tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-79591098102502519372024-03-07T15:05:45.230-08:00amateur believerPatty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.comBlogger49125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-17767623909951638572012-12-08T08:39:00.001-08:002012-12-08T08:39:15.568-08:00Ramah
I write about Christmas a lot, so I
frequently find myself searching for a verse I know I saw in the story of the
nativity. Unlike my Christian students, who, drawing on years of Awana, can
spit back Book-Chapter-Verse at the mere mention of a phrase from the
B-I-B-L-E, I—having read the Bible for the first time in my thirties, when I
was already on the falling slope of the memorization peak—have to rely on
concordances and Google and BibleGateway.com to find what I need and even then
often end up going page by page through an entire book before I finally arrive
where I know I’ve been in Scripture. <br />
<br />
So, every year I leaf past a little
set-in passage from Jeremiah quoted in Matthew’s account of Jesus’ birth:<br />
<br />
<div class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt 1in;">
<span class="textmatt-2-18"><span class="textjer-31-4">“</span>A voice
is heard in Ramah,</span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">weeping and great mourning,</span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">Rachel weeping for her children</span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">and refusing to be comforted,</span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">because they are no more.” (2:18)<o:p></o:p></span></div>
<br />
<div class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">
<span class="textmatt-2-18"><i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">Ramah. What’s that?</i> I ask myself as I speed past to the
frankincense and myrrh. Then I zoom in for a closer look and am again
surprised: <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">Women weeping and mourning and
refusing to be comforted? What’s that doing in there among the good news of
great joy? </i>And every year I have to remind myself again of Herod’s vicious
jealousy after the magi’s visit that resulted in the murder of all the little
boys he thought might be the King they were looking for. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
<span class="textmatt-2-18"></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">Right on
the cursed heel of the Christmas story—or right in the midst of it, for those
who eclipse the whole story to include the visit of the magi when Jesus was a
toddler in with what happened on the night of his birth—this consideration not
of the good news of great joy but the misery and loss that preceded it. The
Israelites’ repeated loss of a place to belong to. Their loss of their children
in war after war. Their loss of God himself, who, as it must have seemed during
those generations of suffering that preceded the coming of the Messiah, had
forgotten all about them. <o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"><i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;"></i></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"><i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">Where are you, Lord?</i> the psalmists and
prophets wail, and the word <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">Ramah</i>
leaping out of the page before me sounds like a lament, echoing their
plea.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"><i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;"></i></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"><i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">What’s this Ramah business doing in the
Christmas story?</i> I wonder crankily, briefly, as I speed on to the happier
verses.<o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">All this
to say that sadness and suffering seem incompatible with Christmas, so much so
that I can hardly think about one in terms of the other. Even though I often
read accounts of people with the Christmas blues. And even though, as the
victim of crime once many years ago during the holiday season, I fight, on the
anniversary of the crime, a yearly attack of post-traumatic stress symptoms
that amount to just such weeping and mourning and refusal to be comforted.
Indeed, for me and many others—those recently widowed, for example, or others
away from family on this family-oriented holiday and just simply those who are,
for whatever reason, lonely—sadness at Christmastime is often inescapable.<o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">Today,
I’d like to consider Ramah with a bit more reverence and attention. Matthew is
quoting Jeremiah 31:15, an ominous verse in the midst of passage full of
promises emphatically from the Lord. (Jeremiah repeats words like “This is what
the <span style="font-variant: small-caps;">Lord</span> says” or “declares the <span style="font-variant: small-caps;">Lord</span>” twenty-two times in Chapter 31’s
thirty-eight verses.) “</span><span class="textjer-31-2">I will come to give rest
to <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:country-region w:st="on">Israel</st1:country-region></st1:place>,”
the </span><span class="textmatt-2-18"><span style="font-variant: small-caps;">Lord</span>
promises (31:2). “</span><span class="textjer-31-3">I have loved you with an
everlasting love” and “</span><span class="textjer-31-4">I will build you up
again,</span> <span class="textjer-31-4">and you, Virgin Israel, will be rebuilt”
(31:3-4). Here’s one I especially like: “</span><span class="textjer-31-16">your
work will be rewarded” (31:16). And how about this one: “</span><span class="textjer-31-17">there is hope for your descendants” (31:17)? <o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-17"></span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-17">In this single
chapter of Jeremiah, the Father promises his children a new covenant of
forgiveness—“</span><span class="textjer-31-34">I will forgive their wickedness</span>
<span class="textjer-31-34">and will remember their sins no more</span><span class="textjer-31-17">” (31:34)—and he assures them, “</span><span class="textjer-31-18">I have surely heard Ephraim’s moaning. . . </span><span class="textjer-31-20">Is not Ephraim my dear son,</span> <span class="textjer-31-20">the child in whom I delight?. . . my heart yearns for him;</span>
<span class="textjer-31-20">I have great compassion for him”</span><span class="textjer-31-18"> (31:18, 20).</span><span class="textjer-31-4"><o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-4"></span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-4">Listen to
the joys God has planned for us:</span><br />
<br />
<div class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt 1in;">
<span class="textjer-31-4">“Again
you will take up your timbrels</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-4">and go out to dance with the joyful.</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-5">Again you will plant vineyards</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-5">on the hills of <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:city w:st="on">Samaria</st1:city></st1:place>;</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-5">the farmers will plant them</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-5">and enjoy their fruit.</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-6">There will be a day when watchmen cry out</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-6">on the hills of Ephraim,</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-6">‘Come, let us go up to <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:city w:st="on">Zion</st1:city></st1:place>,</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-6">to the </span><span class="small-caps"><span style="font-variant: small-caps;">Lord</span></span><span class="textjer-31-6"> our
God</span><span class="textjer-31-5">.’” (31:4-6)<o:p></o:p></span></div>
<br />
<div class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">
<span class="textmatt-2-18">Dancing! Joyful! Enjoying the
wine, the fruit, the excitement of being with God! And there’s more! Hear it:<o:p></o:p></span></div>
<br />
<div class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt 1in;">
<span class="textjer-31-12">“They
will come and shout for joy on the heights of <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:city w:st="on">Zion</st1:city></st1:place>;</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-12">they will rejoice in the bounty of the </span><span class="small-caps"><span style="font-variant: small-caps;">Lord</span></span><span class="textjer-31-12">—</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-12">the grain, the new wine and the olive oil,</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-12">the young of the flocks and herds.</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-12">They will be like a well-watered garden,</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-12">and they will sorrow no more.</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-13">Then young women will dance and be glad,</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-13">young men and old as well.</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-13">I will turn their mourning into gladness;</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-13">I will give them comfort and joy instead of sorrow.”
(31:12-13)<o:p></o:p></span></div>
<br />
<div class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">
<span class="textmatt-2-18">Joy! Rejoice! Wine! Dancing!
Comfort! An end to sorrow! Gladness! In response, the Lord urges, we are to “</span><span class="textjer-31-7">Sing with joy for Jacob;</span> <span class="textjer-31-7">shout
for the foremost of the nations” (31:7).</span><span class="textmatt-2-18"> Our
joy will be so full, so big, so complete, says the </span><span class="small-caps"><span style="font-variant: small-caps;">Lord,</span></span><span class="textmatt-2-18"> that there will no longer even be a need to spread the
good news of it: <o:p></o:p></span></div>
<br />
<div class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt 1in;">
<span class="textmatt-2-18">“</span><span class="textjer-31-34">No longer will they teach their neighbor,</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-34">or say to one another, ‘Know the </span><span class="small-caps"><span style="font-variant: small-caps;">Lord</span></span><span class="textjer-31-34">,’</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-34">because they will all know me,</span><br />
<span class="textjer-31-34">from the least of them to the greatest,” declares the
</span><span class="small-caps"><span style="font-variant: small-caps;">Lord.
(31:34)</span></span><span class="textmatt-2-18"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<span class="textmatt-2-18"></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">Nevertheless,
all these promises notwithstanding, the part of this Jeremiah passage that
Matthew takes us to in his account of the Christmas story—in his account of the
realization of all these promises in the form of the Christchild, the
Messiah—is those women’s mourning and weeping.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;">
</span><o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">Right
from the get-go as we enter the Christmas season, Ramah is a reminder to us, as
it would have been to any Jews among the gospel writers’ original audience,
that the coming of the Messiah is not going to be anything like what the
Israelites expected and hoped for. The Advent of the Messiah, the good news of
great joy, does not mean the end of sin or sorrow or suffering—at least not
immediately. Indeed, it would occasion an increase in suffering for many believers
in the generations that followed.<o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">Jesus’
own circumstances at birth evidence this continuance of suffering. A very
pregnant woman, perhaps already in the throes of labor, consigned to a barn to
give birth. A manure-crusted feed trough for the newborn’s bassinet. From his
earliest years Jesus was the victim of a death threat that turned his family
into refugees. <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">Where are you, Lord?</i>
had to have been often in the minds of Jesus’ own family as they moved from <st1:city w:st="on">Bethlehem</st1:city> to <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Egypt</st1:place></st1:country-region> and back to their hometown. <o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">Rereading
the Ramah passage this year resonated especially with an <a href="http://www.npr.org/2012/11/26/165913371/mantel-takes-up-betrayal-beheadings-in-bodies"><span style="color: blue;">interview</span></a>
I recently heard on NPR with Hilary Mantel, the most recent winner, for the
second time, of the <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">United
Kingdom</st1:place></st1:country-region>’s highest honor for contemporary
novelists, the Man Booker Prize for Fiction.<o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">Perhaps
it was the mixture of hope and pain in this woman’s earnest,
compassionate-sounding voice—she sounds a lot like Mrs. Potts, the lovable
animated teapot in Disney’s <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">Beauty and
the Beast</i>—that moved me. Or perhaps it was simply the fact that her
particular loss and hope resonated with my own from decades ago, before my
advent as an adult believer. Mantel spoke about her most recent historical
novel, the second in a series about Henry VIII’s reign, and her decades-long struggle
with endometriosis, an unremitting menstrual flow for which there appeared to
be no medical solution. <o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"><i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;"></i></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"><i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">She’s just like that woman who, after twelve
years of bleeding, touched the hem of Jesus’ garment</i> <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">and was healed—only she wasn’t healed.</i> I thought as I listened to
her tell it. And the yearning in her voice took on a new dimension. <o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">Then she
told the story of her loss of faith. When Terry Gross asked her why she had
left her childhood religion as a twelve-year-old, she said simply, “I no longer
had faith. I lost my belief in a day or two. Not just in Catholicism, but, in
the whole thing.”<o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">For many
years she didn’t miss what Gross referred to as “that presence” because, as she
said, “Other things came in to fill the gap.” But when Gross asked her if she
still felt the same way, she responded, with heartrending hesitations and gaps
of silence, “</span>No, I don’t feel the same way now. Uh, I, I know, I envy
people who have faith, and I think it’s possible I may regain it…”<br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">Her
words—her envy of those with faith, her hope in the possibility that she might
regain hers—and the gaps between them and the raw longing in her voice at that
moment captured exactly how I’d felt throughout my decades of atheism. Bereft
but, somehow below and around the feeling of abandonment by God, hopeful. On
some level, despite my conviction that it couldn’t be so, I hoped for the
promises of the ancients to be true, for God to return.<o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"><i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;"></i></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"><i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">Where are you, Lord?</i> Mantel’s voice
prayed its groan of a prayer, surely the prayer of those poor women at Ramah. <o:p></o:p></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18"></span><br />
<span class="textmatt-2-18">Advent is
a time not only to celebrate the promises fulfilled in the coming of the
Messiah but to remember the loss and suffering—the almost hopeless hope—to
which these promises respond. To consider that hope and, as those who have
already received what has been promised, to rejoice all the more sincerely.<o:p></o:p></span><br />
Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-10497428056663747932012-12-01T07:08:00.001-08:002012-12-01T07:09:30.728-08:00gospel<br />
<div class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;">
The other night on the way home from my evening course, I
was surfing the radio stations for something Christmassy and happened upon that
most beloved of holiday traditions among us Christians, a rousing
reason-for-the-season lecture. </div>
<br />
The host had already introduced his
invited expert, who launched into an explication of the complex mishmash of
history and tradition that comprise Santa Claus—a fiction, he railed, of store
owners, Washington Irving, and the Dutch. It’s important, he argued, to deconstruct
this material for your kids and extract from the materialistic frenzy the true
and worthy stuff of Christmas: the real Saint Nicholas of yore—a kind-hearted,
unicefy sort of guy there was nothing wrong with admiring, even if we don’t
agree with the whole business of calling people saints—and, of course, the real
Reason-for-the-Season, Jesus himself.<br />
<br />
Here and there in the course of the
lecture, the radio host interjected the story of his and his wife’s attempts to
deal with the “problem of Christmas” in their own family. Despite their holiest
efforts to make the holiday about Jesus, though, he confessed, by early October
their kids were already magneting lengthy Christmas lists to the refrigerator
door. And with this confession, the wholesome jollity of his Christian talk radio
host voice broke open for me, for an instant, upon the sad question underlying
all such discussions. <br />
<br />
“Am I a bad parent?” he asked his
expert plaintively. <br />
<br />
The expert was too caught up in
Sinterklaas and the Reformation to respond, but, once the question was out
there, zinging through radio reality into the ears and minds of parents all
over the world, I could hear nothing else.<br />
<br />
It’s a question all too frequently present
in my brain—not just at Christmas but throughout the year. Often I pray it.
