Message from the District Executive Florida Congregations and links Consultation on Youth Task Force
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Rev. Carole R. Yorke Sermon September 16, 2001 "When Not to Surrender" Spirit of Life Unitarian Universalists, Odessa, FL There is a story of a little girl whose mother sent her on an errand. She was gone a long time and when she finally returned home her mother asked what had taken her so long. She had stopped to help a friend fix his bicycle because it had broken. But you don't know anything about fixing bicycles, exclaimed her mother. I know, replied the girl, I stopped to help him cry. Dear friends, as I have struggled with the right words to give you today,
I found myself having the most difficult time in writing this sermon.
I have found myself doing, over this past week, the very things that seem
to be common behaviors, shared by many with whom I have spoken; feeling
the things I am certain all of us have felt; thinking of the event over
and over again. I have been preoccupied with the horrifying, life changing
event of last Tuesday; I have had difficulty thinking about other things.
I have been glued to the tv, even when I wanted to turn it off and not
hear any more, or see any more pictures of the people in NY who have been
begging for information about a lost loved one. I have read many comments
from my colleagues all over the world - and I have both agreed and disagreed
with every one of them, even as they went from one extreme to the other.
I am amazed at the reaction and responses to the United States from around
the world - and watched with a full heart the work of firefighters, police,
volunteers from all over who have made donations, doing the awful work
of removing what is said to be over a million tons of steel. I have come
to realize that one of the only things to do...is to help each other cry. But I have also come to what I know are the most important words that
I can say to you - I love you. I love the struggle that I know each one
of you has been going through; I love the tears that I have seen in your
eyes. As individuals, truly now members of one embattled body, we shall
be known no longer by the symbols of abundance and prosperity, but by
how well we learn to recognize our own tears in one another's eyes. Though
our minds have been imprinted forever by images of horror, our hearts
join in deep admiration for the ordinary courage and simple goodness of
our neighbors in New York and Washington and Pennsylvania, made one in
shared suffering, reminding each other of how splendid we can truly be. That said, I come back to the deep and painful reality of the blurry
gray muck at the center of it all that is the human condition. Suffering
begets suffering, and at some point we must create communities and cultures
that are willing to make the courageous move to start playing a different
game than the one the world has been engaged in for too long. We must
not surrender to the anger which engenders feelings of hatred. "We
must not choose one in place of another - on the one hand, if hatred and
vengeance spur our lust for retribution, rather than the greater quest
for peace, we will only add to the world's terror even as we seek to end
it. On the other, if we pray only for peace, we shall surely assist the
spread of terrorism. " When we see Palestinian children dancing in the street to celebrate the
slaughter of our neighbors and loved ones, how can we help but feel a
surge of disgust and anger, the very emotions that precipitate hatred.
But the Palestinians are not our enemy. Nor are the Muslims. This is not,
as some historians would have it, a war between civilizations. It is a
war between civilization and anarchy, a war of God-demented nihilists
against the very fabric of world order. I hope you will go out of your
way in the days ahead to practice the second great commandment and love
your Arab neighbors as yourself. Few outside the circle of those who lost
loved ones in Tuesday's tragedy are more surely its victims than are the
millions of innocent Muslims whose God's name has been taken so savagely
in vain. "This said," Church goes on, "to pray only for peace right
now is unwittingly to pray for a war more unimaginable than awakening
to the World Trade Center smoldering in ashes. .. After simmering for
decades, on Tuesday World War III commenced in earnest, against an enemy
more illusive and more dangerous than any we have ever known before. To do this we must not only prepare our minds; we must also prepare our
hearts. Above all else, this is a spiritual challenge, one that each one
of us must meet. If before we could seemingly afford the luxury of relegating
our spiritual lives to the occasional Sunday, today, we must redirect
our energies and spirits. In times like these, measured against the preparation
of our souls, all lesser priorities lose their urgency. So I challenge you to pay attention - even though I have been preaching
this for the three years that I have been giving sermons here - to pay
attention to your spiritual lives, to prepare your heart for the challenge
that faces each and every one of us today. Further, I challenge you to
come to church every Sunday - and to come on other days - and make the
strengthening of your spiritual lives, the protection of your very souls,
a full time endeavor. No less than the salvation of this world now demands
of us that we NOT surrender to hatred, to the lust of revenge; we NOT
surrender to the easy words of "let's get 'em - let's go over there
and bomb the hell out of them..." We will be judged by how we balance
justice and mercy, retribution and compassion. That is a spiritual issue. A story (that comes from the Rocky Mountain Storytellers Guild Newsletter)
called "The Wolves Within." "I, too have felt a great hate for those that have taken so much,
with no sorrow for what they do. But, hate wears you down and does not
hurt your enemy. It is like taking poison and wishing your enemy would
die. I have struggled with these feelings many times. It is as if there
are two wolves inside me: one is good and does not harm. He lives in harmony
with all around him and does not take offense when no offense was intended.
He will only fight when it is right to do so, and in the right way. But
the other wolf is full of anger. The littlest thing will set him into
a fit of temper. He fights with everyone, all the time, for no reason.
