
I’m learning from those around me––those I’ve interacted with in church, in the hospital, in the community, in the classroom, not to mention those I live in community with––that brokenness and mess is everywhere, seeping into cracks we didn’t even know existed. With each client that comes in my office, or each friend that sits down to the table, there is this secret notion that no one else is wrestling with the grief, the guilt, the conflict, the doubt that she or he is.
And there is a kind of comfort that flashes across faces when they learn they are not the only one, but they are one of many.
It is only a flash, though. There is a certain amount of comfort that comes in knowing our misery shares company, but then we are stuck in misery with others.
But still stuck nonetheless.
And that is where some of the magic of the Saturday between Good Friday and Easter Sunday exists. Holy Saturday, Low Saturday, Easter’s Eve: It is that day where the black drapery still hangs over the cross and the Easter lilies, unless the church staff were too eager to prepare for the bright whiteness of Sunday morning.
The silence of the Saturday seems to be the place we find ourselves in most often. We have the luxury, now, of knowing that Good Friday leads to Easter Sunday, but we sit in between the two with our fingers crossed and our noses raw from rubbing them with tear-stained tissue.
And I believe, as I interact with these men in women in my office and in the community and in the churches…I believe that God honors our tight stomachs and heavy hearts on the Holy Saturdays of our lives and worlds. We must challenge the need to jump to Easter Sunday, and honor the grief and struggle on the day before the inauguration of all things new.
djordan
Pine Tree Dr.
Switching on the lectern light and clearing his throat, the preacher speaks both the word of tragedy and the word of comedy because they are both of them the truth and because Jesus speaks them both, blessed be he. The preacher tells the truth by speaking of the visible absence of God because if he doesn’t see and own up to the absence of God in the world, then he is the only one there who doesn’t see it, and who is then going to take him seriously when he tries to make real what he claims also to see as the invisible presence of God in the world? Sin and grace, absence and presence, tragedy and comedy, they divide the world between them and where they meet head on, the Gospel happens. Let the preacher preach the Gospel of their preposterous meeting as the high, unbidden, hilarious things it is.
+ Frederick Buechner, from Telling the Truth

I believe in a blessing I don’t understand
I’ve seen rain fall on wicked and the just
Rain is no measure of his faithfulness
He withholds no good thing from us
No good thing from us, no good thing from us
I believe in a peace that flows deeper than pain
That broken find healing in love
Pain is no measure of his faithfulness
He withholds no good thing from us
No good thing from us, no good thing from us
I will open my hands, will open my heart
I will open my hands, will open my heart
I am nodding my head an emphatic yes
To all that You have for [us]
I believe in a fountain that will never dry
Though I’ve thirsted and didn’t have enough
Thirst is no measure of his faithfulness
He withholds no good thing from us
No good thing from us, no good thing from us
I will open my hands, will open my heart
I will open my hands, will open my heart
I am nodding my head an emphatic yes
To all that You have for [us]
No good thing from us
No good thing from us
He withholds no good thing from us
I will open my hands, will open my heart
I will open my hands, will open my heart
I am nodding my head an emphatic yes
To all that You have for [us]
+ Sara Groves, “Open My Hands”
from Invisible Empires

