In a conversation last week with a colleague we were discussing the changes we have seen in the church in recent years. When I entered ordained ministry in the 1980’s I sensed that the church was shifting its way of being in the world from thriving to maintaining. Over the next twenty or so years it appeared that the shift was even more extreme – from maintenance to survival. We’ve ceded the best of ministering to the needs of the world to non-profits and NGO’s. We’ve latched on to corporate business models to define success and excellence in ministry. We have watered down the gospel to a formula to justify our middle class lifestyles in the midst of a world of have-nots. And we have customized that gospel to suit our individuality at the expense of the community of faith. The troubles of the church began in the last century.
Enter the new century. One of the defining moments in the world towards the beginning of the 21st century was the attacks of September 11, 2001. Those attacks sent shock waves around the world. Aimed at the symbols of economic wealth and military oppression, the events of that day were both a catalyst for and an indicator of the change that was to come all over the globe.
Since that fateful day our country has been engaged in an endless war (OK it began eighteen months later but the build up to it began within weeks), the bottom all but fell out of the global economy, and civil discourse as we once knew it has been reduced to talking heads on 24-hour news networks yelling at one another across the airwaves. And all the while, mother earth has been speaking to us: hurricanes ravaged New Orleans, an earthquake in the Indian Ocean produced a tsunami that took hundreds of thousands of lives, and in the first two months of 2010 major earthquakes have rocked Haiti and Chile.
The very earth beneath us is shifting – literally. But it is also shifting figuratively. Everything is changing. Financial institutions have been scandalized by misuse of TARP funds. Major corporations long the mainstay of successful American business have collapsed. Government leaders have been exposed for marital infidelity and financial malfeasance. Priests in the Catholic Church have been accused and confessed to inappropriate relations with children (I don’t pretend to believe that this is only happening in the Catholic Church). Those institutions in which we have placed all of our trust are at least under the microscope of scrutiny if not under threat of being dismantled.
I dare to believe the planet is trying to tell us something. These seismic shifts are metaphors for what is happening in our culture and the ways in which we have constructed it. And they are giving us the opportunity to consider what we need to attend to if we are going to survive the changes.
It is human nature to resist change, but the earth is telling us that change IS coming. It is coming. It is coming quickly. It is coming suddenly and without warning. We can’t stop it. I’m not even sure that we can prepare for it. But we certainly can pay attention to the fact that it is happening, and take advantage of these signs to engage students in conversations about what the planet is teaching us and what kind of world they want to live in. We can offer them courage in the face of change. We can offer them hope in the face of signs that might otherwise discourage them. We can teach resurrection in the face of crucifixion, new life in the face of death.
From the seed that gives itself over to new life to the tectonic plate that moves the earth beneath our feet, the planet is teaching us that life as we know it is changing – and holding hope that the next life is better. . . . If only we have ears to hear . . .