A friend, one of these candles, lost her babies yesterday. And all the words I use when I talk to God swept right away. "Comfort" and "peace" sound like cheap plastic. The radio plays a song calling God "a friend of mine" and all I can say is "This is salt, God." I'm tired of asking God for anything. I'm done asking Him for babies. A newborn infant was found dead in a pond here Sunday morning. I manage a few more words: "are You aware of how broken this all is?" A few more words then that make me ask Todd what blasphemy is.
We showed up at our monthly dinner last night, the best part the prayer for each other at the end and Joan's homemade bread. I already know what I'm going to say when it's my turn to share what I need. All of these stories, it's too much, God isn't enough. The quiet, gentle whisper, my ass. I need Him to show up, we need Him to show up. Louder. It's all so broken.
We are asked to pray for the person on our left and I turn to my left and the woman next to me shares: I'm six weeks pregnant after ten years of infertility and I'm bleeding.
I let other people pray first. I'm too busy trying to decide if I'm being cosmically punk'd. It's my turn and what else can I do? I take a deep breath and I ask again. God, this baby, please. Calm this fear. Be near. Your breath on her face, fingertips on her cheeks wiping away these tears.
There is nothing magic about these candles. I buy them in the Mexican food aisle at Giant. But the act of reaching my arm out and igniting these wicks, somehow it forms tangible and external the pain and the hope inside my heart, making it bearable.
For today I'll add another candle and I'll borrow someone else's words and I'll wait for God to show up. It's all I've got.
We tell these stories
about being hungry and thirsty
and frightened and angry
and desperate.
And then we tell stories
about your food and your water
and your presence.
But the second half of the story
does not ring powerfully true in our own experience,
so much so that we find ourselves
and our whole beloved community
are often pilgrims in a barren land;
and we find our sophistication and our affluence
does not at all treat our condition of wilderness.
So finally we are driven back to you,
about to receive and then drawn up short
by the One who has nowhere to lay his head either.
We are bold to pray for your gifts
and for your presence
but we do so prepared to endure a while longer
our thirst and our hunger and our sense of absence
because we have resolved to be on your way with or without you.
Amen.
(Walter Brueggemann)
Thanks, dear. It is so good to know people are praying and believing and hurting with persistent faith.
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