Sunday, December 27, 2020

"To Judge the Quick and the Dead"

 “From thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead,” my friend said, quoting The Creed, and then asked: “What does that judgment look like?”


His question caught my attention, but I held my piece for a moment and envisioned the creed, “looking” at it for a moment, and then, boom, the third part of The Creed came into focus. It doesn’t stand alone, or independent of what precedes it - but actually answers the question: “What does judgment look like?” 


For me, at least, God’s judgment is not retribution, but restoration; repairing what has been broken; undoing the damages of sin; restoring the lost to community, healing the broken hearted, and rebalancing, retuning, the earth, and the universe.


In this context, for me at least, the restorative justice of God, the judgment of God, which is never to be feared, but rather welcomed with grateful praise, is outlined in the third element of The Creed: “I believe in the Holy Ghost, the Holy Catholic Church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting.”


Here’s is the judgement of God - the work of the Holy Spirit, consistent with Genesis 1 - that which brings life into being, deals with light and fecundity, ordains the trees and fish to make a go of it, reproduce, replicate themselves, create and recreate in their own ways and purposes.


The Holy Spirit initiates the work of Christ from the get-go, from creating community, forgiving sins, giving death a run for the money, to wrapping it up with life undying.


I don’t know what any of that will actually look like, but at least, for me, the third part of The Creed maps out the program - with evidence already at hand - evidence consist with Creation, and then the New Creation. 


When someone raises a question of justice and welcome, it’s the work of the Holy Spirit. When someone offers a cup of cold water to the thirsty, a ham sandwich to the hungry, a jacket to keep a child warm, and a political program to keep in check the hideous forces of greed, it’s the work of the Holy Spirit.


From the moment of creation, to the moment of recreation, and with and through and in every moment of time, the work of the Holy Spirit, bringing to bear upon creation the judgment/justice of God.


This is what it looks like: “I believe in the Holy Ghost….”


God be praised!

Thursday, December 24, 2020

"It will end badly," I said four years ago, and so it is ... the depths of his narcissism, his spite, his immorality, and cruelty, are running unchecked, and in the next thirty days, who knows what evil will yet emerge from his tormented soul.

Yet, 70 millions Americans voted for him ... which says a great deal about our nation, and our own spiritual deformation. Our own blood-soaked history, our love of violence, our racism, our growing inability to care for our neighbor.

I hope that the unvarnished Tr--- gives pause to some who voted for him, and to some of the GOP who stood by him as he destroyed one thing after another. Sadly, there are very few Republicans left - the GOP has, in fact, become the POT, the Party of Trump.

Yes, the man has a base in this nation, and that ought to frightened the daylights out of anyone who yet cares about the larger issues of justice, climate, equality, immigration, and healthcare.

As always, I write as Christian, lest anyone write me off as a silly liberal. YES, I'M A LIBERAL BECAUSE I'M A CHRISTIAN! The life of Christ, what he said, and did, and died for, shape my being. The witness of the Prophets, the Song of Mary, the Book of James, and Paul's ethics, are the bedrock of my thinking, my values, my politics.

To all who look to the Star for hope, who know full well that even now Herod is at work to destroy the work of God, may there be an abundance of grace, mercy, and peace.

We have our work cut out for us, so let us put our hand to the plow and not look back. Let us sing with heart and soul:

Oh little town of Bethlehem, how still we see thee lie
Above thy deep and dreamless sleep the silent stars go by
Yet in thy dark streets shineth, the everlasting light
The hopes and fears of all the years are met in thee tonight.

Friday, November 27, 2020

Thou Art Present

In the darkest of hours
In the brightest of days
When all is said and done
And more, much more, remains.

Thou art present.
In ways that confound and befuddle
That comfort and confirm
Hovering over the darkened waters. 

Thou art present.
In the first breath of the new
Water, darkness, a restless sea
Beating wings beating life.

Thou art present.
I know not how.
Nor can I always perceive.
Or discern thy hand.

Thou art present.
For the ages … long before my kind showed up
Long before Eden’s wonder
Before snake and fruit and hate and hurt.

Thou art present.
I know not how.
But I cannot escape the suspicion
Of your grace.

