When there is no soul-searching, is the soul still there?
from The Sacredness of Questioning Everything by David Dark

We'll build new traditions in place of the old
'Cause life without revision will silence our souls
from "Snow" by Sleeping at Last

Saturday, December 10, 2011

LIGHT

As a good ol' Lutheran girl, I should be able to write a whole post without much effort about the season of Advent and the significance of light as a symbol in this time of anticipation and hope, but I need to revisit my traditions... All I will say, is light is a beautiful symbol. A good hint to anyone needing a boost in a high school English class is "Look for light and dark imagery and symbolism!" From The Scarlet Letter to Heart of Darkness, that light and dark symbolism stuff is sure to impress on an AP exam, right?


I think it's more than just a tired literary trope, though. I think it's part of our DNA from the very dust of Eden... I mean wasn't the first recorded command of God "Let there be light"?


The theme of light in the darkness stretches throughout the Bible and is sung about beautifully in contemporary music. I want to dedicate the rest of this post to some of the lines about light currently  captivating my thoughts...


And God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light. 
God saw that the light was good, and he separated the light from the darkness.Genesis 1:3-4



The true light that gives light to everyone was coming into the world.
John 1:9



Therefore, if your whole body is full of light, and no part of it dark, it will be just as full of light as when a lamp shines its light on you.
Luke 11:36

For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light.
Ephesians 5:8


The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of deep darkness a light has dawned.
Isaiah 9:2


When Jesus spoke again to the people, he said, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.”
John 8:12


Oh great light of the world
Fill up my soul
I’m half a man here
So come make me whole
Oh great light of the world
Come to impart
The light of your grace
"Great Light of the World" by Bebo Norman


It's been a long long time
Since I've known the taste of freedom
And those clinging vines
That had me bound, well I don't need 'em
Cause I can see the light of a clear blue morning
I can see the light of a brand new day
I can see the light of a clear blue morning
And everythings gonna be all right
It's gonna be okay
"Light of a Clear Blue Morning" by Dolly Parton

Reignite

It puts an unwanted emphasis on how we should have lived. 
Life is a gorgeous, broken gift. 
Six billion pieces waiting to be fixed. 

The smartest thing I've ever learned is that I don't have all the answers, 
just a little light to call my own. 
Though it pales in comparison to the overarching shadows, 
a speck of light can reignite the sun and swallow darkness whole. 

(See my current favorite book of the Bible, Ecclesiastes, for commentary from a king gifted with wisdom, on the subject of the impossibility and vanity of searching for "all the answers.")

I keep finding more and more truth and beautiful freedom in that fact-- the fact that I don't have all the answers-- and not in a complacent, no longer searching way and surprisingly not in a postmodern all-the-answers-are-relative-and-what-is-truth-anyway? sort of way either... it's more like seeing that I don't have all the answers, but I do have one answer... one truth... and it is enough. It is only a little light... like the Advent candles lit one by one to represent the hope we have as we look for our God to come and dwell with us, but it is a speck of light that can reignite the sun and swallow darkness whole.


I want to start embracing the gorgeous in the gorgeous broken gift of life again. I want to remember and meditate on the Savior that made the world and life to be gorgeous, came to live in the gorgeous world that we made broken, and was broken so we could again be made gorgeous. I want to be embraced by, feel indwelling in my heart, and radiate from my very being the redemption that the coming of God to us promises. 

We're all just broken pieces. But the light is coming. The light is here. The light is warm and illuminating, and when it comes in full, we will be able to see clearly.... no longer straining to understand love like trying to gaze at an image obscured in a mirror but seeing clearly in the light of Him, in the light that fills the emptiness, dispels the dark, and makes the broken whole.

Come, Lord Jesus.


How should I live but as one who has the promise of such a light and a redeemer as Jesus?


Life is a gorgeous, broken gift.

Death is promised to the bee whose sting protects the colony. 
Was its life worth nothing more than honey for the queen? 
Life is a branch and it is a dove, handcrafted by confusing love. 
Sign language is our reply, when church bells make no sound. 
In hollow towers and empty hives, we craved sweetness with a fear of heights. 
Was it all just a grain of sand in an hourglass? 


The smartest thing I've ever learned is that I don't have all the answers, 
just a little light to call my own. 
Though it pales in comparison to the overarching shadows, 
a speck of light can reignite the sun and swallow darkness whole. 


Death is a cold, blindfolded kiss. 
It is the finger pressed upon our lips. 
It puts an unwanted emphasis on how we should have lived. 
Life is a gorgeous, broken gift. 
Six billion pieces waiting to be fixed. 
Love letters that were never signed, sent to where we live. 


The sweetest thing I've ever heard is that I don't have to have the answers, 
just a little light to call my own. 
Though it pales in comparison to the overarching shadows, 
a speck of light can reignite the sun and swallow darkness whole.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

C. S. Lewis The Great Divorce: Reflection

incomplete draft written several weeks ago, posted here as written originally


Oh, to be a genius like C. S. Lewis and to be clever enough to conceive something like The Great Divorce, a novel about a bus ride from heaven to hell. 