Occasionally, I say it out loud—to my husband or to a trusted fellow parent. (I
have learned, over the years, never to ask this question of childless friends,
who—having had no parenting trials of their own—are all too eager to confirm my
worst fears.) I’ve been asking this question, with increasing frequency, ever
since my two daughters were born, and, though <st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Charlotte</st1:place></st1:city> and Lulu are in college now and
will soon be out on their own, I suspect I will be asking it for some years to
come. <br />
<br />
And, unless I’m abnormal (another
question often in my brain), <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">Am I a bad
parent?</i> is a question probably in some, if not most, other parents’ brains
fairly often as well. <br />
<br />
It was surely in Mary’s brain with
fair regularity as Jesus was growing up, although the biblical writers shrewdly
omit that mystifying part of Jesus’ human biography from their accounts. In any
case, all that pondering Mary did in her heart early on has, for me, the familiar
tenor of parental worry.<br />
<br />
We do know that later, when Jesus
was long since an adult, his earthly mother was concerned enough for his sanity
that she enlisted her other sons’ help in trying to fetch him home. I envision
her thinking of him and his brothers—as I am certain I will keep thinking until
<st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Charlotte</st1:place></st1:city> and
Lulu have children of their own and can take over the job for me—<i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">Did I do the right thing? Are they going to
understand this world the way I want them to? Will they love God and their
neighbors as themselves—or at least try to? </i>I spend a good part of my
conversations with God pray-worrying the bigger question beneath these
questions: Will Charlotte and Lulu be romping with the dogs and arguing at the
dinner table and assembling gingerbread houses with me and Jesus throughout
eternity?<br />
<br />
The burden of parenthood, it seems
to me, is weighty enough without adding the impossible requirement that we turn
happy holidays into tricky history lectures and expect our kids to value only
the pious truths of the nativity story in lieu of the popguns! bicycles! roller skates! drums! of the popular versions of that story that have evolved since Jesus lived among us. And,
in my view, attempting to dissociate children’s experience of Christmas from
the jolly jingle-belling going on all around them misses the point of the
Christmas lists and hoped for presents and tree-trimming and bright colored
lights on the houses and songs sung and money spent entirely—not to mention the
Reason for the Season. <br />
<br />
Christmas is, and should be, a celebration!
Jesus’ birth is good news of great joy—the gospel of gospels—the best news the
world has ever received in its complex and ugly history. I love it that the
coming of God to our world has become, over the centuries, across the nations,
a big party—such a big deal, so glimmering with promise, that even nonbelievers
celebrate it! <br />
<br />
Helping our kids celebrate this
good news, in whatever ways engage them the most, is good parenting, in my
view. And the yearnings evident in those lists on the fridge followed by the
mad ripping open of presents under the tree on Christmas morning offer us a
rich and rare opportunity to help our kids experience the important spiritual connection
between longing for something good—the best thing they can think of—and receiving
it from the best Parent of all parents: a way out of our own miserable meanness.
A Savior, who is Christ the King!<br />
<br />
Kids are, as Jesus points out on
occasion, the best theologians. They get it about God. We do need to draw their
attention (and our own) to the reason for the celebrating, of course—the story
of God sending his Son to our world—and we should do it not just during the
Christmas season but throughout the year and throughout their lives. <br />
<br />
Stopping or even slowing the
festivities to parse the party and eradicate its heathenness is
counterproductive. As the believers among the celebrators—as those in the know
about what it is we’re actually celebrating—we Christians<span style="color: red; font-family: Arial;"> </span>need to up the excitement, not put on
the brakes. Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-70297233155375431742011-01-24T11:11:00.000-08:002011-01-24T11:25:36.356-08:00wordWhen the devil counsels Jesus to turn stones into bread after those forty days in the wilderness without eating, Jesus remarks that “People do not live on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of God” (Matthew 4:4 TNIV). Or, in the King James Version—which I’m trying to make a habit of visiting this year to commemorate the 400th anniversary of its publication—“Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.”<br /><br />It’s such a strange and, for me, unsatisfying statement, especially when I consider it in light of the physicality of the description—wilderness, stones, bread, hunger, mouths. It’s hard for me to imagine not eating for forty days. I’m guessing that long of a fast in a rocky wilderness would make every stone a loaf in one’s imagination. How can mere words allay such a hunger?<br /><br />For us, the meaning of Jesus’ temptation story may be largely symbolic—or, in any case, not directly applicable to actual hunger, actual rock-fantasies, actual bread, but rather temptations of a more general and less physical nature. After all, who among us is likely to end up starving to death in a desert littered with stones? If you are like me, you have probably never experienced genuine hunger, and, even if you had, your temptations would not lie in the realm of feeding yourself. But, for Jesus, who was 100% man—emptied out of his divinity, if I understand Philippians 2:7 aright—and actually in these circumstances, without food for forty days in an actual wilderness littered with stones, this sentence means differently.<br /><br />So, I was thinking about that. About words from God’s mouth assuaging the direst hunger, feeding a person—indeed, engendering and nourishing and sustaining life itself. And so I got to thinking about the whole concept of words as food—specifically, the detail of our original design that words exit from the place where food enters—and the startling image of being fed directly from God’s mouth. Mouth-to-mouth feeding, so to speak, a method of nourishment that mothers of small children practiced in prehistoric times and still do to this day in some cultures but that, in contemporary Western culture, many find disgusting (even though, interestingly, we have no objection to kissing and other mouth-body exchanges).<br /><br />In any case, the first thing that came to my mind in reflecting on our food coming from God’s mouth was not mothers prechewing their babies’ food but, of course, the mouth-to-mouth feeding that I witness every spring and summer in my yard. The barn swallows that build their nest in the eaves of our house feed their young in exactly that way. The little babies sit waiting all day with their enormous mouths wide open, while both parents bullet back and forth across the yard: foraging frantically, racing back to the nest, dropping a bit in each mouth, going for more. This goes on for weeks, right up until the fledglings swoop down from nest themselves and fly away.<br /><br />I often see male cardinals feeling full-grown female cardinals. It’s called mate feeding and is a common practice in many bird species. Scientists disagree about its purpose. Some suppose it provides food while the female is too preoccupied with the activities of childbearing—building a nest, brooding, and raising her young—to have much time left over to get food on her own. Others say it provides needed additional nutrition as her body prepares to produce offspring. Still others argue that, since mate feeding occurs not only when the female is nesting but throughout the breeding season, it may help the female decide on a mate: the male that provides for her, or perhaps finds the delicacies she likes best, is the one she will choose. It may, on the other hand, be a courting ritual that keeps the two birds together longer—and thus likelier to produce more and healthier offspring. And it could also simply be in certain male birds’ genes to feed others in general—babies, eligible girlfriends, mates, whoever.<br /><br />I once saw a male cardinal feeding a full-grown female brown-headed cowbird. The weirdest thing ever. She just sat there on a branch while he went back and forth to the feeder, got her another bite, and another, for close to an hour. If they hadn’t kept it up for so long and if I hadn’t Googled and found others describing the same amazing event, I would have thought I imagined it. (The explanation, in case you aren’t up on your birds, is that cowbirds lay their eggs in other birds’ nests, so females—and, presumably, pairs—grow up thinking they’re of the same species and thus viable mates. As far as I know, though, cardinals and cowbirds can’t produce offspring together.)<br /><br />Back, though, to being fed words from God’s mouth. To summarize, the notion of eating anything that, as the KJV rather graphically describes it, “proceedeth out of” another’s mouth is a bit repellent. But the birds have shown me the implicit caring—love even—at the root. God’s Word—or God’s words, as I like to undo this expression for the Bible—becomes actual nourishment that enables me to grow and leave the nest and, eventually, share words with others.<br /><br />In the passage from scripture that Jesus is quoting from while he is being tempted, Moses, having just issued the Ten Commandments (words), reminds the Israelites of an important connection between wilderness, hunger, bread, and words. “Remember how the Lord your God led you all the way in the wilderness these forty years,” he tells them. “He humbled you, causing you to hunger and then feeding you with manna, which neither you nor your ancestors had known, to teach you that people do not live on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of the LORD” (Deuteronomy 8:2,3 TNIV).<br /><br />Although Jesus quotes the passage using a word for “word” common in the Greek of the New Testament, the same word in the original Hebrew passage (מוֹצָא, <em>motsa</em>—it rhymes with <em>matzoh</em>, the Jewish unleavened bread, but is not the same word) is relatively rare, appearing only twenty-seven times in the entire Old Testament and translated as the English word <em>word</em> only in this one instance. Everywhere else it means something along the lines of “that which comes out.”<br /><br />We don’t live from bread—or mannah or matzoh or any other nourishment we think essential to life—but from that which comes out of God. God’s breath, originally. God’s words, thereafter, which culminate in God’s son, the Word.<br /><br />The prophet Jeremiah previewed what should be our response to this mystery. He says to God,<br /><blockquote>When your words came, I ate them;<br />they were my joy and my heart’s delight. (Jeremiah 15:16)</blockquote> Like those baby swallows in the nest, he sat open-mouthed, hungry, desperate to be fed.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-86366304734350916242011-01-17T04:55:00.000-08:002011-01-17T16:51:11.417-08:00soEvery so often I start out on a new plan of reading the Bible daily. Usually, such resolutions last a couple of weeks or months and then peter out. Then follows a spiritual dearth, eventually jolted into vibrancy by some close-by tragedy. Then a renewed resolution to read daily.<br /><br />I can never seem to get the bookness of The Book out of my head, and I always start at the beginning. Consequently, I have read the first chapters of Genesis probably a hundred times, always with the same desire for new enthusiasm. And the story of the beginning of everything never disappoints me. I cannot exhaust this book, not even the first chapter. I always find something new and important in it.<br /><br />Today it is this. God rests on the seventh day only <em>after</em> he has completed his work of creating. Rest, in other words, follows directly from the completion of work. Here’s the passage: “Thus the heavens and the earth <em>were completed</em> in all their vast array. By the seventh day God <em>had finished the work he had been doing</em>; so on the seventh day he <em>rested</em> from all his work. Then God blessed the seventh day and made it holy, because on it he rested from all the work of creating that he had done.” (Genesis 2:1-2 TNIV, my emphasis)<br /><br />It would be nice if I could argue the causality evident in this and a few other translations—that God was finished working, <em>so</em> he rested. Unfortunately, however, most translations that I have looked at translate that <em>so</em> as a mere <em>and</em>. Also, I did some research on the word used here—actually the ubiquitous Hebrew morpheme <em>waw</em>, which, added to a verb, links it to a previous verb—and I discovered that Hebrew linguists (read: biblical researchers with agendas) fight wrathfully over whether the word actually implies causality or mere sequentiality and they use their theories to argue such hot theological topics as evolution vs. creationism and what, exactly, God's promised rest is and other questions of importance to them. In this particular passage, for example, the <em>waw</em>-question is whether God ever finished resting and moved on to some other work or rather, as a passage in Hebrews suggests, having finished his work, continues to rest to this day. I don’t want to get into that <em>waw</em> stew, nor am I equipped to do so.<br /><br />Let me say this, though, from my entirely unschooled reading of the Genesis writer's overview of the creation story (which for me begins in the first chapter and ends with the third verse of the second chapter): God only rested when he had finished his work.<br /><br />This is a totally new idea for me. Revolutionary, even. And worth looking at closely.<br />Not having finished my work is my main resting deterrent. I wake in the night worrying about some part of my current work that I have yet to do or that I forgot to do or that I was in the middle of doing when I went to bed.<br /><br />Also, I have an abiding sense of never being finished with my work. Never. As soon as I have finished some consuming project—grading a pile of essays, for example, or writing a chapter of my current book—I am suddenly overwhelmed, it seems to me, with all the other things I wasn’t able to do while I was working. Exercising. Grocery shopping. Taking my mother-in-law grocery shopping. Buying Charlotte a steamer so that she'll feel more motivated to eat vegetables (her idea). Patching the pair of jeans Lulu wanted me to fix for her. Gardening (spring is on the horizon, and for spinach and peas, it's now or never). Spring cleaning. Soon, within minutes, I think, I am making to-do lists and seized with stress. How will I ever get it all done?<br /><br />Judging from the number of books out there on the subject of rest, I suspect many share my problem. Not long ago I read one such book called <em>Sabbath Keeping</em>, by Lynne Baab. It was a good how-to book on the Sabbath: inviting, rather than prescriptive, for the most part, with exercises at the ends of the chapters that really made me examine the stress of my life and desire opportunities for respite. I found it particularly challenging that the sort of activity Baab recommends against doing on the Sabbath was accomplishing anything—that is, getting something done, even if it’s something you enjoy. If you find yourself thinking, I just need to finish..., then whatever would finish the sentence is a bad choice for the Day of Rest. Sabbath keeping, for the most part, became another job, of sorts: the daunting task of sacrificing one’s desire to get done.<br /><br />I don’t know and honestly don’t care if God has finished his rest and moved on to another project—although my guess is that, in the spirit of Ecclesiastes, God’s rest and work come in spells, seasons, a time for each. But I do know this: God did not get stressed immediately upon completing the creation of the world and everything in it. He rested. Ceased, as the word is translated in some versions of the Bible. He stopped working. Stopped thinking about it—about the plants and animals and creatures of the sea and sky, each according to its kind. Stopped looking at it. Stopped talking about it. Stopped blessing it and calling it good, probably, since those actions appear to be key elements of God's creative work. <br /><br />God could have taken naps here and there throughout the process. He could have slogged through it, as I often do at the computer, making himself a cup of tea with which to pretend to rest while he continued working. Instead, he finished his work completely. And then, for some unknown period of time, he stopped. Totally. Entirely. Gloriously.<br /><br />Think of it. Stopping. It is hard for me even to imagine. I envision a sensory deprivation tank, in which I am forcibly prevented from accomplishing anything, and the thought nauseates me. Not just the forcible part or the nasty microbes and fungi that probably live in those tanks. Not the claustrophobia or the metallic smell of the water or the dark. Simply the inactivity. The helplessness of it.