Showing posts with label sea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sea. Show all posts

Saturday, 15 March 2025

Imagine Paradise - O Dust, arise!

 Sunday, 23rd February - 2nd before Lent: Genesis 2:4b-9, 15-end, Revelation 4 

and Luke 8: 22-25


Do you long for the refreshment and space of the natural world? The labour of your own garden or allotment; finding beauty in the changing seasons; trees and hills, vast open spaces and familiar parks. 


Are you drawn to the movement of water and waves? The hypnotic ebb and flow of tides; rush of waterfalls and coolness of shallow pools; the serene beauty of reflected skies; its overwhelming power and force. 


Do you crave the bright lights and creative energy of urban life? Streets full of people - commuters, shoppers, tourists; cultures, households, faiths; the restlessness, loneliness, and longing for stability; vibrant, tense, unequal.

Richard Powers' Playground - taking us to the depths of the sea and much more


Today we dwell in all three: moving from garden to lake to city.

Divine goodness combines with the work of our hands. 

Life comes forth from water; water puts life in danger.

The creator’s love, with us in Christ, speaks peace, casts out fear.

Dazzling brightness, thunder and lightning combine with songs of praise.

Our hope is cast in earth and sea, stone and human hearts.


In the words of the poet, farmer and essayist Wendell Berry, we might:

Imagine Paradise.

O Dust, arise!


Today, a garden is tended and made fruitful, and a stormy sea is calmed, fears subside. We find ourselves caught up in the story of God’s ways with the world. 

We are also given a glimpse of our destiny as a dazzling, noisy city is consumed with praise.

We imagine paradise.

Genesis takes us to the beginning. Dust arises as breath brings life to clay. 

The world teams with creaturely diversity and a pleasing fruitfulness. It is good and sustainable. 

This is a world bound together in a delicate eco-system. 

Yes, humanity is blessed by delight; but we are also entrusted with responsibility. 

In this world, it is not good to be alone. We need helpmates.

The creature does not just depend on the creator and creation.

There is a fresh creative act: companionship emerges from flesh and blood. 

There is goodness - in support for each other in the creative work of tending the earth.

Side-by-side, face-to-face, we learn joy and tenderness, compassion and patience.

The biblical scholar Walter Brueggemann expands our interpretation beyond marriage to how we live together. He writes that ‘the place of the garden is for this covenanted human community of solidarity, trust and well being. They are one! That is, in covenant. The garden exists as a context for the human community.’

All this is gifted freely to us: human companionship - the sharing of life and work, responsibility and creativity.

Such freedom is risky.  

Life and knowledge lie on a tree that is out of our reach.

We lay claim to it nevertheless: testing and twisting the limits, going beyond what we need to seize what we want.

Goodness is distorted as we trade faithfulness for willfulness, trust for disobedience, other for self, interdependence for fragmentation. 

When we take the mysteries of life and knowledge into our own hands - apart from our maker and sustainer - our freedom to act and interact becomes the desire to coerce and control.

As hearts turn inwards, we no longer labour side-by-side: our nakedness and vulnerability become a source of shame.  

We exchange a garden paradise for stormy seas. 

In his novel Playground, Richard Powers talks about curiosity and creativity but also power and coercion. He describes the  impact of story, imagination, memory and song and the ways in which human exceptionalism consumes. He explores the richness of friendships, compromise and forgiveness and the new empires of wealth and influence driving isolation and otherness. 

He takes us to the depths of the wonder of this world - in oceans and emotions - and opens up the risk of how we escape it through the risk of social media and an increasingly gamified life. 

Humanity has played games - cards, chess, and the open-ended go. Now he says: ‘mobile games that consisted of little more than tapping on the screen when a box popped up were destroying people’s lives’.

The plot of Playground names the wonder and the beauty, the playfulness and the hope, the sheer abundance of life; but also the greed and exploitation, the rifts that open up between us, the sadness.

‘We make things that we hope will be bigger than us’, he writes, ‘and then we’re desolate when that’s what they become.’ 

No wonder the prophets cried out for justice and mercy when we struggled to know how to live well together; no wonder they called us back to the commandments to love God and our neighbours as ourselves. 

The struggle of how to live well needs a new act of solidarity: but the creator draws alongside as a helpmate, refusing to refuse love and choosing to dwell with us.

Powers writes, ‘Your sea is so great and our craft so small, O Lord.’

Jesus knows the greatness of the seas - not just the depth of the oceans but the depths of our anxieties and fears; not just the richness of the creatures but our capacity for selfishness and self-protection; the greatness of the eco-systems and their fragility and our smallness.

Our craft feels so small: we wound and want to heal, we are wounded and want to be healed.