I'm reeling from all the thoughts Lewis spins into the fabric of the story, wondering who I am in the story (or perhaps, better, who I am not). I am frozen simultaneously in despair at the inherent brokenness of humanity the story illuminates and in awe at the grace and redemption the story paints as something so mysterious, so clear, and so real I yearn for it.


The story is told through conversations between those who are visiting heaven from hell and  inhabitants of heaven trying to convince them to stay. No one ever does stay, though; everyone chooses to go back to the bus and back to hell. And, amazingly, I think most of us make the same choice every day.


The two following condensed conversations represent me the most, I think, but every sketch has far too close a likeness to me for my liking...


The Elder Brother (See Tim Keller Prodigal God), the Earner of His Way
'I haven't got my rights, or I should not be here [heaven]. You will not get yours either. You'll get something far better. Never fear.' 'I'm a decent man and if I had my rights I'd have been here long ago and you can tell them I said so.' 'You can never do it like that... And it isn't exactly true, you know? You weren't a decent man and you didn't do your best. We none of us were and none of us did. Lord bless you, it doesn't matter. There is no need to go into it all now.'  
This was the substance of my first spiritual milestone in my life, around the age of 11 or 12 in Confirmation class. I always felt things inside me grind against each other when I heard the parable of the workers coming at different times of the day; it defied all my logic that God would give equally to those who did not work equally. I can see myself, even as a child, as a snippet from an old Shirley Temple movie when she asserts with a pout, "I'm very self-reliant. My mother taught me always to be that way." I can see myself, rooting on the heroes of Rand novels for their individuality and reliance on and love of self. "I recognize the right of no man to one minute of my time," Roark testifies, and I applaud his virtue of selfishness where selfishness means being firm in one's convictions and in need only of oneself and no other. But it's all a delusion to think that one can be totally self-reliant, that one can be good enough. That kind of thinking is accompanied by a life of justifying why one is truly good enough, why one has done exactly what should be done in all ways in all instances. It's impossible without embracing the idea that anything you choose to be right is, in fact, right. As in vogue an idea as that is, don't the very laws of nature contradict it? Don't all our senses of what is good and acceptable cry out that things are either right or not? Somewhere deep down in our humanity, we know there has to be something that is right and true, or we wouldn't have to come up with so many reasons for why our right or truth or lack thereof  is the correct right and truth. But I don't know how I arrived at this sentence... back to my original thought: the astounding thing that I realized at 11 or 12 was that my natural inclination was to assume that I was one of the workers to work all day. I was one of the ones who deserved what I got, and surely, if someone who worked only an hour was to get the same amount that I did, I should at least get a bonus. That's only fair... but at 11 or 12 my idea of what "fair" means was radically altered. Fair-- our whole country is based on the ideal of what is fair and what is the right of every person. We live in fear in public education of accidentally giving something to one that is not given to another, and we don't do anything-- take field trips, give rewards, have fundraisers-- that could be construed as unfair. My kids at school know the word oh-so-well and complain all the time that something is not fair when what they really mean is that something did not go their way, regardless of whether it was actually fair. But who really wants fair? We all say we want to be treated fairly, but that's only because we assume that what we have done in life and who we are merits treatment that we desire. But we think too highly of ourselves. Universally. We think we deserve all when we deserve nothing. I have had to realize that of myself many times in my life and embrace again and again the "beauty of grace," as Relient K sings, that "makes life not fair." I love the promise the Spirit makes in this passage: You will not get yours [rights] either. You'll get something far better. Why is it that we puny humans think we know what we want and what is good for us? Something far better is promised...

The Intellectual
'I am perfectly ready to consider it. Of course I should require some assurances... I should want a guarantee that you are taking me to a place where I shall find a wider sphere of usefulness-- and scope for the talents God has given me-- and an atmosphere of free inquiry-- in short, all that one means by civilisation and --er-- the spiritual life.' 'I can promise you none of those things. No sphere of usefulness: you are not needed there at all. No scope for your talents: only forgiveness for having perverted them. No atmospheres of inquiry, for I will bring you to the land not of questions but of answers, and you shall see the face of God... hitherto you have experienced truth only with the abstract intellect. I will bring you where you can taste it like honey and be embraced by it as a bridegroom. Your thirst shall be quenched.'
There is a moment in the complete version of this conversation when the intellectual has completely dismissed the Spirit and rambles on, "I feel I can do a great work among them. But you've never asked me what my paper is about!" Why do I hate my job sometimes (a lot of the time/ most of the time)? Because I feel ineffective. Because I keep longing for something where I could finally do a great work. Where I could finally put my talents to use. There is always a nagging voice in my head, "You should be doing more. You were the smartest kid in your elementary school, a valedictorian, a Niswonger Scholar... so much has been given to you. So much is expected of you." There is always a scale in my mind weighing my pitiful accomplishments against those who have done so much more, all the Vanderbilt undergrads who won medals at graduation for accomplishing more in the past four years than most people do in a lifetime, other teachers who do better jobs or work in more "successful" or more "underprivileged" schools, or those who have gone home and are giving back like I'm supposed to... There is a reason I love John Mayer's question "Am I living it right?" The reason is because I know I'm not. Like this intellectual ghost, I am always trying to find ways to show that I am getting it at least partially right, and I'm always looking for the next opportunity or career that would allow me to fulfill-- finally!-- the destiny intended for me. And, then, there are always the questions. The questions. The questions. I constantly find more questions, more problems, and I fear that I am getting further and further from the answer all the time, but I don't know how to get closer to the answer when any answer I can get for one question inspires more questions in me. Oh for hope in an answer that actually exists. Most times I don't want there to be an answer for despair that I won't ever fully know it, for despair that makes me find reasons to justify not having to have an answer. But I do want an answer. And forgiveness for all the ways I perverted my talents and usefulness... perverted them into mirages of gods, idols, the things that I spend all my time trying to hone, perverted them into unworthy sacrifices, deluded into thinking if I could just use myself and what I've been given properly then my life would be justified.






