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Home for the
Holidays
A
Sermon Offered at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Lafayette,
Indiana
By
Rev. Hilary Landau Krivchenia
December
23, 2001
Reading: -- Rev. David E. Bumbaugh, adapted
A spiritual community begins with the knowledge
that there is a place in the world where we are spiritually at home:
A place where memories
are rooted,
Where mysteries are
pondered,
Where dreams are
nourished,
Where love is freely
given,
Where failures are
owned and accepted,
Where sorrows are
transformed,
Where our lives are
deepened,
challenged, and
uplifted.
Let this be such a
place.
Here let heart and mind,
reason and intuition come together.
Here let us be at home, centered,
Together, once again.
Sermon
D.W.Winnicott said
that home is where you start from. Some famous person said
that home is where they have to take you in no matter what.
Thomas Wolfe said You cant go back home.
And Dorothy of Kansas, though quite an extensive traveler,
said, while clicking together a pair of what were actually silver
shoes, theres no place like home, theres no place like
home, theres no place like home.
Up here, I have one of those little electric candles that
people put in their windows in the winter holidays.
Frankly, I am a chump for them they make me imagine all
sorts of warmth taking place in those houses, coziness a real
quality of home. And
sometimes I refer to this as our church home.
You know how sometimes you get an idea and this little voice
in your head says "Dont go there! But this other little
voice says Go there because thats where the real treasure
is! Well, one of the rules of preaching or what we call in the
business homiletics now that might bring at least a guffaw from
a room full of ministers you know the little play on the topic
of home and the word homiletics
Oh never mind.
Anyway, one of the first rules of preaching is to take one
simple idea and slowly work through it until your twenty or so
minutes are up. And I
work on this I really do but I am reminded of the acerbic
words of an eighty five year old woman named Marcia Elder in the
book Southwest Corner by Mildred Walker. Marcia, a happy
homebody, says she would rather stay at home and read her Bible than
listen to that preacher going back and forth over one idea like a
stocking darner. Well,
Ive never darned a sock, though I expect that the socks in Marcia
Elders day may have been a little humdrum.
I guess Id rather think of darning a sock more like this
that seems like more of an event and then well, I
get too excited by you. See,
youre not some sort of mass so to speak out there you
are each a holy shrine that I get to visit that you each have
the opportunity to visit. A
community of people whose lives and struggles are shared.
Naturally there is a place for this simple darning --
some weeks it is just what we need -- yet when I get together with
you I want us each to walk away our tootsies warm again in
something with a pattern that interests, that perhaps, challenges
the conventions of fashion, and that respects the keen eyes of
insight that I look into every week. And sometimes I want to reach
in and also see the darning egg the egg any darning person needs
to use you have to touch the egg again and again to get the
shape of the sock right and the weave firm.
This week, I am thinking about home and its a simple word
with complex meanings it reverberates with meanings
particularly at this time of year.
Home means comfort, warmth, welcome, getting caught up,
nesting in, sharing changes, breaking bread and then and
then its not always so sugar coated.
How many of you you dont need to raise your hands --
are going to see your parents this year? Can you see the
complexity emerge already? I
mean canned or fresh cranberries, ham or duck or stuffed squash
its enough to shake a person to the core though actually I
mean something else something a little deeper.
Which parents, parents separated, alienated, deceased
Or how many are spending your holiday without
that other parent or without your life partner?
How many of you are going to visit your children or
grandchildren? Again
the complexity begins to emerge. Are you a college student going
home and hoping to reconnect but maintain your autonomy?
Or the parent of a student coming home who youve ached to
see and cuddle but need to give them their space?
And, then, of course, there are those of you
staying home. Maybe
quietly or maybe some thundering crowd or peculiar small
contingent of people is coming to see you.
Theyll hang their towels in the wrong place, rearrange the
silverware drawer. Or,
more deeply, bring to the surface again the ever unfinished business
of intimate relationships joyful and painful.
I know that some of you have helped parents, friends, or
children move in the last year that some of you have moved in
the last year for school, for work, for the pleasure of it, for
a safer, or a better place. And I know among you those whose long time in your home has
ended and who have moved to smaller, easier places, to Greentree, or
Rosewalk, or Westminster, who have left behind the walls of memory
and habit.
And there are those of you for whom the holidays will not
take you to any place you know as home.
I have a friend flying to Maui with her sister and
her sister well never mind. And are the places that you are going to visit are home in
some sense for you in any sense?
Marcia Elder had lived in her house all her life born
there. Home.
Home is a dense idea full of expectation and wishes,
yearnings, disappointments, discoveries, and losses.
And our expectations of home magnify exponentially at the
holidays.
