As we celebrate
Earth Day this week, I love how the resurrection mystery and marvel happen
outside the confines of air conditioning.
Resurrection doesn’t happen in cramped and confining buildings, but in
the beauty of God’s creation.
Consider John 20,
which we heard on Easter, where the setting is a garden, echoing Genesis 2 and
3.
Consider Luke 24,
which we heard on Sunday: Jesus appears to Cleopas and his friend, partner, or companion
on a dusty road of life.
Consider Matthew
28, The Great Commission to the disciples (who let’s face it had serious doubts
about the resurrection ~ which can give us hope) happens on a mountain, echoing
the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7)
Consider John 21,
where Jesus cooks breakfast on a beach for the disciples, trying to process the
pain and promise of being an Easter people.
Creation amplifies
one of the formational and foundational truths of Easter because creation displays
and helps us discover/discern the cycle of birth, life, death, and resurrection
each year, called “The four seasons”.
During Lent, I
invited you to ponder the season of your life connected to the image of
a grape vine. I offered a brief
description of how a grapevine goes through the seasons. Here is a reminder:
In Winter ~ the grapevine is pruned. It is common to remove 80-90% of the biomass
during pruning. But great care is used
not to cut the buds that will be next season’s growth. It takes a prayerful, careful eye and skill
not just to whack randomly on the vine, but to notice the small green shoots
that need the nourishment of the winter resting to begin to grow.
In Spring ~ the buds now burst and break
forth in growth. The bud swells and
reveals new leaves. There is a flowering
that happens. The vine continues to
absorb water and nutrients through the roots as the leaves undergo
photosynthesis ~ note there are no visible grapes yet.
In Summer ~ the grapevine flowers begin to
bring forth young grapes that will swell, ripen, and gain color and
flavor. Vine growth slows down as the
focus shifts to sending all the energy, nutrients, and resources to the fruit. There is a slow ripening on the vine that
cannot be sped up.
During
Harvest season, it is
all hands on deck ~ trying to get the fruit off the vines ~ note that this is
the busiest time. And note, this is
where modern life tells us to live all the time!!
In Autumn ~ the grapevine begins to rest,
the vine slows down to conserve energy.
The leaves change colors and fall away.
This is a dormant state of rest for the next season.
Do not forget
that there is a weathered and worn fence that supports the vine. This is what holds you up every season. The fence may look different. Your fence is made up of friends and family,
authors who give us new ideas, and the church as a safe space to be who you are
and what you are. The fence can also be
out in creation, breathing in God’s love next to a tree that has weathered many
storms and sunny days.
Today, consider
how resurrection happens outside and venture out to stand in the sun,
soaking in the vitamin D that we all need ~ because our souls are solar-powered. May the One who wrote the truth of life into
the seasons be felt, experienced, seen, and encountered this day and this Earth
Day week. Amen.

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