Gary Hall
St. Augustine’s,
Santa Monica
June 10, 2017
[Frederick Borsch]
All of us see Fred Borsch from a
different perspective. For most of us he was our bishop or seminary or college dean.
For some an irreplaceable family member. For others a mentor and friend. For
many a New Testament scholar and teacher. For others yet a civic leader and
public intellectual. Maybe even a tennis partner.
To me, Fred was many of those things
and something else. In my experience of him, Fred Borsch was primarily a poet
and a lover of poetry. I didn’t know this at first about him. My early
experiences of Fred were of a rather distant public figure—my bishop. Early on,
Fred was a man I admired from a distance and listened to with respect. It was
only as I was fortunate enough to get to know him as we worked together—first here,
then in New Haven and Philadelphia and finally in Washington-- that I began to
realize what an enormous heart and soul he had. And his heart and soul found
their best expression in reading, talking about, and writing poetry.
I found that out one night when,
after a long and contentious meeting with a priest accused of sexual
misconduct, Fred went to his desk and pulled out an essay he had written on
George Herbert’s poem, “Artillery”. Herbert’s poem compares the life of prayer
to an ongoing battle between the speaker and God, describing both God and the
speaker as “shooters”. It concludes with the speaker’s admission that we and
God live with each other in tension and an uneasy peace:
“Then
we are shooters both, and thou dost deign
To
enter combat with us, and contest
With
thine own clay. . .
There is no articling with
thee:
I
am but finite, yet thine infinitely.”
Fred
knew that I had been an English teacher, and it appeared he wanted to redeem
what was left of a painful and conflictual evening by thinking about prayer and
words and how we use them, about how God can take even human aggression and
pain and turn them into something beautiful and true. We talked that night for
probably an hour about George Herbert’s beautiful and vexing poem, and in that
moment I saw a side of this public man that I didn’t know existed. Fred said
that Herbert was right: we and God are “shooters both”, each assaulting the
other with our various weapons of complaint and love. I saw my bishop in a way
I hadn’t seen him before, and being let into this aspect of his life and
thought was both a revelation and a privilege.
I will come back to Fred’s poetic
side in a bit, but I don’t want us to forget that he was also a public figure. Fred
made his living first as an interpreter and expositor of the New Testament,
then as a public articulator of Jesus and his priorities to the wider
community. Fred Borsch was a very American type of exemplary English bishop, a
kind of bishop we don’t see that much in the U.S.—one who acts both as shepherd
to the gathered church and to the wider public within his diocese. Fred wrote books,
sermons and op-ed pieces, and he used all these forms to articulate a gospel
vision of what a just society might look like.
In the gospel reading we just heard,
the Beatitudes, Jesus gives his strongest expression of the gap between God’s
priorities and ours. “Blessed are the poor,” he says. There is a connection
between Jesus’s words and those of George Herbert. If we are “shooters both”, then
the Beatitudes are God’s opening volley in an ongoing contest about our social
and personal values. We want to live for ourselves. God wants us to live for
the greater good. Our culture equates blessedness and prosperity. God’s values
endorse something else: poverty, meekness, righteousness, mercy, purity in
heart, peacemaking. God’s values always rile us just a bit, and so the life of
prayer, like the life of the church itself, is often full of conflict. To Fred’s
mind, it was the job of the church to hold out the gospel vision to a beautiful
yet confused world. In Fred’s practice, a bishop spoke both to the church and
to the world about how we might, together, bridge the gap between is and ought,
between God’s vision and ours.
Fred spoke to us during his career first
as a scholar and teacher, then as a preacher and public figure, finally as a
novelist and poet. In retirement, Fred produced a dizzying number of books—essay
collections, meditations, poems, a history of religion at Princeton, and even a
couple of novels. In his final novel, My
Life for Yours, Fred created a character very much like himself, a retired
school head and English teacher named Harold Barnes, who dies during a gym
workout and then finds himself alive in the body of a much younger (and very different)
man. It is a wonderfully inventive and entertaining book, and part of its
fascination lies in the way Fred imagined both a different career path (he
could have been a great teacher and schoolmaster) and how those of us who have
lost him might react and carry on after his departure. The novel shows Harold’s
widow and children first grieving, then accepting, then making their way in the
world anew. When I first read My Life for
Yours a couple of years ago I thought of it as merely the counterfactual
imaginings of a vigorous man in his seventies. Now I see it as Fred’s extended
meditation on his own death and how those of us who loved him can make our way
through grief, in John Milton’s phrase, “To-morrow to fresh woods and pastures
new.” To be sure, Fred was a scholar and a thinker and a leader. He was also,
to the end, a pastor, seeking to lead both himself and us through life’s deep
woods into the open spaces of God’s love.
