As a non-practicing person of LDS heritage, I have fallen
out of the habit of watching general conference. I am still connected to
Mormonism through family and friends and continue to love my Mormon heritage and
the foundation it has provided in my life. Because of the Facebook flurry it
generated, I decided to listen to President Dieter Uchtdorf’s talk. It was
wonderful to hear a talk on doubt. Anything helps in respect to shepherding
members to broaden their understanding of why people leave full participation
in the LDS Church. However, I was disappointed that President Uchtdorf did not address
the substance of doubt. Talks like this encourage tolerance for those of us who
doubt or decide to leave the church, but there is always an underlying subtext:
It is ok to doubt, so long as your doubt produces the right outcome.
Sunday, October 06, 2013
A Doubter's Response to President Uchtdorf
Friday, July 05, 2013
Solstice
For the last several years I have tried to commemorate
the solstice with at least some acknowledgement of this our longest day of the
year. Nothing to New Agey, ritualistic or woo-woo; solitude, a hike, etc. This
year I awoke early and watched the eastern sunrise from my Forest Service
station at the Mill Hollow Guard Station east of Heber, Utah. As I watched I
thought of the trip I had recently made to the Chaco Canyon Pueblos in New
Mexico where the Puebloan peoples that lived there for approximately 1,000
years developed an elaborate sun, moon and star watching practice. It is
thought that the astronomy of these people developed to plan festivals and
trade fairs that were held each year and which were attended by thousands of
people from all over the region. Being able to predict the cycles of the sun and
moon in their ascent and descent in the sky were essential aspects of everyday
life because Chaco was the ceremonial center of this brief empire that
synchronized trade and streamlined architecture into the uniform masonry that
the Chaco ruins reflect. The sun and moon were meticulously watching using
simple instruments like a stick in the ground whose shadow was measured each
day to orient the villages along a north-south axis. Natural monuments such as
Chimney Buttes and small cracks in the rocky mesas were used to track the
journey of the Sun high into the summer sky and back to its winter nadir.
How little I know about the cycles of the sun, moon
and stars. They have been mostly eclipsed, so to speak, by our more precise
technological time pieces and secular calendars. I struggle to remember whether
the moon is waxing or waning. I sometimes notice the ascending and receding
position of the sun throughout the year, but am never still enough, in one
place long enough to watch it actually change. Yet, on the solstice I try to be
present to this silent but ever present liturgy as the sun rises and sets,
ascends and descends in the sacred sky.
On this particular solstice I didn’t do anything
that different. I watched a spotted sandpiper drunkenly walk the shore of the
creek near the cabin. I listened to unknown birds call from hidden bows of a
nearby aspen wood. I watched the slow advance of a beaver logging operation on
the other side of the creek. I walked endlessly through forests that were being
ravaged by spruce beetles; the sappy trunks of towering trees smattered with
the frass and pitch of fresh beetle entries and exists. The tall, ancient boles
whose glory fades one needle at a time; from green to faded brown.
The spruce beetle (Dendroctonus rufipennis) is such a small creature having
such a huge impact on a place. I am reminded of us; our voracious appetite for
material things, money and comforts is killing the earth upon which we have
evolved, lived, loved, laughed and learned. And just as the beetle knows
nothing else but to eat, mate and reproduce; we too, despite our supposed
enlightened minds, technological prowess and religious moralities are eating
ourselves out of house and home. And like the beetle, when the trees run out,
we may very well face a crash. I hope we have the strength to buck this
powerful evolutionary urge and course correct. Perhaps we will, and perhaps we
will not. Yet on this solstice, even under the fading green of spruce trees fighting
to stay alive, I have hope that we too will survive, that the trees will grow
back and that a balance will be struck.
Saturday, June 08, 2013
8.7 Million Names for God
In a recent botany class I took for fun, I learned
the taxonomic Family, Genus and Species of about 60 different woody plants.
This month I also attended the annual Great Salt Lake Bird Festival, a mecca
for migratory bird enthusiasts and avid birders, who devoutly greet the some 5
million birds who migrate through our state each year. In all my efforts to
identify plants and birds using dichotomous keys and beautifully illustrated
books, I wonder about the process of naming. In Genesis, Adam names the
animals. But what’s in a name? Is naming an act of relationship? Or, is it one
of dominance and control? Keying out plants was sometimes frustrating, and I
did more reading than observing the actual plant. But, as I learned the new
vocabulary of plant anatomy and was able to identify more and more plants and
their habitats, the landscape took on a more transparent feeling. It was like
adding letters to an alphabet, or the slow process of getting to know someone. In
some small way, knowing something about a plant connects me to it. And lately,
I have been desperate for connection to myself, the earth and to God. So, while
the process of naming plants was
frustrating and hardly very spiritual, as I learn more and more plants, their
habitats and uses, I feel surrounded by familiar faces. Naming has also allowed
me to be present to the creatures before me, as a miraculous manifestation of
the Ground of Being, the one become many. So, to name something, to recognize
it, is to enrich my vocabulary for the face of God. He was once a white-robed, bearded
male in the sky; now s/he is a dizzying diversity of plants, animals, rivers,
rocks, lichens, mosses, invertebrates, fishes, and birds.
As I learned to identify birds and their calls, the
incomprehensible chatter and flitting of a dusk sky became a grammar of winged
fellow creatures. The general descriptor ‘Bird’ became the myriad Northern
Flicker, Yellow Warbler, Sand Hill Crane, etc. Since the GSL Bird Festival
birding has becoming a kind of walking meditation. The other day, I was standing
on a flat boulder on the west bank of the Provo River just outside of Heber,
Utah; I was mesmerized by the rush of water as it meandered slowly southwestward.
The body of the river I was in had been restored to an undulating meander, and
was surrounded by ponds and wetland. I focused on my breathing as I scanned the
sky for flying objects. An Osprey appeared suddenly, hovered in place and
dipped out of site beyond the trees. In a small pond in sight of the passing
freeway, a beaver swam through the shallows. A buck froze with the whiff of my
scent. I heard the haunting call of Sand Hill Cranes in the distance. By
actively searching for birds, I am that much more
present and mindful to all creatures. I am not so distracted by my thoughts as I would be if I were simply hiking, thinking about my to-do list for tomorrow. This is the focused meditation of the mystics that opens to door to God. As I walk, I feel
the quality and temperature of the air passing through my nostrils as I go from
shade to sun, I hear the sound my shoes make on the gravel and I anticipate any
warble or dip in the air. I feel a deep sense of calm. What beauty there is to
behold in the some 8.7 million creatures on this earth, each unique, each
striving to live, and each a manifestation of the miracle that is life. Eight point seven
million names for God, the Ground of Being.
Back in my truck, a man with his fly rod ambled by
not noticing me. Loading his gear, he mumbled some unrecognizable
words in melody and then broke into a more clear singing voice:
“Oh, it is wonderful that he
should care for me, enough to die for me.
Oh, it is wonderful,
wonderful to me!”
I smiled
to myself and began to sing along to this familiar hymn. I felt a deep
happiness that this (most likely) Mormon man was connecting his deeply held
spiritual beliefs to a quick after work fishing trip. But I hope he also realizes that
just as his temple rituals and church meetings teach him how to become closer to
God, the fish that slip through his fingers, the river he stood in, the plants
on its banks and the birds overhead are closer to God than he thinks!
Cercocarpus ledifolius |
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