{"id":5576,"date":"2021-12-13T17:51:48","date_gmt":"2021-12-13T22:51:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/?post_type=ctc_sermon&#038;p=5576"},"modified":"2021-12-14T13:54:03","modified_gmt":"2021-12-14T18:54:03","slug":"the-economy-of-joy","status":"publish","type":"ctc_sermon","link":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/messages\/the-economy-of-joy\/","title":{"rendered":"The Economy of Joy"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p> Rodney begins this week&#8217;s message by talking about the joy he feels when listening to music. He recounts a story of his typically-stern father making space for joy in his life too. After telling us about an experience where he saw a procession of people heading to a church, he shares a list of songs that make him feel joyful. Rodney is releasing a companion podcast to this one. You can listen to Rodney&#8217;s Music Ministry <a href=\"https:\/\/wellsprings.sermon.net\/21904200\">here<\/a>. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">The Economy of Joy<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p> START OF TRANSCRIPT<br>[00:00:00] Speaker1<br>The following is a message from Wellsprings Congregation.<br>[00:00:15] Speaker2<br>The heart is bloom. It shoots up through the stony ground, but there&#8217;s no room or space to rent in this town, you&#8217;re out of luck. And the<br>reason that you had to care. Traffic is stuck and you&#8217;re not moving anywhere. You thought you found a friend to take you out of this<br>place. Someone you could lend a hand in exchange for grace. It&#8217;s a beautiful day. Don&#8217;t let it slip away. The sky falls and you feel like<br>it&#8217;s a beautiful day. These are the lyrics from the song Beautiful Day, written by Bono and sung by and performed by U2. The song<br>was written after O and I wore these in it because at the time Bono wore his sunglasses, I&#8217;m going to take them off its prescription<br>glasses. Yeah. So the song was inspired or is about a man who loses everything but still found joy in what he had left. Bono was<br>inspired to write the song because he was involved in the Coalition Jubilee movement, which was in 2000, which was set up to wiping<br>out billions of dollars of debt owed by the poorest countries. And I think this is song. This song is a great example of the expression of<br>joy, the way the lyrics and the music work together. It it it&#8217;s it&#8217;s so powerful because I think the joy is encompasses more than just<br>happiness. Joy is, is is deep. It&#8217;s so deep because I think it encompasses so many emotions at the same time.<br>[00:02:18] Speaker2<br>There&#8217;s all there&#8217;s wonder. And yes, there&#8217;s sadness and pain all there at the same time. I know for myself, when I&#8217;m experiencing<br>joy, I&#8217;m laughing and crying at the same time. It sometimes makes no sense to me how this happens, but this is a song I think that<br>goes deep into that feeling of joy. I mean, when you think about the opening line, it&#8217;s like the heart is a bloom and it pushes up<br>through the stony ground. And he&#8217;s making a metaphor that the heart is like this little flower that all it wants to do is push through the<br>harshness of life reaching for the Sun just to celebrate being alive. To oh, it&#8217;s going to do when it gets up there is going to open up<br>and just face the sun, and that is what I think Bono is talking about is what we have to do in order to experience joy. Our heart has to<br>break through the harsh. Stony world. Ultimately, to find Grace. In relationship to ourselves. In relationship to the other. And<br>relationship to the world, and that opens the door of. For the possibility of experiencing and being with and having joy. The name of<br>this message that I&#8217;m preaching today is the economy of joy, and that title came from Lee. You know what, as a lay preacher, one of<br>the things we do as we&#8217;re working on our message if we talk to one of the preachers and I was explaining to Lee what I was thinking.<br>[00:04:17] Speaker2<br>And she said, Oh, that&#8217;s like the economy of joy. And what that means is, I think that there are three. There may be more and I&#8217;d be<br>curious to hear what people think, but I think there are three aspects to joy. There&#8217;s creating the space where joy can flourish, where<br>it happens. And I&#8217;ll talk more about that and a little bit. There&#8217;s experiencing joy, which is when you&#8217;re just so you&#8217;re in it and you feel<br>it in your body, I mean, for me, nothing makes me experience joy more than music. Ever since I was a little kid, I can&#8217;t help it if I hear<br>music I like, like I&#8217;m doing right now, see my hands. They&#8217;re moving. I think about it. You can&#8217;t see. There&#8217;s a massive grin on my face<br>when I think about music, even if it&#8217;s music I don&#8217;t like, I&#8217;m like, Whoa. So does this experiencing joy? And then there&#8217;s expressing joy.