how could I forget this?

Well, sweet Moses! I can’t believe I forgot this one tiny thing:

I don’t have to have deliverance.

This, according to a certain person with whom we’re all acquainted now. During our summit, I told Joey that I’d been down that road before, that it had only brought harm and confusion, and that I’d be following the path of sanctification as laid out in the Word — and no other. To this, she responded:

“Well, I guess you don’t have to have deliverance prayer.”

(Golly, thanks for the permission. What a relief to have the green light to continue doing what I’m doing.)

Then she added:

“I mean, I guess we don’t have to agree on this.”

Hmmmm …… well …..

I tried to be delicate. I’m so good at delicate. Watch me try to tippy-toe:

“Well, Joey, I would exhort you to spend some time studying the whole of Scripture to see if it bears out this practice of deliverance of believers.”

Oh, yeah. Tippy Toe.

That this actually came out of my mouth was a meeeracle, considering that this is what first popped into my head: “Yes, we do! !?#$&!! This isn’t a debatable issue. This is extra-biblical c-r-a-p! Walk away before you can’t see or think straight anymore, you cotton-headed ninny muggins!!”

(And “cotton-headed ninny muggins” comes from? Anyone?)

Now that I think of it, I can’t believe I passed on yet another prime opportunity to call someone a cotton-headed ninny muggins. I’ve had a spate of ’em lately.

That’s it. The next one who comes my way is gonna hear it.

I’m Tippy-Toed out, America.

the post-mortem

(If you’re at this post, you might want to scroll down and read the one below it first. In a nearly unprecedented move, I’ve posted twice in one day and they are part of the same story. So scroll … or not.)

All right. I’ll hit the salient points of my meeting with Joey, as I understand them. I write this for myself. I’m not “writing a post,” per se. I’m just copying from my post-meeting, scribbled-out notes here, really. Your basic, raw notes. Nothing embellished. These notes will likely be the basis for some future (hopefully better-thought-out ;-)) posts on certain spiritual issues this whole thing has raised.

You may come along for the read, if you’d like, but I don’t expect you to. Writing it here automatically constrains some of the, ah, “freedom” I’d likely take in a private journal and forces me to analyze more carefully what really happened. There was a certain elated relief when it was over, that is, until I sat down and replayed the conversation in my head.

Again, I don’t expect anyone else to be that interested. And I do apologize for any raw edges — of my writing, of my personality — sticking out here. I know they’re there.

1) She was unapologetic for several instances over the last year where she involved third parties in this situation, without my permission or foreknowledge. Specifically, in the instance where she involved My Beloved — which set this whole thing in motion — our conversation went like this:

“I’m sorry that I ruined Beloved’s trip to Thailand.”

“Wait. I need to recharacterize something for you. You’ve said this twice, at our previous meeting and again now. He himself has told you that you did not ruin his trip. Rather, by telling him what you should have told me, you placed an unnecessary burden on him and created a “triangle” of communication, rather than a straight line. You did not ruin his trip. Speaking to him in the first place was the problem. So are you apologizing for ruining his trip — which I’m telling you you did not do — or are you apologizing for involving him in the first place?”

She was mad.

“No. No. I’m not apologizing for that.”

“Well, hmm, it was rather inappropriate.”

Her exact words:

“I don’t care. I’d do it again. I was willing to be inappropriate.”

Really, that told me so much. I should have allowed myself to leave at that very moment. I should have said: Thank you. That tells me everything I need to know.
But somehow, in these situations, something in me always makes me stay til the bitter end. I think it’s rank stupidity.

Later, another third-party incident came up. Her response was:

“Yeah? Well, I’m not sorry about that.”

(sigh …)

All right.

2) A word that’s become very big for her — and others who believe in deliverance ministries — is “freedom.” However, I believe they have a different definition of freedom than the Bible does. As believers, we are positionally free in Christ — “So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.” But deliverance proponents believe that freedom only comes in an ultimate, all-encompassing, superior way when one is freed from all those nasty demons. So we touched on this “freedom” issue. At one point, I said:

“Joey, you keep asking whether I’m ‘more free’. More free than what? One thing I know I’m free of — because I’ve really studied the Word on this in the months since you brought it up — is the notion that I have demons.”

