Monday, March 31, 2014

geometry

I spent some time this evening listening to an opinionated Christian pontificating.  He talked about his faith as a simple mathematical equation. God said it + I believe it = the way it is.   Ask= you shall receive.  Seek=Find.   "It's not that hard people." He insisted.  It didn't set well with me.  I left feeling like an old, cynical, cranky Christian.

My supervisor in Chaplain school used to say "I'd be an atheist if it weren't God.  He is just crazy about me so what you going do?" And I get that.  Once in a while my faith feels fresh and pure.  When I hear certain praise songs.  Or see the first daffodils bloom in my yard.  When I read Barbara Brown Taylor or Rob Bell.  Lots of times my faith feels jaded.  Like there is a lot of bitter, judgmental ragamuffin mixed in with the enthusiasm and passion for God.  If my faith were described in math terms maybe it would be geometry.  Lots of weird, uneven shapes that I can't  grasp or make sense of.

Last Monday my boys didn't have school.  Josh had spent Sunday night at a friend's house, and I was going to pick him up in the afternoon.  I was in the middle of my work day, visiting my patients that lived on the south side of town.  At 11:30 Josh called me.  "Mom, I am ready to go home.  Can you come pick me up now?  I was 3 visits down, 2 to go.  If I took my lunch break now I'd have to drive 30 min to get him, take him home, 30 minutes back.  "How about in an hour and a half?" I asked.  "Now would be good." Josh responded. I couldn't  tell if this was preference or need.  So I headed to get him.

The next day I got another call.  Josh had a basketball game.  "Mom, I need shorts and my jersey by 3:15." That meant a quick trip home and then over to the school.  "I will try." I promised.  Later I was talking to a friend on the phone.  Sharing the addition to my day.  "So presumptuous that I can drop anything." I laughed.  "What on earth does he think I do all day?"

"He doesn't." she replied. 

And it hit me.  She was so right.  Josh doesn't spend his day pondering my busy schedule, worrying about my stress levels or productivity.  When Josh has a need he calls his mom. Simple as that.  And while we will have a conversation about respecting other's time, I kinda love his innocence.

Donald Miller, in Blue Like Jazz, writes this - "In his book Orthodoxy, G.K. Chesterton says chess players go crazy, not poets.  I think he is right.  I don't think you can explain how Christian faith works. It is a mystery.  And I love this about Christian spirituality.  It cannot be explained, and yet it is beautiful and true.  It is something you feel, and it comes from the soul. "

So that's my faith plan for the day.  No pondering the problem of evil, the origins of the universe, or my little place in the grand scheme.  If something comes up for me, I am just going to hand it over.  Trust it to someone bigger, smarter, higher.  It's not a geometry day.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

water

There are a few beautiful moments in winter.  Big, fat snowflakes falling from the sky. Watching a white world while you are cuddled by the fire place drinking hot chocolate.  Trees sparkling with ice. My boys pink cheeks as they come in from sledding.

The rest of the time? No thank you.  It is scarves and gloves and coats to layer against the biting cold.  Slush making your feet freeze and your pant legs soaked.  Stinging wind.   Driving slowly and watching for black ice.  Shivering indoors, huddled by the heater trying to get warm.  Street salt coating everything.  Gray skies.  Willing yourself to step out of the car and into the sharp, bitter cold.

And then I walk into my gym.  It's a different world. There is the summer smell of chlorine, and blasts of humid air.  I pull off my hat, coat, sweater,  tights, socks and boots and put on a bathing suit. I walk into the pool. One step at a time until I am floating in the water.  Swimming lap after lap in that small pool.  I can see my skin. Long, pale limbs propelling me back and forth.  I can see the cold and ice outside, but I am warm and free.

I just finished my new favorite book, The Happiness Project.  One piece of advice is to "Find out what works for you and enjoy it even if other people don't. Don't try to be someone else". "Be Gretchen" the author keeps reminding herself.  It has become my new mantra.

"Be Erin"  I tell myself tonight as I walk into my senior citizen gym.  Usually I am the youngest person in there by at least 30 years. Which I love.  Real swimmers would mock my little pool.  It is mostly used for therapy and senior water aerobics and is empty in the evenings when I go.  But in the cold winter months, my pool is warm, healing, and renewing.

Lately as I bobbed up and down in the water I've been thinking about Baptism.  The idea of ceremonial immersion in water to symbolize the beginning of one's public Christian faith.  Jesus was baptized in the Jordan River under a hot Middle Eastern sun.  And since then, Christians have been following His example in so many different ways.

I was baptized when I was 12.  I had a new navy dress and sandals with a little heel.  I felt very grown up as my pastor called me to the front of the church to talk about my decision to be baptized.  The baptism took place in our church baptistry during church.  Afterward many of our friends came to our home for a celebration agape feast.

