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Secret Gardens and Holy Places
A Stewardship Sermon
Offered October 28th, 2007
By Rev. Hilary Landau Krivchenia
Reading
From
The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
One of
the nice little gusts of wind rushed down the walk, and suddenly the
gust of wind swung aside some loose ivy trails, and more suddenly
still she jumped toward it and caught it in her hand.
She put
her hands under the leaves and began to pull and push them aside.
What was this under her hands which was square and made of iron and
which her fingers found a hole in? It was the lock of the door
which had been closed ten years and she put her hand in her pocket,
drew out the key and found it fitted the keyhole. She put the key
in and turned it. It took two hands to do it, but it did turn.
"How
still it is!" she whispered. "How still!"
Then
she waited a moment and listened at the stillness. The robin, who
had flown to his treetop, was still as all the rest.
Everything was strange and silent …It seemed almost like being shut
out of the world in some fairy place.
There
was every joy on earth in the secret garden that morning, and in the
midst of them came a delight more delightful than all, because it
was more wonderful. Dickon stood quite still and put his hand on
Mary almost as if they had suddenly found themselves laughing in a
church.
And the
secret garden bloomed and bloomed and every morning revealed new
miracles.
Sermon
As a
girl I was captivated by Frances Hodgson Burnett’s book The Secret
Garden – about a hidden place where miracles could happen if only
you could find the doorway inside. In part it was the air of
mystery that captured my attention – but mostly it was the sense of
mystery with a capital M… I remember the way the children – Mary,
Dickon, and Collin would spend their secret time in the secret
garden and slowly, with careful hands and growing hearts, they
brought the garden back to life and it brought them back to life as
well. The garden was a sacred space. Dickon – the boy from over
the moors who knew the ways of wild things – the ways of nature –
helped the other children learn and the garden, as well, taught them
about tending to the secret, sacred garden. It was sacred because
it was a place in which to find meaning, peace, and healing – a
place of life and love.
The experience of secret wonder and hidden awe came to
me when my family would go to visit my grandma Tillie at the Jewish
Home for the Aged. The home seemed like a large terrifying
institution. It had long halls filled with illness and helplessness
but on the first floor, was a synagogue and I would escape there
sometimes and, mostly, sit, in the quiet and drink in the beauty of
the stained glass and wood and the great mystery of the curtained
place at the front of the sanctuary. It was the Ark, the enclosed
space where the Torah Scrolls are kept, covered, safe, and hidden.
But at the time I didn’t know any of that so to me it was just a
beautiful hideaway where ornate velvet covered objects were kept.
I’d sit alone in the pews and wonder what sorts of things happened
in that mysterious place – a place of colored light, velvet, wood,
and unlit candles.
I also clearly remember the solemn quiet of the Quaker
meeting house where my parents, active against the war in Vietnam,
sometimes attended. I’d sometimes sit in on the Sunday service and
sometimes go to the Sunday school classes. I didn’t really
understand what was going on in those services – but there, too, I
could feel a sense of the holy, the sacred – some special sense of
possibility. The meeting room was dark on the brightest days – with
small high windows. No ornamentation, no crosses or altar cloths –
just simple, clean lines, firm chairs, and the smell of old,
polished wood. But the sense of sacred space was surely there – in
the patience and hopefulness of the long silences between the quiet
voices. In fact, the sacred space was, in large part, the space
between the voices – the space of possibility.
As a child I didn’t step into many church, synagogues,
temples, or mosques. But I knew, clearly, the feeling of entering
sacred space – it was an experience of a time and space set aside
for something of power and beauty to happen.
As the animal that makes meaning, we create sacred
spaces regularly – often outside of religious institutions.
Another childhood memory I have is of going on picnics
with my Aunt Louise. It was traditional when our families would
visit – for me and Aunt Louise to walk over to the cemetery two
blocks from her house. When we’d arrive at just the right spot at
the edge of the goldfish pond, Aunt Louise would shake open the
blanket and spread it smoothly on the ground. We’d take off our
shoes and step carefully onto the blanket and – it always seemed to
me – into a different world. With the food arranged just so and our
bag of stale bread ready for the giant goldfish, Aunt Louise would
unfold a world of beauty in nature. We always picnicked in solemn
reverence for those buried all around us – but we spent much of our
time focused on other things. Sometimes she’d tell me elaborate
stories but more often we spent our time noticing the grace and
swiftness of the fish, the small miracles of leaf and acorn, the
blossoms by and on the water. Aunt Louise’s blanket marked off
sacred space – space that, as we entered it, made sharp my awareness
of the wonder of the world and the light that shines out of all
things – if we look at them long and deeply enough.
