February 21, 2021 " Under the Rainbow" Rev. Dal McCrindle
It’s been almost a year since Movie Theatres closed because of Covid-19. During that time, movie and television production have been way down. Only recently has our parking lot been used by a crew filming nearby. The Oscars which should have been held next weekend won’t happen until well into April; but movies have been produced for TV and streamed on Netflix, Prime, Disney and others. Whenever the passage from Genesis about Noah and the Rainbow comes around I get to thinking of a song that received the Academy Award for the best original song in 1940
Somewhere over the rainbow, way up high
There’s a land that I dreamed of, once in a lullaby.
Somewhere over the rainbow, skies are blue,
And the dreams that you dare to dream, really do come true.
The inclusion of the song “Somewhere over the Rainbow” in the movie “The Wizard of Oz” was quite a miracle since the producers, at first didn’t like it, expecting it to bomb and detract from the film. Sensing it was too slow and disruptive to the pace, it was cut from the film three times until Louis B Mayer, MGM’s Chief who had a soft spot for the song and its writers told the Associate producer, “let the boys have the damned song, it can’t hurt.” The original 1900’s book by Frank Baum made no mention of a rainbow, but the screenplay’s lyric writer used it as it seemed to him that the only thing a little girl in barren Kansas could use to bring colour into her life, was a rainbow.
No one expected that when Judy Garland first sang this blockbuster song, that it would become Garland’s musical signature, nor that future singers would be compared with her whenever they sang it. So much has the song been identified with Garland that even Barbara Streisand hesitated to include it in her performances for years. When she finally did, she only did so by acknowledging Judy Garland, whose song, she said it was.
We humans have a fascination with the miracle of rainbows and continue to sing about them. For example: “I’m always chasing rainbows,” a song set in 1917 to an adaptation of Fantaisie-Impromptu by Frédéric Chopin and also made memorable by Garland or a more contemporary song, sung by muppet, Kermit the Frog in his: “Rainbow Connection.” Even though we understand the physics of light-refraction and the formation of the colour spectrum across the heavens, there is still a wondrous delight in viewing one of Nature’s phenomena. During my stint in Prince Rupert, which is re-known for its over-abundance of liquid sunshine, the appearance of a rainbow was so normative that the City Council declared Prince Rupert to be the City of Rainbows rather than one of rainfall. Whenever the storm clouds parted, permitting a beam of sunlight to break through the gloom, creating a rainbow we rejoiced with our ancestral families and celebrated our hope for a sunny day; a better day. Rainbows are a common occurrence in Horseshoe Bay where I live as we gaze up Howe Sound and the misty clouds interact with the sunlight.
In the opening scenes of the movie, after being told by Aunt Em "to find yourself a place where you won't get into any trouble" Dorothy ponders "Some place where there isn't any trouble. Do you suppose there is such a place, Toto? (her dog) There must be. It's not a place you can get to by a boat, or a train. It's far, far away. Behind the moon, beyond the rain...", at which point she begins singing.
“Somewhere over the rainbow” was the dream of a youthful Dorothy, who hoped for a world where people could be happy and fulfilled. The Wizard of Oz hit the big screen in 1939 as the world held its breath while standing on the brink of world war. Society was just beginning to emerge from one of the most depressing and socially destructive periods of modern history; hopefully not to be repeated. Who could not identify with Dorothy’s quest for a way home to safety, or with the Tin Man’s search for a heart and for love, or with the Scarecrow’s desire for wisdom and knowledge or with the Lion’s need for courage and fortitude? Even today, living with the threats of continued unrest in the Middle East as well as a world of economic disturbance, life threatening disease and democracies in chaos – during one of our own personal gloomy and rainy days, we still pray for wisdom, for courage, for compassion and a way home, back to the ways things used to be.
The rainbow is a hopeful sign of new life. And it is fascinating to discover how many businesses and services use the image of rainbows to elucidate this hopeful view of newness, regeneration and optimism; with their particular hint of making new, making clean, repairing, healing, caring or building. On the internet, I found the rainbow aligned with many once hopeless causes: special needs for riding programs, literacy agencies against barriers for affordable and accessible housing, gay and Lesbian rights. Even blogs and chat rooms encourage rising above the many trials and life and being encourage by the hope of a rainbow. After the death of a pet, many people receive a copy of a poem entitled, the Rainbow Bridge which suggests a continuing connection to deceased canines and felines. Even the Rainbow Warrior, the flagship of Green Peace sailed on as a hopeful challenge to the nations to care for the earth, her seas and resources.
