Sunday, August 22 nd , 2021 – 13 th Sunday After Pentecost
Philip’s Reflection: “Consider the Lilies of the Field” (Matt. 6:28)
German theologian Karl Barth, one of the most influential Christian thinkers of the 20th
century, gave this advice to preachers – “Take your Bible and take your newspaper, and
read both. But interpret newspapers from your Bible.”
Good advice I think – be relevant, Barth might have said, if you want a theology lecture
you can attend a class at the Vancouver School of Theology. When I sat in the pews on
a Sunday what I wanted to hear was how to make sense of what’s happening in own
lives, and in the wider world, and what scripture might reveal about those events or
concerns – “relevance and revelation” - how to interpret what is happening in the world
through the lens of Scripture. For those of us in the Christian faith, that lens is primarily
the life, teaching, and self-offering of Jesus, the Word of God made flesh, the one in
whom God and humanity are perfectly joined.
So, let’s take the newspaper in one hand, and the Bible in the other, and see if we can
find the connection between what we read here (in the newspaper) with what we read
here (in the Bible) – and specifically, what does today’s text from the Sermon on the
Mount, in the Gospel of Matthew, have to tell us about the reports we read in the
newspaper or, more likely these days, on our smart phones or iPads or laptops?
One of the problems this week, perhaps more than any other in recent months, is the
sheer volume of troubling news stories that crowd our minds. We might start with Haiti,
a country of only 11 million people, the poorest country in the western hemisphere,
which a week ago was struck by a magnitude 7.2. earthquake, shortly followed by
Tropical Storm Grace, that is still hampering rescue efforts. Or Afghanistan, itself one of
the poorest countries in the world, with a staggering 47% of the population living below
the national poverty line, following years of war and food insecurity, where the
government collapsed this week and the Taliban returned to power. We fear for the lives
of so many in Kabul and elsewhere in that troubled country, and grieve for the women
and children in particular. Closer to home, we now enter the 4 th wave of this pandemic
and if that isn’t enough, the announcement of an upcoming Federal election.
The news that’s also been front of mind in recent weeks is climate change which has
already caused so much damage to “God’s wondrous world”. But, as we read this week,
unless world leaders can agree, and implement, measures to drastically reduce the
amount of carbon emissions and greenhouse gases, climate change threatens not only
life today but poses an existential risk to the world we want to pass on to future
generations.
We read in the newspapers just this past week:
1. The IPCC Report saying that there is unequivocal evidence that human influence has
warmed the atmosphere, ocean and land – by around 1°C since the pre-industrial
years. Unless, the Report says, there are “immediate, rapid and large-scale reductions
in carbon dioxide CO 2 and other greenhouse gases, [the goal of] limiting warming to
1.5° or even 2°C within the coming decades will soon be beyond reach.”
2. And we have also read and witnessed how even a 1°C change in global warming has
already had a major climate impact in every region of the world – in creating extreme
weather conditions that we have witnessed this summer in BC, heat domes, after 2017
and 2018 the 3 rd worst year on record for wildfires, and smoke-filled air, and water
shortages and loss of life and property.
3. Another report – that while Canada accounts for only about 1.6% of the world’s
carbon emissions, unlike many other western economies, our carbon emissions have
increased over the past 15 years, and we now rank among the top 10 countries in the
world for greenhouse gas emissions – even though, for global emissions, it’s coal rather
than oil which is now the single greatest cause of climate change.
If there’s any good news in these reports it’s that, despite the damage to climate and
ecosystems and biodiversity it’s not too late to save the planet. But it will take, says the
IPCC Report, “strong and sustained reductions in CO 2 emissions and other greenhouse
gases to limit climate change.” Yes, it would take 20-30 years to see global
temperatures stabilize but there would be immediate effects in air quality.
So how does today’s Scripture reading help us interpret climate change – and you might
think, as I did at first, that it conveys a rather mixed message – “Do not worry about
tomorrow (Jesus says) for tomorrow will bring worries of its own”. Faced with an
existential threat like climate change that might sound a bit complacent. “Relax, don’t
worry, that’s tomorrow’s problem, everything will be OK”. But of course that’s not what
Jesus is saying.
