Inaccessible healthcare websites, international surveillance of cell phone conversations, renewed interest in conspiracy theories for historical events, lack of support for public schools, shifting more responsibility for food and shelter for the unemployed or underemployed to non-profits, distrust of government representatives, disgust at huge profits and bailouts, long terms of recovery from being underwater either from storm surges or from mortgage losses - our society is a mess! My own chosen constructs and political leanings sway and stagger. My confidence wanes. I’m sick of it. Tired. And the irony is that in the midst of this, I’m actually fine. By that I mean I’m still standing. Solvent. Healthy. Secure. Befriended. Married with children. Educated. Passionate about my life’s work. Blessed. Fortunate. I take the cake, as they say, on all the above, but I’m frosted with frustration and foreboding. This is what I have in common with nearly everyone I know. I’m beginning to discover that the only thing that might work will have to be “something else.”
I’m a Christian, but not the sort of Christian that you might expect, that is, not the sort that seems to make the daily news. For example, I don’t worry about prayer in public schools. I prayed in study halls, at lockers, at ball games, on my way to and from schools all my life, and I never missed another person leading the group in prayers aloud because, for one thing, the bible, and Jesus in particular, warns against its pitfalls (Matthew 6: 5-6). In fact, I don’t regularly grumble about or retreat from humanity with all its flagrant failures and debauchery, partly because I was raised to practice honest self-examination and largely because Jesus was known for moving among and eating with low life. It was the one true, irrefutable charge against him, and yet, in the context of his purpose and character, that choice was transformed from a condemnation to confirmation of his message and then, believe it or not, to commission for those who would follow him.
So, here’s how it works: You
have to pack and carry two basic expectations: 1) Jesus is Jesus. We are only like Jesus when His Spirit produces
something else through our attempts to engage life’s situations and
relationships. 2) People are
people, God love them. Everyone I meet is lovable, because God made them so and, in fact, does love them. But at the same time, everyone I meet is also certainly selfish. Everyone I meet struggles with the dichotomy of
money or other form of personal power and God; everyone chooses regularly between self-indulgence and sacrifice. Everyone I meet is self-righteous, excusing
him or herself and judging others.
Everyone. It’s only when I expect
something different from that, something more from others, that I’m offended,
disappointed, frustrated, or shocked. It’s
only when I expect something different, something more that I tend to play
dress-up in self-righteousness myself, tossing those faux-god boas of emotional
reaction around my shoulders. You can
flaunt high and mighty principles all day long, but you can’t fix people. They won’t shape up. They don’t shame up. They aren’t berated into better-ness.
I expect Jesus to be Jesus and people to be
people. At the same time, I try to remember
which one I am and how I'm doing at the moment. And, especially, I remember that
Jesus repurposes damaged goods, left and right. He’s good at it. Perfect, actually. That’s not too high an expectation to believe;
he is something else.
May you have undaunted Grace and Peace,
Pastor Shirley
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