Thursday, 6 February 2025

A Time to Do

 The week did not start out well. Sunday morning I scrolled through the news, all about the tariffs that Mr. Trump had levied against Canada. This move would wreak havoc with our economy. 


Was the whole goal of this game to fulfill what we’d thought were only bad jokes on Mr. Trump’s part: “Canada should just become our 51st state.” Ha ha. Not funny. Turns out he wasn’t joking. He has, more seriously, threatened to use economic force to compel Canada to become the 51st state.

The anxiety I felt after reading these stories settled into my body like a heavy, dark presence. We’re doomed, I thought. Canada is a little mouse, and we can roar, but we’re up against an elephant.

What to do? The weather echoed my gloomy feelings. A snow-laden grey sky loomed over us as we drove to church, with towering  clouds gathering over the hilltops. 

 

Those dark clouds on the horizon seemed to be symbolic of a future that was coming. How could I deal with this? I am just one person, and a person without much power, at that. Even if I joined a protest line, or wrote letters, even if I boycotted American products in retaliation, what good would my little gesture do?

I am very sure that what I’ve written so far will feel very familiar to many people. It’s not just Canadians that are anxious about the future. Many of our neighbours to the south are distraught as they watch what looks like oligarchs and billionaires taking over the reins of society and acting like merciless thugs. It feels as though the nice safe world we inhabited for so long has gone topsy-turvy. How can our comfortable spot in the world have turned so suddenly into chaos?

Wise author Parker Palmer, in a recent podcast, remarked: “A lot of Americans who are aghast at what is happening in our country say,‘But, this is NOT who we are!’ Well, it’s time to admit that this IS who we are. Our Western society has built its prosperity, comfort and pleasure on the backs of others – slaves, indigenous, people, colonialism, exploited workers, expanding profits lining the pockets of stock holders. We are not innocent.” This comment is not just about the US, it’s about Western Society. A time of reckoning is upon us. We are entering a time in the world’s history when things are going to get tough, as the structures we relied on for security begin to crumble around us. And we feel helpless.

So what could a preacher say to me that would help me?

Keltie started by lighting a candle and acknowledging that the events of this week might leave us sad and bewildered. We wouldn’t know what to do, but we could affirm the light, we could let our cares rest for a while. We could do this together, in community. And I did. A little of the darkness within seemed to lighten.

 

And then she began talking to the children. The story she told was about a boy named Jeremiah. He was just a lad – probably a teenager. God spoke to his heart and said, “I know who you are. I have gifted you, and now I have a job for you.” The job wouldn’t be easy; he was to tell people that they needed to repent and change their ways. For too long, the oligarchs and autocrats had ignored the laws of love and justice. Jeremiah responded with a protest: “Who, me? But I’m just a kid.”

Then, looking up and over the audience of mostly grey-hairs, Keltie asked, “And what might you have said?” The responses were many: “Who, me? But I’m only an old person.” “I have no power.” “I’m too busy.” “What can one person do or say that will make a difference?”

Keltie addressed the children once more. “So, if God asked you to do a big thing, to stand up and tell the truth, what would you do?” There was a moment of silence, and then 9 year old Georgia piped up, “I”d say, okay, I’ll do it.”

 

Okay. I’ll do it. Whatever it is, I’ll do it. Because each of us has gifts and talents, and we are all called to use them to make this world a better place. That was the gist of Keltie’s message to the congregation.

There was more to the historical account, of course. Jeremiah went on to become known as the prophet of doom, and he tried to convict people to love justice and mercy, to walk and talk humbly. But they didn’t – their society disintegrated and weakened; the upshot was that his people were defeated and carried into exile in Babylon for 70 long years. “By the rivers of Babylon we sat and wept,” sang BoneyM years ago. Perhaps we too are sitting and weeping.

Jeremiah’s tribe became prisoners. Now the playing field had been leveled. They were all, peasants and oligarchs, in this together. It was in Babylon that they began to examine and change their ways and plant seeds of a new life that prospered when they finally were allowed to go home again.

We are, no doubt about it, heading into a storm. There’s nothing pretty about this situation. But we can do something. It’s how resistance to evil starts. And as author Annie Lamott says, “There is no healing in pretending this bizarre violent stuff is not going on ... What is true is that the world has always been this way, people have always been this way, grace always bats last, it just does–and finally, when all is said and done, and the dust settles, which it does, Love is sovereign here.”

After the service one of my friends said, “If they come to take over Canada, I’ll be at the border. I won’t be carrying a gun, but I’ll raise my hands and say, ‘Stop! Go no further.’” That will be her job – to speak her intentions and build resilience in her little sphere of influence. Imagine a chain of people stretched across the land from sea to sea or before the border walls, saying, “No way!” It could happen!

 

As for me, as I sat and listened, my mind filled with ideas for a blog and a piece of art. That’s my job.

And what’s yours?

Well, the words came pretty easily, but the art? Not so much. I'm pleased with my background of a wintry field and a dark horizon, but how to complete this piece? I tried some possibilities, but none of them were quite right. Do I need to put up a fence? build a road? add people?


 
 

 It seems to me I'll be needing to noodle on it, spend some time listening to my heart.