Thursday, August 11, 2016

I Find God on the Golf Course

I find God on the golf course better than I do in church. That phrase, or something like it, seems to be common these days. In fact on my summer vacation I struck up a conversation with a fellow Episcopalian and asked her if she was going to the community bible study where we were staying. Her reply was no. She then went on to tell me she rarely attends church and instead takes a walk in the woods once a week to be close to God.

While it might be simple for clergy like me to dismiss such sentiments as missing the point, perhaps the reason for this growing phenomenon, of finding God in nature as opposed to church, is one that ought to be considered more closely. People, it seems, are not only longing for God but are also feeling disconnected from the natural order of our world. While those two things may be separate from one another they are also closely related. After all, God is the divine creator of all things. God created nature and us as a part of this world. Despite that fact, many people today are completely isolated from the natural world. For instance, we live in climate controlled homes, drive climate controlled cars, and eat food we don't grow or rarely see growing. It seems that so many of our environments are controlled, artificial, or virtual that the natural world is almost alien to us. And if we can't know the world God created for us, how can we know our creator? As we consider that reality, it’s no wonder people need nature as a first step in their spiritual lives. However, to simply stop with the love, beauty, and glory we see of God in nature is to dramatically short change ourselves. For if we stop with the natural revelation of God we may never really know the divine revelation waiting for us in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.


It is the knowledge of that divine revelation which gives us a greater hope, joy, and faith than nature ever can. For this reason the church spends a great deal of time seeking to grow closer to God by learning more about him. Through learning more about God we come to find a deeper need for meaningful worship. In learning more about God we enrich our theology, expand our ability to pray, and deepen our commitment to healing our broken world.