Tuesday, November 24, 2009

THANKFUL

I have so many obvious blessings...it's ridiculous. For starters...I have an amazingly supportive husband, 4 brilliant and stunning daughters, many precious friends, both of my parents and my in-laws are healthy, active and invested in our lives...I have a lovely home, newer cars as well as a little bit of spending money...I truly do not lack one creature comfort. Yet, Rather that catalogue all of the more obvious things I am and should be thankful for...(there are many)...I want to share a few things that I am grateful for that I have found and identified more by accident, recovered under the layers of cynicism, despair, anger and doubt that I have wallowed in for nearly 2 years.


The last couple of years of my life have been a challenge for me emotionally and spiritually. My life has not followed the course I charted a few decades ago, certainly not an ideal situation for a type A control freak like me. If I were to judge my life by my previous christian-y standards...I would label where I now find myself as an epic failure. I had some pretty lofty ideas and expectations conceived and nursed for years in my 'fully-devoted' evangelical days that have completely crashed and burned outside the institutional Church. As painful as this season of loss has been, it needed to happen. Shedding some superficial fluff and 'me' centric idealism has helped me gain some much needed perspective on my life in relationship to the Kingdom of God. Before my slippery slope experience, I was only marginally aware...I think because my shiny sparkly faith, gianormous 'head' and personal ambition were in the way of 'having eyes to see'. I can say in this moment with honest conviction that I am thankful for the current shift in my life and the season of great pain that has come with it. As a result, my spiritual vision has improved, bringing Jesus and His Kingdom into greater focus. I'm learning to see again...and this is good.


In my previous spiritual life, I carefully constructed an environment for myself that made it impossible for me to be open to the ideas and 'otherness' of people not exactly like me. I approached every relationship and experience through a super sensitive evangelical filter, allowing me to dismiss the spiritual, intellectual and philosophical ideas of others, making me feel quite confident and powerful. Sometimes I'd overwhelm a threatening person with a clever apologetic argument and other times when feeling more provoked, I'd level a hostile attack, perhaps on their character. I rarely, if ever extended the courtesy of honestly listening to those who were alarmingly different from me...determining ahead of time that "there was no value in doing so."


Closing the door on my involvement in more traditional models of Christianity, specifically conservative evangelicalism, has allowed me the freedom to relax a little bit (I have a long way to go here) and intentionally expose myself to the ideas and philosophies of people very different from me. It's only just recently that I am able to truly regard people...to accept them and even love them...for who they are without feeling pressure to try to change or convert them. I am more able to honestly and openly listen to them like they matter...and even more, listen as if I had something I could possibly learn from them or their lives. Today, I am thankful that the painful reshaping season of my life is promoting a greater freedom and willingness for me have ears to hear.


The devastation and disappointment of watching years of purpose driven, name it claim it Christian belief-ism vaporize before my eyes, while at the same time grieving the loss of one of my dearest friends (who died of a malignant brain tumor several weeks after I turned '40')...pretty much crushed my spirit and most of my faith in anything. Up until then...I was just flirting with questions and doubts out on the slippery slope and the absolute terror it represented to me. Not long after Kelly died, my husband Jim and I were "asked to find another church home" by our pastor because we were rocking the boat and not "all-in" enough. Right then, what little was left of my faith and joy...drained out of me...and I began my dizzying descent on the slippery slope, catatonic...yet securely in the proverbial 'hand basket to hell'.


My intense feelings of fear, doubt and anger embarrassed and horrified me. I had little experience dealing with these ugly raw emotions especially in connection to my faith. I never needed to. Prior to the train wreck of my faith...I kept it carefully polished and very shiny. For me, there never seemed to be an appropriate time to feel anything other than self control, poise and blessed assurance. Fortunately...providentially? Jim and I stumbled upon an Emergence Christianity Cohort faith community just about the time I was hitting rock-bottom. This small community of self imposed exiles were living out their faith together in the trenches of a messy spirituality. They endured my pain and confusion and comforted me. They listened to my questions, first validating and then encouraging me and through their friendships and personal stories, they gave me something I thought I had lost forever...HOPE.


I heard a podcast recently by Rob Bell in which remarked that "unless we have experienced great pain or grief, we'll never have the capacity to experience great joy." This statement gives me incredible hope as I emerge from the darker side of my spiritual journey. I want to believe I've walked through the hardest part already. (I hope) I feel much less sorrow and rage now than I did two years ago. I see light looming on the horizon...I anticipate a coming season of great joy...and I am thankful for that.
















4 comments:

  1. I watch in wonder at those who used to be "all in" but are now in an entirely different place. Where we are ending up simply cannot be wrong. There is peace, love and hope returning to our words as we speak them out into the air. God is there. Here's to being NOT 'all in' anymore.

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  2. Joy,
    I am thankful that you pour out your thoughts here. I identify so much with some of the particulars of your journey and the new freedoms we are experiencing on the way. I believe the freedom comes as we "unlearn" all the answers. That tension you wrote about in your last post is part of picture. These older, widely accepted catagories of interpretation are no longer satisfying to our mind or spirit. I believe that is because God is relational (He lived in relationship with himself in eternity past long before we came along) and then invited us to live in relationship with Him. When we think we have it all figured out, or are all in, our EGO,-(Edging God Out) gets in the way and the dialogue stops there. God wants us to be partners with Him, which demands us to be involved in mutual talk, risk and change. That will play its self out differently for each one of us, and we must give that freedom to each other to find our own way. Is it scary?,do we make mistakes?, Hell yes! But today I feel much more alive and am encouraged by others (like you) on the journey. Keep pondering and posting.

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  3. ~Barb...thanks for reading my stuff...and I completely agree with you...Here's to NOT being "ALL-IN"...where we once were! WOOT.

    ~Randy...thank you for reading AND for leaving me a comment (o: Jim and I appreciate having your support and friendship thru all of this mess. AND BTW...you sir are also a word- smith as well...perhaps a blog is waiting to be born?

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  4. I wish I could communicate as well as you do.
    It is incredible the things we can look back at and be thankful for. Two years ago, I'm sure we wouldn't have felt that way at all, but today I am glad for it all.
    There were times when we or others in our lives would have quickly responded something like, "God works all things...". But living the pain makes those statements feel so trite and obnoxious. I feel like I can't even mention them right now w/o a hint of sarcasm (or something like that).

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