TOO BUSY TO LIVE
February 16, 2003
JOANNA ADAMS, PASTOR
The Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago
Psalm 147:1-11
Isaiah 40:21-31
Mark 1:32-39
In the morning, while it was still very dark,
he got up and went out to a deserted place,
and there he prayed.
Mark 1:35 (nrsv)
* * *
Eternal
God, grant us an ease to breathe deeply of this moment, this miracle of
the now. Beneath the din and fury of harsh news and urgent crises, make
us attentive and still before the presence of good news. Remind us again
of the reality of the grace of what is possible, through Jesus Christ our
Lord.1 Amen.
Last fall, a wonderful article by the very witty Adam Gopnik appeared in
the New Yorker magazine. It was entitled Bumping into Charlie Ravioli.
Who is Charlie Ravioli? you might wonder. Charlie Ravioli is
the name of Gopniks three-year-old daughter Olivias imaginary
friend. It seems that one day, the father walked into the room where Olivia
was playing with her toy cell phone. She held the phone up to her ear and
said, Ravioli, Ravioli, are you there? Its Olivia. Can you come
and play? Well, call me. Then she snapped the cell phone shut, shook
her head, and said to her dad, I always get Charlies answering
machine.2
Even worse, one day the father overheard Olivia speaking on the toy cell
phone to a new person named Laurie. It turned out that Laurie was the imaginary
assistant to Charlie Ravioli. She was answering his telephone and told Olivia
that, unfortunately, Mr. Ravioli was in a meeting and would be unable to
play that day.3
The father was concerned about his daughter, so he talked to his sister,
a child psychologist, who assured him that there was nothing unusual about
a three-, four-, or five-year-olds having an imaginary friend. What
then began to concern Gopnik was how his three-year-old had been able to
capture so perfectly the tone and pace of their family life and of the society
in which their family lives.
And so it is that we are busy, busy, busy, forever consulting our calendars
and leaving voicemails and e-mails for one another but never really connecting
person to person with our friends or our families, with ourselves or with
God, whom Paul Tillich called the very ground of being. It is as if we have
to negotiate two very demanding grids of human existence. One is the physical
reality in which we liveof sidewalks, automobiles, and people in restaurants,
encounters with actual living, breathing human beings. Then we go home,
and we sit down at our desks, and there is that second world, that other
grid, that swarming sea of e-mails, voicemails, and faxes. What is so frustrating
about that world is that the communication loop rarely seems to close completely.
You might write me a letter and I might answer it and that would be the
end of it. But e-mails and such seem to be devices of perpetual communication,
ending with such phrases as, Give me a call and lets discuss,
or Lets get together for lunch. Any suggestions about a day?4
A case in point: Adam Gopniks wife reports receiving a telephone call
one morning from a friend who was asking her to check her e-mail regarding
a phone message that she needed to listen to so that she could make a phone
call about a fax that they had both received asking for more information
about a purchase that they were considering that would require two companies
to exchange phone calls, e-mails, and faxes of drafts of contracts.5 It
is never ending, and how familiar it seems, this web of incompleteness,
this tangle of busyness, this thick soup of interaction. It seems almost
impossible to maintain an authentic life in God when we are so busy, when
there is that little voice whispering in our ears, You ought to answer
your messages. You ought to do more. You need to go, go, go, and you need
to do it faster and faster.
Poor Charlie Ravioli. What is it that Barbara Walters says at the end of
the broadcast? I cant remember the exact wordsWere
in touch, so you be in touch. What in the world that means, I dont
know, but I suspect that many of us have become downright obsessive about
this being in touch business. I wonder if anyone in church this morning
has clipped to his belt or stuffed in her purse a cell phone. I used to
carry my cell phone often, but then it occurred to me that I was not a heart
transplant surgeon, needing to be able to respond immediately when news
came that the helicopter was hovering overhead with the new organ and I
needed to rush to the hospital and scrub up. If you are not a transplant
surgeon, you can probably make it through church without needing to be in
touch. Isnt that a sign that we are caught up in the endless traffic
and busyness of life?
