On the screen, the decaying bodies rise from their graves and move inexorably forward in a shuffling parody of human walking. The plucky heroes and heroines run to hiding places, but can never shake the tide of zombies following them. What’s tips them off? Sound? Smell? Something about truly live humans draws these “walking dead” to their hiding places with unerring accuracy.
Saturday, October 31, 2020
Zombies at the Resurrection? (a Steve Orr scripture reflection)
Saturday, October 24, 2020
There Can Be Only One (a Steve Orr scripture reflection)
My title is the catch phrase from The Highlander movies and TV shows. And, while that may be true for sword wielding immortals, I can’t say the same for my favorites. I’m always stuck when I’m asked to name “my favorite” one anything.
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Different versions of this reflection appeared in prior years as My Favorites and These Are A Few of My Favorite Things.
Friday, October 16, 2020
My Kelli 05 Mug (a Steve Orr scripture reflection)
I have this beautiful, handcrafted coffee mug. It’s rounded, with wheat stalks etched into one side. There’s a tan glaze all around the outside, giving it a kind of leather look. Blue glazing — that dark blue of sunset— circles the lip and coats the inside. My mug is special for another reason, too: because of the way it’s made, there’s no other mug like it.
Friday, October 9, 2020
Driving on the Ocean Floor (a Steve Orr scripture reflection)
Technically it’s a seabed. To the casual observer, what I know to be a seabed would appear to be desert valleys surrounded by mountains. My eyes show breathtaking mountain views, sculpted cliff-sides, and high, jagged peaks ... and a paved highway winding its way through the connecting valleys. All around me are the signs of desert life: cacti, scrub, juniper, dry ground, and dry air.
Turn back the clock ~265 million years and the very place I am driving is far beneath the waves of the Permian Sea. On the one hand, I’m driving on dry land. But on the other hand, I am simultaneously driving on the bed of the Permian Sea. It can be a bit disorienting to juggle these two thoughts.
I can’t help but wonder if this kind of confusion might account for the behavior of God’s chosen people. God told the Israelites He would deliver them from Pharaoh, would "go before" them, would provide for their needs, would "drive out" the peoples living in the Promised Land so the Children of Israel could then occupy it ... Plan A, if you will.
Jacob's descendants kept insisting they knew better than God; their Plan B. They kept returning to the worship of the Egyptian gods. They fought battles to take the Promised Land. They wanted a king of their own (See the Exodus 32 and Psalm 106 passages).
So, God kept reminding them that it was He who brought them out of Egypt. God reminded them that He would provide for them. God used miracles to do so.
And yet, year by year, they moved further and further away, while God kept trying to keep their hearts pointed at Him. When they went to battle without His approval, they lost. When their King disobeyed, God replaced that king with His own choice. Even God's prophets kept reminding them of Plan A: trust God for your needs and trust Him to handle your enemies.
God can see it all. God understands, fully. And God asks us to trust him when it comes to facts not presently in evidence. This week’s scriptures revolve around this idea of trusting God, depending on God’s promises, having faith that what God has told us is the truth (see the Isaiah passage).
Jesus and those he sent keep pointing us back to God's Plan A: love your enemies and pray for them, trust God with your concerns (See the Philippians passage). Instead of filling our minds with things like revenge, He points us to the best thoughts; the kinds of thoughts we can think all day every day ... if we're not busy planning the downfall of our enemies!
For some reason, though, we humans keep insisting there must be a Plan B ... the plan we come up with that is not God's plan. Why do we do that?
If we’re driving through the Big Bend, what we see is mountains, valleys, cacti, scrub brush, and desert life. But, if we’re willing to allow a different perspective —to believe what we’ve been told— we can also see something from a different time: an ocean teeming with aquatic life.
God has a better perspective from which to “see” all that is true and real, much of which we cannot perceive. And so, God asks us to trust in His plan, to believe what we’ve been told, to stop trying to live our own "Plan B."
We, too, can choose to follow Plan A.
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PHOTO: Steve Orr (the Big Bend near Fort Davis, Texas)
Different versions of this reflection appeared in prior years as There is no Plan B (2017) and Plan A (2014).
Info about the Permian Sea: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/when-texas-was-bottom-sea-180953653/
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We again gather (via Zoom) for DaySpring’s Lectionary Breakfast on Friday morning. Join us at 8:00 a.m. for Bible, prayer, discussion, and laughter.
Let me know if you plan to attend so I can send you the Zoom link and alert our Zoom gatekeeper to let you in.
Enjoy the week!
Steve
Friday, October 2, 2020
You know (You Just Don’t Know You Know) (a Steve Orr scripture reflection)
A teenage girl helped revolutionize an industry, and her legacy lives on. You know her. You just don’t know you know.
Margie Belcher wanted, more than anything in the world, to have a career as a dancer. That desire had already driven her to study and perfect her dancing skills from a young age, and she had become quite good by the time she reached her teen years. Eventually, she grew up, married another dancer, and they enjoyed a full life of dancing; on the stage, in films, and they even had their own television show.
But none of that is why I'm convinced you know her.
In the mid-1930's, Walt Disney hired the teenaged Margie to come to his studio and dance for his animators. No one had ever made a full length animated film before it, and even in the short cartoons of the day, no one had gone to such lengths to ensure the animated characters moved like real people. When questioned about how watching her dance helped them complete the cartoon they were working on, Disney declared, quite forcefully, "We are not making a cartoon! We are making art!"
What they were making was the first full-length animated motion picture: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. If you've seen it, you've seen Margie Belcher. When Snow White walks, when she sits or stands, when she dances: that's Margie.
Margie was the motion model for Snow White.
Knowing this story changes how we see that first-ever animated film. From now on, whenever you see Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, or even just a clip of Snow White doing something, you will recall that a teenage girl named Margie —a real girl— is behind every move. Knowing about Margie, though, doesn’t change the film. It changes us.
Real life is like that, too. There are many things we know, but know incompletely. We spend our days seeing, hearing, tasting, touching, smelling. We use our senses to help us understand our experiences. And, most of the time, that's the whole of it. Ever once in a while, though, someone reveals something to us that changes how we think about things.
It’s that way with scripture. We enjoy a certain level of familiarity with scripture. But, the more we read of it, the more we understand. That’s the point of the last half of this week’s Psalm 19. The Psalm assures us that reading scripture provides wisdom (even to those with the greatest need of it), rejoices the heart, enhances understanding, revives the soul.
Spending time in the Bible changes us. It’s like young Margie. Her early dance moves were a bit awkward. But as she continued to revisit them, they became smoother, more natural. The more she did it, the better she got. In time, dance became almost second nature to her. Through persistence, Margie became very good. Then, others noticed and invited her to bring her dancing into their lives.
And that is why we continue to read the Bible. Our persistence in it leads us to pray, “Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable to you, O Lord, my rock and my redeemer.”
You knew that. You just didn’t know you knew.
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PHOTO + More about Margie and Disney: https://diabloballet.org/2012/05/26/how-a-champion-dancer-brought-an-animated-classic-to-life/
A different version of this reflection appeared in September 2015 as You Just Don't Know You Know.
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SCRIPTURES FOR THE COMING WEEK
https://lectionary.library.vanderbilt.edu//texts.php?id=162
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Let me know if you want to join us for DaySpring’s ZOOM Lectionary Breakfast, Friday morning. We still gather at 8:00 a.m. for an hour of revelation, discussion, and, a staple, laughter.
I will need to give your name to our Zoom Host so they can let you through the gateway.
Enjoy the week!
Steve