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Wednesday, October 23, 2013

October 20th, 2013 Luke 18:1-8




LUKE 18:1-8  NRSV

1Then Jesus told his disciples a parable about their need to pray always and not to lose heart. 2He said,

"In a certain city there was a judge who neither feared God nor had respect for people. 3In that city there was a widow who kept coming to him and saying,

'Grant me justice against my opponent.'

4For a while he refused; but later he said to himself,

'Though I have no fear of God and no respect for anyone,
yet because this widow keeps bothering me,
I will grant her justice,
so that she may not wear me out by continually coming.'"

6And the Lord said,

"Listen to what the unjust judge says.
7And will not God grant justice to God’s chosen ones who cry to God day and night? Will God delay long in helping them?
8I tell you, God will quickly grant justice to them.
And yet, when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?"


***


            There are two things I believe when I believe nothing else. They are that God is present, and that God is continually at work for good. I don’t say this because I read it in some book, nor do I say it because I have done some drawn out theological proof. I say this because I have been the widow. I have been the one who sought justice and was refused. I have been the one, who continually came to the judge, and over, and over again was denied. I have been the one, when all hope in human systems was lost, I saw the idiosyncratic and synchronistic systems of God’s justice. I have been the widow.

            A long time ago, time long ago enough that I can talk about it, and time long ago enough that I have healed from it, and been through counseling galore because of it, I was sexually assaulted.

            It happened at seminary, of all places, because it seems like, places of power and implicit trust, lure and hide perpetrators. I think of the judge in the scripture. I think of his his position of power. I wonder how he got it, was it an ol’ boys club of sorts ruling Jewish law? Was he someone’s family and slid by because of his last name? Was he charismatic, and confident, and convincing and had the narcissistic ability to pull the wool over other’s eye’s? Did he have his devout followers believing his every word, and opposers who had caught on and were disgusted by his self entitlement? It was this way with the seminarian who raped me. He was a local boy from an old family, from an old and powerful church, the first Presbyterian church in Atlanta, Georgia, whose members sat on the boards of the seminary. His papa was a preacher and he was and is a youth director in the church. I was pickin’ a big battle by coming forward. I was just a widow.

            I came from the black sheep of my Presbytery, a small quirky church with no other ministers in its linage, I was raised by laity, and schooled at a liberal arts college in the Northeast, and I came alone thinking seminary would be an amazing time to grow closer to God, and to do God’s work. This turned out to be true, but not in the ways I had hoped. I grew closer to God because there were moments in my dorm room crying on the cold hard tile floor where I was truly alone but for God. Those were my widow moments. I was the widow.

            I do not know the widow’s plight in the scripture. I wonder, had someone ripped her off, or was she not receiving the care and protection to which she was entitled under Jewish law. Had she picked a battle with someone bigger and more powerful then she? Was law the only way to solve her issue? I do not know, and I supposed she could have sought justice for any number of things. What we know is that she sought justice over and over again. As a first year seminarian I went to the school, who told me not to speak of the assault. I asked the president of the seminary why we had a prayer wall where students wrote down their joys and concerns. I asked how I was supposed respond to the question, “How are you?” I wonder if the judge told the widow not to speak. I wonder if she too felt the oppression silence can be. I wonder how many times she had to go back. My case went to the judicial court at the seminary. Beside me sat my preaching professor, and as the seminary used the old tricks of victim blaming, Rev. Dr. Anna Carter Florence spoke truth to power, and preached gospel. Ultimately, the perpetrator and I were asked to go to counseling, to which I had already been attending, and he had no recourse to go or not go, moreover sexual assault was never mentioned. I, like the widow, came back again.

            Over Christmas break, my dad and I went to his college library. He and I researched, pouring through psychology books, and statistics, and some really good feminist literature. And with that research, I wrote one hell of a letter listing what the seminary did wrong and threatening to sue they and the perpetrator both. My dad stood in the kitchen holding up the twenty page document, and with tears in his eyes he said, “Kate, this is how the world changes.” It was was the most proud of myself I have ever been, but my dad was wrong. It was not how the world changed.
           
            After break, board members, the president of the seminary, and other power players hurried down seminary hallways with big envelopes and met in wood-paneled board rooms. I went to a lawyer, who was willing to take the case. He supported that seminary had been grossly overstepping their bounds, and extremely detrimental to my health by re-victimizing. After a few meetings the lawyer said to me, “I want you to understand this will be the next year or two of your life.” At that point, I was so tired. I had prayed and prayed, and been hopeless but for prayer, prayers that figured the situation was in God’s hands, because I had seen the wreckage of human hands. If there was any hope, it was in God, and God was at work.

