Thursday, January 17, 2019

Rules, Rules, Rules, I'm so Sick of Rules


Rules rule.  They tell us where to drive our cars, what to wear, how to conduct our social relationships, how to do our jobs, how to preserve our health, how to play our games.  Some are written in stone, others in sand.  Some are flexible enough to bend; others break easily. Some seem to fall from the sky; others are the fruit of debates and votes.  Some support traditions which seem arbitrary.  The worst kind are the unwritten ones, which lurk below the surface like land mines, ready to explode without warning.

I learned an important unwritten rule on my first day of school.  I had been seriously ill, and was not able to attend school until the academic year was well under way.  My mother tried to help by teaching me to read, which annoyed my teacher because she thought that was her job.  All the other children had slates and chalk; I had notebooks and pencils, which were rarely used in that classroom because they were too expensive and hard to get.  The teacher finished the day by having us gather around her while she told a fairy tale.  I thought this was rather strange because I thought everybody knew the same fairy tales I did.  But she seemed to be enjoying herself, soaking up the adoration of her listeners, so I tried to be as adoring as I could.  She concluded by saying, “If you like, you can draw a picture from this story.”

When I arrived at school the next day, I was horrified to discover that all the other children had drawn pictures on their slates, and were showing them off proudly to the teacher.  I had interpreted “if you like” literally, not realizing that drawing a picture was an order, not a suggestion.  I don’t recall what consequences, if any, I suffered from the misunderstanding, but I do remember how utterly stupid I felt.  I learned that teachers and other authority figures don’t always mean what they say, and their utterances have to be interpreted.  “If you like” is a veil over power – let’s pretend that you really want to do what I want you to do, and we’ll all feel good about ourselves.

I was taught that “please” is a nice word to use when we make a request.  But it actually means “if you please”, which implies freedom to refuse.  In situations of unequal power, it means absolutely nothing.  The underdog can comply with a smile, or snarl in expectation of being compelled to submit.  Sometimes manipulation is a strategic alternative.  But we always know who is holding the gun, and fantasize about the day when it will be our turn.

My confusion about rules was deepened when the teacher announced that a dentist was going to visit our class to demonstrate correct tooth-brushing technique, and we were all supposed to bring a toothbrush to practise with.  My grandmother absolutely forbade me to take my toothbrush to school on the grounds that it was “unhiegenic”.  As often happens in situations like this, she did not discuss the matter with the teacher, but left me to bear the brunt of her displeasure.  Torn between two layers of conflicting rules, I risked being struck by lightning no matter what I did.  My inability to solve the problem reinforced my growing belief that I was a stupid, unworthy person who would never get things right. Long before being exposed to any theology, I was haunted by the ghost of original sin which could never be erased.  Not good enough.  No matter how hard I tried, I would never be good enough.

The existence of a rule implies that there must be a rule-maker – someone with enough power to reward the compliant and make life unpleasant for transgressors.  Penalties vary from torture, imprisonment and death to social disapproval and loss of status.  If the law-giver is God, the menu of carrots and sticks extends even into the after-life.

Rules have one thing in common: they awaken resistance.  Almost anything becomes attractive once there is a rule against it.  We want to flex our muscles, test our power, find out what we can get away with.  Perhaps it is way of testing where we fit into the pecking order.  It feels empowering to frustrate the minions of law enforcement.  Those who can break rules openly without being challenged are virtually gods.

If we curb our rebellious impulses, we expect to be rewarded.  If we do everything right and still don’t get the brass ring we expected, we wail, “Why is this happening to me?”  Why is the vending machine of blessings not working as it is supposed to?  Did I overlook something?  Is the Rule-Maker unjust? Or is everything random?  Since the time of Job, just about every theologian has taken a kick at that particular conundrum. But the questions continue.

In 1973, when I was a newly-minted confirmed Anglican, my parish priest asked me to teach the confirmation class. I told him I was completely inadequate for the task.  He said, “You have just been through the course.  The curriculum is so complex that it requires a university degree to understand it.  And you have teaching skills.  You are the best qualified person available.”  Because I had not yet learned that no is not a four-letter word, I took on the role of spiritual guide for half a dozen twelve-year-olds.

Before the first class, a woman I had never seen around church delivered her red-headed daughter, pronouncing “It’s time to get her done.”  I smiled and kept my thoughts to myself.
My pupils sat passively around the table, waiting for the magic to happen.  If they showed up for six weeks, they would get confirmed.  Photos would be taken and documents would be signed.  Their parents would be happy.  As far as they knew, that’s how things had been done from the beginning of time.

I tried to get a conversation going.  Their faces were blank, reminding me painfully of my first day of teaching.  Clearly, my skills were not up to the task.  I would have to rely on the wonderful curriculum which required a university degree to understand.

Suddenly, the red-headed girl broke the spell.  “Why should we believe in God?  How do we know there is a God?”