Steve was baptized in Honduras on the beach.  It was the last day of our college mission trip.  The sun was setting as our Chaplain talked about the meaning of Baptism and then walked into the waves with his arm around Steve's shoulders.  After the baptism, our group took communion together before walking back up the beach.  Steve and I weren't dating at the time, but I am so glad that I happened to be there and be a part of that sacred moment in his life.

Jake was baptized on his 10th birthday.  A group of our family and friends met after church and hiked to Lake Powhatan, a favorite Miller destination.  It was a beautiful, fall day.  The trees surrounding the lake were a riot of color.  The water was cold.  Big towels were quickly offered to wrap up in before we headed back home for a party of Mexican food and Jake's favorite Key Lime Pie.

I'm thinking about all this in the pool this evening because our almost-13-year old Josh recently said he wanted to get baptized at the beach this summer.  I am so excited because it is his decision.  Though we have talked about and celebrated the other baptisms in our family, I didn't want him to feel pushed.  It has to be his choice.  In his time.

But I want it for him. So much.  I guess for some of the same reasons I want to be in this pool.  It is the decision to be part of a different world.  For the warm, enveloping protection that faith can be in a cold, unpredictable life.  There is no way I can explain to my 12 year old all that my spiritual life means to me at 45. What it's like to believe and to doubt.   What it is like to feel close to God.  How hard it is to feel God's silence.  Why the words forgiveness and grace can make me cry.  How fulfilling it is to use your spiritual gifts and to worship in community.  How the Bible comes alive again and again and again.   Josh's journey will be so different than mine.  But I hope his faith is filled with uncountable warm, healing, renewing experiences.

I told Josh we should plan his baptism in a way that reflects who he is.  I may have been too liberal in my suggestion.  Josh is definite about it being at The Outer Banks -one of his favorite places on earth. Which means only immediate family and grandparents will be able to come.  Josh is more than fine with that.  He's a private boy and wouldn't like a church full of people cheering him on.   Then Josh said to me "Let's find a night where there is good NBA game on TV.  I could get baptized, then we can come home and watch the game and have root beer floats.  That would be the perfect day!"  This was far from my idea of Sabbath afternoon holy celebration.  But I heard a voice from the book saying "let him be Josh",  and I said "that sure sounds like you.  Let's keep talking about that."

So Josh's baptism is sure to look different than mine.  As will his faith.  And from the warm, quiet waves in my pool tonight that seems just fine.

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

hitchhiking

The room reeks.  Of urine and tobacco spit.  I take a gulp of air at the door and try not to use my nose for the rest of the hour.  A pale, elderly man is slumped in a recliner.  He is wearing the same red flannel shirt every time I come.  He reaches for my hand and I notice his fingernails need to be cut.  "Where you been?" he asks.  I try to look past the missing and black teeth and see the happy, generous smile and the twinkle in his watery, blue eyes.  It always takes me a few minutes - to get used to mouth breathing, to quit worrying about what I might be sitting on, to stop recoiling and start enjoying his dry humor and rich stories.

Today we talk about hitchhiking.  I know that he was a logger on the west coast and a builder on the east coast so I ask him about driving back and forth across the country.  "I never drove it," he tells me.  "I hitchhiked across eleven times."

"Wow" I say.  "Eleven times?  Were you scared riding with strangers?"

"Scared?" He snorts.  "You obviously never hitchhiked.  Every one did it. Plus, I had my gun if I needed it."

"A gun?" I am even more incredulous.  "Didn't that scare the people who picked you up?"

"I didn't wave around like a crazy man while I had my thumb out." He is tickled now.  "You obviously never hitchhiked."

"Nope.  Never.  It's not safe anymore."  I tell him. "And I sure wouldn't pick up a gun toting, ornery lumberjack either. How many women picked you up?"

"Women?  There were hardly women drivers then.  I never rode with a woman."  He cracks up at my ignorance.  "You obviously never hitchhiked back then."

"I wasn't born then."  I remind him.  "So I definitely wasn't hitchhiking across country."

"That's true."  He admits.  "And it's obvious you never hitchhiked."

He tells me how he hates being trapped in this one room.  Trapped in a body that is failing him.  He longs to be a young man again, planning his next adventure.  "I would do so many things differently."  he tells me.  "I made so many mistakes."

"Oh sweetie," I say, (because I am a Southern chaplain, after all),  "We don't get through life without having regrets, do we?  It's one of the hardest things about being human."

For a minute there is no urine or dirty flannel or black teeth.  Just two travelers who know the pain of regret, talking about the gift of forgiveness and the peace God can bring.   It's in these moments that I know why I am supposed to be in this room.

And then he wants to lighten the mood.  "This one time I was hitchhiking in Arizona." He is grinning again.  "You have obviously never hitchhiked there....."

Someday, I hope to be the kind of chaplain who doesn't plug her nose during a visit, who can throw her arms around dirty flannel without wincing, stingy reserve.  I have coworkers whose acceptance and warmth both shame and inspire me every week.  Until then I will be grateful for every exiting gasp of fresh air.  And for former hitchhikers who are eager to tell tall tales.