Every Moment Holy
Diana Butler Bass wrote recently about pandemic trauma, the dislocations we have all experienced in the past 15 months. We've been dislocated in four major ways:
1) Temporal dislocation
We’ve lost our sense of time as it existed before the pandemic. How often have you thought: What day is this? What time is it? Did I miss an event? What month is it? That’s temporal dislocation.
2) Historical dislocation
We’ve lost our sense of where we are in the larger story of both our own lives and our communal stories. History has been disrupted. Where are we? Where are we going? The growth of conspiracy theories, the intensity of social media, political and religious “deconstructions” – these are signs of a culture seeking a meaningful story to frame their lives because older stories have failed. That’s historical dislocation.
3) Physical dislocation
We’ve lost our sense of embodiment with others and geographical location. For millions, technology has moved “physicality” into cyber-space and most of us have no idea what to do with this virtual sense of location. Without our familiar sense of being bodily in specific spaces, things like gardening, baking, sewing, and painting have emerged as ways of feeling the ground and the work of our hands. We’ve striven to maintain some sort of embodiment even amid isolation. But the disconnection between our bodies, places, and other bodies has been profound. That’s physical dislocation.
4) Relational dislocation
We’ve lost our daily habits of interactions with other humans, the expression of emotions together in community. Have you worried you won’t know how to respond when you can be with your friends without distance, with no masks? How it will feel to be in large groups again? How will work or school feel back in person, with others at the next desk or waiting on customers face-to-face, or in the first in-person meeting? What happens when the plexiglass comes down, the mask is off? That’s relational dislocation.
As we begin to regather, we've been praying that engaging in the spiritual practice of focusing on "Every Moment Holy", noticing and attending to God together in our everyday lives might help us reorient and rejoin each other in the months to come. There are some wonderful liturgies written to help us with this communal practice and each week's sermon will focus on one aspect of paying attention to God in all things.
Take a breath. Settle in. Spirit of the Living God, fall afresh on us and help us to see Jesus.
Grace and peace,
Anita Sorenson
Pastor for Spiritual Formation