Colossians 2:6-10, 16-19
I suggest reading The Message translation.)How do systems change? How can we move toward the just communities we need and want? The natural process of ecological replacement highlights two mechanisms at work in replacing a complex system that dominates the landscape and seems too big to change. Succession relies in part on incremental change, the low, steady replacement of that which does not serve ecological flourishing with new communities. But it also relies on disturbance, on disruption of the status quo in order to let new species emerge and flower. Some massive disturbances are destructive, and recovery from them may not be possible. Other disturbances of the right scale and type, create renewal and diversity….Both of these tools – incremental change and creative disruption – are available to us as agents of cultural transformation. I hope we will use them both. In these urgent times, we need to become the storm that topples the senescent, destructive economies so the new can emerge. (The Serviceberry, Robin Wall Kimmerer, pp. 100-102)
What is Paul’s advice to the Colossian church, assuming they want to be followers of Jesus? What will become Christians? Live like Jesus. Or even more simply BE Jesus by letting him live again through you.
Can you resonate with Paul’s frustration with people who want to make rules, have theological debates, structure the church as an organization, and generally make the focus of Jesus’ people on figuring out how to do faith right? Forget it! He says. Just do it. And what does doing it look like? Love. Jesus says many times, “God is love.” “Love one another.” And Jesus did love: feeding people, forgiving people, healing people, chastising leaders who made life hard for people. Jesus at his best cuts to the chase: help each other out and do whatever is most loving in each situation.
We remember that the early church lived in difficult times, violent times, economically devastating times. They had almost no power to change anything happening around them. So what are they to do to make Jesus’ vision of the reign of God happen? Live like Jesus. Love each other. Take care of one another. Even when you have to follow the outward rules of the Empire, you never have to adopt the mindset of the Empire. You can always prioritize love. You can always see a friend instead of an enemy. You can always take the most loving action possible for you in any particular moment, even if it’s not everything you wish you could do. You can BE like Jesus.
I’m tempted to make a list of all the things that went wrong in our world last week, but I’m going to resist temptation. Every week the list gets longer and more discouraging. Remember, Jesus didn’t fix his world. He died trying, and he didn’t finish the job. The Empire won. Except that it didn’t, because even if you’re the world champion at whack-a-mole, you can’t hit every head that pops up. The way the Jesus movement became a world-changing force was to just keep doing one small thing at a time, day after day, by 10 or 100 or 1000 people, until you couldn’t overcome all the good with evil. The good got through some places, and when it did, it multiplied.
We’re trying to see the world with God’s eyes until the world can see itself that way. We’re trying to love the world with Jesus’ love until the world can love itself and be transformed. And we’re going to win this battle because at its very core the life of the world is love. Those who want to harm others, puff themselves up and make the world enrich only themselves, are not the way life happens. When we see life around us in nature, the bullies don’t win in the long run. The plants and the bees and the animals and even the humans, keep working together until they make something beautiful that benefits everyone. Even the bullies eventually end up as fertilizer for new life. Life can heal itself, if we let it. Life will teach us how to let love happen, if we keep looking around us with Jesus’ eyes.
Robin Wall Kimmerer is determined to build up the natural economy of shared goodness and tear down the false economy of scarcity the Empire has adopted just now. She observes how that can happen – incremental change and strategic disruption. We can be smart about causing both.
Incremental change happens when we keep on doing the most loving thing we can in each moment. This week Victoria ran all over town buying bus passes and delivering checks. I let two groups of people without a ticket check out the garden tour. What did you do? … When we do any small act of kindness we make the world different by being different in it. Kindness multiplies.
We can also be strategic about disruptions that interrupt the status quo. Protests are about disruption. Jesus turning over tables of moneychangers in the temple was disruption. A young white woman calling out ICE agents for arresting brown men she’s never met is disruption. The Grand Forks City Council wants to eliminate funding for arts and human needs in next year’s budget. Some people will speak against that. What if there weren’t enough chairs in the room for all the people who came to just listen and applaud those speakers? Would that be enough disruption to matter?
We’re trying to work out how to live authentically and morally in an immoral country right now. Here are two very important clues: incremental change through loving kindness every single day, and disruption where the opportunity presents itself. We can do this together, because we have been commissioned to be the Body of Christ in this time and place and that is what Jesus would do.