to answer the question

Asked by Marc in the comments of this post:

Don’t you think integrity is important for a Christian then? It sounds like you don’t think it’s important.

If that’s the impression I gave in that post, then, wow, I really wasn’t clear enough. I did say this in that comment thread, although perhaps it was overlooked:

I think valuing one’s integrity is important. Value it to the point that it’s too sacred to speak of or advertise. It’s something others should say of a person, not something they should say of themselves.

So that’s my opinion, in brief, on the integrity issue. And that’s my opinion across the board, Christian or no. Hope that clears up any confusion.

quote day: a spiritual theme

“Madame,” I said, “if our god were a pagan god or the god of intellectuals — and for me it comes to much the same — He might fly to His remotest heaven and our grief would force Him down to earth again. But you know that our God came to be among us. Shake your fist at Him, spit in His face, scourge Him, and finally crucify Him: what does it matter? My daughter, it’s already been done to Him.”

~ George Bernanos
Diary of a Country Priest

Without somehow destroying me in the process, how could God reveal himself in a way that would leave no room for doubt? If there were no room for doubt, there would be no room for me.

~ Frederick Buechner

The only ultimate way to conquer evil is to let it be smothered within a willing, living human being. When it is absorbed there, like blood in a sponge or a spear thrown into one’s heart, it loses its power and goes no further.

~ Gale D. Webbe
The Night and Nothing

Vengeance is a passion to get even. It is a hot desire to give back as much pain as someone gave you ….. The problem with revenge is that it never gets what it wants; it never evens the score. Fairness never comes. The chain reaction set off by every act of vengeance always takes its unhindered course. It ties both the injured and the injurer to an escalator of pain. Both are stuck on the escalator as long as parity is demanded, and the escalator never stops, never lets anyone off.

~ Lewis Smedes
The Art of Forgiveness

I said to my soul, be still, and let the dark come upon you
Which shall be the darkness of God …
I said to my soul, be still, and wait without hope
For hope would be hope for the wrong thing:
wait without love
For love would be love of the wrong thing;
there is yet faith
But the faith and the love and the hope are all in the waiting.

~ T.S. Eliot
“East Coker”

When you forgive someone, you slice away the wrong from the person who did it. You disengage that person from his hurtful act. You recreate him. At one moment you identify him ineradicably as the person who did you wrong. The next moment you change that identity. He is remade in your memory. You think of him now not as the person who hurt you, but a person who needs you. You feel him now not as the person who alienated you, but as the person who belongs to you. Once you branded him as a person powerful in evil, but now you see him as a person weak in his needs. You recreated your past by recreating the person whose wrong made your past painful.

~ Lewis Smedes
The Art of Forgiveness

He seems to do nothing of Himself which He can possibly delegate to His creatures. He commands us to do slowly and blunderingly what He could do perfectly and in the twinkling of an eye. Creation seems to be delegation, through and through. I suppose this is because He is a giver.

C.S. Lewis
The World’s Last Night

I had far rather walk, as I do, in daily terror of eternity, than feel that this was only a children’s game in which all the contestants would get equally worthless prizes in the end.

T.S. Eliot

And here in dust and dirt, O here
The lilies of His love appear.

~ George Herbert

for a birthday girl

I have seen something else under the sun:

The race is not to the swift
or the battle to the strong,
nor does food come to the wise
or wealth to the brilliant
or favor to the learned;
but time and chance happen to them all.

Ecclesiastes 9:11

for “sylvia”

You say that capitalism saves the world. You say that death is an instinct for you. You say that you no longer believe in love.

These are just some things you say.

So I wonder: in the face of this instinct of yours, this cold thing calling to you, what will your messiah do to help you? How will it come to your aid or give you comfort or the tiniest glimmer of hope in your isolation? How will it do these things? How does the god of capitalism save a person’s heart and soul?

I’m willing to have you hate me. I’m willing to have you think I’m an idiot, a fool, clinging to my religion, whatever. I’m willing to have you say, “That girl is whacked; I’m never talking to her again.” I’m willing to have you despise me forever, if you must. But right now, you are in a very dark cold place. The demons of too many wounds are swirling around you and they want you. I can feel them from here and I am not willing to remain silent.

That you’ve been so horribly abused in your life, I can never ever take away. I would if I could, hon. I would in a heartbeat. You’ve experienced profound evil, so you must surely know it exists.

