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Monday, February 11, 2019


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The Parable of the Seekers (March 6, 2006)

Once upon a time, in a strange and faraway place, there lived a people who were small, but their numbers were very great, and they populated a land that, to them at least, was vast. Their kind was ancient, having occupied the land for uncounted generations. The clans, and communities, and countries of them were numerous, and there were many different languages and traditions among them. They had no writing though, because their fingers were short, and so were their legs, so they rarely ventured very far from their birthplaces. The landscape where these people lived was ridged and wrinkled, full of hills and dales, and rills and rivulets, and in the middle of it was an enormous rise of peaks, that they called the Mountain of God. Most of the people never knew what lay beyond their own particular crease in the earth, for their lives were as short as their limbs, and they had to work hard every day for a living. They all could see the towering tops of the Mountain of God though, from the higher vantage places, on some days and on moonlit nights, when fog and clouds didn't hide them. These people had just one food, which they prepared in many different ways, for variety. This was a sweet, aromatic, seed-like, whitish substance that appeared overnight as if materializing out of thin air, like hoarfrost. It was called "manna." Some said it resembled a gummy resin exuded by certain trees, and some said it was like a grainy residue left on leaves by aphid-like insects. Legend had it that once, a great flock of quails had arrived, and then the people had feasted on roast squab, but as long as anyone living remembered, their food was just manna, manna, and manna, nothing but manna. The people gathered their manna every morning and ate it up that day, because it would not keep overnight. It would spoil and be found crawling with maggots by next morning - except, oddly, on the sixth night. Every seventh day, no manna would be found, but the leftovers from the day before would still, inexplicably, be edible. So on that day, which was called "Shabbat," no one had to labor gathering food. Everyone said the manna was a gift from God for God's beloved people. Another strange fact about this land was that the force of gravity was not the same everywhere. Everything weighed less at higher elevations, and weighed more at lower elevations. For this reason, though it was difficult for people to climb very far uphill on their short little legs and tiny feet, their work was easier, and they felt lighter and more restful when they had made the effort to reach higher ground. Naturally, hilltop real estate was the most valuable. The big problem, though, for most people, was that the food collected in the hollows, and thus only the very rich could afford to pay servants to carry it up the hillsides to them. Consequently, no one lived permanently on the highest ridges, where people sometimes came on day-trips, and felt their yokes most joyously lightened. Now, most of these people didn't think about God very much. They all believed that God could, in principle, be found way up on the tops of the Mountain of God, but almost no one claimed to have ever seen God. They would get together in small or large groups, on Shabbat, to praise and thank God for not having to work that day, and they cherished and enjoyed that tradition, but few were really very concerned about God, as Godself. There were always a few, though, who were ultimately concerned with God. They loved God with all their hearts, and all their souls, and all their minds, and all their might. They were called "Seekers." They sought to approach nearer to God by journeying arduously, step by tiny step, over the land, up hill and down, toward the mountain of God. As they reached the ridge tops, they felt weightless and light-hearted, and they knew in which direction to travel because they could see the peaks of the Mountain of God gleaming beautifully in the light of the sun and the moon, when the air was clear. They were often hungry on their pilgrimages, since their manna did not last long during their crossings of the high country. On Shabbat days, the Seekers rested and worshipped God with the people gathered in little brown churches in the dells, who shared their manna with them. For as long as anyone knew, Seekers had told the gathered people about their visions of the Mountain of God, about their hopeful journeys, their enlightenment in the high places, how they expected one day to see God, and to be in God's presence. From time immemorial, multitudes of Seekers had come from every direction in the land, and many had reached the Mountain of God. Not only had they done that, but also many had returned to tell of it. They told of many paths worn and cleared by halting, little steps up the mountain, and of age-old signs and monuments left by those who had gone before, showing Seekers the way up, higher and higher. Some paths ended in sheer stone outcrops, or had been blocked by rockslides. Those ways were hidden with overgrowth, or covered with rubble. But other paths, though steep and impossible to discern from below, had been kept open and free from stumbling blocks. Seekers knew, they said, that some pathways could still be ascended all the way up. Of these, there were known to be quite a few, approaching the peaks of the Mountain of God from every side. To reach the summits took Seekers many years, even lifetimes. It required of them prudence, justice, temperance, and fortitude. How did the Seekers survive on the rocky mountaintops without fresh manna? Climbing was easy, even though their short-limbed locomotion was very slow, because they were light as lizards at that high altitude. Moreover, God provided them with freeze-dried, extended-release, high-protein, carbohydrate-balanced manna substitute, with organic preservatives, because God wanted to see the amazement on their sun burnt faces when they finally arrived. God had an astonishingly liberating truth to reveal to them, in a blinding flash of the obvious - which you already know. The Seekers who had made their way to the top, and returned with the good news of God, advised others to do this: Find a well-worn path with well-kept signs; study the signs and understand them, set out on the path you've chosen, paying close attention to the ground ahead, and stay on that path. That will be your Way. Do not turn aside from it, looking for a better route. There are many ways to reach the heights, they said, but scrambling across the mountainside, scrabbling and sliding on this path, then that, from one blind curve to another, without learning the meanings of the signs, is not the way. But did the neophyte Seekers heed the advice their venerable mentors so generously gave them? Actually, most of them did, because they had never seen pulp fiction or television shows, and their undergraduate professors were Dominicans and Jesuits, who had taught them to respect authority and develop self-discipline. And what of the unfortunate, sophomoric, heedless ones in a hurry, who couldn't tell a blunderbuss from a bowling pin? Some of them eventually wandered back down into the valleys, all knot-headed, scraped and bruised, saying, as far as they were concerned, there was no God up there after all. So, ages came and ages passed, and most of the people never did see God's face, God never spoke, and they couldn't have read God's handwriting anyway, but they mostly believed in God nonetheless, and they kept getting their daily manna. Wise and weary Seekers kept coming back from the Mountain of God, radiating God's glory, and people fed them and listened to their stories, but most people really were content just to scrape up breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and admire the daffodils in the meadows. God, being just and merciful, and having other worlds to create, continued to love them as long as their short little lives lasted, because they were God's people, with their short little fingers and short little legs, and God had promised to deliver them from evil into the land. And so it was, because even though God is invisible and speechless, and no one can decipher God's handwriting, God is nothing if not one who keeps promises.

