Tag: Lexington Kentucky

  • Being sorry is not the same as repenting

    I was especially moved by these words in the Litany of Penitence in yesterday’s Ash Wednesday service: 

    For our waste and pollution of your creation, and our lack of
    concern for those who come after us,
    Accept our repentance, Lord.

    We've been praying that prayer for a long time!  This prayer book was published in 1979, 32 years ago.  That we’re sorry about our poor stewardship of creation is clear.  That we’ve repented is not so clear,  because to repent means to change behavior.  Our sorrow must be strong enough to motivate us to make a change.  However, as I lamented the sloth in my own green habits, I also noticed  some signs of hope, some of which are fostered by the city in which I presently reside, Lexington, Kentucky.

    Curbside Recycling ~ We have two cans, provided by the city.  One can is green and is for household trash.  The other can is blue and is for recyclables.  We put paper, glass, plastic, aluminum, and a number of other items in the blue can and set it out by the curb every Thursday morning.  A city crew comes by and picks it up.  They take it to a place where the items in the can are sorted and recycled.

    Bicycle Lanes ~ Lexington has bicycle lanes on roadways all over the city.  They connect to some very nice bicycle trails. Cyclists ride them to work, to school, to church, and for recreation seven days a week.  Motorists watch out for them and slow down.  Unless otherwise posted, the speed limit in Lexington is 25 mph.  In most other cities, it’s 30 mph.  That 5 mph can make a big difference in an encounter between a passenger car and a bicycle.  I don’t want to suggest that instituting bicycle lanes here was a simple thing, but mainly it took creative thinking, leadership, and application of some white paint on pavement.

    Energy Saving Light Bulbs ~ Gay and I almost never buy an incandescent bulb anymore.  The improvements in compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFL) and the number of options now available, the energy savings, and the availability make this kind of energy conservation a no-brainer!  To make it even better, our local electric utility provider sent us some coupons that provided significant savings on the purchase of CFL's.  We’ve come a long, long way from those fixtures with the “starters” my parents used in the 1950’s.  But I am grateful for the example they provided.  My dad was a homebuilder and he used fluorescent fixtures wherever possible.  Lexington, like many cities, now has reasonable building codes that foster more extensive use of energy efficient lighting.

    I am grateful to be living in a city where it easier to practice "green" habits.  I feel that I've moved a little beyond sorry and am actually demonstrating some repentance in my care of creation. Thanks, Lexington, for fostering such a climate.  Other cities can learn a lot from your good example.

    A friend of mine was complaining about “tree huggers.”  I confessed to him that I am a tree hugger and always have been. He pointed out that peoples’ livelihood depended upon the ability to harvest lumber from old forests in places like the Pacific Northwest and that the needs of people outweighed the needs of the Spotted Owls.  I had to point out that human beings are endowed by the Creator with more options than the other creatures with which we share this planet.  When God entrusted the stewardship of creation to humanity, it was because God had specially equipped us with cognitive resources not given to any other creature.  We are supposed to be smart enough to figure out how to steward the resources of creation in a way that respects and sustains all life, not just humanity.

    One of my Lenten disciplines is going to be to find more ways to be a good steward of creation, with or without the help of municipal resources.  I want to be a contributing citizen of “this fragile earth, our island home.”

    Ron

  • An Epiphany From a Ginko Tree

    Ginko1The leaves on the Ginko Tree outside my study window are turning yellow.  This is not a rare or  disturbing phenomenon.  The tree is not dying.  What is happening is the predictable effect of photosynthesis, the process by which plants convert water and carbon dioxide into oxygen and sugar.  The word means “put together with light.”  Chlorophyll gives plants their green color and helps make photosynthesis happen.  As summer ends and autumn arrives, days become shorter and there is not enough light for photosynthesis.   So, during autumn and winter, the trees stop producing food.  They rest and live off the food they stored during the summer.  The green chlorophyll disappears from the leaves and other colors are visible.

    Soon, the leaves will fall to the ground and add nutrients to the soil that will benefit the tree when spring and a new era of growth arrives. This annual process of change is necessary in order for the tree to thrive.

    Human life also involves change.  But we do not have to regard ourselves as “victims” of change.  Unlike trees, which do not have the privilege of deciding how to manage change, humans have choices.  We have options!  The greatest options involve intangibles such as attitude, inspiration, perspective, and spirit.  After all, the inner life of a child of God is different from that of a tree.  The kind of light we “put together” with the elements of our lives is a different kind of light, one we can seek in any season.  Enlightenment is the human equivalent of photosynthesis.

    We regard our Creator as changeless.  Creation, on the other hand, is made alive by change.  Of all God’s creatures, humans have the most options for managing change in purposeful ways that impact the unfolding story of creation.  When we are able to work with changes that impact our lives, they are more likely to become springboards that propel us into the next stage of growth.  Learning to live creatively with change allows us not just to survive but to thrive.

    So, in the light God gives, let us relish opportunities to explore changes that are thrust upon us and to purposefully initiate changes that will promote life and growth.  In learning from change we expand our lives and become more fully human.  By exercising our faith in God to guide and protect us through transitions, “we who are wearied by the changes and chances of this life” will find rest and refreshment in God’s eternal changelessness.                               
    Ron