It's been a year.
A tree crashed through the roof of my house and a tornado tore
off the roof of the church I pastor on the same stormy night last February. God
did that, I’m told. Or Satan did. Depends on who you ask.
Some say God was punishing me, or at least warning me, to
repent from my sinful ways. They say that God is punishing me for speaking out
loud in church (in other words, being a woman preacher), refusing to condemn
all LGBTQ folk to everlasting torment, and supporting “those illegal aliens.”
They’re broke the law! No grace for them.
Some say that God brought about these events not to punish
me but to test my faith, or even to strengthen it.
Others say Satan is responsible for the double disaster
dealt to me and mine, to interfere with all the truly Godly work I do as a
woman preacher serving the poor and oppressed, including, you guessed it, the
LGBTQ community and undocumented immigrants.
Some believe that it was all God’s answer to our church
ladies’ prayers for much-needed new carpet!
Interesting theologies, all.
I have to admit, the timing is curious, especially for
someone who used to carry the title “Disaster Coordinator.” That title caused
me some consternation. Wasn’t it supposed to be “Disaster Response Coordinator?” Were they trying to tell me something?
Anyway, everyday I walk into my crushed house, watching
where I step. Shards of glass are everywhere, nails, splintered wood, soggy
pink clods of fiberglass insulation, crumbled sheetrock. Oh yes, and trees,
tree limbs are still scattered about the house. I make my way through these
obstacles trying to find some absolutely necessity to take to rental house
where we are staying. Sometimes I stand around in a daze. What’s that roof
doing on my living room floor?
Until last Sunday, I must not have looked up. When I did,
something I hadn’t seen before caught my eye – and my heart. I saw my Christmas
stocking-holders, still standing (yes, they were still out at the end of
February), spelling the word J-O-Y.
Find JOY, the Spirit whispered to me. Find JOY in the rubble. That’s the theology I want to embrace.
Whatever the genesis of the storm, God always invites us to find some cause for
joy. Some glimmer of hope. Some possibility of redemption. As Wendell Berry
said, Practice Resurrection.
As I picked my way through the debris yesterday, I saw
something else. My Christmas cactus is blooming again. Find JOY in the rubble.
Stepping carefully through the mess today, I noticed my
Valentine’s roses over in a corner, darkened and dried. Thinking that the place
needed a little sprucing up, I put the vase of last month’s flowers on top of
the collapsed roof that covers whatever is left of my living room. It makes me
smile to imagine what the workers will think when they find roses in the
rubble.
No comments:
Post a Comment