The Main Stage |
We left the Wild Goose Festival on
Sunday, a three day festival of “justice, spirituality, and music,” to which I
would add mud, tattoos, and progressive evangelicals. I’m not sure how many hundreds of people were
there, but it’s kind of a pop-up Christian community of campers, speakers, and
musicians for a weekend. We went last year, too, when there were bigger names;
Krista Tippett from NPR interviewed a bunch of the presenters, and it felt like
there was a certain imperative to listen to people who had written Big Books—James
Alison, Brian McLaren, Phyllis Tickle—on the big stage when I had the chance. Vincent Harding ,
who died in May, was there last year,
too, and I do feel grateful to have heard him.
But the best talks we went to were the smaller-tent ones, where you
actually had more of a conversation, and not someone far away giving a faster,
less nuanced version of their latest book.
So I went in with that in mind, as well as with a considerably better
frame of mind, given that our last foray into the mountains and wild woods of
Western North Carolina left us with a long trip with a tow truck and some
pretty scary driving (including the falling-off of our tent trailer in a
lovely clearing at Wolf Creek Falls in the Cherokee National Forest).
The Big Top |
I remember reading in college about the post medieval French
charivari in Natalie Zemon-Davis’
work, the intentional upside-down celebration where the poor became rich and the rich became poor, if only for a day. It served as an escape valve; if you let those on the bottom feel like they’re on top for just a day or two, how much easier it is to keep them on the bottom for the rest of the year (There is certainly some good economic analysis to be done here when it comes to contemporary American politics, too—but that is for another time).
work, the intentional upside-down celebration where the poor became rich and the rich became poor, if only for a day. It served as an escape valve; if you let those on the bottom feel like they’re on top for just a day or two, how much easier it is to keep them on the bottom for the rest of the year (There is certainly some good economic analysis to be done here when it comes to contemporary American politics, too—but that is for another time).
This carnival was more in line with what has long attracted
me about poetry, and what I was longing after in my writing sabbatical in 2012.
Poetry isn’t for anything, in the
same way that the guy wearing a fake nose and horns on his forehead and a skirt
wasn’t dressed up in that way to accomplish
anything. Instead, carnival is about
hope and imagination; to shock us out of the compulsion of
the ordinary, even if just for a minute.
From their welcome sign (see below for full text):
We wish with our bodies to contradict claims that civilization has made about how necessary its gifts are to a life well lived and again to playfully produce, if not proof, some early evidence that a life of another stripe might be realistic, even necessary.
From their welcome sign (see below for full text):
We wish with our bodies to contradict claims that civilization has made about how necessary its gifts are to a life well lived and again to playfully produce, if not proof, some early evidence that a life of another stripe might be realistic, even necessary.
Life of another stripe might be realistic, even necessary.
So under the carnival tent were wonder- workers of knowledge
and activism—working repentance and newness and thought in oppressed
communities of inner city Detroit, First Nations people of Canada, and all over
the globe, in and through our earth as it suffers as well. The carnival space felt liturgical. At the end of one session we wandered into,
we were invited to greet each other with this: “We are here! We are here!”
which would not have been out of place (maybe without the puppets and face
paint) in my own parish community as we pass the peace on Sunday mornings.
We are here! This is the human interaction that says, “I see
you, and yes, we are here. We have
been created for more than buying and selling. We have been created to see each
other.” We are here! We see each
other! We remember! We remember, not just each other, but everyone. Poor people in Detroit whose water is getting
shut off. New immigrants, whether or not they have the correct paperwork. People you disagree with. Women who have lost
their right to their full health care benefits (thanks, Hobby Lobby and Supremes). We are all here. God made me. God made you. Before we’re supposed to “witness”
God’s love to each other, God invites
us to witness the Other in the first place, see each other at all. Jim Perkinson pointed out that the beginning
of the Gospel—the beginning of the Gospel, that we so often remind ourselves is
“good news”—is the voice of one crying out in the wilderness. The cry is the
beginning.
Carnival is unsettling in all the right ways—there are more
questions than I can name. How am I
living Christian values of giving up power—having economic power as part of the
middle class, having white privilege in this bruised, bruising, and racist
country, having the privilege of a position of, if not power, at least comfort
in the (institutional) Episcopal Church. One of the Big Names of the weekend
was Jim Wallis, talking about racism as America’s original sin—I did leave the
carnival tent for that.
I love so much about my life, but my life is, objectively, not that hard. I love parish ministry, I love sharing sacraments, I love being
a parent. But it’s also true that I’m a parish minister in a place
with an endowment. My kids always have enough to eat. There are certain
comforts that make it easier for me to love what I do.
What was great about the Carnival tent, though,
was the shimmering, holy joy of finding a way to live differently: the bean bag
toss game “Cleanse the Temple” to remind us of Jesus’ invitation to faith
without commerce, the puppets, the parades, the anti-clock tower. As Ghandi
used to say, “Renounce and enjoy!”
I imagine—I hope!—I will spend some more time thinking about
this. One of the talks I went to was
called “Slow Church,”
about how freaking long it takes to
establish yourself in a community and to listen to what the community needs, to
respond authentically to those who are there and where God might be leading.
Heading into my tenth year as rector of Christ Church Waltham, I look forward
to some slow reflection, and pray for the patience to sit still for it as well
as in thanksgiving for the conversation partners traveling there.
...[more great Goose times were had learning music with Ana Hernandez, a rousing altar-call to social justice sermon by the Rev. William Barber, catching up with friends, and splashing in all the mud puddles (it rained all weekend)... but I have to stop writing at some point.]
3 comments:
Thank you for this beautiful reflection! You got it sister!
life of another stripe, alive and well, whether under the tent of the carnival, or the tent in the wilderness. Thanks, Sarah, for these great words.
Regards,
Todd Wynward, the guy in the horns and the skirt
Taos, NM
Beautiful recollections!
life of another stripe, alive and well, whether under the tent of the carnival, or the tent in the wilderness. Thanks, Sarah, for these great words.
Regards,
Todd Wynward, the guy in the horns and the skirt
Taos, NM
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