It's been two months since I posted here at the Perverse Lutheran. One reason is that there are so very many words out there every single day. I'm so inundated with incoming information, so flooded, that there's no time to let anything soak in, let alone spin it back out into the world with added thoughts or insight.
So, random thoughts today, on a Sunday.
From the lectionary this morning: choose life, choose Jesus. In church we sang "Let Us Every Walk With Jesus," German chorale from the 17th century. The second stanza begins "Let us suffer here with Jesus." So, one has to ask, who would choose Jesus if that meant choosing suffering? What's wrong with Christians? I think the Buddha has an answer for that: life is suffering. What crossed my mind singing the hymn this morning was not so much the "suffer here" part as the "with Jesus" part. The suffering is inevitable, sometimes because that's just how things are, sometimes because we bring it on ourselves even as we struggle against it. (Buddha again.) I think that suffering is a whole lot easier to manage, spiritually anyway, in the context of a God who gave himself up to suffering in life and death as a human person.
"Choose life" comes from Deuteronomy 30:15-20, the Old Testament lesson read this morning.
Choose life so that you and your descendants may live, loving the LORD your God, obeying him, and holding fast to him.
Choosing life means choosing what God values. Life worth living means choosing God's values and attributes: love, mercy, righteousness. "Choose life" is not just choosing to continue to live and breathe on this earth. It's not judging other people's healthcare choices. It's not even deciding to live your life to its fullest, or to seize the moment, or to resolve to live in the present every day. It's love and trust in what and who is God. It's bringing all of that into relationships with others.
This is all pretty preachy for the perverse Lutheran. The sun is setting on what was a beautiful September day. The sky was so blue, the weather cool, the light at this time of day, golden. How did I end up in a post with all these imperatives?
Spent some time in the car this afternoon and while driving I listened to Dan Pfeiffer of Pod Save America interview Heather Cox Richardson of Letters From an American. (Listen here.) She introduced herself as a cultural historian and told stories from American history that chronicled two different ideas: the strong individual under no constraints, no government regulation, that gathers resources to himself, versus the collective good, democracy, the people govern, resources are used for the good of all. (Pejoratively this is "socialism"--horrors!) One idea empowers enslavers, Jim Crow, Nixon, Reagan, and the current radical right. The other was articulated by Abraham Lincoln and Barack Obama and turned into legislation by LBJ.
Choose life. Choose life in a way that includes all, that suffers with all, that rises again.