Monday, April 29, 2013

May Newsletter

I was asked to lead worship at our recent meeting of Northern Lights Presbytery. Here is a revisit of the message I gave during that service (the Scripture reading was Isaiah 43:1-3, 18-19)...

It is 1933, the world is in the midst of the Great Depression. Farmland is being turned into a dustbowl. Banks are failing. Unemployment is sky-high. There is no social safety net. But 1932 had been an election year, and a new President had been elected in the US. And in his first Inaugural address Franklin D. Rooesevelt uttered a phrase that has become one of the memorable classics of political discourse:...the only thing we have to fear is fear itself...Really? As the economy crumbles around us, as people are losing homes and land, as families are struggling for food you make the claim that we have nothing to fear? There must have been some people who at the very least scratched their heads in confusion as those words were uttered.

And yet they have become classics. I am sure that there are many people who could have finished the phrase for me. It stands with other classics like “Four score and seven years ago...” or “Ich bin ein Berliner”. And part of that was because FDR was a great orator. Part of it was because he knew what the people of the US needed to hear. But part of it was because that is a message that we need to hear over and over and over:
...the only thing we have to fear is fear itself...

Did you know that phrases like “Fear Not” or “Don't be Afraid” are among the most common statements in Scripture? There was a graphic circulating around Facebook recently that they occur 365 times – one for each day of the year. The reading from Isaiah we just heard is written to people in exile. And God tells them not to be afraid, “I have called you by name, you are mine...I am about to do a new thing; now it springs forth”. Whenever something big happens, when the world is about to be changed, God says something like “Fear not for behold I bring you tidings of great joy which shall be for all people....”
...the only thing we have to fear is fear itself...

Some days I think that without fear our media and political systems would break down. News media seem to go out of their way to breed fear – like the station that figured a good way to cover news of a fertilizer plant explosion was to ask people living near a different fertilizer plant if they felt safe. Our political leaders routinely try to make us afraid of what might happen if they can not do what they are proposing. And so we too need to hear the words:
...the only thing we have to fear is fear itself...

Those words still seem overly simplistic. There are things we fear. We worry about what will happen in North Korea. We worry about the sustainability of our congregations – what will happen if a few more families move away. We are afraid that what we have to say may not matter. We are afraid of many things. But as the hymns we just sang reminds us, God says “Don't be afraid, my love is stronger than your fear...and I have promised, promised to be always near”
...the only thing we have to fear is fear itself...

It won't always be easy. God never promised it would be easy (neither did FDR). God says there will be water and fire. But we will not be overwhelmed or consumed. We can live into the changes of the world with confidence, with hope, striding firmly towards the promise.
...the only thing we have to fear is fear itself...

Can we do it? Can we take the leap of faith and live out of love and hope instead of fear? All it takes is faith and trust and we can fly (at least so Peter Pan told us). Do we truly believe that love and hope are stronger than fear and despair? In a world where fear and despair seem to have leading roles, can we claim there is a different way?
...the only thing we have to fear is fear itself...

Not by ourselves. But with God we can. Thanks be to God.

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