<br /><br />Some part of me longs for it, though. For resting that comes as a natural consequence of being done, rather than as an artificial or sacrificial activity of its own. Resting that is not something I do, but something that just happens, like how, when we were first married, Kris and I used to sink into the most refreshing sleep at night after a long day of weaning calves and trucking the bulls to the sale barn. Or after raking and baling a field. Or after spearing the bales, one by one, onto the bale trailer, then toting them off to wherever we were storing them that year and, one by one, lining them up in tidy rows for the winter.<br /><br />Something about farming was conducive to the kind of rest I’m thinking God takes. Getting done. Perhaps it’s because the tasks of farming are so much like God's work in the first place. Globbing everything together into a formless dark mass of cattle or cut grass. Separating them into male and female, young and old, fescue and good clover, windrows and bales, square bales and round bales, each according to their kind. Looking at them. Blessing them. Pronouncing them good. Getting our check at the end of the day, or knowing the cows would have plenty to eat when the weather got cold.<br /><br />Getting done, totally done, I'm thinking, is the key to rest. Not just stopping. Before we can honor the Sabbath—an act of holiness so important in the old law, mind you, that not honoring the Sabbath was punishable by death—we have to actually finish what we're doing. How to do that is my next struggle, in the area of rest. But for now, it’s just good to be finished thinking about it.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-36772905219237536042011-01-12T04:57:00.000-08:002011-01-12T06:56:42.213-08:00placeboI have been marveling over—which is to say, doubting—a bit of recent health news: 59% of people with Irritable Bowel Syndrome who knew that, as part of a study, the doctor was merely giving them sugar pills for their condition reported relief from their symptoms. There are so many ways to interpret these findings. That merely being paid attention to by a doctor has a curative effect. Or that taking action about a medical problem—even if the action is merely participating in a study in which one is given sugar pills—tells the body to heal, and the body pays attention. That, by extension, taking action about any problem, no matter what the action is, has a potential curative effect. Or, the doubting side of me says, maybe Irritable Bowel Syndrome is not a physiological condition at all but a psychological one. Or maybe it's indeed a physiological ailment that tiny amounts of sugar somehow addresses. The only real conclusion I have so far come to is that the brain is a mystery. Such a mystery.<br /><br />Somewhere in the course of my ponderings, though, I looked up the etymology of the word <em>placebo</em>. Whoa! It is the first word of a response in Latin that mourners repeat in a traditional Catholic service for the dead and came to refer to the whole service. The response itself is the Latin Vulgate translation of Psalm 116:9, “<em>Placebo Domino in regione vivorum</em>,” which in English is “I will please the Lord in the land of the living.” This is also how the line was translated in the Douay-Rheims, a Catholic Bible translation based on the Vulgate that was published around the same time as the King James Version. In most other translations—all Protestant translationsi as well as the New American Standard version currently popular among Catholics—the verse reads something like “I will walk before the Lord in the land of the living.” <br /><br />How the word <em>placebo</em> came to mean what it means today is a curious tale. Apparently, people crashed funerals in medieval times, and these people came to be called, derisively, “<em>placebo</em> singers,” because they sang that repeated response in simulation of mourning in order to get at the food the mourning family provided. From there, with help from Chaucer, the word came to be used more generally in reference to flatterers and freeloaders and eventually to any pretence designed to “please” someone else—which in medicine would mean, as <em>placebo</em> is defined in my <em>American Heritage Dictionary</em>, “A substance containing no medication and given merely to humor a patient.”<br /><br />I’d like to commit a semantic anachronism—a bad habit of people who preach, for example, that since our English word <em>hilarious</em> comes from the Greek word for cheerful, <em>hilaron</em>, then it must be that God loves a “hilarious giver” in 1 Corinthians 9:7—and read that weird Douay-Rheims translation of Psalm 116:9 as “I will humor God in the land of the living.” Such an odd idea, putting one over on God, but I kind of think that’s what I’m often trying to do. Singing <em>placebo</em>. And God knows it. And, incomprehensibly—as incomprehensibly as knowingly taking a placebo can cure Irritable Bowel Syndrome, as incomprehensibly as our brains work—God interprets my song as all the righteousness I’ll ever need. <br /><br />Indeed, singing <em>placebo</em> is the essence of the verse on which I sailed into faith—“Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see” (Hebrews 11:1 TNIV). As in this verse, when one knowingly takes a placebo, hoping and knowing become synonymous, and—inexplicably—we are cured.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-66591119840952368742011-01-03T06:25:00.000-08:002011-01-03T08:56:25.926-08:00choose, choosing, choice, chosenLast night my 17 year old daughter Lulu and her friend and I discussed wealth. I had heard part of an NPR broadcast on the subject and was intrigued when some wealth scholar discussed historical differences in how wealth worked. Previously, people used to amass wealth and then live from it. So, as I pointed out, in Jane Austen novels, people were routinely described in terms of how many pounds a year they lived from. Their base income defined them, but they seemed to live pretty nearly the same lives as those with less. The broadcast went on to say that the wealthy these days, by contrast, must keep buying more and bigger houses and yachts and so on. These things—not the money they live from—define them. These things also place them outside the life of ordinary people. They live a life removed.<br /><br />Another expert on the broadcast pointed out that, though the U. S. is so wealthy that even our poorest would be seen as rich by global standards, nevertheless, no matter how much money they have, Americans generally consider, not themselves, but only those who make twice as much as they do to be wealthy. Thus, none would refer to themselves as "wealthy." <br /><br />I told the teenagers that from now on I was going to regard myself as and call myself rich. After all, I enjoy a house, daily showers in hot water, virtually any food that I can think of (and find ingredients for, here in the Oklahoma countryside), the leisure to run 21 miles a week, a gorgeous vista of fields and trees and birds from my living room (aka office) window, several dependable sources of income (jobs, husband's job, savings), and so much more that I can’t begin to list it all. <br /><br />To my surprise, Lulu—who, like most teenagers and many adults in my acquaintance, seems frighteningly acquisition-minded—ardently agreed. In her Western Civilization class—which she disparagingly referred to as her “Bible study,” because her Christian professor often discusses matters of faith—she had studied what she called the “seven cardinal virtues,” companions to the seven deadly sins. One of them, she said, referenced just such views on wealth as I was expressing (who knew?!) but she couldn’t remember the word for it, so this morning, while she slept, I did some research. <br /><br /><em>Temperance</em> was probably the word she was looking for, and it’s a good one. But my research brought me to a broader expression of the notion as one of the more encompassing “four cardinal virtues,” <em>prudence</em>. The word has a history as meaning not caution but something more like practical wisdom and was seen by Greeks as well as medieval Scholastics as the root of all virtue: the ability to choose wisely.<br /><br /><em>Choose</em> is such an interesting word. It is about what we take from what is around us. It speaks of lesser and greater options, of freedom. Things that are especially luxurious are called <em>choice</em>. And, beneath the surface of all <em>chooosing</em> lies rejection. In the context of faith the word <em>choose</em> references all those meanings and more.<br /><br />I think of Mary’s stressed out sister Martha versus Mary herself, listening and resting at Jesus’ feet, having, as Jesus said, “chosen what is better, and it will not be taken away from her” (Luke 10:42). Mary was certainly prudent, a good steward of her wealth. <br /><br />But then there’s the term “God’s chosen people” and how offensive that sounds to any who do not regard themselves as such—the rejected. Also, there's the whole concept of election—a fancy theological word for some Christians' belief that the saved are "chosen" by God and cannot choose God for themselves, sort of the spiritual opposite of seeking—and Jesus’ cryptic parable of the king’s son’s wedding banquet which those who were invited were all too busy to attend. So, the king sends for the people of the street, “the bad as well as the good, and the wedding hall was filled with guests” (Matthew 22:10). Everything sounds good up to this point, but then, of these new guests, one forgot to wear his wedding clothes and is bound hand and foot and thrown “outside, into the darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth” (Matthew 22:13). For, Jesus explains, “many are invited, but few are chosen” (Matthew 22:14). I get really worried about what I'm wearing (at this moment, still, to my shame, my nightgown and housecoat—more evidence of my great wealth!) whenever I think about this story.<br /><br />“I chose you,” Jesus is always reminding his twelve main followers, emphatically reminding them in John 15:16, “You did not choose me, but I chose you.” The rest of the followers, though, seem to choose Jesus on their own, by my reckoning, sometimes going out of their way to do so. Zacchaeus climbs a tree. The Roman centurion (an officer in charge of one hundred soldiers, in case you’ve always wondered, as I have, what that word meant exactly) sends a servant. The Canaanite woman with the demon-possessed daughter runs after Jesus and wails, so embarrassing and outraging the disciples that they want to send her away. Even after Jesus himself rejects her, saying “I was sent only to the lost sheep of Israel” (Matthew 15:24), she kneels in the dirt before him and begs and reasons and counters his own arguments and eventually gets what she wants. And Jesus describes her behavior—the wailing and begging and reasoning and arguing; in short, her persistent <em>choosing</em>—as “great faith” (Matthew 15:28).Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-32370805259407475912010-12-29T15:12:00.000-08:002010-12-29T20:08:54.573-08:00sanctimoniousOne of my most pernicious sins—aside from plain old meanness, to which I'm prone from time to time and for which I have myriad rationalizations, which I won't go into just now, though I'm tempted—is sanctimony. Defined in most dictionaries as feigned piety or righteousness, the word has nothing to do with pretense in my private lexicon. Rather, it is the overwhelming sense of my own moralness, often in the face of someone else's misery or despair. <br /><br />I will lay it before you. When confronting a tragedy of some unknown unfortunate, my default inner response appears to be not pity or compassion or even that most generous of pomposities, indifference. Instead, a sticky, unswallowable sanctimonious ooze of fills me, collecting like snot in my sinuses in the night. However arduously my soul within me moves and twists, however hard I gasp for a breath of genuine love, sanctimony oozes and seeps, filling the passageways of the spirit and choking me with the unlovable lovelessness of thinking others’ miseries earned and myself—for not being <em>like that</em>—holy by comparison.<br /><br />The word <em>sanctimony</em> is a strange one. In English, it is used almost exclusively in its adjective form, <em>sanctimonious</em>. Etymologically, it derives from the Latin cognate <em>sānctimōnia</em>, which means, simply, sanctity or holiness. The English word <em>sanctimonious</em> was used that way for many centuries, until it acquired, notably via Shakespeare in <em>Measure for Measure</em>, its current disparaging sense as not sanctity but hypocritical sanctity, not holiness but holiness feigned, not righteousness but a show of righteousness. <br /><br />Many words that once denoted sanctity have become similarly disparaged in contemporary usage, but sanctimonious is the worst of all. Few these days like to be called "pious" or "righteous," but none want to be called "sanctimonious." <br /><br />And rightly so, I would argue. The sense of one’s own relative holiness is poison to every holy impulse. And hypocrisy seems lamentably inherent in every conscious holy act.<br /><br />Nor is sanctimony constrained to those who wcall themselves Christians. Many of my nonbelieving friends and acquaintances wax sanctimonious in matters of social justice or green living or animal rights or whatever happen to be their personal holinesses. <br /><br />As for my own sanctimony, I wish there were some solvent to dissolve it or at least break it up some and let it sink below my breathways to join the other wastes I produce until the glorious day when it all passes from me entirely.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-54089706217761108862010-08-09T16:14:00.000-07:002010-08-09T16:16:21.903-07:00selahI really like that there are untranslatable words in scripture. For one thing, they make you slow down and speculate and consider—which is, in fact, one of several ways scholars propose we understand the biblical word selah, an untranslatable word used 71 times in 39 of the Psalms, many of which begin with reference to the musical nature of the psalm, and 3 times in the song that concludes the short book of Habakkuk. (That Habakkuk’s final prayer was meant to be sung is clear from a concluding reference to the director of music and intended instrumentation.) The term may have some musical meaning—like “pause here” or “descendo” or “insert bridge”—that has since been lost. Or it may mean always, which is how it was translated in certain key ancient translations. Its meaning may also draw upon its apparent etymology in the Hebrew word for hang.<br /><br />All these possibilities come together, it seems to me, in the way I—and, I’m guessing, many modern readers—hear the word as they read through one of those unsung songs of scripture. Selah sounds like exhaled breath, a musical suspension meaning “Hang onto that thought.” Selah seems like the most wise and natural commentary one could make on the nature of the things of this world. It reads like a sigh.<br /><br />That’s, in any case, how the word seems to operate in reggae songs and in the nostalgically apocalyptic songs of Leonard Cohen I’ve been listening to of late—that is, as sighs or groans in response to a world beyond understanding.<br /><br />Scriptural sighing also calls to mind, for me, Paul’s intriguing depiction of the Holy Spirit translating the groans of all creation “through wordless groans” (Romans 8:26) as well as Jesus’ frequent exhalations—in his interactions with those around him and in breathing his last upon the cross. In a favorite passage of mine, Jesus sighs in prayer: <blockquote>Then Jesus left the vicinity of Tyre and went through Sidon, down to the Sea of<br />Galilee and into the region of the Decapolis. There some people brought to him a<br />man who was deaf and could hardly talk, and they begged Jesus to place his hand<br />on him.<br /><br />After he took him aside, away from the crowd, Jesus put his<br />fingers into the man's ears. Then he spit and touched the man's tongue. He<br />looked up to heaven and with a deep sigh said to him, "Ephphatha!" (which means<br />"Be opened!"). At this, the man's ears were opened, his tongue was loosened and<br />he began to speak plainly. (Mark 7:31-35)</blockquote>Ephphatha. Try to say that word aloud, and you will hear that deep sigh that housed it—a different sound from selah but somehow the same. Selah. Ephphatha.<br /><br />And that’s the biggest reason why I like untranslatable scriptural words so much. They mimic the wordless, word-hostile nature of our deepest prayers. Groans, as Paul says, “as in the pains of childbirth” (Romans 8:22). I remember those exhalations as simultaneously buoyant and unbearable, a joyous agony, an explosion of wordlessness. I felt opened.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-27979918072094870462010-08-04T17:40:00.000-07:002010-08-04T17:43:04.534-07:00testAbraham’s spiritual journey was not the steady climb from unbelief to ardent and abiding faith and holiness that I expected to enjoy when I first became a Christian. Not the ever growing devotion to God that seemed likely to make me into one of the “godly” men and women of the congregation—ancient and tireless workers and greeters and “prayer warriors”—that the pastors of churches I attended in those days were always pointing out to the rest of us sinners. Rather, for Abraham, as for me, the journey Godward comprised a series of miniscule ascents in his direction interrupted by deep descents and long flat periods of not paying attention and getting lost, the whole forming a course as jagged as an electrocardiogram. <br /><br />Abraham’s moments of faith are provisional at best—and far less compelling, story-wise, than his frequent excursions into faithlessness. When God initially tells him to leave his country, his people, and his father’s household and go to Canaan, Abram responds with the partial obedience that characterizes his whole story. He leaves, but he takes his people and father and his father’s household with him. They head for Canaan, but settle in Haran before they get there. When Abram’s father dies, Abram does finally go where God directs him, but he leaves soon after—for Egypt, for the Negev, or for wherever it is wily Lot decides not to go when the land can no longer support them both. Abraham seems, in fact, to allow anyone but God to direct his wanderings.