Sunday, November 27, 2011

What to do next?

As my time runs out, and I'm going to have to go to church, the question is "What to do next?"


How do I get out of this place?


I'll let you know when the answer comes....

Remind Me Who I Am

When I lose my way
And I forget my name
Remind me who I am
In the mirror all I see
Is who I don’t want to be
Remind me who I am
In the loneliest places
When I can’t remember what grace is
Tell me once again
Who I am to you, who I am to you
Tell me lest I forget
Who I am to you, that I belong to you
When my heart is like a stone
And I’m running far from home
Remind me who I am
When I can’t receive your love
Afraid I’ll never be enough
Remind me who I am
If I’m your beloved
Can you help me believe it?
I’m the one you love
I’m the one you love
And that will be enough
I’m the one you love


by Jason Gray and Jason Ingram

Pathologies

I am sitting here in my bed fully dressed for church, but I skipped Sunday School since I was a few minutes late to catch my usual ride with my in-laws and didn't really want to go anyway of course, and I'm tempted to skip church too.

I am (re)learning about myself that I have a tendency to simmer and brood. I have had that trait for quite a long time, but it seems to have periods where it gets less pervasive, and times like now where it seems I find myself in "one of my moods" nearly every day.

Like the Jason Gray lyric, I don't really like people. I only want to be close to a few people, and I keep mentally shrinking even my short list and drawing back from people, trying, it seems, to get the point where I only have to put up with myself. Like an angsty teenager, I find that no one understands... I am caught inside my own head, testing different ideas, questioning every facet of my life, despairing that I will never find the balance for my personality or my identity, that I will never figure out who I am and what I'm supposed to be doing. Even with the people in the small circle, I cannot quite articulate what's plaguing my mind; I can't even quite sort it out myself.

So the last thing I want to do is go to happy-slappy church and same-ol'-same-ol' Sunday School, where I do nothing more than sit and stew inside, simultaneously weighing a dozen ideas in response to what has been said, finding myself more and more lost and confused the more people try to tell me what the answers are, where I try to avoid conversations more often than I successfully put on my smiley good attitude of actually wanting to get to know people and put effort into being part of community (which is an attitude I really do want to have but usually just have to try to fake because, after all, I don't really like people at all, and I'd rather hide by the lobster tank...)

Here's the heart of what I'm feeling. (Again, thank you for the words, Jason Gray.)
Jesus is speaking But it’s so hard to hear When disciples with swords Are cutting off ears Broken and bleeding I’m waiting for healing to come.
That is my excuse for avoiding church and church people. The loudest voices there are of disciples with swords or of disciples, at the best, who are unarmed but also unintelligible to me, seeming to murmur what they think are the words of Jesus, but, to me, it's just confusing and muffling and getting in the way... I can't hear Jesus speaking, and I'm despairing, more and more sure all the time that I'm not going to be able to hear him where I am.

But then, the excuse melts away to reveal the deeper malfunctions of my heart and mind:

But wounded is a part I’ve learned to play well Though the wound may run deeper Than I know how to tell Where pain’s an addiction That keeps me buried alive But when it’s all that I know I’m afraid to leave it behind 
I'm getting too good at being wounded. I am addicted to my pain. A goofy story in a 6th grade workbook I was reading earlier this week centered around the expression "Dramatic things happen to dramatic people," and I just keep thinking how much that's my problem. It's more like "Wounds happen to wounded people" in this context or "Confusion plagues the person who looks for confusion." Jason Gray also says in this song

It’s not like I’m trying To be optimistic If the truth be told I’d rather dismiss it And be free of the burden Of the living that hoping requires.
It's truly like I want it all to be proven useless, a crutch for the weak, something people use to make them feel better about their meaningless lives, so I can "dismiss it and be free of the burden of the living that hoping requires." What a messed up addiction to pain. But it's true. Hope requires an attitude and a way of living more strenuous, more full of responsibility. It requires love and fearlessness, facing people, facing life for what it is, it requires me
To bring my heart To every day And to run the risk of fearlessly loving WITHOUT RUNNING AWAY.

I'm seeing more and more what my pathologies are...
Now to overcome them...