            It was Spring now, and I had planted a garden. I learned to be alone, and to find contentment in the soil, and the earthworms, and after this long winter of my life, sprouts were beginning to burst forth. It amazed me that in the depths of pain, there could be blossoms, there could be life anew, and I saw God in whimsical cosmos and the bounty of tomatoes. I saw God in the friends who stood up for me, in the professors that stood by me, and in the classmates who preached fire and brimstone against the injustice of rape. I saw God in those that took the courage to ask how I really was. I saw God in those that heard my story. I saw God in the elderly seminary couple who pulled me aside in the dining hall and told me they knew, and that they were there, and that they believed me. I saw God in the work and the women at the Rape Crisis Center. In the way I came in a broken mess of confusion and pain, and I left with the strength and knowledge of a survivor. I saw God in the cousin of friend who showed up on my last day at the Rape Crisis Center, and putting two and two together she said that I was the reason she had come seeking help. That her cousin had shared my story, and it gave the the courage call. I saw God in these things, and I saw God’s justice in these ways, and through God’s ___ justice I found healing, healing for myself and healing for the world.

            It was not the normal ways of justice, the court and judge ways, the crime and punishment ways. It was the ways that God made many of us better pastors, better preachers, better people. It was the ways that healed me, that friends said how nice it was to see me outside again. It was good to see me smiling again. It was good to begin to feel like myself again. I couldn’t give a year or two more of my life to seek human justice. I had a lot in me, but I didn’t have that much. Somewhere in the Greater Atlanta files is a crime report on a youth director written in my penned out hand. That was where I had to stop, but I felt okay with that, because I had seen the ways God brought justice. My prayers had been answered, not in the way I wanted or expected, but with unfathomable grace and creativity.

            The scripture says, “God will grant justice to God’s chosen ones who cry to God day and night. God will not delay long in helping them. I tell you, God will quickly grant justice to them.” I believe this. I believe God is present, and God is continually seeking justice for the widow among us, and the window that is us. 

            I believe those prayers prayed on cold hard tile do not hit deaf ears, I believe they open our ears, and our eyes, and our heart. Our prayers are not about making God do something. God is already doing all God can. God is working quickly. God is working for justice and healing. Our prayers are about our seeing God’s work in our midst. Out prayers are the reminder to not loose heart, our prayers are for the widow to have faith to see the justice of God on earth. I have been the widow, and I have have seen the justice of God. In this I have faith.

           

October 13th 2013 LAMENTATIONS 1:1-6, 3:19-26



LAMENTATIONS 1:1-6, 3:19-26
The book of Lamentations articulates the anguish of the Hebrews in the wake of the conquest of Jerusalem and the razing of the city by Babylon.

1How lonely sits the city that once was full of people! How like a widow she has become, she that was great among the nations! She that was a princess among the provinces has become a vassal.
2She weeps bitterly in the night, with tears on her cheeks; among all her lovers she has no one to comfort her; all her friends have dealt treacherously with her, they have become her enemies.
3Judah has gone into exile with suffering and hard servitude; she lives now among the nations, and finds no resting place; her pursuers have all overtaken her in the midst of her distress.
4The roads to Zion mourn, for no one comes to the festivals; all her gates are desolate, her priests groan; her young girls grieve, and her lot is bitter.
5Her foes have become the masters, her enemies prosper, because the LORD has made her suffer for the multitude of her transgressions; her children have gone away, captives before the foe.
6From daughter Zion has departed all her majesty. Her princes have become like stags that find no pasture; they fled without strength before the pursuer.
19The thought of my affliction and my homelessness is wormwood and gall! 20My soul continually thinks of it and is bowed down within me. 21But this I call to mind, and therefore I have hope:
22The steadfast love of the LORD never ceases, his mercies never come to an end; 23they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness. 24"The LORD is my portion," says my soul, "therefore I will hope in him."
25The LORD is good to those who wait for him, to the soul that seeks him. 26It is good that one should wait quietly for the salvation of the LORD.



***
Hope in the Lord.

            There are days like this, there are months, and sometimes there are years, but there is never an eternity like this, an eternity of lament, because there is a God in which to hope.

            I look at this passage, and if we are honest with ourselves, and willing to go those deep wounded places, we can relate to this passage. Lamentations uses the image of daughter Zion weeping and alone in a city that has been conquered and forsaken. I imagine there are times in our lives where we felt so alone that only metaphor can describe the emptiness. This personal emptiness is described by Pastor Nate Pyle, in his article, Confronting the Lie, God Wont Give You More Than You Can Handle. He writes,

“The past three weeks have been the most difficult I have ever gone through.  These three weeks have been filled with illness, the terrible-three’s (the terrible-two’s are an out-and-out lie), a friend suffering the consequence of sin, a ministry I am a part of reeling in confusion and pain, having to cancel a trip to celebrate my parents 60th birthdays, and our family experiencing the emotional roller-coaster of finding out we were pregnant only to be told the pregnancy was ectopic and could be life-threatening to my wife if it was not ended.[1]...



This experience forced me to look at one such statement that gets spouted often when people go through a lot: God won’t give you more than you can handle. If I may be so bold, let’s just call that what it is:

Bullshit.

