’s terminal. Not necessarily for humanity, but surely for what we have come to call civilization. Human activity has so altered the systems we depend on that we’re headed for an entirely new normal. One that may well take centuries of upheaval before it finally settles in … so far from the normal we now know, that everything at present is at an end. Dying. An ending already underway. Reflecting on the image of a terminally ill spouse, he writes, “And maybe it is the same with Earth as it is with my beloved: if I am wise, I will reach out so that we can grieve together while there is still time.” (175) Only the warmth of his writing makes the heartbreak of such words bearable. Just barely.

To help orient us to the ending we face, Buhner explores the terrain of death from terminal disease to other instances of gut-wrenching loss. Death unmoors us. And the fact that this world—from ecosystem to social system—is ending, will do the same. Meanwhile, “Grief will be our companion on the journey because of what we have lost and because the losing will not end in our lifetime—nor will it end in the lifetime of our children or our grandchildren, or their children either.” (195) Ultimately, Buhner turns to the work of Elizabeth Kübler-Ross (with whom he studied) to find guidance for traversing the territory of Earth grief. He recounts vignettes that highlight the wisdom of choosing to love and to serve in the face of death, concluding that “She [Kübler-Ross] did not find despair or apathy to be the final state of being that occurs when a person truly accepts the fact of a terminal illness. She found it to be something else entirely.” (240)

In the last thirty pages of Earth Grief Buhner explores what that “something else entirely” might mean for those of us living with Earth grief on the far side of acceptance. These pages are impossible to capture in a few words; you really must digest the first 240 pages to receive the wisdom he offers here at the end. I’ll just say this. Buhner holds an almost mystical (he would perhaps say an ecological-minded and evolution-fostered) conviction that we’re in radical relationship with Earth. I don’t use the work “mystical” lightly. His conviction hearkens to Augustine’s exclamation in his Confessions: “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.” I’ve no doubt Buhner would trade “Lord” for “Earth” and say the same.

Because of this radical relationship the only way we can reclaim our fully human selves as we meet this approaching End involves learning once again to touch and be touched by Earth … opening ourselves to Earth grief. And perhaps even to something more. Indeed, in ways that will only emerge as this renewal unfolds, he suggests this renewal is healing for both people and Earth (and all the creatures in between). Not a healing that can alter this Ending, but a healing that can alter what comes next.

I was so moved by Earth Grief and felt such a kinship with Buhner’s work that even before I’d finished the book, I felt compelled to reach out and share some of my own writing with him. I found his website and as soon as I landed on the homepage I was met with his … obituary. Stephen died in December 2022. I was overcome—with grief. How fitting.

* * *

David Weiss is a theologian, writer, poet and hymnist, “writing into the whirlwind” of contemporary challenges, joys, and sorrows around climate crisis, sexuality, justice, peace, and family. Reach him at drw59mn@gmail.com. Read more at www.davidrweiss.com where he blogs under the theme, “Full Frontal Faith: Erring on the Edge of Honest.” Support him in Writing into the Whirlwind at www.patreon.com/fullfrontalfaith.

November 14 2023 – Conversations in the Commons

COMING: November 14 2023 – Conversations in the Commons with David Weiss

NOTE: This announces a local (St. Paul) in-person event, so it won’t be accessible to many of my readers. But I want you to know that it’s happening. As I’m able, I hope to offer similar opportunities in a Zoom format … if you’d be excited for a Zoom option in the future, please comment or message me.

I am pleased to announce my THIRD “Conversations in the Commons” around my work “Writing into the Whirlwind” coming up on Tuesday, November 14! 

Through a creative collaboration with Zion Lutheran Church as part of their commitment to serve as a “community commons” in their neighborhood, I’m hosting “Conversations in the Commons” around my “Writing into the Whirlwind” every second Tuesday of the month—from 6:30-8pm. (The last date for 2023 is Dec. 12.)

