
Loma Linda preps for new hospital.
Hobbes' Place reports on Adventists at the American Academy of Religion meetings in Chicago.
Some questions are being raised about Adventist Health's accounting practices. More on that here.
Local Oregon paper notes Adventist help for the hungry.
Adventist youth hold AIDS panel discussion. More on Adventists and AIDS here:
“Irrespective of the religions, the HIV/AIDS challenge has to be tackled using the help of all partners whether Government, private, NGOs and religious bodies,” said Pastor Matthew Bediako, Secretary of the Seventh Day Adventist Church General Conference, on an official visit to Mauritius last week.
Bloomberg reports the growing unrest in the Congo:
“It was Tutsis who attacked us then and it’s Tutsis who are attacking us now,” he said.
Nkunda, who is also a Seventh-Day Adventist lay preacher, led his forces to within 10 kilometers of Goma by Oct. 29. His fighters overwhelmed Congo’s army despite the presence of over 5,000 United Nations peacekeepers in North Kivu. Nkunda, who said in the past that his National Congress for the Defense of the People, or CNDP, was essentially trying to protect his Tutsi minority, now speaks of the “total liberation” of Congo.
“I have national ambitions,” Nkunda, dressed in army fatigues and wielding a cane capped with a silver eagle’s head, said in a Nov. 13 interview near the border with Uganda. “Where we are is the safest in Congo. If we can do that, we are capable of doing it on a national level.”
New York-based Human Rights Watch and witnesses such as Sinamenye dispute Nkunda’s contention and say his soldiers executed tens of civilians in Kiwanja in November.
Awake.
Shake dreams from your hair
My pretty child, my sweet one.
Choose the day and choose the sign of your day
The days divinity
First thing you see.
A vast radiant beach in a cool jeweled moon
Couples naked race down by its quiet side
And we laugh like soft, mad children
Smug in the wooly cotton brains of infancy
The music and voices are all around us.
Choose they croon the ancient ones
The time has come again
Choose now, they croon
Beneath the moon
Beside an ancient lake
Enter again the sweet forest
Enter the hot dream
Come with us
Everything is broken up and dances.
34Then the king will say to those at his right hand, “Come, you that are blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world; 35for I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, 36I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me.” 37Then the righteous will answer him, “Lord, when was it that we saw you hungry and gave you food, or thirsty and gave you something to drink? 38And when was it that we saw you a stranger and welcomed you, or naked and gave you clothing? 39And when was it that we saw you sick or in prison and visited you?” 40And the king will answer them, “Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me.” - Matthew 25:34-40
23 November 2008
I have a bit of a hard time with Thanksgiving.
As a vegetarian, it’s difficult to look forward to a holiday whose central icon is cooked fowl. The carnivorous carnival has at times left me feeling like a second-class citizen. More accurately, perhaps, it has left me feeling like the overlooked side dishes I’ve been expected to be sated with. (Tofurkey helps.)
Further, as a pacifist committed to social justice, I’ve been disturbed by the excessive romanticization of the “Pilgrims and Indians” who populate Thanksgiving myths. History is never so tidy as the stories we tell about it, especially about our nation’s colonial origins. Peeking backstage from the classic Thanksgiving drama, we see how, throughout European conquest in this land, indigenous people were treated as actual second-class citizens, at best. Remember that I did just move from Berkeley, California, where the legal holiday on October 12 each year is not Columbus Day but Indigenous Peoples’ Day. It’s official. It’s on the parking meters and everything. And it’s also just. The least we can do is remember the violence and loss that was the price good people paid to purchase the new country that others enjoyed.
As a spiritual descendant of the Dunkards, I am also wary of the national religion that has come to underlie this day. Recall that in the late 1700s and into the 1800s, the Brethren Annual Meeting banned its members from taking part in Independence Day celebrations, disdaining the glorification of a nation birthed in war.
But there’s something different about Thanksgiving that has allowed me to come to terms with it, to love it even, not with unquestioning naivete but with a desire for informed responsibility for what I – what we – can make it.
And what’s special about it isn’t all that secret: it’s that there’s communion inside it. Thanksgiving is North America’s moment of Eucharist. Literally: the word Eucharist translates as “thanks-giving,” giving thanks.
Part of what I love most about the communion that’s embedded in the Thanksgiving holiday is the way it just sort of bubbled up over the years as everyday people celebrated their harvest festivals and recognized the blessing of their dependence on G*d’s creation that instilled in them deep gratitude. Because it’s not what’s unique to Thanksgiving that makes it so noteworthy, it’s what is so common. Eating together as a way of nourishing the wider, social body, as well as individual, physical bodies, is not a new idea to anyone by now. It’s a widespread, very human reality. That’s what makes it so true. That’s what makes Christian practices of communion so true, too.