Tell that to a survivor of Auschwitz.
Tell it to the man who lost his wife and child in a car accident.
Tell it to the girl whose innocence was robbed from her.
Tell it to the person crushed under the weight of depression and anxiety.
Tell it to the kids who just learned their parent has a terminal illness.

Limp, anemic sentiments will not stand in the face of a world that is not as it should be.”

            Pastor Pyle, is in a Daughter Zion situation, and as he notes, it is not only his life that is in this situation. It is the world. Daughter Zion not only represents the individual, but also the community’s experience of grief. I think of this grief, in worn torn countries, those plauged by natural disaster, or oppression. Where is Daughter Zion today? Does she weep next to weapons in Somalia, or child trafficking from North Korea, or violence from the drug cartels in Mexico City and Juarez, does she hid in girl’s schools in Pakistan, does she feel empty looking over the flooded out and burned up towns in Colorado, is she here with us after the death of a child a couple weeks ago? There are times in our homelands where we feel overtaken and forsaken that we can only describe ourselves in Daughter Zion sorts of ways. Yet, even for daughter Zion, there is hope. At the end of her painful litany, she speaks,

This I call to mind, and therefore I have hope:
22The steadfast love of the LORD never ceases, his mercies never come to an end; 23they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness. 24"The LORD is my portion," says my soul, "therefore I will hope in him."
25The LORD is good to those who wait for him, to the soul that seeks him. 26It is good that one should wait quietly for the salvation of the LORD.”

            As a pastor, I hear this notion a lot. People say to me that they don’t understand how people make it through the hard times without faith. This wonder is often less of a judgement against nonbelievers, than it is a profound gratitude for God’s presence in the life of the suffering. It is daughter Zion type of moment, a moment when all one can do, all one has left is hope.

            When I was little, and didn’t believe in God, I had this hope, this hope in humanity, that one day, we would all gather together and seek to do good. It was much the image of children, red, and yellow, black, and white, all holding hands in a circle around the earth. I imagined everyone seeking to do good, and if we just tried a little harder we could change the world for the better. I was, if you can imagine, quite an idealistic and brazen youth. My mom remembers answering my debates with the quip, “Well Kate, Life is not fair.” She also remembered my answer. “Well Mom, it should be fair, and we should try to do everything we can make it fair.” Although, the response to that I got in the old days was probably more along the lines of, “because I said so, Kate,” she later told me that my challenge of change always stunned her, and I think when we bring hope to hopelessness it is stunning.

            These days, some of my youth-like-idealism is gone. I no longer think, we could all band together - red, and yellow, black, and white. We can’t even band together in this country Red State and Blue State. With this reality, there is hopelessness that comes in seeing the world in shades of grey. I no longer wish on every dandelion for World Peace, and I doubt it is possible to end hunger. I no longer have that hope in humanity, and I think my child self would be upset with me, I am part of the problem. But what my child-self did not know, that I know now, is a hope in God. A hope in the mysterious ways God responds to Daughter Zion. The small kindnesses that happen right when you need them, a card, a call, a quote. The ways that although nothing gold can stay, there is also grass and roots that overcome concrete, popping through parking lots and sidewalks. That even in the abandoned lots of NYC dandelions grow, and give pops of yellow color. Pastor Pyle write about this too.


“Later, Paul will write it is when he is weak that the strength of Christ is seen.  In other words, when we can’t do it any longer.  When we are fed up.  When it has become too much.  When we have nothing left.  When we are empty.  When it is beyond our capability to deal with it.  Then, in that moment, the strength of the God of resurrection will be seen.  Until we get to that point, we rely on ourselves thinking we can handle it and take care of the problem.

Don’t hear me saying I am rejoicing because of the last couple of weeks.  I am not. Not once have I danced around our house shouting, “Yeah suffering!”  Instead, in the midst of pain and hurt, I am actively expecting God to do something.  I don’t know what.  I don’t know when.  But I am expecting the God of resurrection to heal us.  I am expecting God to restore us.  I am expecting him to redeem this situation.  I am expecting him to do this and so I will be actively looking and waiting for him to do something.  I believe expectant waiting can only happen when we exchange our feeble platitudes for an authentic faith that engages God with the full brunt of our emotion and pain.  Only then can salvation been seen. But that exchange takes courage.

            It takes courage to have hope, it is nonsensical, and unrealistic that as life is pulling us in downward, that it will ever turn around and go the other way, but what is amazing, is that it does. I have this image from my childhood of the children’s offering basket at my home church. It was yarn, and had red, and yellow back and white kids all holding hands encircling the center of the offering basket. Rather than the image of kids around the globe, this offering basket is my image of hope. That somehow God can take what we have, our daughter Zion moments, and create something new and good. That even in our daughter zion moments, we can have hope, because God is present. Because, there are Daughter Zion days, days like this, there are months, and sometimes there are years, but there is never an eternity like this, never an eternity of lament, because there is a God in which to hope.



[1] http://natepyle.com/confronting-the-lie-god-wont-give-you-more-than-you-can-handle/#sthash.lVd1pXK2.dpuf