These evenings are an opportunity for me to share some of my recent work (or some of my favorite) and then open things up for conversation. I’ll typically identify the blog posts we’ll be discussing at least a week in advance so you can read them ahead of time and come ready to engage! Each evening, I’ll offer a few opening reflections, and then invite conversation, which might simply be in response to my reflections and selected writings or in response to some posed questions. My work has always been enriched by conversation, and that’s more important than ever today. You’ll find topics for the next two upcoming conversations, as well as key details for all these events on the backside.

Tuesday, November 14, 2023 – The Roots of Our Ruin: We Fell Apart

There is a lie at the very heart of our Western cosmology. Whether religious or secular we imagine ourselves somehow other than the world in which we live and move and have our being. That sense of human separation is perhaps the most primal seed of our current crises. Plural, because “crisis” doesn’t begin to name the depth of our entangled dilemma(s). Understanding—and undoing—this lie is the only “green” path forward. From how we consume resources to how we grow the economy, from how we dispose of waste to how we bury our dead, we have been enchanted by an otherness that is fundamentally untrue. Coming to terms with how we fell apart—and how we might come back together—is the work of communities that might bring us home. For this Tuesday, please read this new essay up on my blog: The Roots of Our Ruin: We Fell Apart. It’s 6 pages long and in a couple days I’ll add a link to a PDF of this new piece at the top of the blog post if you’d like to print it out. Of course, you don’t need to read the essay in advance, but the conversation will be far richer if you do! Bring your comments and questions; I’ll bring mine.

Other key details:

  • Location: Zion Lutheran Church, 1697 LaFond Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104. No parking lot, but plenty of street parking right near the intersection. Unfortunately, Zion’s building is not (yet) accessible; an elevator is coming in the next year!
  • Entrance: Use the door along Aldine Street near the alley. There will be plenty of signs (maybe even a smiling person) to guide you to the Conference Room.
  • These evenings are no cost to you. I will usually set out a donation basket if you feel moved to put a couple dollars to benefit some aspect of Zion’s ministry or a cause dear to me. But all that I truly ask is your presence and participation!
  • The second Tuesday of each month Zion hosts a gluten-free, nut-free, vegan community meal. You’re welcome to come early for this pay-as-you-can meal served in the church basement. But you do need to RSVP separately by 8am Monday for this. Find important details about the meal BELOW.

UPCOMING CONVERSATION TOPICS:
Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2023: Christmas Pageant Pandemonium: Untangling & Untaming Christmas.

Shepherds and Magi often traipse nearly side-by-side down church aisles in Christmas pageant cuteness. Some wee kids become angels underneath shiny halos while another child gets to be “the” glittery Christmas Star. But Matthew and Luke, whose images we blend together in our Christmas pageants, each offer their own distinctive Christmas story. And by untangling these yuletide tales, we also untame them—releasing their imaginative foreshadowing of the world-challenging power of God experienced in Jesus. If you’ve ever wondered whether there’s more to the Christmas stories than wondrous tales and a cute baby, this evening will give you plenty to ponder. This is Christmas wonder made most real. I can pretty much guarantee you’ll learn a few new things—and that you’ll never think about Christmas in quite the same way again. (Although not directly joined to my “writing into the whirlwind” around climate and ecological-societal collapse, this session will lift up the unexpected—and necessary—power residing in these sacred stories. Power that can help up meeting the future well.)

The community meal is served all day, from 11am to 7pm.

Make Colin’s life easier by preordering your Community Dinner meals no later than 8am on Monday. That’s his shopping day. Here are the preordering instructions:

  1. Email eurekacompassveganfood@gmail.com to let Colin know HOW MANY meals you need and WHEN you’re coming. (If you’re coming for my 6:30p “Conversations in the Commons,” you’ll want to arrive 5:45-6p and dine in. We WON’T be meeting in the dining area, so you’ll want to finish your meal there and then head to our conversation room at 6:25p.)
  2. NO PAYMENT IS NECESSARY, but cash contributions are accepted the day of the dinner. If you’d like to contribute with a credit card, indicate how much you wish to contribute when you email your pre-order. You’ll receive an invoice by email that you can pay electronically via a prompt on the invoice.
  3. Show up on the day of the dinner at your designated time, and we’ll have your meals ready for you! If you have any questions, just send us an email! We’re happy to connect!

