Melicent and James Smith
“A Blessing at the Threshold”
It takes only a couple of seconds for a life to change irreversibly.
Suddenly you stand on completely strange ground
and a new course of life has to be embraced.
Especially at such times we desperately need blessing and protection.
An excerpt from To Bless the Space between Us
—John O’Donohue
[This past Sunday, we continued our Lenten theme of “Blessings,” based upon the late John O’Donohue’s book To Bless the Space between Us: A Book of Blessings. The topic was “Thresholds.”]
When James and Melicent Smith stepped onto the 96-foot brig Sarah Abigail in Boston in May of 1842, they had crossed a threshold. They had left the life which they had known in New England and they would never go back to it. They moved to Koloa where they spent the rest of their lives. James was the only Western-trained physician on Kaua`i and he served the entire island, as well as Ni`ihau. He came here and he saved many lives—mostly Native Hawaiians.
The Old Testament text was the well known passage of the Ten Commandments from Exodus 20. The Hebrew people had just crossed their own threshold when they left Egypt where they were slaves and crossed over onto a journey where they were headed to the promised land of freedom.
Both the Smiths and the Hebrew people had left the life they knew behind and entered an entire new way of being, of seeing, and of relating to the world. I pointed out that the Ten Commandments did not start out as just a big set of rules. They started out ontological.Ontology is the study of being, of identity, of understanding the essence of a person or community. “I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery.” These are the opening words of the Ten Commandments! It starts out with who God is, who the people were and are, and (by implication) who they are becoming. Only after the ontological words come the practical words. “You shall have no other gods before me….”
It is important whenever we cross our own thresholds in life that we remember first who we are, what our identity is, how we relate to God, the earth, and other people; only then is it important to consider our actions. In our Gospel reading (Matthew 5), Jesus made it clear that if our focus is on the rules, we have missed the entire point. What is way more important is what is in our hearts. After all, we can still follow the rules (for awhile) and hate people in our hearts. Jesus and his followers know that our actions are best motivated by love, by grace and compassion.
As you cross over any thresholds in your life, I invite you to begin by asking who you are and how you relate to God, the earth and others. I invite you to allow love to motivate your actions.
Aloha nui!
Kahu Alan Akana
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Our Kahu (Pastor) offers a weekly message in church most Sundays during the year. Click HERE to see a video of this week’s message. You may also see the Koloa Union Church YouTube channel to see many of his past messages and subscribe in order be notified when a new message is posted. Please share these videos with friends and invite them to church. Please feel free to “Like” any of the videos you see and share them on social media, such as Facebook, so that others will notice them.
“A Message from Kahu Alan Akana” is provided most weeks by the Kahu (Pastor) of Koloa Union Church, a congregation of the United Church of Christ (UCC), a member of the Kauai Association and Hawaii Conference.
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