EARTH DAY BLESSING OF THE BIKES

Inaugural Festivity held at Highland Avenue Church of the Brethren

Elgin, Illinois – 22 April 2009

Liturgy by Audrey deCoursey

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 As we gather today, the words of the prophet Jeremiah ring in our ears:

“Thus says the Lord: I brought you into a plentiful land to eat its fruits and its good things. But when you entered you defiled my land, and made my heritage an abomination… Be appalled, O heavens, at this, be shocked, be utterly desolate, says the Lord, for my people have committed two evils: they have forsaken me, the fountain of living water, and dug out cisterns for themselves, cracked cisterns that can hold no water…Return, faithless Israel, says the Lord. I will not look on you in anger, for I am merciful, says the Lord; I will not be angry forever… Return, O faithless children.” (Jer. 2: 7, 12-13; Jer. 3: 12b, 14a)

We confess that too long, humans have decimated the land and distanced ourselves from our Creator God. North American lifestyles have been particularly destructive.

But today is a day to celebrate solutions. We join with millions of people around the world, all celebrating ways that can return to right relationship with our Creator, in their own local communities. Here, we have chosen to lift up the modes of transportation we have come to rely upon, and use this Earth Day as an opportunity to recommit ourselves to safety and sustainability in this one important facet of our lives.

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(SOME) BEATITUDES OF URBAN TRANSIT

Blessed are the bicyclists, who travel as commuters or for pleasure, who harness human energy and ingenuity to power their travel along roads and trails.

Blessed are the pedestrians, who feel the contours of the land under their feet with every step.

Blessed are the bus and train passengers, who ride shoulder to shoulder with strangers who become brothers and sisters on their daily journeys.

Blessed are the motorists who drive with care and caution, showing mercy to their fellow travelers on the road.

Blessed are the truck drivers, the train conductors, the bus drivers, whose daily labor connects us with new resources, new places, and new communities.

Blessed are you when you breathe fresh air, drink clean water, observe blossoming flowers, and yearn to create a world where every person can share in such delights, for you shall be called children of God.

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BLESSING OF THE BICYCLES

(Unison) Creator God, please watch over each of us, your people. Empower us to honor the legacy of Earth’s abundance that we have inherited from our ancestors. Help us to build communities that are safe and healthy for every one of the beings you have created. Inspire us to envision societies that will sustain life for generations to come. We place our faith in you, God, not in our own power to control or exploit.

Tonight, O God, please bless the bicycles brought to this place. May their riders be kept safe; may they be strengthened in body and spirit; may their lives further reflect commitment to stewardship of your Creation; and may the wind that blows in their hair and faces ever remind them of you. Please shower your blessing on cyclists across Elgin, throughout Chicagoland, and all around the world.

In the name of the One who is our Way, Amen.

Women Working for International Peace

“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.”

- Jesus

In honor of International Women’s Day on March 8, and in remembrance this month of the long, proud history of women across the globe, I offer a spotlight on a few women I especially admire for their work for peace.

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi

In 1990, Suu Kyi and her party, the National League for Democracy, were elected to lead Burma (now known officially as Myanmar). Yet nineteen years later she has never been allowed to claim her seat, and has spent more of that time under house arrest than free. Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991 for her tireless efforts to represent her people’s wishes for democracy and peace, Suu Kyi has been the public face of the movement against the Burmese military dictatorship for over two decades, with no signs of stopping until her country sees the peace it so dearly longs for. For more information about Suu Kyi, visit www.dassk.org. For information about the struggle for democracy in Burma, please see www.burmaissues.org.

Rachel Corrie

Killed March 16, 2003, by Israeli tanks demolishing yet another home in Palestine, Washington-native Corrie was a young woman willing to risk everything for others, without resorting to violence. She could have easily stayed home and lived a normal 23-year-old’s life, but instead she reached out to understand and help a people half a world away. Her death has turned a spotlight on the injustices perpetrated on behalf of the Israeli government, and has witnessed to the power of solidarity that spans religious or ethnic identities. For more information about Corrie, see www.rachelcorrie.org.

