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Friday, June 17, 2022

 On Rainbows and Love in a Time of Pride

I realized last week that some Evangelicals are using Pride Month as a time to point out the "original origin of the rainbow." As Facebook friend Jake Lierman notes, other than the absurdity of using a theological story to make a scientific and historical point, the approach distorts a symbol of divine love to emphasize human distancing and division.  I am always struck by how necessary these religious people think it is to sermonize and respond to such cultural moments of reaching out.  Those gay, lesbian, and transgender friends use the month of June as a time to witness to their humanity, to share their joys and sorrows, to express their hopes for peace and justice, to gain full and safe access to the same rights and privileges as other Americans.  There is in response -- by many people who claim faith -- a kind of defensive categorization or distancing:  These people are not like us; they don't even know the Bible!

Well, perhaps, but ignorance of the Bible -- and of the teachings of Jesus -- is not something limited to the ones who don't go to church.  "Above all, Love," this Jesus would say.

I was reminded of this reality with a repost of an Instagram piece yesterday.  This reflection is part of a new AIDS Monument and Museum, which will open soon.  It is written by Cosgrove Norstadt, the husband of my dearest childhood friend, Jeff Foote.  The words stand on their own; there is no need for any other commentary.

“It was a Sunday morning in the Castro. We were having brunch at Bagdad Cafe and noticed a couple who obviously didn't belong. They stood out even if they had been tourists. We were serendipitously seated next to this couple. When my food came, the woman asked what I had ordered which led to some small talk and finally on to real conversation.

They were in town visiting their son Raymond who was dying of AIDS. Thelma, his mother, said that he’d been in the hospital over three months and his friends had dried up. Thelma and Ray, his father, had a large family but the family had tired of making the five hour drive to visit. They were left alone to tend to their dying son. Abandoned by friends and family.

My husband and I thought it was nonsense for this little trio to be left alone. We could offer something of great value with little effort to us. So we began visiting a couple of times a week which grew to daily visits. We would offer Thelma and Ray breaks to go out to dinner or just a nap back at their hotel.

The days turned to weeks and finally months. We spent many hours talking with this family. They were an Evangelical family, strict in their faith and in their greatest time of need, two gay men ironically came to the rescue. We were all a devastated microcosm of a real family. Our beliefs didn't matter, just Raymond.

Raymond finally passed. Thelma and Ray asked me to deliver the Eulogy. But, it wasn't just about Raymond. It was about his mother and father. We might have been "enemies" in another situation who called a truce (as Christ's example) to minister to the sick and ailing. We held on to each other to comfort their son and ourselves. We believed only in unconditional love during that time.

That fall, the family invited us to Thanksgiving dinner. We drove down and brought a bouquet of white roses with a single cardinal red rose, Raymond's favorite.

In Raymond's death, he brought some unlikely people together. He ministered to us as well and always referred to my husband and I as his mother's "gay friends.” Love was all that mattered to us during this time.”

May we all be so kind.

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Sunday, April 5, 2020

Sibelius' Gift in the Time of Pandemic

In 1899, Finland was a nation struggling against the encroaching power of Russia. Its journalists held a three-day meeting, the Finnish Press Pension Celebration of 1899, "a thinly veiled rally in support of freedom of the Finnish Press, then largely controlled by tsarist Russia" (Britannica online). Jean Sibeilius, working as a musician with an annual Finnish government grant, contributed to the event a set of nationalist musical works. The final piece was a tone poem, later labelled as Sibelius Opus 26, which Sibelius had entitled “Finland Awakes.”  It was introduced to the public by the Helsinki Philharmonic at the Paris World Exhibition of 1900. The piece became Finland’s most important national song, but its tune – or rather, part of it – found its way into other cultures and media. Most Christians know it as “Be Still My Soul.”  (The words to the hymn predate Sibelius; they are translated from Catharina von Schlegel’s 1768 poem.)