Thou art present.
In life and in death.
In seasons of joy, and in the bitter winters of our discontent
When darkness sweeps away the light.

Thou art present.
And that is enough
More than enough
To steady the soul and strengthen the hand.

Thou art present.

Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Mashed Potatoes???

 An Ode to Mashed Potatoes …


Let me count the ways I love thee …

The common tator … a tuber … from the ground …

Just like you and me …

Maybe we feel something in common with this common ground thing …


They’re not picked, like apples or pears …

They’re dug …

Like good music … or hangin’ out with folks we love …


Lots of different sizes … and colors … in a lot of different places …

We do have a lot in common, don’t we?

With the humble potato …


Peel ‘em … if ya’ want …

But I like to leave the skins on …

Yukon Gold, of course.

Adds texture … as it should be … the whole potato …

As God intended.

 

Into a pot of water …

Turn on the heat … lots of good things need a little heat …

Cook ‘em not too hard … 

Test ‘em with a fork …

Drain ‘em and put ‘em back into the pot …


And now the good part …

A couple of butter chunks … 

A generous splash of cream … I mean: be generous …

Maybe even some cream cheese …

A little horseradish?

Rosemary?

Thyme?

Salt and pepper …


And a little elbow grease …

Smash and mash these remarkable gifts from God …

Not too much, just enough …

To blend it all together …

Taste to your heart’s content …

That’s what I love about cooking …

We get to sample everything before you do.


Can it get better?

You bet … 

On the plate they go …

A fork-full will satisfy all your desires for comfort …

Just like home … 

But like all good things … these good things go well 

With a chorus of other good things ….

Gravy … 

Giblet gravy …

Corn and slabs of carefully sliced turkey, neat and precise … though I prefer the dark meat … a tad bit unruly …

Cranberry relish on the side …

And how about the country cousin, the sweet potato … with its famous hat, 

The marshmallow … all white on the inside, with golden trim …

And who knows what else … 


Start with potatoes, and who knows where it’ll end.


But start with potatoes … 

A very common thing …


And it will end well …


As all good things do …


Happy Thanksgiving …




© Tom Eggebeen, Los Angeles


Tuesday, October 13, 2020

Eternal Life 001

 I’ve always wanted to be remembered by my children. 

Maybe because I had so few memories of my father, who died suddenly when I was 23 and six-months married, at the beginning of my middler year in seminary.

Maybe because my memories of my mother were so darn crummy. A troubled woman she was, but that’s a story for another time.

To be remembered by my children - that’s always been important to me. Now that I’ve lived this long, it’s no longer a question - they’ll remember me, and I believe most of the memories they’ll have will be good memories … good times with travel and dinner-time silliness … and my career … I made sure that I most always had the time for their lives - soccer games, piano recitals, school events, and such. Couldn’t have happened without Donna - her steady presence, her devotion to the family, her career, too, in real estate and accounting. But those are stories, too, for another time.

What’s central here for the purposes of this little essay is my wanting to be remembered.

There are societies wherein memory of loved ones keeps them alive in some form or fashion. Is that what I want? 

I don’t know.

I would like to think my wish to be remembered is more that of asset for them to carry on with their lives, as I did with mine. Mostly good, and sometimes not. But carrying on, doing the best I could, even when the best wasn’t so hot.

That’s life.

Plenty of ups and downs, and we hope for more ups than downs.

To be remembered?

For their sake?

I think so … because my own sense of “eternal life” is pretty slim - a far cry from the gospel hymns that speak of the sweet by-and-by, streets of gold, everlasting joy, with mommy and daddy and dear old friends, or something to that effect.

As it now stands in my life, there’s no one I wish to see again.

And if my last breath in this mortal vale is indeed my last everything, that’s okay by me … as it stands right now.

Though I must confess that if one of my children or granddaughter died, or Donna goes before me, I suppose I might like to see them again.

Maybe even a dog or two on that fabled rainbow bridge.

Very early on, Donna and I had some conversation about such things, and we both decided, though it very much was Donna’s sense of it here, that if there were anything after this life, it would be all right, because it’s in God’s hands … and whatever God decides will be just fine, and if there’s nothing, well then, that’s okay, too.

