Posts Tagged ‘Christmas’

Lens of tears.

Usually, I wouldn’t do this, but early in December I started to write a post and then never finished it, partly because my mind hadn’t wrapped itself entirely around the topic and partly because holiday chaos overtook my capacity to think through it further.  But my head’s back in that same place today, so I’ll work with it now.  Originally, I was struggling with understanding a speaker I had heard at seminary, Reverend Tyler Wigg-Stevenson, who is the director of the Two Futures Project, an evangelical effort for a nuclear weapons-free world that works primarily with younger Christians.  This man, who’s only a little older than myself, spoke eloquently and passionately about the need for our nation and the nuclear-armed West in general to lay down its weapons for the sake of the future of our planet and our species.  He stated, referring to the fact that we are armed and yet simultaneously denouncing countries who are building and newly testing nuclear weapons, “As it stands, we’ve got no moral authority to oppose them; you can’t preach temperance from a barstool.”

The day after I heard him speak, a song came on the radio, one that I’m sure is familiar to most of us, “Someday At Christmas” sung by Stevie Wonder.  The lyrics felt like a collision between real life and dreaming: “Someday at Christmas men won’t be boys/ Playing with bombs like kids play with toys/ One warm December our hearts will see/ A world where men are free/ …Someday at Christmas there will be no wars.”  Music is an emotional experience for me, tending to sort out and clarify difficult feelings into organized thoughts and pictures, and this one hit me right in the chest.  I remember I was driving in my car, and the image of children of God playing with bombs as though they were toys welled up a sense of deep sadness and horror in my soul.  Then I remembered what Tyler had said about preaching temperance from a barstool… and I began to reflect on what Jesus said in Luke, “Can a blind person lead a blind person?  Will they not both fall into the pit?”  And, also, in Matthew, ‘You have heard that it was said to those of ancient times, “You shall not murder”; and “whoever murders shall be liable to judgement.” But I say to you that if you are angry with a brother or sister, you will be liable to judgement; and if you insult a brother or sister, you will be liable to the council; and if you say, “You fool”, you will be liable to the hell of fire.”  Maybe these two verses don’t seem to fit together, I don’t know.  But they popped into my head and forced me to consider how nuclear weapons have anything to do with the anger I feel toward other people.  How the violence in my own heart can be as damaging, at least according to how I understand what Jesus might be saying, as a bomb decimating a city.  Am I exaggerating? Perhaps.  But I don’t think so, for two reasons.

First of all, how can I judge others to be in the wrong, when I’m comfortably sitting on my own barstool waving a hefty glass of antagonism, pride, need for power, and self-protection, even prejudice and, yes, hatred?  I think I hear Jesus saying to us that the slide from one type of violence to the next, from violence in our souls, little violences done daily, to larger violence done in the world is a slippery one.  That, possibly, the small angers and hurts we inflict upon one another sums up, combines, lives cosily together in a miasma of badness that ultimately must lead to larger violences.  Like that scene in Ghostbusters when the glowing pink goo takes over the city, a collection of the people’s evil boiling up from underneath.  Perhaps it’s about desensitization.  Research has taught us pretty clearly that small negative influences are gateways to larger ones.  But I also wonder if what Jesus was telling his people was that these small ways of being out of line with the way of God turn us even farther away from that vision for peace and justice, wholeness and love of neighbor, so that we must hedge ourselves against the small evils in order not to find ourselves unprotected when the big ones come.

I mean, we have to admit it…. we live in a fallen world.  There are big badnesses, real threats ever present, lurking in the shadows and looming in plain sight.  If we’re blind to our own ways of living violently with one another, whether it’s through cruelty of words or use of fists and weapons, neglect of those around us who live in need of basic kindnesses,  manipulation and coercion to make our own lives feel more secure… if we’re blind to these, then we can’t very well claim the high moral ground when others follow our example and take it even to the next level.  Especially when we’ve modeled that level so well and used our resources to exhibit our power.  How can we really ask others not to do the same if we are unable or unwilling to admit the wrongs we’ve done and resolve ourselves to learn from the lessons there?  I remember Tyler made another statement, toward the end of his talk, that has stuck with me.  It reminded me that it’s okay to make errors, as long as we can learn to see ourselves in an honest light.  God’s vision isn’t of us as unbroken, but it is of humanity as transformable, if we begin to see as God does.  He said, “In a fallen world, the only way we will see as God does is through the lens of tears.”  It won’t be easy or perfect, but tears can be cleansing.  Regret isn’t the end of the world.  Refusal to lay down our weapons, psychological, emotional, nuclear, will be.

