It’s a Crazy World Out There…

and a lot of people are shouting trying to be heard. Only God seems quiet these days as our culture seems to find ways to the bottom and then start digging. Yet, is that so?

I’m no prophet but the signs of the times in the United States appear to point to an era where observant Christians will no longer find support from the most of the major institutions of this culture, including many churches. Corporations, media, governments, and academia in many places are either not supportive of our lives, our visions, or our lifestyles, and often can be directly hostile. Truly the world of my childhood when towns were basically closed on Sundays is long gone and, in my lifetime, will never return.

So its a wilderness life for us until our culture cracks and breaks under the pressure of the many forms of brokenness that come to pass when people ignore the lived experiences of people over time we call tradition. It’s already starting as our nation, having jettisoned any idea of an overarching narrative informed by the graces of Christianity is becoming more diseased and turning on itself. Sanity will come, of course, but not after some years of tribulation while the old lessons being ignored are relearned through pain.

It can be all quite frightening to watch. Sad, as well. What kind of person can watch a society come unraveled without having some kind of compassion, especially a Christian? Yet, is it possible that in all the storms and hubbub God is not silent, but gently calling those who still seek Him to something beautiful, real, and holy. Stripped of all the trappings of the world’s support, could it be that we are being called back to our first loves, not the least of which may be the simple rediscovery of God?

We American Christians can make such an idol of our country, so much that we mistake its values for what should be our own, it’s ideals for ours, and it’s way of life for the life of Christ. That might be why so many of us are actually shocked and traumatized to discover that this culture in which we had put so much hope is starting to turn on us and one day might even use its power to make us outcasts in our own land.

Yet, our home, as observant Christians, was never truly in this land or any other for that matter. We belong to a Kingdom that can live in this world but ultimately is beyond it. If it is our lot to be exiles in this country the blessing in it may be that we rediscover Whose we are, who we are, and the very core of Truth about God, ourselves, and this world that’s been buried under the weight of an increasingly consumer and decadent culture.

The world is crazy, and I think, sadly, that we’ve not even come close to the end of the shouting all around us. Still, God is there, alive, present, and quietly inviting us to come to Him and find the real rest we’ve been seeking. In the end that still, small, voice, may be just exactly what we need to hear and the one place of true rest in a world of storms.

 

 

Fasting Diets…

are gaining new acceptance, so says the headline. In Orthodox Christianity we’ve been following a fasting diet for around 20 centuries and, as a general rule, support the idea of moderation in our consumption of food throughout the year. From time to time stories like these remind us that our ancestors, although not as technically advanced as we are, had wisdom that has stood the test of time couched in the form of stories, traditions, and spiritual writings.

You Will Be Out of Step

if you live this Orthodox life. There’s no question about it. Out of step with the flow of the world around you. It really can’t be any other way.

I’m thinking about this as Lent is drawing near with its Wednesday and Friday services and, in our area, Sunday afternoon Pan-Orthodox vespers. Then, of course, there’s Holy Week. Even outside of Lent my schedule is just different because my Faith calculates time with little thought to the commercial, social, and digital world in which I live. When something has to give its that larger world and not the world of my Faith that has to do the giving. It’s just part of how this thing called Orthodoxy works.

What I’m trying to value is out of step as well. If I am to seriously be Orthodox my political life, as this is an election year here in the United States, will never quite fit in any of the categories provided for me. The same for my economic life. As the culture changes my views on sexuality and family are becoming way out of the mainstream, and lately I’ve been noticing it all.

It’s probably because of where I believe I’m headed. I’m trying to be wherever Jesus is and although I’m not even close to being good at it I still want to try. As I get older I understand more and more that when that’s your destination things are just going to be different, and I’ll be different, too, just a bit out of step with the world around me, attached but not too tightly, and traveling on a path at variance with the paths around me.

All of this is not a complaint, but rather a statement of fact. One of the great blessings of growing older is the lessening of the pressure to be like everyone else. I’m much more comfortable in the understanding that my Faith will mean that some days I will truly be out of step with the world around me. Still, as I get closer to home I also understand in ever greater depth why this is the way it must be and the joy of it all increases as well.

 

Death and Wisdom

In a little over a month three people in my parish have passed away. One was a venerable Archdeacon, a good man full of years. He had served His Lord and the Church for decades and passed peacefully in his sleep. The other two were young, a high school boy full of promise tragically taken in a car accident, and a man in his early twenties who reposed in the Lord after a brave battle with illness.

Three deaths in three different ways. Death is ingenious like that, it has the ability to come in as many ways as there are people to visit and no one, regardless of their age or station, is immune. We expect, in the normal course of life, for those along in years to die but even the young can, and do, leave this life. We have seen it, first hand, as December has given way to the new year.

There are no answers in all of this, at least not in the short term. We know, in each case, the cause of death but the greater questions of “Why?” will take time to ponder. It always does. Death challenges pious platitudes and easy answers because death has a profound depth to it, a great mystery in the best sense of that word, and easy answers seem to fall apart in the face of it.

Death is also, though, a forge of wisdom with the power to clarify the true value of things and burn through everything superficial. The knowledge that this time on earth is limited can be a source of frivolity where all of our efforts are focused on extracting fleeting glimpses of whatever we consider the good life in a mad dash before the deadline. It can also be a source of paralysis and despair where the idea of the inevitable end clouds every part of every point along the way. Or it can call us to something higher, to search for, and practice, the good, the true, the things that transcend the moment, and even life itself. If that is the course we choose, then, perhaps, even death, as mysterious and powerful and challenging as it is, has something to offer us in this life.