A short video highlighting various disastrous events such as floods, wildfires, terrorism, famine, earthquakes, and homelessness was played as a start to the evening. It's these kinds of events that lead people to question where God is and the film was set to a very eerie piece of music by Tom Waits entitled "God's Away on Business". By this time we were all beginning to feel the room's sense of Godlessness.
Everyone was then invited to take a closer look at the articles on the floor and to circle the ones that were particularly negative. After this, Psalm 42 was read, which ties in the idea of "thirsting" for God when we experience negative events in our own lives. It also expresses the feeling of abandonment that we sometimes feel from God really well.
The feeling of being alone, that God has left us, led us to an activity. Each person took a rock from the centre of the room and moved it away from the pile to a distance that they personally felt from God. The rocks in the room ended up in many different places, some nearer to the centre, and others at the very edge, each on a personal scale.
We then again reflected on the feeling of drought in our spiritual lives with readings from Peter Rollins' The Prodigal Father as well as The Dark Night of the Soul from the 16th century and The Cloud of Unknowing from the 14th century. This demonstrated that for centuries, people have experienced many of the same emotions and distance from God that we sometimes think of as being unique to modern life.
As a final act, eve
No comments:
Post a Comment