(For the United Methodist position on nuclear arms, you can read the denominational statement,  “In Defense of Creation”.)

The naming, which is knowing.

Rainer Maria Rilke was about my age when he wrote my favorite book of poetry, The Book of Hours.  The winter always finds me reading this collection of Rilke’s gorgeous, haunting poems.  Perhaps it is something about their richness and their starkness that reminds me of the weeks after Christmas, when I’m supposed to be so hopeful but instead tend to feel so lost.  Rilke lived in a time of anxiety, the Great War central to his existence and writing, and he struggled with the difficulty of communing with the ineffable in such a time of catastrophe, horror, and disbelief.  I love him for it - he teaches me to see God in places I would never otherwise look.

  This week I have had so many things on my mind and in my heart, I just couldn’t force myself to write.  I tried, over and over, to sit at the computer and hack out something, but each one failed rather dismally.  I realized yesterday evening that part of the reason was that I am once again sliding into my yearly waiting-for-springtime blue period.  When I was younger, I tended to love this time of year… it gave me an excuse to disappear into mountains of books for a season, crawling out of my literary cave after a little hibernation, into the green light of things growing and breezes changing course.  As I’ve gotten older, this period between Christmas and Lent has been a time of learning, learning how to manage my own moods and needs.  I got dogs.  I learned to exercise regularly and sleep.  There are special UV lights to buy, even.  Seminary hasn’t been very good for me in this way.  During the last three winters, I’ve forgotten how to lean into this season, what I’ve always thought of as a waiting-time.  Instead, I’ve begun to look at the entire year as a waiting time, waiting for the semester to end, for the year to be complete, for graduation, for ordination, for life to be as it should be, whatever that might mean.  But I think perhaps God doesn’t appreciate that attitude.  There is a difference between trusting and waiting.

I grew up hearing stories from the Norse tradition, viking sagas and legends.  So many had to do with light, with light in the darkness.  Winters are long in Denmark, where my dad’s family comes from, and I wonder sometimes how my ancestors managed with months of darkness.  As I continue to struggle with patience, in the seasons changing in the world and in my own life, I’ve been thinking about them and their epic patience.  They didn’t just wait, they trusted.  Spring would come.  Ice would melt, days would lengthen, things would grow because that’s the way God made the world to move. 

And so, feeling this, I stumbled across Rilke’s words this morning, and they hurt me and healed me, together.

You see, I want a lot./ Maybe I want it all:/the darkness of each endless fall,/the shimmering light of each ascent.

So many are alive who don’t seem to care./Casual, easy they move in the world as though untouched.

But you take pleasure in the faces/of those who know they thirst./You cherish those/who grip you for survival.

You are not dead yet, it’s not too late/to open your depths by plunging into them/and drink in the life/that reveals itself quietly there. (I,14).

It is the darkness and the shimmering light together that are “all.”  One is not more than or better than the other.  They are seasons, and each is necessary, for perspective and clarity.  The darkness might even be there so that we have the opportunity to feel, to remember to care, to find deep within ourselves, in our truest parts, the need to grip God for survival.  The life is there, even under the snow and ice, even within the darkness.  It is quiet, but tremendously patient.  It is simply not its season, yet.  Yet.