Would I be content with nothing in the afterlife, if there is such thing, if my life had been one of destitution and misery? Suffering and loss? 

I don’t know what I would feel, because I can’t imagine a life of dead-end poverty and deprivation. 

My life has been good, and though it may end roughly, as many a life does these days, with drawn-out disease-management and the medical merry go-round, I would, I hope, still know that life was good, and I’d breath my last with gratitude.

Beyond that, I’m not sure.

I know that the Jews had no sense of eternal life until they spent some time in Egypt and Babylon. For the Jew, life was enough, threescore and ten, or maybe fourscore, and that was that.

But in the end, what with Egypt on the one end, and Babylon on the other, with the destruction of the Temple, there were some adjustments made, as to justice and fairness. Could the terrible reverses of life be counterbalanced by life after death, in some sort divine rebalancing of things?

And somewhere deep into the story, hell got thrown in there, as a place where God would put all my enemies, or something like that, or maybe even put me, if I didn’t toe the line. And if hell were a little too severe, well then, we’ll go for purgatory, a mini-hell of sorts where the bad stuff is at least roasted away, whereas hell is just a matter of constant roasting, gnashing of teeth, moans and groans. Dante seems to have put it rather well.

I guess the point or so - I mean, there are some pretty shitty people around who manage to accrue lots of power, and with that power, take delight in depriving others of life. Those who live in the lap of luxury with barns upon barns full of grain, grain stored to create scarcity and manipulate the markets, and build some stinking huge big homes.

But that’s another story, too.

Somewhere along the line, a notion of resurrection - a gift from God.

Because there’s nothing in us that survives death. 

No immortal soul, or anything like that.

When we’re dead, we’re in Sheol which isn’t much of a place, a land of shades, where the good, the bad, and the ugly all go.

But maybe God has something up God’s sleeve on this score … God remembers us … makes us always present (whatever that means!) … if my children remember me for the duration of their life, and if God remembers me for the duration of God’s life, which has no duration in the normal sense of the word, but is without beginning and without end … so, in some bizarre way, I’m always present in the mind of God, and so are you, dear reader, so are you.

At the end, when the time is right, graves are opened up, the sea gives up its dead, and the bones are refleshed, not with the perishable stuff given to corruption, but the imperishable stuff, like the body of Christ - light and luminous, but real enough for Thomas to dig his fingers into a  scar, and real enough to cook a beach-side breakfast for the weary disciples and help them get on their way with the high and holy calling of being disciples.

Refleshment is part of the deal, because we’re as much flesh as anything else, and without it, we’re not ourselves … but that’s a story for another time.

Between now and that great gettin’ up morning, bright with sight and sound, we all die … earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust, pretty well sums it up.

From the book of Revelation, the idea, perhaps, of spiritual awareness in the presence of God, aware enough to enjoy the sights and sing some hymns … but it’s an awareness full of waiting … waiting for that final moment, when the trump is sounded, and all that’s been lost is found, all that is broken is made new.

The waiting of the saints, if you will, is categorically different than our waiting, fraught as it is with uncertainty, anxiety, a not-knowing that growls around inside our soul like a hungry beast, snapping and snarling when approached.

The saints wait with a full-blown confidence, assurance, blessed assurance, for sure … no uncertainty for the saints. 

Well, if that’s the case, to God be the glory.

As for me, who knows?

God knows.

And God is everlasting, eternal, world-without end, the Alpha and the Omega, which is a beginning, and an ending, not as a cessation of things, but a fulfillment, a completion, something made ready for the next round.

I think of the next round, but God-only-knows … God was doing godly things for billions of years before this earth came to be, and we got up from the mud to take a look at the sights.

And who knows what comes next in this expanding universe.

Is God done?

I don’t think God is ever done.

Endless creativity is God.

Anyway, to God I belong.

And so does my dear wife, and our family.

And everyone, all creatures great and small.

Some years ago, I read a fine article about life-after-death in The Christian Century - a theologian was asked by her young daughter, after her grampa’s death, “Will he be there in heaven?” As the mother said, I put aside my learning and said, as if it were a word from God, “Everyone you love, and everything you love, will be there.”