<br>And I think that it&#8217;s really easy to conflate, confuse mixed them all up together because I think they are really different and I want to<br>spend some time sort of pulling them apart and looking at each one. So. But before I go to there, I also want to talk about and this is a<br>little little return or left turn, depending on where you how you think about it, the politics of joy.<br>[00:05:55] Speaker2<br>There&#8217;s a way in our culture that we have this idea of what joy looks like and that we&#8217;re supposed to be the only way to be joyful is to<br>be almost like this whirling dervish running down the street. Yeah. I&#8217;m so happy dancing in the streets. You know, ah, like I imagined,<br>like some of the scenes in West Side Story where people are dancing in the streets or in the heights. And that&#8217;s this idealistic idea of<br>what joy is. And also, one of the things in Western culture is this idea that those who have less are able to teach us who have more<br>about joy. And this is evident in the concept called the Magic Negro, which is a character that exists in film and stories. And you&#8217;ve all<br>seen movies like The Green Mile or the Help or Bagger Vance, where there&#8217;s a person of color who has nothing but somehow<br>teaches the person who has everything the real meaning of joy. And there is something that is just sort of politically gross about that<br>whole idea. So I want to keep that in mind because language is a difficult thing to deal with when you&#8217;re trying to express something<br>so complex as joy. And some of the examples I&#8217;m going to use to talk about joy, I want you to keep in mind that there is this also this<br>underlying way in which we think about what joy is.<br>[00:07:30] Speaker2<br>For example, I when I was thinking about this, I thought, OK, what&#8217;s one of the most joyous moments or what filled me with joy? And<br>for me, I think of the first time I saw the Grand Canyon. And the point at which I saw the Grand Canyon, just looking at it and looking<br>down and seeing rainbows and looking down in the canyon and seeing clouds, I again, I&#8217;m a weepy guy. I cry. I can cry very easily. I<br>was like, weeping. Oh, that is the most beautiful thing ever. And even when I tell the story, I communicate this joy of seeing this. This<br>this awesomeness. This I mean, truly using the word awesome in the way it&#8217;s meant to be used this awesomeness of the Grand<br>Canyon. But in talking to someone, as I often do when I&#8217;m working out these messages, they reminded me that it could also be<br>someone having clean drinking water for the first time. That is could be immensely joyful for someone or someone just having an act<br>of kindness bestowed upon them. Someone paying for someone&#8217;s coffee in a line at a coffee shop. All of these are a way of opening<br>the door and allowing someone to experience. Feel. And express. Joy? So one of the things I want to look at.<br>[00:09:06] Speaker2<br>Is that? The difference between happiness and joy. They&#8217;re related. And I think sometimes when you look up the definition of joy, you<br>see that it says happiness. And I&#8217;m like, That&#8217;s confusing. How can that be? Oh, there was a point I wanted to make. I want to jump<br>back to the politics of joy. One of the things I did look up and I was very curious about this in the Constitution. Why did, as you say,<br>the pursuit of happiness and not the pursuit of joy? It&#8217;s really curious about that. So of course. My friend and little nemesis, Mr<br>Thomas Jefferson. He&#8217;s the one who changed the line. Originally, it&#8217;s at life, liberty, and it was something to do with the pursuit of<br>things, property, things we could own, and he changed it to the pursuit of happiness. Now there&#8217;s a theory that he got it from the<br>philosopher John Locke and John Locke wrote about this philosophy sort of in the same way. Now there&#8217;s some historians who say<br>there&#8217;s no way he could have got from Locke was Locke was a supporter of the Crown, and they would have been at odds with each<br>other. But the interesting thing I saw in what John Locke wrote in the way he was using happiness, and I think it speaks to that the<br>time and how they were understanding it. He was trying to say, and I&#8217;m going to paraphrase.<br>[00:10:32] Speaker2<br>He was saying that the pursuit of happiness, having this goal of this meta happiness, this overarching happiness will keep you from<br>making decisions that are about immediate pleasure and gratification. That and that, to me, actually sounds like the pursuit of joy.<br>Not happy because happiness is so immediate. It&#8217;s so fleeting. It&#8217;s so like, Oh my god, I&#8217;m so happy. Ok, it&#8217;s over. You know, I think at<br>the times when I&#8217;m really happy and some of them are hard to even remember, like they don&#8217;t stick with you. But the times I feel and<br>celebrate and enjoy, they stick with you for a lifetime then, and they don&#8217;t go away because I think they&#8217;re always there. They&#8217;re<br>always present. And again, so, joy, is this it&#8217;s there, it&#8217;s gone. I think I mean, sorry, I got that backwards happiness is there, it&#8217;s gone.