She just stared at me. She’s quite an animated person, but her face was utterly blank.

I started giving her Scripture to back up my point. No reaction. Not anger, not surprise, not happiness, not relief. Just nothing.

3) She’s sold on the notion of generational curses and that I have these, too, along with the demons. Apparently, the two go hand in hand, you see. And if you’re a generational curser, this is your life verse:

” ….. for I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sins of the fathers to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me ….”

Never mind that the whole verse and the surrounding context actually says this:

4 “You shall not make for yourself an idol in the form of anything in heaven above or on the earth beneath or in the waters below. 5 You shall not bow down to them or worship them; for I, the LORD your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sin of the fathers to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me, 6 but showing love to a thousand {generations} of those who love me and keep my commandments.

That’s Exodus 20: 4, 5, and 6, peeps, not just a part of verse 5, which is the entire basis for the GC philosophy. The passage is, obviously, the Ten Commandments. It’s talking about idols.

So we got to talkin’ about this. I pointed out the entire passage was about idols. Nothing. I pointed out that the people punished were those who hate God. Nothing. I pointed out that love was shown to those who love God. Nothing. I pointed out that I love God. Nothing. Finally, I pointed out something basic that GCers never seem to notice about this verse: GOD does the punishing.

NOTHING.

There was no reaction. Finally, I just started talking as if the only person listening was the little old lady who had plopped herself down at the table two feet away from my chair — because she obviously WAS the only person listening! I felt like I was teaching Middle School again. Lord.

I mentioned the story of Balaam, how he could not curse what God had blessed. Then I mentioned Ephesians 1:3, how as a believer I am blessed:

3Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ.

NUH-

THING.

I truly hope Little Ol’ Lady was listening. Joey wasn’t. Or rather, she didn’t seem to be. Maybe she was stunned. Quietly enraged. I just don’t know.

More points to follow.

No blogging this weekend as our lives are about to be invaded by sunshine and giggles and toddling in the form of our 18-month-old niece, Kylie.

Her older cousin Piper (she who used to call me “Fece”) has already instructed the child to give up the ghost and call me “Tee Tee,” so she does. Adorable.

of tea and oom-pah-pahs

(Again, I feel the need to offer this disclaimer: The person mentioned in these posts does not know of this blog. No one who knows her knows of this blog. No one who reads this blog knows her. Make sense?)

So Joey and I sat there, straight in the path of the oom-pah-pahs. On this day, they weren’t so loud. Considering the circumstances, though, they were just ludicrous, laughable.

Still, we sat without speaking. For far too long. Someone had to say something, if only to make the trip worth the price of gas. I hoped it would be Joey, since (I admit) she, not I, had wanted this particular meeting, But I knew I’d crack first, not out of great civility, mind you, but because I’m just impatient. Inside me was a rising, nagging irritation that time was passing us by, despite appearing to have stopped; that my tea was neither delicate nor aromatic nor flavorful; and that my head was now beginning to pound in rhythm to the satanic serenade of circus music bellowing from that monstrous pipe organ.

I spoke.

“So … Joey. Since you asked for this meeting, I assume you have something you want to say or discuss.” Her eyes were hidden behind the large, sepia-toned lenses of her sunglasses. I looked in their general direction.

“No,” she said, clipped, staccato.

I thought she was kidding; she wasn’t.

“Okaay.”

“Yeah.” She simply sat there. It seemed like some bizarre strategy, actually. She seemed comfortable with it, so I sat there, too, wishing the organist would play louder. I knew he could. I’d heard him. Come on. Play, man, play!

I spoke again, still thinking there must be something she wanted to say, good or bad.

“Uh, well, again, you called for this meeting, so I thought I’d give you the opportunity to share whatever it was you wanted. I assume there’s something?”

“No,” she said, the same way as before.

I sighed and didn’t hide it. We sat there. I took a very deep breath. Was she waiting for me to braid her hair? Do her nails? Start a pillow fight? Suddenly, my tea was tasting much better. And that cup — that cup was now endlessly fascinating:

Look at the glorious design of this sippy cup lid! Consider these textured sides, offering protection from the hot liquid without a cumbersome sleeve! Ingenious! God-breathed! A modern wonder!