In today’s gospel, Jesus steps into that small craft - that ordinary boat - to be with us. He gives in to his need for rest. He is like that first helpmate, flesh of our flesh. But he is also God’s Word, abiding in the Father’s heart in peace.

Storms when they arise from the depths are ferocious, surging waters threaten to overwhelm both boat and crew.  Disaster looms, fear rises, Jesus sleeps.

He only awakens to the cries of humanity.

His rebuke clams the waves and subdues the wind. 

Jesus has mastery over creation.

Who then is this?

This is love, casting out fear. 

This is breath, bringing peace.

Here is God in the storms we most dread: grief and fear, loss and betrayal; in the games we cannot win and the times where faith waves.

God is with us. 

God is acting for us. 

God is loving us. Still. 

The one who said ‘dust, arise’ in the creation of Adam becomes one of us. The one who made a helpmate out of bone, comes to us in flesh and blood. 

His body heals, touches, feeds and teaches. 

His body is anointed, spat at, wept over and buried. 

His hands break bread with us as his body breaks for us. 

In his body, we are drawn into a new kinship. Here, though we are many we are one body. As we share in fragments of bread, we are called by name. We begin to imagine paradise as we share this bread of heaven, on earth.

As we participate in this Eucharist we are led through stormy seas from a garden to a city, from creation to new creation. We share in the song of heaven - holy, holy, holy. We come near to the refining power of God’s love - the one who was and is and is to come.

We long for that place beyond darkness and dazzling, of one equal light as John Donne puts it. A place beyond fears and hopes, ends and beginnings; of oneness and joy.

To long for it is not an escape into an artificial world or alternative reality: it is instead to embrace the renewal of the covenant of love. As that happens, we are invited not only to find delight and beauty, pleasure and satisfaction - but to seek to labour for a fruitful garden and help others navigate stormy seas. 

In a world of chaos, noise and pain, we are to be people whose hearts turn outwards towards the other: breathing peace, acting with compassion, giving with generosity. 

In a world of contention, exploitation and gamification, we are to be creative; to be fearless in seeking equity and justice; to be committed to the earth’s sustainability. 

Stormy seas might be crossed or be calmed. We might find in our urban lives places where gardens grow.

It might be the care we show to our churchyards and grounds; it might be encouraging others into green spaces or helping all ages connect with nature. It might be helping with Hendon’s own Tiny Orchard - sandwiched between the pharmacy and alms houses on Church Road.  

As we do so, our work turns grief to joy; our work is joined to heaven’s gift. In hope, we imagine paradise, as dust arises. 

Wendell Berry’s “Sabbath Poem VII” might become our prayer:

The clearing rests in song and shade.

It is a creature made

By old light held in soil and leaf,

By human joy and grief,

By human work,

Fidelity of sight and stroke,

By rain, by water on

The parent stone.

We join our work to Heaven's gift,

Our hope to what is left,

That field and woods at last agree

In an economy

Of widest worth.

High Heaven's Kingdom come on earth.

Imagine Paradise.

O Dust, arise!


© Julie Gittoes 2025



Monday, 25 February 2019

Garden, sea and city

It was a delight to preach and preside at the Eucharist at Holy Trinity, Guildford yesterday. The texts were: Genesis 2:4b-9, 15-25, Revelation 4, Luke 8:22-25


Given the choice, where would you prefer to spend a day:
  1. in a garden, your own or Wisely perhaps or;
  2. by the sea, sitting in a deckchair or;
  3. at the heart of the city?
As a rural lass, with an urban heart and a sister who loves the sea, like many of us I end up inhabiting all three. 

But lacking the green fingers of my parents, and the proximity to the coast, the buzz of the city draws me moth like to it’s light.

Gardens: places of tranquility and seasonal beauty; a haven of privacy and place for conviviality; a glimpse of paradise and a place of labour.



The sea: the expanse of sand or shingle ridges and the hypnotic roar of waves; a place of ice-cream and fish and chips; a haven of peace, subject to nature’s unpredictable force.



City: the energy of people filling streets and theatres, platforms, hostels and galleries; the vendors, commuters, performers and consumers; a sleepless place of restless inequality.



Today’s readings straddle all this: a garden blessed and tended; a sea raging that is calmed; a city dazzling consumed by praise. 

In the garden, by the sea and amidst the city, we are caught up in the story of God’s ways with the world and the destiny of humanity.

In Genesis we see a world which is teaming with life in all its diversity: it is good and pleasing, generative and sustainable.

We are earth creatures, formed of clay; we are God’s creatures, breathed into life.