<br>Joy is something that you have to open yourself up for. It takes. It&#8217;s a practice, it takes work. It takes a discipline to get yourself into<br>that space where you can be open to and feel and express joy. So I give you an example of that in my life. So my dad. Who probably<br>some of you are tired of hearing me talk about because they talk about them all the time. And I actually made a whole show that that I<br>did right before COVID, one man show where I was like a little love letter to my dad, but I never thought of my dad as being a joyous<br>person.<br>[00:12:17] Speaker2<br>In fact, I think it&#8217;s taken me almost to the point where I&#8217;m almost 60 years old to recognize how wrong I was. When I would always see<br>my dad thinking my dad is being grumpy and kind of miserable and like, Wow, now he was always telling jokes they were<br>inappropriate jokes, but he was always going around telling jokes. He was always laughing and making fun of things and poking<br>things. And he loved movies, comedy, music, all this stuff. But in general, he always seemed to be like, So I have a vivid memory of<br>one day coming, you know, sitting at the dinner table and I go, Look, I got an a in school look, I got an A and he goes, Yeah, what do<br>you want? Let me write a letter when to parade? What do you want to call the president? I go to work. I make money. You go to<br>school. You get A&#8217;s. Ok, fine. And as a little kid, I don&#8217;t even know what he was trying to teach me at that moment. I don&#8217;t even think<br>he knew, but it felt like I wasn&#8217;t seeing that he was miserable. And I said, I&#8217;m not going to be like you. But here&#8217;s the thing that same<br>guy. When I was in fifth sixth grade, I can&#8217;t remember exactly when when he found out that at Sears, they were doing a<br>correspondence course in basic electricity and that he could get them and give them to me because he saw how much I love<br>tinkering with things.<br>[00:13:46] Speaker2<br>He came home one day from work and he handed me a stack of books. He goes, It&#8217;s a course in basic electricity. It&#8217;s for you.<br>Whatever you want to do, you can do it or not do it. It&#8217;s up to you. My eyes lit up. I&#8217;m like, what? Of course, in basic electricity. Woohoo. That summer, I have to say it was one of those. I have the most joyous memory of reading those books trying to figure out what<br>things meant. I mean, one of my favorite jokes is I&#8217;m looking in the book and I&#8217;m going a Kappa Sider. What&#8217;s a Kappa Sider? And I<br>go to the library and I&#8217;m like, Librarian, what&#8217;s a cat beside her? She goes, What a capacity. I don&#8217;t know what you&#8217;re talking about.<br>See, right here. She goes, That&#8217;s capacitor. Go to the physics section. Ok, so such joy and I finish the books. I took the test. I got an a.<br>When the the certificate came back, my dad sat there, typed out his name, my name in front of his name because my middle name is<br>his name, Luther. And and he gave it to me, put it in a little plaque, and he handed it to me, and here&#8217;s the thing my dad may not have<br>been able to express joy, but he certainly made the space for it to happen, both for me and my sisters.<br>[00:15:01] Speaker2<br>I mean, my sisters and I have spent our lives pursuing what we love, what makes us happy? My one sister is a writer. My other is a<br>doctor and surgeon, and I&#8217;m a musician and filmmaker, and I don&#8217;t think we would have been able to even begin that journey of<br>taking on something that most people would think, Oh, you can&#8217;t do that. That&#8217;s impossible. If it wasn&#8217;t for my dad setting these<br>conditions for us to. Feel and sense, the joy is even possible. And I think about when I&#8217;m working in the studio every day, I have a<br>condition called dish where my tendons fuse and I&#8217;m in pain a lot, and yet I wake up every morning and I am so happy to get out of<br>bed because I know I&#8217;m going to go down in the studio and work on something or someone&#8217;s coming over. And it will be as tedious<br>and as annoying, and it&#8217;s difficult and it&#8217;s mind numbingly crazy and anxiety producing as it can be. There&#8217;s joy. There is a sense of<br>joy in creating and making something. So that is creating the conditions for joy. I&#8217;m going to move on now to feeling joy. In the early<br>90s, I was a reporter for Radio for Peace and Radio for Peace was a shortwave radio station that was located in Costa Rica, and I<br>was lucky enough to get to go down there for a month and spend a month working at the station and learning stuff about shortwave<br>radio and about the politics.