Fire Power!
Charles Lloyd, the world-renowned tenor sax, flute and
virtually anything like a woodwind virtuoso, who gave us Forest Flower at Monterey Pop, and Billy Higgins, the
quintessential west-coast jazz drummer and sideman for literally hundreds of
recordings the past fifty years or so, worked on an extended suite in the
months leading up to Higgins’ death in 2001. It is a varied and extraordinary
musical meditation titled Which Way Is
East (EMC recording, 1878/79). Both musicians play an array of instruments
and sing.
The music is written and played from the perspective that
Billy Higgins is leaving this world. In the booklet that accompanies the two-CD
set, there is a conversation between Lloyd and Higgins as Higgins lies in bed.
The end of this conversation about their musical collaboration goes like this:
Higgins: With my
instrument (the drums) it’s like I have to support so many people, so the
creator keeps me around here longer, just because he knows I got a lot of stuff
to do. And with the drums being the whole bottom, I got to do what I got to do,
so I don’t even question it….
Lloyd: We come
through here, we sing our song, nobody knows us, and we’re gone.
Higgins: Anything
you do, if it is in the spirit, it’s going to be right. So, you submit to the
point where it’s not coming from me, it’s going through me… Hey, man! I’m
tellin’ you, that’s a whole suite right there! That’s two guys, just two guys
sittin’ on top of the mountain. You talkin’ about the journey’s end – the
journey’s just beginning.
Lloyd: Can I say
something to you in all sincerity? This is one of the greatest joys of my life
– because what we have been able to do, to share it with you – and for you to
peep that it’s real and that it’s blessed … I mean, it just encourages us.
Higgins: Let me
tell you something, please…let’s please…this might be the last time we do this.
It made me understand a lot of what I’m trying to do…but for us to be able to
do it at the right time, in the right space…What we doin’ is getting our fire
power to be able to do this on any level. We got to keep workin’ on this
music….
Lloyd: Do you mean
to tell me you’re going to get up off the bed and come back to work on this
with me?
Higgins: I didn’t
say I would be there, but I will always
be with you.
This sums up the major themes of Pentecost. Pentecost, like
jazz for musicians, represents a collaboration: a collaboration between God,
Jesus, the Holy Spirit and the rest of us. And as Billy Higgins says, “Anything you do, if it is in the spirit,
it’s going to be right. So, you submit to the point where it’s not coming from
me, it’s going through me.” This is the essence of the Christian life. This
is life lived in the Spirit. We submit to God’s spirit to the point that it is
not coming from us, it is going through us.
And there they are, Charles Lloyd and Billy Higgins, like
Jesus and the disciples, coming to the end of years of collaborating in the
life of the Spirit and the life of Truth, whether expressed in ministry or in
music, reflecting on what the end of the journey is like.
And Higgins, like Jesus, says this end of the journey is in
truth just the beginning of the journey. This may be the end of this form of
the journey, but “what we doin’ is getting our fire power to be able to do
this on any level… we got to keep workin’…”
Fire power! If
that isn’t Pentecost Acts Chapter Two talk I don’t know what is! We keep on
working on this thing we call faith and discipleship, kingdom living and life
in the Spirit, so we can get our Fire Power together to be able to do this on
any level. So it is with Jesus and us, his disciples, his Pentecostal
companions. Jesus says that he and the Father are sending us the Holy Spirit to
continue the work that he does.
On Pentecost we do well to remember just what it is Jesus
does: teaching people, feeding people, healing people, raising people from the
dead, blessing people, gathering people together (especially sinners, outcasts,
the lame, the sick, the blind, prostitutes, tax collectors, children, women,
fishermen, shepherds, all kinds of people), challenging people, encouraging
people, and generally finding new ways to reach out to new kinds of people. Note
the common denominator: People. All his work involves people.
To continue the work that he does, we need to reach out and
involve ourselves with people, all kinds of people. As we say in our Baptismal
Covenant, we need to seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving our neighbors
as ourselves. Even as we have first been loved by God in Christ.
This love will be hard work and requires all the Fire Power
we can muster. For it also means striving for Justice and Peace for all people
and respecting the dignity of every human being. Not some people, not a lot of
people, not most people, but every human being. Jesus says we can do this.
In chapter 14 of John Jesus says something even more
remarkable. He says this Holy Spirit we receive in our Baptism, this Fire
Power, will enable us, empower us, lead us to do even greater works than he
does, “greater works than these!” People will know we know the Risen Lord Jesus
if we do the work he does and greater works than these. What an amazing
promise! What an awesome responsibility!
Now Jesus is saying all of this because the disciples are
hoping he won’t be leaving them. Or, like the tradition that grew up around all
that Jesus said and did, they were hoping at the least he would come back and
show them how to keep doing this on any level.
He replies, “I have said these things to you while I am
still with you. But the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in
my name, will teach you everything, and remind you of what I have said to you.
Peace, shalom, I leave with you; my Peace, my shalom, I give to you. I do not
give as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not let
them be afraid.”
The hearts of the disciples must have leapt at these words.
Our hearts leap even now.
Does this mean he will get back down here with us and keep
on doing these things with us? “I didn’t
say I would be there, but I will
always be with you.” Always,
until the end of time. Which, because God is eternal, is all of eternity for
those who live their lives with God.
We are here on this Earth to get our Fire Power together so
we can continue to do the things that he does and greater things than these. On
any level. At any time. At any place. It is an endless, timeless, eternal
collaboration. To be able to do this at all, let alone at the right time and in
the right place, is our greatest joy! On Pentecost the journey’s end is the
journey’s beginning.
“Anything you do, if
it is in the spirit, it’s going to be right. So you submit to the point where
it’s not coming from me, it’s going through me.”
It’s going through us. Jesus’ Fire Power is going through
us. In His Name. With His Spirit. Today
we begin getting our Fire Power so we can do this on any level!
We can do this, and more, because in Pentecost, in Baptism
and in the Holy Eucharist Jesus says to us, “I didn’t say I would be there, but I will always be with you…You may think we’re talking
about the journey’s end – the journey’s just beginning!”
Amen.
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