Wednesday, January 31, 2018

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Jim Weller
Pacific School of Religion 
Berkeley, California
29 October 2008

Idou! Pay attention!

Now after John was put in prison, Jesus came to Galilee, preaching the gospel of
the kingdom of God, and saying, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is
at hand. Repent, and believe in the gospel.”

In the Gospel According to Mark, Chapter 1, Verses 14 and 15, this is what Jesus did and said first in his Galilean mission, on his way to Jerusalem, and the cross. The Evangelist, in Mark, wastes no words. He must have considered this proclamation to be of primary significance. I understand this as the concise expression of the gospel, the Good News of God.

In other words, “God is Present, In You! Here and Now, and Forever, in the
Eternal Now. The time is ripe for you to realize your holy identity as an earthly incarnation of the Supreme Being, a beloved child of God, a living manifestation of the power of the ultimate reality that is God Eternal.”

Re-pent! Meaning, “Think again.” “Turn your head around.” “Transform your mind.”
Metanoia is the Greek word used by the author. It signifies a spiritual conversion, a turning around, to face the Reality and the Presence of God – in the mirror, as it were!

Christ has no body now but yours;
No hands, no feet on earth but yours.
Yours are the eyes through which He looks
compassion on this world.
Christ has no body now on earth but yours.

Teresa of Avila put it that way. In Mark, the Evangelist wrote, “Believe in the good news of God!”

How did Jesus arrive at this exalted state of being, to begin his holy mission of salvation, which we emulate? Here is a literal translation of the Greek text. It is as brief as a recitation of poetry:

And it was in those days, came Jesus from Nazareth of Galilee,
and was baptized by John in the Jordan.
And immediately going up from the water, he saw being torn the heavens, and the Spirit as a dove coming down upon Him. And a voice there was out of the heavens:

You are the Son of Me the Beloved, in whom I take delight.
And instantly the Spirit Him thrusts into the desert.
And he was there in the desert days forty being tempted by Satan,
and was with the wild beasts, and the angels ministered to him.