Each meal is gluten free, nut free, and vegan to make it accessible to as many in the community as possible. Other allergens such as corn and soy are rarely used. These meals are always offered “Pay what you want/can.” No one is turned away for lack of funds. Each Community Dinner has a philanthropic partner and half of all contributions at Tuesday dinners benefit Zion Lutheran’s Food Justice programs and Thursday food shelf program.

* * *

David Weiss is a theologian, writer, poet and hymnist, “writing into the whirlwind” of contemporary challenges, joys, and sorrows around climate crisis, sexuality, justice, peace, and family. Reach him at drw59mn@gmail.com. Read more at www.davidrweiss.com  where he blogs under the theme, “Full Frontal Faith: Erring on the Edge of Honest.” Support him in Writing into the Whirlwind at www.patreon.com/fullfrontalfaith.

The Roots of Our Ruin: We Fell Apart

The Roots of Our Ruin: We Fell Apart
David R. Weiss – November 6, 2023

Welcome to the Anthropocene, that geologic epoch that echoes our name (anthropos: humanity) because, at last, in this epoch human activity has come to assert itself as a force of planetary scale. (Think “fossil fuel and friends”: soaring CO2, clear cut forests, melting icecaps, polluted waterways, ecosystems fractured and destroyed, and species seemingly racing—being run—toward extinction.) This is change and peril on steroids. But worse: it is unmistakably ecocidal in aim. It is change for the sake of destruction. Peril for the rapacious rush of adrenaline. It is madness. And ruin. Ours. Earth’s.

Indeed, the passive tense of that opening paragraph is dishonest. Human activity writ large is on a murderous assault across Earth. From at least the industrial age onward we have ripped that fabric ourselves—and done so with glee. We have pursued the peril of societies and ecosystems as though it were our life’s purpose. We have razed flora and fauna in a killing frenzy we call “progress.” How quaint.

“We” is loaded language, of course. It means mostly those members of the “developed” world, “developed” itself a misnomer, since that very development is bringing about the death of the planetary systems that support life. And even among this “developed” world, most of us are more accurately described as entangled actors trapped in the systems at the heart of the Anthropocene. Undeniable accomplices in an ecocidal assault that nevertheless profits us very little and over which we have no real power. And yet, this ruin will wreck us all. What irony: the Anthropocene, flying our species’ flag in its name, may end up being the epoch that ushers us … out.

The exact onset of the Anthropocene remains up for debate. It’s most often dated to the 1940’s or 1950’s, tagged to the dawn of the nuclear age or the post-war boom of industrial growth and consumer consumption. Both events can lay legitimate claim to tilting Earth’s axis off center. But neither came out of nowhere, and there are those who argue for dating the Anthropocene from the invention of the steam engine (1712) or more broadly the advent of the Industrial Revolution (around 1780), both of which are direct if distant forebears of the atomic/consumer ages.

Still others suggest that humanity first ran afoul of Earth’s aspirations for a mutually beneficial relationship already some 12,000(!) years ago with the Agricultural Revolution: that this first step into settled life and toward what eventually became civilization is where the earliest roots of our now approaching ruin started out. That planting crops was the opening move in a cultural chess match with Earth, of which the Bomb and the Market are simply the moments when we cried “Check!” and “Check Mate!” (Without realizing that this joyful cry effectively … existentially … meant that we lost everything. Oops.)

I don’t doubt that these various external factors—cultivating crops, building machines, splitting the atom, and selling ourselves all manner of things we don’t need—have played a role in bringing us to this fraught moment. But as someone who specializes in the power of our inner worlds, I want to suggest that the true roots of our ruin lie within.

