Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Stories--redemption

One day, as I lay on my bed reading my Bible before going to bed, I glanced up at my bookshelf and saw a book onto the shelf.  I'd been imagining such a book for a long time, and I spotted it at last--as if my looking put it there.  Last summer I inherited it with a number of inspirational books when my grandpa died, but I've been in a 5-year reading funk lately, and hardly touched the books I got.  This one, called "Alive for the first time" was instantly recognizable as the sort of book I've been needing.  It addressed my ongoing sense of "there is much good in life... but I'm just not feeling it... and it's my fault...etc..."  I'm not big into recommending books, as writing style, angle, and all can be very subjectively enjoyed.  I'm just saying that the book has been great for me, speaking my language.  Fudging the English language like I would, using images that I understand.  Not sure I buy into every implication of the author's theology, but at the same time I'm deeply appreciating his explanations of concepts regarding redemption.  

A week ago I experienced a poignant example of redemption...

17 years ago my family moved away from a 3-acre property along a country road.  I spent the first 5 years of my consciousness there.  I can't believe how little I must've been when I was climbing ladders in the barn...monkeying up and down trees... simply playing outdoors all the time.

But I did like big houses, and I was aware that ours was quite crowded & small.  So when we were moving, I was all anticipation.  When our house sold, Mom steadily packed boxes and we took them to the barn in a red wagon.  To top it off, during the last part of the move, we got to stay at some friends' house in the town we were moving to.

But some weeks or months after the move, my seven-year-old self began to experience something totally unexpected.  Sure, I liked the new place and met new neighbors, made new friends.  But I found that I really wanted to see the old house again.  Perhaps if I could have explained that I "needed" to see the old house again, my parents might've taken me out there.  But I'm guessing, the sixth child of nine would be told a house is just a house.  So the closest I came to going back was to sit there drawing pictures of the house from all sides, trying to take myself there... so I could cry.  If I could make myself cry, it would bring a completion to my sadness.  It didn't work.  I didn't get myself to cry, the illusion wasn't good enough.

Over the following 17 years, I've been past the house 3 or 4 times.    (But initially, not til at least 5 years later.)  The memory of the place remained burned in my brain.  I didn't consciously think about it all time, but various daily ideas and concepts, to this day, refer to my fundamental perceptions of "the world"--that 3-acre property, mainly.  

Unfortunately, not so many years after we moved out, the house changed hands a time or two and ended up abandoned--a foreclosure, I think.  The last time I saw it until last Sunday, my heart about broke at the sight: The house was surrounded by a sea of dead grass.  I feared the faded barn would soon be one more tumble-down barn of the Midwest.  The giant motherly willow had all its limbs sawed off---a maimed corpse standing in the yard, and I'd often played in the little room between its half-dozen trunks.  Driving by, then trying to take my mind away from that sick feeling of watching something die slowly and doing nothing.

I now recognize how big of a role the early memories play in my way of thinking.  Were somebody very curious about the way I think and behave, I have the odd believe that I could say, "Come with me and I will take you to visit my Id."  and we'd go walk around that property.  Playing means losing oneself in the oblivion of imagination, running from one hidy-place to another, touching the wood of the lilacs, pulling a strand off the willow.  Digging in the sand pile, flattening grass tunnels in the tall grass.  Always believing myself to be in a world much bigger and exciting than three acres.

And yet, that "Id" if I can call it that, was colored in the last few years by the superimposed, depressing image of neglect--hopeless, bankrupt abandonment.  I was feeling just so in my soul a week ago Sunday, even as I've been searching for meaning in all I do.  Searching for a meaning to pursue that can reflect my allegiance to Jesus Christ and give me a sense of worth in so doing.  

I was at loose ends, with my car, with nobody expecting me home.  All at once I decided to drive down to that house and tramp around the abandoned place.  In growing excitement, I decided I would even see if I could get the door open on the house and walk around the abandoned rooms!  And the barn--the barn.  Were I to write an epic poem about this egocentric experience, I'd refer to the barn as my father and the house as my mother, teaching me how to interpret the world for all my days.

In growing excitement, almost weeping at the prospect of making a 17-year-old case of homesickness right, I drove toward the old place.  I planned--I would weep for the willow tree that could no longer weep.  I would look at everything--EVERYTHING and memorize it one last time, affirming the old memories, and saying goodbye.  For that's what was wrong all those years ago--I left without saying goodbye.  What does an abandoned house look like inside?  What would I recognize in the ghost of a house?  Would I hear the pitter patter of children chasing each other in circles?  Would the stairs hold my weight?  The prospect of a gloomy adventure became more and more appealing.