Added to that is the reality that before 9/11 we, as United
States residents had a more secure sense of home a sense of our
country as a home set apart in the world.
There is no doubt that this has changed that our sense of
home is changing. More
than anything I wish that you that we will all -- go into our
holidays and find a sense of true home and real light that you
feel its strengthening heat within you amid the changes and
challenges, amid the unfinished business, the pressures that
followed you, the wounds yet to heal or half healed, the losses or
dislocations, the frozen places that may begin to thaw a sense
of true home and real light within you -- profound and hard to
extinguish. I would
wish for such a miracle at this time when miracle stories are told
and retold.
Yet, I know that
humans are afflicted by a longing for miracles as told in ancient
scriptures. And perhaps
there are miracles I believe that there are but I must share
with you my conviction that they will not resemble the miracles of
ancient scripture but will yet be more humble and glorious at the
very same time. So
today, I want to share with you two miracle stories, holiday stories
that may act if we are fortunate, intentional, and attentive
as reminders of the very deepest home and the brightest light.
Our first story takes
us back to the year 165 before the Common Era.
When Antiochus the IV, King of Syria outlawed the Jewish
religion. A small band
of fierce warriors led by the Maccabee brothers -- led a long
campaign to regain their land and to win back the Temple of
Jerusalem. When finally
they won, they cleansed and rededicated the Temple and then the
Bible says they found a small bottle of sacred oil for the Temple
lamp enough to last one day.
But, as the story goes eight days later the flame still
burned a miracle. Light
candle
Five hundred years
later the Rabbis reexamined the message of the Hanukkah which
comes from the Hebrew word for dedication and decided that the
battle was not the moral of the story and that victory was far
less important than the miracle of faith and light that cause the
lamp to burn for eight days. A
friend sent me a Hanukkah greeting last week in which it was claimed
that the real miracle was that a band of men actually cleaned up
though I have seen some evidence that this can come to pass in fact.
Myself, I am tired of battles, but I believe absolutely in
the miracle of enduring light in the holy fire that burns at the
core brighter than the electric candle at the hopeful window --
the hearth the heart -- the human spirit though it reminds me of
a hymn one we borrow from the Quakers.
Walk in the light
wherever you may be -- walk in the light wherever you may be
in his old ragged britches and his shaggy, shaggy locks you are
walking in the glory of the light said Fox.
Light candle. Sometimes
it banks low the holidays, our losses, the suffering of the
world can bring low the flame into an ember almost ashen grey.
The poet William
Stafford wrote
You live your life by
the light you find
And follow it as well
as you can,
Carrying it through
darkness wherever you go
Your one little fire
that will start again. Light
candle
Caroline Barnhart
pointed out a story to me that was in the paper a few days ago
of a woman in New York City, feeling that despair that has touched
so many of us. In her walks through her neighborhood passed one of the fire
stations that had lost so many fire fighters in the attacks.
The grounds around the station were dry and weedy, trashy,
neglected. And she then
decided to make it her practice to clean that up to clear away
the dead weeds and trash and to tend the grounds and sort and share
out the many gifts and honors sent to the fire fighters.
She not only rekindled her own flame but spilled light out
all around her. Light candle.
For herself, for others, and just because there was
something that she had lost and almost forgotten.
Like the young woman wise and brave enough to seek the truth
in all its fullness.
We are, by and large,
used to the notion that we have private suffering.
Family conflict, loss the stuff I ran through earlier
even that our bodies age or even fail us and our lives are changed
because of that. Yet I
have also been haunted by a conversation I had this summer with a
man that I met from India in fact, it was he who gave me this
leaf. Anyway, we were
taking part in a discussion group one night in August and the group
was exploring asking why was there this or that evil? Conflict? Violence in schools? Why was it so hard to better
things? And the Indian
gentleman asked -- why is it that you Americans are so surprised and
shaken by this? and why are you obsessed by comfort?
And other questions of this nature. And I raised my hand
eager to talk as usual and I said I have a guess that it
is because we are powerful Americans, we are charmed by our things,
and lulled into an illusion of safety we are buffered
particularly those of us able to afford to attend the retreat in the
first place. Some
Americans may even believe that our fates are separate from the
fates of others. Weeks later, after September 11 we have this luxury no more
we can see that human fates and sufferings are linked. Light candle We are not unlike the man Siddhartha
Gautama the prince whose father raised him in luxury so that he
thought that all was wealth and health and youth and playfulness and
who, then, discovered within the village by his palace, the
realities of aging, sickness, and death the reality of
suffering. Therefore,
he left his home overwhelmed by the suffering that he saw.