But …….

I know you’ve known love, too. Maybe not enough. Maybe not often enough or consistently enough. But along the way, you have and, even now, you do.

So there isn’t just evil in this life. There is love, too, and it comes from somewhere. It has a Source. Water has a source. Light has a source. These basic things have a source. So love, that most important of things, must have a source, too. It can’t be manmade, can it? No. No. We’re too unreliable. We’re too selfish and blind and fickle and uncaring. We are the wind. And you need a Rock.

You were prayed for the other night. Total strangers wept for you. Total strangers took you — anonymously — and laid you and your very life at the feet of Jesus.

They did because I asked them to. And I ask anyone reading this now to do the same. Because there is love, hon. The Great Love, The Source, Jesus Christ.

He is Love and He does not disappoint. He is the one your heart longs for even though you can’t acknowledge it. He understands you like no one else ever has or ever will. He speaks your name with joy and pride for what He made in you.

Go ahead. Tell him you’re pissed. Tell him life has f***ed you over. Tell him you’re terrified. Tell him you want to die. Tell him you despair. Tell him you hate. Tell him you think He doesn’t exist. He can take it. He is, simply, Love.

You will do what you will do. I cannot stop you from here. I cannot hop on a plane to where you are. I cannot pick up the phone and expect you to answer. I cannot take whatever it is out of your hands. I would, if I were there. I would fight you and the cold thing calling you with everything I have.

But I can’t and I have wept long over the fact that I can’t. All I have is this battered keyboard and these feeble words and these aimless tears that are falling for you even now, as I write.

All I can do is tell you please do not leave this life without calling on Him. You do that and I have no doubt He will live up to his end of the eternal bargain.

Then, my very dear girl, if you feel you simply must leave this place ….. well, then, someday, I will meet you there, okay?

I love you.

email

In my inbox, from a silent long-time reader of this blog:

Mother’s Day never arrives any more that I don’t think of you and remember your heart. I find myself holding you and the other childless couples I know close to me, considering them with special honor, knowing that there can never be the “right words.” Mother’s Day comes, and later Father’s Day comes and they are quietly absent from church. They never say anything, and were it not for you, I would not have noticed. They show courageous smiles–genuine, sincere smiles–at awkward moments. I am overwhelmed at times by such grace.

Thank you SO much for this. I am in tears. Tears, just having you tell me that I may have helped you take notice of others in similar circumstances. That means more than you’ll ever ever know. I have emailed you privately but want to acknowledge your kindness publicly, even though you’re anonymous.

God bless you for taking the time to tell me.

I feel somehow changed just reading this.

“fear not”

Well, I suppose it’s not Christmas on this blog unless I trot out my beloved Philip Yancey. Every year at this time, I seem to be excerpting this and excerpting that, so in keeping with that, well, tradition or compulsion, whichever you prefer to call it ….. an excerpt from what I think — I think — is my favorite Yancey book, Disappointment With God. How can a person read that title and not want to read the book? I’ve said this ad nauseum, but I don’t care: Philip Yancey’s books are a life raft to me as a Christian. He gets it. He gets it. He gets how much being a human gets in the way of being a Christian. He just gets it. I love him. I owe him.

Onto the excerpt … a Christmas excerpt. It’s not too long:

“Fear Not”

We hear these words every Christmas season at church pageants when children dress up in bathrobes and act out the story of Jesus’ birth. “Fear not!” lisps the six-year-old angel, his bedsheet costume dragging the ground, his coat-hanger-frame wings flapping ever so slightly from the trembling of his body. He sneaks a glance at the script hidden in the folds of his sleeve. “Fear not, for I bring you good tidings of great joy.” Already he has appeared to Zechariah (his older brother with a taped-on cotton beard) and to Mary (a freckled blonde from the second grade.) He used the same greeting for both, “Fear not! …”

These were also God’s first words to Abraham, and to Hagar, and to Isaac. “Fear not!” the angel said in greeting Gideon and the prophet Daniel. For supernatural beings, that phrase served almost as the equivalent of “Hello, how are you?” Little wonder. By the time the supernatural being spoke, the human being was usually lying face down in a cataleptic state. When God made contact with planet Earth, sometimes the supernatural encounter sounded like thunder, sometimes it stirred the air like a whirlwind, and sometimes it lit up the scene like a flash of phosphorous. Nearly always it caused fear. But the angel who visited Zechariah and Mary and Joseph heralded that God was about to appear in a form that would not frighten.

