I was reflecting Monday night with the District Committee on Ministry about what we’ve been up to together in church in the past year, and among other things I was talking about the Vacation Bible School curriculum I selected, which is science-based. There were various reasons for this selection: for instance, I didn’t want to be doing the same curriculum all the other churches in the area were doing, and I also wanted to plant the seed early that church and science are not incompatible—a concern I still hear voiced in the community outside the church.
But I also wanted to do science as a religious community because I think so many lessons are comprehension based and very linear, and I think that in their rush to meet benchmarks, the people writing them forget about the wonder of science. God’s creation is complex and amazing, and we should take a moment, sometimes, to allow ourselves to be surprised or even awed at the complexity and the interrelatedness. To wonder at this world and the many different forces at work, and at all of the many and varied lives it sustains.
Pastor Eugene Peterson, writing about Christmas, wrote that the church comes together at that time as a “community of wonder.” We wonder together, coming together awed and amazed at the gift we’ve been given, this new life, come to show us how beloved we are. Those candles we light that night aren’t simply pretty: they start from the Christ Candle, symbolizing the new light that has been born into the world, and we “pass” that light not just out of efficiency but to show the light of Christ growing, the wonder “passed” or gifted from one person to another.