We see this reality revealed in today’s Scripture reading from the Gospel of Matthew. Jesus’ upside-down Kin-dom bestows greatest honor on those who serve, and has a king, a leader, who lives in positions of second-class status, or even outright misery. In this Kin-dom, how people treat those deemed “least” really matters. Here, the side dishes really are put at the center of the table.
Now, too, this is not a new idea, and that’s why it’s such a good idea. Jesus is picking up on Jewish traditions of his day,1 and applying them to his own situation. Matthew’s Jesus had clearly read Isaiah 58, from which I will quote extensively:
“Look, you serve your own interest on your fast-day,
and oppress all your workers.Is such the fast that I choose,
a day to humble oneself?
Will you call this a fast,
a day acceptable to G*d?Is not this the fast that I choose:
to loose the bonds of injustice,
to undo the thongs of the yoke,
to let the oppressed go free,
and to break every yoke?
Is it not to share your bread with the hungry,
and bring the homeless poor into your house;
when you see the naked, to cover them,
and not to hide yourself from your own kin?
Then your light shall break forth like the dawn,
and your healing shall spring up quickly;
Then you shall call, and {G*d} will say, ‘Here I am.’”[2]
Isaiah was encouraging folks to choose the truer faith revealed in acts of loving-kindness.[3] For Isaiah, and for Jesus, the heart of devotion to G*d is in right, loving relationships, not in right ritual, right rites, right fasts or right feasts. And as in Isaiah’s day, there can be a wrong way to do a feast as much as there can be a wrong way to do a fast.
We can see this in the dangerous potential of Thanksgiving holiday celebrations:
Those are feasts we could choose.
But we can also choose another feast. The food and drink that we share can be a feast Isaiah would be proud of, when the dishes are flavored with love and the table is set with justice. It is the feast rooted in the “elements” of Thanksgiving that carry communion into homes and shelters and campuses across the country.
The first element is the food. Food is at the center of this holiday, perhaps more than any other. And it’s not just any food, it’s local food, foods with American origins that allowed immigrant Europeans to survive on the East Coast without their native staples. Corn, squash, turkey, venison, lobsters, mussels, grapes, herbs.[4] How many holidays remind us to pay attention to where our food comes from?[5]
On a more basic level, Thanksgiving and communion both start from the recognition that bodies need food.[6] Human bodies need food. These are recipes for starting to see the people who hunger and thirst. The righteous ask Jesus, “when was it that we saw you hungry and gave you food, or thirsty and gave you something to drink?” The first step in that act of loving kindness was the seeing itself.
The second element is the hospitality. This holiday celebrates different peoples coming together. Now, the factual legacy of the holiday cannot be ignored, but its legend can be embraced by Christian Americans. The myths of this day honor the important fact that the Pilgrim settlers were immigrants to this land, and that the indigenous Americans responded to their arrival with hospitality, despite the threats these immigrants might pose. It’s the rare holiday of the national calendar that actually admits – even celebrates – the European colonizers’ weakness and dependence on the land and their hosts, not their strength or invulnerability.[7] Communion, too, honors a Christ of an upside-down Kin-dom where the ‘least’ matter the most and a Christ who wears the mantle of weakness when he stoops to wash his friends’ feet and when he opens his table to Judas as much as Peter or John. The faces of hosts and guests may have changed, but we still need the hospitality.
The third element of the Thanksgiving feast is memory: remembering our ancestors, our forebears by genetics or by adoption. In America’s Thanksgiving, this means also remembering the painful parts of our heritage - remembering all the bodies broken along the Way, so that no more must ever be broken. We eat not only for our bodies’ sustenance but also in remembrance of those gone before us.
The final element I’ll lift up today is the giving of thanks - for all we have to be thankful, and to all who contribute to our lives. Said Meister Eckhart, “If your only prayer is ‘Thank you,’ that is enough.” THANK YOU. That is a prayer all Americans can speak together. Our Eucharist, our Christian thanks-giving, is a statement of gratitude specifically to G*d, who sustains our lives through the efforts of countless beings.
In these ways, the Thanksgiving holiday that is upon us is but one day we can choose the feast Christ has spread for us: by eating knowingly and intentionally, by acts of radical hospitality, by remembering our roots, and by giving deep thanks.
Chances for communion surround us every day, in every moment where justice is made by sharing food and drink, if we but choose to see it… because the truth of Christ’s communion is more powerful than our religious institutions. It breaks out of church buildings or worship services to welcome us and feed us wherever and whoever we are.
Alleluia! Let the feast continue.
__
Audrey deCoursey is Associate Pastor of the Highland Avenue Church of the Brethren, Elgin, Illinois, and a Spectrum Blog reader.
Notes:
[1] Just as Jesus’ institution of the Eucharist quotes heavily from Passover, another celebration of thanks for deliverance.
[2] Selections from verses 3-8.
[3] Preaching the Gospels without Blaming the Jews, Ronald Allen and Clark Williams (Louisville, Ky: Westminster John Knox Press, 2004) .
