CALL TO WORSHIP FROM NATIVE AMERICAN TRADITION
(FACE EAST)
L: From the East, the
direction of the rising sun, we receive peace and light and wisdom and
knowledge,
P: We are grateful
for these gifts, O God,
(FACE SOUTH)
L: From the South comes warmth, guidance, and the beginning
and the end of life,
P: We are grateful
for these gifts, O God,
(FACE WEST)
L: From the West
comes the rain, purifying waters, to sustain all living things,
P: We are grateful
for these gifts, O God,
(FACE NORTH)
L: From the North
comes the cold and mighty wind, the white snows, giving us strength and
endurance,
P: We are grateful
for these gifts, O God,
(FACE UPWARD)
L: From the heavens
we receive darkness and light, the air of Your breath, and messages from Your
winged creatures,
P: We are grateful
for these gifts, O God,
(FACE DOWNWARD)
L: From the earth we
come, and to earth we will return,
P: We are grateful
for Your creation Mother Earth, O God,
ALL: May we
walk good paths, O God, living on this earth as sisters and brothers should,
rejoicing in one another’s blessing, sympathizing in one another’s sorrows, and
together with You renewing the face of the earth. Amen.
In this call to worship which we used at Oakhurst, I am
reminded of how far ahead Native Americans have been of Anglos and others in
regard to environmental issues. One of
the early Anglo arguments to justify the taking of land and life from Native
Americans was that they let the land lie fallow and refused to develop it. The rapacious and unchecked capitalist
spirit ran over everything, including the people who lived on the land. That spirit obviously continues and seeks to
strengthen its destructive ways.
Developers in metro Atlanta destroy 50 acres of trees a day in our
stunning destruction of the earth in order to get money. As we watch the environment make a huge
pivot in response to our Western-driven desire for more and more stuff, we can
hear the echoes and the current calls for re-orientation and change in Native
American life. There is little doubt,
except among those like Roy Moore and his ilk, that unless we change and
re-orient our relationship to the earth and the environment, we will all choke
and drink and eat and smash ourselves to death. Many scientists and educated observers
believe that it may be too late already.
Would that we had listened, or even now would listen, to a different
cultural point of view! No romantic,
guilt-driven acknowledgment of Native American life, but rather a sense of a
life-saving orientation toward humanity and toward the earth and its creatures.
In his
“Notes on the State of Virginia,” written in 1785, Thomas Jefferson ruminates
on whether other cultures really have equal humanity to that of Anglos. Not surprisingly, he does not think so. He is fairly certain that those of African
descent will never be human beings equal to Anglos, but he wonders a bit about
the equality of Native Americans. He
does not believe that those who were here when the Europeans came are currently
equal to the Anglos, but he opines that he does not yet have enough scientific
evidence either way to say whether they ever would be. That sense of entitlement, that sense of the
ownership of equality has plagued all of us for so many centuries in the
colonizing of peoples and lands by Europeans and in the struggles of the
American experiment. Perhaps it is time
to recognize that if there is some group who is not “equal,” it is the Anglos,
it is those who created “race” and used that idea to do all sorts of terrible
things to those who were deemed outside of the circle of humanity.
So, let us all consider these proverbs from the Native
American tradition, as we gather for Thanksgiving this week.
“When all the trees have been cut down,
when all the animals have been hunted,
when all the waters are polluted,
when all the air is unsafe to breathe,
only then will you discover you cannot eat money.”
—Cree Prophecy
when all the animals have been hunted,
when all the waters are polluted,
when all the air is unsafe to breathe,
only then will you discover you cannot eat money.”
—Cree Prophecy
“Treat the earth well: it was not given
to you by your parents, it was
loaned to you by your children. We do not inherit the Earth from our
Ancestors, we borrow it from our Children.”
loaned to you by your children. We do not inherit the Earth from our
Ancestors, we borrow it from our Children.”
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