Somewhere, over the rainbow, skies are blue.
And the dreams that you dare to dream really do come true.
Some day I'll wish upon a star
And wake up where the clouds are far behind me
Where troubles melt like lemon drops
Away above the chimney tops
That's where you'll find me.
Somewhere over the rainbow blue birds fly
Birds fly over the rainbow, why then - oh, why can't I?
If happy little blue birds fly beyond the rainbow,
why Oh why can’t I?
In light of our readings, this simple song from another war-era speaks of both hope and fear which we have for the future. The Israelites knew little about atomic particles nor light-wave theory but they did know about rainbows. The story of Noah’s Ark was not remembered because of the terrible destruction which took place during a flood, nor for the number of animals that entered the ark, nor the problems that were raised by the story. The story of Noah and his family was remembered because of the rainbow which was a sign of God’s promise, of God’s covenant to preserve creation rather than destroy it. No matter how hopeless we appear, no matter how sinful and failure-ridden we become, God plans to keep us “under the rainbow!” We may well be tempted to wish for a fantasy garden, to which we could escape the realities of the world, with its wars, its poverty, homelessness, sickness, loneliness, social dysfunction and brokenness. But trying to avoid the issues which constantly threaten our survival is just as futile as wishing that we could find the elusive pot of gold at the rainbow’s end.
Following his baptism, Jesus was driven into the wilderness by none other than God’s spirit to be tempted by evil forces. After 40 days of that, Jesus returned to Galilee, preaching the gospel of God. “The time is fulfilled,” he said, “the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the good news!” Creation exists “under the rainbow,” there is always hope, so seek it, and once found, follow it! God’s promise is to seek and save what is lost, not to destroy.
After 40 days and nights of stormy, rainy weather, a rainbow was seen and a covenant was made. After 40 days on Mt. Sinai, Moses received the Ten Commandments, a guide for hope-filled living. After 40 years in the wilderness, Joshua and Caleb led the Children of Israel across the Jordan into a new promised land. After his baptism and reminiscent of all God’s rainbow-covenants, Jesus spent 40 days preparing to preach his rainbow gospel that God saves, none other; hope abounds.
Songs about rainbows often speak of those who search and search but do not find, who wish and dream but are often disappointed, who hope but remain fearful. Baptism is an assertion that we have chosen to live “Under the Rainbow,” rather than desire to fly over it. It is our profession that we have chosen to follow Jesus not simply or only wish for better days.
We may be walking in the wilderness, but it is to the wilderness which God’s Spirit has driven us. We shall be confronted with evil forces, with wild beasts and with angels; temptations shall abound. There will be great danger. The forces of evil shall surround us but we shall not be overcome nor shall we be dismayed, for God intends to bring rainbow confidence to all creation. For those who choose to live “under the arc of the bow,” God has promised to be near, no matter what happens! This is God’s covenant.
The season of Lent begins as we reflect on the baptismal waters though which we and our children have come. Last week, we remembered whose we were and heard again God’s encouragement to listen to and follow Jesus. Today we are encouraged to trust in God’s promise and covenant to be with us, all along the way.
Kermit the Frog sings:
“Why are there so many songs about rainbows?
And what’s on the other side.
Rainbows are visions, but only illusions
And rainbows have nothing to hide.
So we’ve been told and some choose to believe it;
I know they’re wrong, wait and see.
Someday we’ll find it, the rainbow connection:
The lovers, the dreamers and me.
It seems to me that instead of longingly looking for rainbows we are to continue singing of that rainbow connection since we live, move and have our being under God’s care. We may be pressured and tempted; many will suffer; all of us shall die, but none without the confident expectation that God’s will shall be done. The waves are mighty, the wind is strong but the floating ark of Christ’s body confidently sails onward. The sky is dark, the clouds roll in, but somewhere a rainbow bursts across the heavens and under it – under it, is God’s creation. May our lives continue to be signs of rainbows and Christ’s good news. At least that’s the way I see it!