Getting into familiar territory, I noticed that not too much had changed since a few modular homes had gone in some years ago.  The house had to be soon, though.  That looked like--that WAS the barn.  THE HOUSE HAD BEEN REPLACED.  AAA!?  I drove on by in shock.  What?  What? THe house, gone?  replaced. Gone.  Ok.  Goodbye.  The old termite-infested house laid to rest at last.  Just as well.   Rest in peace.  Somebody had at least cleaned up the property and the barn was lookin' good.

I drove to the T and turned around slowly.  Approached the property slowly.  Began to suspect that the house was, to some extent, the original house after all.   I pulled into the driveway.  I saw that the house, though completely transformed, was still the old house.  Re-sided, and the second floor quite changed.  But the windows.  The windows on the first floor were in the same places.  The porch was the same porch.    I went and knocked on the door.  Seventeen years since I stood on this cement porch.  Seventeen years ago it was a flaking blue-gray.  And still today there are faint bits of blue-gray paint.

Sadly, nobody answered my knocks.  But as I waited, I stood with trembling lip, drinking in the beauty of what I could see.  This piece of land had been redeemed.  The willow corpse, I say with relief, is gone, may it rest in peace...  So is the pine tree, for good reasons I'm sure.  But the faithful maples by the barn are still there, and the barn--why, the barn, repainted, looks exactly like it did before!  No danger of tumbling down!

Every bit of the yard I could see--every undulation of the freshly-mowed lawn, the brief slope of the driveway--was so vividly a reincarnation of a long-dead part of me, that it was like time travel had been discovered, after all.  The more I looked, the more I felt this is me.  Somehow... this is almost literally me.  A fundamental part of me.  All was restored to a technicolor glow (the afternoon sun was particularly golden), and it was not easy to give up on getting permission to walk around.  I drove away and cried, a silent scream that would've shredded my throat if it escaped.  I've not spent all 17 years pining daily for the place, but like layers of leaf mold in a forest, its emotional impact seems deeply merged with my psyche!

My business there is not finished--I hope to go back and get that chance to walk all over, saying goodbye.  But that Sunday, I got the lesson I needed.  I saw redemption.  I saw something hopelessly decrepit redeemed.  But it wasn't just any something that I saw.  It was something that I identify so closely with, that it's as if the abandonment, the bankruptcy, the march towards total decay, all happened not just to the property, but to me.  But somebody bought the property.  Stripped down the house to its essentials and remade it into something beautiful and new.  Took away the garbage, the corpses of useless monuments.  Painted the solid old barn that really was in no danger of falling in, but regained its dignity under an encouraging bath of paint.  Somebody groomed and cared for the big lawn.  Somebody bought the place and gave it a new beginning, a new life.

And by that real life parable, I've experienced a peace, a hope, and perhaps a better understanding of grace than I've known in a long time.  I may even be remembering what it's like to have "faith as a little child."

f.n.,
t.a.

Friday, June 19, 2009

Blues

Music and serve many purposes.  Commonly music is used as a mode of worship.  It is also used for entertainment.  And, quite often, distraction.  Some people can't not listen to music--they get edgy.  Their own thoughts get too loud, perhaps.

There's another age-old purpose for music.  An outlet for deep, inexpressible emotion...expressed.  Through sad stories blues, cowboy tunes, and old ballads can be a channel for deep emotion that otherwise would boil and spoil within the singer.  

Sometimes I just can't stand such music--being in the mood for cheerful music.  But other times I am in such a mood that, if I don't reassure myself that other people have felt the same way, I'll feel isolated and depressed.  Music allows melancholy to become a positive expression of shared humanity.

Ironically, even in that kind of mood, it's better if the music is not about me, but someone else.  And.... I'd prefer it have hope built into it.  I don't know.  Whatever.  I am super tired.  Partly because it's late, and partly because last night when the lightning started at 3:30 I didn't ever completely go back to sleep.  Partly because I sang a lot tonight.  Partly because I'm bemused by my interest in people, and yet I am such a terrible conversationalist.  Seriously, why  can't I just ask friendly questions and not say stupid nosy things that shut people down?  Many questions I could ask, I know can be soothed simply by resting my body & soul.  So I'll go brush my teeth... write a poem or two...and a psalm ending in hope...

I think I'd like to buy a cd of lullabyes.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

I tend to look for extremes.  Extreme simplifications, especially.  At times I get sad that there is not one track to life, or three or a hundred.  Life is like a bees' nest.  Except that bees' nests are just one tiny fraction of what goes on in this world.

