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Showing posts with label the Book of Revelation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the Book of Revelation. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

All Saints Day : Reading Revelation

11/1/14

Our Revelation readers: Kim, Jeremy an Rose

All Saints Day.

A children’s fire helmet. And one large bag of candy. On the steps.

The Session is in an upbeat mood after yesterday’s DOB meeting. The conversation is level headed and positive. We look at the figures. See the projected income gap for next year. And set about figuring out alternative ways to close that gap. We leave with a sense of determination. The way will be found.



Things are looking uncertain foe our read through of Revelation. But Jeremy G and Rose and Kim arrive to join me in reading. And Marsha too. I explain that the book was originally written as a letter to a besieged community. One hiding underground. From violent oppression. And that we should just listen, allow the words to flow over us.Allow ourselves to just feel them before we think and analyze. So I begin my playing the Son House version of John the Revelator. 


And then we jump in. Treading in the King James version.

A little more than hour later, we arrive at the final passage:
18For I testify unto every man that heareth the words of the prophecy of this book, If any man shall add unto these things, God shall add unto him the plagues that are written in this book: 19And if any man shall take away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the book of life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are written in this book.20He which testifieth these things saith, Surely I come quickly. Amen. Even so, come, Lord Jesus.
21The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen.



We take a breath. And then reflect. We think of the familiar images. That glorious passage from the Messiah…..the Hallelujah chorus:  The kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ; and he shall reign for ever and ever…..You can almost hear it ringing in the air. 

And the Seventh Seal…memories  of Bergman’s film.


We talk about 666, how far from some spooky, cryptic sign, it’s a statement that in a book filled with in ages of seduction, prostitution, etc., in a time when 7 was the number of perfection, it’s a way of saying that sometimes evil is nearly indistinguishable from good. We talk about references to the synagogue of satan, those who think they are Jews but are not as relating to those followers of Herod who served on behalf of the Roman Empire. And that far from being anti-Semitic, it appears only those from the 12 tribes of Israel, 12,000 from each. We talk of the four colored horses. The imagery of Rousseau’s War.That the words pour out at a fever pitch, like the author just let fly. One says that the words gallop, as a stampeding horse.

Rousseau's War


Far from being some complicated scheme to predict the future, we instead have a vivid, pulsating cry of the heart in the midst of chaos. And that sudden, fast turn to the New Jerusalem, the crystal river flowing through the streets of the city. A song of triumph in the midst of seeming destruction. It’s a voice that comes from Guernica. Berlin. Dresden. Auschwitz. San Salvador. Ground Zero. Mosul. Syria. Sudan. Gaza. And it’s the voice that rises from the Black community in the midst of slavery and Desmond Tutu declaring we have already won years before apartheid fell. Archetypal and human.

There is a sense of peace as we leave. This is our second journey through. Tomorrow when we sing holy, holy, holy in our Eucharist, we will join our voices with all those who have come through the ordeal. Around the world. And in heaven. It is one song.

We’re beginning a tradition.









Friday, November 2, 2012


11/1



Who's that writin?
John the Revelator
Who’s that wrtin?
John the Revelator?
Who’s that writin?
Jon the Revelator
He wrote the book of the seven seals....

                       * * * * 

A good pair of jeans and anew sweater....

Martin, his daughter and her boyfriend are here.  Seems that Nayelli’s house was split by a falling tree. The family dog was injured, everyone else safe. But the contract is on the shelf for the moment...

A sense of dejavu as the boiler is balking and a feeling of cold seeps into the church. Calls and some Internet work tell us that the boiler company is in a part of Brooklyn that was underwater. Their phone is not answering. Their server down. The plumbing company that secured the boiler company isn’t answering either. 

Danielle arrives accompanied by her husband Nate and RL meets Nate for the first time. 

We’re taking turns checking it out. Stephen, Teddy, Marc...all mystified. We call in Tony from Sanctuary and he’s mystified too. We search the Internet for manuals, anything that could help. Phone calls made to anyone who might be able to figure it out. Martin will get by with space heaters. We want to use kerosene heaters fro our sanctuary, but the fuel is gone.

Kimberley arrives. It’s time for our weekly supervisory session and preparing for tonight’s journey through Revelation. As we’re preparing,Karen comes in and plays her music. 

I step outside. An old man who looks like the  actor Stephen Mckinley Henderson looks at me, looks at the jeans and sweater, looks at me again. I nod. When I come back later, the sweater is gone. 

(The real life actors tend to show up next door at Barney Greengrass. On the first day of  post Sandy, Richard Kind of HBO’s Luck was there....)

Ramon is talking ballet with Martin. Wants to remove some rows of pews for his perfomance for the church. (Ramon...it’s for Sanctuary. West-Park is the church..)

Lilly and Glen are working on gathering clothes and other items for local relief. When someone had called and asked Teddy if we were doing anything, he'd said that we were broke. And I told him, even if we're broke, we still have to do what we can...

Kimberely has brought her colleague Ashley from Union to be anther reader. I”m happy to learn she’s not only Presbyterian but from Pittsburgh. And I know how hard that is. 

OK. Time for Revelation...The sanctuary is darkened except for candlelight. As people come to join the circle in the front, the sound of  Curtis Stigers and the Forest Rangers singing John the Revelator fills the sanctuary followed by Son House’s acapella original. Then from the four corners of the sanctuary, Kimberley, Ashley, Glen and I walk to the circle silently. We are wearing simple albs, carrying candles. 

Bob, Ashley
Ashley, Kimberley, John
We sit. And begin. Kimberley has prepared a script dividing the book for four readers. About halfway through, we take a break for cider, wine, cupcakes, cookies. Then with silence, begin again. As the book comes to a close...the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen.... Government Mule’s version of John the Revelator fills the Sanctuary. 

It’s been a journey. Confession: I have never before in 36 years of ministry read this book through. To be honest, it comes across as flat out strange. A Facebook friend had posted objecting to our flyer, the scariest book of the Bible...Not he scariest, he wrote, the most beautiful...

Well...it’s whirling, swirling hallucinogenic imagery is like a hurricane of words. It is clearly an anguished cry from  time of extreme persecution and oppression. Clearly a warning against being seduced by the trappings of empire. And yes, part violent revenge fantasy. You hear lines that have made their way into the Messiah, funeral liturgies, and culture high and low. From the Omen to Ingmar Bergman's Seventh Seal.  From the apocalyptic imagery of the  Battle Hymn of the Republic to Bob Marley and Chant down Babylon.  And of course Son House. And then from the whirlwind, the simple reassurance of :

And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow or crying,neither shall there be any  more pain: for the former things are passed away....

Is it enough? Jamie has trouble getting past the violence, the misogyny,and what sounds like anti-Semitism. And those reactions are right. And shouldn’t be answered by apologetic. But every generation and every people  seems to have to live through its own apocalyptic moments. Genocides, wars, disasters. Apocalypse is always with us.

One of our audience members asks if this will be an annual event. Hmmmm....

Who’s that writin?
John the Revelator. 
He wrote the book of the seven seals. 

On my way home, the jeans are gone too.

                    * * * *
Big thanks to Kimberley De Bus for her creation of the reading script. The reading takes approximately 90 minutes. For more information on the script, write rlbrashear@gmail.com

Bob, Ashley, Kmberely, Glen