Blow
Text: Genesis 1:1-3
(Gary W. Charles at Cove
Presbyterian Church, Covesville, VA, 6-11-2017)
The year was 1925 in Dayton, Tennessee. The
occasion was the trial of a biology teacher, John Scopes. The charge was
illegally teaching the theory of evolution. The prosecutor was the three-time
Democratic candidate for President, William Jennings Bryan. Using his
considerable rhetorical skills, Brian fought fiercely to uphold a recent Tennessee law that made
it unlawful [quote] “to teach any theory that denies the story of divine
creation as taught by the Bible.”
The year
was 580 B.C.E. in ancient Babylon. The occasion was the trial of God. The
charge was dereliction of duty, having allowed the troops from Babylon to destroy
Jerusalem, all in the name of the Babylonian gods. The prosecutors were
bereaved former citizens of Jerusalem, who were now being held hostage on
foreign soil, living with nightmarish memories of a scorched earth, of
screaming children ripped away from their nursing mothers, of enemy soldiers who
set their homes and their temple aflame, of the rape of women, and of the
beatings of elderly men.
In 1925, the Scopes trial tried to turn
Genesis 1 into a scientific treatise. Try as might, though, you can never turn
poetry into prose. It is quite likely that the 580 B.C.E. Babylonian trial resulted
in the writing of Genesis 1, this first story in the first book of the Bible.
The first creation story is written to comfort those whose life has turned into
utter chaos as they are force marched from their land to the alien kingdom of
Babylon. The first creation story claims that from the beginning God has fought
chaos to establish the cosmos and God will not stop working God’s creative
purpose out even amid the chaos of exilic life in Babylon.
My
late brother, Dale, was a scientist who could never reconcile the claims of
Judaism and Christianity with those of science. He would often cite the first
creation story in Genesis 1 as an example of the primitive, silly, unscientific
thinking that he rejected. On the other side of the philosophical divide, I had
a college roommate who spent untold hours defending Genesis 1 as a miraculous and
exact account of how God created the world in seven days, even taking the last
day off.
I loved my brother and tried to love my
roommate, but they both badly misunderstood the first story in the Bible, and
they are in good company. This story is not about asteroids and amino acids,
fossils and rock fragments. It is not a scientific treatise at all. It is theological
treatise; it is all about God. It is not scientific prose. It is theological
poetry.
When
scientists, like my brother, read Genesis 1 and insist that it is not good
science, they are right. It is not nor was it ever intended to be good
pre-modern or post-modern science. And, when fundamentalist Christians read
Genesis 1 and insist that this is a story that describes how God scientifically
created the world in seven, twenty-four hour, days, they are just as wrong.
Let me
suggest an imperfect analogy to make this point. Picture a cluster of Hurricane
victims, all who have lost their homes and now huddle together in a temporary,
makeshift shelter. They are wearing borrowed clothes, sleeping on borrowed
mattresses, and eating borrowed food.
When the
mail arrives, they receive a manila envelope containing pictures of a large body
of water where their homes once stood on solid ground. They are exiles from all
they know as home. Lost and distressed, these exiles from home are not
interested in the meteorological nuances of hurricanes or the intricate
mechanization of meteorology.
The
questions that these Hurricane victims are asking are not scientific in nature;
they are existential and theological. Like the ancient hostages living in
Babylon, they want to know how God has allowed such devastation to occur and if
God is even capable of stopping it. They want to know where God is in the midst
of their misery, if God hears their cries, and even if there is a God. This is
the human situation to which Genesis 1 speaks. It is a poetic statement of
faith declaring that even in the chaos, God; even in the darkness, God; in all
real beginnings, God.
The
great African American poet, James Weldon Johnson, captures the creation poetry
in Genesis with this language:
Then he stopped and looked and saw
That the earth was hot and barren.
So God stepped over to the edge of the world
And he spat out the seven seas—
He batted his eyes, and the lightnings flashed—
He clapped his hands, and the thunders rolled—
And the waters above the earth came down,
The cooling waters came down.
Then the green grass sprouted,
And the little red flowers blossomed,
The pine tree pointed his finger to the sky,
And the oak spread out his arms,
The lakes cuddled down in the hollows of the ground,
And the rivers ran down to the sea;
And God smiled again,
And the rainbow appeared,
And curled itself around his shoulder. (The Creation)
On this first Sunday after Pentecost, the most fascinating word in this Hebrew poem is ruah, God’s breath-wind-spirit. At the end of his poem, James Weldon Johnson uses these images to capture ruah:
This great God,
Like a mammy bending over her baby,
Kneeled down in the dust
Toiling over a lump of clay
Till he shaped it in is his own image;
Then into it he blew the breath of life,
The
Genesis preacher uses the imagery of God’s ruah
hovering over the futile, dark, chaotic world like a mother eagle
fluttering over its young, breathing into its young the breath of life.
Wherever chaos rules and life is threatened or diminished, says Genesis 1, God’s
breath-wind-spirit-ruach blows.
When you and I soar above all those voices
telling us to “mind your own business” and “do not cause a stir,” and instead, commit
our minds and hearts to stir up justice, especially for those most often
ignored, for those most likely with meager means, God’s ruah is blowing. When you and I love our enemies even though they
give us every possible reason to hate them, God’s ruah is blowing. When you and I regulate our use of resources, recycle
and compost while insisting on energy that is sustainable for all sisters and
brothers walking this earth, God’s ruach is
blowing.
When you
and I give extravagantly to provide for the needs of others even when our
personal economy is in the dumps, God’s ruah
is blowing. When you and I pledge our lives to make sure that every child
baptized at this font knows the love of Christ in us, God’s ruah is blowing. When you and I make
time to read and learn and think critically about matters before we speak,
God’s ruah is blowing.
The year
is 2017 in Covesville, Virginia. The occasion is the trial of Genesis 1.Will we
continue to diminish the first story in Scripture and turn it into a biblical
cartoon by reading it literally, either as unbelieving scientists or believing
fundamentalists or will we reclaim this statement of faith in all its poetic
glory?
The
verdict, I pray that will be rendered is that we will find this story not
guilty of scientific or theological small-minded prejudice, so we can gladly
join in the great Pentecost prayer: “Blow, Holy Spirit, blow.”
AMEN
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