Monday, December 28, 2020
Scary Sadness
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
Choosing Online School
Decisions
are hard and sometimes the decision-making process is the worst. I am really good at seeing both the good and
bad of any decision, which means I am really good at debating with myself. When I have an important decision to make
everyone can see I am distracted as I go back and forth in my head over and
over again. I also ask everyone I have
ever met for their opinion, pray about it, meditate on it, and agonize for a
while. It’s not that fun. But once the decision is made, as long as I
know I came about it through good honest struggle, I feel much better.
Lately
life is full of hard decisions. One of those is the decision about sending the
kids to school. I definitely stressed
about this. I can easily see both
perspectives. If you would have asked me
one year ago if I ever would send my 1st and 3rd grader
to online school I would have assumed you knew nothing about me. I am a huge believer in public
education. Honestly, I think all of the
difficult situations our country is in point to the importance of a larger
investment in public education! But,
life happens and we make decisions as best as we can and just try to keep up.
My family
decided that keeping the kids in remote schooling is the right decision for us. I realize this is largely because I work a
flexible part-time job which can mostly be done from home and so I am able to
do this. My oldest really misses school
but he is such a sweet kid and serious thinker and he supports our
decision. My kids are doing great academically
and we find ways for them to be social that we feel are safe, like an outdoor
class at the Catamount Institute or social time with church friends after our
outdoor worship service.
There are
several reasons we made this decision and several reasons that could have
pushed us the other way. One of the
hardest things about the decision is the judgment. Some people think that anyone being cautious
these days is “living in fear” which conjures this image of us hunkering down
with bags of rice and cans of beans with all the doors locked and curtains
drawn. I actually am not actively afraid
of COVID (although like so many others I have my moments) because I know I am
living in a way that minimizes my risks and the risks to my loved ones, like my
mom who is very high risk for multiple reasons.
I realize I am doing my best so worrying won’t help. But I know people have their strong opinions
and think we are ridiculous because we see things differently than they
do. That will always be the case.
The decision
is also hard because of my FOMO. A few
weeks ago I deleted Facebook from my phone.
It was bumming me out for multiple reasons but I realized all the
pictures of people partying without masks, going to large gatherings, and
generally living as though this isn’t a thing were leaving me feeling like an
outsider. It’s a strange thing to see
two very different worlds happening simultaneously. It also made me sad to read
everyone’s posts about how awful online schooling is for them and how it isn’t
working and they are all sad. I totally
get it. Even with our very workable
situation it gets hard and frustrating.
I miss my independence; I miss seeing the kids make new friends and
hearing about their independent experiences. And I am constantly yelled for all
day long to help find school supplies or address a technology issue or some
other reason, but there wasn’t much encouraging on social media for those of us
planning to stick with it.
These
days can be lonely for so many of us and we all seem to be pretty good at
making this a more lonely time for each other by adding judgment, pressure, and
projecting our own insecurities onto anyone who will bear them. I have no judgment for people returning their
kids to in-person or people homeschooling; I have seriously considered those
and could have gone either way. This is
new for all of us, and it will one day be over.
A few
weeks ago, as I was right in the middle of my indecisiveness, I was talking to
a wise friend from church. She has lived
longer than I and is better at seeing the long view of things. I said I was worried about the kids missing
out and feeling alone. She said, “They
aren’t alone. You have all of us. This
church is your community and we love you and we love your boys and we are all
here with you in this.” She wasn’t
telling me what to do, she wasn’t shaming me, she wasn’t mocking my amazing
ability to make mountains out of molehills, she was just being with me. And I felt less alone.
Monday, October 5, 2020
In the Midst
Ordinations are a big deal. They involve: bishops, rehearsals, vestments, bulletins, choirs, rows of clergy, hotel reservations for family, plane tickets for seminary friends, chartered buses for church members, liturgical preparations and more. Not to mention the mountains of essays, hours of interviews, years of seminary and copious amounts of prayer. It is a life-changing experience one never forgets.
So I
was excited on Friday to get to attend an ordination at our own church. The assistant priest or curate who came to
our church right in the middle of a pandemic had completed her time as a
transitional deacon and was getting ordained as a priest in the Episcopal
Church. Much would be different. Instead of a filled cathedral we would be on
lawn chairs in carefully spaced circles outside. Instead of bulletins we would find the
responses on our phones. Instead of
singing together there would be a cantor inside the building with a microphone
for us to hear him. Seminary friends,
former parishioners and family would follow a link to a live stream
online. But we still put on our
vestments, wore our red stoles and processed with the Bishop.
We sat
under a clear October Colorado sky and said the responses under our masks. The Bishop preached a great sermon and
everything was beautiful. And even
though there were many aspects of a typical ordination service missing, there
were also many added sights and sounds unique to this experience. The bishop’s inspiring words about calling
and a persevering hope that love will win occasionally had the background music
of a car driving by with the bass turned way up. Claire’s ordination vows were spoken over
chatter from patio diners at the restaurant across the street. As the cantor sang, joggers and dog walkers
looked at us from over the chain link fence.