<br /><br />Abraham meets God’s other promise, that his descendents will outnumber the stars in the sky, with similarly qualified trust. Despite his wife Sarah’s barrenness and advancing age, he fleetingly believes the promise that she will yet bear children. Or, in any case, that’s what the text says, and God believes he believes it. But no sooner do we read those words on the page than we find Abraham attempting to choreograph the miracle by his own methods. He apparently doesn’t trust God to keep him alive long enough to father the promised children and instead tells lies that the beautiful Sarah is his sister and pimps her to the lusty Egyptians—a trick he later repeats to protect himself from the people of the Negev—to keep potential suitors from murdering him to get her. He also goes along with Sarah’s attempt to preempt God’s plan by having him sleep with her servant, Hagar. And, as if these indications of faithlessness are not enough, when the Lord’s angel announces that the promised child will arrive within a year, he snickers to himself—surely the most compelling gesture of unbelief imaginable, one for which Sarah is sternly reprimanded. <br /><br />God himself, despite having acknowledged Abram’s faith early on, appears to doubt it later in Abraham’s life. After the visions and the smoking firepot with which God makes Abram “know for certain” (15:13) that what he says is true, after the name change to Abraham (“Father of Many”), after the household circumcision instituted as the covenantal affirmation of Abraham’s faith, after the miracle of Isaac’s birth, after all these signs that should have fortified and confirmed the faith that God has already acknowledged, God “tests” Abraham—that’s the word used in the text—by demanding in burnt sacrifice the very child he has said will engender the countless descendents he has promised. Then he waits to see what Abraham will do. And it is here, in an intricate story embedded in the intricate story of Abraham’s faithlessness, in a sentence or two liable to slip right past the inattentive reader, that we can glimpse what God must have seen in that moment early on when he commended Abram’s faith and accepted it in exchange for the righteousness we humans seem incapable of putting into practice.<br /><br />Abraham tells his servants, at the end of what must have been the terrifying journey to sacrifice his son, “Stay here with the donkey while I and the boy go over there. We will worship and then we will come back to you” (22:5). Skeptical reader that I am, I understood Abraham’s promise to return, at first, to be mere subterfuge designed to prevent the servants from knowing what he was up to and perhaps interfering with his plan. What else could he say? “Stay here with the donkey while I go over there and sacrifice my son”? Abraham knew, I reasoned, that he would be returning alone, but he would surely not want to reveal his horrific plan to anyone else, not even to servants. So he lied. And after all, it’s not as if we haven’t already witnessed him lying. <br /><br />Similarly, when Isaac, who is made to carry the wood for his own sacrifice and is probably a bit suspicious about the whole undertaking, asks, “Father. . . The fire and wood are here, but where is the lamb for the burnt offering?” (22:7), Abraham replies with what seems like another white lie: “God himself will provide the lamb for the burnt offering, my son” (22:8). I can imagine Abraham’s rationalization: Well, God did provide me with my little lamb of a son, Isaac . . . And, anyway, I can’t imagine what else he could have told Isaac, under the circumstances.<br /><br />It’s instructive to consider the whole undertaking from God’s perspective, though. To look down from above on that miserable journey to a mountain in the region of Moriah that God said he would tell Abraham about: the funeral march there, sighting the spot in the distance, the horrifying ascent. Indeed, we can’t forget the other Father, watching, waiting, as Abraham struggled to believe and not to despair. “Against all hope,” Paul writes of our faith-father, “Abraham in hope believed” (Romans 4:18). Against all hope, he hoped himself forward. Step by step. Moment by moment. And God looked down on that hopeful, hopeless march from above, and he hoped, too, as any parent would, and forgot all of his child’s previous failures—the lack of trust, the misplaced fidelities, the weird attempts to take control. Listening and hoping from above, God heard only Abraham’s promises—that he and Isaac would both return to the waiting servants, that God himself would provide the sacrificial lamb—and he recognized them not as lies or even as the wistful hopes they probably were but as pure, solid faith. Faith as great as anyone could ever muster. As great as that of John the Baptist, who, while in prison and soon to be beheaded, sent to Jesus asking, “Are you the one who was to come, or should we expect someone else?” Here is Jesus’ response to John’s question, to his endgame travesty of faith: “Truly I tell you, among those born of women there has not risen anyone greater than John the Baptist; yet whoever is least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he” (Matthew 11:11). <br /><br />In other words, as tiny and imperfect as our faith might be, as weak our hope, God leans in and listens—not for our failure, not for yet more proof of our faithlessness, but for the realization of his own hope for us—that is, for the faith he himself provides, just as he provides everything else we need to be happy and healthy and safe. And when he finds it, he credits it to us as all the righteousness we are capable of accomplishing.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-52098097114559269012010-07-25T18:53:00.000-07:002010-07-25T19:16:24.069-07:00doingI am usually under stress, I discovered years ago when I went on sabbatical. It took the experience of rest to make me recognize its opposite.<br /><br />In all of the jobs I have had, most of the women I have known have figured out when they are going to retire. They know the exact year, without having to figure it up when you ask them. Perhaps the men do as well, but it is the women who talk about retiring. They fantasize about it—fantasies I like to call job-icidal ideation, the primary symptom of a mental illness whose name I have not yet invented. It is a common mental illness, I think. Perhaps the most common of our culture.<br /><br />Once, in a meeting of other professional women, I mentioned a sick fantasy I have about lying in a hospital bed, rendered suddenly stress-free by cancer or paralysis some other act of God. Probably some of my listeners were struggling with loved ones laid low by illness, I thought as I spoke, and I was regretting the words even as they emerged from my mouth. I often do this. Especially under stress. But the response of my listeners surprised me. They nodded. Vigorously. Several women said that they had had the very same fantasy. The hospital bed. The silence. The IV drip sustaining one effortlessly. Visits from family and friends only during visiting hours. The hushed messages of encouragement.<br /><br />Perhaps the stress of reconciling the demands of home and work is not a gender thing, but I have read somewhere that working women, contrary to men, typically eat at their desks, still working, or else don’t lunch at all, and I have noticed that this is true of most of the women I know. They can’t stop working long enough to sit and joke around in the school cafeteria with our male colleagues and eat a decent lunch. I also don’t see them walking around with gymbags, as the men do. A few women work out, of course. They give up lunch to fit in aerobics or body pump. Or they get to school early early to join the morning class. I know because I have joined them, lunging and thrusting half awake through driving songs about love and power. <em>What’s love got to do with it, do with it</em>? Often I would find myself singing it as I rushed to class and then a core curriculum meeting and then back to my office to be there for the two hours we are required to set aside for our students each day. By then I am starving, so I make some microwave popcorn and eat it as I grade papers or prepare class for the next day.<br /><br />Two of my female colleagues do go home for lunch. Both are about to retire. They go home for lunch, I like to imagine, in anticipation of the time when they will be able to rest and enjoy life every day.<br /><br />While I was on sabbatical, I ate lunch. Outside, if it was nice weather. A salad fresh-picked from my garden, most times, dressed with the merest teaspoon of olive oil, a scattering of salt and sugar, and vinegar. I could see our dogs in the outer reaches of the yard, lounging in the sun.<br /><br />“Here, Tessi! Here Erica! Moe dog, come here!” I called to them. But they just lay there, or loitered a bit nearer to my iron table and dozed off again.<br /><br />Who knew that dogs spent the day sleeping? It’s true that all the aphorisms say they do—a dog’s life, let sleeping dogs lie—but I knew our dogs, before that year, only in attitudes of frenzy. Jumping up at me. Wanting fed. Tripping me in their excitement at getting to accompany me to the mailbox. In my year at home, I learned the secret of their perpetual good nature, and it is this: Dogs spend their days AND their nights at rest. They live, I have come to think, as God would have us live. At rest. Worry free. Not waking at 3 a.m. to write an essay, as I am at this moment, or fantasizing about having terminal diseases, but at peace with the world, saving their frenzy for something worthwhile. Fellowship. Food. A walk in the sun.<br /><br />Kris and I have been reading Isaiah. It is a grim book, mostly, hard to enter first thing in the morning, which is when we typically do it: a list of bad things that will happen to this people or that, to us, if we don’t live the way God wants us to.<br /><br />For the first twenty books or so, I understood this living right as the usual sort of righteousness we are called to follow: not worshipping idols or intermarrying with idol-worshipping foreigners, not staggering from wine or reeling with beer or being “heroes at drinking wine and champions at mixing drinks” (5:22—it’s really in there!), not making widows our prey or robbing the fatherless.<br /><br />It was hard to get convicted by anything Isaiah said, I found. This is nothing new, though. Isaiah’s own listeners had the same problem. Even after Isaiah took to preaching in the nude, which you’d think would make anyone perk up and pay attention, his listeners just mocked his words.<br /><br />Then we got to this electrifying passage in Chapter 28. Isaiah’s listeners are mocking him, babbling his words back to him like little children, just words in meaningless-sounding streams:<br /><blockquote>Do and do, do and do,<br />rule on rule, rule on rule,<br />a little here, a little there.</blockquote> In Hebrew, the jumble of words sound even more mocking, like the meaningless sounds we make when we are mimicking someone we think a fool, as indeed some scholars think is what Isaiah is recording in this passage:<br /><blockquote>sav lasav sav lasav<br />kav lakav kav lakav</blockquote> The passage is evidently difficult to decipher, as the various English Bibles come up with wildly different translations—but Isaiah’s response to his audience’s mockery clears it all up, to my view. “Very well then,” he tells them,<br /><blockquote>with foreign tongues God will speak to his people,<br />to whom he said,<br />“This is the resting place, let the weary rest”;<br />and, “This is the place of repose”—<br />but they would not listen.<br />So then, the word of the LORD to them will become:<br /><blockquote>Do and do, do and do,<br />rule on rule, rule on rule,<br />a little here, a little there.</blockquote>So that they will go and fall backward,<br />be injured and snared and captured. (28:10-13)</blockquote> And that is precisely what has happened. Here was genuine prophecy. Having rejected God’s offer of rest and repose, we do and do and do and do, following our rules, adding a few more tasks and a few more rules each day, until we are injured and snared and captured in a web of doing, no longer even capable of rest, despite our best intentions. In lunging forward, we fall backward. Our best attempt to grasp the old promise becomes a dream of hospital beds and then death, the ultimate rest.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-35572275026088879162010-07-22T14:44:00.000-07:002010-07-22T18:40:18.856-07:00evangelicalThe other day, on a bus trip, I sat down next to a chatty man in his sixties who had just been dumped by his third wife.<br /><br />“Is someone sitting here?” I asked him, and he said, no, he was as alone as a person could be. <br /><br />He had an unusually loud voice, and the people sitting around us all laughed. We were all on our way back to the Orlando airport to fly home after grading Advanced Placement exams for a week at a cavernous Convention Center in Daytona Beach with six hundred other professors and teachers. When the man asked me the inevitable question about where I taught, I lowered my voice and told him the name of the school, and then, when he didn’t recognize it, I said it was a private Christian university in Arkansas. <br /><br />I waited for the usual pause that had followed this announcement all week whenever I got into conversation with someone new. I’m guessing many of my fellow academics there regarded Christian higher education as an oxymoron. Or perhaps it’s that something about me—my clothes or the way I talk—failed to prepare them for the fact that I might be a Christian, and they needed a couple of seconds to realign their thoughts. Everyone was too polite to tell me what went on in their heads in that pause, and afterwards, they typically changed the subject. <br /><br />This man, however, went straight after it. <br /><br />“You mean, evangelical?” he shouted. He twisted in his seat to stare at me—sternly, it seemed to me—and to see my face when I answered.<br /><br />I have always been uncomfortable with the term evangelical, I have to say here. The adjective it used to be has been bandied around in the media so much of late that the noun Christian that it used to modify has been knocked off. Now it’s one of those attributive nouns that means something different to whoever uses it. <br /><br />In the mouths of the people on NPR and on the pages of <em>Time</em> and <em>The Atlantic Monthly</em>, my primary sources of news and information, the label <em>evangelical</em> appears to be synonymous with politically benighted or bigoted or stupid, depending on the context. At best, ridiculously naïve. <em>Time</em> has taken to capitalizing the word, which makes it look even more embarrassing, somehow. Admitting I am one is tantamount to revealing that I am married to a man who spends his free time, together with a bunch of equally besotted men in his model railroad club, decorating expanses of plywood with spray-on grass and watching in glee as miniature locomotives pull empty cars around a circular track to return to where they started out. Worse yet, although I teach at an evangelical college and attend what most would call an evangelical church, whenever I meet fellow Christians who go out of their way to identify themselves as evangelicals, I find myself disagreeing with them on most of their pet subjects. To say I am an evangelical, in my mind, is to be the kind of push button believer my most arrogant inner self scorns any association with at all.<br /><br />But, when this stranger asked so directly, so stridently and sternly, some vestige of [my] old dedication to godly embarrassment rose in my throat and demanded that I admit the truth.<br /><br />“Yes. Evangelical Christian,” I said, in my softest possible voice above a whisper. I was sure all of my unseen colleagues around me on the bus were overhearing every word of what we were saying, and I sent up a little prayer, which the Holy Spirit no doubt edited out of my daily offerings to the Father, that the man would dismiss the topic and move on to something less threatening, such as what essay question I had been scoring or whether this was my first time at an AP conference.<br /><br />“That’s great!” he said at the top of his voice and pounded me on the knee. “I’m an evangelical too.”