We are free to act boldly because
we are safe.
We are safe because we are at rest.
We are at rest because we have
been forgiven.
I am reluctant to talk about God and what God thinks and how God acts. . . . I go there, but when I do, I’m reminded of Robert Capon saying we’re like oysters trying to explain ballerinas. — Barbara Brown Taylor
We are free to act boldly because
we are safe.
We are safe because we are at rest.
We are at rest because we have
been forgiven.
The problem with humility is that
if you think you have some, you
probably don’t. No mirror exists
that will reflect it. And trying to
check on your “humility quotient”
is like pulling up a plant to see if
the roots are developing.
Genuine humility is swayed neither
by promise of heaven nor threat of hell.
Humility is blind to every lovely face,
every bar of achievement, every
seductive gesture save that of God.
Not because God is possessive or
judgmental or petulant. God is
delightful. Once you experience
that Delight, all other measurements
seem frivolous.
Once you experience that Delight,
you become fearless, free from the
clutches both of vanity and hesitation
alike. Such self-forgetfulness gives
rise to freedom, and freedom results
in audaciousness, for in the Presence
of such a Lover no gain can boast nor
loss encroach.
“Do this in remembrance of me,”
Jesus told his disciples during their
final meal together.
To “remember” Jesus is not simply
to experience fond memories
and tender emotions:
Those were the days, were they not?
Let us toast their memory!
It is not simply to recollect the events
of that evening. This memorializing is
anamnesis, to recreate, reenact and
reanimate the drama of Jesus’ life:
•to enter into his passion and
character;
•to love whom he loved and
confront whom he confronted;
•to be animated by the same vocation;
•to be turned and churned, even
spurned, in like manner;
•to be similarly authorized—and
stigmatized;
•to be implicated in his mission
and thus in his fate.
It has been said: Our weakness is our only claim on Jesus. “Come to me,
you who are weary. . . . For my yoke is light” (Mt. 11:28, 30).
“Aha!” you say. “Just as I suspected. What God really wants is to keep
us subservient and dependent! On our knees, rather than on our own
two feet. This religion business is nothing more than a form of social
control—with leaders, pretending to speak for God, slyly bolstering
their own exploiting power.”
If that were true, I would say: This “Master” must die if we are to find
our freedom. This “God” is nothing but a pimp and his disciples are
but hustlers.
Weep, oh my soul,
with tears painful and public:
when life abandons ardor for order;
when the demand for sober security
upstages the generative prospect of passion;
when the birthright of fertile charism
is bartered for a ration of bridled expedience.
The blessed struggle—¡Buena lucha!—is upon us.
The City of Promise
is bathed in the tears of the Beloved
—would that you knew,
would that you knew—
who cries not in indignation or threat
May you store up patience, for life is not always kind,
and you need to persevere.
Remember that regret is not the last word.
Despite life’s disregard, the last word is this:
One day every cup will overflow.
May you store up affection, for sometimes the heart
grows cold, and you need to persevere.
Remember that bitterness is not the last word.
How well I remember standing there on the
Sidewalk in Santa Fe in front of a jewelry store
where you'd just picked up your rings.
My wife of twenty-seven years, me, the two of you.
The two of you trying your best not to melt into the
pavement under the weight of emotions;
The two of us with eyes watering from the
Holy smoke from some nearby burning bush,
wondering if we should take off our shoes.
Who among you believe that
grieving and lamentation
are symptoms of despair.
Not so!
Only the hopeless are silent
in the face of calamity—
silenced because they no
longer aspire even to be heard,
much less heeded. The labor
of lament, on the other hand,
is premised on the expectation
that grief’s rule will be bound
by the Advent of Another.
The liturgy of grief transforms
the pain of lament into passion
for an outcome forged in justice
and tempered in mercy. Such an
outcome is not ours to impose
by strength of will or accomplished
by force of threat; yet it does demand
of us relentless struggle and steadfast resolve.
Come, you whose beds are awash
in weeping, you whose portion is
tear-mingled wine and bread of mourning.
Come, come to the mountain
of Refuge. There the Spirit,
as with Jesus before, kneels
ready to bathe your feet with her tears.
Hear this Word of assurance, you
of wavering endurance: the
moment nears when those sowing
in tears will reap shouts of
extravagant joy.
©Ken Sehested @ prayerandpolitiks.org. Written for an ecumenical “Service of Lament and Healing” following the August 2014 killing of Michael Brown by police in Ferguson, MO. Inspired by Ps 6:6; 42:3; 80:5; 102:9; Luke 7:38;
Read more ›We kill and bomb
Murder and maim
Target and terrorize mostly
(for high-tech armies)
from great distance
the better not to see actual faces
or severed limbs, or intestines oozing through
holes where belly buttons used to testify
to being a mother-born child
But then we apologize
Sorry
So sorry
Deeply regret
Such a tragedy!
Sorry, sorry, sorry
We do everything we can to limit civilian casualties
“This isn’t Sunday school”
(one politician’s actual words)
Didn’t have those children in our sights
Impossible to see, at 10,000 feet,
whether Kalashnakovs are present
Smart bombs aren’t flawless
Flawed intelligence
(as if a test score were at stake)
Military necessity
Rules of engagement need refining
S**t happens
We gave them advance warning
War is hell
by Ken Sehested
Wondrous was the
occasion of your birth,
which I knew not,
and hardly
since.
But mere acquaintances, distant
and casual as we are,
participated in jubilance by
proxy reflected from
the eyes of those whose
longing and labor lifted
your name in splendid recognition,
and reverence, even as
they lifted your flesh
from mucous
incubation.
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