Sunday, January 26, 2014

The Land of the Living

Ephesians 5:8-10; Psalm 27


            When I was five years old, a certain family television show first appeared.   Forty-three episodes then aired over a two year span.   I was too young to watch it at that time, but I was glued to every one of these when the show began its life in re-runs on Saturday mornings back in 1985.   It’s was a science-fiction adventure about a human dad and his two teenagers who had mysteriously gotten trapped in an alternate universe.    This was quite a captivating and somewhat relatable premise to my sixteen year old self.    Maybe you remember it?  The now cult-classic T.V. series was called “Land of the Lost.”  
            You definitely remember it if the word “Sleestak” just popped into your head.    These characters were really creepy human shaped lizard creatures with a little horn ridge atop their head.    And if eyes are the windows to the soul, as I’ve often heard it said, then the oversized, glassy black orbs of the Sleestaks revealed them as absolutely soulless.   They were intriguing predators of the show protagonists -- Rick Marshall and his kids Will and Holly.   At the beginning of every episode, we are reminded that this family ended up exiled in the alien universe of Sleestaks and other hostile creatures after an earthquake opened up a space-time rift during a white water rafting trip.  
            The captivating goal of the whole series was for the Marshall family to survive being utterly lost … to return home to the world where they truly belonged.    And despite the very campy early 1970’s styled rubber Sleestak suits and other primitive special effects, I recall how real it felt relating to this family’s anxiety-filled adventures.    Their identity and unity and, on some level it seemed the whole human race, was under threat.   
            In all the ways it’s creatively interpreted, this epic theme of being dangerously lost but yearning for and fighting to get safely home is easy for every human to relate to.  Nobody ever wants to be in the land of the lost.  We all want to be in the land of the living.  We don’t want to be confused and anxious about our lives, constantly fleeing in fear from all sorts of emotional and physical enemies to our well-being.   We want to be where we and our families are fully able to live securely, growing and thriving in places inhabited by goodness, love and peace.   
            Yet we all live with the reality of human sin.   This is no science-fiction.  It’s biblical truth.  And it means we all inescapably have times of feeling lost – lost to ourselves, to those we most love, to our God who created and loves us uniquely and unconditionally. 
            Let’s be reminded that the origin of all such anxious times in the land of the lost is told to us in the Book of Genesis.  There we read about the first human beings, Adam and Eve, falling to the temptation of believing they could be just like God, then realizing their rebellion, experiencing their isolating shame, and establishing spiritual exile as our human norm.   Living in sin is like an alternate universe because it’s not what God planned for us and this world.  Instead of the perfect paradise of feeling secure, fully accepted, always willing to use our spiritual gifts to God’s glory and for the benefit of all God’s children and all of Creation … sin pushes us through a spiritual rift where we find ourselves dangerously confused about where and with whom our true home is.
            This epic struggle is held up before us like a big mirror in Psalm 27.    When we read it, we see ourselves feeling trapped by enemy forces all around us, feeling forsaken by family, coping with false witness against us, and living in a land where all human breathing leads to violence.    I’d rather live with the slow stalking Sleestaks!  
            Blessedly, through Psalm 27 we are also able to clearly and inspirationally see something else of ourselves.    We see ourselves returning to live securely in the house of the Lord every single day.   We see ourselves confidently lifting up our heads to sing praises to our Lord in the face of every manner of enemy.   We see ourselves glad to be taught God’s level way of living and exuberantly beholding divine beauty all around us.    In this mirror to our soul, we see salvation.   We see all darkness being completely dispelled by holy light.  We stand in the reflection as children of this light, believing we will see all that is good and right and true.    We see ourselves in the land of the living.   
            But life in the land of the living is not easy.   It’s usually not like we are crawling through pitch-black spaces one moment and then a sudden flood of radiant light shows us we are actually safe in our homes.     It’s more like what the ancient Israelites experienced.   When the sun went down in the days of Psalm 27, there weren’t any light switches to flick on.   Nor were there any street lamps, floodlights, super bright LED’s, rows of high intensity stadium bulbs.    To be in the land of the living at night meant trusting in the little bit of light provided by simple, single wick and flame pottery lamps.   To follow God’s path, God’s will, meant not knowing what the road right ahead looked like and trusting that God gives just enough light “to take a few more steps.”[i]     It’s always easier to see and trust the goodness of God when there is great illumination, like here in this sanctuary and when in the security of our homes.   It’s harder to experience this when you can only see a few feet ahead of you – literally and figuratively – out in the midst of dim and dark places and times.
              Psalm 27 invites us to keep seeking out and stepping into this little bit of divine light and welcoming it to guide us through the land of holy living.  It calls on us to find those places where we too can confidently declare, “The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear?  The Lord is the stronghold of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?”   Where are these places for you? 
            The way back home to them is always through the gracious power of Jesus Christ.  And there is a traditional Christian perspective that can help us better balance our days in the land of the lost and the land of the living.  We are reminded about this every time we pass by the stone cross on our way into this sanctuary.
            This perspective comes from people who lived long ago in Ireland and Scotland.   It’s a form of Christian living that they practiced known to us as Celtic spirituality.  That’s a Celtic Cross out front.  Central to this way of seeing God’s goodness in the land of the living is identifying what they called “thin places.”   Fortunately, this has nothing to do with our diet and where we choose to stand!  It has to do with both geographical locations and specific moments in time where what is holy becomes clearer to the eyes of the human spirit.   You are in a “thin place” when you experience a profound encounter with ancient and eternal reality within our present time.   It’s a place of homecoming, of reunion, where God seems particularly real and close by and all seems good with the world.    It’s a place of meeting where it seems the veil between heaven and earth is so sheer you can almost step through it.   In “thin places” you feel less lost in sin and more securely part of all that is sacred.[ii] 
            When I hear folks talk about feeling close to God when out in nature, I hear it as their being in “thin places.”   Can you take a moment and picture one these places for you?   Are you overlooking the ocean or some other body of water? Gazing at or from a mountain vista?  One place I like to go for this is by the Black River right behind Cooper Gristmill in Chester.  And, of course, there are so very many spots up at Camp Johnsonburg.    
            But again, it’s not just about certain locations.  “Thin places” happen when you locate yourself as being in a particularly holy moment too.   Since we all suffer inescapably anxious moments, of feeling as though we just surviving in a land of the lost, it takes constant practice to identify these and thus to focus on believing and seeing and thriving and truly living in the goodness of the Lord.    
            So I’m going to end today with telling you about an excellent suggestion by author Dorothy Bass.   She has written about how often we ask each other the question, “How was your day?”    This is a question that usually comes from someone who deeply cares, such as when we ask it of spouses and kids the moment they get home from work and school.    It’s often met, however, with kind of vague response like “Not bad.”    Or it opens up space for a litany of complaints.    She goes on to tell about a mother she knows of who therefore chooses to ask a much different question.  When tucking her children in at night, she asks, “Where did you meet God today?”    Then witness to thin places is shared … by the tree with beautiful blooming flowers, as my teacher was helping me, when my eyes met those of a homeless person.    So “before the children drop off to sleep, the stuff of their day has become the substance of prayer.  They enter a thin place and the presence of God is very near.”[iii]     
            Amen.





[i] www.workingpreacher.org/preaching.aspx?commentary_id=1872
[ii] http://day1.org/807-a_psalm_of_thin_places.print
[iii] ibid.

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