Where is home for you? This question
has so many answers for me. Every now and then I have a series of
dreams about the house I spent my childhood in, and I still haven't
figured out what it represents for me. Now the place I call home is
this lovely house I share with my husband and two kids. There are
other places that I have called home and places that always bring me
a sense of home when I recall them; like the chapel at the seminary I
graduated from, the church I grew up in or gatherings with extended
family. But over the years there has always been one place that week
after week I have come home to no matter where I lived or what I was
doing with my life. From the time I was born church has been that
place for me. The prayers, the altar, the cross and of course the
Eucharist are my home no matter what building they are in. My middle
school years were particularly difficult for me. Everything I new to
be normal was changed: family, house, friends, how I looked, etc. It
was during that time that I really dove into my faith. I asked
questions like crazy during confirmation classes and soon felt a
calling to be an ordained pastor. When everything was changing that
place was home and I knew it would always be there. It was where I
could be me, ask any questions I had and be accepted.
So as I looked into the shocked and
overwhelmed faces of the teens I work with as a youth pastor it was
difficult to tell them in addition to everything else in their life:
school, sports, friends, work, the church would also be closed. I
know, I know that the church can never be closed as the people are
the church and of course the Holy Spirit is not contained in the
walls of that fancy building, but it still totally sucks that this
place that has been so steady and constant in our lives isn't there
at a time when everyone is freaking out.
That first week after the schools
closed it was a flurry of zoom schedules, facebook live plans,
tripods, webcams, video editing software and phone calls. I felt
energized by the opportunities God was calling us to as a church.
The truth is all of us (like all of us in the entire world) were in
shock and just trying to figure out our way through all of this.
Now it is week four and I find myself
thinking again about home. Many of us are stuck in our houses in a
way we have never before experienced. So in a sense we are home, yet
the ways in which we have built our lives, made meaning and planned
our days are completely upended. Everything is different and there
is no definite end date.
I believe the best way to get ourselves
through this time is to find our way home. I came across the phrase
in a book discussion I am in (on zoom of course). We are reading
“Love Heals” by Becca Stevens and at the end of the book she
lists twenty-four spiritual practices that guide her staff and
community in the rehabilitation work that they do. The twenty third
spiritual practice listed is “Find Your Way Home.”
I asked the others in the group what
this meant to them and one woman shared that her heart aches for
those who are younger and have not yet had the life experience to
help them find home within themselves. I thought about that a lot.
It is true that in all of the panic, worry, uncertainty and heaviness
of these days I am relying on the resources I have developed within
myself. I have had some lovely realizations that have brought me
great comfort. One of those is realizing that I am not the same
person I was when I experienced post-partum depression, one of the
most difficult things I have ever gone through. Now I can see how I
learned and developed inner resources of strength from that.
Through other stressful events these
past few years I have found myself wanting to go to my room, lay down
and quiet my mind. When I am looking for peace I look deep within
and find it. For me, this is the presence of the Holy Spirit within
me. It is a church that I can never be separated from no matter what
life brings.
These days have been hard, every time I
cough I have a pang of worry that I “have it.” I feel out of
control, I worry for others, I wonder how long it will last and some
days feel heavy, but I do know and trust that I can always find my
way home to that healing presence within.
And I know that the young people I work
with are building up those resources and finding confidence in their
own ability to find peace within through this experience. I never
want to diminish their pain, but I do see that this situation is an
opportunity to look for a steady and lasting peace, one that is best
felt in times of deepest need. A place that is home, no matter what
happens.
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