<br /><br />~excerpt from <em>Confessions of an Amateur Believer</em> (Thomas Nelson, 2007)Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-37066509272099404732010-07-11T13:32:00.001-07:002010-07-11T13:35:53.189-07:00restoreIn the early days of my adult faith, . . . I saw God everywhere. I spoke of God all the time. I bored and alarmed others with my preoccupation with matters of the spirit. <br /><br />Soon, though, the business of living—which has its own jealous demands—resumed. I had two toddling daughters, a widowed mother-in-law living on our farm, a new teaching job at the local school followed by another new job at a nearby university, an additional part-time job helping my husband with big seasonal farm chores—haying, weaning, selling animals, calving assistance—and all the claims on my attention that attend such responsibilities. Soon, . . . I stopped noticing God’s presence as much, stopped looking for it. I read the Bible less frequently and nodded off at church. <br /><br />Before I knew what had transpired, I found myself in another place, spiritually speaking--. . . a place of spiritual oblivion. I simply stopped perceiving all the evidence of God’s presence that I had come to cherish. Gradually, unintentionally, I began to live from one day to the next in just about the same way as I had lived before I became a believer, except that now I tacked a little prayer onto this or that worry. Father God, I prayed, help me know what to do about Charlotte’s thumb-sucking. Holy Spirit, please speak for me when Lisa and I have our talk about class scheduling. Oh, Jesus, let Kris not be so stressed all the time. As soon as I had prayed my little prayer, I was done with God. Most times, I didn’t even notice, or rejoice, when my prayer was answered. By then, another worry had already laid claim on my relationship with God, and the old one was forgotten.<br /><br />I forgot not only yesterday’s problems and prayers but the very core of my own faith history: the longing, the relentless seeking, the daily discoveries of God’s involvement in my life that had made me a believer in the first place. Somehow, my faith, over time, shrank to empty habit, something I should be doing or feeling rather than the daily fulfillment of my desires and hopes. <br /><br />. . . Sometime during this period of oblivion, . . . I came across a journal I had briefly kept back when my faith was still new. A fellow teacher named Mitzi—younger than I was but a lifelong believer—had given me a blank book for Christmas. Its cover was a field of watercolor wildflowers—lavenders, pinks, greens—and Mitzi had labeled it “A Blessing Book” on the first page. Although I found the book was a bit cutesy, I nevertheless used it to keep a detailed account of three weeks of my life from that time. My disagreements with my husband. Our money troubles as farmers. Childrearing difficulties. Conflicts at work. My night worries. Eleven entries just like those in the diaries I had sporadically kept as a teenager, but with one big difference: I repeatedly compared the events of my days to what I was reading in the Bible. The entries were about as far from blessings as they could be. Rather, they recounted struggles, worries, discord—doggedly accompanied by strangely peppy-sounding efforts to see meaning in my grievances. Or, more exactly, to see the direct intervention of God in the everyday details of my life. <br /><br />In one entry, I interpreted my boss’s micromanagement of a program I administered as evidence of my own unwillingness to submit to authority, and I found hope in Peter’s promise that “the God of all grace” would “restore” me and make me “strong, firm, and steadfast” (1 Peter 5:10). The word Peter used for restore, I noted—I’ve no idea where I found this out—was the same Greek word he would have used for mending the holes in a net. In another entry, I considered how best to confront a coworker’s misbehavior in light of Paul’s counsel to “restore”—the same word Peter used!—fellow sinners “gently” (Galatians 6:1). Meanwhile, my husband and I were having one of those convoluted early marriage fights involving potty-training issues, his mom’s constant involvement our day-to-day routine, and whether or not to get out of farming entirely, and I blithely wrote, “I should be wanting to do God’s will in this. I still too desperately want God’s will to be the same as mine.”<br /><br />If there were no record of this admonition to myself, no record of those three weeks of living by faith, they would be gone forever. In the period of spiritual oblivion in which I found myself in the years that followed, I could not even recognize the earnest person who wrote those eleven entries. Time had transformed me into a person inexplicably unaware of my constant need for God and incapable of desiring God’s will over my own. Incapable, even, of recognizing God’s ongoing involvement in my life. Although more mature in every other way—older, wiser, and by then the conscientious moral coach of my own children and whole classes of befuddled students—I was a spiritual adolescent at best. I lived in the moment. My life was too hectic to admit much of a future beyond a scribbled to-do list, and I had not yet cultivated one of the primary skills necessary for distinguishing the presence of an unseen, unheard, untouchable God: remembering.<br /><br />~excerpt from <em>A Field Guide to God</em> (Guideposts Books, 2010)Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-33642396711991528052010-07-05T12:49:00.000-07:002010-07-05T20:57:07.243-07:00nameI'm still thinking about genealogies today. My Bible’s notes say that Noah's name sounded like <em>comfort</em> in ancient Hebrew and was thus likely a reference to his father Lamech's hopeful—or prophetic—remark that his son would “comfort us in the labor and painful toil of our hands caused by the ground the Lord has cursed” (Genesis 5:29). It seems a stretch to me, even for the ancient Hebrew reader. In any case, if Lamech was prophesying about his own future comfort, it was a limited sort of comfort at best. The comfort of the survival of his lineage, despite his own inevitable death and, in this case, the death of everyone else in the world. <br /><br />Names. <br /><br />Almost every time a name is mentioned in the Old Testament, the biblical writers go out of their way to impress upon us the rightness of that name to that story. And then the study Bible note writers and commentators give us their take on the name. Biblical scholars say Methuselah meant either “man of the dart” or else some grammatical permutation of “when he dies, someone will send it”—the latter leading some to think that, Methuselah’s death coming at the same time as the flood, the “it” might have meant the destruction of humankind. Or maybe—if you're a glass-half-full kind of reader—"it" might refer to the comforting survival of Noah and his crew.<br /><br />There is, in other words, much meaning to be found in biblical names, and also much confusion. Focusing overmuch on them can hang you up in the kind of biblical research that makes me nervous—the kind involving totting up the years between Methuselah’s birth and the flood or the generations, corrected for the unusually long lifespans of the ancients, between Adam’s birth and our times and figuring out just how old the world is. This kind of biblical research does not seek what the actual words and sentences and paragraphs have to offer as much as what we want to find there: the sort of certainty that passes for knowledge in our half-darkened world of science and reason. Numbers. Data. Answers so tightly crocheted that you can build a house with them, a whole worldview. This is the sort of research that mires us in denominational debates and in that murky smudge in the text that lies between how liberals and conservatives vote. I will not go there.<br /><br />That said, just for fun, and perhaps to get something of the flavor of how scripture may have read back when names were still direct products of their language of origin, I would like to offer here a rewriting of the genealogy in Genesis 5 with the names' meanings (insofar as they can be ascertained by biblical scholars) substituted for the actual names. Here goes:<br /><br /><em>This is the written account of Human Being’s family line.<br /><br />When The Gods created human beings, he (or they?) made them in the likeness of The Gods. He (or they?) created them male and female and blessed them. And when they were created, he (or they?) called them “human beings.”<br /><br />When Human Being had lived 130 years, he had a son in his own likeness, in his own image; and he named him Granted. After Granted was born, Human Being lived 800 years and had other sons and daughters. Altogether, Human Being lived a total of 930 years, and then he died.<br /><br />When Granted had lived 105 years, he became the father of Man. After he became the father of Man, Granted lived 807 years and had other sons and daughters. Altogether, Granted lived a total of 912 years, and then he died.<br /><br />When Man had lived 90 years, he became the father of Sorrow. After he became the father of Sorrow, Man lived 815 years and had other sons and daughters. Altogether, Man lived a total of 905 years, and then he died.<br /><br />When Sorrow had lived 70 years, he became the father of Blessed God. After he became the father of Blessed God, Sorrow lived 840 years and had other sons and daughters. Altogether, Sorrow lived a total of 910 years, and then he died.<br /><br />When Blessed God had lived 65 years, he became the father of Shall Come Down. After he became the father of Shall Come Down, Blessed God lived 830 years and had other sons and daughters. Altogether, Blessed God lived a total of 895 years, and then he died.<br /><br />When Shall Come Down had lived 162 years, he became the father of Teaching. After he became the father of Teaching, Shall Come Down lived 800 years and had other sons and daughters. Altogether, Shall Come Down lived a total of 962 years, and then he died.<br /><br />When Teaching had lived 65 years, he became the father of When He Dies, Someone Will Send It (also called Man of the Dart). After he became the father of When He Dies, Someone Will Send It, Teaching walked faithfully with God 300 years and had other sons and daughters. Altogether, Teaching lived a total of 365 years. Teaching walked faithfully with The Gods; then he was no more, because The Gods took him away.<br /><br />When When He Dies, Someone Will Send It had lived 187 years, he became the father of Strength. After he became the father of Strength, When He Dies, Someone Will Send It lived 782 years and had other sons and daughters. Altogether, When He Dies, Someone Will Send It lived a total of 969 years, and then he died.<br /><br />When Strength had lived 182 years, he had a son. He named him Comfort and said, “He will comfort us in the labor and painful toil of our hands caused by the ground the Lord has cursed.” After Comfort was born, Strength lived 595 years and had other sons and daughters. Altogether, Strength lived a total of 777 years, and then he died.<br /><br />After Comfort was 500 years old, he became the father of Name, Hot, and Enlarged.</em><br /><br />The meaning of Shem, the name of the son of Noah through whose lineage Luke will later trace Jesus’s own pedigree, is <em>name</em>. God's human self, in other words, derives—as, in some sense, we all do—from all the names in the genealogy: from Human Being and Granted, from Man and Sorrow, from Blessed God and Shall Come Down and Teaching. From When He Dies, Someone Will Send It. From Strength. From Comfort. From Name.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-67518796095670863682010-06-27T16:45:00.000-07:002010-06-27T17:40:14.314-07:00genealogyIn the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. Then trees and animals and such. Then people, who, sadly, didn’t love him as much as he loved them. In fact, they didn’t pay him much attention at all and went through many generations at a stretch before they acknowledged his existence or proclaimed his name. <br /><br />So, to punish them perhaps, or maybe to nudge forth a like-kind exchange of sorts, God created genealogies: list upon list of people’s forgotten names that God crammed into an anthology he was busy editing that, through the voices of other forgotten people, told the story of his relationship with humankind. Thus it is that, having forgotten all these people, the tellers and the ones whose existence is recorded in the anthology, we can nevertheless not escape their names: Enosh, Kenan, Mahilalel, Eliud, Eliezar, Jeconiah, Peleg, Esli—as worthless and unrelenting as socks whose mates were lost in the wash. Nor can we escape the abiding worry that maybe these forgotten names and people and their unrecorded deeds were important, somehow, else why were they included in the Bible to begin with? That, perhaps, for some unfathomable reason, God had had these people in his sights all along—that he had loved them and kept on loving them and yearned for them, even now, centuries after their deaths. <br /><br />None of which makes biblical genealogies much fun to read. The typical response is to skip over them to the stories of those among the many who by faith still speak, as the forgotten writer of Hebrews writes, even though they are dead. Abel. Enoch. Noah. Abraham. Their names appear in the genealogies, too, sprinkled among the forgotten. Rahab. Jacob. David. Jephthah. <br /><br />Today I glean this from the “written account” the writer of Genesis offers us of Adam’s line. First off, unlike most genealogies undertaken in modern times, this one makes no attempt to be exhaustive. Indeed, it is highly selective. Adam had lots of kids, but only one son figures in his official line: Seth—a son “in his own likeness, in his own image,” as the Genesis writer remarks, echoing both the words and the emphatic repetition of the creation song of Genesis 1. Just as humans were God’s special creatures, made in his own image, in his likeness, so this one son of Adam is also special—mirroring Adam’s sinfulness, as my Bible notes point out, yes, but also special in that we can follow this particular vein in the genealogy of Adam (as Luke does in the genealogy he includes in his gospel) right down to Jesus, the Son of God. And of that one son of Adam’s many sons and daughters, only one grandchild makes the list. And so on. This singling of one child out of the many makes the people in the biblical genealogies significant, at least by association. Many many are called, but only a few are chosen for the written account.<br /><br />The biblical genealogies are, as I have pointed out, written accounts. Presumably oral accounts—probably recited or sung in some sort of rhythm to aid memory—predated it. This selective account is, in other words, archived, not intended to be forgotten, as I imagine many oral genealogies were in the old days. And as, in fact, many written genealogies are these days, despite the arduous efforts of self-appointed family genealogists. I know, at least, that the two fat books of genealogical research taken up by relatives of mine—plus the genealogical results of my own efforts to establish my Choctaw lineage—lie amouldering in the closet. <br /><br />A few names do come accompanied by enough story to arrest the modern reader. It doesn’t take much. About Methuselah, for example, all we’re told is that he lived for 969 years, which happens to be the oldest age recorded in scripture. So he lives on in all manner of hyperbolic expressions of longevity as well as in the names of a scientific organization dedicated to the reversal of aging and of a much revered bristlecone pine in the White Mountains of California believed to be almost 5000 years old.<br /><br />Adam’s line in Genesis 5 also includes Enoch, my mother-in-law’s favorite Bible character for no other reason than that, rather than dying like the rest of us, he was taken away by God. I would take Mamaw’s fondness for Enoch to be the wishful thinking of an eighty-five year old who has outlived ten siblings and a husband and surely seen much suffering, except that she also told me that she has always envied Enoch. Since childhood. And so I hear in her longing the voice of my daughter Lulu and my own voice as a child, the voice of every child who has contemplated death with fear and considered and ranked the ways that one might go. A pain-free dying in one’s sleep is hands down the best, but the worst can rank from long and slow—like, say, the skin cancer of the husband of an acquaintance whose name I have forgotten that rotted him from the inside out—to fast and violent. A fall from a height. A thorough car crash. Gunshot to the head.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-13944088753058805862010-06-22T14:56:00.000-07:002010-06-25T07:32:42.740-07:00loveI hadn’t been a believer for very long before I started struggling with what exactly the biblical writers meant by the word <em>love</em>. That is, what God meant. I’m rather slowwitted when it comes to things spiritual. In any case, I started studying the word love in the biblical passages I was reading and soon discovered that there are two Hebrew words commonly translated as "love" in English translations of the Old Testament: <em>ahab</em> and <em>hesed</em>.<br /><br />The first word, <em>ahab</em>, seemed more like our English word <em>love</em> and was applicable in a lot of the same situations in which we use the word. Parents and children, spouses, and lovers all <em>ahab</em> each other in scripture, and, in the Law, God commands his children to <em>ahab</em> not only their neighbors as themselves (Leviticus 19:18) but also strangers: “The foreigners residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt (Leviticus 19:34). In the most important passage of the Law to the Jews, a passage that they traditionally commemorated on doorways and gates and bound to their wrists and foreheads, Moses exhorted them to <em>ahab</em> God as well: “Love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength (Deuteronomy 6:4).