Yep. Fighting off frustration, I could have been riveted by anything right then:

Observe this … this … stick that so magically wakes the flavor in my tea! Listen, enchanted, to the wondrous, dulcet tones of circus music on the Devil’s Pipe Organ!

Oom-pah-pah-oom-pah-pah ….

When she spoke, she sounded unsure.

“I feel I’ve offended you somehow.”

I stared at her, surprised to be surprised again at what I thought was a slight understatement.

“Well …. you have.”

Finally, we were talking …. sort of ….

About what? Well, that comes next …. sort of ….

a pre-post post

So …. about that meeting. I’ll post more later, when I’m done penning my Tony-Award-caliber kiddie play.

But I dash this off now, mentioning a few items:

1) I was early.

2) Joey, who has never, ever been on time in the 15 years I’ve known her, was even earlier. So God bless ‘er. That seemed promising.

3) We met outside, at the place I suggested — The Japanese Tea Garden. It’s near the pond, but not too near, you see. With tea comes civility, no?

4) It was 10:30 a.m. I arrived with sunglasses on, but there was no need for them under the table’s large, sheltering umbrella. Momentarily though, I considered leaving them on, hiding behind their dimness. But I pulled them off as I sat down. I didn’t want to create a barrier between us.

5) Joey also had her sunglasses on. Joey kept her sunglasses on.

6) Next to our meeting spot, there is a famous organ in a place cleverly named the “Organ Pavilion.” The Saturday before the meeting, I was at this particular park — at this very tea garden, even — when the organist began playing. It was a pounding and macabre collision of opposites, Phantom of the Opera vs. aromatic tea and delicate cookies. It was no contest. So, I thought it wise to inquire of the ladies employed at this Japanese Tea Garden about the organist’s weekday schedule:

“Does he play on Fridays?”

“Oh, no. He no play on Fridays.”

“Really? Oh, good. So he wouldn’t be playing, say, at 10:30 on a Friday morning?”

“Oh, no. He no play then.”

7) So, no, he wasn’t playing at 10:30 on that Friday morning. But at 10:31, he was. His theme was circus music and who doesn’t love circus music? Well, demons first of all. For one unhinged second, I believed Joey’s assertions about my condition. “Ooom-pah-pah, oom-pah-pah, oom-pah-pah, oom-pah-pah.” I swear I could hear some sinister ringmaster in my head, “Ladies and gentlemen, kindly turn your attention to the center ring where Tracey, that Demon Clown, will now thrilll and amazzze you by twisting her head off and throwing it into the audience, scarring children for life because that is a clown’s lonely calling!”

And so there we sat, without speaking, sipping tea, waiting for the awful oom-pah-pahs to die …..

An auspicious beginning, indeed.

the going away

Tomorrow is my meeting with Joey. Today has been such a see-saw of anxiety and prayer, of flesh and Spirit, that finally, I grew weary. I needed to jump off for a moment and see the rest of the world.

On the kitchen counter sat some peaches, fresh and luscious from my parents’ tree. I scooped up several and headed to my neighbors’ place. You remember Mike and Lee, don’t you? They’re my gay neighbors, my gay friends.

Mike, who now has full-blown AIDS, was home alone. He invited me in. He didn’t look right.

“What’s wrong?” I asked, alarmed.

“Lee might be moving out. I think we’re breaking up.” He choked out these last few words:

“I don’t want to be alone!”

I simply listened as he poured out his heart. As he spoke, he dragged his hand through his graying hair, over and over.

I was dumbstruck, bewildered. Silently, almost automatically, I prayed that this wouldn’t happen, that God would somehow intervene. And then I berated myself for praying that. And then I berated myself for berating myself.

The Lord does not condone his lifestyle; that I knew. But I also knew that seated before me was a man fighting tears because of this one thing:

The going away of love.

And how do any of us stand when faced with the going away of love? Surely, we could all fall to our knees, quailing, and howl together:

“I don’t want to be alone!”

“Be the person you used to be. Be the one who still loves me. Be the one I always trusted. Be the one who holds my heart …. and still deserves to.”

Finally, from somewhere deep and primal, comes the plea, to a love, perhaps a best friend:

“Just …… don’t go away.”