I silently thanked God for her presence, anticipating a lively discussion.  Self-disclosure, sharing of secret thoughts, perhaps even a teachable moment or two.

The highest-status girl in the group fixed the newcomer with a withering stare.  “You just have to, that’s all.”

This statement of the Rule of Blind Faith put an end to the matter.  It was above discussion.  I surreptitiously looked at my watch, wondering how in the world I was going to survive the rest of that hour.

The red-head never returned.  I didn’t investigate, hoping her mother didn’t realize that she was skipping class.  I wasn’t familiar with the concept of spiritual rape at the time, but I was convinced that the worst thing that could happen to that girl was to be dragged to the communion rail for the hocus-pocus of laying-on of hands in the name of a god she had not been introduced to.

It didn’t take me long to realize that the confirmation curriculum might as well have been written in ancient Hebrew.  In the weeks that followed, I tried to shed some light on the basics – the Lord’s Prayer, the Creed, the ten commandments, highlights of the catechism.  My charges waited quietly for it to be over.

“These kids don’t have a clue!”  I told the priest. “No way are they ready to be confirmed.”

He shrugged and invoked the Rule of the Expediency of Jumping Through Designated Hoops.  “They go to class, they get confirmed.”

Horrified, I made a pact with my husband that we would not permit the confirmation of our unborn children until they were at least sixteen and willing to question the status quo.  Some years later, I volunteered to give confirmation lessons, provided it could be a two-year program, the first year on general Christian belief, lifestyle and service, and the second year exploring the specific peculiarities of the denomination.  My offer was declined.  I was not surprised.  For the convenience of the patrons of the church machine, the most important commitment anyone will ever make is carried out like a shotgun wedding.

Sometimes our rules serve us; sometimes they break our spirits; sometimes they lead us to perdition.  But they will never leave or forsake us.  Even in Paradise, we need to know on which side of the road to drive our cars.

Monday, December 31, 2018

The Edge of Eternity


ON THE EDGE OF ETERNITY

Sometimes, it only takes a single sentence to change the way I see life.

Recently, I was whining to a friend that I was, once again, on Square One of a brand new game board.  She looked at me with complete lack surprise and said, “All days are like that.”

She was just stating the obvious.  But it was not obvious to me.

My childhood keepers taught me that if I worked really hard and obeyed all the rules, I would be successful and would be rewarded accordingly.  So I set out to work hard and discover what the rules were.  I had absolute faith that one day, after I had laboured mightily and mastered all the rules, I would play a flawless game. Finally, I would be grown up, and know exactly what to do in every circumstance. Life would be gloriously domesticated.  No bumps, bruises, or bug bites.

My lack of progress convinced me that I was stupid and lazy.  I overworked everything, and avoided challenges that I was not confident of conquering.  Ultimately, I gave up on myself and decided that serving other, more deserving people was the only way I could justify my existence.  I conceived a romantic scenario about achieving immortality by dissolving myself in others.

One day, I read a sentence that punctured my balloon.  “If I am here to serve others, what are others here for?”  I suspect that this was supposed to be a joke, but it hit me hard.  If serving is such a privilege, and it is more blessed to give than to receive, shouldn’t everyone have a chance to do it?  Isn’t it actually a kind of exploitation to do things for people just so I can feel better about myself?

I gradually started asking questions like “What do I really want?” “Does this really work?” and “Is this in the best interest of all concerned?”

I also noticed that the rules were not as durable and universal as I imagined.  A passionate young clergyperson informed me that rules cease to be valid when they no longer serve the people for whom they were made.  I was unable to integrate that thought into my world view, but it left a dent in my delusions.

When my mother died the day after my 71st birthday, I no longer had anyone’s needs to juggle but my own.  The questions that had been brewing in the back of my mind migrated to front and centre.  Welcome future shock.

The rules are not what they were.  Nothing is certain but uncertainty.  I can’t control anything that is worth controlling.  Every day is a leap of faith into the unknown.

Scary stuff.  But it is also an adventure.

Every day, I am standing on square one of a new game board.  My mission, should I decide to accept it, is to discover what works for me today, and what doesn’t.

Let the game begin.  I'm not ready, but nobody ever really is.

Monday, August 27, 2012

THAT'S WHAT WE DO

(Sermon delivered by Christine Richardson at her husband Doug’s memorial service in May 2012)
One day, Doug and I were preparing to anoint and pray for a man who was in desperate need of God’s love and light.
He was crying. He asked, "Why? Why do you bother?
Why waste your time on a piece of garbage like me?"
While I was still trying to figure out a fancy theological answer to that question,
Doug answered.
"We care for people. That’s what we do."

During his life, my husband was most fully alive
when he was reaching out to people in trouble.
At those times, he forgot about himself,
his problems, and his insecurities.
He freely offered the unconditional, unlimited love of God
and his own love along with it.

Before Doug became a priest,
he would drag all kinds of people home,
expecting me to feed and comfort them.
As the children were growing up,
they got the idea that it was normal
to get involved with people in trouble.
That was often inconvenient,
but those were the times when I felt really proud of my family.
We cared for people. That’s what we did.

