Thursday, September 6, 2012

through the looking glass ... (Trinity Times Sept 2012)


through the looking glass

The work on the Church building is complete. It has been wondrous to watch the various pieces come together. We have talked about this renovation as an opportunity for a new beginning. Beyond the new look is the new us. How will we change? How can a new look be reflected in a new way of being?

I have been reading recently a little book entitled Breakfast with Buddha. It is fiction but as is true of any good fiction it is about life and how it is lived. This story has to do with a man who is relatively successful and just a regular guy who finds himself driving a holy man from the East across the United States. The book is really about how we see the world and what is at stake with our souls and the spiritual reality in general. At one point in the book the holy man says this: Everyday, he said, many times every day, you can go one way or the other way. You can go with anger or not go. Go with greed or not go. Go with hate or not go. And so on. Later he said these feel like small things, small choices, but every day, across one life, across many lives, if you choose the good way, again and again and again, in what you are thinking and what you are doing it changes you.

New beginnings mean change. We have changed the building. Can we change our hearts? If we need a word to guide us, the writer of the letter to the Ephesians put it plainly and practically, revealing, also, that the need for a change of heart has been with us in the church since the very beginning: Let no evil talk come out of your mouths, but only what is useful for building up, as there is need, so that your words may give grace to those who hear. Put away from you all bitterness and wrath and anger and wrangling and slander, together with all malice, and be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ as forgiven you. (Ephesians 4: 29, 31)

When Bishop Reuben Job wrote his little book on the Three Simple Rules reflecting on John Wesley's General Rules for Methodist Societies he wrote how the practice of the first rule "Do no Harm" changed how he dealt with conflict and disagreement. I have also found, he wrote, that this first simple step, when practiced, can provide a safe place to stand while the hard and faithful work of discernment is done. When we agree that we will not harm those with whom we disagree, conversation, dialogue, and discovery of new insight become possible. If I am to do no harm, I can no longer gossip about the conflict. I can no longer speak disparagingly about those involved in the conflict. I can no longer manipulate the facts of the conflict. I can no longer diminish those who do not agree with me and must honor each as a child of God. What he does not say and I would add is that I can also trust that when someone disagrees with me they are not out to harm me and when I disagree with someone they can know that I mean them no harm. Together we are discerning a way we can go together. This is how it happens. In fact we need different perspectives (disagreement) to have a complete vision of the way forward but it won’t work until we learn how to disagree without causing harm. May this new season be a time of new life as together, celebrating even our differences, we practice loving one another and finding our way together.

Larry

Holy Trinity United Methodist Church ~ Danvers