Why (besides running late, which isn't an excuse because I could have made it) I Am Not in Sunday School Right Now

There's something I need to confess
At the risk of exposing my faults
But I'm starting to find that most of the time
I just don't like people at all
When I saw you five minutes ago
I was afraid you might talk off my ear
I panicked inside and decided to hide
And that's how I ended up here
Crouching behind the live lobster tank
Hoping you'd just pass me by, oh...
That's how I ended up here
That's how I ended up here
Oh how I wish I could say
It's my first time to hide in this spot
But with all of the people I try to avoid
I find myself down here a lot
I mean, just look at these guys in the tank
With the red rubber bands 'round their arms
If they don't open up 
And just keep to themselves
They won't do anyone harm
So I screen my calls,
don't answer the door
Sometimes wish I could disappear,
oh...That's how I ended up here
That's how I ended up ..
Building a wall so no one could bother me
Living my life in isolation
Opening up to only those close to me
Nobody's close to me, what have I done?
See, I really want to be known
But I'm not quite as strong as the fear
That you won't understand the fool that I am
And that's how I ended up here
That's how I ended up here
That's how I ended up here


"How I Ended Up Here" by Jason  Gray and Andy Gullahorn

Without Running Away by Jason Gray

I’ve spent some days looking 
For a length of rope 
And a place to hang it 
From the end of my hope 
But where I thought hope had ended 
I always find a little bit more 

It’s not like I’m trying 
To be optimistic 
If the truth be told 
I’d rather dismiss it 
And be free of the burden 
Of the living that hoping requires 

To bring my heart 
To every day 
And to run the risk of fearlessly loving 
WITHOUT RUNNING AWAY

Jesus is speaking 
But it’s so hard to hear 
When disciples with swords 
Are cutting off ears 
Broken and bleeding I’m waiting for healing to come 

But wounded is a part 
I’ve learned to play well 
Though the wound may run deeper 
Than I know how to tell 
Where pain’s an addiction 
That keeps me buried alive 
But when it’s all that I know
 I’m afraid to leave it behind 

To bring my heart 
To every day 
And to run the risk of fearlessly loving 
WITHOUT RUNNING AWAY

My heart is not lifted up 
My eyes are not lifted up 
But calm and quiet is my soul 
Like a child with its mother is my soul 

After awhile in the dark
Your eyes will adjust 
In the shadows you’ll find 
The hand you can trust 
And the still small voice
 That calls like the rising sun 
Come 
Bring your heart 
To every day 
And to run the risk of fearlessly loving 
WITHOUT RUNNING AWAY 
You must run the risk of fearlessly loving 
WITHOUT RUNNING AWAY


Monday, September 19, 2011

Groping as in a Mirror... for Something that is not that Far Away

Go read Acts 17.


In my Bible, my cursive scrawl in the top margin over Acts 17 reads "I love this story for some reason..." And I do. There are so many things about it that strike me.


The basic gist, for those who haven't read the whole chapter, is that Paul is waiting around in Athens after some run-ins in Thessalonica, and his spirit "provokes" him because of all the idol worship he sees in Athens. So, he spends a  lot of time "reasoning in the synagogue" with all kinds of people-- Jews, "God-fearing Gentiles," and Epicurean and Stoic philosophers. Paul ends up speaking to the Areopagus, a religious and educational council, and what he presents to them is the gospel but said in a way I've never ever heard a Southern preacher tell it:
For while I was passing through and examining the objects of your worship, I also found an altar with this inscription, 'TO AN UNKNOWN GOD.' Therefore what you worship in ignorance, this I proclaim to you. The God who made the world and all things in it, since He is Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in temples made with hands; nor is He served by human hands, as though He needed anything, since He Himself gives to all people life and breath and things; and He made from one man every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth, having determined their appointed times and the boundaries of their habitation, that they would seek God if perhaps they might grope for Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us; for in Him we live and move and exist, as even some of your own poets have said, 'For we also are His children.'
Paul goes on for only a few verses to talk about repentance, judgment, and Jesus's resurrection. At this point, some people begin to, as the New American Standard translation reads, "sneer." Some of Paul's listeners are skeptical of the resurrection stuff, as many of my contemporaries would be, and I'll admit I too have a tendency to turn up my nose when the gospel story is told laid on thick with lots of references to righteous judgment and eternity and rewards and other unfortunate evangelical buzz words.


Not all of Paul's listeners are completely put off, though. Some people say instead, "We shall hear you again concerning this," and that's one of the things I love about this passage. Some people want to hear again. They're intrigued. Something in it, crazy though it may be, easy as it would be for the academic mind to dismiss, seems true.  Somehow there's something true... maybe... about these ideas.


And how did Paul get their attention? Anyone who knows me knows why I love this part. He quotes their poets! Not Scripture, not Jewish law, not what he thinks or what Jesus said to him on the road to Damascus-- their poets. He points to their religion, to their shrines, to their obvious, obsessive desire to honor whatever god that might be out there to worship and shows them what they're lacking, gives them a name for the God that is unknown to them, the one true God. I love that on so many levels. I love it so much it makes me not want to try to explain  myself but just keep saying  how much I love it. I love it. I love how Paul talks to them from their culture's perspective, I love that he quotes poetry, and I love how the whole thing points, as Romans 1:19-20 does, to the fact that something in humanity knows God even when He is unknown to them.