Ah, but we are so fragile and fickle and mutable. Earthly loves do change and leave and die, dragging our keening, grieving hearts away with them. Sometimes we can stop the going away of love; many times we can’t. And for our wounded hearts’ lament, “I don’t want to be alone,” the only balm is Jesus, the only One whose love endures forever.

The only One.

As I looked at Mike, he seemed more gaunt than ever. For a brief moment, there in his living room, I soaked up the evidence of him: the clutter, the knick-knacks, the collections of anything and everything. All these things, proof, he says, of being “Appalachia gay.” And I considered that day, perhaps not far off, when Lee might go, taking love away with him. And I considered another day, perhaps not far off, too, when this man Mike, who has a piece of my heart — my “Appalachia gay” friend — will succumb to his illness, taking love with him forever.

I considered those days and my heart cried, “Jesus. Jesus.”

Tomorrow, I meet with my friend to try to stop the going away of love.

But, today, my heart just cries, “Jesus. Jesus.”

relax … I’m only crazy when I sleep

When sleep finally came last night, it brought with it this …. queer spectacle:

We are at that pond where we aren’t supposed to meet, Joey and I. A large shallow pool, it makes a nice mud pit, which is suddenly what it is. I am standing in the warm, sucking ooze, draped in frippery. I stare down at myself, dazed. My clothes fairly vibrate with shimmer. And, hul-lo, what’s this? Someone sure loves mama! I get a gander of a glowing rock formation on my finger, huge and purplish and heavy.

This stuff ain’t from my closet.

On the other side of the slime stands Joey. Her outfit is linen, simple, a humble tunic without shimmer or vibration. It is my dream, after all. She appears discombobulated, too.

Suddenly, a voice booms from somewhere:

“Ladies and Gentlemen, welcome to The Main Event!!”

A pause, electric.

“Let’s get ready to HUMMMMMMMMMMMBBBBLE …………
ourselves before the Lord!!!!!!!!!”

A spotlight floods down on Joey.

“Ladies and gentlemen, in thissss corner, a lady who’s always hiding something up her sleeves — give it up for that Protector of Spies, that Keeper of Secrets, Raaaaaaahhhabbbb!!”

Huh?

I hear the thunder of applause; I feel it rock my feet.

The spotlight now searing down on me, I squint and drag my heavy, ringed hand up to shield my eyes.

The Voice roars again:

“And in thissss corner, a lady born to kick some some holy hinder for such a time as this — give it up for that Champion of her People, that Queen of Persia, Esssstthhherrrrrr!!”

Oh, I guess that’s me. Wave to the people, Tracey.

I do, with quiet queenly dignity. All those years of watching Miss America finally pay off. The crowd explodes.

Someone breathes hot in my ear, “Look behind you.” I whirl around.

It’s David Letterman. What the heck is he doing here, smirking that gapped-tooth smirk at me? I start to sputter, “But … but …. but weren’t you just on TV with that thug, Russell Crowe?” He shushes me, though, and nudges a strange cluster of ornery-looking men my way. The men are identical. As are their scowls. As are the nooses around each scowler’s neck.

Letterman is giddy. He introduces them:

“Say hello to your posse, The Hangin’ Hamans!!”

Huh?

The Gapped-Tooth Doofus continues, “Isn’t it great? They’re here to cheer you on!!” He whoops a “Woo-hoo.”

Letterman woo-hoos.

This is all wrong ….

Suddenly, a bell rings and, without warning, I’m shoved into the pit. Probably by one of those wretched Hamans.

Losing my balance, I slosh down into it. Shimmering frippery is ruined. Drat. I just can’t have nice things.

I stagger up and find my balance long enough to get this eyeful: Joey, lumbering at me, a fiendish gleam in her eye.

Okay. Now I get what’s going on here. (Seems I’m Queen, but I’m dumb, which is never a good combination.)

Trying to run from her is like trying to run from a grizzly bear: it mostly ends badly and sooner than you’d think. She lunges and yanks me down til I’m covered in goo. It’s all so unladylike, undignified. Mama always said cleanliness was next to godliness, so now I’m cheesed on that front, too. I’m gagging and losing and my posse of useless Hamans aren’t doing squat to save me — not that that’s a real headscratcher. Plus, I can now see that that wiener Letterman brought a camera crew with him.

