Congregational Church of Pinehurst

United Church of Christ

September 28, 2014

ORD26A

1 Kings 19:9-13

Psalm 139:1-12

Acts17:22-28a

A Reverent Humming

Om……Omain…….Amen……Ahmeen(chanting)

Many of the world’s great religions,

Hinduism, Judaism, Christianity and Islam

say and chant and sing these words that many believe

havecommon linguistic roots.

And there is a humming sound to these particular words

thatseems to lend a mysterious, ethereal quality

to their use.

In Hinduism it is even suggested that this humming sound

is the sound of the vital Energy that gives the earth life.

The very sound of God.

I have two female friends, Judy and Carmen,

who you may know as well from their work in our community.

Years ago,they wanted to solemnize

the loving, committed relationship that they shared

in the presence of friends.

This was decades before same-gender marriage

was legal anywhere in the United States,

much less in NC,

where it still remainsunjustly illegal.

So as they told friends and family about this covenant relationship

that they desired to lovingly enter,

they frequently got the question,

“Since it’s not a legal marriage,

what will you call it?”

On one such occasion one of them,

and they can’t remember which,

scratched her chin and replied, “Hmmmmmm.”

And that’s where they got the idea to call the ceremony

a “Hmmmming”, a “Hummmming”, a “Humming”.

And that’s what was on the invitation.

You’re invited to celebrate Carmen and Judy’s Humming.

And that’s what was on the invitation that Greg and I received

a couple of years ago,

to celebrate the 25th anniversary

of Carmen and Judy’s Humming.

And what a delightful celebration it was!

And personally, as I’ve thought about it since then,

I wish that’s what we called

all covenant marriage relationships in the church.

It would distinguish those relationships from the legal ones

designated by the government.

And more importantly,

it seems to more accurately capture

the very nature of this intimate relationship

between two loving people.

It is an acknowledgement of the vital, humming energy of love

that has come to vibrate between two people---

an energy that you can almost feel and hear,

like the humming of the energy of electricity

across a telephone wire.

Which brings me, believe it or not, to Jane Fonda.

Yes, you heard me, Jane Fonda.

Several years ago in an interview Fonda gave

to Rolling Stone magazine the interviewer said to her:

Your most recent---and perhaps most dramatic---

transformation is your becoming a Christian. Even

withyour flair for controversy, that’s pretty explosive.

The reporter’s statement seemed to imply an underlying question.

Why would any modern, thinking person become a Christian?

Much less a person

as seemingly free from cultural convention

as Jane Fonda.

In her response,

Fonda spoke of being drawn to faith because

“I could feel reverence humming in me.”

I could feel reverence humming in me.*

The power of Fonda’s response for me

is that it speaks to an awareness that is deeper and beyond

so much of the God-talk that happens in the church

and in our larger so-called “Christian” culture.

It seems to me that so many people who have left the church,

or are teetering on the edge of doing so,

make that decision based on a rejection,

not of God, but of a certain concept of God.

Many folks these days, myself included,

can no longer embrace the theistic God

who lives isolated in the sky,

is described as exclusively male,

and who, peering down from his heavenly throne,

decidesfrom time to time to intervene,

here and there,

in the lives of mere mortals.

This God also tends to be judgmental,

demanding perfection or right belief or both

from his constituents,

and enforces his demands

through a system of reward and punishment,

culminating in an eternity in heaven or hell.

This deity also has a tribal quality about him,

preferring one group of humanity to another.

When we glibly say “God Bless America”,

or implicitly require our presidents

toalways end their speeches with such a phrase

lest he or she be considered unpatriotic,

we can be sure that a tribal God has snuck into the room.

It’s no wonder then,

that many people have come to reject this God

to whom we can pray to find us a parking space,

or to become wealthy.

A God who loves our tribe,

but punishes other tribes

with AIDS or typhoons

for their disobedience.

Many of us have come to the conclusion that

to believe in this God requires us to ignore science,

and critical thinking,

and cultural conditioning,

not to mention our own experience.

And even worse,

to believe in this God requires us to set aside

our own best loving instincts.

Even Jesus, who on our best days we understand

as God’s deepest love embodied in human flesh,

oftengets turned into an instrument of punishment

for those who do not believe.

So it’s no wonder that many of us are asking the question,

“Is this really God, or is this our idea of God?”----

our version of a powerful person “writ large”.

Is there a way to embrace the felt sense

that there is MORE to life

than meets the eye,

without that MORE

being a tribal God of rewards and punishments,

who is more concerned about a future judgment

than a present love?

And that is when I return to a reverent humming.

It may not be the understanding of God

that has been most embraced in Christian history,

but it is one that has consistently been there nevertheless.

And our ancient sacred stories

attempt to speak of that sense of a loving MORE.

When the prophet Elijah was literally running for his life,

taking refuge in a mountain cave,

he experienced a divine visitation---

not in the shock and awe of a violent wind,

or a fear-inducing earthquake,

but rather in the sound of silence,

in which the reverent humming stood a chance to be heard.

The Psalmist speaks eloquently of an eternal Spirit

embedded in the fabric of the universe

from whose presence it is impossible to flee.

A Spirit Presence found in the day and the night,

the heights of heaven and the depths of underworld,

and to the ends of the earth.

A Spirit Presence that is at our beginnings within the womb,

at all the endings we encounter on this journey,

as we areheld by this effusive Energy of Life

through it all.

And in the stories of the early church,

as told in the book of Acts,

we are given a sermon from the Apostle Paul

in which he describes God

as that One “in which we live and move and have our being”.

These ever-Present images of God

sound very different to me from the tribal sky God images

that have pervaded so much of our understanding.

It is an intimate image of God

as the Holy indwelling of life and love

deep within every single human being,

regardless of whether or not they are in our tribe.

It is an image of God

infused within the very fabric of all creation---

a God who does not have to be called upon to intervene,

but rather who is always there,

as close as our breathing,

moving the energies of love and life and healing forward.

And so perhaps our relationship with this God

is not so much a relationship of asking this God to do things,

for us and for others,

as it is a relationship in which we seek to align ourselves

with the movement of God’s life-giving energy

already at work in our lives

andin the life of the world.

And if this reverent humming---this God presence---

is native to us all,

then we can no longer put people into categories

of those on the inside and those on the outside,

or those who have something to offer the world,

and those who do not---

those who are the givers and those who are the takers.

For I believe it is precisely this radical notion

of the pervasive presence of God

that Jesus gave his life for.

It was his insistence on eating

with so-called outcasts and sinners

thateventually got him killed.

It was his rejection of a distant tribal God

and his embrace of an intimate loving God

that sealed his fate---

a God that he felt and heard humming

in his time alone in prayer,

and humming in every single person he met,

and humming in the works of love and justice

toward the “kindom come”.

What might the world be like if we did less talking toGod,

anddid more listening for the reverent humming---

listening for the reverent humming

that sings within you and within me,

and within the life of all creation.

All glory be to the Divine Hummer!

Aaaaammmmmeeeeennnnn! (chant with resonance)

Rev. Brent A. Bissette

*Taken from What We Talk About When We Talk About God

by Rob Bell, HarperOne, 2013, pp. 9-10. Bell has an entire

chapter devoted to God as a reverent humming, which has

inspired what I have written here.

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