Photo credit: Michael Piazza |
I spent this past week on the rugged Central Coast of
California, in Monterey. Around 500 UU
ministers gathered there to attend the Institute for Excellence in Ministry, a
week-long program of worship, workshops, and welcome rest. This is the third
Institute I’ve attended and perhaps the best.
While there, in addition to attending the seminar on
Preaching and Worship, facilitated by a friend and former colleague, Rev.
Michael Piazza, now a United Church of Christ minister with the Center for
Progressive Renewal, I also enjoyed the beautiful coast in the free time the conference
planners thoughtfully included. I ran three days along the shore; the ocean’s
crashing waves providing the sound track to my runs, with an occasional descant
belted out by seagulls. There is so much oxygen at sea level, it felt glorious
to run in the warm air; the sea salt mixed with my sweat, stinging my eyes, but
I didn’t care. I just squinted a little and kept on running.
Another wonderful opportunity I had to visit the Butterfly
Pavilion where the Monarch butterflies overwinter. Pacific Grove, where I stayed, is one of a handful of places in
California where the Monarchs migrate as winter approaches. Although the
Monarch butterflies are ubiquitous in the U.S and even as far north as Canada,
they can’t survive the freezing temperatures and so, when the days get shorter
and colder, they migrate. Generally, those east of the Rockies spend the
winters in the high mountains of central Mexico, while those west of the
Rockies come to California’s Central Coast.
It’s an amazing phenomenon in many ways: while traveling to
their winter homes, they can fly as much as 200 miles a day, and take several
months to arrive. Astonishingly, the
life span of the adult Monarch butterfly is only 2-4 weeks, so they live long
enough to mate and lay the eggs for the next generation before dying. Unlike
other migratory animals, then, the Monarch migrates to a sanctuary it has never
seen; in fact several generations of Monarchs have been born as larvae,
transformed into butterflies, and died before the ones I saw ever made to the
safety of the eucalyptus, Monterey pine and Monterey cypress trees that provide
shelter and food.
On my list of things to do before I’m 60, seeing the Monarch
butterflies in their overwintering home was high on the list; imagine my
delight when I discovered their winter habitat was only a mile from the hotel
where I was staying! On our free time on Wednesday, my friend and colleague,
Gretchen Haley, and I hiked to the Pavilion along a green trail with beautiful
trees providing a dramatic, welcoming archway for us. Once there, we discovered
the Pavilion was a simple path, open and free to the public, that wended its
way through trees and bushes and there, halfway down the path, thousands upon
thousands of Monarch butterflies flew in the air above us or clustered on trees
so thickly they looked like a rich harvest of autumn leaves about to be
unleashed upon the earth.
It was a cool, overcast afternoon, and so the monarchs kept
close to the warmth and shelter of the trees but they were still amazing and
marvelous to behold. I thought about their lives, their dedication to living in
what is essentially a perpetual migration, laying eggs, before dying, the eggs
hatching into larvae that become adorable caterpillars before that final
transformation into the regal Monarch butterfly who would continue the cycle
again. And I wondered how it felt, to be a part of the generations that got to
gather together in the thousands, seeing their beauty reflected, as in a
multi-faceted mirror of nature, in the wings and eyes and antennae of their
brothers and sisters. I wondered how it would feel to be the a part of the
generation that leaves, finally, in the
spring, going to far flung places across the nation to share their beauty with
us.
Opening Worship Service at Institute for Excellence in Ministry |
I thought of my own congregation of ministers just a mile
down the road, and how it felt to be a part of the generation that comes
together, that sees the peculiar beauty of what it means to be a minister
reflected in the eyes and faces of my kindred folk who talk in the language of
memorials and budgets, of baby naming and difficult divorces, of shepherding
and exhorting. It underscored for me the
need for ministers to gather as a whole.
This was reflected in the powerful worship sessions where we
ministers could sit in the congregation and be ministered to, rather than have
to be the ones up on the chancel. It
gave ministers who love to sing a chance to join the 100 voice choir, directed
by Jason Shelton, and to blend their voices with others in music that they didn’t
choose, didn’t prepare, and wouldn’t be speaking after. There were chaplains
available to minister to ministers seeking solace, or wisdom, or the presence
we give out so freely in our own home congregations or hospitals or navy
battalions and the scores of other places where we would scatter at the end of
the week, leaving the familiarity and comfort of our shared experience in this
mystical, beautiful place.
This business of perpetual migrating sounds exhausting, but
there is a wholeheartedness in it as the beautiful butterflies do simply what
they are called to do, and don’t worry about the rest. I guess that is where
wholeheartedness is found in ministry-- which can also be an exhausting
undertaking at times—in doing simply what we are called to do, in being in the
moment whether in shared fellowship with other ministers, in our places of
ministry, in our homes with our families, in the migratory rhythms of our
lives.
And perhaps that is what we all need to do: stop seeking an
antidote to exhaustion—whether in the form of more caffeine, or self
medication, or other ways we try to numb ourselves—and instead to seek where we
are called to be, in this moment, in this generation, in this mystery.
3 comments:
Hope you don't mind. Your beautiful post brought to mind a poem in my collection "We Build Temples in the Heart"
Migrations
Later they will come,
the legions of Canada
on the edge of cutting cold,
backs scraping stratus slate,
arrayed in military majesty,
dressed in ranks and counting cadence,
squadron after squadron, an air armada,
single minded in their migratory mission.
But now,
when September sun lingers and
lengthened shadows hint ferocity to come,
the first glints of gold and black flit
with seaming aimlessness,
pushed here and there by the faintest zephyr,
the pioneers of a nation,
descended from Alberta prairies
and Minnesota Lakes.
One will linger
briefly on my shoulder
if I am blessed, then be off again.
Then, if she is lucky
she will pause to rest with
the millions along the bend of the Rio Grande
before finding a winter’s respite of death
amid deep Mexican forests.
And it will turn again next spring—
egg to larva,
larva to silken slumber
pupa to Monarch
Monarch to migration.
Oh ye proud Canada,
mute your boastful blare—
the mighty bow before true courage.
—Patrick Murfin
Thank you for telling some of our beautiful journey!
Patrick-- what a beautiful poem!! Thank you for sharing!
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