<br /><br />The other Hebrew word for love, <em>hesed</em>, was more puzzling. A key word of interest to Jewish theologians over the centuries—the root of a word used in Psalms for the especially devout and of the name of a group of especially pious Jews, the <em>Hasidim</em>—<em>hesed</em> is used almost exclusively in passages describing not <em>our</em> love but God’s. Within the translation of scripture I read in those days (the NIV), <em>hesed</em> was translated into many quite different English words: not only <em>love</em> but <em>mercy</em>, <em>kindness</em>, <em>loyalty</em>, <em>faith</em>, <em>devotion</em>, <em>approval</em>, <em>favor</em>, <em>glory</em>, and <em>grace</em> as well as subcategories of these like <em>loving-kindness</em>, <em>unfailing love</em>, and <em>acts of devotion</em>. Other Bible versions, I discovered, were just as varied in their translation of the word <em>hesed</em>.<br /><br />Jesus himself refers to the word <em>hesed</em> when he quotes Hosea 6:6, a rare biblical instance when the word is used for humans. "[G]o and learn what this means," He tells his audience of hecklers and disciples alike: "‘I desire mercy’—<em>hesed</em>—‘not sacrifice.’" (Matthew 9:13).<br /><br />In recasting the Hebrew of Hosea 6:6 into New Testament Greek, Matthew uses, possibly echoing the Aramaic word Jesus actually used in speaking, not one of several Greek words for <em>love</em> but <em>eleos</em>, which means mercy. Having studied and puzzled over for years Hosea’s and Matthew’s choices of words for what God was saying, here’s what I think God means.<br /><br /><em>Yes, I have given you lots of rules to follow</em>, God was telling the famously obedient prophet Hosea and tells us to this day. <em>I have demanded sacrifices to atone for every disobedience imaginable and even for behaviors I never specifically told you were forbidden. But what I really want from you is not merely that you obey my rules but that you love me. And not in the feeble way you love one another. Not</em> ahab. <em>I want you to love me the way I love you.</em> Hesed.<br /><br />~excerpted from my current writing project, tentatively titled <em>Easy Burdens: Doing the Stress-Free, Guilt-Free Work of God</em>Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-83540121408939060362010-06-06T10:36:00.000-07:002010-06-07T07:26:50.719-07:00eyesThe Bible offers us many kinds of eyes—eyes that see clearly,<br />eyes overflowing with tears, eyes with scales on them, eyes with<br />planks in them, eyes darker than wine, eyes that should be gouged<br />out, eyes that are lamps, eyes that hate the hands or the feet or<br />secretly envy other body parts, eyes that cause us to sin, eyes too<br />small for a camel or a rich man to pass through, and lustful eyes,<br />painted eyes, eyes that offend us, eyes with barbs in them, eyes<br />that see treasure, eyes that see destruction, eyes that are on all of<br />creation from the beginning of the year to the end. People make<br />covenants with their eyes. They open their eyes, close their eyes,<br />wipe their eyes, and lift up their eyes to the mountains. The blind<br />are made to see, and the sighted become blind because of sin or<br />drought or sheer stupidity. Both good things and bad things are<br />pleasing to the eye, and seeing is metaphorical for everything from sinning to repenting to understanding. Ironically, there are blind watchmen, as well as blind men, who are the only ones who can see. Through our eyes we are enlightened and also led astray.<br /><br />What are we to make of it all? How, as Christians, do we take<br />on this burden—described by Jesus as “light”—of seeing the way<br />God would have us see? Is seeing through the eyes of faith the<br />same thing as what many Christians tell me they are trying to<br />do—that is, seeing ourselves as God sees us? And how is that,<br />exactly? Does he see me as I see my own children, as flawed, horrible even, but utterly lovable because they are mine? Or does he see only our sins, those bloody rags we drag after us? Does the All-Seeing One see only the part that doesn’t offend him, the purity of Jesus in us? I have been offered each of these possibilities. Just how do we go about being students of God? What do we look at? And what should we do about what we see? Is closing our eyes a correct or faithful way of seeing?<br /><br />~excerpt from <em>Confessions of an Amateur Believer</em> (Thomas Nelson, 2007)Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-80258012690831695082010-05-31T18:54:00.000-07:002010-06-07T07:25:59.205-07:00yokeThe yoke is a powerful image in scripture, used almost always in the same way as it is most commonly used in contemporary English: metaphorically, namely, in reference to domination and subjugation. The Old Testament writers bewail the yoke of oppression and the yoke of slavery, and the Lord these prophets write of frequently threatens the yokes of slavery and oppression as punishment for disobedience and just as frequently promises to break the yokes of those who obey. The Law warns against unequal yoking, and later the Apostle Paul echoes this warning. There should be no pairing of an ox with a donkey—presumably because the variance in their strength and shoulder heights would make the sharing of work more difficult—and likewise no pairing of believers with unbelievers, who are, according to Paul, as antithetical to one another as light and darkness, virtue and sin, God and idols. In the biblical perspective, the yoke is the metaphorical antonym of freedom. So, while Paul counsels “All who are under the yoke of slavery”—that is, actual slaves—to accept their lot and “consider their masters worthy of full respect” (1 Timothy 6:1), he elsewhere declares, “It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery” (Galatians 5:1), by which he means our slavish devotion to evil.<br /><br />Scriptural yokes are intriguing in any discussion of God’s work since the real world purpose of a yoke in the farming culture of biblical times was to make it possible for two or more draft animals to join their efforts on the same task, thus rendering the work easier for each of them than it would be if one were doing the work alone. In other words, yokes benefit both farmer and farm animal by spreading, or equalizing, work, rendering it possible to get more done while reducing the toil and stress of those yoked. This understanding of the word <em>yoke</em> is seen in cultures today where water is still carried, balanced from a yoke in two manageable buckets rather than lurched along in one unwieldy one. Yokes make work easier, and yet, semantically, they suggest anything but ease. The yoke has thus evolved from biblical times onward from a means of sharing labor with another and lightening one’s load to become the quintessential symbol of enforced labor—and, by extension, of resistance to enforced labor. No one wants to wear a yoke.<br /><br />All of which serves as a paradoxical back story to Jesus’ invitation, “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” The One God Sent is not our taskmaster or subjugator, and the yoke he speaks of is not the yoke of oppression or slavery or even toil. Indeed, we are invited to take this yoke upon ourselves not for work at all, but for <em>rest</em> from work.<br /><br />The yoke of the One God Sent—metaphorically, the work of God—is thus unlike anything we might normally think of as "work." It is not a burden. It does not make us weary. It does not enslave or oppress. Rather, it is the antidote to stress and toil: a source of relaxation and pleasure. What God wants of us in the way of work is more akin to what we think of when we hang up the “Gone Fishin’” sign on the door: something fun, an escape from the unpleasantness of our jobs, rest.<br /><br />~excerpted from my current writing project, tentatively titled <em>Easy Burdens: Doing the Stress-Free, Guilt-Free Work of God</em>Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-18005069263079108702010-02-28T11:13:00.000-08:002010-02-28T12:19:21.266-08:00Grant the Glad Surprising!I've been doing radio interviews about my new book this week—three back to back on my days off from teaching—and the discussions I've had have reignited my enthusiasm for the scriptural passage that forms the center of <em>A Field Guide to God</em>. In it, Paul summarizes all of scripture to a crowd of Athenian philosophers gathered to discuss the newest ideas: "From one ancestor he made all nations to inhabit the whole earth, and he allotted the times of their existence and the boundaries of the places where they would live, so that they would search for God and perhaps grope for him and find him—though indeed he is not far from each one of us" (Acts 17:26-27 NRSV). <br /><br />I just can't get over the promises so efficiently offered here. That all of human history, that everything that seems to divide us, that everything that happens to us, however perplexing or upsetting, is part of a divine plan to make us seek God. That God greatest desire of us is to be sought. That God is always near us, waiting to be found. Inherent in the promises is also a clear plan for what God expects of us: namely, we should not merely seek but grope for God.<br /><br />In remeditating on this passage anew, it occurred to me how much God's desire for us is like the desires imbedded in any relationship. I thought of how I have gone through days, weeks even, waiting for one of my daughters to get over some perceived injustice on my part, how I long the whole time for her, how I nudge opportunity after opportunity for reconciliation into every encounter.<br /><br />I thought, too, of how, when my husband Kris is depressed or when he and I have had one of our rare fights (usually these occur sequentially: he gets distant and down, and I flip out and try to fight it out of him), afterwards I get in bed next to him and feel about as far away from him as it's possible to be. Far away in my frustration and hurt, in my inability to solve his stress and dread. Far away in my inevitable anger. Far away in my regret. Far away, even, in my underlying desire to repair what I have damaged and make things right again, which I know to be impossible. <br /><br />Simultaneously, I know that it <em>is</em> possible for us to restore our usual love, that we <em>will</em> get okay with each other again. We always have, after all. I know that we could even now be on the road back to each other if I would just reach across the great chasm of sheets and blankets and coldness between us, reach up across his back and pull him toward me. <br /><br />But I can't do it. Can't force myself. <em>But he...</em>, I lie there thinking. <em>It's his ... He should....</em> And so it goes until one of us gropes past anger or hurt or self-righteousness for the other. Maybe not that night. Maybe not the next day even. Each of us wants and waits and just about makes that move, while the other is never far away, wanting, waiting, just about to move, too. And eventually, in a moment of "glad surprising" I sang about in a hymn this morning at church, love is restored. <br /><br />It seems to me there is no greater thing in my life than those moments of restored love. Toward a husband. Or a daughter. Or a relative or a friend or a colleague or even a stranger who happens to displease me. What a joy it is to rediscover in myself the capacity to get beyond my own meanness, if only momentarily.<br /><br />From one ancestor God made all nations to inhabit the whole earth and allotted the times of their existence and the boundaries of the places where they would live, so that they would search for and perhaps grope for and find God—though indeed God is not far from each one of us. What delightful promises from our creator and father and lover. What a call to action.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-34598259381959015592010-02-19T09:42:00.000-08:002010-02-21T11:21:56.053-08:00Spring, Birds, Lent, Tiger Woods, etc."We saw a red bird," one of my students told me in class yesterday.<br /><br />"It was a cardinal," I told her.<br /><br />"No it wasn't. I know what a cardinal looks like, but this one was different. Its body was orange. And it sang this amazing song." <br /><br />She commanded another student, the other half of the "we" who saw and heard this bird, to "do the song." He had a good memory for bird voices and made a convincing twiddle that ended in a falling whistle.<br /><br />"Cardinal," I said. I knew for certain now. But the students were skeptical. "First off, there's no other red bird around here this time of year. Also, the immature ones range from brown to orange. Plus, that was the cardinal's breeding song you just heard."<br /><br />Spring approaches, although it's still cold. The cardinals have quit their feckless cheeps of winter and are singing with purpose now—as, indeed, everything seems to be doing this time of year. Students linger before class in pairs, leaning toward each other. Despite the yellow ratty grass, despite the chill yet in the air, they yearn to go outside, as my girls used to when they were little: I'd look up and there they'd both be—having stripped naked when I wasn't looking and escaped—sitting in the mud puddle at the end of the drive with our dogs.<br /><br />It always impresses me how spring motivates people. Suddenly, they're touching, dieting, exercising, cleaning, noticing birds, whistling, attending church services they've neglected for a long time, practicing disciplines—fasting, sacrificing, setting spiritual goals for themselves—that would never occur to them the rest of the year. It is as though the desire for renewal is built into us, just as it is in the color-tipped branches of the trees, in the surprising downpours of spring, in the woodpeckers I see chipping away at the trees to make their nests this time of year. Somehow, in spring, we all want to be new.<br /><br />Charlotte called me from school on Ash Wednesday to lament that she had already failed, ten hours into the first day of Lent, in this year's goal of no texting. <br /><br />"I got a text from one of my teachers, and I had to answer it. So it's not going to work. You have to help me think of something else!" she whisper-wailed. I tried to envision where she was at that moment. In the hallway between classes with her friends? In some class where the teacher let them use their *&#^^%!! cell phones? In a bathroom stall? <br /><br />I suggested adding, rather than subtracting, something from her life, and she said she was already planning that, too. She had counted up the chapters of the four gospels and decided she could read it all during Lent at a rate of two chapters a day. <br /><br />"I can't give up rich foods," she confided, "because I know I'd be doing it for the wrong reason—to get in shape. But what else is there?" After some more whispering—I felt as though we were planning a murder—she decided to scale down the no texting plan to the hours between 7 and 9 at night, during which time she'd read her two chapters.<br /><br />I just now listened to Tiger Woods' speech of remorse to his friends and fans. Generally speaking, I have little interest in sports or celebrities and their flashy troubles, and, without a television in our house, my only way of even knowing what's going on is in the summaries of our weekly news magazines. I'm interested in apologies, though. So, when Woods' apology headlined in the Google news as I turned on my computer, I clicked on it and cried my way through the whole sad speech, his halting words doubly halting because of our slow dial up connection. <br /><br />For the record, despite what the experts in matters public seemed to think, it sounded like genuine remorse to me. And, more movingly, genuine desire to be a new person. As I listened, I heard the voices of others I think about this time of year: Peter, Judas, Pilate. I savored, through this golfplayer's regret and hope, the sweet regret and hope of us all, as we grasp at new selves in the springtime.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-23542222149396014472010-01-31T07:22:00.000-08:002010-01-31T10:43:14.272-08:00A Recommendation for Lent (coming up in mid-February)I'm snowed in. Eight inches of snow, uncommon in our area, have shut everything down, and there's a deep freezing fog. I can hardly see the birds at the feeder beyond my window. My family has abandoned me. Kris has risked icy highways to travel to faraway Oklahoma City to help Lulu with her calculus, mechanics, electromagnetics, and chemistry homework, (I'm no help there!), and Charlotte and friend, who'd been snowed in with me, finally got sick of the entertainments of this house (and me, probably) and were fetched away from here yesterday by the friend's dad, who has four wheel drive and knew not to drive into our hockey rink of a driveway, where his daughter's car was moored.<br /><br />Alone. An uncommon pleasure, although not without its boredoms. For lack of anything else to do, and because Charlotte and her friend baked cookies and left behind all kinds of teenager food, I've been stuffing myself, just like the birds at my feeders and all the rest of the animals around here, who have gone into reckless food foraging mode, apparently expecting weeks of frozenness ahead will prevent them from getting food. The yard last night was full of deer, brazenly sniffing at the ice-glazed bedding plants, and, returning through the woods from my mother-in-law's house yesterday afternoon, I came upon a fresh pile—still steaming and rank smelling!