The movie, “Groundhog Day” stars Bill Murray as an
ill-tempered TV weatherman unhappy about having to cover, yet again, the annual
emergence of the renowned groundhog, Punxatawney Phil from his den. While in
Punxatawney, Murray’s character (also named Phil) gets caught in a time loop in
which he repeats February 2 over and over and over again. Every duplication of
the day is announced by his alarm going off at 6:00 a.m. with Sonny and Cher singing
“I Got You, Babe.” Throughout the movie Phil travels from shock and dismay,
into self-centered manipulation of the experience (and of others), through
bored endurance, and, finally, into embrace of the transformation offered by
seemingly endless reprisals of the day.
Sometimes moving through the church year (even weekly
liturgies) over and over and over again can be something like Phil’s experience
with Groundhog Day: Shock and dismay…self-centered manipulation…bored
endurance…
Yet again, the alarm plays “I Got You, Babe” and Ash
Wednesday approaches with its annual ashen imposition of mortality’s shadow.
Yet again, we’re invited to engage six weeks worth of Lenten discipline (how
many times do I have to give up chocolate, anyway?). Over and over and over we
sing those dreary hymns, wonder whether Sundays are included in the fast, hear
the stories of suffering and loss, worry that our congregation will do a foot
washing…
It’s pretty natural for repetition to trigger everything
from dismay to self-centeredness to boredom, even with something like the
church year. Yet, repetition also carries promise when it’s rooted in the
presence and promises of God. Hearing the stories again and again, engaging the
ritualized behaviors over and over, walking the same path with Jesus and other
members of his body time after time…all these and more can draw us through
repetitious rehearsal into new life, transformation, and deeper engagement in
God’s mission of healing and hope in the world.
Wartburg Seminary professor Craig Nessan puts it this way: What each of these ritual occasions provides is the opportunity to...articulate and rehearse what we ordinarily neglect...What we ritualize by means of the historic
Christian liturgy is nothing other than the kingdom of God proclaimed and
embodied in the person of Jesus…Worship affords the occasion to rehearse the
role of one’s true self, a citizen of God’s kingdom [Beyond Maintenance
to Mission, p. 37].
Blessed (and transforming) repetition be yours this holy
season and always!
Bishop Bill Gafkjen