there outside Jerusalem 2000 years ago. We've read that story a
hundred times, more probably, but this time it really stuck with me.
This man enters the Gospel story for only 6 hours or so. But in that
short time, he goes from reviling Jesus, hateful, insulting, crowd-
pressured, resentful, scornful . . . to a changed man who recognizes
Jesus for who he is, expresses faith, and heads to Paradise. All of
that change occurs while his hands and feet are immobilized and his
body is physiologically failing. No clearer picture of how helpless
we are to effect change. No clearer picture that God's power can work
in the most unlikely of circumstances. Something very real but very
hidden occurs between two near-corpses, something that changes this
man's eternal destiny.
We are not exactly nailed, but in some ways trapped in suburbia far  
from those who hold our hearts, and feeling just as helpless.  One  
child starting college:  bewildering array of choices, hard-to-find  
classes, required print-outs but no printer, pouring his heart and  
sweat into making the club soccer team, feeling the let-down that the  
promise of wonders has been revealed to be tedious hard-work among the  
masses of freshmen in entry-level classes.  One child alone in  
Africa:  also busting his anatomy to make the soccer team, and his  
brain to be the lone Junior again in BC Calc, and to be himself.  One  
team in Uganda:  a direct lightening strike took out their power this  
week (how not-subtle an attack), turmoil and chaos as the district  
insists that under-age but shadily registered-to-vote students be  
released from school to participate in elections, a multitude of team  
illnesses, and the ever-difficult-to-negotiate cross-cultural lines of  
expectation.  One team in Sudan:  planning for the next year when the  
whole region could flare up in war after January's referendum . . or  
not, in which case we want to be ready to move forward.  We listen to  
all of these, and promise prayer, feeling helpless to really offer any  
worthwhile words of comfort or wisdom, let alone real aid.
And there is something about plunging across cultural lines that  
refocuses one's view of one's own sin.  I don't like to think that I'd  
challenge Jesus to get off the cross and rescue me in a haughty and  
complaining voice.  But is it any different to worry, and stew, and  
complain, and notice all the things about this time that aren't what I  
would choose?  As we get distance from our normal life I remember the  
friend-wounds of coming face to face with ways I judged and hurt  
others.  And I'm not proud of the weary, short, way I often react  
here.  Not good.
Six hours on the cross, five months in America.  Not a peppy self-help  
change-your-life program, but a nailed down helpless look-only-at- 
Jesus state.  If the thief can change into a spiritual human who will  
be communing with Jesus by doing nothing more than looking at him,  
then anything can happen.  For those I love (friends, good classes,  
direction, joy, fair elections, peace, power, healing).  And even for  
me, a changed human ready for the feast.
1 comment:
i wrestle with a "yeah, but what am i supposed to DO?" feeling all the time. In a sick way it would be almost a blessing to be nailed up and know there's nothing for me to do. In a very sick way. Thanks for sharing your struggles, they always help me keep mine in perspective. Know also that someone is praying for y'all.
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