We are among your called.
We have heard and answered your summons.
You have addressed us in the deep places of our lives.
In responsive obedience we testify,
as we are able, to your truth as it concerns our common life.
We thank you for the call,
for the burden of that call,
for the risk that goes with it,
for the joy of words given us by your growing spirit, and
for the newness that sometimes comes from our word.
We have indeed been in the counsel of your summoning spirit,
and so we know some truth to speak.
But we are, as well, filled with rich imagination of our own,
And our imagination is sometimes matched and overmatched
by our cowardice,
by our readiness to please,
by our quest for well-being.
We are, on most days, a hard mix
of true prophet and wayward voice,
a mix of your call to justice
and our hope for shalom.
Here we are, as we are,
mixed but faithful,
compromised but committed,
anxious but devoted to you.
Use us and our gifts for
your newness that pushed beyond all the we can say or imagine.
We are grateful for words given us;
We are more grateful for your word fleshed among us.
Through this day we have named your name in gladness, we have pondered the world you have called “good,” we have relished your gift and your task, and we have marveled in amazement, yet one more time, at the wonder of this Easter Jesus, who has died and is alive among us.
Now we are homeward; And when we arrive there, it will be as it was this morning, with anxiety and demand and conflict and inconvenience. Except that all things will be–yet again–made new. Make new by your spirit; make new the church where we live; make new the public reality of justice among us; make new the practice of compassion in our neighborhood; make new the surge of peace in our violent world; make new the policies of our government and the workings of the church.
Make new, and we will be in Easter joy unafraid and unweary, your glad people, carrying among us the marks of the death and the new life of Jesus in whose name we pray.
+ W. Brueggeman, “Habitat of Newness and Goodness”
from Prayers for a Privileged People
A good friend of mine spoke this week at a church for a lenten gathering. He described the nature of the cross as being the doorway into the kingdom, and that the crucifixion must come before the resurrection.
The story felt close by as I heard it told: Jesus has been drawing a crowd as he spoke to their hopes that he would indeed be the king of the kingdom, and ready for his seat on the throne they were. But all of his incessant stories made the kingdom anything other than what was expected. And in every story, there is great cost to inherit it, to find it, to move into it, to be moved by it.
And the crowd who was dripping with saliva over the thought of their king and his kingdom having come were suddenly less enthused; the shiny Sunday morning services that speak to his good reign and our infatuation with him will prove as ultimately truthful to our commitment as the branches we will guide back and forth as he rides across our coats on the donkey.
So the crowd begins to thin out.
Like it always does, when we listen for what he is actually saying.
There’s nothing slick about giving up everything to know that we will lose. But we must.
There’s nothing bold about doing whatever it takes to come in last. But we must.
There’s nothing ambitious about serving quietly and faithfully only to be pitied and scorned. But we must.
So the crowd begins to thin out.
Like it always does, when we listen for what he is actually saying.
Seeing the crowd wane to find the next shiny Sunday show of sorts, Jesus turns to his disciples and says, “Are you gonna leave too?”
And for all the ways they were always doing anything except get it right, and for all the times they wanted everything except what they needed,
this time, they spoke the shattering truth…maybe realizing it themselves for the first time themselves.
“Are you going to leave too?” he asked?
“Where else would we go?”
“The way of the kingdom is the way of the cross” my buddy said the other evening. Of all the things Jesus talked about, he never spoke of success or ambition or happy lives. He spoke of the good news of the kingdom, and then told stories that drove us mad about what it is like, and how it is nothing like we’ve expected.
Every story of the kingdom includes the story of the cross.
Loss. Suffering. Grief. Humiliation. Last. Long. Defeat. Everything.
But we must.
However it does not make sense––and of course it doesn’t make any sense––we know to much to do anything else, to go anywhere else, to try anything else. Where else would we go?
djordan
Pine Tree
***
I have joined the long defeat
that falling set in motion
and all my strength and energy
are raindrops in the ocean
so conditioned for the win
to share in victor’s stories
but in the place of ambition’s din
I have heard of other glories
and I pray for an idea
and a way i cannot see
it’s too heavy to carry
and impossible to leave
I can’t just fight when I think I’ll win
that’s the end of all belief
and nothing has provoked it more
than a possible defeat
we walk a while we sit and rest
we lay it on the altar
I won’t pretend to know what’s next
but what I have I’ve offered
and I pray for a vision
and a way I cannot see
it’s too heavy to carry
and impossible to leave
and I pray for inspiration
and a way I cannot see
it’s too heavy to carry
and impossible to leave
it’s too heavy to carry
and I will never leave

In light of many comments, public and private, about my previous post “Loss as loss, not as lesson”, I thought perhaps now is the time to share a little bit about what I’ve been learning concerning trauma, and specifically sudden, violent death.
After a few weeks of cofacilitating a support group for people who have lost loved ones to homicide, suicide, or accidental death, I began to learn how very, incredibly different the grief process is for this kind of violent death than for other types of loss.
All loss is loss, no doubt; violent loss is different.
I can think of people by name who have
lost a mother in gunfight.
lost a cousin in a robbery gone wrong.
lost a son in a hit a run.
lost a baby to violence.
Three days from today will be one year since my grandfather died. I will never forget the day he passed away, kissing his forehead, and telling him thank you for everything. I had watched as the sinfulness of Parkinsons ate away at his body for several years. Meals had become special. Kisses on the cheek had become monumental. Laughs shared and jokes made had become cause to gather everyone’s attention in the room. Our family was making meaning together, in the privacy of our home, of the life of our husband, brother, father and grandfather. We spent many holidays saying things we needed to say, hearing things we needed to hear. And at his funeral, almost a year ago today, we celebrated his life with grief and with gladness. Meaning had been made, and we could be at peace with his lost.
This is absolutely, positively nothing like losing someone violently. There is no hierarchy of grief, and no need to compare stories, but the grief associated with violent death is sharply different and should be seen and understood as such.
In the loss of our community at the beginning of this week, a freshmen in college dies in a car accident.
The family has no time to make meaning together, in the privacy of their home, around meals, holidays, laughs and stories. They have, no doubt, been doing these things in passing, unnoticed, like we all do. But we do them differently when we see the shadow approaching. So when the shadow is not seen, they are not done. No one is to blame…it is the way we are.
But the story is immediately stolen. There are phone calls and conversations. News reports and tv coverage. Facebook updates and emails asking, wondering, trying to make meaning in places that feel meaningless.
So now, there is not only no opportunity to plan for the grief, but there is no privacy to the story. It cannot be told the way we get to tell the story of an aging grandparent.
The story tells itself. In public.
And then the news tells it. And then the neighbors tell it. Questions of why it is important, what is to be learned, and how to prevent it linger in the mouths of other people. The story is everywhere, and belongs now to everyone.
But most importantly, it is co-opted from those grieving the loss.
To grieve is––in itself––an act of worship.
djordan
Pine Tree Dr.
***
“Real criticism begins in the capacity to grieve because that is the most visceral announcement that things are not right. Only in the empire are we pressed and urged and invited to pretend that things are all right – either in the dean’s office or in our marriage or in the hospital room. And as long as the empire can keep the pretense alive that things are all right, there will be no real grieving and no serious criticism.”
+ Walter Brueggeman, The Prophetic Imagination
***
Rosa Parks | February 4, 1913 – October 24, 2005
On thoughts of Black History Month

+ “Rosa Parks” from Walter Brueggeman’s Prayers for a Privileged People
djordan
Pine Tree