Finally, out of the corner of my eye, a ray of light, of hope:

It’s Billy Graham, arriving with two men and tottering to a chair. Through the mud, I can only make out one of the men, his son Franklin; the other is mere shadow. Gingerly, Franklin and the shadow help lower the good Reverend into the seat. Once he’s seated, though, the two men take his arms and hold them high. It’s a curious sight indeed.

But then …. suddenly ….. miraculously …. just like ol’ Moses and dose Israelites:

I AM WINNING!!

As long as Billy Graham’s arms are vertical, I AM kicking holy hinder for such a time as this!!!!

That is …. until Franklin, that good-time Charlie, wearies of the effort, falls off the wagon, and sneaks a little swiggy from a flask hidden in his jacket. Billy’s arms sink; so do I. In the fracas, the miniature plum-colored planet on my finger slides into the muck. I glop about, searching, hopeless.

I scream at Franklin, hysterical, “You fool! Put the booze down!! Put the booze down!!!” But he just grins and hiccoughs and waves at me. My Hamans are oblivious, pulling at the slack end of their nooses, playing at chokey faces.

I’m going down … fast, hard, and slimy-like.

From across the mud pond, Joey “yoo-hoos” me triumphantly. She has my ring, now just a sad, globby-looking trinket.

But then … just then … Letterman, that kooky, Gapped-Toothed Doofus, lunges at the now pie-eyed Franklin and knocks him away. Heroically, he takes up the good Reverend’s loose arm.

And the tide turns once again.

Just as I’m waking up.

What’s it all mean, you ask? Oh, I’m sure I don’t know ….

distraction

In the midst of trying to write some posts about camp, I find myself distracted.

Joey, my friend who thinks I have demons, wants to meet with me. Next week.

For those of you in the dark, go read the post linked above and meet back here. Be sure to read through the comments, too. There’s some great ones.

So, back to Joey (who is a woman, by the way).

I know I should meet with her, but, honestly, I just don’t want to.

And why would she want to meet with me, demonized wretch that I am? We have not spoken in the 8 months since she made that pronouncement — in front of both our husbands, I might add. Frankly, it’s such a spiritual chasm, I have not known what to say.

I still don’t.

So I’m distracted.

(Oh, and if you’re here and want to follow the saga, go here, here, here, here, here, here, and HERE.

Oh, and then how it had a wee effect on drama camp last summer is discussed here and here and HERE.)

PHHEWWW!! I think that’s it on THAT.

the divine lottery

So a while back, I was riding in a car with a woman I’ll call Plumcake. At a stoplight, while deep in discussion with me about something else, Plumcake suddenly gasped and blurted, “Hey! Look at that car! It has ‘333’ on the license plate! Oh, thank you, Lord!”

Hm. I looked at the car. I looked at her. I looked back at the car. It was just a car.

Uh, I didn’t get it.

She continued.

“You see, the Lord has told me that whenever I see the number ‘333,’ it means He’s thinking about me and loving me.”

I’m sorry, what??

Was she joking? Temporarily off her nut? I wasn’t sure, so I decided a solid, but noncommittal response was a chuckle. I mean, what person, whether joker or nutter, could object to the chuckle, right? So I chuckled. Plumcake threw a withering glare at me. Oops. Okay. I guess she was serious. Duly chastised, I shut my mouth, too stunned to make a peep now. I sat in silence while she rhapsodized about ‘333.’

Now I thought this was an isolated incident, but since then, I’ve seen her publicly gush over anything with the number 333: addresses, phone numbers, digital clocks. I was at her house one afternoon when the kitchen clock struck 3:33 and she started to dance a little jiggedy jig of joy: “It’s 3:33! God’s thinking of me. It’s 3:33! God’s thinking of ME!” Her two little kids ran in and joined the 333 jig.

I stood stock still and wide eyed at the celebration, the only one not dancing, which is a bummer because I like to dance, just not about numbers generally. Frankly, I thought the whole dealio seemed rather exclusionary, since apparently, God was thinking just of Plumcake and there were other people in the room. Once 3:33 clicked over to 3:34 and God wasn’t thinking about her anymore — I mean, I guess, if you follow the “logic” here — Plumcake calmed down and resumed her (semi)normal life. I, on the other hand, left Plumcake’s house shortly thereafter so I could begin my private spiritual freakout at the thought that God was now in the numbers game.

