Homily – Sept 8, 2019 – “Saving the Captives” September 8, 2019 • Mary Beth Czifra Rev. Joseph Boyd As Erica Roberts clung to a tall mango tree, the winds and sea water churned up by hurricane Dorian pounding her face, a single thought ran through her head: “I will not die like this”. Her home, in the small town of High Rock on the eastern side of Grand Bahama Island, had already been swept away. Her 24 year-old daughter Natori, was alongside her clinging to branches as well. Her face and arms still bear the dry, bloody cuts of her hours exposed to the 185 mph winds. The pair eventually lost their grip but were swept close to a nearby home that had withstood the hurricane’s devastation. They got inside. This was a story told by the Guardian in the aftermath of Hurricane Dorian. Many times we can feel like captives. We can feel like a captive audience. We can feel like we are watching our life go by in front of our eyes. Water takes many surprising forms. Water can bear down on us, and whip our battered grip. It can put us in danger, and alienate us from that which makes our life secure and meaningful. Water can remind us of places we’ve been, places we treasure or places we wish we were. Water can remind us of the precariousness of being where we are, especially when help feels far and distant. Water reminds us. It reminds us of New Orleans. It reminds us of oceans traveled, homes built, destroyed, and built again. This is homecoming Sunday. This time of year, I reflect on what it means to come home. This year I have been thinking of the captives in Babylon, the captives in the Bahamas, the captives in our midst, captivated by life that seems to keep happening to them, for better and for worse. I’ve been thinking of the life that runs through us. I’ve been thinking of the thirst we yearn to quench. I’ve been thinking of rivers that bring us home, and remind us who we are in moments of felt captivity. This homecoming Sunday is about saving the captives in our midst. We save the captives by doing something very simple and very profound. We bring water into this sanctuary. We bring most of it in this vessel of skin, and we continually ask ourselves what it is we’re holding. We may not know what it is, but we sense it is precious. We save the captives by doing something strange. We pour out the water. For some, it pours like a waterfall. For some, like a leaky faucet. We pour it out. Saving the captives involves nothing more and nothing less than sharing our entire life with all the captives in our midst. We pour out our grief, we pour out our yearning, we pour out satisfaction. We pour out joy. We pour out memory. We pour out hope. We pour this water out for those who have lost their homes and loved ones in the Bahamas. We pour out water in remembrance of New Orleans, of places flooded, and places in drought. We pour out a little bit of water to connect us to those who are weary, those who feel alienated, and those who feel help is far off. We pour out this water for those who immigrated from distant rivers, and find themselves in a strange land, a hostile land, and those who were born and live along the Mahoning. We pour out this water for those who have had their water shut off. We pour our little bit of water to save ourselves from captivity. We pour out this water to save ourselves from a limited idea of pain and feeling trapped, a limited idea of what might be possible. We don’t have to pour everything out. Just a little bit. We pour our captivity into something that is larger than our captivity. We yearn to go to that place where we are truly free, that place beyond fear and mourning. All it takes is a little bit of ourselves we’re willing to pour into a world thirsty for freedom. This Sunday, in this sanctuary we will quench this thirst. We will pour a little bit of who we are into what we might become. We will save ourselves from captivity by pouring out our life, and in so doing, save the captives in our midst.