I am writing this on Earth Day 2019.
Few years ago, I would not have noticed this day, or paid any
attention to it, let alone write about it. So much has changed in my
spiritual life that I consider earth day as important as Easter
Sunday, Christmas day and many other religious holy days.
It is not because I am a new age guru,
or a tree-huger or ardent environmentalist, which are usually used
as pejorative terms. But, it is because, I have reflected deeply
about the unfathomable beauty, mystery and magnificence of this
moving, yes, moving blue dot in space which holds me up as God
holds me tenderly in the palm of Her hands.
I have lived on earth 21,170 days and
it has never failed to provide for me: air, water and food, the three
most basic ingredients needed for my very existence. Thank you holy
mother earth. As I walk gently on this holy ground, I join with
prophet Isaiah this morning to say: “The whole earth proclaims the
glory of God.”
Let us take a closer look at our home
planet. We usually experience it as stationary, because that is what
our five senses tell us. But if we could stop for a moment and
reflect, we will realize that we are moving, rather spinning, and
yet staying put...that is a huge mystery worthy of adoration itself.
The earth spins around her axis at the
speed of 1,000 miles an hour at the equator. To spin around once
takes 24 hours. The spinning makes our days and nights. But as we
spin, we are also on another circle journey as we orbit round the
sun. Traveling at the speed of 66,600 miles an hour, this second
journey takes 365 days to complete. In the annual pilgrimage around
the sun, we travel 595 million miles. Such an awareness of distance,
speed and order creates a sense of awe and wonder.
Consider what it must have been like
for astronaut Edgar Mitchell as he gazed down on the home planet and
allowed his feelings to find words: On the return trip home,
gazing 240,000 miles of space towards the stars and the planet from
which I had come, I suddenly experienced the universe as intelligent,
loving and harmonious. My view of the planet was a glimpse of
divinity.
Perhaps what most of us need is a
pilgrimage to outer space, to have our eyes and hearts opened afresh
to see the sacredness behind and above the appearances and to
reawaken that inner light buried beneath our limited ways of
thinking.
It is worthy of note that Mitchell uses
the word 'divinity' but not 'God'. God is a divisive term for many.
Religions people fight over their own definitions of God and make
declarations like, “My God is bigger than your God.” But, if we
can speak of divinity it has an an all embracing quality to it. When
we use 'divinity' instead of “God' what is at work here is
'spirituality' not 'religion.' And our goal is to evolve more each
day as spiritual beings not merely as religious people.
When
we see the earth as a whole, from outer space, we can clearly see
the connection and interdependence of all of us who live upon
this planet. We have created imaginary boundaries, dividing ourselves
into countries and states, forgetting that in reality we are all
living together, breathing the same air, drinking from the same
water, eating food grown from the same earth. We share everything on
this planet, whether we are conscious of it or not, with other
people, and those people are our brothers and sisters. Seeing earth
as a whole brings new meaning into Christian concepts like “Communion
of Saints” and “Body of Christ.”
When we realize that any sense of separation we have from one another is truly an illusion, we will naturally begin to make more conscious choices in our daily lives. The simple act of preparing food, or deciding how to dispose of our refuse, can be done with the consciousness that whatever we do will affect all our brothers and sisters, no matter how far away they live, as well as the planet herself.
When we contemplate the earth in her wholeness, we see the bigger picture, which is, every one of us, living on her body. We are connected to one another in the most intimate way, because we literally share our living space. As we become aware of the reality of our interdependence, sins of racism, sexism, and homophobia will disappear and much of the discord that we see now will dissipate and we will live in a more harmonious world.
When we realize that any sense of separation we have from one another is truly an illusion, we will naturally begin to make more conscious choices in our daily lives. The simple act of preparing food, or deciding how to dispose of our refuse, can be done with the consciousness that whatever we do will affect all our brothers and sisters, no matter how far away they live, as well as the planet herself.
When we contemplate the earth in her wholeness, we see the bigger picture, which is, every one of us, living on her body. We are connected to one another in the most intimate way, because we literally share our living space. As we become aware of the reality of our interdependence, sins of racism, sexism, and homophobia will disappear and much of the discord that we see now will dissipate and we will live in a more harmonious world.
Let
earth day inspire us to become holy and wholesome.
By learning the 10 lessons mother earth has taught me, I have been experiencing heaven on earth. These lessons are titled Cosmic Kindergarten: Earthly Lessons for a Heavenly Life. I will share them with you in the days and weeks ahead.
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