'We must love the age we live in... the best age for each of us is the one God has placed us in.'
Super local food at Sharrow Marrow greengrocers
- Jean Leclerq
Many of us these days
seem to carry a feeling of dread just beneath the surface, that we
are usually unwilling to face or talk about. In this year's Salter Lecture at Yearly Meeting, speaker Ed Mayo referred to it as 'a
spirit of great sorrow on the edge of our every conversation about
the future.'
It is hard to love an
age of broken ecosystems and runaway climate change. We all face the
temptation to despair or to bury our fear under denial or continual
distraction. The ecological destruction wreaked by industrial
civilisation is a long-term predicament that we, and our children,
are going to have to live through whatever happens; but we do have a
choice about the way we live through it.
As Quakers in Britain,
we have committed ourselves to become a 'low carbon, sustainable community'. This is not just a matter of using less paper or turning
the lights off. As I understand it, this is a commitment to a process
of learning new patterns of work, consumption, culture and
spirituality that are in balance with the living systems that
sustain us. This doesn't just call for one type of person or one set
of abilities. We don't all have to try to do everything, because we
are in community together, where we can benefit from each others'
varied abilities. We need people with a passion for gardening as well
as political activists. We need Friends who can share their
understanding of nature with children, and craftspeople who can teach
those of us who have never learned the practical skills of making and
repairing. We need Friends with business experience to build local
enterprises that focus on serving their communities. Above all, we
need everything that helps us to reduce our reliance on impersonal,
unaccountable institutions; that grows our capacity to support each
other and meet our real needs in locally accountable and ecologically
responsible ways.
As elders of Sheffield
Quaker Meeting, we have been discussing how to enable conversations
about our commitment to become a sustainable, low carbon community
that don't spiral into guilt and despair over all the ways that we
are failing to live sustainably. Guilt and despair won't help us.
We need to encourage
each other to focus on the gifts that each of us has, and what all of
these can contribute towards a vision for our Quaker community that
is built up from our personal gifts and passions, in all their
variety. Each of us has something to offer to the world as it is,
with all its brokenness. Each of us needs to seek and to follow our
own leadings in order to respond to the needs of our time, to learn
to love the age we have been born into.
Simply, "Love Not The World" for "the WHOLE (not just a portion) world is under the control of the evil one"! (I John 2:25-17; 5:19)
ReplyDeleteAs for "Pure Religion and Undefiled"!
There is but One "Pure Religion and Undefiled"....... (James 1:27)
http://asimpleandspirituallife.blogspot.com/2008/10/pure-and-undefiled-religion.html
Simply, ALL other religion IS "IMPURE AND DEFILED!
Thankfully Peace IS! in spite of the dis-ease(no-peace) that is of this world and religion....... francis