Like the story of Hanukkah, this may be one you have heard
before but it bears repeating for he followed many spiritual
paths, he gave up all possessions but the bowl for which he would
beg for rice. And after
some years on a day celebrated yesterday, called Bodhi Day,
while seated under a tree a tree just such as this leaf came
from now called a Bodhi tree -- a tree of awakening he did
awaken he found a spiritual home seated deep within him.
It was not a moment when unearthly miracles happened it
is was time of learning of illumination enlightenment.
Light candle It was not a moment like a flash it
was the outcome of years of thought, no-thought, of meditation, of
breathing in and remembering the body and the breath and breathing
out and remembering the body, the breath and the world. It was the day in which the Buddha the awakened one
realized the four Noble truths and the eight fold path.
But this is not going to turn into a lesson on Buddhism for
beginners we are always beginners if we are lucky and wise
anyway. But the
four Noble truths are important particularly now the first
is that the world is deep in suffering. The second is that the cause
of suffering is craving or greed and because, ultimately, things
change and pass away. The
third truth is that there is a path out of this suffering, a release
that is positive. And
the fourth noble truth is that the path out of suffering is one of
practice of living a life not of asceticism -- of starvation
and self-inflicted suffering but of the middle way the
practice of the virtue of balance whose fulcrum is in the still
center, the bright seed, the steady flame of peace and compassion in
every person. Not
flamingly dramatic for sure.
Certainly no instant cure for anything but a healing
process a mindful process a process that reconnects us with
a human world, a suffering world, with our own suffering and at
time insufferable families. With
a calm and steady flame that can warm and center us.
Let me make this
perfectly clear oooooh I didnt much like the way that
sounded. I am simply suggesting that wherever you are these holidays
which ever ones you celebrate, that you take time to seek out
that place within yourself that you may know as home deeper than
any external home. Back
out of the over crowded room, take a short walk, or a long one,
spend some time in silence and apart if you need to.
But let your breath deep and filling your chest lead
you inward to that place. I realize that to some of you this may sound odd out of
your orbit or custom. But
perhaps you can just think of it as counting to ten and catching
your breath. Or gathering your wits about you.
But there is yet that wise and peaceful place in you.
It may be as a thicket like that around any sleeping beauty,
overgrown and neglected as the grounds about that firehouse in New
York or worse but it is no less noble a place.
Or it may be clear and easy to find, to touch, and to rest
in. Yet, it is a holy
place a shrine just as I said earlier.
Earlier this year I brought back a bell like this one but
smaller. And when I
would chime it I would remember the words of Thay Thich Nhat Hanh
the Vietnamese Buddhist Monk who had lived through the Vietnam
War and been exiled for his opposition.
I remember his gentle voice and words the voice of a wise
elder who has lived in exile from his home for many years ring
bell listen, listen the sound of the bell is calling me back
to my true home. Not
heaven, not a Currier and Ives print, not even for him Vietnam
but that home within every human heart the heart, core sparks,
the fire that endures. Light candle.
But this place, too,
is a home impermanent as human homes are but a home to a
steady stream of light as one of our Unitarian Historians called it.
A home to daring and wise minds and compassionate human
hearts. I read two
articles in this Saturdays paper that attacked in a wave of
terrible ignorance the movement that has come to be called
humanism. I will and
have spent more than one Sunday speaking of this noble truth, as
well, but it must be said I must say it that this church and
this Unitarian Universalist faith have long supported and embraced
humanism among our other sources of wisdom and inspiration
rational humanism, religious humanism, Christian and Jewish
humanism, Buddhist and earth centered humanism.
It was humanism that liberated the Bible so that even small
minded people could read it in a language they could understand,
humanism that gave people the right to take sacraments and or
reject them, it was humanism that drafted the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights more than fifty years ago.
Humanism is nothing more than the faith that we hold within
us a celestial inheritance as the Rev. William Ellery Channing
called it a glory and nothing less than the faith that we can
call ourselves and exhort other to embody that inheritance.
None of us is perfect even our greatest daring can lead
us into habits and cranky patterns but
If you look on the
back cover of your order of service you will see our principles
It is out of that still center, the bright
seed, the steady flame of peace and compassion in every person that
those principles evolved over many years and were voted on in our
association. So as your thread your way through the holidays carry
also this flame with you our chalice that has spoken the
truth in the darkest places and will dare to continue to.
Let no church nor family dim that light within you that
portion of our chalice you carry forth into the world.
By its light you will find your way back here to this place. By your own light you are the light of this faith built with
reason. You are beloved
and worthy embraced by the very web of life, affirmed by the
keenest of reason, and the deepest compassion and you are encouraged
to grow by every person gathered in a Unitarian Universalist
Church this early winter morning.
Let me offer to you the words of the Buddha
Be ye lamps unto yourselves
Be your own confidence
Hold to the truth within the spark
As to the only lamp.
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