Vicar Karla Leitzman
I was one of those people that was beyond excited for the Super Bowl last week. Not because I particularly care about football in any capacity, but because I was so excited for the halftime show. You see, I love, like really love Benito Antonio Martinez Ocasio, or as he goes by his stage name, Bad Bunny. Even though my Spanish is pretty elementary and he sings really fast using Puerto Rican Spanish that goes over my head, I find his music electrifying and full of musicality, full of a desire to unify his audience.
I love how committed he is to celebrating his homeland of Puerto Rico, playing a long residency there last year in order to generate millions of dollars of local revenue. His superbowl halftime show last week gave us a beautiful illustration of the celebration of Hispanic culture in a way that invited everyone, all of us in. Even with all of these things, one of the things I love most about Bad Bunny as an artist is how much he holds reverence and respect for those who came before him to pave the way for his success as a Puerto Rican artist. He is quick to credit those who came before him to make his success all the more resonate now.
Whether it is accepting an award celebrating him as a top Latin Artist of the 21st century Puerto Rican from the iconic and now 93 year old Rita Moreno who was one of the first artists from Puerto Rico to become a household name, to featuring Ricky Martin as a guest performer during last week’s halftime show, he is always committed to honoring the artists, and really all of the people in his story who came before him. And whenever I watch him or any other artist or even any public figure do this, I inevitably always find myself reflecting on those who came before me to pave the way for all that I am able to achieve.
I think of all of the women pastors who have come before and whose shoulders all women clergy today stand upon. After all, in the more than two thousand years since Christianity’s inception and in the five hundred and nine years since the protestant reformation which gave birth to Lutheranism, it’s only been 56 years since the ELCA started ordaining women. At that, there are still fewer Christian denominations that do ordain women than those which do not. Any of us who are either female pastors or hopeful female pastors are only able to pursue those avenues because of those who came before us, not unlike how Bad Bunny was able to achieve all that he has thanks in no small part to those who came before him. This is a practice that many marginalized cultures engage in regularly, asking the ancestors, those who came before, to give them strength and fortitude for challenging times, as well as joyfully celebrating that those ancestors are here now celebrating right alongside them.
Today is Transfiguration Sunday in the church and this day serves as a hinge in a lot of a way as we transition to a new season. For the weeks and months behind us, we have, in Advent, prepared to welcome God coming to the world as Jesus. During the Christmas season, we celebrated that God comes to the world, brightening our resolve and our joy to live out and share that good news. In Ephipany, we recognised and celebrated the kings from the East who followed the star to pay homage to the Christchild, who warned Jesus’ family about King Herod’s fear at this tiny baby becoming more powerful than him, and unfortunately powerful men who get scared are sometimes the most dangerous. This ultimately led to this family fleeing quickly for fear for their safety to Egypt where they lived in exile until Herod’s death. In the last couple months of our liturgical calendar, we have commemorated so much together.
So today, Transfiguration Sunday, is a day that serves as a bridge in many ways. We hear the story of Jesus being illuminated, solidifying his identity as God’s son, the one sent to Earth to be the earthly manifestation of God’s love, grace, mercy, and justice. We hear the voice telling us in clear resounding words to listen to what Jesus says, to watch and to emulate what he does. And, we witness Elijah and Moses, the ancestors, being there with Jesus. We are not told explicitly what they are talking about, just that they are talking. So, I wonder if it stands to reason that Moses and Elijah are giving Jesus encouragement, fortifying him for what is to come.
Because you see, today, Transfiguration Sunday, prepares us to begin the season of Lent in just a few days. Today is, in sorts, meant to be a sort of fortification of the season of lament and reflection we are about to begin. We see the brightness of the light of Jesus illuminated, we sing resounding hallelujahs for the last time before Easter Sunday. We fortify ourselves. And one of the things about today’s gospel reading is that it is the presence of Moses and Elijah, the ancestors who are there to, we can assume, fortify Jesus.
This past Tuesday morning, I attended the Interfaith Coalition on Immigration’s monthly vigil at the Whipple Building. About a month ago I preached from this pulpit regarding the meaningful experience I had the last time I attended one of these vigils. And while this past Tuesday was also meaningful, it was a very different scene. A month ago, Pastor Erica from Holy Nativity and I were able to park our car and walk to the lawn outside of the tennis and education center since we couldn’t be in front of the Whipple Building. We had plenty of space to spread out and move and sing and pray.
Tuesday this week was a very different picture. From the place where we parked, there were volunteers in reflective vests guiding us where to go. Multiple layers of chain link fencing and barricades have been set up. We were guided into a very small area between barricades, pushed very close together. While I have never been in a war zone before, this sure felt like one. We watched car after car of DHS officers, already masked, drive in to start their shifts and the looks of disgust that some gave us were impossible to miss.
This past Saturday, a group of indigenous leaders gathered at the Whipple Building to present a ceremonial eviction notice to the federal government, that using their sacred land in the way they are, holding people with shackles on their legs, not giving them adequate food or medical care to mention some of the most mild reports that are coming out of that building, is nothing short of an abomination. At this ceremonial eviction event, 4,000 ribbons were tied on the chain link fence, each ribbon representing a person who has been taken without due process by this administration. As we approached the vigil, we watched each ribbon blowing in the February wind.
United Church of Christ pastor, Susan Hayward offered the following prayer on Tuesday, and I share parts of it with you now:
“God of Liberation, who we know as Love,
Draw near to us this morning in the shadow of this building that houses so much pain, where the machinery of injustice churns. Ground us in your love as we witness to the cross present here, state violence enacted against all that is good, against Love itself. A story we know too well, God. Strengthen our faith in the ultimate triumph of Love. Be with those currently detained here in this building and their families – all afraid, seeking reconnection and hope. Assure them that we are fighting for them, that they are not forgotten or forsaken - by your nor their neighbors. Be with those who are detained within their own homes this morning, unable to leave for weeks now. May all these captives be set free. And God of all, draw near to the federal agents arriving here this morning, who are also your children and who we know are harmed by their participation in this evil. May your Spirit stir their hearts, shifting their loyalties back to that which serves your will, to love of neighbor. And finally, God, gather into your infinite embrace our neighbors across the city and state who are doing your work of love this morning – those on patrol outside schools as our children arrive, those tracking ICE agents as they travel through our neighborhoods, those bringing vulnerable neighbors to work safely, or delivering groceries. Shield these agents of love with your righteous care. God, ground us in the wisdom of this land where we stand, less than one mile from Bdote – where the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers converge. A place our Dakota relatives – those Indigenous to this land – understand is the most sacred place in the world. The birthplace of the universe. Root us in this sacred land we love that holds stories of pain and resilience across generations. Stories of forced displacement and exile, of state murder, of family separation. And, stories of resilience, survival, and persistence. The drum beats on, and now it is our time to dance the world toward freedom – to persist in love in the face of evil. Strengthen our faith, God, that this is the time You made us for, the time our ancestors prepared us for, that we have all we need to meet these days with courage. We call on our ancestors, the saints, the freedom fighters who came before us and showed us the way.
May your will be done, God, on earth as it is in heaven. May we have the courage, the strength, and the wisdom to ensure this is so.” Amen.