In this passage, Jesus first tells today’s listeners not to fret about lifestyle issues – what
will you eat for dinner or what will you drink or how you will dress today - “Is not life
more than food and the body more than clothing? - “Look at the birds in the air” – says
Jesus – God feeds them and aren’t you of more value than they: and consider the lilies
of the field – aren’t they more beautiful than Solomon even when he’s dressed to kill?
Don’t sweat the small stuff, Jesus might have said: but instead, “strive first for the
kingdom of heaven and God’s righteousness.” (6:33).
And this then is the key to understanding the final verse when Jesus says “Don’t worry
about tomorrow”. It’s not that we aren’t concerned for the future; of course we are.
Jesus tells us instead to focus on what we can do today – because “today’s trouble is
enough for today.” Worrying doesn’t help – it won’t feed you or clothe you – the way we
deal with our worries, with anxieties, is to focus on what we can do now, what we can
take control of in our own lives, today, and try not to worry about things we can’t control.
We all know that worry and anxiety can be immobilizing, and it’s easier said than done
to move beyond worry – but we know that, unless we start, piece by piece, step by step,
identifying, doing, changing the things, including the behaviours, that are in our power to
change, we will be stuck in that place of anxiety.
And so, back to climate change. The good news is that we can make a meaningful
difference at each of three levels – first individually – in the simple choices we can make
that help to protect our planet, one plastic bag, one landfill, at a time – reducing, reusing
and recyclying, how we drive or travel, how we promote sustainability, how we shop, or
conserve water, or use less energy. Many of us are already doing these little things;
others are trying to go further through intentional changes in lifestyle, in different forms
of voluntary restraint – to reject a consumer mentality of more, more, more, and instead
commit to less, less, less – by doing so we not only reduce our own, or our family’s,
carbon footprint, but we create more goods for others.
And the second level where we can make a difference is in our communities, by helping
raise the profile of climate change initiatives in the communities we belong to – in the
work place, or among our circle of friends, or, in our communities of faith. I would love to
see a Climate Action Group at St. David’s – several of our sister churches have already
taken the lead with their own initiatives of this kind. We would start with some
brainstorming about practical actions we could take as a church, either on our own, or in
partnership with other people of faith on the North Shore – including our Indigenous
neighbours, from whom we have so much to learn about respect for Mother Earth. Have
we done a sustainability audit at St. David’s? What about solar panels on our roof? Or
creating a community garden, or planting trees, or doing a major clean-up around the
parking lot, where there is sensitive habitat? I’d like to be part of such a group!
And the third level of action is political. Like it or not, we are once again in a federal
election campaign and one of the commitments we might each make is to become
better informed about ecological issues and to read the campaign promises of each of
the main parties, do they have a credible plan to address environmental and climate
change priorities, find out about the positions of our candidates, let them know of your
concerns and make your vote count!
So I conclude where we started, about the newspaper in one hand and the Bible in the
other. Yes, we’re confronted by many challenges and I’ve concentrated today only one
of them, but perhaps it’s the most important. As we’ve heard this morning, we live in
God’s world – a world that does not belong to us – a world of breathtaking beauty, of
abundant resources and limitless possibilities; but also a fragile world, that now groans
for action to reduce the consumption of fossil fuels and limit greenhouse gas emissions
– for we – particularly my generation - have placed God’s “Wondrous World”, and “all
creatures great and small” at risk. Jesus tells us to worry less but to do more, now,
today, – to “strive first for the Kingdom of God”, for a more just, compassionate, less
unequal, and yes, more sustainable world. For each one of us, as the late Dr. Sallie
McFague says, it means knowing the house rules and living by them –, “take only your
share; clean up after yourself; and leave the house in good condition for others.” If we
live by those rules, individually, communally, and at a national level, then maybe, just
maybe, future generations will live to enjoy the lilies of the field and the sound of birds
singing in fresh, clean air. Creator and creating God, may it be so.