What could be less scary than a newborn baby with jerky limbs and eyes that do not quite focus? In Jesus, born in a barn or a cave and laid in a feeding trough, God found at last a mode of approach that humanity need not fear. The king had cast off his robes.

Think of the condescension involved: the Incarnation, which sliced history into two parts (a fact even our calendars grudgingly acknowledge), had more animal than human witnesses. Think, too, of the risk. In the Incarnation, God spanned the vast chasm of fear that had distanced him from his human creation. But removing that barrier made Jesus vulnerable, terribly vulnerable.

The child born in the night among beasts. The sweet breath and steaming dung of beasts. And nothing is ever the same again.

Those who believe in God can never in a way be sure of him again. Once they have seen him in a stable, they can never be sure where he will appear or to what lengths he will go or to what ludicrous depths of self-humiliation he will descend in his wild pursuit of man …

For those who believe in God, it means, this birth, that God himself is never safe from us, and maybe that is the dark side of Christmas, the terror of the silence. He comes in such a way that we can always turn him down, as we could crack the baby’s skull like an eggshell or nail him up when he gets too big for that. (Frederick Buechner, The Hungering Dark)

How did Christmas Day feel to God? Imagine for a moment becoming a baby again: giving up language and muscle coordination and the ability to eat solid food and control your bladder. God as a fetus! Or imagine yourself becoming a sea slug — that analogy is probably closer. On that day in Bethlehem, the Maker of All That Is took form as a helpless, dependent newborn.

“Kenosis” is the technical word theologians use to describe Christ emptying himself of the advantages of deity. Ironically, while the emptying involved much humiliation, it also involved a kind of freedom. I have spoken of the “disadvantages” of infinity. A physical body freed Christ to act on a human scale, without those “disadvantages” of infinity. He could say what he wanted without his voice blasting the treetops. He could express anger by calling King Herod a fox or by reaching for a bullwhip in the temple, rather than shaking the earth with his stormy presence. And he could talk to anyone — a prostitue, a blind man, a widow, a leper — without first having to announce, “Fear not!”

for the week before Christmas

I’m posting links to the exerpts I posted last year from Philip Yancey’s brilliant book, The Jesus I Never Knew. Because I love Philip Yancey, in case I’ve never mentioned that.

I hope, even if you read them last year, you’ll visit them again to help you get into the spirit of the season. If you’ve never read them, give ’em a try. Yancey really does give a wonderful, totally different perspective on Christmas. Seven parts for the next seven days! (You’d think I’d planned it ‘er somethin’.)


Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Part 5

Part 6

Part 7

Uh …. oops. There are 8 parts. I am now twirling in a shame spiral brought on by poor planning and misguided boasting about great planning. Well, it’s not really Christmas until someone’s twirling in a shame spiral, right? Fa la la!

Part 8

crack

It’s crack to certain women. The topic of whose fault it is that you don’t have children. Certain women, especially certain Christian women, can’t let it go. They just can’t. They will hound you and hound you and hound you to answer them. But I never have and I never will. Somehow, that particular tidbit drives them crazy and they just need to know:

Where can we point the finger? Whose fault is it? It it his? Is it hers? The two of them together? A bad combination? Just where, precisely, is the problem here?

It’s that extra pulp in an already juicy story. I swear, it’s informational crack. Over the years whenever I’ve been asked this question by women, NEVER men, I’ve always sensed this crackle of sick hope in the air that maybe, maybe it’s the woman’s fault. A small electric gleam in the eyes as they look at me. Maybe another woman’s body doesn’t work. Maybe her body doesn’t work. They can’t help themselves. It’s primal. A kind of alpha female thing.

I’m more woman if I can see you as less. I have body power. You do not.

Beyond the assumption involved, it’s sick, I tell you. Sick.

And I have never answered them either way. I never will. That information is private. It doesn’t involve them, although they want it to very much. To my mind, any random woman who asks that question instantly proves herself to be an untrustworthy person with a very low emotional intelligence quotient.

