Ah, my dear angry Lord,
Since thou dost love, yet strike;
Cast down, yet help afford;
Sure I will do the like.
I will complain, yet praise;
I will bewail, approve;
And all my sour-sweet days
I will lament and love.
-Bitter-sweet by George Herbert
This afternoon I let my own face carry the wet and the salt of lament till it made little red roads down from my eyes and spread across my lips and salted my tongue. I watched a middle-aged Sudanese priest put his face to the floor in tears while praying for the middle east, where Muslims, like those persecuting Christians in his homeland, live apart from the peace of Jesus Christ.
I sat amazed at the table with two African American women as they listened to Bob Dylan sing about Medgar Evers' killer and the senseless murder of Hattie Carol. There is pain that doesn't fit my understanding, or my manageable categorizing. I am convicted by the words of Dylan that I have "philosophized disgrace". There is a time for tears.
Phileena Heuertz, from Word Made Flesh, told of what she has been learning among the poorest of the poor around the world. That God is breaking her from her habit of wishing to fix people. Instead, like Jesus, she is learning to enter into brokenness and lament in order to love. We go with the broken, ourselves broken. Like Psalm 126 says, we
go out weeping,
carrying seed to sow,
and return with songs of joy,
carrying sheaves with us.
I saw paintings, heard poems, listened to songs all created from places of deep grief and lament today. All exhaled into stunned and somehow hideously happy societies, laments carrying seeds to sow. I say 'hideously happy' because when there was hurt that needed to be grieved or suffering that needed to met... the gravesites were paved over and an amusement park built on top. The word 'hide' is in hideous. Jeremiah speaks:
They dress the wound of my people as though it were not serious. 'Peace, peace,' they say, when there is no peace.
Jesus entered into our brokenness, he wept, he bled. He did not ignore or belittle. Jesus is not embarrassed.
Let's not be afraid to let our hearts break. To call evil what it is, to name the pain. May our tears be seeds sown in the tired, trampled ground. And when the weeping is done, Oh Lord, when the fallow-rest has been enough, let the ground birth laughter - Light and Breath playing through the leaves of the Tree of Life.
Last year, when sitting among the others, hearing of lament that I'd never known for myself, I was so struck! So struck. And I can't tell you how, except that it seemed very important, this need to lament.
ReplyDelete--
Matthew, I felt so at home with the community last year at the Summer Institute. At least, I felt as "at home" and one can feel here. I hope you're feeling home-like, too! After all, it's a picture of the new creation to come when He returns, every nation and tongue together, praising His wonderfulness.
Praise be to God!
as i read this post, tears began falling from my eyes...
ReplyDeletebrokenness for the brokenhearted
sadness for the orphans who are alone
anger for those captured in slavery
love for a God who loves...