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"How Can We Sing Songs of Peace?"

(Lamentations 1:1-6; Ps 137; Lam. 3:19-26)

I recently joined a Lectionary Study Group made up of several of the Presbyterian ministers in this area.

When we discussed the scriptures this week, there was only one question on everyone's mind

On this Peacemaking Sunday,

how can we preach peace to a land scarred by terrorism?

It seemed to most of us that the Old Testament scriptures were asking the same question.

The book of Lamentations is really part two of the book of Jeremiah

The first book mostly collects Jeremiah's writings and describes his actions

as he tried to warn the people and kings of Judah

that their continued reliance on the power of nations would lead to their destruction at the hands of the Babylonians

The second book collects the Lamentations or poems of mourning

Which Jeremiah wrote after his prophecies had come true

After his people were under seige by the Babylonians and after the seige, when Jerusalem had been devastated

It's that second book that came up in the lectionary for this Peacemaking Sunday

Add to that the Psalm that ends with such an awful and vivid picture of revenge

And once again I am convinced that God plans the Lectionary readings

Psalm 137 specifically asks

"How can we sing the songs of Zion,"

(the songs of Jerusalem

the songs of the home that has been destroyed)

"while we are captive in a strange land."

We Americans are in some sense being held captive in a strange land

Since September 11, there are things about our land that are very strange

Armed soldiers patrol our airports, dams, power plants

Flags fly from more houses and cars than I have ever seen on the 4th of July or Memorial Day

The skyline of our largest city, the most familiar skyline, has been drastically altered.

And every television show that used to pan that skyline has re-shot or re-edited it's opening sequences to avoid that angle

And every movie that still contains a glimpse of what is no longer there makes us think again of what has happened

Policemen and firemen are held in higher esteem than they have enjoyed in my memory

And the sound of sirens or just a low flying plane can set nerves on edge

We are "going on with our lives" and "returning to normal" but . . .

The news reminds us every night

The headlines remind us every morning

Public service announcements dot radio, TV and bill boards and remind us constantly that

the city that once was full of people!

Is like a widow, weeping bitterly in the night

And the thought of that affliction and homelessness is wormwood and gall!

Our souls continually think of it

And the grief and shock threaten to undo us

But, like the prophet Jeremiah, we must call this to mind and have hope

The steadfast love of the LORD never ceases,

his mercies never come to an end;

The unknown author of the Psalm asks

How can we sing the songs about the good times when we are grieving?

How can we sing of peace when the devastation of war is still so much in our minds?

How can we hope for peace when we still long for revenge?

The psalmist almost answers his own question

We must remember the joy that was

We must never forget what it felt like to live in peace and security

The psalmist however is still in such pain

that remembering the joy of what was

he can think no further than to pray

for rough justice against those who destroyed

that their loved ones should suffer as his have suffered

The prophet's answer is better

Jeremiah does not give up the hope that justice will be done

Jeremiah does not say surrender to the tyrant

But he says, trust in the Lord,

The LORD is good to those who wait for him

It is good that one should wait quietly for the salvation of the LORD

After all, it is the Lord who gives peace,

Peace that passes all understanding

Peace that cannot be taken away from you

Peace that triumphs over evil

Peace that,

no matter what,

allows you to keep on singing the songs of the Lord

even in a strange land.

Copyright © 2001


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