In short, we fell apart. Three short words, brimful—of catastrophe. Spilling out in multiple directions.

Where do I begin? That, right there, is THE question. Posed not rhetorically but evocatively. Where do any of us begin? The central lie that has taken up residence in our inner world is that we “begin” somewhere other than in nature. That we are somehow above and qualitatively different than “animals.” That we move through this world as conquerors-yet-aliens destined for eternal life in some realm other than this one. This is the lie in which we live. The lie that threatens to kill us all.

We fell apart. In one of Western culture’s defining origin myths (Judeo-Christian, but culturally omnipresent), Genesis 3 recounts the story we’ve come to know as The Fall in the Garden of Eden. There are many ways to interpret that tale, but today I’m mostly just borrowing that word: FALL. The story implies that once upon a time there was a perfect world in which there were perfect human beings who unfortunately, tragically, made a wrong choice—and fell.

I don’t believe there was such a past. I’m persuaded our origins unfolded much more slowly, as the life force in our genes inched slowly across eons toward greater complexity of cognition until humanity—homo sapiens—appeared. But the truth of the Genesis tale lies in its witness to the early recognition that things are not as we wish they might be. Whether or not a perfect world ever was (it wasn’t!), this world’s “imperfection” presses in on us. Inexorably and uncomfortably. Flood, famine, disease, tragedy, the hard labor of daily life, the pain of childbirth, and, ultimately, death. This is not the world we would’ve mapped had we been asked. But it is the world in which we find ourselves, nonetheless. It is a world that challenges us to make meaning.

And in that world, we chose to fall apart. That is, at some point, we chose to meet this beautiful but unpredictable, abundant but harrowing, life-giving but death-demanding world by choosing that our true home was elsewhere. That the flora and fauna around us were not family but fodder. Rather than seeking the wisdom to make ourselves at home here, we imagined we were ultimately not part of the cycle of life here on Earth, but merely biding time until we found our real home. Elsewhere. Apart. And there we fell.

We know better now. And yet by now we are so entangled in patterns of apart-ness that both our habits and our hearts resist the only truth that might guide us into and through the ruins ahead.

For instance, we know now that we are alive because we are ecosystems: interwoven with the world. Not apart. Primarily in our gut, but also in our mouths, lungs and on our skin, our daily vitality depends on over 1000 species of microbes whose lives are interwoven with ours. They number 100 trillion—in each of us. Altogether there are somewhere between seven and eight POUNDS of microbes living in me so that I can live. Whole metropolises of essential diversity. Because their cells are much smaller than mine, there are about ten times as many specifically nonhuman cells in my body as human cells. By this measure, I am, as it were, a minority presence in my own body.

Beyond this, we can trace elements on Earth and in our bodies to ancient stars. We realize that the oxygen we need to breathe and the food we need to eat is produced by other members of the Earth community. If we dare to think clearly about, we know that our very bodies are comprised of materials reused from those who came before us. My body might well contain matter that once walked as a dinosaur or towered as a tree or flitted as a bumble bee. I am … and you are … the living intersection of a cosmic, now Earth-bound, ecological saga. Far from “apart,” we are all more entirely together than we usually imagine.

But this knowing remains disconnected from our doing. From our speaking. Even from our dying.

We “know” (science tells us) we are consuming the planet at an unsustainable pace—a pace certain before long to crash the planet’s capacity to sustain human society in its present form. Yet we drill for more oil. We make more unnecessary stuff. We measure our success and satisfaction by standards that are scientifically and mathematically ecocidal. Because we fell apart. Because we found ourselves folded into a Giant Lie that told us we were somehow exempt from the laws of nature that govern everything else on this pale blue dot.