—mountain lion scat.<br /><br />Just before the beginning of the storm I started listening to Andrew Lloyd Webber's rock opera <em>Jesus Christ Superstar</em>. I hadn't listened to it in many years, not since I returned to faith in the story it narrates after many years of atheism, so it has been a revelation. Not surprisingly, the work's overwhelming focus, the stress and hectic and desires and terrors and confusion surrounding Jesus' teaching for everyone involved—for Judas and the other apostles, for Mary Magdalene (seemingly a composite character of a number of women in the gospels), for Pilate and Herod, for Jesus himself, and for the crowds that followed him everywhere—has been impressing itself upon me from a number of other sources. I've been writing about John 6, where Jesus keeps trying to escape the crowds, into the mountains and out onto the roiling waters of the Sea of Galilee, and chastises them for just wanting things from him—food, healings, magic tricks—and not really believing in who he is. Not one of them believed he was who he said. Their collective refusal to believe him seems to make him doubt himself in an interesting reading of his begging, in Gethsemane, that God take the cup from him. The turmoil and misery of Jesus' human situation is so overwhelming and convincing in <em>Jesus Christ Superstar</em>, I keep finding myself sobbing at different parts of it.<br /><br />I told Kris on the phone that I thought I'd assign it in my English 102 (Intro to lit.) classes as a drama, since we had only short plays in the syllabus. I want them to hear it. Kris seemed to think my mostly Christian students will be offended that Jesus doesn't rise from the dead in <em>Jesus Christ Superstar</em>, which I thought was an interesting. Of course, I would want them to be offended by something, the better to have something to say or write about the piece. But the fact that Kris is probably right—indeed, since he hasn't himself listened to <em>Jesus Christ Superstar</em> in eons, I'm guessing he remembers that this was the actual Bible Belt response to it back in the seventies when it was being performed—makes me think of it as the perfect literary experience for Lent: to coexperience the rejection Jesus must have suffered from, the abandonment and aloneness he must have felt even as he was surrounded by hectic crowds of people.<br /><br />I'm entering Lent early this year, I realize. It begins 17 February this year. I got all off schedule as a result of working on a Lent article for <em>Guideposts</em> during my Christmas break, before I was even properly in the Christmas mood. I was working through Jesus' death even as I was trying to fold my mind around his birth as one of us.<br /><br />One of us. Born like us. Being loved by parents, growing up, learning, having friends, disappointing parents, hoping like us, worrying like us (It says nowhere in the gospels that Jesus never worried, and I'm certain Andrew Lloyd Webber is right that he did!), surrounded by turmoil and stress like us, alone like us. Suffering and being misunderstood like us—surely worse than most of us. Confronting death as we all will. Dying.<br /><br />How I came to listen to Webber's masterpiece is this: Kris has been reading Paul's letters to me in the morning, and the word <em>apostle </em>keeps coming up. Paul repeatedly claims to be an apostle himself, just like Peter and the rest of the twelve. He warns against false apostles—who apparently lurked about the early church believers, trying to get them to return to their Jewish obeyance of the Law or else believe something else entirely—and even seems to disparage what the NIV Kris reads from translates as "those 'super-apostles'" ("the very chiefest apostles" KJV; "these super-apostles" NRSV), which I take to be, contrary to what the notes in my NIV Study Bible say, the big churchy names of the times: Peter, James, John, etc.<br /><br />Certainly Paul puts a lot of effort into locating himself among the real apostles, I have been thinking, but he also conflicts with them on several occasions. In any case, as always with me, it was a word, <em>apostle</em>, that baffled me. Why were the twelve referred to as "apostles"? It's used more frequently in the post-Resurrection narrative than in the gospels, where the twelve are often presumably lumped in with the rest of the disciples.<br /><br />Judging from what my American Heritage dictionary and NIV Exhaustive Concordance have to reveal, the word appears to derive from the Greek word for <em>send</em> and means <em>messenger</em>. The twelve were Jesus' messengers, sent out to tell the world the wonderful news of the Messiah's arrival and departure from this world, and the false apostles were probably also sent by someone—Satan? Herod? the Romans who persecuted the early Christians?—to deliver a different message.<br /><br />As I speculated about the word, a song from my teenage years sailed into my consciousness and remained there for days. Always hoped that I'd be an apostle. Knew that I could make it if I tried. Then when we retired we could write the gospels, and they still talk about us when we died. I don't remember attending a performance of Jesus Christ Superstar in those days or listening to the song (was it on the radio then, along with Mary Magdalene's haunting "I Don't Know How to Love Him"?) or ever speculating about it. Certainly it's not one of the more memorable pieces in <em>Jesus Christ Superstar</em>. Nevertheless, I woke up with the wistful melody in my mind, those fame-obsessed words on my lips as I drove to work and home again. So I rummaged around until I found a copy of the CD (<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Jesus-Christ-Superstar-Andrew-Pask/dp/B00005AREN/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=music&qid=1264961912&sr=8-3">here</a> it is on Amazon.com, with previews and MP3s available, in case you want to hear precisely the version I've been listening to) that I vaguely remembered someone had brought into the house some years ago.<br /><br />In <em>Jesus Christ Superstar</em>, the senders of the different messages are some of the main voices we hear, and they are convincing and articulate and heartbreaking. They are Judas, distraught that Jesus isn't more of a people's hero for the Jews. They are Mary Magdalene, wanting Jesus to be "just a man." They are Pilate, perplexed and impressed by Jesus but too smug and afraid and angry to acknowledge his own assessment. They are the crowds of poor and sick and unhappy, shrieking out their miseries and expectations of him. They are us, confused one-time or would-be or current God-followers, each one of us determined to discover in Jesus not who he is/was/will be but whatever it is we are looking for. To be fed or healed. To be loved in whatever way we understand that difficult word. To be confirmed in our craziness. <em>Jesus Christ Superstar</em> is a caution to me, to us all.<br /><br />So, it's my recommendation for Lent. Go out and buy it and let me know what you think. It's a great investment in a Lenten rethinking of what all was and still is involved in what Jesus identifies as the God-follower's work: believing in the One God Sent.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-77924489286366557362010-01-15T06:14:00.000-08:002010-01-15T08:13:31.017-08:00Resolutions of a Yum-YuckerThe other day my daughter Charlotte called me a yum-yucker. I just googled this term and got, amazingly, no hits, so I'm guessing it's original to one of my colleagues, who also used it some weeks ago—the first and only other time I've ever encountered the term—in response to my response to his going on about summer sausage. It was the second or third time he'd mentioned summer sausage in a week. How he craved it. It was the season.<br /><br />"I can't figure out why it's called summer sausage, though," he told me, "since it's only available in winter."<br /><br />“I can’t figure out why you like it,” I told him. “It makes me feel a little sick when I eat it. Like those bottled salad dressings that have that weird aftertaste . . . ”<br /><br />That’s when he called me a yum-yucker.<br /><br />And Charlotte inherited the term from my telling the summer sausage story at dinner that night. I can’t remember what we were talking about, but she went even further.<br /><br />“Your colleague was right. You’re a yum-yucker. You’re always yucking on people’s yums.”<br /><br />Her supportive example (parenting tip: I always demand these from my girls, when they assert their views. It has made them both formidable arguers.): “Well, like, we go in a store, and I say, ‘Look at this skirt! Isn’t it cute?’ and you’re like, ‘Eeewww!’ That’s you. Totally. A yum-yucker.”<br /><br />She refused to acknowledge the fact that, when we’re shopping and I <em>like</em> something she points out, I get all excited, in the positive direction. Or that I frequently find things <em>I</em> like and say, “Here, put this on. It’ll look really good on you.” And she does, and I’m right, and she buys it.<br /><br />I call it being enthusiastic <em>and </em>honest. I’m just not into empty praise. Or vacuous or openly dishonest pep talks, like the ones my mother-in-law once told me she used to give my husband as a teenager whenever he left the house. “You look so handsome!” she’d croon, especially if he looked, as she put it, “down in the mouth”—her euphemism for <em>depressed</em>, a word she hates and refuses to use. I admire the impulse—to lift others up, an ambition that pretty much defines Mamaw—but, ever since she told me about those routine remarks, I’ve never trusted as genuineany word of praise she’s ever offered me.<br /><br />Indeed, her praise often makes me suspicious she actually means the opposite. “Your car looks so shiny and clean!” she’ll tell me, and I’m suddenly aware that it’s way past time to do something about the salt and grime that’s been building up for months.<br /><br />All this to say that my new year’s resolution—and my plan for Lent, which is coming up in a month—is to work on yumming others’ yums. To consciously seek out role models, rather than focusing, as I'm prone to do, on others' failures.<br /><br />Not surprisingly, having made this resolution, I've gotten two lessons on the topic over the past few days, as the semester has started up again. One was from the head librarian at my university. I was telling her about the next book I’ll be working on, tentatively called <em>Easy Burdens</em>, on how the life of the believer really is supposed to be delightful, not a trial. Yoked to the powerful One God Sent, our burden, however heavy, should actually feel light. I started the book in response to an ongoing series of pep talks I’ve been giving to a beloved former student—possibly the most spiritually devoted person I've ever met, a woman whose every action seems imbued with the desire to love God back—who is crippled (as, secretly, I often am) by the worry that she doesn’t <em>do</em> enough as a believer. (In the book, in other words, I hope to convince myself as much as her of what I believe to be true about what God expects of us but nevertheless struggle to embrace.)<br /><br />“Yes, I know a lot of Christians worry about not doing enough,” the librarian told me. “But I never feel that kind of guilt. I think it’s because of my father, who was always so encouraging and positive. There was nothing I could do that didn’t impress and please him.”<br /><br />The next day, I was asking another colleague how he came to have the goal of being available to whoever walks in his door. Whether it's a student or a colleague or an utter stranger or just me, he drops everything, always, with a smile on his face. So inviting. I guessed he had been the victim of someone—probably a parent, such important formers and deformers—who was saliently unavailable to him in his past. Always too busy. Or too negative and closed. Perpetually yucking his yums. I figured he had made it his life goal to never be that way to anyone else.<br /><br />“It was my dad,” he said. “He was a pastor.”<br /><br />“Ah,” I commiserated. My father wasn't a pastor, but I could imagine that life: the endless flow of needy sheep, the neglected sons and daughters.<br /><br />“You know,” he went on, “his door was always open—to me and to anyone else. ‘Nothing is more important than being there for someone who needs my attention,’ he always told me.”<br /><br />“It’s hard sometimes," my colleague continued. "I mean, I get behind in things. But I figure, a lot of what I do”—he gestures at his computer, some open textbooks, a pile of papers—“is just fluff, and people are more important.”<br /><br />I want to be like this man, the pastor’s son—and a pastor himself, though he may not know it. And like the librarian—Miss Mary, I call her, which is what my daughters called her in Sunday school—who not only never <em>suffers</em> from guilt but never causes it. I’m certain of this. I want to be like Mamaw, who prods and primps everyone around her out into the world with the confidence that things aren’t so bad. And I want to inspire my daughters to be like these people—to keep their doors open, to feel no guilt, to enter the world without suspicion but only buoyancy and blithe confidence.<br /><br />Which is not to say we shouldn’t be wise to the dangers ahead of us. Like those potato chips coated in an oily powder that purport to taste like sour cream and green onion and that, if I break down and eat the one Charlotte thrusts at me in her enthusiasm, will make me burp artificial onion taste for days afterward.<br /><br />Eeeewww yuck!Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-52499878700036847762009-12-29T09:29:00.000-08:002009-12-30T08:54:50.826-08:00'Twas four days after Christmas . . . .. . . and I'm finally making my first Advent post.<br /><br />I just haven't felt it, this year. Funny, because Advent has always been such a God-rich time of the year for me. But here it is, on the eve of the new year—the Christmas music and present buying and tree decorating and yearly six o'clock tumble of my almost grown girls into the parental bed on Christmas morning all behind me—and God has yet to arrive for me this holy season as a wet, slippery, screaming reality. I haven't felt Hope moving within me. Nor my usual yearnings or even the near despair I typically suffer in the days before Christmas. Just empty contentment.<br /><br />Despite the unusual blessings this Christmas has brought with it:<br /><ul><li>no PTSD symptoms whatsoever and very little anxiety about buying presents, spending money, getting it all done.</li><li>getting to have Lulu home from her boarding school with not a bit of homework and all As after her first semester taking all difficult classes.</li><li>my girls' satisfaction with their gifts, each other, and the season in general.</li><li>getting to see my first pileated woodpecker. (If you’ve never seen one, you need to. He was amazing: gigantic, with a luminous red pointed head and white-and-black art deco looking body, just like Woody Woodpecker but more handsome. He flew incredibly fast and laughed loudly whenever he did. Such a cut up!)</li><li>super presents: a gorgeous, raggedy-looking scarf from Charlotte that makes me look like the beggar girl Anastasia in that old animated movie; three bird books from Lulu, one of which is a birding journal; silver earrings from Kris that look like a stellar body being orbited; and a whole slew of pricey youth elixirs from Mamaw.</li><li>the promise of a visit from beloved former students in a few days.</li><li>a gift from a hunter friend of four pheasants, which I will make into pheasant fricassee (I've posted the recipe) for the visiting students.</li><li>a successful running year of 21 miles per week, plus 14 banked miles, here at year's end.</li><li>my newest book—<em>A Field Guide to God</em>—all done, the publishing process trustworthily and congenially overseen by my new editor, who's a gem and who overnighted me a copy the second it came off the press, two days before Christmas.</li><li>two more books on the horizon. (My new publisher is going to bring out the book of Christmas essays that I took back from my previous publisher plus a book I recently started called, tentatively, <em>Easy Burdens</em>, about how God never intended the life of faith to be the burdensome task or unpleasant sacrifice many of us make it.)</li><li>getting to hear the chapter on home from <em>The Wind in the Willows</em> read aloud by Jennifer Mendenhall on NPR. (Here's the <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=121812467">link</a> to go to if you want to hear it, too. Be advised, it will make you moan-cry.)</li><li>SNOW! (On Christmas day, no less, which, according to Kris, is only the second time it's ever happened here in recorded history.)</li></ul>Oh, there was much more, but I don't want to make those of you who received less unduly envious, so I'll stop listing.<br /><br />Why, then, does God feel so, well, uninvolved in any of it? (Except for the woodpecker. I definitely sensed God's presence as I watched that bird clutch the tree and hammer away.)<br /><br />I've been speculating that it's maybe because I've been out of tradition, in the months leading up to the Coming. One member of our small family is prematurely absent from home, and another has been crazily filling out college applications in preparation to leave, too. I haven't had my usual Advent angst, which I listed as a blessing—and it is one!