Sunday, September 26th, 2021 – 18th Sunday After Pentecost
Philip’s Reflection: “Rivers of Living Water” (John 7:38)
As you’ve realized by now, rivers feature rather prominently in our worship service this morning – we heard of a singing river that “my thirsty soul with pleasure fills, and sets my thoughts on peace”; and we’ve gathered at the beautiful, the beautiful river “where bright angel feet have trod”. We’ve “found peace like a river in-a my soul” and we’ve rejoiced with glad adoration as the mountains and rivers proclaim God divine. For those of you who love river music, stay tuned!
Of course, it’s not a coincidence because, as you know by now, the fourth Sunday in September is when we celebrate BC Rivers Day – and it’s become one of the largest river appreciation events in the world. Our music brings out the beauty, peacefulness, and life-giving qualities of rivers – and of course there are many other gifts that rivers bring – including the more than 500 named rivers in British Columbia – irrigation for agriculture, drinking water, transportation, hydroelectricity and all sorts of leisure activities – one of my favourite childhood memories, with my little brother and sister, is of leaning over the railings of a small bridge in England, dropping pieces of wood into the water below, crossing quickly to the downstream side of the bridge to see whose piece would emerge first – for those of you blessed with children and grandchildren you’ll recognize this as the river game of “Pooh-sticks”.
But, as you’ll be hearing in a few minutes from Mary Sue, many of our rivers and freshwater ecosystems are now threatened - by urbanization and pollution and climate change – and our music selections today also remind us of the essential roles that rivers play, not only for human lives but for all of God’s creation, that is dependent on fresh river water in so many ways.
River stories also play a central role in Scripture, from Genesis to Revelation – we read of how God creates a river flowing through Eden to water the garden and then divides it into four branches including the Euphrates (Gen. 2:10); and of Moses’ mother placing her baby in a basket and setting him adrift on the River Nile (Ex. 2:3); and of Jesus’ baptism by John the Baptist in the River Jordan (Mk. 1:9); and in the last book of Bible, the Revelation to John, we read of a river “bright as crystal, flowing from the throne of God and of the Lamb” (Rev. 22:1) – and many other stories. But today’s three readings from Scripture take us in a different direction and each of them offers us hope for pandemic times.
Our first was the reading of Psalm 137, and you might wonder what is hopeful about the sorrowful refrain that we sung with the psalm – “By the rivers of Babylon, there we wept.” Written from exile in Babylonia, following the destruction of Jerusalem, the captors taunt the exiled Judeans – “Sing us one of the songs of Zion” and the psalmist responds “How could we sing the Lord’s song in a strange land?”. And there, by the mighty Euphrates River, the Judeans hang up their harps in the willow trees and grieve on the river bank, as they remember Jerusalem and the loss of their temple. I like to think of the river as a symbol of comfort, perhaps in their grief, the swirling waters signal that that “this too shall pass”. And I wonder if this image resonates for you, as it does for me, when perhaps a long way away from home, or in a moment of personal sadness, or even in the exile of a global pandemic, we search out a river, and take a walk along the towpath and the flashing wings of a kingfisher remind us that in the midst of grief there is also beauty. For those of you who practice centering prayer, you’ll know how helpful the image of the river is in our time of meditation – as each unwanted thought or distraction comes into our minds we gently, ever so gently, place it on the surface of the river and it will be carried away downstream, and allow us to return to the present – as the poet Ernestine Northover writes - the river soothes “confusing thoughts that come my way… giving a soft contentment to my day.”
The prophet Ezekiel is also writing for his people in exile. He tells us of his vision of a trickle of water emerging from beneath the holiest of holy places in Jerusalem, the Temple of Solomon, in fact from just under the south side of the temple, by the altar; and then we hear how his guide carefully measures out a distance of about 1,000 cubits, 500 meters, from the temple and the guide leads Ezekiel into the water of what has now become a stream, with the water reaching up to his ankles; and he measures out another 500 meters and the stream has become a creek, with water up to Ezekiel’s waist; and then another 500 meters and the creek has become a river, “deep enough to swim in – a river that no one could cross.” From a trickle to a deep river in the distance of a mile and a half, in the dry wilderness east of the holy city. And the guide turns to Ezekiel and asks him “Son of man, do you see this?” Do you see how a trickle of water, from underneath God’s temple, has now become a river too deep to cross?
And, Ezekiel goes on to tell us, that the river flows through the deep valley of the Arabah and empties into the Dead Sea, one of the saltiest bodies of water on the planet, where the water contains almost ten times more salt than regular seawater and as a result is almost completely devoid of life. And as this river flows into the Dead Sea, the salt water becomes fresh – “swarms of living creatures will live where the river flows… and there will be large numbers of fish (where previously there were none) … and so where the river flows everything will live.” And then as Ezekiel walks along the river bank he sees that “fruit trees of all kinds will grow on both sides of the river. Their leaves will not wither, nor will their fruit fail. Every month they will bear fruit, because the water from the sanctuary flows to them.”
Ezekiel tells his exiled and demoralized countrymen that from the Temple, the throne of God, issue the waters of life – from which even the salt water of the Dead Sea becomes fresh, and in the desolate wilderness of Judah, fruit trees flourish. It is a picture of a new Garden of Eden, a paradise, with a sacred river flowing through it, and the people of the land will one day return and benefit from it. It is a profoundly hopeful message.
And it can serve as an important metaphor for us too. Four years ago, God called me into a new way of being; and I left my job in one of the tall glass towers of downtown Vancouver and I enrolled as a full-time student at the Vancouver School of Theology; a year later, having completed the Diploma program, the water was, in a sense, up to my ankles. And God quietly called me to go further and after a second year, having completed a Master’s Degree in Public and Pastoral Leadership, the water was truly up to my waist; and again God called me to go deeper, in fact to go “all in” and earlier this year I graduated from the Master of Divinity Program – and now the water was deep enough to swim and, not being a strong swimmer, God gently guided me to the river bank, to West Vancouver, where the ground is fertile and the fruit of the trees “will serve for food and their leaves for healing.” Perhaps you can think of a time in your own life, or a relationship, or a new interest or project when, figuratively, you put a toe in the water; soon found that the water was over your ankles, and then up to your waist; and soon you were in so deep you needed to swim? And perhaps it changed your life too?
And what is the meaning of this water, this Sacred River? Our final reading, from the Gospel of John, gives us one answer. “Whoever believes in me, as Scripture has said” says Jesus “rivers of living water will flow from within them.” (John 7:38). And the evangelist John goes on to explain “By this he [Jesus] meant the Spirit, whom those who believed in him were later to receive.” It was the same water that Jesus had offered to the Samaritan woman at Jacob’s well – “…those who drink of the water that I will give them will never be thirsty.” [For, as Jesus says] “The water that I will give will become in them a spring of water gushing up to eternal life.”
This morning we have read poetry, and sang hymns, we have prayed and we have listened for the Word of God in Scripture, and we have reflected on some of the images and symbolism of rivers and streams throughout history. And that seems appropriate, don’t you think, for the day each year when we celebrate rivers – not only the great rivers of British Columbia – the Peace River in the North, the mighty Fraser River that drains nearly all of the interior plateau; and the Columbia River in the south-east and south-central regions – but also the hundreds of smaller rivers and streams with which this Province is so richly blessed.
And whether we think of rivers in a physical sense, or figuratively, as a source of comfort, or peace or hope, they all have one thing in common: all rivers are life-giving - whether as freshwater ecosystems, or the rivers of living water that satisfy the spiritual thirst, the water that “gushes up” to eternal life.
Friends, rivers are an essential source of life and we must protect them. Amen.