Betty Williams and Mairead Corrigan

Violence between the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and British soldiers had recently claimed the lives of three children when Williams and Corrigan entered the public square to lead peaceful marches that demanded an end to the killing. Protestants and Catholics alike marched and organized into “The Community of Peace People,” doing the slow, difficult work of living an alternative to violence. In 1976 they were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their work. Read about these two peacemakers at http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1976/index.html.

Wangari Maathai

Another Nobel Peace Prize winner (in 2004), Maathai has worked for decades to unite eastern Africa under one sustainable roof. Her pan-African Green Belt Network has drawn the connections between economic development, national security, and ecology. Facilitating tree-planting as a way to sustain the land and its human inhabitants, she has shown the world that in the twenty-first century, peace activism must work hand in hand with environmental organizing. Read about her work and wisdom online at www.greenbeltmovement.org.

Jeannette Rankin

The United States’ first female Congress member would make any pacifist proud. Known for clever quips, her actions spoke as loudly as her words. Out of her opposition to all war, she cast one of few votes against US entry into World War I and was the lone voice of dissent against US military involvement in World War II. The Montanan declared, “the first time the first woman had a chance to say no against war she should say it.” Rankin was also a strong supporter of veterans’ rights, introducing the GI Bill to Congress. She also stated that (logically enough) “You can no more win a war than you can win an earthquake” and that “Men and women are like right and left hands; it doesn’t make sense not to use both.” Learn more about her at the Jeannette Rankin Peace Center, online at www.jrpc.org.

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I know that there are many, many more women out there making peace possible in this world (Thank God, because none of us could do it alone!). Who inspires you? Who’s not on this list but very well could be? Share stories of your own peace heroines on the comments section below!

Burial the Brethren Way

I sure am proud to be Brethren! 

Click here to check out what our church is doing: revolutionizing burial practices.   Interment of ashes in a communal garden at the church.  Yes, it’s just for one relatively small community.  But it has deep implications. 

What can I say but WOW?  This is truly living out that tagline we’re so familiar with as Church of the Brethren: we’re doing burial in a way that emphasizes community (together in spirit in death as in life), a way that’s simpler than the ecologically-taxing standard burial practices, a way that memorializes peace for the world as well as for each soul tied to that place.  I think this is the work of ritual done justly that Jesus would have smiled to see.

This is environmental burial that truly considers our impact on the Earth/earth, even and especially in the midst of one of the biggest life transitions we go through.  This is communitarian burial that takes relationships seriously in how we identify ourselves and how we remember ourselves.  This is radical stuff!  And we’re not just talking about it – we’re just doing it. 

Amen!

Binmen Bears

Romania’s having some of the same trouble as the UP, with bears being half-domesticated (while still dangerous, even more so than naturally).  Bears, once scared from native habitats by encroaching tourist development, adapt to foraging in trash for food.  And conflict between humans and bears, over increasingly scarce resources, ensue.

Romania!  Wildlife!

Seafood Watch on Your Phone

Just visiting the Monterey Bay Aquarium website to keep up on my marine health activism here, and I discovered this great novelty: now the aquarium offers its famously useful pocket guide to the healthiest seafood on your mobile phone. For those of you pescatarins, the guide suggests which kinds of seafood are best for you and the fishies, in three categories, with different guides specific to each region of the country. You can also download the paper copy online, if you can’t get out to the Monterey Bay yourself.

Enjoy your summertime strolls along the ocean or other waterways or wherever you’re eating your fishy culinary delights, and be sure to think of me soaking up the sun on the Oaxacan Coast!

Sustaining Congregations

Harry Potter and the Thankful Forests

At midnight on July 21, millions of Harry Potter fans across the world (including me) lined up to buy their copy of the seventh book in the series, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Fortunately, the pages of their new tome were made of sustainable paper products. 30% came from recycled paper, and another 65% of the paper came from wood certified by the Forest Stewardship Council, which certifies wood harvested without decimating forest ecosystems. 12 million copies of the book have made it to stores and eager readers hands, a record first-printing. Thank goodness Scholastic, Inc. made the right choice to consider the ecological impact of their product!