Earlier in this service, Fred’s son
Matthew read the title poem from Fred’s collection, Parade:
[Parade
“I
want to see, I want to see,”
my
little grandson pulls on me.
I
lift Jack up that he may point
to
firemen smiling from their truck,
hooting
when they whoop its horn.
Next
horses and a marching band,
and,
by God, an elephant thumps ahead
of
open cars and pretty girls, I notice,
waving
to a squad of cyclists,
black
and red and white and blue
in
the parade that’s passing through.
It’s
then I see I want to see
new
poets, next musicians, scouts,
explorers
of the quarks and stars,
even
global warming, if more caring,
undoing
of some old diseases:
all
he may see this century,
seeing
he cannot shoulder me.]
Like My Life for Yours, the poem “Parade” is a witty yet poignant
reflection on life’s finitude. The speaker hoists his grandson on his shoulders
to see the literal parade, realizing that a figurative parade of future events
is coming, that his grandson will not be able to return the favor, and that
little Jack will have to be his eyes and ears for the coming century. The book Parade ends with a similar poem, “As
Well”:
As
Well
Of
course we die alone,
marked
by loss and brokenhearted,
even
doctors say so,
and
eternity seems vast,
while
there is love, as well, my gratitude,
and
where go these unless you—
as
I am parted?
This poem, “As Well”, gives voice to the
same kind of love of life and longing for connection after death. If all we
knew about Fred Borsch was these two poems, we would think of him as a rather
witty (if mordant) observer of life and death and their respective ironies. But
Fred was not only a poet. He was a pastor and preacher. He probably never
became an English teacher for the same reason he never played Major League
Baseball: as satisfying as those career choices might have been on one level,
they would not have enabled him to express the depth and extent of his faith.
Fred not only believed what we proclaim today in this liturgy. He lived it and
wanted to make it accessible to the rest of us. And that is why there is yet one
more thing to say.
Several years ago, Fred sent me the
text of an Easter hymn he had written, and though I don’t believe it has yet
been set to music, the text of “Easter Now” should be in whatever incarnation
of our Hymnal that comes next. Fred Borsch the poetic ironist knew we die alone
and that we will not see the parade ahead of us, but the Fred Borsch the
Christian person knew something more. He knew that the love and hope and compassion
and goodness we meet in Jesus and in each other will outlast and finally
transform all those other things that oppress and frighten us—even (in some
mysterious way we cannot entirely grasp) death.
I’m thankful for so many things about
Fred Borsch, but today I’m perhaps most thankful that a man like Fred could
hold together such a sharply questioning critical intelligence and such a deep
and compelling faith in one complex human identity. On more than one occasion I
heard Fred say, at a funeral like this one, that the mystery is not, “Why did
God take him from us?” but rather, “Why did we get to have him in the first
place?”
Easter is God’s answer to both
questions, taking the pain and the joy of death and life and somehow making
them into a new way for us to be together in the world. Here, finally is how
Fred announces Easter in his hymn text, “Easter Now”:
EASTER NOW
Now to
broken-hearted yearning,
Now for love
such love returning
In upper room,
light from a tomb.
The wounds,
his voice, again bread broken,
Rabounni,
Jesus, from death woken. [Alleluias]
His Spirit’s peace upon us breathing,
Our hoping,
hearing hearts for healing
That we might
see how it could be,
And now does
daystar’s courage dawn,
And now can
be our morning song. [Alleluias]
Thank you, God, for the gift of Easter.
Thank you for this community that celebrates and proclaims it. And thank you today
most of all for the gift of the life and ministry and witness of Frederick Houk
Borsch. Amen.
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Fred knew that I had been an English teacher, and it appeared he wanted to redeem what was left of a painful and conflictual evening by thinking about prayer and words and how we use them, about how God can take even human aggression and pain and turn them into something beautiful and true.
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