Thursday, April 22, 2010
(If you come to my blog on a regular basis, you know that I like Barbara Brown Taylor's book, An Altar in the World. I am quoting from it again today.)Deep suffering makes theologians of us all. The questions people ask about God in Sunday school rarely compare with the questions we ask while we are in the hospital. This goes for those stuck in the waiting room as well as those in actual beds. ...To spend one night in real pain is to discover depths of reality that are roped off while everything is going fine. Why me? Why now? Why this?
These are natural questions to ask when you are in pain, but they are just as relevant when you are in pleasure. Who deserves the way a warm bath feels on a cold night after a hard day's work? Who has earned the smell of a loved one, embracing you on your first night back home? To hold a sleeping child in your arms can teach you more about the meaning of life than any ten books on the subject. To lie in the yard at night looking up at the stars can grant you entrance into divine mysteries that elude you inside the house.
The daily practice of incarnation--of being in the body with full confidence that God speaks the language of flesh--is to discover a pedagogy that is as old as the gospels. Why else did Jesus spend his last night on earth teaching his disciples to wash feet and share supper? With all the conceptual truths in the universe at his disposal, he did not give them something to think about together when he was gone. Instead, he gave them concrete things to do--specific ways of being together in their bodies--that would go on teaching them what they needed to know when he was no longer around to teach them himself.
2 comments:
Clif,
Sometimes the best way to answer those Why questions is to replace them with What instead?
What are I suppose to learn in this process?
What should I do now?
It helps to refocus the issue on something positive and instead we should be asking ourselves sometimes "Why not?"
Love and Hugs ~ Kat
Loved this quote: Deep suffering makes theologians of us all.
And is this quote yours:"Those who dare to teach must never cease to learn." That is a great one!
wb
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