So, women with kids, some very basic advice: Never ask a woman that. Never ask a man that, either, but that rarely happens anyway. It’s simple. Never ask. It’s just not your business and if that ever flies out of your mouth, you need to ask yourself Why am I asking this? Really. What is the empty place inside you that will be magically filled through this piece of information? What IS it? The fact that you’re asking speaks of some deep deficit that this information, however titillating it may be, will never fill. And, believe me, that offhand nosy-ness can deeply hurt a woman, drag her down into the dark yet again for a very very long time. Which — I don’t know — may very well be the entire goal anyway.

Because women ……. can be cruel. And Christian women …… are the worst.

For me, though, any woman who has ever asked me that is instantly suspect to me — and that’s if I’m feeling generous. Usually, I’ve written her off in a split second. POOF! Her smiling nosy self is dead to me. In that moment, some blaring alarm goes off in my head so earsplitting, so global, that it’s forever associated with that woman. It’s Pavlovian. I see that woman and hear “Danger, Will Robinson! DANGER!” from that moment on. Forever.

I remember, from about 5 years ago, another church woman, different from this one. I was new at this particular church — the church of the worst person I’ve ever known — and decided to get involved singing in the church band. Because wouldn’t that bless everybody, and blah blah blah. And this woman, Lisa, was on the worship team, too, singing alto. I met her for the first time at practice. She was shaped like a droopy dumpling, a bit of oversteamed dim sum. I remember her stuffed smooth whiteness, her dark curly hair flopping on the sides of her face like cocker spaniel ears. She wore a proper Christian woman’s uniform: polyester floral dress, calf length; white nylon sandals, dark pantyhose, reinforced toe. Church can be strenuous. Never know when you’ll need a reinforced toe.

I wore jeans, a t-shirt, and a hoodie and decided we probably weren’t kindred spirits.

There wasn’t much chitchat at practice. We just practiced. But on that Sunday, my first Sunday onstage, with 5 minutes to go-time, she started with the questions.

“So do you have kids?”

“Uh, no.”

“Oh? Really?”

“Uh-huh.”

“Oh. Why not? Is there some problem?”

Who says that? Who? The blaring global alarm started to sound. I stared at her. Did my best to shoot daggers at her with my eyes. It was 4 minutes to go-time. I strained to silence the alarm and clear my head. But I did not strain to be nice. I see no biblical call to be “nice.”

“Wow. You really cut to the chase, don’t you?”

I narrowed my eyes, looked her up and down, felt the elastic of my insides suddenly solder into one hard thing: contempt. A big ol’ ball of contempt. Here I was, standing in front of church moments from singing about Jesus and his love and his grace and I literally oozed contempt. That one thing. Nothing else. My eyeballs felt very hot and huge. Maybe they were lasers. Maybe I was trying to melt her dim sum body down to a puddle of polyester dipping sauce.

“Well, I’m just interested. I mean, I’ve been there.”

“Oh? Been where?”

“Well, I couldn’t get pregnant either and then the elders laid hands on me and prayed for me and I ended up having Charlotte. Then a little later I had Scarlett. And now I just found out I’m pregnant again!”

I glared at her. Wanted to smack her. I could barely contain my shaking. Why was she putting me in this position?

“Wow. What interesting assumptions you make,” I said.

“Well, I know what you’re going through.”

“You don’t really know anything about me, Lisa.”

“Okay, but that’s what I’m talking about!”

I couldn’t deal with her presumptuous leaps of thought.

“Uh, I see that.”

“So if you ever want to talk –”

“Look,” I interrupted. “I’m sorry. We’re, like, two minutes from singing. I don’t even know you and I’m not comfortable talking about this. I need to focus on worship. I’m sorry.”

She stared down at her reinforced toes. My bluntness must have worked, because we never spoke of it again.

Sometimes, you need to respond — and quickly — to that blaring global alarm.

She named her baby Arlett.

quote

From Philip Yancey, my spiritual crush man, who, by the way, looks like this ….

yancey4.jpg

(Okay. So he’s Disco Stu from The Simpsons. “Disco Stuuu has a quote for youuu.”)

….. comes this:

Why am I a Christian? I sometimes ask myself, and to be perfectly honest the reasons reduce to two: (1) the lack of good alternatives, and (2) Jesus. Brilliant, untamed, tender, creative, slippery, irreducible, paradoxically humble — Jesus stands up to scrutiny. He is who I want my God to be.

From The Jesus I Never Knew.

Which you haven’t read yet why? Yancey is a life raft for me. His honesty means everything. READ it. Read anything he’s written. You won’t be sorry.