The first time that I heard the hymn’s tune in its original context, I was stunned. Sibelius’ composition only reveals this gem after a foreboding beginning, punctuated for several minutes while being interrupted by something uplifting along the way. And then the sheer beauty emerges. It builds, but the darkness returns, creeping in and challenging, only to be rebuffed as the tune tries and breaks through again. The calm energy takes over the rest, and the symphony unites and builds to its finale. One cannot help but be moved, and greatly encouraged.

If you listen, watch for the counter tune’s initial attempted entry at .48 into the piece. At about 2.15, the tune begins to return and build, but is challenged; about 2.50 it returns and increases. The cycle repeats about 3.20 to 4.00. And then at 4.15, parts of the tune build and then fall, build and fall, until calm at 4.58. And we hear it, softly at first among the flutes and oboes, then building. Tones of the ominous beginning struggle to fight through, but they are overwhelmed by 6.35; at 7.14 unity and celebration! Enjoy.




Sunday, September 1, 2019

Guns, God(s), and Thoughts and Prayers


Add my hometown to the endless list of places where mass shootings have occurred.  A 36-year old white male with an A.R. rifle killed seven and injured nineteen during a confusing ride through Odessa before his own death.  Somewhere in the midst of that run, the shooter sped through my old junior high school neighborhood, shot a postal worker, and took off in her van.  I am amazed at how much this shooting has affected me; since yesterday, I’ve felt generally ill and preoccupied, and sad.  Although we in the United States now experience one mass shooting every two weeks, according to an F.B.I. agent in today’s press conference, there is something different about these shootings when they hit close to home.

I can agree with Texas Governor Abbot on one thing: “I am tired of the dying.”  But that line in itself is disheartening; how long does it take us to become “tired” of the dying?

When these shootings occur, there are two immediate responses.  First, everyone sends or asks for “thoughts and prayers.”  Second, everyone thanks and praises brave first responders.  Both of these actions are noble.  Neither is enough.  Acknowledging the bravery and sacrifice of first responders is important.  In times like these, we know that we lean on their shoulders as they seek to protect us, and as we learned in the Odessa chapter, no routine stop is routine.  I cannot imagine the stress and exhaustion that law enforcement personnel must daily bear, and I join others in grateful admiration for these protectors and responders.  I wonder, however, if the litany of thanks and praise does not mask deeper problems.  We thank the responders because thanking them is one of the few immediate actions that we can do.  But we also thank them because enough acknowledgments can convince us that we have helped.  More gratitude and praise will lead them to more courage and fighting at the next shooting.

We must never doubt the sincerity of someone’s desire for thoughts and prayers, but all too often that move signals our lack of any perceived ability to help, or our own inability to see solutions or act for less violence.  God, after all, is somehow in charge and has a plan for us all.  Sometimes when a friend has a tragedy, I do want to send my thoughts and prayers; it’s a way of saying “I don’t know what to do other than pray.”  But that is the rub.  I think I do indeed know what to do before the next shooting.

I can certainly call on community and government leaders to help us return to a Godly, conservative morality.  The problem, we have begun to hear again, is “the evil acts of a handful of people,” as state Rep. Matt Schaefer said Saturday.  If fathers will not leave their wives and children, if discipline is used in the home, if “God-given rights” are protected, then the evil go away.  Often the refrain is slightly stronger: “Get God back in our schools!” they say.  I agree.  I call on legislators to increase funding for public schools, increase the minimum wage and provide better public transportation for mothers and fathers, and promote the discipline of caring and the virtue of selflessness.  I ask that Christians look to Jesus and seek to embody his model of justice and mercy, forgiveness and love.  I call on community leaders, pastors, and teachers to encourage contexts and communities of diversity, where fears, dreams, hopes, and actions bridge ethnicity and social status.  Watch as hate begins to go away.

And I can encourage action on sensible gun control.  Universal background checks, red flag warning systems, and outlawing military-style guns are widely supported measures.  The arguments here are so common and so tired.  We no longer see how sensible and reasonable these changes are.  It is time to say no to the NRA and to vote out legislators who remain beholden to that organization. 