The bright red vestments made those driving by turn their heads. It was an ordination just as it should be …
right in the midst of life.
Our
sturdy churches hold stunning art in their stained glass and perfect acoustics
for singing which makes for powerful worship, but our ministry is predominantly
done out in the ordinary, in the midst of the chaos, beside the preoccupied and
next to the distracted. During these
days of social distancing I have been meeting pets, seeing art work and getting
college dorm room tours over youth group zoom meet ups. Instead of youth group lunch after worship I
am meeting up with teens in their neighborhoods for masked walks for catching
up and thinking about God together. Our
relationships are no longer dependent on our building and we know more about
each other’s daily lives.
School
is also a very changed experience in our house these days. I hear the teachers teaching, I listen to my
kid’s responses and their classroom is sometimes the living room, sometimes the
back porch and sometimes the desks we set up in their bedrooms. Worlds have converged. Some days it feels stifling, some days I feel
like I can’t spend one more second in the walls of my house, but some days I
see the ways in which these circumstances have deepened my relationships- relationships
with my kids, my husband, my church, the kid’s school, the teens I work with
and my friends. Sometimes turning inward
actually broadens our horizon. Sometimes
being forced out of normal circumstances challenges us to clarify our calling
and focus on what matters. And sometimes
when we are pushed out of our familiar spaces we find that we are right where
we need to be and right where the Holy Spirit is busy at work.
Monday, September 7, 2020
Life's Heart
Sermon for Grace and St Stephen’s 9/6/20 Matthew 18:15-20, Romans 13:8-14
It’s September in Colorado which means the days will either
bring snow to the mountains or 90 degrees to our back yards. The aspens will start turning yellow, the
sunsets are starting earlier and the kids are back to school … sort of. Some kids are being home schooled, some kids
are doing online school and some kids are going to school carefully spaced 6
feet from the other children and with little cloth masks over their runny noses
and chatty mouths. Many of us are now 2
weeks into this new creature called pandemic schooling and while I could share
stories of technology glitches, websites not working and kids not understanding
how to do school while sitting next to all their toys …. What has really struck
me about this whole process is the mutual dependency and accountability created
between parents, students and teachers.
Three days in to online first grade I got an email from my
son’s teacher. She said “be brutally
honest, how is this on your end, please tell me what you think.” I was surprised and touched by this for a few
reasons. First, she wants to do a good
job, she wants to do the best she can and really teach the children. Second, she genuinely cares about the experiences
of the parents. And third, that is a
super brave email. Who does that? In a world of “don’t @ me” and unfollowing
and screaming and shouting … it is surprising and refreshing to find people
opening dialogue and wanting to learn from one another.
I responded with honesty but also taking seriously my
accountability in the situation. We are
in this together. I need to do my part
to have patience, a positive attitude and to constantly say to my child over
and over again “this is school, she is talking, go listen until she is
done.” And my kids are accountable in
the situation too. This is a unique
opportunity for them to learn at a young age how to take responsibility for
your own education. They need to pay
attention to instructions, know when to log in and navigate the various
websites for learning. And we all need
to be mindful of when to mute and unmute ourselves.
I thought about this schooling situation and the mutual
accountability it calls for as I read the Gospel reading from Matthew today because
it really is about accountability. It is
not saying “if someone makes you mad, take it to the parking lot and have it
out.” It is not saying “if someone
offends you, never speak to them again.”
It is also not suggesting that as part of every Sunday worship service
we hold an open mic “airing of grievances” and lay into one another.
Rather, it is a system of being accountable in love- a way
to bind together this body of Christ in the world. An admission that we will hurt each other
sometimes and a call for all of us to be accountable to one another so that we
can grow together in love- so that we can be for the world a beautiful family
in Christ.
Notice in these instructions from Matthew that after you go
to the person who has “sinned against you” directly and after you involve some
other members of the church and after you involve the church … if the
“offender” still “refuses to listen” then you are to treat them as a “Gentile
and a tax collector.” At first glance
this might seem like an invitation to write that person off as someone
different from you, someone outside of your circle, someone on whom it is
generally acceptable to despise and look down.
But … this is the Gospel, the stuff about Jesus and how does Jesus treat
the Gentile and tax collector? Anyone
who knows the Zacchaeus song knows Jesus didn’t write them off or toss them
aside as unworthy and hated. He broke
bread with them. In fact, the very next
passage is about the importance of forgiveness and Jesus’ instruction to
forgive not seven times but seventy times seven times.
This holding together the community stuff isn’t easy. I remember reading in a book in seminary that
it is hardest to be a pastor during a presidential election year.[1] And that was before COVID, before Twitter and
before shared Facebook memes. This holding
together the community stuff is about love, grace and forgiveness but also
accountability. Recognizing we all have
a part to play in this difficult thing we are doing called “thy will be done on
earth as in heaven” - this beautiful
thing we are doing called building the Kingdom of God.