Since then I’ve been in many sacred spaces – from the
Episcopal Church at Midnight Mass to Stonehenge to the woods with a
hundred women to the Western Foundation wall of the Temple in
Jerusalem and the Dome of the Rock just above it. I’ve sought out
sacred space and wanted to learn about what makes a space sacred.
What is sacred space and how does it come into being?
Some sacred space is simply revealed to us in nature – I’ve visited
places that stunned me into awe. I’m sure that in your own lives
there are such places – they can be as striking as the Grand Canyon
– that I’ve heard about though never seen – that can fill the heart
with a sense of history and of our smallness in that history that is
truly humbling. They can be as humble as an outcropping of
limestone in a green field that suddenly reminds you that there’s a
great rockshelf beneath the land – a strong shoulder or an ancient
lap. Sacred spaces remind us out of our daily selves – I talked
some about that last week – the part of our minds that is busy with
the errands, the chores, the chauffeuring, the stoplights – and
remind us into our deeply connected selves – the part that of us
that’s aware that there is a sacred light in everything and a holy
possibility in every moment. We simply need reminders. Some sacred
space is revealed to us in nature – like the migration of sand hill
cranes happens at Jasper Pulaski Park. I was there a couple of
weeks ago and the sound of the birds was like a primeval choir and
the sight of thousands of birds and so many deer mingling made me
feel generations of blood in my veins – the cell memory of ancient
plains rich with life out of which my life came. It was pure holy
revelation.
Other sacred space is created. Humanity has poured ages
of creativity into this endeavor – cathedrals that took centuries to
build and stone circles that baffle the mind with their size.
Sacred spaces can carry the imprint of a particular faith – for
example spires that reach skyward toward a skygod or heavenly father
or long low lines that remind people to deal lovingly and justly
with one another and to remember that our finest kingdom is here on
earth or noble temples with majestic columns so that the gods might
take the throne and rule over human life more justly. But those are
the particulars of faith – the universals of creating sacred space
are a little different.
One characteristic of sacred space is that the time
spent there is time set apart. The ordinary cares of the day can be
let go and what remains are the heaviest burdens, the brightest
joys, the deepest insights – or a holy waiting. For religious
traditions that believe that what is sacred is beyond this world –
holy places stand as reminders of what is beyond this world – a
place in the world to think beyond the world.
For
Unitarian Universalists – our houses of worship are meant to remind
us more deeply of the world – our interior world, the world of
nature, the world of human suffering and of hope, the world of human
possibility. That’s why in this congregation the covenant has
always had a place of honor – to remind the congregation of its
aspirations which exist in this world and among the people. Our
sacred spaces must in some way call us to be mindful of the sacred
nature of all being.
I’ve visited Unitarian Universalist houses of worship
from New England Parishes with white walls, boxed pews, and towering
pulpits ornate with carving to First Church in Chicago with its
marble walls and marble inlays to Frank Lloyd Wright’s prairie
schooner of a church in Madison, Wisconsin to First Universalist in
Minneapolis where a large Jewish synagogue now houses a vibrant UU
congregation to Birmingham, Michigan where stark white walls and
clean modern lines create a simple setting for worship. I preached
for a year in Quincy Illinois in a Queen Anne building with curved
pews and a Tiffany window over the pulpit depicting the bluffs above
the Mississippi.
And today we’re here – in this fine building – once
Methodist, that this congregation will change and adapt so that it
becomes sacred space for this congregation – rich with symbol and
with the outward signs that help Unitarian Universalists set apart
our sacred space. As various as our congregations are the designs
of our buildings and the things within them that open our doors onto
sacred space. The designs of our buildings may be determined by
location, historical period, congregation, and architects – but
above all what makes our places sacred – is the spirit of the people
within them – the active embodiment of our living tradition – of
reason, integrity, ethics, social conscience, imagination, creative
energy, community building and principle. It may look a little
different from here to there – from Portland, Oregon to Portland,
Maine – but there’s a living tradition that we share and a living
commitment that we build together in our congregations.
In all places Unitarian Universalists aspire to
engagement in the world for its own sake – not for hope of reward or
fear of punishment in another life or of external lasting judgment –
except for the judgment of history. The question that Unitarian
Universalists wrestle out in our congregations is – am I leaving the
world a better place? As in all religions our aspirations can be
mere lip service – but also they can drive us to engage more deeply
in the world -- to give ourselves more fully to our finest
commitments.
I think of the Reverend Theodore Parker whose conscience
led him into service on the Underground Railroad and to preach a
gospel of freedom, of rights for women, and of justice for Native
Americans from his pulpit. I think of Susan B. Anthony – a woman
raised Quaker who joined the Unitarian Church in Rochester New York
and served the cause of women’s rights her whole life time. I think
of Clara Barton, Dorothea Dix, Julia Ward Howe, Louisa May Alcott
who all spoke for the lifting up of humanity and were willing to
dedicate themselves to those ideas. I think of the Reverend Jenkin
Lloyd Jones, whose soul searching taught him about world religions
and made him so reverent of life that he opposed war and stood firm
in his commitment to peace until his Unitarian colleagues barred him
from their meetings. I think of the Reverend James Reeb and of
Viola Liuzzo whose Unitarian convictions called them both to the
deep south to work for Civil Rights and who both died in that
service. I think of Charlie Clements.. and Rev Jill McAllister….
