May 2008 From the Pastor's Pen

 

“It’s not that easy being green . . .”

 

I don’t really know why, but the word that has been on my mind as I’ve thought about this newsletter article has been “green.”  Now, I can just hear all the Michigan State fans in the congregation getting excited.  Sorry, but that’s not what I mean.  (This time!)

 

There are so many “shades” of meaning associated with green:  caring for the earth is the green revolution; we get nostalgic for “the green, green grass of home”; jealousy is called the “green-eyed monster,” or we are green with envy; or if we’re not feeling well we might be “green around the gills.”  We’re proud of our beautiful “church with the green roof,” and when we describe First Church’s building that way, people know which church we mean.  And yes, Spartan fans love to show their true and loyal green hearts!  There are many more ideas, positive and negative, that green can stand for.

 

In the gospel of Mark, the story is told of Jesus multiplying the loaves and fish into a meal for a crowd of five thousand or more.  (Actually, as you may have heard me say before, this story is told by all four gospel writers, even by two of them on two separate occasions in Jesus’ ministry.)  But the way Mark tells the story is unique.  Jesus saw the hungry crowd, and “had compassion on them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd.”  Before the miraculous meal, Jesus tells the crowd to sit down in groups on the green grass.  Mark is the only gospel writer to add that detail.  One small word makes all the difference. 

 

Scholars wonder, of course, why Mark did that.  Maybe to show everyone he was an eyewitness?  To indicate what time of year the miracle took place?  Many believe that it was to evoke his readers’ memory back to the 23rd Psalm:  “the LORD is my shepherd . . .  he makes me lie down in green pastures . . .”  Jesus’ care for the people is like that of God, the good shepherd.  Whatever the reason Mark uses the word, I’m grateful for that little piece of visual detail.

 

As I was driving to worship last Sunday, I noticed how suddenly green the fields and trees are.  The sun was shining, and the green was vibrant.  I usually prefer the full, rich green of early summer, what I call “June green,” but this spring I’m quite attracted to that newer, earlier green.  The green we see right now is not about completion; it hasn’t already arrived, but is a green that is in process, some thing that is happening all around us.  Our very long winter seems finally past, and the world is coming to life again.  New life, the growing season, is there to be seen and enjoyed, and we can’t help but be caught up in it.  The green reminds us of the refreshment of the earth and offers us a breath of that newness, not just as a poetic idea, but literally as the plants release oxygen into the air.  Green is about a new start, growing life, refreshment of the earth and perhaps even of the human spirit.

 

One of the books in Michael’s and my shared pastoral library is a book of sermons by Bishop Roy Nichols, entitled The Greening of the Gospel.   Now, here’s the bad part:  I couldn’t lay hands on it when I looked for it; I don’t remember what was in it; I’m not even sure I ever read it.  Michael laughed when I asked him about it, because I admitted that it was really just the title that I remembered.  But it’s a great title!  To me, what it says is that the gospel, the story of Jesus and how he reveals God to us, grows in us through our lives and in the different seasons of our lives.  The “greening” of the gospel is how it takes hold of us, grows in us, changes in us, and in turn helps us grow toward God.  Like the greening of the spring, whether it comes suddenly or gradually, the greening of the gospel does come in due time.  When we hear and read and study it, the gospel takes root in us and grows in us.  The gospel grows in us as surely, and as eventually, as spring comes.

 

Kermit the Frog used to sing “It’s not that easy being green.”  It wasn’t just a silly song on a children’s show.  Ray Charles recorded it later, and something in that voice of his made the song so poignant and touching, it could bring tears to one’s eyes.

 

        It's not that easy being green
        Having to spend each day the color of the leaves . . . 
 
        It's not easy being green
        It seems you blend in with so many other ordinary things
        And people tend to pass you over 'cause you're
        Not standing out like flashy sparkles in the water
        Or stars in the sky
 
        But green's the color of Spring . .  .
        And green can be big like an ocean, or important
        Like a mountain, or tall like a tree . . .  
 
        When green is all there is to be
        It could make you wonder why, but why wonder why
        Wonder, I am green and it'll do fine, it's beautiful
        And I think it's what I want to be

 

I think it’s what I want to be, too.  Not green like Kermit, but green, growing into who God calls me to be.  Greening and becoming more like Christ.

 

I hope for green things for First Church also.  I hope we will continue to grow in our shared and individual spiritual life; in the health of the congregation; in wisdom; in grace; in the love of God and neighbor; and in number and vitality.

Hoping green for you, I am

 

On the Journey with you,

 

 


e-mail Pastor Baker-Streevy


 Previous messages from our Pastor | FUMC Home  | Music  | History  | Staff |