Throughout the four gospels, accounts of Jesus’ teaching by parables are retold in various settings. And I regard as well the gospel authors’ accounts of various vignettes of the life and ministries of Jesus as parables, composed for our learning, in which the figure of Jesus himself, in relation with God, is symbolic of the possibilities for our relationships with God.

If you were Jesus in the Jordan (and I do believe the Evangelist means for his hearers to identify with Jesus as the protagonist in his gospel) how would you respond? Like, “Wow! Who, me? Oh, my God!”

At the moment of his baptism, it seems to me, Jesus suddenly realized who he was. And he understood immediately the Name of God, given to Moses by the bush that burned and yet was not consumed: Yod-Hay-Vav-Hay (YHWH) pronounced Eyeh-Asher-Eyeh; “I am that I am!”

Jesus must have fallen on his knees in the river. “Oh, my God!” – I imagine the revelation washing over him, transforming him, converting him; “I am God!”

It was just as it is written in the Upanishads, the holy book of Vedanta, in that ancient
Sanskrit wisdom utterance known as the Maha Vakya, the “Great Saying”: Tat Tvam Asi, “That Thou Art!” In this saying, “That” refers to Brahman, the Ultimate Reality; “Thou” refers to Atman, your innermost Self; thus, Atman is Brahman – “You are God!”

And thus, Jesus became Christ, the Anointed One, the incarnate Son of God the Creator – the living manifestation of Being Itself, in intimate relationship with the One Being Eternal and Infinite, by and through the Holy Spirit, that constant communion between Creator and Created, the carrier of prayer and transcendence.

I believe that we human persons, you and I, are living realities profoundly connected with one another in God, the Ultimate Reality – just as mountain peaks are connected in the
continents upon which they rise, and the continents are connected in the planetary sphere, of which they are topological features. We personal beings are topological features, as it were, of Being Itself. That is why it is true to proclaim, “Thou Art God!” And God is that eternal reality upon which our temporal reality is utterly dependent.

We are, all of us, living embodiments, incarnations, manifestations of God Eternal. Just so, each of us is a beloved child of God, made in the very image of God – but too many of us refuse to believe this, the Good News of God. The time is fulfilled. The time of self-realization has come! The words of the Christ now reach our ears. Let those with ears to hear, listen!

The kingdom of heaven, God’s realm, is present here and now – in the eternal now,
where we all are living. No one lives in the future; the future is not a reality. The past is but a memory. Reality is here and now; eternal life is lived in the eternal now, in Christ consciousness, fully human, fully God – this is the self-realization of Jesus Christ at baptism. The gospel, God’s good news, as Jesus proclaimed, is that eternal life is ours – now!

Protestant orthodoxy assures us that the gospel is good news of God’s love and merciful forgiveness. Our appropriate response is faith – trust in God’s promise of salvation and eternal life, called forth by the Holy Spirit – and by grace, received through faith, we are reconciled to God, redeeming us from the state of sin.

Some Christian theologians teach that what is meant by “sin” is a state of spiritual estrangement from God. It is a state of imprisonment of the alienated self, isolated in its finitude, born with a death sentence into a brief life of bondage to suffering, travail, and ultimate demise. 

As the poet A. E. Housman wrote,

And how am I to face the odds / Of man’s bedevilment and God’s?
I, a stranger and afraid / In a world I never made.

The truth, for me, is that in all our existential anxiety, despair and doubt, we are deluded.

The Holy and Eternal One Whose Essence is Existence Itself and Whose Self-Realization Is All-Encompassing Love brings us into being to praise and glorify the holy self we recognize in one another, and to answer the love that gives us being with a love for one another, for all beings, and for being itself!

Now, knowing the truth of this gospel, what will I do with the rest of my one holy and
beloved life? This one, the one I’m living here and now. What, then?