Because if God is in the numbers, I’m toast. Doomed. If this is the direction he’s headed, then at some point I will wet my pants about it, because Crackie ain’t so good with the numbers. Oh, no, she ain’t.

I generally don’t like to wet my pants, so to calm down and keep myself dry, I’ve given some thought to Plumcake’s spiritual epiphany and, it turns out, I’ve got a few niggling questions. First, why 333? I mean, why that number? Is “God in the number” because the three digits are identical? Is that the magic of it? And what would happen, Plumcake, if I just scribbled 333 on a piece of paper? Would that mean God’s thinking of you or would it mean that I just scribbled 333 on a freaking piece of paper?

But, wait. I need to think this through. Maybe God is speaking this way. Maybe God IS in the numbers. If so, what’s next? Story problems?? Oh, sweet baby Jesus in the manger. Just think of the ones ALMIGHTY GOD could come up with: “Two trains depart Toledo, one traveling the speed of a hummingbird’s wings, the other, the speed of an eyelash blink and if X is the total number of passengers and Y is the total number of sins amongst them, which locomotive arrives at the pearly gates first??” I mean, I’d be toast for sure. My utter incompetence with numbers would cement my spiritual doom forever and ever. I’m schvitzing just thinking about it.

Maybe it’s not story problems, though. Maybe it’s these numbers, as Plumcake says. So then does God speak exclusively through the identical three-digit number? And how do all believers get one of these? Because I don’t think there are enough of them to go ’round. I mean, let’s count:

000, 111, 222, 333 (Plumcake’s), 444, 555, 666 (uh, Satan’s), 777, 888, 999.

By my count, that leaves only 8 of these “God numbers” left over for the rest of us.

Wow. This is really rough. I’m sorry to tell you that God does not love you, nor is He thinking of you. Tough, tough break, peaches.

And if God is speaking through numbers, then I must be deaf.

What is going on here? Where are we Christians getting these fairy-tale notions? Where? Please understand. Plumcake isn’t stupid. (She’s emotion-based, yes, but I don’t question her native intelligence.) What I question is when superstition and fantasy creeps into believers’ hearts, weakening or totally replacing firm foundations. You may say, “Well, but I don’t buy into these notions.” To which I say, “Thank God,” but there are enough Christians who do that we should be concerned.

This concerns me too: I know a couple who dubbed their youngest child the “Resurrection Baby.” The husband had had an affair and in the midst of the traumatic fallout, they got pregnant. According to them, the baby was a “sign from God,” of the “resurrection” of their marriage.

(Wow. No pressure, baby. Mess that diaper. Spew those peas. Save that marriage.)

One day, the husband blithely said to me, “Well, I guess this means I get to stay married now.” (Maybe not something you say to a woman in the throes of infertility but whatevs.) And, really? Is that what the blessed baby “means”? Or does it perhaps mean a chance to avoid, to deny, the deep and abiding issues that brought your marriage to the brink? Or does it perhaps mean that you deftly manipulated your broken and betrayed wife into bed — at least once? Why is that a sign from God, I wonder? Given his comment, I questioned whether the baby was really a “resurrection” or a deflection.

Has the God of the universe transitioned into the business of saying what we want to hear, of saying things that are facile, expedient, and small? Or have we become so immersed in our spiritual ADD and laziness that we want — no, need — God to speak in ways that are facile, expedient, and small?

It seems the Word is no longer enough for us. Our souls become so hollowed out by the on-the-spot society swirling around us that we seek, not just instant gratification, but instant sanctification. The lifelong process is simply too wearisome, too burdensome. We need a God who speaks in newer, better, faster ways. We need a God who’s just more efficient, dammit. Please be easier to understand, God. Please speak to me right now, God. Please give me a “word” that makes things better for me, God.

What we want from God diminishes God. What we want from God diminishes our chances of becoming more like him. Still, we want it. And believe me, it’s astounding what “God” will say to a desperate, vulnerable mind. I’m adamant here because I’ve been there. And back, thank God. (A post for another time.)

