End of the World

Photo NASA Photo Journal

“People are making jokes

like there’s no tomorrow.”

Coincidentally, this week my students finished their end of the semester theology unit on Eschatology or “last things.” This is the area of theology that considers what happens at the end of the world, at the end of time or at the end of our lives.

Today is proposed by some to be the last day. The reality is that we are always living in end times or the last day. This is because none of us ever knows when our last day will be. Today might actually be my last day. Anything can happen to anyone, and does.

So the question is not, “Is this the last day?” Ask a better question. Ask, “If today is the last day of my life, how would I want to live it?” This question will immediately clarify what is important in your life and where you should strive to spend your time.

At the end of each day reflect back on the day’s events. What if today was the last day of my life, did I spend it the way I would have wanted to? Usually the answer is “yes.” If not – I consider what changes I need to make in my life.

Plan for your future, but live each day as if it were your last. It may be.

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Cinco de Mayo

Cinco de Mayo! While not Mexico’s Day of Independance, it is a day to celebrate Mexican heritage.

Food, of course, comes into play here. Do you like spicy food? We most definitely do. Here’s a picture of the grilled, stuffed, chili rellenos we made.

Take a little time today and explore Mexican culture. Try a Mexican restaurant. Read about Mexican history. Volunteer to teach English as a second language in a Spanish speaking community. Learn Spanish at the same time. Watch a film to learn more about conditions immigrants face, such as Amexicano (play instantly on Netflix). Read my post on Juarez. Visit Ciudad Juarez, Mexico just across the border from El Paso, Texas and stretch out of your comfort zone.

Become aware of the severe poverty in which most of the world lives. Become aware of our role in creating or maintaining that poverty.

Take time to learn about another culture. Remember, to know only one culture is to know no culture at all. We need another culture to compare and contrast our own. That’s how we begin to have enough information to critique our own culture.

This is the reason schools actively promote study abroad programs. Getting students immersed (not just a visit or vacation) in another culture gives them a basis from which to view their own culture. By being present to another way of viewing the world we are transformed. In fact, this is the reason the ability to speak another language is a requirement for most masters and doctoral programs in theology.

Go deeper. Entering into another culture is a way to learn more about others and also more about who we are, why we think the way we do and what impact our own culture has on us. For Catholics this is “mission.”

Go deeper still. Learn about immigration reform. Consider how U.S. farm subsidy policies bankrupt farmers in Mexico and elsewhere, causing them to come north looking for work.

For authentic Chili Rellenos here’s what we did. Roast poblano peppers.

Peel the roasted peppers.

Stuff roasted and peeled peppers with strips of queso cheese.

Dip into egg whites whipped stiff with a bit of flour and fry until golden.

Into 1 cup simmering water whisk 1/2 cup of chili powder until red sauce thickens.

Into cooked rice stir chopped cilantro.

Into cooked black beans add green onion, celery or greens of your choice.

Serve chili rellenos smothered in red sauce along with rice and bean mixture. Add a cold beer with lime if you like.

Enjoy.

Mmmmm

Adios!

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Krista Tippett on Being

Photo R. Meshar

If thoughtful conversations on faith and God interest you, check out Krista Tippett’s show –

Krista Tippett on Being: meaning, religion, ethics and ideas.

Her serious journalism, in-depth interviews and thoughtful shows are available as Podcasts on the website link above. You can watch them at your convenience.

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Only 3.9 Billion Years Left

Photo NASA Photo Journal

As DH wrote in an email to me, “Wrap your brains around THIS ONE from Technology Review.”

Just 3.9 billion years left before time ends? Interesting to think about – and supports the Doctrine of Creation belief that time had a beginning and has a telos, meaning a purpose, goal or endpoint. Time doesn’t go on endlessly.

God or reality has a purpose and a vision in mind – even if it’s not a specific plan because we have free will. Actually all of creation has some degree of free will. This is because God takes a risk in creating and allows creation the freedom to be and to choose. We can observe this because we live in an evolutionary universe.

As theologian and scientist John Haught notes, a self-emptying, self-giving, but infinite God requires that any finite creation of God’s must, therefore, be an evolving one.

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You’re Invited!

The most amazing invitation you can imagine has been offered to each of us.

Transformative healing or wholeness – salvation. This is God’s promise. This is the religious end of Christianity. Its goal or promise is salvation.

What does “salvation” mean? It comes from the same root word as the Latin word salve meaning “to heal” or “to make whole.” Think about a salve you might put on your skin to heal it.

Is salvation heaven? If “heaven” is understood as a place far away, up in the clouds or in another universe elsewhere – then no, salvation is NOT heaven. In the gospels, Jesus’ resurrection breaks into this world. His disciples do not get whisked off to some other universe to encounter him. It is this world that God promises to heal and make right.

Read C. S. Lewis’ The Great Divorce if you think heaven is another place where all our materialistic desires are met. The characters in this story begin their journey in “Grey Town” where they can have anything and everything they desire – and it is most assuredly NOT heaven.

The story of salvation in Judeo-Christian history recounted in the bible is a story of freedom, liberation and healing, as in the story of Exodus, the stories of the exile and return from Babylon and the stories of healing and wholeness Jesus brings.

Likewise the meaning of “resurrection” in the Old Testament refers to the understanding that God will “set things right” in the world. Resurrect meaning “to stand up” to “stand with” and “to stand for.”  In resurrection we will be able to stand up, in right relationship with God, for each other and with the world.

Salvation and resurrection. Both speak of a process that begins now, in this lifetime and continues beyond our death. It requires our acceptance or consent. God/reality will not coerce us.

Salvation and resurrection. Healing and wholeness. Surrender to the process is all that is required.

Your invitation beckons. Will you accept?

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