Ordained ministry slowed Doug down a bit.
In small communities, people were not that eager
to have the neighbours notice their vehicle in our driveway.
Respectability crept in, bit by bit.
But from time to time, something drastic would happen,
jolting Doug back into an understanding of who he was
and why he was here.
The core of his identity was that of
an outcast reaching out to other outcasts.

We are all outcasts at some level.
We don’t fit in because we are not rich enough,
not clever enough, not popular enough;
because our skin is the wrong colour
or we grew up on the wrong side of the track.
Even those who are fortunate enough to be classified
as beautiful people and pillars of society
experience private agonies that often explode
into destructive behaviour.

Even Jesus, the sinless lamb of God,
was an outcast.
He was conceived out of wedlock.
He was a refugee in Egypt.
Instead of leading a normal, predictable life,
he became a wandering maverick preacher
who turned people’s ideas of success upside down,
criticized the religious establishment,
and spent quality time with people who needed his help
rather than people who could further his career.
Scripture tells us that he was despised and rejected of men,
a man of sorrows, acquainted with grief.
(Isaiah 53:3)His friends ran away when he needed them most,
and he was executed for blasphemy.
Perhaps the pain he felt
when he was misunderstood and rejected
made him especially tender around those who were sick and needed a doctor,
those who were lost and needed a shepherd,
those who were spiritually dead and needed a Saviour.

When we surrender our lives to Jesus
and call ourselves Christians,
we don’t have to look far to see
who we are and why we are here.
Holy Scripture makes it plain that we are children of God
and we are here to do God’s work on earth,
just like Jesus did.
The Holy Spirit works in us and through us.
Like Jesus, we care for people. That’s what we do.

Our baptismal covenant comes in a variety of forms,
depending on our age and religious tradition.
In one way or another,
we confess our need of a Saviour,
renounce the lure of the world, the flesh, and the devil,
affirm our belief in the Christian faith,
and promise to participate in the business of God’s church.
In the Anglican tradition,
these promises are made on our behalf by sponsors
when we are adopted into the Body of Christ as infants.
We reaffirm them for ourselves
when we are old enough to understand what they mean.

One of the baptismal questions
in the Book of Alternate Services is:
Will you seek and serve Christ in all persons,
loving your neighbour as yourself?
That question cuts right to the heart of the matter.
All our preaching, teaching, healing, helping, and reaching out
has a single focus: finding Jesus in everyone we interact with.
Jesus said that whatever we do to the least of people,
we do to him.
When we seek and serve Jesus in another person,
we are doing the work
that Jesus has called us to do on his behalf.
Our power to do good is the greatest power
we have on the human level.
When we carry the power of the Holy Spirit,
we share in the ultimate power in the universe,
God’s very nature.

Saint John wrote boldly,
No man has seen God at any time.
If we love one another, God lives in us,
and his love is perfected in us . . . 1 John 4:12
God is love, and those who abide in love abide in God,
and God in them. 1 John 4:16b
The power of divine love is transformative.
The Spirit we share has the power
to change a person from the inside out.
When we remain in Christ and work in His strength,
anything can happen.
 
As Christians, we have been given the mandate to
preach, teach, baptize, and heal.
The visible church on earth is a sacramental sign
of the Body of Christ alive and at work.
We have built gathering places,
formulated liturgies and prayers,
composed music, drama and dance.
We have ordained and commissioned specialized workers,
argued over theology and forms of worship.
We have even gone to war to prove who was the most righteous and pleasing to God.
Sometimes Christians get so involved in servicing the system
that they forget
why the system was developed in the first place.
Keeping the doors of a building open
can become more important
than keeping people’s hearts open.
When a church community
measures its success by numbers --
how many dollars, how many people, how much staff –
it is terminally ill.
It is a body without a soul, a zombie.

For the last ten years or so,
Doug foresaw that the institutional church would collapse under its own weight
and be reborn.
His work as a priest was not to tell people what God was saying to them,
but to help them find out for themselves.
He worked to encourage God’s people to reclaim their heritage as children of God,
living stones in God’s temple,
kings and priests actively engaged
in furthering God’s kingdom.

This diocese, like many other parts of the church,
is facing loss.
What worked yesterday isn’t working any more.
What we thought we had is falling apart.
At a time like this, we must ask ourselves
how God is calling us to respond.
Is this our time of renewal?
Are we dead, or are we just asleep?
Have we forgotten who we are?
Where is the path?
What do we need to walk it?

What are the minimum requirements to be a church?
Jesus Christ, plus at least two people
who are willing to let him into their circle.
The church is not an organization.
It is an organism – something alive.
As long as there is life in it, it will grow.

How do we begin?
We put God first in our lives,
and follow where Jesus leads us.
We seek and serve Jesus in others,
and reveal Jesus to those whom we serve.
We care for people. That’s what we do.