He cannot think because his anger and hate are so great. It is hard to
live with these two wolves inside me, for both of them try to dominate
my spirit." The boy looked intently into his grandfather's eyes and asked, "Which
one wins, Grandfather?" The grandfather solemnly replied, "The
one I feed." We will be judged by how we balance justice and mercy, retribution and
compassion. I have used the word "surrender" - and the things to which
we must not surrender; but I believe that "surrender" is a spiritual
idea, and one that, in the most positive way, can become a spiritual practice.
I have already told you what I do not mean by surrender - those feelings
to which we must never surrender. But think for a moment: when was the
last time you have felt a spirit of peace, validation and joy of surrendering
your impenetrable selfhood...to nature, to love, to intimacy, to community,
to the sacred? I will never ever forget the kind of experience I had when I went on
a vacation to a New Hampshire lake one summer - it had been a hot day
and still warm at 10:00 pm, so we (my partner and I) decided to take a
dip. Easing into the cool water and taking some time to get used to the
water temperature, I lay back, floating on the calm surface, with my face
toward the sky. I was amazed to see the array of bright stars shimmering
from one end to the other. In an instant, I had this wonderful sensation
of not knowing where I ceased and where these great, infinite, welcoming
heavens began. I relaxed, and surrendered to this feeling of what I can
only describe as being merged with all that was...I allowed myself to
be submerged into something much larger than I could ever imagine to be.
In that moment of willing surrender to that YES, I was filled with a sense
of peace, beauty, belonging, and love that I wish I could always feel
but rarely do...a feeling that I wish with all my heart I could recapture
right this instant, to share with all of you as we try to heal our ravaged
hearts from the experience of this week. Do you all know this intense
spiritual feeling of peaceful, complete surrender I am describing? I am convinced that if I were to make the search for this feeling, by
being more willing to surrender myself to mystery - by searching for the
God that seems to be hiding from us today - I would be more able to help
myself and therefore, you - begin to heal. I have realized that I myself have been pretty nervous when it comes
to this particular spiritual stance. In spite of the peace, validation
and joy I take from moments of surrendering my selfhood (like the one
in the lake) I have not been so sure I really want to regularly let go
of myself in the spiritual sense. Surrender (in one's religious life)
implies and requires that one willfully submits, lets go of, and gives
over one's conscious control of one's life to some power or presence larger
than oneself, and this I find very hard to do as a rational, independence-minded
Unitarian Universalist. As you know, our liberal faith tradition (which
has always been suspicious of ecclesiastical, scriptural and cosmic authority)
is built upon the rocks of individual freedom, reason and personal authority.
We are perhaps the most rational, willful and individualistic religion
on the face of the earth, because we insist on assigning, to each individual
Unitarian Universalist ultimate responsibility for his or her own religious
beliefs, values, behaviors and practices. You are not only FREE in this church to use your own personal authority
to look for what is true and real, right and good for yourself, you are
then OBLIGED to do the disciplined work of following your own authentic
spiritual path, once you have uncovered it. While we do in this religious
community regularly look beyond ourselves, to scripture, tradition, history
and other external sources of authority, for spiritual guidance and direction,
ultimately, each individual UU is free to reasonably and responsibly establish
(and then, live out of) their own religious, spiritual and ethical framework.
It is anathema, then, for UUs to even consider the spiritual value of
surrendering authority and control to someone or something else. Most of us fiercely want to control and shape our own spiritual beliefs,
principles, landscapes, and destinies. I myself, even though I do personally
believe there is a great and mysterious spirit afoot in this creation,
a spirit to which I purposefully belong, have been nonetheless routinely
hesitant to willfully surrender much philosophical, emotional or spiritual
control to anyone or anything beyond my own skin. But I think you and
I have missed something of great personal and spiritual importance if
we fail to consider the spiritual value of surrender, as one stance in
our religious lives. I do not believe that capable and self-contained
as we might be, any of us can live a rich, full and satisfying life imagining
ourselves as somehow independent agents in this otherwise amazingly woven
creation. The events of this week have underlined this for me. Another form of positive surrender in our daily living is when we feel
impelled, or compelled, to surrender our personal will to the sheer power,
clarity, and rightness of some principle, cause or value. Today we are
asked to commit to justice, and mercy; retribution and compassion. Sometimes
we as human beings simply must obey the dictates of something which we
know to be absolutely right, good or true, thus subjugating our own immediate
self interest on behalf of something higher and holier. And I believe that what is higher and holier for us now, in this time,
on this day, in this space, is that we commit ourselves once again to
encouraging ourselves and each other in a search for the holy, the sacred
- a search for a God whose love and compassion we can identify - that
we continue to seek meaning, even meaning that is hard to find, and not
go home because we can't find it quickly - that we reach out for the hands
of the persons next to us - that we lay one brick at a time, take one
step at a time, emphasizing the human dimension in the task of building
a genuine civilization. And make no mistake about it, dear friends, the
very salvation of the world demands it of you - of me - right now. The
very salvation of the world demands- that we recognize our own tears in
the eyes of another; that we be in right relation, depth relation, caring
relation, with ourselves, with each other, with the culture, and with
creation. We are asked to do no less. May each one of us find the comfort and healing that we need. So may it be. Amen. For our closing hymn today - the UU ministers of the Washington DC area have asked all UU churches around the country to sing with them - This is My Song - #159. |