We are placed in a world of mutual interdependence. We are in a profound way bound together with the glorious goodness of the created order. It is not a world of our own making. God’s gift is one of interdependence. We are blessed by delight and entrusted with responsibility.

In this delicate eco-system, we are confronted with the reality that it is not good for this human to be alone. 

A fresh creative act of God brings forth a helpmate.

It is not good or right for this man, this one formed of earth, this adam, to be alone.



Like each one of us, this solitary human needs a helpmate. 

We need companionship. The wellbeing of one is not fulfilled by dependence on God or creation alone. 

Out of our creaturely flesh our most intimate other is formed: one who opens up what it is to be human - in relation to God and the world.

In the first instance this is not about hierarchy, complementarity or marriage. Rather it points to a fundamental goodness in being together.  There is the possibility of work and creativity as custodians of the earth. As we face one another, we learn compassion, generosity and joy. 

As Walter Brueggemann puts it: ‘The place of the garden is for this covenanted human community of solidarity, trust and well being. They are one! That is, in covenant. The garden exists as a context for the human community.’

This vision of generative human companionship and shared endeavour, is gifted to us freely. God’s loving purpose for us is based in freedom, not coercion. But such freedom is fraught with risk. 

Goodness is disrupted. Faithful obedience becomes an assertion of self-will. Life and knowledge are within our grasp. The prohibition will be scrutinised and misquoted and we seize the fruit of that tree for ourselves. 



And, as Genesis will tell it in the following scene, freedom, trust and calling are exchanged for autonomy, oppression and fragmentation

We know all too well the pain of what happens when we selfishly take the mysteries of life and knowledge into our own hands apart from God: freedom to act becomes the capacity to control. 

We become fearful and mistrusting; our hearts turn inwards, away from the other; we are ashamed of our naked vulnerability and dependence. 

The tranquility of the garden paradise breaks; we find ourselves on stormy seas.

Our struggle to know how to live well with one another is met by the commandments to love God and neighbour as ourself.

Our struggle with how to live wisely in the world is bet by the prophets cry for justice and mercy.

Our struggle to know how to live is ultimately met with a new act of solidarity. By God refusing to refuse love; by God dwelling with us in Christ Jesus. 

Jesus understands our anxieties and fears; he knows our tendency to selfishness and self-protection; he knows our capacity to wound and be wounded; and also knows our desire to heal and be healed.

Jesus stepped into the boat: and he slept. As flesh of our flesh, he gives into his physical need for rest; as Word made flesh, he abides in trusting rest with God.



The storm arises: disruptive and ferocious. It stirs the chaos from the deep. It surges and threatens to overwhelm. It has mastery over the boat and over seasoned sailors.

And amidst the terror and looming disaster, Jesus sleeps.

The storm does not disturb him; but wakes to our cries.

And with a word of rebuke the Word brings calm: wind and waves are subdued. This sign of mastery over creation and is also a renewed breathing into us of God’s life.

Who then is this?

Here is perfect love casting out fear. 

Here God’s Word addresses us in the midst of the storm.

In the midst of those things which fill us with dread, heartache and trembling... God is. 

God is with us in the betrayals and losses; the anxiety and grief; in the things which break us down and when faith wavers.

God. is. with. us.

Loving us. 

The God who created us that we might be one, comes to us in flesh and blood. His body heals and teaches; is touched and anointed; is spat at and wept over; breaks bread and is broken for us.

And we God’s creatures are made one as we share in fragments of bread. Here we are moved beyond the ties of biological kinship and commitment of flesh and blood. Genesis speaks of being one and here, though we are many we are one body.

Here we are called by name and nourished with the bread of heaven: the covenant of love is renewed. 

Here we at this Eucharist we are led through stormy seas from creation to new creation. From the beauty and labour of our earthly garden, we are given a glimpse of a heavenly city. 



A city where, in the words of John Donne, there is no darkness nor dazzling but one equal light; no noise nor silence, but one equal music;  no fears nor hopes, but one equal possession; no ends nor beginnings, but one equal eternity.

Here and now we unite our voices with the saints and angels singing ‘holy, holy, holy; Lord God almighty; who was and is and is to come.

As we praise our creator God, we are united with Christ in one body. But what we say and sing with our lips we are to live out in our lives: in the urban heart of Guildford and in our gardens; amidst personal storms and at work or school.

In a world of chaos, pain and noise, in the power of the Spirit, may we be one as a people whose hearts are turned outwards to the other. 

Breath by breath may we be compassionate, generous and peaceable companions on stormy seas.

Gesture by gesture, may we be creative and just in our commitment to the earth’s sustainability.


Word by word, may we walk in the light of Christ, seeking the equity and fearlessness of a heavenly city. 

© Julie Gittoes 2019