This
Sunday is the day after Earth Day; a day begun in 1970 America to draw
attention to environmental concerns and provide a voice for emerging
environmental consciousness. By 1990 Earth Day went global as more and more countries
were experiencing environmental crisis brought on by global warming. Today
another 30 years down the road, the entire planet is in climate crisis such
that the life of every person, creature, and plant is affected.
Marking
Earth Day is important, for our very life depends upon the health of Mother Earth.
Today
we can raise our voices and pray the well known prayer - Blessed are you O
God of the universe who brings forth bread from the earth and creates the fruit
of the vine.
But
this isn’t entirely true. Not if one
lives in a place of prolonged drought - the world map as of August 2022 has crippling
drought in many areas, outside of Antarctica no continent is exempt. And bread
from the earth and fruit from the vine are not present if one lives in a
growing number of areas affected by flooding - either by rains from intense
storms or from rising sea levels.
I
find Earth Day hard to celebrate – not the part of celebrating the earth and
the abundance found therein- but daily I am saddened that everyone doesn’t live
the values of Earth Day everyday, as a matter of course, to be a good human
being, to be in relationship with the land and one’s Creator.
I
feel the same about Easter. I find it hard to celebrate – not the part of celebrating
resurrection and the abundance of hope and grace found therein – but daily I am
saddened that everyone doesn’t live the values of resurrection everyday, as a matter
of course, to be a responsible human being, to be in relationship with the land and
one’s Creator; to focus on that which gives and grows life.
This
is the Day After Earth Day and we hear God’s Word relating a story about Jesus’
followers the day after Jesus was put in the tomb. Two followers of Jesus are
walking outside along a road, talking about the day’s events. Earlier the women
found the tomb empty; one claimed she had seen the Lord; other disciples went
to see the tomb – confirming it was empty! And as they walked along, a
traveler fell in step with them to hear this news.
The
day after, these disciples encounter the Resurrected One while walking the
land, a land that held and nourished their ancestors for generations. From the
very ground, from dust to dust and ashes to ashes, God resurrected from the
land; birthed to new life from the depths of Mother Earth.
Pope
Francis wrote: the universe unfolds in God, who fills it completely. Hence
there is a mystical meaning to be found in a leaf, in a mountain trail, in a
dewdrop, in a poor person’s face. (LS 233)
The
universe unfolds in God, who fills it completely – this God is the traveler
who appeared and fell in step with the disciples on the road to Emmaus. This is
the God who was unfolded in the breaking of bread from the earth and fruit from
the vine.
This
is the Day After Earth Day and I can’t help but connect Mother Earth with God’s
journey through Holy Week and Easter. Earth Day is like Palm Sunday -the Jesus’
parade; rah rah Mother Earth; but how quickly the scene turns. Everything that
Jesus planted through words and deeds, started to come back to him; his
revolutionary speak and radical kindom talk were stirring up the people, some
to follow with hope and expectation and others with angst and a desire to get
rid of him. The parade was the last showy event to put Jesus at the point of no
return on his way to the cross.
There
are moments when I am sad, when I am enjoying nature and walking the land, and
I feel the earth moaning. I feel Mother Earth dying. And I wonder is this Earth
Day THE parade, the last showy event, the point of no return on Mother Earth’s
way to the cross.
The
Day After Earth Day - Mother Earth is crucified – in genetically modified grain
to make bread from the earth, by pesticides used on the fruit of the vine; open
wounds of mineral extraction, gashes and burns of abused prairie and destroyed
forests; cancerous water and caustic air --- all death by human hand. Crucified.
I
have been reading Our Home and Treaty Land: Walking Our Creation Story, by
Raymond Alfred and Matthew Anderson. Raymond is Nehiyawak (Cree), an Anglican
priest, and professor at the Vancouver School of Theology. He writes:
Indigenous
people have preferred to regard all things as sacred because at any point in
time Creator could do something powerful within Creation, and that powerful
working makes a place sacred. Indigenous peoples, then, in anticipation of
Creator doing something powerful, maintain an attitude of awe and anticipation,
trying to understand the movement of all that is around us and within which we live
our lives. The journey upon the land, then, is put into stories, songs, and Ceremonies
that remind us and help us
to understand our journey upon the earth. …
Jesus
has joined or was always part of the journey, which takes place on the land.
Creation is always the context of Creator’s interaction with us. (pg 59-60)
In
Raymond’s words, I picture the indigenous walkers on the road to Emmaus, not
only are they walking the land, they are pondering ‘this something powerful’
that has occurred; the Creator’s interaction, trying to understand the movement
of all that is around them.
The
Day After Earth Day – as I ponder Mother Earth in the shadow of the cross, she gives
life through the powerful transformation of Jesus –from dust to dust- to an
open tomb and a risen Christ.
The
land tells a powerful story, the good news. Those who walk the land maintaining
an attitude of awe and anticipation, trying to understand the movement around
us and within which we live, will recognize that Mother Earth again and again
walks from life to death to resurrection. Holy Week through Easter is relived!
Often!
In
school I enjoyed geography class, particularly the units on rocks and tectonic
plates. Rocks and tectonic plates are always moving, always in the process of
transition and change. Shifting tectonic plates – push up mountains and open
the earth’s crust to form new land. Earthquakes, volcanoes, glaciers carve out escarpments,
press dead sea life into limestone, create pools for freshwater; tectonic
plates move causing rock to take on different forms and the lay of the land to
drastically change causing some ecosystems to die and others to emerge.
Mother
Earth’s nature is to be in the constant state of living, dying, resurrecting.
Christ’s
nature is the state of living, dying, resurrecting.
The
Day After Earth Day – I ponder the good news; Easter. Jesus’ death and
resurrection gives me hope that all is not lost, that in death (and only through
death) is there the possibility of life and resurrection. Walking the land, Mother
Earth whispers to us – acts it out for us- that we are to die to ourselves, die
for the sake of the other, die to give our life for the life of the other, so that HOPE, RESURRECTION, PEACE blossom. And it is
whispered across the land, proclaimed in earthquake and the bursting open of rocks
and tombs, that the universe unfolds in God and that Creator is doing something
powerful around us.
Let
us anticipate the Creator at work. In this season when we celebrate the
resurrection part of Mother Earth’s cycle, the season of Christ is risen Christ is risen indeed, may be take time to ponder
with others the Mystery of faith, to go for walks with another human being and
be attentive to them and to the world around you, and be in relation -physically
touch Tree, Earth, Flower and give thanks for life.
Christ
is risen! Christ is risen indeed! Alleluia!