We “know” (science tells us) that ecosystems are comprised of subjects not objects. Of countless creatures and plants each pursuing their unique life—and each contributing to a larger communal life—with an agency that is no less real simply because it boggles our minds. The world teems with life; it vibrates with the energy of relatedness. From the quantum level to the macro level, life is less a matter of individual lives than a symphony of notes sounding in concert with one another. Bees are bee-ing; frogs are frog-ing; flowers are flower-ing; marshes are marsh-ing. And altogether everything is being its interwoven self. Nothing—least of all us, exists on its own. Subjects, every one of us, but held, cradled, caressed, “caught,” as MLK said, “in an escapable network of mutuality.”

But the very syntax of our language largely erases the subjectivity of our companion creatures. Almost as though it was designed to be complicit in colonization and exploitation—to shape our patterns of world-making at a subconscious level that sets us apart from the rest of our world. English (and most Western-rooted languages) prizes nouns over verbs. Linguistically, this provides us with a multitude of objects to manipulate rather than a community of subjects with which to relate. But wait, isn’t this just the very nature of languages? How could it possibly be otherwise? Well, most indigenous languages, reflecting a wisdom of with-ness rather than a “falling apart,” are verb-centric. They “require” of their speakers as they speak that they name the subjectivity of the world around them—an admission of the agency in every other being, a recognition of kinship with the whole of nature.

In describing “the grammar of animacy,” Robin Wall Kimmerer recounts her frustration-turned-to-insight as she struggled to learn Ojibwe words (Ojibwe being closely related to the Potawatomi language stolen from her ancestors). “Then my finger rested on wiitkwegamaa: ‘to be a bay.’ ‘Ridiculous,’ I ranted in my head. ‘A bay is most definitely a person, place, or thing—a noun and not a verb.’” And then her moment of revelation: “Suddenly, I could smell the water of the bay, watch it rock against the shore and hear it sift onto the sand. A bay is a noun only if the water is dead. But the verb wiitkwegamaa—to be a bay—releases the water and lets it live. ‘To be a bay’ holds the wonder that, for this moment, the living water has decided to shelter itself between these shores, conversing with the cedar roots and a flock of ducklings. Because it could do otherwise—become a stream or an ocean or a waterfall, and there are verbs for that, too.” (Braiding Sweetgrass, pp. 54-55) From water to rocks, from places to drums, Native languages acknowledge the animacy—and the agency—of those beings that fill out the community around us.

Words enable us to weave meaning into the world in which we live. But most Western languages encourage (dare I say, they syntactically force us?) us to make meaning by rendering the world as other. They set human beings as the default subject and set every other “card-carrying” member of the natural world … as mere object. Our language fell apart. And that has played a role in the present wreckage of the world. It becomes so much easier to mistreat those creatures we objectify, those ecosystems we fail to recognize as thriving communities.

This is depth of our entanglement. How do we even discuss this in a language that is structured to hide the apart-ness that imperils us, to prevent it from even being named?!

Is it possible to “rehabilitate” English so that it allows the living world breath? Here is an analogy that captures the scale of the challenge. When the Hebrews wandered in the desert after the Exodus they fashioned a tabernacle—a great tent with walls of woven cloth and animal skins—to “house” the presence of the living God. The material structure of the tabernacle meant that its sides could swell with the movement of the air; it could, you might say, billow with the breath of the living God. The tabernacle’s structure “confessed” God’s freedom. Years later when the people of Israel built a temple of stone (a project challenged by early prophetic voices) those stone walls tempted Israel to imagine a captive deity. I’m not suggesting they did this on the conscious level. I’m suggesting that the material structure of a temple with solid unmoving walls permitted the human imagination to meet the living God on terms that no longer allowed that God to breathe.

In a similar way, indigenous languages offer a tabernacle to the world, a syntax that can billow with the breath of bugs, animals, plants, trees, rocks, rivers, and more. English, unfortunately, has a syntax of stone that doesn’t allow the living world to breathe. The question of “rehabilitating” the English language is the question of how to renovate stone walls so they can billow. I won’t say it’s impossible, but it is surely an imposing challenge. Audre Lorde believed “the master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s house.” And in some ways English is BOTH: it is that tool by which we name-know the world and it becomes the house of meaning in which we live. So, I begin by admitting, I don’t know if our language can billow. And then I add, tentatively, what I have learned.

