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Boggs

Delivered by Rev. Dr. Terry K. Boggs to a gathering of church
leaders in Fort Worth, Texas.
I want to tell you something you already
know…but you may have forgotten…and I want to share a vision.
And I speak as a pastor of the church for whom the Bible is the
cradle for the living address of God for this day and in this
time.
The Bible does not comment on Fort Worth, or for that matter, on
Dallas. The Bible, rather, is preoccupied with only one city,
Jerusalem. |
Dr. Walter Brueggemann writes that the Bible believes that God’s
will for creation is all wrapped up in creating a viable Jerusalem
that will be the earthly repository for the best of God’s dreams.
All that we think biblically about our cities is an extrapolation
from Jerusalem. Every city, including Fort Worth and Dallas, is like
Jerusalem, in that there is
- Concentration of great power;
- Concentration of great wealth
- Concentration of media and so of imagination
- Concentration of hopes and social possibilities
- A collage of social institutions…churches, schools, museums,
synagogues, mosques, places of learning and artistry and
expertise, that seem to bespeak the goodness and presence of God,
an extra measure of vitality, anticipation, and for lack of a
clearer word, guts.
A city needs money, institutions, infrastructure, buildings, etc,
etc. But a city also needs heart, and heart comes from speech,
lyric, arts, imagination, and worship. The remarkable thing is that
in this city of Fort Worth, and Dallas, there are such gifts and
such possibilities. But they require honoring, heeding, enhancement,
nurture, even when we wish they were not so bothersome. Indeed, the
city depends on the very voices it wishes were not there.
There is a deep nervousness in our society, rooted no doubt in a
deep anxiety. We know that the good old days are gone and beyond
retrieval; there is, for reasons of fear and uncertainty, a deep
temptation to isolation, self-protection, and greed. There is,
according to market ideology, the necessity of getting more and
letting the rest of the folk fend for themselves.
But a city is not a market. It has a market, but it is not a
market. All around the market is a community. The community is
deeper and more complex than the market, but ever so fragile, so
endlessly at risk, so in need of care and protection. The city lives
by those who have energy, courage, generosity, and tenacity. The
powers of destruction such as fantasy, denial, despair, and
passivity—have a life of their own. Whenever they prevail, we die, a
little at a time. Against such dominational powers moves holiness, a
relational power that recruits us into active care and active
speech. That holiness will prevail into justice, mercy, and
compassion is not a certitude. It is, however, a chance, a gift, a
calling, and a vocation for folks like us.
Our faith traditions teach that:
- We have been created in God’s image…that is, we are as human
beings…according to the Holy Scriptures…a reflection of God for
the world.
- We have a God-given identity…
- And we have God-given purpose…to care for… to
tend…to be stewards of… what God has first created.
- God gives us our identity…and God gives us capacity to act…to
do.
- God calls Abram to leave home, security, safety and to go
where God was calling him…there I will bless you and make your
name great…I’ll give you strength, I’ll give you power, I’ll give
you capacity, the ability to act…for what purpose?
- So that you can build great barns to store all your stuff…?
- So that you can be king/queen of the hill…?
- So that you can rest on your couch, take your ease; have the
good life…?
- The dominant culture so teaches, and it does seem to resonate
with our own brokenness that is deep, and not so deep, within us!
The Word of God I hear from scripture proclaims a different
vision: I will bless you and make your name great…so that all
the peoples of the land will know blessing. I will bless you,
God says, so that you will be a blessing for others.
The vision is that all of this public blessing and action happens
in community, because God created us for community.
But in our daily life we are tempted:
- To forget God’s calling, and to forget God’s story
of our identity and purpose.
- We are tempted to go it alone, to despair, to become isolated
As a faithful organizer-priest once wrote: "These past years have
been filled with struggle and adventure. As we move into these next
years, the danger is that safety will replace the
struggle and success the adventure."
We are, indeed, tempted by the dominant culture to buy into the
advertising story…that meaning and purpose are found in trinkets,
toys, stuff that rusts in our hands, that our identity comes in what
we own, what we possess, our identity comes from a new pair of
shoes.
- And God’s Word from the Prophet Amos shouts to the world what
we will do for a pair of shoes…(sell the poor)
- God’s Word in the story of Esau and Jacob tells us what we
will do for a bowl of porridge, of lentil soup…(give away…sell…our
birth-right/our identity)
- God’s Word in the story in the Gospels tells what we will do
when our barn isn’t big enough…(we will build bigger ones)
- We will sell or give away our identity…we will give away our
birthright…we will sell our God-given power to act; we will give
away our capacity to participate in the creation of community…
These years ahead should:
- Be about cultivating and deepening the art of public
relationship…belonging to, not just existing in, an organized
community
- Having the right to act in, not just gaze at, a public arena
in which discourse is paramount and there is real negotiation,
compromise and reciprocity.
- Our organizing vision stands counter to the dominant culture
where progress and growth vie to replace community and the common
good; where government control coupled with military might push
out the meaningful scale of human action and moral limits; where
unaccountable corporate greed and electronic images replace
sacrifice and relationships.
- An invitation to participate in our society must mean more
than the ability to select from a panoply of consumer choices and
to vote occasionally. Participation must include an invitation to
power, to resources, and to community. The power of God’s love
poured out for all; the power of the cross that invites us to the
true freedom to be a people of the cross…to empty ourselves,
taking up the cross, to follow with Christ where Christ is
leading…to be living witness…to be the living Body of Christ for
this time and in this place.
- We are looking for leaders who will take the necessary risks
to rebuild a public church and an active democracy, to initiate
new solutions and to engage in public transformation, not just in
market transactions.
- We are about creating the space in which people from
throughout the community can think, develop their public life and
be loyal to themselves and with their neighbors build strong
community. We use this local organizing and these relationships as
that public space to build and rebuild our communities.
- We are open to new ideas, new approaches, and new allies so
that the “good work that has begun” can continue to grow and
change. We welcome the new challenges and confrontations to enable
ourselves to be stretched, and we hope the community with us.
There is a wind, a spirit, blowing…that will not be shut-up…it
is, I believe, the spirit of God pressing us for just this kind of
speech, pressing for courage, pressing for community, pressing for
relational power, pressing for holiness. There is a wind, a spirit,
blowing…it will not be shut-up.
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