God gave us the Word, his radical love letter to the world. He woos us to The Enduring Romance, but we settle for the quick cheap thrill of “333” on the back of a car. He gave us His precious Spirit, but we still crave a sign, any sign, as long as it’s the one we want. His Word gives us a foundation, but we long for flights of fancy, for the whimsical escape of other, newer words. We are desperate for His love, but numbed to the bloodied, beautiful proof of it on the cross.

Just give me another sign, God. Speak a new word to me, God. Thanks for 333, God.

Really? That’s what you want? We have The Cross. We have the Word. We have the Holy Spirit. You want 333?

Honestly, you can have it.

I think I’ll stick with the rest.

oh, dem demons!

(Pre-Note — added after initial posting:   I confess that I really don’t like my tone in this post.  You may not, either.  It’s true — I am hurt, upset, confused by this complicated situation, but, not having shared all, I imagine my feelings may sound disproportionate to you, the reader.  I’ve thought all day about deleting this post.  But I’ve decided to leave it up.  As is.  Because this is me, frequently sarcastic and unlovely when hurt.  I’m ashamed of it, but deleting the post would be hiding from some of the truth of who I truly am.  I am slow to process things well and even slower to learn of the Lord.  I need His grace so much more than anyone I
know …)

Note:  The person mentioned in this post doesn’t read or even know of this blog.  Of course, names have been changed.  Also, just so you’re prepared, I do swear  in this post, using the following shameful words: "hell" and "damn."  Why?  Because I’m mad and bad and history’s worst monster.  Somehow, though, given the topic, they seemed appropriate.  So … post as written is rated PG-13.  Could be worse, though. Post in my head  is rated R. 

a     n     y     w     a     y .  .  .  .

I have a rather, um, bizarre situation in my life.  I’d be interested in what you’d say about it. 

So pull up a chair, get comfy, and allow me to relay a conversation I had a few months ago with a person I’ve known for many, many  years.  Let’s call said person Joey.  (Conversation edited for clarity.  Trust me.)

Went a little something like this:

Joey:  There is a demonic stronghold over you and your family that wants to KILL you!!!

 Me:  (mouth)

Joey:  And you need deliverance!!

Me:  (hanging) 

Joey: Because of all the generational curses!!

Me:  (W    I    D    E) 

Joey:  And I’m willing to risk the relationship on this!!

Me:  (open)

Soooo … hmm.  You know, I have to say I’ve never had a conversation start with such a big, thuddy brick. ( Hence, my startlingly coherent contribution to the conversation.)  Apparently, (says Joey) all the "painful" things that have happened in my life over the last several years are evidence of my demonic infestation.  And, also apparently, Joey will not have a relationship with me any longer unless and until I take the stated prescription of "deliverance" prayer.  (Oh, and that part was a "word from the Lord.")

All righty. 

(And, yes, Joey is a Christian.  And, no, Joey doesn’t listen to what the Word has to say on this, choosing instead to rely on scriptures taken completely out of context.)

So, let’s say for argument’s sake that I take my medicine and get "delivered," how then could I empirically prove to Joey that I’m no longer infested, that I’m "demon free"? 

I mean, is there a blood test for it? 

Maybe an X-ray? 

A CAT scan? 

Could I skippity-skip down the Yellow Brick Road and get myself one of themthere certificates from the Wizard?

(Um, do I need to get myself a herd of pigs here?) 

Oh, wait.  Hold on.  I’m gettin’ something.  The Lord is saying:

I  could  pee  on  a  stick.  You know:

"+" I’m finally pregnant after all these years (but, drat, I’ve got demons and am probably carrying Beelzebub’s baby) 

OR

"-" I’m still not pregnant (but, hell, Paw, I’m demon free.  Woo-hoo!)

Damn  it.  (Yep.  There it is.)  I.  am.  so.  tired. of all this crazy, made-up, so-fantastical-Harry-Potter’s-got-nothin’-on-it, fraudulent Christianity.  I’m in the heartbreaking process of losing a long-standing relationship because of it.  Understand that any sarcasm here is just a feeble mask to cover how much it does hurt.  (And well, what else is sarcasm for?  Useful thing, that.)

It’s just so mind-boggling.  So maddening.  So utterly dangerous.   I just don’t understand.

But … it’s quite possible I don’t understand anything anymore.

Guess it’s the demons.