Friday, August 11, 2023

Silence

 


Silence
-Uncomfortable and restorative. 
-Maddening and reflective. 
-The Devil’s workshop and the presence of God.

-

         Elijah took an incredible journey to get to Horeb.

         Elijah confronted the prophets of Ba’al, 
ran at an impossible super-hero pace, 
was fed by angels under a broom tree, 
and then hides himself in a cave at Mount Horeb… 
more commonly known as Mt. Sinai, 
where Moses too encountered God.

         And God is kind of confused by Elijah’s presence there. 
“What are you doing here, Elijah?” God asks.

         And Elijah gets defensive, “I’m being super zealous, on your behalf.” 
“I alone am still faithful.”

 

         Elijah is understandably overwhelmed by the loud and devastating power of his King and Queen, 
the whole jangling royal court 
are arrayed against him.

         But God needs Elijah to know that he is not alone
always God is with him

         And more than that, while Lord and King
Not to mention words like Almighty and All-powerful 
–might be ways to talk about God, 
they do not get at God’s essence
—these descriptors and experiences, are not God.

         Elijah encounters God, 
but God is not in the tattered flapping and harsh tearing, 
of a terrible wind.

         Elijah encounters God, 
but God is not in the calamitous clangor and world spinning shaking of the earthquake.

 

         Elijah encounters God, 

but God is not in the roaring lapping of flame and fire
you’ve seen Hawaii burning this week
—while insurance companies might call that an act of God
that is not how God acts… 
God is not in the flame!

         Elijah encounters God in 
a still small voice, 
sheer silence, 
the sound of fine silence.

         The God who is the God of Sinai, 
the God of the Prophets, 
the God of Wisdom, 
the God who we can honestly call God… 
is encountered in tender quiet. 

 

         That is the God who asks a second time, “What are you doing here, Elijah?”

         “I alone am left.”

         But you aren’t alone Elijah, 
there are the 7,000, 
and other prophets, 
and even other kings both foreign and domestic… 
You see one, but there are 7,000.

 

         Now I can appreciate how Elijah is feeling
—this week I helped 42 people as Pastor of Spruce Run…
I say that not to brag, 
but instead to remind myself!
when I fixate on the 2 people I was unable to help this week.

         The noise of those two failures is loud enough to drown out those 42 successes.

         The noise of 1 prophet escaped from death, 
can drown out 7,000 faithful colleagues and friends.

         In the silence of this cave in Horeb
—where the commands of God were received by Moses, 
Elijah encounters God as God is, 
and is sent out to find fellowship among the other faithful.

 

Silence

-

         Jesus has been seeking silence, 
a quiet place to be in prayer, 
communion with his father and our Father. 
He’s been going nonstop since his cousin, John, was killed.

         He tried to escape to a deserted place, and instead fed 5,000.

         He finally takes a moment, praying until evening
—a little time away.

 

         It’s worth repeating what I just said. 
Jesus, 
God’s beloved Son, Our Lord, 
took time to rest and pray
to mourn for John,
to be by himself, 
so that he is with the LORD.

         If rest is good enough for Jesus… 
it is certainly good enough for us
Be gentle with yourself, as the Lord was gentle with himself.

 

Silence

-

         Then there is Peter
—always doing the faith two step
—forward and back, 
all in followed by “Hey! Wait a minute!”

         Peter's faith is shaken by a strong wind.

         Shaken by the terror of it.

         Shaken because walking on water isn’t a natural kind of thing.

 

         So, if your faith is shaken. 
If you find yourself sinking or scared, 

The weight of the world is heavy on your shoulders
life has given you plenty of body blows and it is too much,
know that you’re in good company…
Peter, the Rock of the Faithful, the Apostle par excellence 

Can do nothing other than shout, “Lord, save me!”
         Peter’s grand devotion
“command me to walk on water!”
Shrinks to a manageable, 
“Lord! ‘elp me!”

 

         And that’s enough, 
enough for him 
and enough for us.