<br>[00:16:46] Speaker2<br>It was on the grounds of the University for Peace, which was created by Robert Mueller, who was one of the founders of the U.N.. I<br>also got to spend a day with him, which was pretty amazing. Spend the day with one of the founders of the U.N.. How often does that<br>happen? That&#8217;s insane. But some interesting things about that trip. I landed on the Friday before Easter in Costa Rica, and Costa<br>Rica is a Catholic country, so everything is shut down. And when I say everything, I mean, you can&#8217;t get a cab. Everything shut down.<br>And then the town I was staying in was a little teeny town. I don&#8217;t even know if you could call it a town, one paved road. Is that a town?<br>And probably about 200 people lived in this town, and nobody very few people spoke English, and my Spanish is OK. It was better by<br>the time I left. But while I was there, it was. It was sketchy. And there&#8217;s funny stories I have, but I&#8217;m not going to go into this right now<br>anyway. Good Friday, I decided that I was going to walk through the rainforest to the station, which was walking up the side of a<br>mountain and going over a string bridge and all that sort of stuff.<br>[00:18:04] Speaker2<br>And it&#8217;s something I wanted to do. So I asked, how do I get to the station? They just follow that path. Ok, so I go. And it was this<br>amazing experience chased by monkeys that were. And I say Chase. I mean, I&#8217;m walking, and all of a sudden I can hear them<br>following me and I look up and I&#8217;m like, Those are monkeys up there and they&#8217;re following me. I saw a bug. I swear the wingspan was<br>this big. I was sitting down for a second. It came and flew and just kind of looked at me like this and said, Oh, OK, you&#8217;re OK. And<br>then it flew away. So I get up to the radio station and there&#8217;s nobody there. I&#8217;m like, Where is everybody? This is really weird. Where<br>did everybody go? I don&#8217;t know. So for about 45 minutes goes by. And here comes this caravan of cars and I go, What happened?<br>Where? What happened? They go, Oh, a boa was crossing the road and we had to wait for it to cross. I&#8217;m like a what? They said a<br>boa was crossing the road. You know, big snake and you let me walk through the wood, the rain forest with a there&#8217;s boas out there.<br>[00:19:07] Speaker2<br>They&#8217;re like, Yeah, I&#8217;m like, I&#8217;m not going anywhere without being in a car anymore while I&#8217;m here. But it still was this amazing<br>experience and kind of opened me up that night. Uh, since, as I said, Costa Rica is a very Catholic country. All 200 people in the<br>town made the procession around the town to the church. And they all sang in unison as they were doing it, and now they were<br>singing Latin or Spanish. I&#8217;m not sure I didn&#8217;t know what they were singing, but I&#8217;m standing there in front of the church. And as the<br>procession got closer, this wave of feeling of emotion of joy came over me that I have never felt before up. You know, I felt that sense,<br>but not up until this point in my life. And I could not stop weeping, could not stop crying. In fact, I didn&#8217;t want to. And it was this crying<br>again filled with laughter. And I don&#8217;t know why. I mean, it was a group of people singing marching to the street. They were carrying<br>Jesus on the cross and they had Mary. And but it was this feeling I was feeling this immense joy that was coming from all these<br>people. And it was so, so powerful. And I think part of it was, for me was having that experience in nature earlier that kind of opened<br>me up to be able to receive and be present to.<br>[00:20:48]<br>Joy? So that&#8217;s feeling joy.<br>[00:20:55] Speaker2<br>So now we move on to expressing joy. Now I said, there&#8217;s nothing that moves me more than music. So in the chat, you&#8217;ll see that<br>there is a companion podcast to my message where there is a series of songs that are played that are what I think of as expressions,<br>musical expressions of joy. I called up a couple of friends. I asked them, What song makes you actually email them to be specific?<br>What song makes you think of how you feel, joy, how you express joy and what makes you joyful? And I got a lot of different<br>responses. Some of them completely surprised me, and I also included some of my own. And so as you listen to the podcast, you&#8217;re<br>going to hear me talk a little bit and set them up, but I want to go through them right now as expressions of joy. So the first song, as<br>soon as I thought about this and it&#8217;s going to drive some of you crazy, I know because it&#8217;s going to be a song that some people go,<br>Why would you pick that song? It&#8217;s awful. It&#8217;s terrible. It&#8217;s walking on sunshine by Katrina and the waves I. Every time I hear that<br>song, it just makes me smile. But it doesn&#8217;t just make me happy. It is that frenetic child in me that just wants to run free when he<br>hears music and just can&#8217;t stop moving and just start bouncing up and down and wants to dance around.