I love that verses 24-28 are all one sentence, like Paul has to connect all the ideas together in one tumbling string of related ideas to get them all together like they can't be separated, even by a breath. They're that closely connected, flowing from each other. They're that urgent to say.


Perhaps best of all, though, I love this part, so I'll type it yet again--


He made from one man every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth, having determined their appointed times and the boundaries of their habitation, that they might seek God, if perhaps they might grope for Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us; for in Him we live and move and exist.

Reasons abound for loving this... I identify with it so much, the feeling of seeking, groping reaching out to Him, stretching for Him as if He is so far away and so hard to grasp. It reminds me of one of the parts I love from Ecclesiastes--

He has made everything appropriate in its time. He has also set eternity in their hearts, yet so that man will not find out the work which God has done from the beginning even to the end. Ecclesiastes 3:11  
Both are comforting in some ways-- God is in control, God has determined all the appointed and appropriate times just as they should be, eternity is set in our hearts, and, according to Paul, finding Him is a possibility. He made us and appointed our times so that perhaps we might find  Him. Both are perhaps even more frustrating. Paul qualifies finding God with "if," "perhaps," and "might." These are big ifs here. Solomon throws in a "yet" and says that man will not find out the work which God has done from the beginning even to the end. That kills me. Can I find what I'm looking for or not? What is the point? Then, though, even in that frustration, that despair at never knowing and finding fully, the end of Acts 17:27 envelopes and embraces in hope-- He is not far from each one of us; for in Him we live and move and exist.


This whole life is groping and grasping, struggling for the point and more often than not coming up one-sided or broken and then just digging in and sharpening some more. Yet the elusive point is out there. God is the point, and He is not that far away.


The best part of 1 Corinthians 13 to me is verse 12-- 
For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face; now I know in part, but then I will know fully just as I also have been fully known.

Amen. The reaching and the grasping-- or trying to-- are not in vain. He is not far from each of us, and one day we're actually, finally, fully going to be able to understand that. Until that day, I just have to keep reminding myself that God is not as far off as He seems, that life can never be completely in vain while that is true, and that life is in the seeking. Seeking, seeking, until one day we know, until one day we fully live and move and exist in Him and understand it as we do.

Genesis = the origin, the formation

The Sunday school class Jason and I are becoming a part of at Parkway is studying the book of Genesis; from the look of it we will be studying it for a while, and I'm finding myself almost surprisingly fascinated. What is the origin of the world? Of life? Love? Beauty? Art? Humanity? I reflected earlier this summer that I simply have to believe in God, that for me there can be no other option. I cannot believe that something as complex and driven by emotion and a sense of the possibility of perfect good and beauty can exist without a source of perfection, good, emotion. 


As expanses-of-the-sky wide open as I am about the specifics of the book of Genesis, its history, and how it is to be understood and interpreted, I do not doubt that the origin is God. In six days, six seconds, or the entire Darwinian process of centuries and centuries, everything came to be, I truly believe, at the word of God. At His breath. At His command.


A study I found online has directed me to several places in Scripture aside from Genesis that refer to the formation of the world and our Creator's foreknowledge and authority in the process. I don't know why. I want to be so logical, have such proof and rationale... yet all I have to say is this feels right. Something about the story of God as our Creator (and as our Redeemer I must equally emphasize) just fills all the gaps for me somehow... I will think about how I might express that more articulately and informatively.


All I really know to say is that I want the one in whom "all things hold together." How can I not yearn for that? I have to have hope in one who made this world, one who has the power to continue to form it, to transform it into what it should have been...
If you address as Father the One who impartially judges according to each one's work, conduct yourselves in fear during the time of your stay on earth; knowing that you were not redeemed with perishable things like silver or gold from your futile way of life inherited from your forefathers, but with precious blood, as of a lamb unblemished and spotless, the blood of Christ. For He was foreknown before the foundation of the world, but has appeared in these last times for the sake of you who through Him are believers in God, who raised Him from the dead and gave Him glory, so that your faith and hope are in God. 1 Peter 1:17-21
By faith we understand that the worlds were prepared by the word of God, so that what is seen was not made out of things which are visible. Hebrews 11:3 
He [Christ] is before all things and in Him all things hold together. Colossians 1:17
[...] that which is known about God is evident within them; for God made it evident to them. For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen, being understood through what has been made, so that the are without excuse. Romans 1:19-20 

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Better not to want the world too much

Who could envy Cain his hunger? Better to be circumspect and silent. Better not to want the world too much. Left alone with the body of his brother, Cain began to assemble the words about what Abel had done and what he had been forced to do in return. It was a long story. It took his entire lifeto tell it. And even then it wasn’t finished.How great language had to become to encompass its deft evasions and sly contradictions, its preenings and self-satisfied gloatings.Each generation makes a contribution, hoping to have got it right at last. The sun rises and sets. The leaves flutter like a million frightened hands. Confidently, we step forward and tack a few meager phrases onto the end.

Each generation makes a contribution, hoping to have got it right at last.


Hoping to have got it right at last.


I love the book of Ecclesiastes, and  I am constantly reminded that Solomon has it right when he says there is nothing new under the sun. Generation after generation, we're following the same patterns with different specifics. Struggling and striving as those before us, trying to add meaning that hasn't been added before... just to "tack a few meager phrases onto the end."