Accountability means holding each other in love, not
letting each other give up, loving through the darkness and despair, holding a
vision of hope up for the hopeless to see, learning together, growing together,
being open to one another, remembering that we are not alone.
The passage from Romans simplifies our Christian calling to
“love your neighbor as yourself.” It
says “Owe no one anything, except to love one another; for the one who loves
another has fulfilled the law.” It
almost sounds as simple as “all you need is love?” … except that anyone who has loved anyone
knows love isn’t always so simple.
In his popular work “The Prophet” Lebanese poet Kahlil
Gibran writes these words about love and its depths:
When love beckons to you, follow him,
Though his ways are hard and steep.
And when his wings enfold you yield
to him,
Though the sword hidden among his
pinions may wound you.
And when he speaks to you believe in
him,
Though his voice may shatter your
dreams as the north wind lays waste the garden.
For
even as love crowns you so shall he crucify you. Even as he is for your growth so is he for
your pruning. Even as he ascends to your
height and caresses your tenderest branches that quiver in the sun, So shall he
descend to your roots and shake them in their clinging to the earth.
Like
sheaves of corn he gathers you unto himself.
He threshes you to make you naked.
He sifts you to free you from your husks. He grinds you to whiteness. He kneads you until you are pliant; And then
he assigns you to his sacred fire, that you may become sacred bread for God’s
sacred feast.
All these things shall love do unto
you that you may know the secrets of your heart, and in that knowledge become a
fragment of Life’s heart.”[2]
Love is not always so
simple or easy. It opens your heart to immeasurable
joy and elation but also pain and disappointment. Bravely risking love means opening oneself to
growth, change and accountability. It
means being held in something greater than oneself and holding oneself to
that.
Friends, we are being shaped, pruned, molded. It is love that makes my heart hurt when I
hear stories of friends mourning the loss of those dear to them to this
pandemic. It is love that makes my heart
hurt when the reality of racism and injustice is laid bare for all to see. It is love that made the tears trickle from
my eyes as a beloved child was baptized into the Christian faith last Sunday,
our witness of hope and faith in the future.
It is love that makes me ache for visits, hugs and in person community
as we used to know it. It is love that
draws forth an apology from my lips when I have let frustration turn into
impatience and harsh words for those who are enclosed in the same square
footage as me during these days of work from home, school from home … safer at
home. It is love that mixes together
immense gratitude and grief in the same heartbeat. It is love that we will see when we look back
at all the strange things we did like online school and worship in chalk drawn
lawn circles, all the new and difficult things we did to get through this
together. It is love that will carry us
through as this beautiful body of Christ doing this important work of kingdom
building.
Friday, August 7, 2020
Scars
We were gathered on the church lawn looking at chalk-drawn,
spaced-apart circles and hashing out last minute details for our first
in-person worship service since March. I was in a deep discussion with a newly
retired police officer about the police reform bill recently passed in our
state of Colorado. I heard the sound of rocks hitting chain-link fence and
immediately walked across the parking lot to tell my six and eight year old sons
to stop throwing rocks at each other. My eight year old said “but mom, I want
to get a scar!” I said “why would you want a scar?” He simply replied “they
look cool.”
While I can assume that he was thinking more “Harry Potter
lightning bolt” type scars, I thought about my own (less exciting) scars. My
kids love when I tell the stories of my scars, especially the permanent bump on
my lower lip. I tell them about the trip to K-Mart to get new shoelaces for my
sister. I was only two years old and sitting in the front part of the shopping
cart. I saw a beautiful pair of Smurf shoelaces. Surely, these were the ones
she would want. I tried to tell my family but after repeated attempts I took
matters into my own hands. I reached and reached and reached until … the next
thing I knew I was going home with my two front teeth in a plastic baggie and a
stitched lip.
I have changed a lot in the 37 years since I got that scar,
but it is still here on my body. A constant connection to that little girl. A
connection to that memory of my mother as a young mom, my big sister whom I
adored and that feeling of being very cared for even in scary times. My scars
are also reminders that I have been through hard things … that I can get
through hard things.
I recently overheard a conversation between my two sons. The
youngest said “my fish died and that was really hard and sad” my oldest then
said “but I had surgery when I was a baby and that is harder.” I do not know
why, but they were each trying to prove that they had endured something more difficult
than the other. I can understand then the appeal of a scar, a way of proving
that you went through something really hard. A sign for others and ourselves
that we can get through difficult things.
I thought about all of this as I sat in the sweltering sun
with my mask on, listening to the cantor and organist through the speakers on
the church lawn. We did it; we were together. It was very different than how we
worshipped before the pandemic, but as I looked up to the blue sky and watched
a yellow butterfly glide down over the carefully spaced apart heads I felt so
incredibly grateful. We were all together again. We were all getting through
something difficult. We are resilient and some day we will look at the cloth
face masks tucked away in the back of our closets and it will be our scar. Our
sign to ourselves and to others that we can get through difficult times.