These are only a few examples of our living tradition
that has been shaped of countless Unitarian and Universalist lives
committed to the idea that the world is a precious place, that our
congregations are places to be reminded of that preciousness and of
our deep responsibility to the world. Our sacred spaces bring us
together in that sense of holy possibility – of what is possible
among us as we work, live, worship, reflect, and vision together.
To nurture that possibility that we create houses of
worship with space for religious education and involve ourselves in
teaching it. We provide staff – called ministers, skilled
musicians, religious educators, and dedicated office staff and shape
in a partnership between staff and volunteers the concrete
circumstances which can give rise to holy possibility. To nurture
that possibility we are sometimes called to the ministry to comfort
the afflicted and afflict the comfortable, to provide example and
sometimes inspiration – on our better days, to study and to teach,
and to share leadership. To nurture that possibility we keep on the
lights and turn on the heat and open our doors.
These days we find ourselves in a new religious dwelling
is to move our covenant to a new place – a place where we intend
that it should be made ever stronger, to serve more of life, to make
of Unitarian Universalism a stronger and stronger force for good,
for justice, for healing, for hope in our world.
For this to happen we have to create the sacred space
together – not only by the purchase of a new building – but through
the building together of our noblest relationships. The sacred
space is what we create in our being together – in our covenant and
our principles. It is what we create in our daily work together. I
feel that holy possibility when we are together. This is our
stewardship season – the time when we gather in groups, in pairs and
talk about the values and future of this congregation. Well—my
friends – the values and future of this congregation are entirely in
your hands. As we pass the offering each week – it’s clear that
there is no higher organization that sets our course nor that funds
our work – we do it ourselves. A free church – which is not to say
that it is without cost. The cost is worthy. For 7 years my
husband and I have given more than 3% of our income each year to
this congregation. This year we will increase our pledge to make
possible more of the visions of this congregation and more of the
possibilities of Unitarian Universalism. It’s not an easy choice –
I still owe thousands of dollars for the theological education I
finished before I came here and now we have two children in
college. But it’s essential that this faith flourish and each year
it’s been vital to me to help this congregation meet or exceed its
hopes. This year was of critical importance – because, finally,
after perseverance on the part of so many of you for so many years,
because of long and hard work on the part of so many of you for so
many years and because of generosity on the part of so many of you
for so many years you have gotten a new and more fitting space in
which to meet and make real your visions and hope. You’ve opened
the doors on the future and it has arrived. Finally. The doors are
open.
And therefore it is time that all our doors be open –
the doors of our eyes to see the condition of the world. The doors
of our ears to hear one another into more creative and meaningful
lives. The doors of our imagination open wide so that together we
create the sacred space of possibility – for something of power and
beauty to be created by us together. The doors of our spirits to
deepen our connection with all that is. The doors of our hearts
that our generosity and love are thrown wide that we can give from
deep within to the wide hope without. Stewardship is finding the
key to generosity – unlocking and flinging the doors wide open.
The great mystery here is in each one of you – the
miracle that you have come to this day – through all the adventure
of your lives and with the gifts and burdens that you carry. The
great mystery is that you have gathered finding one another --
hopeful of a new life in religious community – a community grounded
in principle and service. The great mystery is that you are part of
a tradition that reaches back hundreds and yes – even thousands of
years and will stretch long into the future if you make this place a
priority as did generations before you. The great Mystery with a
capital M is the power that you find in being together and in
bringing ideas, support, acceptance, love, mercy, and commitment to
one another – to be more together than you were alone. The great
secret is how you will unlock in yourselves and one another – this
year and every year in the future the great doors of your heart so
that you will give generous, substantial, and yet realistic
resources to this common endeavor – of this congregation and this
faith – that it can reach higher and stretch further than ever. For
too long this noble tradition of Unitarian Universalism has been
like a secret garden – waiting and hidden holding healing marvels
the world needs and, in fact, hungers for. It is time to dig into
the soil, to reach in with our hands and our hope and find the key
that brings this garden – this sacred place – this living space – to
light. For so long people have said – I was a Unitarian
Universalist and didn’t know it. For this congregation in this
place at this time you are ready to let people know who you are – to
open your doors and share your Mystery which must be no longer a
secret. All that remains is that you make it so. By your hearts
and hands by your generosity and vision – by your work and love – so
it shall ever be.
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