The last 24 hours have been full of contrasts. On the one hand, it was the first full day of Music Week at Lutheridge:
--Monday began with a long walk with the S. Florida church friend who is staying with us for the week. Up and down hills, but I didn't really notice them because the conversation was deep and meaningful.
--Morning worship was also deep and meaningful. I LOVED this prayer of the day: "On the night he was betrayed, Jesus took bread, not revenge. He offered bread to feed and to forgive. On the night he was betrayed, Jesus took a basin of water to sooth [sic], liberate, and heal. Help us, so washed and fed, to do the same."
--My inner English major was intrigued by the above spelling error, which made me think of soothsaying, which I continued to think about all day.
--My inner English major also was there for Bible study, which will take us to some villains in the Bible. We began with one of the biggest, the serpent in the Garden of Eden. One participant talked about the devil possessing the serpent, which sent me to the text, which reminded me that it's not in the text. Ah, Milton, how your version has taken over everything we think we know about the story--which is what I said, in more non-English-major accessible form.
--One of our last questions for Bible study was "What does the serpent get out of this?" I keep misspelling serpent, and this morning, I thought about serpent and repent, and now I want to write a poem, "The serpent repents."
--I was there for general choir rehearsal. From the very beginning, this group can sing. They sounded amazing, like they had been practicing for weeks, instead of just beginning together.
--The director has interesting ways of describing what he wants: "You just sang the color dusty rose. But it was the dusty rose of a piece of tuille or a curtain so faded you can see through it. Now try it as a deeper rose color." I immediately thought of a creative writing class idea, having students write a description and me bringing in different fabrics and colors and saying, "Now write it this way."
--We had good meals together at our house. The prep work was easy because I did most of it in advance. It's becoming clear that I have prepared too much food--happily, much of it is freezable.
All of yesterday happened against a back drop of World Cup drama, both the games themselves, and the rumors of a phone call pressuring the officials to change a decision about red cards. And then, this morning, the U.S. team lost anyway.
I got up this morning to news not only of that sports/political development/scandal, but also of the one in Maine. If I left that sentence standing by itself, would future me remember which scandal I'm referring to? In the interest of history, let me note that there are new rape charges against the Democratic candidate for Senate. The charges that were already known (inappropriate sexting, inappropriate use of force against girlfriends) by the time of the primary would have been more than enough to disqualify him in the not-so-distant past. Sigh.
I don't have a pithy way to end this post. After all, if we're lucky, every given day is full of these contrasts if we just know to look: deep friendship and deep spirituality and the farcical elements of modern life particularly the political bits and pieces, along with song and sustenance of all sorts.
