True grit
Joshua
24:1-3a, 14-25
He had real grit, that Joshua. When his fellow
spies felt like grasshoppers and the Canaanites looked like giants, Joshua
and his friend Caleb urged the Hebrews to take them on even though their
compatriots threatened to stone them for their advice. After Moses died
and Joshua assumed command, he showed his mettle by trusting God to bring
down the walls of Jericho with only the sound of the trumpet and the shouts
of the people.
But I think Joshua's greatest moment came in his farewell speech to
the Israelites, when he told them the truth about their covenant with
God. He and his family had chosen to follow the Lord, Joshua proclaimed.
The people roared enthusiastically. They would do the same. But Joshua
didn't accept their initial response. Instead he reminded them not once
but three times of the cost of that covenant and the consequences of breaking
it. If they dealt falsely with their God, Joshua warned, God would do
them harm and consume them. Probably the Hebrews were ready to stone him
for being so demandingly honest.
As a parish minister, I assume Joshua's role when I invite people to
affirm their covenant with God and one another. But I seldom have his
courage in the follow-through. If I did, when parents brought their child
for baptism, I would ask more than the generic "Do you promise to grow
with this child in the Christian faith and offer him or her the nurture
of the Christian church?"
Instead I'd ask, in front of God and the whole congregation, "Do you
promise to get him or her out of bed, dressed and here every Sunday morning
for the next 18 years, even when you've had a long week or you'd rather
sleep in or there's a soccer match or when this darling infant has grown
into a surly, tatooed teenager who thinks church is 'dumb'?"
I've never been that honest about baptismal vows. I bet Joshua would
have been. When people join the church, Joshua would have asked more than
a rote "Do you renounce the powers of evil and seek the freedom of new
life in Christ?" After the unsuspecting new member said yes, Joshua would
have followed with, "So when you buy your next car, will you resist all
the commercial hype that encourages you to overspend on something that
eats up resources and pollutes the air?"
Had Joshua presided at my ordination, I doubt he would have let me get
by with a simple vow to study, pray, teach and preach. He probably would
have demanded, "Will you give up your personal gods of procrastination,
perfectionism and the pursuit of trivia?"
As a pastor, of course I'd like to beef up the traditional vows of baptism
or membership. But then I'd need more assurance in dealing with Joshua's
dire consequences of covenant-breaking. For many people in my congregation,
the primary experience of covenants-marriage, family, church affiliation
or job-has been their endings. How do I capture Joshua's passion for keeping
covenant with God without sounding judgmental and damning of persons whose
human covenants have been broken, either by design or default?
Joshua's uncompromising stance on the exclusivity of the covenant poses
another challenge. Even as a child growing up Congregational in the Southwest,
I knew the history of violence and devastation that faithful Protestants
inflicted on Native Americans and Catholics when they encountered those
people's "foreign gods."
Yet when I moved back west after a ten-year sojourn among Connecticut
Yankees, the spiritual smorgasbord of Santa Fe felt overwhelming. Like
other New Age centers, it seemed filled with Anglo spiritual dilettantes,
people who had grown up Protestant or Catholic and then tried every spiritual
path from Buddhism and Native American practices to Sufi dancing and Hindu
chant. When they landed at the United Church of Santa Fe, they often felt
lost and disoriented, as if they had gone through multiple intimate relationships.
At the same time, they were wary and uncertain about committing to any
faith tradition.
I resonate with Joshua's willingness to affirm what he believed, but
I want to do it without damning other faiths. How do I retain the essence
of his covenant without its exclusivity?
A chance encounter with Martin Marty taught me how. In 1989 Marty was
speaking on religious pluralism at the University of New Mexico. I almost
didn't go - I'd had my fill of spiritual "options." But I'd enjoyed his
columns in the Century for years, so I made the two-hour trip. What Marty
said that night has been a plumb line for my ministry. When I asked, "What
advice do you have for a United Church of Christ pastor serving a church
that isn't sure it wants to be a Christian church in the New Age capital
of Santa Fe?" He paused. "The United Church of Christ?" he asked. I nodded.
"You have the blood of the Puritans in you! Claim your inheritance." But
then he said, "If you go deep enough into any faith tradition, you find
the common ground with all other traditions. That's why a Baptist preacher
like Martin Luther King could learn from Gandhi the Hindu, or why a Capuchin
like Thomas Merton was in conversation with Buddhist monks."
"I think that's what all of us are seeking," he continued. "We want
that common ground. But we have to go deep into our own tradition to find
it. You need to tell your people that."
It's been almost 15 years since that night, but there's seldom a day
I don't remember Marty's words. "Go deep," he said. It sounds like Joshua's
"Choose this day whom you will serve." Either way, it takes grit. Either
way it leads to life and to God.
Talitha
Arnold is pastor of United Church of Santa Fe (UCC) in Santa
Fe, New Mexico.
Copyright 2005
CHRISTIAN
CENTURY. Reproduced by permission from the October 23, 2002
issue of the CHRISTIAN CENTURY. Subscriptions: $49/year from P.O. Box
378, Mt. Morris, IL 61054. 1-800-208-4097
Copyright © by the author
All Rights Reserved
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