But that doesn't keep me from sorting, sifting, synthesizing what I see.  The two areas I puzzle over most are spirituality, and relationships.  There are a couple big ballparks... kind of like saying, I puzzle over life!  More specifically on the spirituality one, I puzzle much about my Christian faith as it pertains to relationship with God, who God is, what God wants, where I can find God, and how I relate to people.

For a while last year I grabbed onto Matthew 25 as my guiding light of salvation.  Feed & care for the poor & rejected, and life is as it should be.  I've failed and failed to actually do this.  And partly because I sense its incompleteness even in theory.  

Because part of me can't quite leave it at "share the gospel, and if necessary, use words."  The New Testament clearly exemplifies openly sharing in words what that Jesus saved me through His death and resurrection.  In fact, I'm reading a really cool book right now called "I once was lost."  It's won me over because, so far, it speaks my postmodern language without compromising faith in Christ.  It's not just re-stating things I've heard before, but giving me information I didn't have before.  So, I'm very encouraged about sharing my witness.  But then--is that what Christianity is all about? Spreading Christianity?  For what? so the converts will also spread Christianity?  So more and more people can learn Christian-talk and be nice to each other?

But for me to ask those questions is to bypass what Christianity is.  Christianity *is* helping the poor & needy in the name Christ.  That ministry is our worship of God.  So there's the Matthew 25 part.

We desire to see others live this way, too.  Actually, without directly emphasizing the point, "I Once Was Lost" brought that home for me, too.  In several of the examples the authors use, skeptics became mystified and curious about Christians because of what Christians do (especially crazy things like moving into bad neighborhoods on purpose). Without living Christianity, it's only good in theory.  Honestly, that truth makes me quake inside.  It throws in my face just how my life is not like Christ's.

It makes me realize why I've been so tentative about sharing my faith.  I'm scared I might meet someone who will ask questions.  Someone who will want to know how my life is different from theirs--and they'll see my life isn't very different.  Sure, I have a style and habits that many people recognize as "Christian."  But how do I live?  Here's how I live--just to show what I mean by living--I love music, I love getting to know people.  I love learning--lately I'm learning madly about sound systems.  I love road trips, random personality quirks, people-watching.  I don't cook a lot, but when I do I know what I like and make it well.  My favorite is strong, savory stir fries over fried rice.  I think a LOT and in unusual ways.

I could go on and on about what my life is.  I'm vain, self-conscious.  I'm involved in my church's worship team--I love witty conversation--I spar with my old roommate about the technicalities of word meanings--I relish music theory--I run power points for my church's worship when I'm not playing piano and singing.  I have dreams of my own recording studio.

It's not a bad thing that a skeptic could look at my life and see a number of things he or she can relate to and possibly find interesting.  But I'm hardly lacking in that area of accessibility.  What I wonder is, what am I doing to be different?  How am I putting hands & feet to my love of Christ, and thereby FOLLOWING Christ?  Can I even say I am "committed" to Christ?  Isn't that commitment supposed to mean I will do what he wants?  

Any time I talk about Doing, I feel there are people who will say I don't understand grace.  Maybe I do, maybe I don't, but not for lack of thought on the subject.  I strongly believe that I can never "earn" forgiveness, but that my resting on grace does not get me off the hook of "doing good"!

I want to say, in this I am not being self-depricatingly blind to good things I have done.  I do have relationships with nonbelievers, and I do believe my response to life is somewhat different (though not necessarily super-much).  There are occasional specific things I do that could be called "good deeds".  But it's like I'm wiggling my toes and shaking people's hands and enjoying conversations with people, when I should be sharing in every way possible with people.  I don't want a life of "good deeds", I want a life that is a "good way."  (And by that I do not mean perfection, although that would be lovely, haha).

Comes down to it I'm scared.  Pretty sure my life isn't worth imitating.  Pretty sure my life doesn't imitate the Life that is really worth imitating.  I'm nice, I'm caring, I'm fun.  I have a lot of potential.  But I'll never feel right til I get out of my chair and give of myself in the name of Christ, to those who do not know Christ as their Savior.  I've done a lot of praying, a lot of talking to God.  I've talked about Christianity a lot with other Christians.  Theory is wonderful, but it's not satisfying me.  It's not emptying me of self-focus.  It's not opening my eyes to the beauty of the Lord--as inevitably reaching out to the hurt & broken does to me.

As I said at the beginning, I like to sort, sift and synthesize.  A lovely three "s"s.  A closing summary of this blog is at the tip of my fingers.  But that just stroke my "theorize and go home" habit.  I've got to learn these s's: Serve, Share.