In the story we heard from Marks Gospel, even Jesus appeared to be
caught up in it. He was very busy. Everyone in town wanted to be in touch
with him. Just prior to the passage that we read in our New Testament lesson
is a paragraph that begins with these breathless words: As soon as
they left the synagogue, they went to Simons house, and when
they reached Simons house, there was Simons mother-in-law who
was ill with a fever. Jesus healed her. One of the Bibles funniest
verses comes next: Jesus took her by the hand and lifted her up. Then
the fever left her, and she began to serve them (Mark 1:31). Speaking
of get up and go! Straight from the sickbed to the cookstove is what it
sounds like to me.
Evening comes, and Jesus work still isnt done. At sundown, they
bring him everybody who has anything wrong with themeverybody was
there. The whole city gathered at the door to watch. It just wears you out
to think about it. Jesus, being the person of compassion he was, the Savior
who embodied the power of God, walked right into the heart of the human
need that surrounded him, but that was not the whole story. The next morning,
while it was still dark, he went out by himself to a deserted place
and prayed (Mark 1:35). Had the pressing needs gone anywhere? Of course
not. Even while he was praying, the disciples were looking all over the
place for him and when they found him, they were very exasperated. Dont
you know everyone is looking for you? They need you.
Of course, he knew they needed him. That was precisely the reason he had
gone off, gotten out of touch with all that was around himso that
he could get back in touch with God, who was the source of his strength.
How could he offer his healing touch, his compassionate concern, if he himself
were disconnected from the source of his spiritual power?
Hanging over the desk in the study of my home for a number of years has
been a commandment from the Bible. It is the commandment that has proven
to be the hardest one for me to keep. It is a verse from the Forty-Sixth
Psalm: Be still and know that I am God.
We have become 24-7 Charlie Raviolis. We have places to go and things to
do and e-mails to answer, but we cannot be filled with new life, and we
cannot have life and hope to share with anyone else, if we get out of touch
with God. Jesus understood human life completely, and the great secret of
his strength was his never once forgetting that his strength did not come
from himself but from God, the Creator and Giver of life, the tireless Sovereign
of all that is or ever will be. Jesus never allowed the demon of busyness
to set up shop in his daily routine. How did he keep that demon at bay?
He got up early and prayed. What a novel idea in the face of the challenges
of our restless lives. What a novel idea in a time of great anxiety and
fear.
The new Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, has written recently of
prayer in this most helpful way: There comes a level of prayer where
it is no longer a question of are you OK [or getting somewhere
with your own thoughts and words] but are you being seen? .
. . Are you sitting in the light and being and becoming who you really are?
Usually our thoughts are all over the place, running after this and that
and the other. . . . The process of prayer is the steady, quiet drawing
in and settling of all those tentacles that are wriggling out to lay hold
of the world. You gather them back in, you gather them into the heart in
prayer. By this, we become what we are; we just sit there, being a creature
in the hand of God.6 If Jesus found such an activity indispensable
in his busy life, why in the world would it not also be indispensable to
us?!
There have been ominous urgings in recent days from the Office of Homeland
Security as to what we ought to do to prepare for disaster. It all seems
a little overboard to me, but it did cause me to reflect on what I have
control over and what I dont. I cannot prevent a terrorist attack.
I cannot do anything about nuclear weapons in North Korea or biological
weapons in Iraq. I can do little to prevent war with Iraq, other than writing
a letter to express my opposition to preemptive military action. What I
can do is to sit, being a creature in the hand of God. I can remember that
when it comes to power, there is another player on the field. I am speaking
of spiritual power. I am speaking of strength from above. We are going to
need a lot more than duct tape and flashlight batteries in the days and
months ahead. We cant be running all over the place with our anxieties.
We must be still and remember that it is God who is the creator of the ends
of the earth. As the prophet Isaiah said, it is God who is in charge of
the princes of the earth (Isaiah 40:23). These are the realities
with which we must connect, because they are the realities that undergird
human life and human history.
Isaiah sent the fearful, discouraged exiles in Babylon a security alert.
He reminded them that it was time to pay attention to the promises that
had supported them since the foundations of the earth: God is Lord of all.
God never faints or grows weary but gives power to the faint and strengthens
the powerless. Those who wait on the Lord will renew their own strength.
They will mount up with wings as eagles, they will run and not be weary,
and at the very least, if they cannot soar, if they cannot run, at least
they can walk and not faint.7 There is a great temptation at this
particular moment in American and world history to fall into what someone
has called functional atheism, that is the temptation to believe
that there is no power in the world besides our own.8
The other day, I ran into a friend who is a psychologist. She said that
several of her patients had made emergency appointments last week. Two were
mothers of young children who had dutifully made their trip to the hardware
store to lay in supplies but it hadnt seemed to help. What do
Ido? she wanted to know. I wish that the young mother had asked me.
