Saturday 19 December 2015

On Advent

Are babies born bad? What is original sin? Why does John the Baptist leap in Elizabeth’s womb, welcoming the arrival of his cousin, Jesus? Why will he later say, ‘He must increase, but I must decrease?” What kind of world is this?
            I think ‘original sin’ represents the human capacity to make mistakes, coupled with the likelihood that persons will make them: a potentiality, requiring action before it becomes guilt. Of course, babies are too young to do much wrong. There are myriads of mistakes: simple, complicated, trivial, grave, due often to limitations from outside, maybe not our fault, just our mistake. With consequences, though.
            John Baptist leaps with joy, Elizabeth blesses Mary, John says, ‘I must decrease’: a very strange comment to make. His joy is fulfilled; his message is given; he accomplishes his purpose. They have been waiting for a saviour, to be released in a political sense but also in a spiritual sense. A Prince of Peace. War resulting from, and compounding upon, mistake after mistake at the grave end of the spectrum.
            I like infant baptism, placing a child under the protection of the one who forgives sins, those mistakes made actual with consequences for ourselves and others. At Advent we wait for a Saviour, the shattered fragments of our mistakes fallen over all the world. What kind of world is this?

Sunday 6 December 2015

On Timekeeping

Time, by its nature, cannot be kept, but the observation of its flight is known as timekeeping. A small child interprets the hands of the clock. A twelve-year-old gets a watch for that birthday; a twenty-one-year old a better watch. Some of them flash numbers, a sign of greater accuracy maybe. Carpe diem.
            Time can be kept in music, confining time to beat and measure with stick and metronome. An hourglass times the egg’s boiling; the twenty-four-hour clock lands planes. The watches I’ve owned time years: the one I inherited from my mother, the year overseas, the Roman numerals I bought at the airport to keep me grounded. My watch tells the time when it’s not there. Glance at your wrist where the watch should be and see what happens.
            Physicists find time a real quantity, studied through mathematics. Is it true that Buddhists and Hindus see time as circular, comprising vast ages? Since there are many schools of philosophy, the Dalai Lama says some say past and future are in the mind, others, abstract concepts relative to continuing events.[1] What of the Christian, linear view of time as beginning and ending, a new heaven and a new earth?       
            The present moment exists. Time ‘to cast away the works of darkness’ — a Collect introduced in 1549 — ‘now in the time of this mortal life’ the time to keep time in mind, even if we cannot grasp it.