
Hello from my small corner,
It’s turned colder again. After a beginning of a week that allowed for walking in merely a t-shirt or a long sleeve, yesterday I had my winter coat on, and this morning the little abode is chilly (or beyond) as the wind works its way through the windows typical of an old building whose windows are probably a century old. And March is always an unpredictable month, teasing Spring to the point the little flowers will poke up only to be lured into a late winter’s freeze or early Spring snow. In spite of our knowing this probable course of events, we are regularly pulled into our desire for warmth so easily, daring to believe Spring has sprung.
The power of suggestion, our desire for warmer weather at the end of the winter season, and also in the midst of Lent, regularly convinces us that the magic of Christmas and hot chocolate, the kindness that characterizes the holidays that seems too often to freeze into banks of grey frozen snow will soon become hospitable once again. I know what even a hint of buds on a tree or bush provides a sense of renewal that turning my post-holiday sadness toward happier thoughts, renewing my energy and restoring my hope. Yes, the pattern is well-known to me, and yet my desire for “spring to just get here now,” which will ultimately be dashed when sub-30s return or the hint of snow reappears, happens every year. Part of that is choosing to remain in a geographic location with four seasons.
What is also apparent is that profound reminder that when it comes to some things, we have little or no power. That is not to say we cannot influence some things more easily than perhaps realized, but when it comes to most things, actually power is minimal at best. Having more time to ponder, I find myself returning to some of the things I found interesting, intriguing, and maybe even confounding from my classes as a seminary student. I remember one of my professors describing our journey through seminary in the following manner. We entered seminary (titled junior year) believing we knew what it meant to be faithful or how we understood God. By our second year (titled middler year) we were now unsure of anything we held true when we began. The third year (internship) we were attempting to put theological knowledge into practice. And by our fourth year (titled senior year) we understood faith and practice of that faith to be the grace of God that provided any possibility of a faithful life. There is both a wonderful promise as well as a simultaneous reminder of our fragility. The Biblical concept currently ruminating for me is the concept of “stranger.” It is integrally connected to the idea of power and faith for me. The only real power I have is how I treat others or how I let their treatment affect me. And faith is a tenuous thing. Where is God in those moments I feel that God is the stranger? What happens when God seems distant or unreachable?
Isaiah notes in the 55th chapter, my thoughts are not your thoughts and my ways are not your ways. This is a verse I find most comforting and again most complexing. Can we truly understand God’s intimate plan if we cannot fathom his thoughts or actions? Does that make God the stranger? Would that make us the child who must perceive God as the ultimate stranger/danger? That might be the easy response – the simple reason to walk away, but as noted there is, for me, comfort in that verse. The concept of stranger is immersed throughout the verses of the Bible. The Hebrew word Ger (גֵר) or Zar (זָר) includes the idea of foreigners, outsiders, even aliens. Particularly in the Old Testament, the chosen of God are referred to as sojourners and refugees at one point living in a land, not their own, and subjected to heavy toil and bondage. And as one moves into the New Testament both the Hebrews and eventual Christians are commanded to show compassion, justice, and love. It seems all too apparent even now that the commandments of God are difficult for us. Thoughts and ways are not the same. From the Old Testament command in Leviticus to treat the stranger as native-born to the New Testament and Jesus example of radical welcome, the scriptures are full of examples of welcoming the stranger regardless the customs or laws in place.
Deuteronomy (whose very meaning is second giving of the law) 10:18-19 reads, “ [The Lord] defends the cause of the fatherless and the widow, and loves the foreigner residing among you, giving them food and clothing. And you are to love those who are foreigners, for you yourselves were foreigners in Egypt.” It is a difficult thing to believe that even for someone illegally here, we are to welcome them. Can I say such a thing? I believe I theologically can, but more profoundly, I must. Escaping injustice, sojourning from a place of danger to somewhere else must be beyond merely a question of borders, particularly for us who struggle with the sense of legality. In the earlier verses, the author of Deuteronomy writes, “Yet the Lord set his affection on your ancestors and loved them, and he chose you, their descendants, above all the nations—as it is today. Circumcise your hearts, therefore, and do not be stiff-necked any longer.” The importance of loving the other is expressly noted. And anyone who has felt the power of being loved, particularly when we are feeling unlovable, understands that power, the transformation that occurs for the one being loved.
However, the one doing the loving, the one who believes that loving is the greatest of all (1Cor 13:13), follows the greatest of the Commandments. As a person with a doctoral degree in argumentation, my study of disagreement is pretty extensive. We often use power unethically particularly when it comes to wanting to prove our correctness in something. Believing we so completely understand God or have some insider knowledge because of our faith is to place ourselves outside of the grace of God, which is God’s love. when we argue believing we must win completely, we have lost a fight to love people profoundly. The most powerful thing we have in our humanness is our relationships with the other. It is the very thing that defines us, has the potential to transform us, and it is in our loving the other that power is used most ethically.
And yet I know, as I look at my own life, the times I failed to do this are readily apparent. It’s difficult to love first and ponder later. No matter how empathetic I wish to be my selfishness gets in the way. The battle to love first to treat all strangers as fellow sojourners, that is the way of God as I understand it – perhaps it is there that to duality of my thoughts are not your thoughts and my ways are not your ways is most apparent. And yet even the gospel of that Old Testament text from Isaiah is indeed good news because it reminds us there is a better way. The year I traveled on a Lutheran Youth Encounter team, there was another much more accomplished group named Spiritbourne. The following is from them.
Thanks as always for reading.
Michael