I would have suggested that she pray with her family. Turn off the answering
machine. Turn off the Internet. Sit at the table. Hold hands. Place the
little community that is your family in the great and trustworthy hands
of God.
What was it that Tom Ridge said a few days ago? Be in touch with your family
and establish an emergency plan you hope you will never have to use? I think
that you ought to establish an emergency plan and put the plan into action
today. Get up early in the morning and pray together. Clear the dishes early
in the evening and pray together.
What should you pray? Pray the Lords Prayer: Thy kingdom come.
. . . Deliver us from evil. For thine is the power and the glory.
Read the great strong words of the Twenty-Third Psalm: I will fear
no evil, for thou art with me.
Be still and know that I am God. (Psalm 46)
God takes pleasure not in the speed of the runner, . . . but in those
who trust in Gods steadfast love. (Psalm 147:10-11)
A few years ago, I took my harried, busy pastor self to the island of Iona,
just off the coast of Scotland. I had been told that eagles often fly over
Iona, and so I recited to myself the verse, They will mount up with
wings as eagles. I looked for eagles but only sparrows and blackbirds
appeared. But my, how they flew, flapping and trying with all their might
when it was needful and also having the good sense to ride the currents
of the air when they could.
Here is what I would say to you today: Gods grace is the air that
holds you up. Gods strength lies deep within you. May Gods peace
fill your spirit today and in all the days ahead. That is my prayer for
you and for our nation and for our troubled world. Amen.
Notes
1. Paraphrase of Ted Loders I Need to Breathe Deeply,
Guerrillas of Grace (1984),
p. 22.
2. Adam Gopnik, Bumping into Charlie Ravioli, The New Yorker,
September 2002,
pp. 80-84.
3. Ibid.
4. Ibid.
5. Ibid.
6. Rowan Williams, quoted in Context, 15 November 2002.
7. John Claypool, Tracks of a Fellow Struggler (Word Books, 1974), p. 55.
8. Parker Palmer, Leading from Within (Servant Leadership School), p. 16.
Prayers of the People
By John A. Cairns, Dean, Academy for Faith and Life
Ever-present God, this is a time we have yearned for, a time we have known
for days that we needed. Our hearts and lives are full to overflowing with
thoughts and concerns, which we need to offer up to you: thoughts of gratitude
that we can know your love for us and concerns that each day presents too
much for us to bear by ourselves. O God, we feel weak and inadequate in
the face of situations where your goodness seems absent, where your love
has become invisible, where we cannot see any evidence of your presence.
We bring before you this morning the multiple tragedies of the fast-paced,
self-centered lives we lead. We seek your healing touch for those who bear
the marks of someone elses lack of caring. We seek your grace and
forgiveness in those relationships that currently produce nothing but hatred
and pain. We seek your power to keep ourselves and our neighbors away from
the ingredients of personal destruction that are so prevalent and so powerful
in our society. May our families again become a strong source of caring.
May we willingly undertake our role as mentors for those who are growing
up in the midst of our community. May we each find someone to help, to hold,
to heal; some way to chase away the horror and honor the image of God imbedded
in every person we see.
God of all the worlds that are, we can hardly stand to dwell on what is
happening to this world, this part of your creation. Whole nations of people
have been killed or scattered or starved or enslaved, and no one seems to
notice. Open our eyes, we pray.
Pride and greed have become the shaping factors in our international relations.
We stare at each other, refusing to listen, waiting to see who will blink
first. Open our ears, we pray.
People are becoming objects to be used and discarded without ever being
called by name, all because we are told its in the national interest.
Open our hearts, we pray. Awaken us to your call for justice and righteousness.
Embolden us so that the faith to which we give lip service on Sunday might
shape our opinions and interactions on Monday and Tuesday. Give us the courage
of our convictions so that we can stand up and make a difference on Wednesday
and Thursday. Enable each of us to run and not be weary, so that your will
might be done even on Friday and Saturday. For we pray in the name of the
one who calls us all to a ministry of healing and reconciliation, even Jesus
Christ, who taught us when we pray together to say, Our Father . . .