I do know it is possible to imagine, perceive, encounter the world as teeming with life. That truth actually announces itself on a wilderness hike, where the made-world recedes and the forest becomes again what, in truth, it always is: the living world. But even in the city it is possible to remind oneself relentlessly that the trees and grass, birds and bugs, rocks and squirrels, are beings in their own right. And that altogether they (and we!) are linked by an undulating—living—silver thread of relatedness. In my mind, I have seen-felt this at times. I am slowly teaching myself to acknowledge the woven flame of Life that joins all of us together. It is there, if we patiently and persistently invite ourselves to notice.

Yet that patience and persistence is anchored nonetheless in the uncomfortable awareness that the words of the English language which I have so loved all my life are, at best (at least at present?), ambiguous allies in the work of liberation. But perhaps they, too, are entangled in the service of an exploitation to which they never consented. So, I allow myself to wonder whether the words themselves are, like me, waiting for the opportunity to testify to life’s teeming vitality. Is it possible that English might be interested and able to become an accomplice in undoing our fall? I don’t know. But I dare to wonder.

Lastly, we die. Honestly, I suspect it was our dawning awareness of death that caused us to “fall apart.” So far as we can tell, animals near death—whether by injury, disease, or age—can sense in some nonverbal way that their end is near. Other animals in their group may sense this impending death as well. It seems likely that as the complexity of an animal’s cognition rises, so does its attentiveness to mortality. However, only humans seem to have a long-term anticipatory sense of death. Typically, from our teenage years onward we understand that everyone dies—including those we love, and ultimately including us.

As this awareness unfolded in the minds of our distant forebears, it proved a decisive evolutionary leap forward—at a precipitous cost. This awareness arguably amplified human creativity, technological drive, and social cohesion. If necessity is the mother of invention, then death is perhaps the mother of necessity. But there are legitimate ways to meet the challenge of death and illegitimate ones. “Falling apart” strikes me as illegitimate.

By wishing, imagining, declaring that we are more than animals—that we are somehow not really embedded in nature but somehow above nature and destined for eternal life, we may protect ourselves from the existential anxiety of death, but we do so by setting in motion a perceptual shift that fundamentally alters our relationship with the world. No longer regarding ourselves as PART of it (we “fell APART”!), we end up acting in ways that reinforce that notion of separateness. Even as science tells us from multiple vantage points that we are nature, to maintain our apartness we act in ways that deny what we know.

We know now how entirely cyclical nature is. From seasons to ecosystems, life moves forward in circles. Everything that arises in nature is fashioned from nature and returns (by death or other process) to nature to “birth” the next generation of life. As noted above, we carry in our bodies the “recycled”/”reborn” matter of earlier lives: from dinosaurs to daffodils; from redwoods to robins; from mammoths to microbes. We are the living past, the vital present, and the—

Oops. No. We ought also to be the “pledge of the future.” But when we die, we do everything possible to break the cycle. To insist, with our dying breath—and after that breath is gone—that we are NOT nature. We embalm our bodies, enclose them in caskets set inside concrete liners, to make damn sure that nature’s generosity ends with us.

Martin Luther defined sin as incurvatus se: the state of being turned inward upon oneself. To do so in life is regrettable. To be buried in ways that seek to place us incurvatus se in perpetuity is a monstrous denial of who we are: human beings wrought of humus. Sallie McFague defined sin as “being out of place.” Is there anywhere in the whole wide world that is more “out of place” than to be buried in a manner that preserves our rupture from the world for as long as possible?

