May This Church Be like a Tree – what a beautiful prayer and blessing for the church.
This blessing was written in
the form of a hymn by Pablo Sosa and was his contribution to the Lutheran World
Federation’s 500th Commemoration of the Reformation, which was held
in Namibia. It is common practice in Namibia to gather for worship and meetings
under trees, just like in his part of the world, the Apostle Paul would go to
the water the place people gathered to pray.
May This Church Be like a
Tree is hymn number 1042 in All Creation Sings. It is a
suggested hymn for today, as it echoes the imagery from Jeremiah and the Psalm
of the day, Psalm 1.
Blessed are those who trust
in the LORD, whose trust is the LORD.
They shall be like a tree
planted by water, sending out its roots by the stream.
It shall not fear when heat
comes, and its leave shall stay green; in the year of drought it is not
anxious, and it does not cease to bear fruit. Jer. 15: 7-8
The World Council of Church’s
in memorial piece for Sosa refers to him as the “grandfather of what became
known as ‘ecumenical worship.’ …He was engaged in a creativity that not only
learned from other traditions and cultures, but formed new liturgies so that
the ecumenical community might participate with one another.”
Sosa believed that singing and
music is “embodying the theology of another, and in the process understanding
more clearly how we were shaped by our presumptions.” Sosa also believed that by
embracing global song and singing together, “God was accompanying the people in
the song, living within their history. Even the rhythm of the song brought God
closer, incarnate within the beat of the street. The music itself was part of
song’s theology.”
The 500th
Commemoration of the Reformation and the song May This Church Be like a Tree,
emphasized to the Lutheran World Federation what a tree the global church has
grown into and what abundant fruit there is yet to bear. The hymn calls the
church to be a joyful place of feast (communion) and simple prayer; to be about
justice, acts of love, and compassion; a resting place, a welcome shelter, open
arms and an embrace for the pilgrim and stranger; a place of self-giving and abundance
sharing.
Take a moment to think about
this – the Lutheran expressions of church around the world that we represent, or
ministries we have been connected with. Since WWII, especially, the church has changed
their leaves, and grown new branches, letting other branches to be pruned and
discarded. Branches of social awareness have abounded, and the theology of the
church has become more expressive in contemplating the connection between faith
life and worship life, the biblical connection between worship and justice.
Sosa reflected much on this and the lifting up of hope with song. Sosa delightfully
described worship as “the fiesta of the faithful.”
But this ‘fiesta of the
faithful,’ was – is - born in and through the pains of a weary world.
Pablo Sosa grew up in
Argentina. As an adult he became a composer and a pastor of a large Methodist
Congregation in Buenos Aires. He taught liturgy and hymnology at a seminary. He
served in Argentina during a period known as the Dirty war, Guerra sucia,
1976-83. During this period, Argentina experienced military dictatorship and a
state of terrorism. Political dissidents, students, young professionals, intellectuals,
trade unionists, writers, journalists, artists, citizens suspected of being
left-wing activists, anyone associated with socialism or having left-leaning
sympathies were subject to harassment, detention centres, torture, concentration
camps, or death squad. Others were simply ‘disappeared.’ It is estimated that 22,000
to 30,000 people were murdered or disappeared.
Pastor Sosa and his
congregation experienced the atrocities of the regime when two girls from the
congregation were ‘disappeared’ because they worked among the poor. … Because they
worked among the poor - Compassion and mercy- faith living threatened the regime.
Churches both Protestant and Catholic were conflicted on how to be under and in
this state of terrorism and military regime. How was the church to be? Was it
to speak out, be silent, support the government, subversively undermine authority?
Continue to openly resist by offering compassion and work for justice, or to
only speak in house building resilience and hope among the people? During this
time many people lost faith. As the Dirty War continued it caused economic
meltdown and plunged the middle-class into poverty.
There have been and always are
places in the world where God’s faithful question what it means to live
faithfully. The Church – even from those who do not profess the faith of the
church – is looked to for statements, answers, or action; and if none are
forthcoming the church is vilified. Today we have an inkling of what it is to
personally, as a community, and as a larger church body, understand living in a
place and time where the church is seriously contemplating and discerning what
faithful living is amid an aggressive world, where those in leadership only
make this weary world wearier. Do we speak or stay silent, does the church support
the powers that be or blatantly defy orders? With whom does the church stand, work,
support?
In 1977 in Argentina, Las
Madres de Plaza de Mayo held their first vigil for the ‘disappeared.’ A group
of women gathered in the Plaza de Mayo, in a demonstration requesting to have
their young adults returned to them alive. The women, and others, have gathered
in solidarity every Thursday afternoon thereafter. They pursued details of the
fates of their lost relatives. They named the disappeared as ‘fighters for the
people.’ Their justice work in human rights continues today, until, in their
own words, there is a “defeat of imperialism and the sovereignty of the people
are achieved.” Faithful acts of love, compassion and mercy. A continued persistence
in seeking justice.
ELCA pastor and professor
Mary Hinkle Shore wrote: “With the beatitudes, Jesus announces that the
provision of God is trustworthy when the world is offering poverty, hunger,
grief, and rejection. With the woes, Jesus announces that the provision of God
is even more trustworthy than acting in what we imagine is self-interest. The Messiah
embodies a whole way of being in the world that is better and more basic to
life than either eking out an existence or building barns and filling them.”
This is what I feel it is to
be like a tree – embodying a whole way of being in the world that is better and
more basic to life than either eking out an existence or building barns and
filling them – some form of middle ground where no one has too much and no one
too little.
This is what I feel it is to
be like a tree – embodying a whole way of being in the world where worship and
justice are connected. Where worship is the fiesta of the faithful. A
place to be connected with God and each other, to be filled with a zest and
power, to go and be the embodiment of hope in everyday life.
This is what I feel it is to
be like a tree – embodying a whole way of being trusting in the provision of
God. Where this principle is the root that waters discernment and decision
making; our love, compassion and action. May we – the Church- be like a tree.
Blessed are those who trust
in the Lord, who trust is the Lord.
They shall be like a tree
planted by water, sending out its roots by the stream.
It shall not fear when heat
comes, and its leaves shall stay green; in the year of drought it is not
anxious, and it does not cease to bear fruit. Jer. 17: 7-8