         After all, we’re in Matthew’s Gospel
the Mustard Seed Gospel
—the Gospel that can’t let go of that parable of Jesus
—the Gospel that rides the image of that small weed welcoming a flock of birds into a farmer’s field 
Rides that parable, for all 28 chapters!
–that parable is fused into Matthew’s DNA.

 

         If a small faith is all that you can muster
—and for most of us it is… 
that’s enough!

         God doesn’t ask us to walk on water or save the world.

         No, that’s Jesus’ job. 
He’s here with us in the storm.

Dragging us into the boat like we’re drowned kittens, 
still wet from baptism.

Drags us into the silence of a storm ceased…

         Our Lord is present with us.

 

         Present with us
and presenting us with a promise—the Gospel!

         You see, Matthew has done something clever with his account of Jesus walking on water. 
He’s retold the Gospel
—Death and Resurrection. 
         -Jesus prays alone on the mountain—like Calvary.
         -Jesus disappears at evening, leaving the Disciples fending for themselves, afraid.
         -Early the next morning, he comes among them—like Emmaus or the Sea Shore.
         -They think him a ghost, but then their fears are silenced and they call him Lord, and worship him.

 

Silence

-

         The God of the Still Small Voice, always reminding us we’re not alone.

         The God who embraces us in our mourning and is rest for our weary bones.

         The God of a mustard seed and resurrection from the dead.

         That God is present with us and:
-the little, are mighty, 
-there is faith, in the midst of doubt,
-Save me, Lord! becomes a confession,
-The Sinking, are uplifted,
-The lonely faithful, find a multitude.

Amen.

Monday, August 07, 2023

Tidbits from USA v. DJT

 


I thought, due to the historic nature of the document, it was worth reading the 45-page indictment of the former President for myself. A lot of it is stuff I already knew from Impeachment trial and from reading Vice President Pence’s book and Bob Woodward’s book on the subject. That said, there were some things that struck me:

The fraudulent electors were tricked into participating based on the understanding that their votes would be used only if the Trump Campaign lawsuits determined that Donald Trump won their state. Instead, the Trump Campaign used their false certifications of Trump’s election in malicious and illegal ways. In other words, these folk put their name on official documents and their reputations on the line, with the understanding that they were doing so to fast-track recertification in case some of the 32 court cases filed went for Trump, but those documents were instead used to spread confusion.

The Trump Whitehouse sent official letters to various state officials telling them the Justice Department had found issues that had impacted the election outcome in their state, after the Justice Department had reported the exact opposite to the President and his staff.

There were at least 7 officials who informed the president that the election was not stolen, most of whom were trusted by the president and stood to gain by agreeing with the president that the 2020 election was stolen, including: his Vice President, his Attorney, the Director of National Intelligence, campaign staff, and various courts.

Even his co-conspirators knew they were grasping at straws. Their refrain was “we don’t have evidence, but we have lots of theories.”

The co-conspirators were referred to inside the Trump Campaign as “Our Elite Strike Force Legal Team” and their theories were called, pardon the language in the quote: “conspiracy sh*t beamed down from the mothership.”

There were at least 4 regular citizens whose lives, and the lives of their families, were threatened because of statements the President made about them.

The President told the Georgia Secretary of State and his Lawyer that if they didn’t find 11,780 votes for him, they would be put at risk and committing a crime.

The stated goal of fraudulent electors (at least the ones from Arizona) was to get congress to fight about which slate ought to be counted. Again, going against what they’d told the actual electors.

One of the co-conspirators threatened to take over the Attorney General’s job if he didn’t do what the conspiracy wanted.

On multiple occasions there were conversations about how this conspiracy would directly lead to violence. The responses were consistently cavalier. For example, Mike Pence warned that this would cause “elections to be decided in the streets.” Violence was seen as preferable and “necessary.”

After the Vice President explicitly told the President he would not obstruct the certification of the 2020 election because it wasn’t within his constitutional power, the President responded by issuing a public statement that read, “The Vice President and I are in total agreement that the Vice President has the power to act.”

There were other things I underlined in the indictment, but that gives you a sense of the allegations that the four-count case makes against the former President.