My point here is NOT foremost to criticize burial practices. (Although you can bet, I intend to make plans for my body to be rejoined to the Earth community in all its parts and pieces upon my demise.) My point is to wake us up to the extent to which we have fallen apart. These practices are now deeply embedded in our culture, religion, and ritual. We are captive to them: it is far easier to bury a body APART from the very world that provided that body to us, than to bury a body in a way that returns it to the world in reverent gratitude.

Listen, this is personal. Barely a year ago the casket holding my mother’s body was set in a concrete vault alongside the vault that holds my brother’s casket from two decades earlier and next to the space that will one day hold the vault that will receive the casket bearing my father’s body. In the cemetery where many of the bodies of my extended family are similarly entombed. This is what it means to be captive to cultural practices dressed up in sacred ritual … that, in fact, betray us.

Even if we can’t practically alter this in the short term, we cannot afford to hide from this most uncomfortable truth: the way we bury our dead harnesses the energy of this most liminal moment and uses it to buttress the lie that is killing the planet that is our only source of life. The way we bury our dead reinforces a worldview that may well make life impossible for coming generations. What is holy about that?! I am asking less in anger than in anguish. Why do we—in this most sacred moment—continue to aid and abet the lie that will surely undermine life for those yet to come?

Ironically … insidiously is more accurate, the industrialization and commercialization of funeral practices have grown in their capacity to preserve our apartness almost in step with the science that has increasingly demonstrated our togetherness with nature.

So, what do we do?

Here is my overarching claim restating briefly and clearly. We are entangled in a grand lie. We did not invent it. It preceded us. It shaped us. We are not guilty for being entangled. But we are responsible for trying to disentangle ourselves (even if we fail). Because the lie has caused untold damage to beings past and present and poses an existential threat to all beings in the future. The lie claims that we are in some way “separate” from nature. Are we distinct, unique, diverse? Yes! But not separate. At all. We are interwoven with the rest of this world from before our birth until after our death. We fell apart. But that fall has festered into a mortal wound in our worldview. We need to live beyond the lie. We need to embrace our connectedness. But how?

One path is grief. As I suggested in Grief-stricken—and Grace, this is an essential path, because (in this present moment) any attempt to reclaim our connectedness while shielding ourselves from grief is doomed to fail. There is so much grief across this planet there is no avoiding it. If we aren’t grieving, we haven’t connected in any authentic way with the whole of life.

Nevertheless, as Rumi writes, “There are a thousand ways to kneel and kiss the ground; there are a thousand ways to go home again.” So, alongside grief there are a thousand ways to reconnect. Choose to live (far) more simply; start small; go slowly; go far. Learn the names of the trees on your property or on your street; they are, after all, your neighbors. Give up industrial-produced meat; few processes objectify animals more horrifically than this. Choose to buy only free-range eggs. Avoid plastic like the plague it is; the planet will be grateful. Plant a pollinator garden; learn the names of the plants and try to identify the pollinators that come to visit.

Dare to push back against all the nouns; as you walk through the woods or the city, imagine that silver thread of flame linking everything together, including you. Imagine it until it becomes true for you. (Believe me, it’s already true for the world.) Be intentional about pausing to star gaze now and then, and remember that the iron in your blood in close kin to those twinkling lights. After you finish a meal, take a moment and thank the microbes about to play out a flash mob in your gut. Educate yourself on a green burial and decide if you can make a plan to give your body back to the earth when you die. And any of these ideas—and more—are done with deeper joy when done with others. Find a community and get reconnected to Earth—together.

We fell apart. But “there are a thousand ways to kneel and kiss the ground; there are a thousand ways to go home again.” The entire Earth community is waiting. Look, they even left the light on.

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David Weiss is a theologian, writer, poet and hymnist, “writing into the whirlwind” of contemporary challenges, joys, and sorrows around climate crisis, sexuality, justice, peace, and family. Reach him at drw59mn@gmail.com. Read more at www.davidrweiss.com where he blogs under the theme, “Full Frontal Faith: Erring on the Edge of Honest.” Support him in Writing into the Whirlwind at www.patreon.com/fullfrontalfaith.