And as I speed re-read Ecclesiastes this morning, noting all the portions I have circled and identified with in the past in the exact same way I identify with them this morning, I am not apathetic or pessimistic or down-trodden or hopeless as it might sound.


How is it possible that I don't really find the refrain of Ecclesiastes "Vanity of vanities! All is vanity!" hopeless? Somehow, this morning, it is not hopeless, but hope in something that is not vain, a reminder of the proper perspective of humanity, which is to remember that our lives are brief, a repetition of lives before us and without control over the lives that come after, lives that are filled with vanities, futilities, inconsistencies, and injustices. We struggle to make meaning of every aspect of our corporal lives, and, in trying to get it right, we all follow different paths, some wisdom, some riches, some work, some religion, and  in the end it is all the same. As Hamlet reflected over the skull of Yorrick, Solomon said it centuries before: "One fate befalls them both."


There is nothing new under the sun. Why then, do I search for the point as if it is something that can be discovered that hasn't been discovered before?


I think if I could just study enough... if I could just be wise enough... but the problem with the whole thing is that my perspective is rooted in the idea that I, a human, can grasp it and can get it right, and that perspective is foolishness. There is only one point: God. It's a point I can't ever understand, but that's the point. And this morning, I am rejoicing in that.


But beyond this, my son, be warned: the writing of many books is endless, and the excessive devotion to books is wearing to the body. The conclusion, when all has been heard, is: fear God and keep His commandments, because this applies to every person. For God will bring every act to judgement, everything which is hidden, whether it is good or evil. Ecclesiastes 12:12-14
And I  saw every work of God, I concluded that man cannot discover the work which has been done under the sun. Even though man should seek laboriously, he will not discover; and though the wise man should say, "I know," he cannot discover. Ecclesiastes 8:17
He has made everything appropriate in its time. He has also set eternity in their hearts, yet so that man will not find out the work which God has done from the beginning even to the end. Ecclesiastes 3:11 


The Point and Grasping for It

I had no intention of opening this with any sort of metaphor, but as I typed the title and thought about the point, I was reminded of my pencil sharpener at school. It's one of the old-fashioned wall mounted kind, but I've loved it because it has worked better, longer, and more quietly than any of the multiple electrical sharpeners I've purchased since being a teacher. Lately, though, something in it has gotten jammed or dull, and it now frequently sharpens pencils only on one side, leaving wood covering the graphite completely on one side of the point. Because of this, kids stand in lines half-a-dozen children long sharpening their pencils until they break and trying again and again and again, only to produce pencils that have sharp points but are unusable because of the side still enveloped in wood.


The whole process is frustrating, and at some point, I always have to intervene and force the pencil to sharpen or trade the students' unusable pencils for ones I have sharpened before class in an attempt to eliminate the lost time of endless pencil sharpening.


Sometimes, on mornings like this one, I feel like I'm one of the kids standing at the pencil sharpener, sharpening and sharpening and sharpening. Pencil dust is flying everywhere, and I'm turning the handle as carefully as I can, trying not to break the graphite as I sharpen, but each time I pull out my pencil, praying that it has a usable point, it is either one-sided or broken. Again and again. One sided or broken. Unusable. And I'm starting to get impatient and there are other kids waiting on me to finish, relying on my success for their chance at the pencil sharpener, but still, despite my urgency and desire for success, I keep wearing down my pencil, smaller and smaller and one sided or broken.




Today, I could be in Sunday school. I was running late this morning, but I could have made it. But I didn't leave. I decided to stay here and do this instead because I simply don't know what the point would be in going. What's the point? What's the purpose?


I want a community, true. I want to learn more about God and this Christian life that I'm trying to live, true. Both of those would be stated purposes for attending Sunday school, for attending church, and I want them. But is that what I'm getting by making sure I attend like I'm supposed to? Is that what I'm getting by reading my Bible and Sunday school lessons? Is that what I'm getting by reading more books and spending time in my blog? Am I really getting closer to anything? Is there really a point? Or is the pencil just emerging, lesson after lesson, book after book, as either one sided or broken?

Saturday, July 23, 2011

A poem my last post makes me think of for some reason...

Long Story by Stephen Dobyns

There must have been a moment after the expulsion
from the Garden where the animals were considering
what to do next and just who was in charge.
The bear flexed his muscles, the tiger flashed
his claws, and even the porcupine thought himself
fit to rule and showed off the knife points
of his quills. No one noticed the hairless creatures,
with neither sharp teeth, nor talons, they were too puny.
It was then Cain turned and slew his own brother
and Abel’s white body lay sprawled in the black dirt
as if it had already lain cast down forever.
What followed was an instant of prophetic thought
as the trees resettled themselves, the grass
dug itself deeper into the ground and all
grew impressed by the hugeness of Cain’s desire.
He must really want to be boss, said the cat.
This was the moment when the animals surrendered
the power of speech as they crept home to the bosoms
of their families, the prickly ones, the smelly ones,
the ones they hoped would never do them harm.
Who could envy Cain his hunger? Better to be circumspect
and silent. Better not to want the world too much.
Left alone with the body of his brother, Cain began
to assemble the words about what Abel had done
and what he had been forced to do in return.
It was a long story. It took his entire life
to tell it. And even then it wasn’t finished.
How great language had to become to encompass
its deft evasions and sly contradictions,
its preenings and self-satisfied gloatings.
Each generation makes a contribution, hoping
to have got it right at last. The sun rises
and sets. The leaves flutter like a million
frightened hands. Confidently, we step forward
and tack a few meager phrases onto the end

There's a story I need to tell...

