Friday, February 25, 2022

I’m not going on a Lenten journey, and neither should you

     The Church often visualizes Lent as a journey.  The traditional season of preparing for baptism is also the season in which believers walk with Jesus to Jerusalem and the cross.  Ancient traditions of pilgrimage to holy sites mirror Jesus’ own fearless journey to crucifixion.  Although a mostly helpful image in the Church’s history, that image now puts the Church at risk of merely reinforcing our culture’s constant quest for the new, best thing that is always just up ahead.  This year, the Church should stay put for Lent, and lay aside the journey image.

     Our culture imagines almost everything as a journey these days. Myriads of commercials promise help on journeys to fitness, weight loss, or a “new you.”  Financial commercials tout a path for retirement.  Educational journeys lead to career journeys. A nearby hospital even advertises joint replacement journeys.  Our culture obsesses with getting somewhere, the new best place, about finally being happy.  But of course, all of that is a capitalist sham meant to make people feel inadequate and that only the next thing can make them happy. 

     The Church needs to call that toxic image what it is, but instead the Church doubles down on it.  Read this book for Lent and you will be on your way to a holier you. Increase your righteousness before God in 10 easy steps.  Journey with Jesus to the cross and he will journey with you in your life. Nonsense.

     There is simply no where to go.  There is no where up ahead that is better than right here. There is no world to journey to that is not the beautiful one that we inhabit.  Prophet and poet Wendell Berry reminds us:

            The Future 

            For God’s sake, be done
            with this jabber of “a better world.”
            What blasphemy! No “futuristic”
            twit or child thereof ever
            in embodied light will see
            a better world than this, though they
            foretell inevitably a worse.
            Do something! Go cut the weeds
            beside the oblivious road. Pick up
            the cans and bottles, old tires,
            and dead predictions. No future
            can be stuffed into this presence
            except by being dead. The day is
            clear and bright, and overhead
            the sun not yet half finished
            with his daily praise. 
                (from Given)

     The journey image gives us hope for escape to somewhere better, somewhere away from our brokenness and hurt and grief.  There is no place to go.  We are like the monk in the old story who fleas from a spot because of the many temptations there:

There was a monk who because of the great number of his temptations, said, 'I will go away from here.' As he was putting on his sandals, he saw another man who was also putting on his sandals and this man said to him, 'Is it on account of me that you are going away? Because I will go before you, wherever you are going.'

(Daily Readings with the Desert Fathers, p. 65 Templegate Publishers 1988)

      But, someone might object, aren’t the great stories of the Bible about journeys: Abram to Canaan, Joseph to Egypt, the Exodus, the return from Exile, and Paul’s journeys?  Yes, indeed the Bible deals a great deal with journeys, but they are the exception not the rule.  The background story of the Bible is of farmers and shepherds tending their little piece of land, of not so good fishermen going back to the Sea of Galilee because they don’t know what else to do.  The first Psalm even casts the image of the good life as staying put, as stationary as trees:

 

Happy are those

   who do not follow the advice of the wicked,

or take the path that sinners tread,

   or sit in the seat of scoffers;

but their delight is in the law of the Lord,

   and on his law they meditate day and night.

They are like trees

   planted by streams of water,

which yield their fruit in its season,

   and their leaves do not wither.

In all that they do, they prosper.


The wicked are not so,

   but are like chaff that the wind drives away.

Therefore the wicked will not stand in the judgement,

   nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous;

for the Lord watches over the way of the righteous,

   but the way of the wicked will perish.

 

     So, I’m not going anywhere for Lent. I’ll plant some seeds indoors and in the garden, and watch them grow.  I’ll prune the apple trees. I’ll sneak into the church when no one else is there and take a nap on the back pew. I’m not going to worry about a journey to cross and resurrection.  After all, Paul reminds us that we are “always carrying in the body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be made visible in our bodies” (2 Corinthians 4.10).  There is no where we might go that the cross and the empty tomb are not with us.  For God’s sake, this Lent, stay put.



Image: Leuthold, Julie. Tree of Hope, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=57033 [retrieved February 25, 2022]. Original source: https://www.flickr.com/photos/julieleuthold/7521645058 - Julie.