<br>[00:22:26] Speaker2<br>And I think of that song as representing sort of adolescent joy or teen teen joy. It&#8217;s so youthful, it&#8217;s so full of energy. And the song I put<br>right next to it is Sir Duke. Someone friend of mine sent me that, and I think that it&#8217;s an example of someone&#8217;s deep, deep love for<br>music, which is Stevie Wonder. And that is one way to joy is to love something deeply love. Someone deeply love deeply can open<br>your heart up to joy. Yeah, it opens you up to sadness and pain and all those other things. But again, that&#8217;s the point I&#8217;m making. I<br>think all of it is included in joy. So there&#8217;s Sir Duke and you know, as soon as you hear those horns come in da da da da da da da da<br>da da da. How can you not have a grin on your face? It just makes you know that you&#8217;re alive. The next song is, of course, what I<br>started the message with beautiful day that song. But you to again, I can&#8217;t say enough about it because it is. It encompasses the light<br>and the dark reading. If you get a chance, look on Wikipedia. It&#8217;s a really cool article about how the song musically came together.<br>That opening was developed by Brian Eno and Daniel Anwar.<br>[00:23:52] Speaker2<br>They almost trashed the song because the band didn&#8217;t like it. It started off as another song, and they kept playing with it and tweaking<br>it. Obviously, they thought the chorus was cheesy. It&#8217;s a beautiful day, really. That&#8217;s what you got by now. Come on, can you give us<br>more than that? But something happened when Eno and Lenoir, the producers of the song, added This little keyboard part at the<br>beginning and this little drumbeat, and it changed the tone, and it also inspired the edge to come up with some. The think of the song<br>a little bit differently, and what I love about it is in the music. There is this darkness that&#8217;s there, and yet there&#8217;s a celebration of life<br>when you get to the chorus. Every time I hear that chorus, it feels like the sun&#8217;s coming up, you know? And so and I love the end of<br>the song where he goes the line. He sings, what you don&#8217;t have. You don&#8217;t need it. Now what you don&#8217;t have, you can feel.<br>Somehow, Bono is definitely a poet. The next song I put I played is a Wellspring staple when joy comes back, but I found the Ruthie<br>Foster version, and it just makes me weep every time I hear it. It&#8217;s so it&#8217;s so moving. So check that out. It&#8217;s got this bluesy thing going<br>on, and if you have any doubt that joy does not encompass all the different emotions.<br>[00:25:20] Speaker2<br>Listen to the Blues because it&#8217;s all there. It is still, to this day, a thing that blows my mind and how you can. This music can be so sad<br>and tell such a deep, sad story, and yet it is so joyful. It is so full of life and a celebration of life, and it gets in your body and you get to<br>move. And so joy comes back. A nurse, patapaa from Miriam Makeba and Patapaa Amin&#8217;s touch was a dance that was really popular<br>in South Africa, and I mentioned in the podcast, so I got to work with her a little bit a couple of years ago, which was again another<br>joyful moment in my life. My friend Gary sent me Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da, I felt obligated to put it in since there&#8217;s so much Beatles<br>hysteria. The song is this. I&#8217;m torn about this song just because it is a celebration of life. It&#8217;s about, Hey, life goes on. But it&#8217;s the<br>simple things in life that make us joyful and that connect us. But look on Wikipedia, there&#8217;s some sadness of the story, the guy that<br>came up with the line felt he got ripped off. There&#8217;s a whole thing that goes on with this. The next piece I play is a piece by Igor<br>Stravinsky called I can never say this correctly because it&#8217;s in Russian o&#8217;clock and it means pastoral, and it is one of my favorite<br>contemporary classical pieces of music.<br>[00:27:01] Speaker2<br>And I just think it is so joyful. But at the same time, it&#8217;s it&#8217;s solemn. There&#8217;s joy to the world, which a friend of mine sent me. I. You&#8217;re<br>going to hear the Pentatonix version. Rise up, rise up. This song has been one of my favorite songs forever. Probably not. A lot of<br>you know it. It was a big 80s dance song, and it became a theme song for many movements the gay rights movement, civil rights<br>movement. It was part of the Democratic Party at one point, but it is such a celebration. It was first played in Pride Fest in Toronto in <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Rodney begins this week&#8217;s message by talking about the joy he feels when listening to music. He recounts a story of his typically-stern father making space for joy in his life too. After telling us about an experience where he saw a procession of people heading to a church, he shares a list of songs that make him feel joyful. Rodney is releasing a companion podcast to this one. You can listen to Rodney&#8217;s Music Ministry here. 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