While reading Same Kind of Different as Me (which I highly recommend), I came across this passage by Ron Hall with Lynn Vincent-- a passage that sums up a lot of thoughts that have been in my heart and mind in the past year or two:
I guess we were pretty good at the whole Christian thing-- or maybe we were bad at it-- because we managed to alienate many of our old college friends. With our new spiritual eyes, we could see they didn’t have fish stickers either, and we set about saving them from eternal damnation with all the subtlety of rookie linebackers. Looking back now, I mourn the mutual wounds inflicted in verbal battles with the "unsaved." In fact, I have chosen to delete that particular term from my vocabulary as I have learned that even with my $500 European-designer bifocals, I cannot see into a person’s heart to know his spiritual condition. All I can do is tell the jagged tale of my own spiritual journey and declare that my life has been the better for having followed Christ.

Hall’s words sear into me when he talks about verbal battles and saving others from eternal damnation. Faces of dear friends whom I tried to “save” in high school-- like that was my job and not God’s-- come to my mind, and I remember bitter cynics I met in classes in college who probably had every right to be cold and harsh toward evangelical Christians.   It doesn’t take many episodes of The 700 Club, news broadcasts about Christians burning holy books or storming soldiers’ funerals with signs that say “God hates you,” saccharine speeches of Joel Osteen, failed predictions of the end of time, or  fire and brimstone stories that smack of the same mixture of lie and ultimatum your parents gave you in the Santa Claus presents vs. coal scenario to make even a believing Christian like me doubt the whole crazy thing. Of course people are cynics. It doesn’t take much wit or way with words to poke plenty of holes in Christianity. I believe, and I like to think I can do it with the best of ‘em.
“Is there anyone who ever remembers changing their mind from the paint on a sign? Is there anyone who really recalls ever breaking rank at all for something someone yelled real loud one time?” So go the opening lyrics to John Mayer’s “Belief.” I think of these lines every time I drive I-40 East from Nashville to Newport and contemplate the gigantic billboard inquisition “If you died today, where would you spend eternity?” and as I drive through Knoxville, wondering if the city’s half a dozen billboards with rip-your-heart-out anti-abortion ads that say things like “Mommy, I forgive you. You didn’t know what you were doing. Love, the Unborn” have actually ever helped anyone escape hell at all-- either the literal, physical, eternal afterlife one or the literal, physical, emotional, here-and-now-on-earth hell that I can only imagine the experience of having an abortion must be.
I don’t know that I’ve deleted the word “unsaved” from my vocabulary, but I know I hate using it, and I hate using the word “saved” for that matter too. I don’t like to talk to about “when I got saved” like it was a one-time magical event or like I had even a speck to do with it in comparison to how much God had to do with it, and while the word is used to describe followers of Christ in Scripture, I think it has been tainted in our culture with too many unintended meanings to keep using it as a main part of my vocabulary at least. I do know, though, like Ron Hall, that there is certainly no way for me to tell if someone else is or isn’t saved-- whatever exactly that means-- and I’ve been quite through for a quite a long time with the practice of telling people that they need to get saved or how to do it. 
At the same time, however, it doesn’t sit well in me to stay silent about what I believe. I feel like a liar and a coward not being bold about my faith. As cynical as I am about almost every way I’ve ever seen evangelism happen, and as surely as I believe that not many people-- if any-- really change their minds from just the paint on a sign, I still feel that something is missing from my faith if I don’t talk about it, if don’t share it.
If I know of a sale at a clothing store that I know a friend loves as much as I do, I make sure she knows about it. If I read a good book, I lend it to a friend. If I know a good doctor or hairdresser, I recommend that person. I sang the praises of Indian Lake AT&T on Facebook and to everyone I saw for days just because the guy behind the counter let me in right at closing time and gave me a new SIM card so my phone would work again. I insist on sharing favorite movies and songs with others, and I tell everyone I know that they simply have to have Sweet CeCe’s if they haven’t before. Seriously.
So what must my faith, my Jesus, my God mean to me if I never really even bring them up? How important can they really be in my life if they’re less worth mentioning than the brand of straightening iron I use or what Taylor Swift song I’m really digging right now?
Of course, it’s not as simple as that. It’s not so much that I don’t think it’s important as it is that I don’t want to push my beliefs on anyone. Sharing interests and day-to-day information doesn’t have so much potential bite to it. After all, it’s not like I tell my friends that they’re going to go to hell or-- doctrines of eternity aside-- that their life won’t be as full or satisfying without a hot pink CHI or sprinkling cereal on top of frozen yogurt. Not even the president of the Taylor-Swift-Can’t-Sing Club is going to be that offended-- at least not for long-- just because I tagged her in a note with the lyrics to Taylor’s latest bubble gum sweet toe-tapping tune. It’s just not that big a deal.
