Saturday 23 August 2008

Testimony...

Brennan Manning suggests ‘The question for all of us is what we will really aim at next. If all we are going for is placid decency, routine prayer, well-behaved worship, and comfortable compassion, then we have effectively parted company with the shipwrecked and have no fellowship with the pearl-finder.’'

'I didn't go to the flea market the week of my abortion. I stayed home, and smoked dope and got drunk, and tried to write a little, and went for slow walks along the salt marsh with Pammy. On the seventh night, though, very drunk and just about to taking a sleeping pill, I discovered that I was bleeding heavily. It did not stop over the next hour. i was going through a pad every fifteen minutes, and I thought i should call a doctor or Pammy, but I was so disgusted that I had gotten so drunk one week after an abortion that I just couldn't wake someone up and ask for help. I kept changing Kotex, and got very sober very quickly.

Several hours later, the blood stopped flowing, and I got in bed, shaky and sad and too wild to have another drink or take a sleeping pill. I had a cigarette and turned off the light. After a while, as I lay there, I became aware of someone with me, hunkered down in the corner, and I just assumed it was my father, whose presence I had felt over the years when I was frightened and alone. The feeling was so strong that I actually turned on the light for a moment to make sure no one was there - of course, there wasn't. But after a while, in the dark again, I knew beyond a doubt that it was Jesus. I felt him surely as I feel my dog lying nearby as I write this.

And I was appalled. I thought about my life and my brilliant hilarious progressive friends, I thought about what everyone would think of me if I became a Christian, and it seemed an utterly impossible thing that simply could not be allowed to happen. I turned to the wall and said out loud, "I would rather die."

I felt him sitting there on his haunches in the corner of my sleeping loft, watching me with patience and love, and I squinched my eyes shut, but that didn't help because that's not what I was seeing him with.

Finally I fell asleep, and in the morning, he was gone.

This experience spooked me badly, but I thought it was just an apparition, born of fear and self-loathing and booze and loss of blood. But everywhere I went, I had the feeling that a little cat was following me, wanting me to reach down and pick it up, wanting me to open the door and let it in. But I knew what would happen: you let a cat in one time, give it a little milk, and then it stays forever. So I tried to keep one step ahead of it, slamming my houseboat door when I entered or left.

And one week later, when I went back to church, I was so hungover that I couldn't stand up for the songs, and this time I stayed for the sermon, which i just thought was so ridiculous, like someone trying to convince me of the existence of extraterrestrials, but the last song was so deep and raw and pure that I could not escape. It was as if people were singing in between the notes, weeping and joyful at the same time, and I felt like their voices or 'something' was rocking me in its bosom, holding me like a scared kid, and I opened up to that feeling - and it washed over me.

I began to cry amd left before the benediction, and I raced home and felt the little cat running along at my heels, and I walked down the dock past dozens of potted flowers inder a sky as blue as one of God's own dreams, and I opened the door to my boathouse, and I stood there a minute, and then I hung my head and said, "OK: I quit."

I took a long deep breath and said out loud, "All right. You can come in."
So this was my beautiful moment of conversion.'

(Anne Lamott: Travelling Mercies - Some Thoughts On Faith)

I don't believe in covering up cracks. Rather I believe in redeeming those landscapes of brokenness and terrifying loneliness and difficulty that we often find ourselves traversing. To fight hard to give back to the little people of this world that which this world had taken so remorselessly from them.

Mike Yaconelli said of himself, ‘I want to be a good person. I don’t want to fail. I want to learn from my mistakes, rid myself of distractions, and run into the arms of Jesus. Most of the time, however, I feel like I am running away from Jesus into my own clutteredness. I want desperately to know God better. I want to be consistent. Right now though the only consistency in my life is my inconsistency. Who I want to be and who I am are not very close together. I am not doing well at the living-a-consistent-life thing.’

3 comments:

Raindog said...

I read these lines:

Most of the time, however, I feel like I am running away from Jesus into my own clutteredness. I want desperately to know God better. I want to be consistent. Right now though the only consistency in my life is my inconsistency. Who I want to be and who I am are not very close together. I am not doing well at the living-a-consistent-life thing.’

and thought about how one-ness with god/jesus or close-ness with god/jesus...is seen as the thing to be attained...and there is something often secretly interwoven into our idea of that, that expects peace or singularity or conesion. What if the more cluttered you get, the more you are getting closer. The more confused you get, the closer you are...to that thing, that some might call god. Its as if our understanding of god/jesus is someone who cleans us up like a hygenic parent. Not that I am a believer, but, what if he doesn't...what if he messes you up, brings you closer to your own craziness...your own wildness. But, then, maybe we prefer spiritualities and stories, that sanitise, and help us conform better to our expectations of ourselves or others.

Maybe we will always be striving to be something we aren't, and for some, they religisize this, and call the "acceptable version of themselves" (that they will never be) closer to god/jesus.

When i read through my journals a while back, i realised that i had understood my depressive feelings as being "far from god", and thought that i ought to stive to get closer to god, completely oblivious to the other reality that was playing itself out.

bla bla bla

Raindog said...

Just thought I would quote some Rumi:

“Stay bewildered in God and only that.”

Anonymous said...

peace does come, not in the way u might expect or indeed in a way others tell u to expect. peace with who u r, who u r becoming - whatever colour of crazy that may be..