11-26-18 - Climate Change

(You can listen to this reflection here. Sunday's gospel reading is here.)

We’re talking about the end of the world; it must be Advent. And the end of the world, Jesus suggests, will not sneak up on us: “There will be signs in the sun, the moon, and the stars, and on the earth distress among nations confused by the roaring of the sea and the waves. People will faint from fear and foreboding of what is coming upon the world, for the powers of the heavens will be shaken."

Nations confused by the roaring of the sea and the waves; sounds like the latest warnings from environmental scientists and most world leaders. Those who track the melting of our ice caps and rising of our seas, the increasing ferocity of storms and fragility of food production, also sound the alarm about the conflicts the resultant scarcity will unleash among humans. What are we doing to each other, and to the planet we call home, with its wondrous diversity of creatures and abundant food supply?

Will the end of this world, when it comes, be man-made or God-ordained? Are we to work to preserve God’s creation or hasten its implosion? I’m betting on the former. I don’t believe God invites us to destroy the earth she created, but to reveal his realm in the here and now, bringing about a just and merciful creation built on the promises of God. In that sense, we are all to be about the business of climate change. And by that I mean much more than environmental ministry.

Those of us who follow Jesus as Lord are commanded to foster a climate of godliness, humility, generosity, justice-seeking, peace-making, love-giving. Not only are we to live this way – we are to create a climate in which others can experience transformation and live this way too. That is the pattern we see in the community of sinner-saints who surrounded Jesus, and later among his apostles.

What marks the emotional climate in your community? On your social media feeds? In your local media? Is it a climate of suspicion and division, or honest inquiry and supportive assistance? Is it a climate of violence in word and deed, or of generous debate? Does it celebrate death or nurture life?

And then this: how are you being called to change that climate? Where does God want you to show up? What does God want you to say? Who does God want you to love, to challenge, to break down, to build up?

We are responsible for the climates in which we live, in more ways than one. I pray we can truly be climate changers in the best sense, creators of emotional, political and spiritual climates in which children can thrive and all who are wounded can be loved back into wholeness. Even our beloved planet Earth. Even us.

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