God’s Christmas improv

I was trying not to do this, blog about Christmas.  I love Christmas, and I absolutely despise the shrill and brittle criticisms it brings out of the woodwork, the judgmental and one-sided reminders that no one lives out the spirit of Christmas.  We social-justice oriented folks are the worst at this, and it tires me.  It certainly is important to remember the real meaning of Christmas, not to shop ourselves into oblivion, or drink ourselves there.  But I don’t think people actually do too badly, most of the time.  We gather with friends, even the poorest among us share our homes and food, our time and love, with people who have less.  We reconsider our lives, reflect on the previous year and hope for the year to come.  We look at what’s important, and at what’s not, and we reorganize our lives according to better priorities.  With or without Jesus explicitly as a part of the equation, I think most of us manage to keep God’s vision of Christmas pretty faithfully.  We allow ourselves to be surprised by grace.  That’s Christmas, to me… God’s improv, God’s giving of something so surprising and strange and lovely that our attention can’t help but be caught.  Maybe a baby in the middle of the desert with the oddest parental relationships imagineable isn’t what does it.  Maybe for you it’s something else, the beauty of the world through a swirl of snow on the street, or children opening gifts with abandon, or an anniversary of sobriety, or eating a meal with a stranger.  I don’t know.   God’s there, too. 

I remember Christmases growing up – my mom loved the holiday, the glory of decorations, gatherings, music, following the Santa traditions.  I believed in Santa until I was nine years old.  He was sacred.  I remember the day I found out Santa wasn’t real and the moment I realized I had to protect my younger brothers from learning the same, from their Christmas worlds shattering.  My letters had swirled up the chimney since I was three, reindeer came and ate cookies and carrots on our porch.  There had been reindeer prints, Santa teethmarks in cookies left in the living room.  I had heard the bells.  My parents were very, very serious about Christmas.  From Thanksgiving until December 25, we lived the myth, Santa-style.  Except. 

We all have, I think, memories we try not to dig out of our mental closets.  Our most shameful behaviors, the most hateful words we’ve ever said.  For me, half of those memories are tied to Christmas mornings.  You see, in addition to the amazing playing out of Christmas stories, my family also did Christmas morning extravegantly.  My brothers and I would wake up and find literally a mountain of gifts, each kid’s pile wrapped in their own colorful paper.  We each had our own corner of the room, filled with all sorts of amazing things.  The tearing, snapping, piranhas would strike, paper would fly, we’d exhaust ourselves ripping apart the piles.  Then, it would be over.  Most years, we’d open gifts like this then go to family’s or on vacation somewhere.  The center of the day was that enormous collection of stuff, our bickering over what the others had gotten, temper tantrums when what we’d asked for wasn’t in the pile.  I remember one year when I actually received a lump of coal in my stocking, my gifts hidden in the other room, because I’d been so angry the night before about a gift I’d received that I hadn’t wanted.  Sent to my room on Christmas.  Christmases like these embarrass me.  I know I started this with the statement that most of us do Christmas pretty well… perhaps I should say that we learn to. 

When I think about my childhood Christmas mornings, and the candle-lit, wondrous days leading up to it, baking cookies with my mom, decorating the house and tree, the traditions she so pain-stakingly  created for us, I realize now that she wanted Christmas for us to be what God wants it to be, as well.  She just didn’t have the right path to get us there.  We had the surprises, there was love, there was generosity (most of the time), but one magic ingredient was always missing… what was the point?  What were we supposed to be becoming through Christmas?  God’s amazing baby-gift had a message.  Santa-Christmas, at least the way we did it, had none.  It wasn’t about anything.  God’s Christmas is about surprising ourselves with goodness, hoping for a better world, living into our potential as seen through the lens of eternity, of doing it as a community of humanity.  It’s about lighting the darkness and bringing love to others.  Done with these things in mind, Santa isn’t a problem for me, but I am painfully aware of how easy it is for me, myself, to return to my childhood habits.  And so this Christmas, I hope you are surprised by love.  Overcome by God’s generosity in your life.  Taken aback by hope of what’s possible in the world.  Drowned in grace.  Whatever this means to you, I wish you a merry Christmas.  Because there’s a surprise in it for you somewhere, and it’s got your name on it.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.