—but which is also an important prayer (i.e., writing) catalyst. Also, because of Lulu's absence, we've spent a lot of weekends gone from home—especially Kris, who helps Lulu with her masses of math and science homework. Away from home means, for us, not attending church services, which, I'm discovering, play an crucial role in keeping me aware of God. (Who would have thought?!)<br /><br />Whatever the reason (accidental quote, here, of Dr. Suess's summation of the Grinch's very similar sentiments), I just never <em>felt</em> Jesus' birth this year. Not the excitement. Not the pain. Not the realization that my lifetime of longing was answered.<br /><br />There's still time, though. Because of a family tussle over what to eat on Christmas Eve this year—the traditional turkey, you see, also fell away, somehow—and our upcoming post-Christmas visit from old friends, we have decided to extend Christmas for the full 12 days of the traditonal Christmastide, ending on the eve of January 6th, the traditional Feast of the Epiphany.<br /><br />That makes today, in Orthodox tradion, the Feast of those poor little boy-children Herod ordered killed to prevent there being any other King of the Jews than himself. Such a self-serving and absurd order—reminiscent, to me, of Mao's calamitous attempt during the Great Leap Forward to kill off all the sparrows in China to save the crops, which ended up backfiring, since there were no birds to eat the locusts that subsequently descended on the fields. Anyway, according to Matthew's account of the good news, Herod's order fulfilled Jeremiah's prophechy that “A voice was heard on high, weeping and much wailing, Rachel beweeping her sons, and she would not be comforted, for they be nought” (Matthew 2:18, quoting Jeremiah 31:15, in Wycliffe's translation)<br /><br />I'll leave you with that sad thought. Babies killed in response to the coming of the God-baby.<br /><br />And this little tribute to the brown winter sparrows that flock the feeding stations in my yard:<br /><ul><li>There are the White-Throated Sparrows (<em>Zonorichia albicollis</em>), which first got me interested in birds when they started singing their sweet but sad little song that mimicked the melody of the words "are coming" of Green Day's commemorative song "The Saints Are Coming," which was on the radio everywhere I went right after Hurricane Katrina. It was such a beautiful little bird song. I had to find the bird that sang it, but it took me a while. It's a shyish bird, with yellow spots behind its eyes and a white tuft under its chin. </li><li>Then there's the White-Crowned Sparrow (<em>Zonotrichia leucophrys</em>), with its black-and-white striped cap. (The females' caps are tan and brick-red.) </li><li>We get the occasional House Sparrow (<em>Passer domesticus</em>), which is actually a European transplant, fifty pairs having been intentionally released in Central Park in 1859 for reasons I have not been able to discover. Evidently, bird releases were common in the 19th century. <em>Passer domesticus</em> (yes, its scientific name is exactly the same as its common name, which is so nice) has bright white cheeks, a ruddy cap and shoulders, and a black mask.</li><li>And then, there's my favorite, Harris's Sparrow (<em>Zonotrichia querula</em>), named after Edward Harris. Its scientific name describes the black on its face, which radiates like soot from around its pink bill into irregular speckles onto its white breast and tan head. It looks as though something blew up in its face, and it behaves that way, too. It runs shrieking at the other sparrows at the feeders and even at some bigger birds, like cardinals and jays. A funny little hysteric.</li></ul>Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-46358214661560801232009-03-10T06:39:00.000-07:002009-03-11T07:25:20.020-07:00Thoughts on the Current Lapsing Trend<div align="left"><p>There seems to be a sudden rash of interest in faith loss of late. Recently, I was invited to talk informally with students about doubt, and many more showed up than had been anticipated. Then I started getting emails from various people on the topic of doubt and faith loss, including a some marked with red "High Importance" exclamation points from a student writing a paper on the subject. And then, in scanning the news recently, I found that the same interest not just among the mostly ardent believers surrounding me but out there in the world. Here are a few headlines from yesterday: Americans Becoming Less Religious, Study Shows (LA Times). Most Religious Groups in USA Have Lost Ground (USA Today). Study: Fewer Catholics in New England (MSNBC).</p></div><div align="left"></div><div align="left"><p>Having just finished the manuscript of a book on faith loss and strategies for sensing God's invisible presence , I'm excited, of course. Maybe more people may buy my book! (<em>A Field Guide to God</em>, due out in early 2010.) [The book's subtitle—always a difficult part of the publishing process for me—is still under consideration, for which, pray that I'm not talked into anything dorky or cutsey or otherwise offensive or embarrassing. In fact, pray that they let me call the book just <em>A Field Guide to God</em>, which in my view is plenty pfiffy to sell it.]</p><p></p><p><p>But there's a deeper level on which the problem, if it can be called one, interests and excites me. All these people leaving the church are, after all, going somewhere else to look for God—potentially somewhere better, if church wasn't where the excitement of God's presence was for them. They're moving. Not just <em>leaving</em>, which sounds so much like an end, but <em>going somewhere</em>. I'm guessing they're not just going home to watch TV and eat potato chips and forget about God altogether. Historically, the death of religion always brings faith growth. This leaving or lapsing or loss is, has got to be, the opposite of complacency and stagnation—both of which worry me more than whether or not people are attending one or the other church.</p></div><div align="left"></div><div align="left"><p>Not that church is bad. Or necessarily a place where faith stagnates or becomes complacent. Often quite the opposite.</p></div><div align="left"><p>But the biggest danger to true believers, in my opinion, is not that their faith will disappear but that <em>God</em> will. In their perception, at least. They'll start taking God's presence—and all evidence of it in their experience, in nature, in their interaction with others, and in the miracles that fill our days—for granted. Or, as my students write in their papers, for granite. For an edifice, or a set of rock hard traditions, and stop caring much about the divine parent behind it all. Invisible and inaudible and intangible, but, as Paul reassures the Athenians in Acts, "not far from any one of us" (17:27 TNIV). As believers, we can have faith, but lose a sense of God's presence. And that, I think, is a worse place to be than simply questioning or rejecting the practices of this or that group of believers to which they had previously belonged.</p></div><div align="left"><p>I lost my faith entirely, as I saw it, for over a decade of my life, and that was a hard thing. But, as a result of that loss, I think, I later came to believe in a bigger and more relevant way. More questioning and doubt laden. Less accepting of pat answers. More appreciative of God's involvement in my life. More aware of the listener on the other end of my worries and longing, the invisible arm across my shoulder, the silent shuffle of another's feet as I walk in my garden.</p></div><div align="left"></div><div align="left"><p>Doubt, as I see it, is good, perhaps the best thing that can happen to a believer. If you doubt, you are searching, trying to find God. And God hovers nearby, having designed all of history, every boundary between us, every division, as a way of causing us to notice and come. Or so Paul sums up all of history for the people of Athens, whom he describes as "extremely religious. . . in every way." He told them that "From one ancestor" God "made all nations to inhabit the whole earth, and he allotted the times of their existence and the boundaries of the places where they would live, so that they would search for God and perhaps grope for him and find him—though indeed he is not far from each one of us" (Acts 17:26-27 NRSV).</p></div><div align="left"><p><em>So that</em> we would search. And <em>perhaps </em>grope and find. I love this verse.</p></div><div align="left"><p><em>Grope</em>. God wants us to grope, expects us to have to grope—and planned it that way, in fact.</p></div><div align="left"><p>Anyway, that's where I am with this business of doubt and lapsing, in case you want to know.</p><p><p>[There, now, I've spent the entire morning blogging after a year long hiatus while I worked on my book. For me, it's all but impossible to do both well. That's another problem with blogs—in addition to bloggers' tendency to misjudge tone and audience and end up sounding like asses—that I neglected mention in class when we were talking about blogging the other day: You either blog or you write.]</p><p></p></div>Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-50437076577981531072008-03-24T19:35:00.000-07:002008-03-24T21:00:15.092-07:00Radio BluesI was interviewed today regarding my post of 28 February—about allowing my daughters to watch <em>The Hills Have Eyes</em>—on a Christian radio program called <em>John and Stephanie</em>. Stephanie was clearly outraged that I would let Charlotte watch again a movie that had given her nightmares and then that I would let her even younger sister watch it. I explained my miserable parenting as a preference for permission with discussion over prohibition and simply relenting to teenager pressure. And I tried to talk about the other part of my post: the fact that equally creepy stories are found in the Bible, and I see this as evidence that we are to confront and talk about such matters, work them through, even with our children, and not simply forbid the topics altogether and deny their existence.<br /><br />As is to be expected in any discussion of objectionable or graphic material undertaken among believers, Stephanie quoted Paul to the Philippians: "Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things" (4:8). Then she asked me if I didn't think allowing my kids to watch the movie with discussion wasn't tantamount to letting them have sex in the living room or use drugs in my presence. She also wisely pointed out that, while the Bible was made for teaching us how to be, movies were made for entertainment. Her parents had forbidden such movies, she said, so she had never seen them and never wanted to see them. The few glimpses of scary scenes she had caught in her life had stayed with her and damaged her.<br /><br />I felt bad afterwards. I suppose it shouldn't have been any surprise that my parenting looks exactly as bad to others as I always feel it is. Parenting, I've said many times, is the hardest work I have ever done, and I always feel like a failure.<br /><br />For the record, though, here's what I'd like my parenting to look like: I seek to be an engaged parent by being aware, really aware, of what my girls are thinking about. I want my daughters to like and trust me enough to keep me in the conversation, so that they will later talk to me openly about more difficult and personal issues—issues that I kept secret and dealt with entirely on my own at their age. I want to allow my children to gradually grow up and away from me. At the same time, though, I also want to have the kind of relationship with them that permits me to retain some small input in their decision-making.<br /><br />Currently, I am the cool parent among my daughters' acquaintance. Not cool in the sense that I allow my kids to do anything I consider dangerous or immoral, like having sex or using drugs in my livingroom. And not cool in terms of being on top of the latest fashions or able to sing along with the popular music they like, as some of their parents can. Just cool in the sense that I am open to any discussion. I am frequently stern and preachy and demanding, even toward children not my own. I forbid language that they blithely use that, even in jest, belittles and hurts others, and I hold them accountable for racist and sexist views. They have to, in other words, talk nice. But just about any topic, as long as it's seriously considered and not raised purely for the sake of shocking me, is allowed in my presence. So we talk, and because we do I am cool, and my coolness—as well as the fact that my girls like spending time with me—is my main hope in this business of parenting my kids out into a pretty scary world.<br /><br />My Christian students at JBU often intimate to me that I must be glad not to have been a Christian when I was their age because I got to experience, with impunity, all the stuff they missed or are missing out on. They think my life before I became a Christian must have been, in other words, more fun than my life afterward—and, more importantly, they think that a life without God is probably more fun than their own Christian lives are. I think this sort of skewed thinking comes from never really talking with their parents or other experienced people about depravity. My students grew up believing that sin, however true it might be, was something you just didn't talk about. As a result, they romanticize sin and don't realize such simple truths as that foulness really <em>is </em>foul and feels foul and that immoral behaviors never result in happiness.<br /><br />There wasn't time in my discussion with John and Stephanie for me to go on about the thinness of the line—if there is a line at all—between teaching and entertaining. I think all art—and I include among it, somewhat reluctantly, even the often bad art of popular culture, even movies like <em>The Hills Have Eyes</em>—has the capacity to teach. Indeed, that's what I think the unconscious goal of most writers and filmmakers and painters and composers is: to teach while entertaining, or, to use Horace's words, to delight <em>and </em>instruct. I think the biblical writers have the same goal, otherwise there would be no complicated organizational schemes, like arranging a psalm's lines in the order of the Hebrew alphabet—no word play, no verse. The stories of scripture, Jesus's stories, would not teach as well if they had not been designed to entertain, and entertain well.<br /><br />Anyway, I'm somewhere way off topic and must to bed. Sleep well, all.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com11tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7959109810250251937.post-52451184791967459202008-03-18T11:37:00.000-07:002008-03-18T12:45:03.039-07:00An Intercessory Prayer of Lancelot Andrewes, Bishop of WinchesterI really like this prayer—the specificity of its generalities, especially. I also like how the selective capitalization—reminiscent of e. e. cummings and Thomas Carlyle—throws emphasis on certain words. The prayer is excerpted from "Prayers for the First Day of the Week," from the private devotions of Lancelot Andrewes, originally composed in Greek and Hebrew sometime during Andrewes' lifetime (1555-1626), here translated and abridged by Florence Higham in her biography, <em>Lancelot Andrewes</em> (London: SCM, 1952). I've become a fan of the biographer, who wrote a number of books about 17th century religious thinkers. I'm also reading a translation of Andrewes' devotions by John Henry Newman, but I don't like it as much.<br /><br />I covet Andrewes' ability to pray outside of his own experience—to think of farmers' concerns and nursing moms and those who, surely unlike him (he was known for his sweet cheerfulness of temper), are tempted by suicide. Anyway, just thought I'd share it, as it seems as though this wonderful little biography doesn't get checked out much. Here it is:<br /><br />O Thou that art the Hope of all the ends of the earth,<br />remember Thy whole creation for good, visit the<br />world in Thy compassion . . .<br />O Thou that wlkdest in the midst of the golden candlesticks<br />remove not our candlestick out of its place,<br />Set in order the things that are wanting,<br />Strengthen the things that remain.<br />. . . . .<br />Grant to Farmers and Keepers if cattle good seasons;<br />To the Fleet and fishers fair weather;<br />To tradesmen [I'm sure Andrewes and Higham meant <em>traders</em>], not to overreach one another;<br />To Mechanics, to ursue their business lawfully,<br />even to the meanest of work[ers],<br />even down to the Poor . . . .<br />Do Thou arise and have mercy<br />on those who are in the last necessity.<br />. . . . .<br />All in extreme age and weakness<br />All tempted to suicide<br />All troubled by unclean spirits,<br />the despairing, the sick in soul or body,<br />the faint-hearted.<br />All in prisons and chains, all under sentence of death,<br />orphans, widows, foreigners, travellers, voyagers,<br />women with child, women who give suck,<br />All in bitter servitude, or in mines, or in the galleys,<br />Or in loneliness.<br />. . . . .<br />O Lord I commend to Thee,<br />my soul and body,<br />my mind and thoughts,<br />my prayers, and my vows,<br />my senses and my limbs,<br />my words and my works,<br />my life and my death;<br />my brothers and my sisters, and their children,<br />my friends, my benefactors, my well-wishers,<br />those who have a claim on me;<br />my kindred and my neighbours,<br />my country and all christendom.<br /><br />That's it. And I agree. Amen.Patty Kirkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10443040733177065911noreply@blogger.com1