Showing posts with label Resistance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Resistance. Show all posts

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Seed the Hope... Resist the Sleep (John Legend and the Roots)



It can take a while for us to fully say the need as we walk forward in Advent, but there comes a time when Advent compels us to do more: respond and resist. So this week on the Advent Music Prject we recall how we SEED THE HOPE of God's coming reign, and RESIST THE SLEEP of un-remembering who and whose we are.

Advent can be a beautiful time of yearning and waiting, but it should also be a time of acting and transforming. After all, Advent looks forward, not backward. It preceeds Christmas to remind us that God's coming is not complete, that Christ still acts in the world and is bringing about a beautiful transformation of all that is broken into wholeness.

In response to the staggering needs of this world and the hopes we each carry in our hearts, we speak and act. We do the hard work of hoping not merely with our words, but with our hands, with our time, and with our lives. We tend the roots of new life wherever it is found.

In response to the social systems designed to lull us into inaction by confusing consumerism with community and entertainment with engagement, we resist the slumber of passivity and apathy. We move, we speak, we learn, we question, we call out for transformation. We remember that this world belongs to God, and let the fire of our passion burn bright.


"There's something in your heart
And it's in your eyes
It's the fire
Inside you
Let it burn
You don't say good luck
You say don't give up
It's the fire
Inside you
Let it burn"


The Fire perf. The Roots (feat. John Legend). Lyrics HERE.

This could be interpreted as a song about personal success, but both the Roots and John Legend have shown consciousness beyond their own interests in their music. There's also a way in which when we Seed the Hope and Resist the Sleep, we live in recognition that our destinies are bound together, and that what seeds hope in the lives of others reverberates back to our own. 

In the end, we don't save the world, but we create spaces for the God Who Comes to move in and take hold. Yet without tending to the places of new life among us, Advent cannot do its full work of providing safe, dark space for seeds to grow, a womb of waiting for the God-with-Us who brings all things to light and life. So we work in Advent, and allow Advent to do its work in us, seeding the hope and resisting the sleep, both being drawn and drawing others into the renewal this season offers.


"Be at peace among yourselves. And we urge you, beloved, to admonish the idlers, encourage the fainthearted, help the weak, be patient with all. Repay no one evil for evil, but always seek to do good to one another and to all. Rejoice always, pray without cearsing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you. Do not quench the Spirit. Do not despire the words of the prophets, but test everything; hold fast to what is good; abstain from every form of evil."                                                    - 1 Thess 5: 13b-22



Where are you being called to seed the hope or resist the sleep this Advent season?


May you feel new energy, even in these shortest days, for the work of compassion and hope, the passion of engagement and action we so sorely need from one another.


                                                                                            - Anna


**This week, we'll take YOUR suggestions for what songs help you Seed the Hope or Resist the Sleep. Post a YouTube link with your thoughts and we'll re-post them all on our Saturday post.**

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Thurs Dec. 8 - As Seen on TV (Gil Scott-Heron)

      
In the dissonant ring of messy Advent reality against Coming Hope against media-packaged "Christmas preparation," active resistance helps. Joining the revolution of poets, justice workers, advocates and truth-tellers delivers us from the falseness of unending cheeriness or easily-abandoned charity to the deep and abiding movement toward transformed reality.


We resist what has been stolen from us in this season: the story of a homeless baby born in Bethlehem who would grow into a freedom fighter who exposed the workings of oppression and fought against the exploitation of people.* This part of the story of Christ’s coming somehow gets lost among our bright lights and peppermint mochas, our careful balance of charity donations and ‘December to Remember’ gifting. But the holy agenda begun in the manger was both the spiritual transformation of hearts and a dramatic overhaul of political, economic and social systems of injustice. This is not pennies dropped in a bell-ringers’ buckets, this is the revolution of Christmas, and the revolution is LIVE.


*Dr. Obery M. Hendricks, Jr.  The Politics of Jesus: Rediscovering the True Revolutionary Nature of Jesus’ Teachings and How They Have Been Corrupted
**Some strong language present. Also: jazz flute.  You are welcome.


With laws that betray human life We will not comply
With the pointing finger and malicious talk We will not comply
With the idea that happiness must be purchased We will not comply
With the ravaging of the earth We will not comply
With the principalities and powers that oppress We will not comply
With the destruction of peoples We will not comply
With the raping of women We will not comply
With governments that kill We will not comply
With the theology of empire We will not comply
With the business of militarism We will not comply
With the hoarding of riches We will not comply
With the dissemination of fear We will not comply
With the destruction of community We will not comply


- Catalyst Litany -Shane Claiborne, James Loney and Brian Walsh




                                               -Lindsey