After the El Paso shooting, I found myself embroiled in a social media “discussion” about guns and mental illness.  I pointed out that the mentally ill are rarely perpetrators of mass shootings and more often the victims of gun crimes.  My interlocutors found it difficult to see how anyone who was not mentally ill could kill in such a way.  But attitudes of the heart (such as hate) are not the same as deficiencies of the mind.  The painful truth is that “normal” people like you and me – people who have good days and bad, times of joy and moments of anger, desires for love and thoughts of revenge – can do horrible things. 

So I mourn the deaths of yesterday and today, and I recommit to doing what I can.  Will you join me?

Tuesday, June 11, 2019


Reflections on Confronting My Color Blindness
Stacy Patty
      
             Sometime around 1986 while in ministry in New York, I was attending Union Theological Seminary.  In a class on Theology of Culture, I was assigned the task of presenting and defending the black theology of James Cone, widely regarded as the founder of black liberation theology.  This was not a task I relished.  I read his God of the Oppressed carefully and repeatedly to try and understand.  But it was very offensive; Cone seemed to say that Jesus was black and that only those who had experienced blackness could comprehend the liberating Jesus.  But I had to complete the assignment, so I dutifully summarized what I took to be the book’s thesis and main points and then proceeded to explain that Cone was too offensive.  If black theologians want us to understand what they are saying, they must tone it down, seek common points of reference with normative theology, and go more slowly with their radical (even if perhaps good) proposals, I argued.  And then I took the barrage of strong, inflamed responses.  “You have not suffered!  You cannot understand!  You must repent!” seemed to be the sentiment, literally pointed at me, that day.  I don’t remember the exact words that day, but I will never forget one scene:  The young black minister in his fancy three-piece suit standing over me with anger and calling me out.  The professor – a white Methodist male of Southern heritage – remained silent.  I felt humiliated and defeated (“I was trying to help Cone and his followers!”).  I left angry (after all, I had been fired from one church by then; I had suffered!) and confused. 
            Over the coming weeks and months, I met with that professor, and two others – also coincidentally white Methodist males of Southern heritage).  They listened to my anger and confusion and whining and questions.  They offered encouragement, and over time, words of advice, but they never justified my thoughts that day in class.  I don’t know how long I remained angry and confused, and self-righteous.
            But one day along the way, it hit me.  The initial offense was necessary to wake me from my slumber, to begin restoring sight from my blindness.  As a white person growing up in West Texas, I always enjoyed excellent public schools within easy walking distance from home.  I only even know that there was another side of the tracks – literally – when my blue-collar parents brought Mandy in once a week to clean the house.  Occasionally I would hear the n-word, but it never really seemed anything other than an identifier; even so, I sometimes joined others in fixing things by “n-rigging” them, but that phrase “meant no harm.”  I never worried about getting into a college, or paying for it, really.  And I never gave a thought to any real concern of one day getting a job and raising a family in peace and prosperity.  I realized that my family legacy was one of hard work and strong faith, and thereby life successes, but I never gave any consideration to the many others whose hard work and strong faith left them hungry, homeless, or in extreme poverty.  And in adult life, I have been fired – twice so far, and nearly three times – but I’ve never lost the safety net of family and savings and the ability to borrow money at reasonable rates.  I’ve never been stopped by the police and feared for my life.  I’ve never been followed around a store as if I might steal something.  I’ve never been turned down for a job because of my color, or my inferior educational past, or my prison record due to a lack of legal funds for adequate defense.  I’ve never been told that my ancestors did not have a soul.  I’ve never had to realize that I don’t know my original last name.  I’ve never had to sit on the back of the bus.  For that matter, like most of my contemporary friends, I’ve rarely had to even ride a bus – they’re much too slow and dirty.  I’d never realized that mid-20th century laws regulated housing developments and distorted regional voting districts at the disadvantage of black families.  I’d never realized that the colleges and universities associated with the Churches of Christ were some of the last higher education institutions to integrate.
            And I’ve not really understood the Jesus of the Bible – a darker-skinned Jew who challenged religion and fought for social justice and dependence on God alone, with an end of all idolatries.  I’d never considered well, before my encounter with liberation theology, that the oppressed can teach me more about God than many European theological giants.  I’d never really understood suffering as a place close to God.  I’d never really listened to the words of spirituals.  I had not really known the Gospel.
            I still struggle with my own subtle racisms and/or attitudes susceptible to festering racism in me.  If I enter a restaurant and find only a few seats at the bar, I will likely avoid the one next to a black man.  I can easily make judgements about my black academic colleagues and their “over-the-top” cadences and rhetoric.  I walk through a D.C. neighborhood at dusk and avoid the black people on the side of the subway.  I enjoy a good black spiritual because of its “unique” style.  I’d rather not sit through a long and emotional worship service at a black church.  I admit that I remain complicit, even sometimes perhaps subconsciously, in structures of oppression and injustice that my own lifestyle supports or fails to confront.
            I am thankful for that class assignment, those professors -- Tom Driver, Christopher Morse, and Larry Rasmussen -- for Jim Cone, and for the many mentors, friends, and people of color who continue to help me see.