But tag an “unbelieving” friend in a note about their need for Jesus, give them a Bible instead of your favorite recent bestseller for their birthday, or recommend the living water that can satisfy even long after the Sweet CeCe’s dish is empty, and you’re treading on much more sensitive, divisive turf. Religion, faith, belief-- these are so much more personal than a sale at the Gap Outlet. And I wouldn’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings, send the wrong message, be judgmental, push them farther away, ruin a relationship forever...
But, religion, faith, belief-- they’re so much more important to me than a sale at the Gap Outlet. Why am I willing to let relationships with people I care about stay at such a superficial level that I’m afraid to talk about anything more personal than musical preferences and places to eat? Even more important, less vapid topics that I can and do discuss with friends-- things like politics, thoughts and philosophies, education-- those things aren’t as important to me either. I act like they are. My time, attention, and conversations certainly reflect that they are. But I know that they’re just pieces, just parts, just shadowy reflections of what I really want to explore and know and be a part of-- God.
So here’s what I have to work on-- telling that jagged tale of my  own spiritual journey and learning how to explain, somehow, that my life is better with Jesus. And not better in a “I pray to God and He sees fit to give all good gifts to me to bless my life” way. And not better in a more holy or more “good” way. And not any better than anyone else either.
Just better. 
Better because it all just makes more sense, feels more complete, seems to explain what I feel echoed, whispered, promised in everything-- literature as old and older than the Bible, ballet, a sky full of stars, the ideals of love and compassion and sacrifice that seem to weave through every story that moves me, music, art, academia. Everything in history, all of humanity, is groaning for something-- striving for better, reaching for perfection, longing for and looking for wholeness. 
A student gave me a page of quotations she liked because she thought I would enjoy them, and I recently painted one of them onto a canvas to hang in my classroom. It's attributed to Ernst Haas, who a quick Google search reveals is a photographer and one whose work I want to explore and share with my students. He said, “A picture is the expression of an impression. If beauty were not in us, how would we ever recognize it?” That’s how I feel about God. Somehow, everything in art and history seems to proclaim that man is searching for beauty, finding glimmers of it, striving to preserve it, express it, create more of it, celebrate what of it he can find in himself and those around him. Art wouldn’t change if it had been perfected yet. Technology and society wouldn’t continue to advance if there were no room left for progress. All of human history, all of my history as a human, seems to be just one long story of progressing, advancing, carrying on toward beauty and perfection. How could we long for it if it didn’t exist somewhere? Why can we not attain it if it is not beyond humanity itself, if it is not something more, something purer, vaster, more full and complete than we can understand?
It is not possible for me not to believe in God. Surely He must exist. It seems to me it stands to reason that love, hope, joy, and beauty must derive from somewhere beyond the functions of chemicals in the human brain. Science tells us that matter can be neither created nor destroyed, but surely it must have a source somewhere; if it cannot be created, how does it exist at all? Surely there must be something to bestow the initial finite amount of “stuff” in the universe.
And surely personalities and spirits, emotions and thoughts have origin not in cold impersonal chemicals but in a spirit, in an entity with personality, emotions, and love. God.
Now I realize the next logical step is the question of who/what created God, and that is a “chicken or egg” kind of conundrum, but somehow I am not at odds with the idea of an uncreated deity as much as I am with the idea of an uncreated human. It is problematic for me to try to assume that nothing created humanity and that it simply exists. It is far more logical and fathomable to me that something exists beyond me-- something so complex that it is beyond my realm, beyond my understanding, somehow able to exist by its own accord and for its own sake. It is impossible, however, for me to believe that something as complex but ultimately powerless as humans could simply be, simply happen, simply exist without any idea of how we came to be so.
John Mayer goes on to sing that belief is “a beautiful armor that makes for the heaviest sword- like punching underwater, you never can hit who you’re trying for.” I’ve become fearful of the sword of belief, petrified of wielding it clumsily, misaiming, and shattering, scarring people I care about.
But “how will they call on Him in whom they have not believed? How will they believe in Him whom they have not heard?” (Romans 10:14) How can anyone I know know of what faith, belief, God mean to me and have done in me, if I am always silent? If I don’t consider Jesus a name to be said more than those of human musicians, authors, and politicians? 
How do I even begin to tell my jagged story? What do I say? How do I convince anyone that this is not what John Mayer writes off as a “chemical weapon for the war that’s raging on inside.” Faith for me is not “an exhibition,” an attempt that I feel compelled to make at being good or doing the right thing. It is something that is real, liberating, all-encompassing.
I’ve got to get better at telling that story, and I’ve got to start telling it. Genuinely. Not in a way that’s like verbally condemning someone who’s lactose intolerant for not trying Sweet CeCe’s but in a way that’s like recommending a doctor to someone who’s actually looking for one, like lending a book to someone who might truly enjoy reading it.
It’s the story that defines my life, who I am, everything that matters. It’s a story worth telling to everyone who cares at all to hear...