I think that’s just about it.

For love is the heart of the matter.

And everything, from old blankets and a pair of roller-skates, to  everyone who has ever lived, because everyone was loved by someone … and so it is, and so it shall be.

What is loved is there.

In the heart of God … 

And when the time is right, all shall be made new.

And that’s one heckuva deal.

Friday, September 11, 2020

9 11 Remembered


Tuesday morning, I drove to church, and only there, did I learn what was happening. A TV was on in the office.

As we watched, in stunned silence, tears flowing, I felt a great, horrible, hideous, anger ... "nuke 'em" I thought ... maybe even said it aloud.

By Sunday morning, when we were scheduled to celebrate the church's 50th anniversary, and some of our guests were unable to make the journey because of the airline shut-down, I had to preach and I did.

I don't recall how I stitched together the joyous celebration of a 50th anniversary, with a full congregation of guests who were able to gather by car from afar, and the tragedy of 9.11.

I recall saying something about restraint and trust ... not giving into the darkest thoughts occasioned by the present terror.

And I remember a young woman at the door afterward scolding me for not damning the Muslims.

She and her husband never again returned to the church.

Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Why I Write

 All of my life has moved to this point.

That's the way it is.
For good or for ill.
And a little of both.

And in the midst of all that motion.
Commotion.
Coming and going.
Words came to matter to me.

Because I read a lot as a child?
The Hardy Boys.
Zane Grey.
The Weekly Reader.
National Geographic.
A Bible illustrated by Albrecht Durer.
U.S. News and World Report.
Reader's Digest and it's "Word Power."

All along the way, Words.
The Word made flesh.
Reality yearning to find a home.
Words to capture it.
Which can never be captured.

Reality, Divinity, the Universe.
It lends itself to us.
And then walks away.
And we wonder what happened.

We had it for a moment.
And then our hands are empty.
And we grasp again for the illusive wonder.
And it welcomes our embrace.
And it dances with us.
For a time.

And then it's gone again.
Leaving us with memories.
Thoughts almost forgotten.
A sense of once possessing, and then losing.
Only to try, and try, again.

That's me.
I sit here with reading.
Yearning to know.
I sit with my cup o'coffee.
And the crumbs of a breakfast sandwich.

I sit with my computer.
Playing with these words.
Infinite words that pull the heart.
Tease the mind.
Point to never never land over the seas.
Somewhere long ago.
Somewhere maybe ahead.
Old and new.
Tried and true.

Or just plain worn out and tired.
Words.
Ideas.
Images.
Enough to make the mind reel.
Or real.
Or true.
Or sad.
And blue.

Or full of energy.
Crazy hope.
Because out of the dusty words arises the Christ.
Stones get rolled away.
Angels say, "He's not here."
He's ahead of you.
Over there, up there, beyond the horizon.

Follow him.
Follow your dreams.
Your childhood dreams of adventure and discovery.
Never stop being a child.
Because children know.
What we're all likely to forget.

So, here I am.
Words piling out of me.
Clowns with sad or happy faces.
Piling out of the clown car of my soul.

And the audience scratches it's head.
Or laughs, or cries.
As the clowns entertain, entice.
So humbly at our service.
Self-deprecating.
Pointing never to the self of words.
But to the worlds beyond.
The sky so brilliant and blue.
The night ringed with stars and moon.

So, I write.
In the hopes of giving expression to truth.
Or at least which I think it might be.
To find the world to which all these words point.
A place where folks can sit in the sunshine of the day.
Or in the moonlight of the evening.
With quiet in the air.
And contentment in the spirit.

That's what I am for.
And if my aim is poor.
Well, I'm not the first to miss the point.
But that's as it should be.

No graven images said God.
Nothing sent in stone, or word, or words.
Except the Word made Flesh.
Which only proves the point.
Because Flesh never rests until it's dead.
Flesh moves and changes.
It's here one moment, and then somewhere else.
And then it's gone.
To find another home.
Somewhere.

So nothing set in stone.
Noting definitive.
But only questing.
And questioning.
And singing.
And some poetry.

To suddenly find Majesty
Sitting by your side.