Summertime
The Summer Solstice marks the beginning of Summer and the end of lengthening days. As the days grow shorter, slowly at first, we enjoy warmer weather and a season of growth.
For a couple of weeks or so
around this weekend
we may not be noticing any change
in the length of our days.
That's true because of the Solstice,
and it's true for both Solstices, Winter and Summer.
The word, solstice, refers to the sun
standing still
in what appear to be its half yearly movements
from north to south or south to north
as opposed to the daily apparent movements
from east to west.
I don't want to spend too much time
on the astronomy,
but the transition is important
in terms of our experience
of the Four Seasons.
Summer began yesterday at 2:43 p.m. PDT,
and as summer begins
it also begins to come to an end.
For this reason,
today, the first full day of Summer,
can be a melancholy day
for people in northern, cooler climates.
Of course, without this occasion
and everything it means,
the days would get longer and hotter
until our climate would become
impossible to live with.
In fact, it's possible to find hope
in the experience of either solstice,
the start of Winter or the start of Summer.
The first day of Winter, its own Solstice,
marks also the beginning of Winter's end,
even if it seemed as though
wintry, chilly, wet weather
would never end in our part of the world
until just the last few days.
Warmth and light are vital
for all of the things we need
for the nourishment of our bodies
as well as the nourishment of our feelings,
our hearts and souls.
The sun has therefore been an object of worship
for as long as objects of worship have existed.
The source of all life
would have to be something
to be held in reverence.
With that in mind, it seems appropriate
that Father's Day falls on a Sunday each year,
close to the Summer Solstice.
The Greek God, Apollo of the Brilliant Light,
is an appropriate symbol for Solstice
and for Father's Day.
His daily task with his chariot and horses
was to pull the sun across the sky.
He was father to many children,
and he was revered as an oracle
and as a source of healing.
Ironically, he was also a bringer of plagues.
As such, he could be
an appropriate symbol of our times,
on both counts,
the plague and the healing.
In our part of the world
we are coping with two kinds of plague:
One is a dangerous virus
and the other is a dangerous sickness of society.
Sunlight can aid in the healing of both.
Like most viruses,
the coronavirus that causes COVID-19
cannot survive long
in the ultraviolet light of the sun.
Like many social ills,
racism cannot survive long
in the light of undeniable information.
The truth is that all people are born with equal rights
and that is the kind of light
now cleansing our world.
Sometimes we think of the forces of light
and the forces of darkness
as absolute opposites,
like good and evil.
The truth is that it simply does not work that way
in ourselves or in the world in which we live.
We require both light and darkness
in order to survive.
The shadow side of ourselves
is as important to our well being
as the light side.
Guess which one we generally prefer to show!
Yet the light and the dark come together
to bring us to deeper understanding of truth.
Without the quiet of winter
the busy, bright times of summer
would wear us out much faster,
quite literally.
The balance of light and dark can be seen every day
with sunrise and sunset.
That may be one reason
that so many people love
both sunrise and sunset so much.
The balance of light and dark
gives us beautiful shades of many colors
as sunlight is filtered through the atmosphere.
Watching a summer sunset
can give us a beautiful feeling
of the meaning of the Summer Solstice.
I have a favorite verse to sing about it.
I'm going to try to sing it via Zoom.
You all can let me know how it works -
or how it doesn't work.
Summer sun, Summer sun, we watch as you set,
Sending your long arms of light from the west.
Summer sun, Summer sun, you shine so bright,
As you begin your return to the night.
I love that verse
because it captures a universal kind of devotion
to our beloved Day Star,
and at the same time,
it recognizes that the beginning of Summer
marks the apparent return of the Day Star
to the night, not just for one evening,
but also for the coming seasons
of Fall and Winter.
The balance of light and darkness,
the marking of the end of Summer
with its beginning,
and the recognition
of light and shadow in ourselves
can bring healing to our souls and bodies
and to our nation.
If we try to deny the shadow by saying
"I'm not a racist!"
or, "The virus is going away on its own,"
we will only delay the healing we all need
so very much.
If we accept our days and nights
our seasons of light and dark
and our own strengths and weaknesses,
we can learn the lessons of the Solstices
and begin a process of healing for us all.
As the days pause
in their growing longer and shorter,
we have this moment to take stock of ourselves,
our communities
- families, friends, and like minded people -
so that we begin to appreciate
who and where we are,
more and more,
every day and every Season.
Amen.
So let it be.
Blessed be.