The Scripture Readings this week are:
- Genesis 2:4-6, 10-14
- Ezekiel 47:1-12
- Revelation 22:1-2
The Sermon title is Water of Creation, Water of Life
Where the River Goes
Early Thoughts: Where there is water there is life.
Many of the world's cities are established near bodies of fresh water, even coastal cities are often along a river heading out to the sea. If you were establishing a settlement out in a dry area one of the first tasks would be to dig a well or some other reliable source of water. All land animals need to have access to water if they are to survive. And then the bodies of water themselves are teeming with life, from micro-organisms to complex animals and plants.
Where there is water there is life.
Our faith story knows this to be true. The beginning of creation (according to Genesis 2) is the rising of a stream that would water the ground. In our other creation story (Genesis 1) water is present from the beginning and land is created from it -- interestingly many North American Indigenous stories of creation also have water at the beginning with land coming out of it, often on the back of a giant turtle.
Where there is water there is life.
All three of our passages this week remind us of this basic fact. All three talk about the river of life. So do our hymns for this Sunday. As we consider how humanity is going to share this earth with the rest of God's creation we must give consideration to water.
How do we take water for granted? How do we give it honour? How do we care for the river(s) of life?
Some predict that access to water is going to be (or is already becoming) a key issue in international relations. Remember Donald Trump ranting about the big tap that Canada could turn and send water down to the US instead of 'wastefully' letting it flow into the Pacific? (Just to be clear there is no such tap and watersheds are complex things). As we move forward into a changing climate, where precipitation patterns are already changing, how do we support the river of life -- or at least get out of the way so it can thrive?
Life, we have long been told, first came out of the water. Both faith and science say this is so. Clean fresh water is mandatory for most plants and animals to exist (some actually live better in brackish water).As part of God's Creation, as people who claim to be called to "live with respect in Creation " (as A New Creed has said for 30 year), what is our duty to the water of life?
--Gord
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