[4] Elizabeth Armstrong, “The First Thanksgiving,” Christian Science Monitor, 27 November 2002.
[5] Of course, this can become problematic, too, as the holiday spreads out across the continent to places where the ‘traditional’ feast elements are not native…
[6] Do we really think that yams or pumpkin pie or turkey or Tofurkey come from G*d any less than the juice and the bread we share in this sanctuary?
[7] This recognition of weakness and the nonsectarian nature of the holiday in general provide an opening point for immigrants today to weave their own stories into the nation’s narrative.
We’re really glad you were born, because if it hadn’t been for you—if you hadn’t been what you were—we wouldn’t be what we are.
You had a special role in our community of faith, but in many ways you were a lot like us. You belonged to your time and place. You had a birth family, and after you were married you had your own family—for better and for worse (I suspect that being the wife of James Springer White wasn’t a bowl of cherries).
You knew what some of your recent admirers seem to have forgotten—that you weren’t omniscient or infallible, and didn’t have the last word on every subject.
But you taught us a lot—about the purpose of prayer (“Prayer does not bring God down to us, but brings us up to Him”);[1] about the nature of God (“God is love” begins and ends your five-volume description of the “Conflict of the Ages”);[2] about faith and evidence (“God never asks us to believe without giving sufficient evidence upon which to base our faith”);[3] about personal integrity (“The greatest want of the world” is for people “who will stand for the right though the heavens fall”);[4] and about the continuing need to learn (“There is no excuse for anyone in taking the position that there is no more truth to be revealed, and that all our expositions of scripture are without an error”)[5].
So, on this 181st anniversary of your arrival in our world on November 26, 1827, we want to say, “Happy Birthday, Ellen — and thank you for being you.
[1] Steps to Christ (1892), p. 93.
[2] Patriarchs and Prophets (1890), p. 33; The Great Controversy (1911), p. 678.
[3] Steps to Christ, p. 105.
[4] Education (1903), p. 57.
[5] “Christ Our Hope,” Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, Dec. 20, 1892, p. 785.
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| The Continuing Quest for Truth by Ellen White | 81.04 KB |
Here is another excellent slide lecture by Jeff Crocombe, Professor of History, Helderberg College, South Africa.
Jeff blogs at Hobbes' Place.
Ed Spivey Jr. reads his December H'rumphs on the financial crises and Adam Smith from Sojourners Magazine.
p.s. At this last weekend's Adventist Society for Religious Studies meetings in Boston I heard that La Sierra University is hosting Jim Wallis for a campus talk. I see on their website that Jim Wallis will be delivering the Landa Lecture during Alumni weekend, on Sabbath, February 28.
"Adventist Women and the Earth: A Response to the Ecofeminism"
Conference Date: April 24-26, 2009
Location: La Sierra University, Riverside, California
Submissions Due: Friday, February 13, 2009
Undergraduate and Graduate Student Call for Papers: "Adventist Women and the Earth: A Response to the Ecofeminism" is the theme of the 2nd Annual Young Women & the Word Conference, hosted by the Women's Resource Center and co-sponsored by La Sierra University.
This conference aims to address our responsibility to the earth/environment and to explore connections with gender justice. Ecofeminism brings together ecology, deep ecology, and feminism. Feminism seeks equality of women with men, a transformation of social relations of the ownership of the means of production and reproduction, and changing cultural patterns of violence and male domination.
Ecofeminist theologians, such as Rosemary Radford Ruether, specifically seek to assess cultural and social roots that promote destructive relations between men and women, between ruling and subjugated human communities, and the destruction of the rest of the biotic community, of which humans are an interdependent part. Ecofeminist theologians affirm that we can draw critically from the legacy of the Christian and Western cultural heritage to find usable ideas that might nourish a healed relation to each other and to the earth. The conference planners hope to lead out and show how young Adventist women care about the abuse of the earth and women; and challenge others not only to recognize this problem but to actively create and practice solutions that respect the dignity and value of God's creations.
The main topic will be addressed utilizing discussions on leadership, practical solutions, dialogue on the parallels between our ethic toward the environment and women, and so forth. Visit www.adventistwomenearth.wordpress.com for more information.
Featuring Rosemary Radford Ruether, John B. Cobb, Jr., Jared Wright, Maritza Duran, Ginger Hanks-Harwood, Somer Penington, and others.
Undergraduate and graduate student submissions should be presentable in 15 minutes and aim to connect religion, ecology, and gender issues. Please submit a paper proposal of no more than 250 words to be considered for participation. All paper proposals should be sent to the organizer of the conference, Trisha Famisaran, no later than February 13, 2009. Submissions should be sent electronically in Word format to adventistwomenearth@gmail.com and include the following:
1. Paper proposal of 250 words.
2. A separate page indicating your full name, paper title, institutional affiliation, degree program and major, class standing, telephone number, e-mail address and mailing address.