Here's a chance to turn deadly weapons into gardens
September 28, 2024
In the parking lot right behind Central Presbyterian Church, 3501 Campbell in Kansas City, Mo., you will find a garden, pictured here. That's the congregation's pastor, the Rev. Jenny Wells, standing in front of it.
That parking lot is where, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 12, people will be able (anonymously) to turn in firearms that they want to get rid of. Then they can watch the start of a process that will turn those guns into gardens. Or, if not exactly the gardens themselves at least garden tools to help make things grow.
The "Guns to Gardens Safe Surrender" event that day is rooted in a prophecy found in the book of Isaiah (2:4) about an imagined time when people "shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks."
So, yes, this is one small effort to address the catastrophic plague of guns that are murdering our fellow citizens and wounding the heart and soul of our community. But it's also rooted in Central's approach to ministry, which Wells says has a lot to do with feeding people physically and spiritually, which is why Central has both a sanctuary and a garden.
"After the shooting at the Super Bowl parade here," she says, "I mentioned 'Guns to Gardens' (a national program) in a sermon, and had a handful of members here at Central who really grabbed onto it."
The event, naturally, has security precautions. Any weapon someone brings to turn in must be unloaded and in the trunk of the car. That will be checked at the very start of the process, "and the person surrendering the firearm will never be the one to handle it," Well says. The volunteer inspectors and the people chopping up the weapons will be the only ones handling them.
Volunteers for the event are going through extensive training and the people bringing in guns will not be asked to identify themselves: "We're not asking people for their names," Wells says. "We're not checking i.d.'s." And media are being asked not to be present for the event.
As for getting dozens or more guns off the streets, Wells says "I'd be happy with one" firearm turned in. But she hopes for many more and expects more because some of the people who have gone through volunteer training have said they intend to turn in weapons, too.
When faith communities get engaged in such civic or social programs, you almost always will find some theological justification for that engagement. In this case, as Wells notes, "Something that Central is really good at is feeding people." (And that is exactly what Jesus asked his disciple Peter to do for the Christ-followers of that time.) "So if there's any way that we can turn this tool that has been used for violence and destruction into a tool that can be used productively to make something beautiful, to feed someone, that's really ultimately the goal -- to turn violence into food and peace. The hope is that we'll have a line of cars."
Wells says that a local blacksmith will be present to take "the pieces of the guns that are dismantled that day and turn them into things like garden tools." In return, people giving up their guns will get a grocery store gift card.
"Our hope," she says, "is that some of the tools that are created from the firearms that are turned in will be put to use in our garden here and maybe offered to some of the community gardens in town."
I hope you'll share this post with others in the Kansas City area so that lots of dangerous weapons can be deconstructed into tomatoes and peppers. Thanks for helping with this good project.
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WHEN MEMBERS DISAGREE WITH CORE RELIGIOUS TEACHINGS
It's true that the theology and positions on social issues within religious communities are not decided by opinion polls of members at any given moment. There are, after all, traditions and history to consider. On the other hand, it can be disruptive and even dangerous for an institutional religious structure to ignore the opinions of lay members.
For instance, a new survey of Catholics in six Latin American countries and the United States, done by the Pew Research Center, shows a lot of them disagree with official church stances on various issues, including birth control and the possibility of women priests. In fact, on those two issues, large majorities of respondents disagreed with the official church positions.
Church positions on various issues cannot be up for grabs every two weeks, but there's a price to be paid when the members of a religious tradition begin to reject some of the tradition's important teachings. The challenge is being able to be what my own denomination describes as being "reformed and always reforming" without seeming to have no fixed theology at all.
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P.S.: Speaking of deadly weapons, as I was above, I hope by now -- if your are a resident of Missouri -- that you have written to Gov. Mike Parson to express your outrage about his failure to stop the Sept. 24 execution of death-row prisoner Marcellus Williams, who throughout his incarceration has contended, for good reason, that he's innocent. If you haven't yet done so, here's what I wrote. You're free to use it as a model:
Dear Governor Parson:
Your failure to stop the execution of Marcellus Williams — and you, in the end, were the only one who could have done that — was an appalling act of misgovernance.
I am among those who believe the death penalty is wrong and immoral in all cases for many reasons. But given that Missouri still retains capital punishment as an option in some cases, you and the whole system of justice in our state must make sure that there is never a single doubt about the guilt of any prisoner subjected to it. You failed in that task this time. And I don’t understand why. Nor do I understand how, given that failure, you can sleep in peace at night.
Please know that your inaction will not be forgotten as I and others continue to oppose capital punishment and as we work to create a legal system that can be trusted to do the right thing. Your deadly decision will continue to inspire me and others to make sure this never happens again.
Sincerely,
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THE BOOK CORNER
Some 10-plus years ago here on the blog, I introduced readers to an intriguing little book of fiction that told the New Testament story of when Jesus was 12 years old and, for three days in Jerusalem, his parents couldn't find him. Eventually, he was located in the Temple, where he was having deep conversations with the leaders there -- to the shock and annoyance of his parents. The author of that book, Chris Stepien, now has fictionalized (while sticking quite close to what history we know) the post-crucifixion life of Jesus' apostle John, whom Jesus, from the cross, appointed to take care of his mother Mary.
John narrates this book and, with Stepien's help, sticks tightly to traditional -- and Catholic -- theology and orthodoxy, despite some intriguing inventiveness on Stepien's part. The author is, for instance, clearly a great admirer of Mary, whom he calls "Imma Miriam" (as he calls Jesus "Yeshua"). Indeed, he has John, whom he calls "Yochanan," say this of her: "Miriam was Yeshua's first believer and his first beloved disciple."
In fact, Stepien adopts the Catholic idea of her perpetual virginity so closely that people identified in the New Testament as Jesus' brothers and sisters are called, instead, his cousins. And a year after Mary's death, when John and others come to her grave to gather her bones in a ossuary box, they discover that her remains are entirely missing, as would be required if the doctrine of Mary's "assumption" into heaven was to be believed.
It will almost certainly feel to non-Catholic readers -- and maybe even to some Catholics -- that Stepien is doing a lot of work to stick so closely to church theology and, in the process, making the story a little less human.
All of that said, what is redemptive about this book is that it tries to bring to life people in the Bible that sometimes seem half-dead or at least half-drawn in scripture. Stepien's John is an admirable man who struggles to understand the story of which he's such an important part. You and I may not have pictured him or others in the story the way Stepien does but his effort in some ways frees us to try to imagine a version of these gospel stories that is both true to the history we know and true to the cosmic meaning of the birth, life, ministry, death and resurrection of the Messiah.
And once we grasp the full humanity of the people in this story, its eternal meanings can become clearer. All of which is a good thing.