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11 June 2019


           


Monday, July 23, 2018


Why I Go to Christ in the Desert Monastery
Stacy L. Patty

So I did it again.  I left wife and job, packed basics and books, and headed up to the monastery for about two weeks.  When people learn that I am going, they always wonder why.  And for two weeks?  Here’s why:

The Location.  Christ in the Desert Monastery is described as “the most remote monastery in the Western Hemisphere.”  There are numerous monasteries in New Mexico, but none so far off the map, literally.  Drive an hour north of Santa Fe to Abiqui, then drive 14 more miles, past Ghost Ranch, to a turn-off, one-lane dirt and gravel road.  You have 13 more miles, so give yourself at least 45 minutes.  The road winds up the Chama River canyon, alternating between gentle curves and steep, hairpin turns among stunning mesa views with a kaleidoscope of colors.  The drive ends at the monastery, with guest rooms for 15 people.  The first thing one notices is the stark silence, only to be broken by a church bell marking the hours of prayer during the day.  And the deep blue sky.  And the midday clouds casting shadows on the cliffs all around.   And the afternoon shower, and the occasional rainbow.  The location makes it difficult to get to, but if you really want to have separation from the busyness and noise, there are likely few better places in the world.  If you just have to have a restaurant dinner, see that special ball game, or check up on the latest from Washington, you can certainly make the drive, but there’s that gnarly road and those lost three hours.  So settle in, and begin the adjustment to the life of the desert.

The Rhythm.  Before my first visit in 2011, a friend encouraged me to take the daily schedule seriously, and I am grateful to him.  These Benedictines follow the Opus Dei, the Divine Office, a series of seven “hours” of prayer appropriately placed throughout the day.  The prayers are largely chanting of the Psalms, punctuated with frequent doxologies, a simple hymn, and prayer.
On this visit, I did not arise for the first hour, Vigils, at 4:00 a.m.  I started at 5:00 with orange juice, two boiled eggs, and a slice of toast, followed by Lauds at 5:30.  By 6:15, I was back at my room, reading with the dawn, or walking.  At 8:45, Terce began, followed at 9:00 by work assignments (this year, I pulled weeds and oiled exterior doors).  Sext was at 1:00, followed by the main meal, with the monks serving a bounty of salad, beans, and white meat.  The meal began with hymns and prayers, and closed likewise.  The hour of None followed at 2:00, after which I enjoyed an afternoon of quiet, reading, writing, and walking.  At 5:45 I would go to Vespers, then share leftovers with the community at a light meal.  After more quiet time, Compline began at 7:30, followed by the Great Silence.  I usually sat at my door watching dusk and then dark arrive.  Over time, I find that my mind is more and more full of the day’s phrases – psalms, hymns, and prayers.

Often first-time guests come for only a couple of nights, which is sad.  It takes several days to adjust to the quiet, the stark beauty, and the day’s pattern.  But then comes something indescribable:  There is a kind of gentle inward peace and physical relaxation.  The rhythm of the hours, the walking to and from the chapel, the calls of the bell to prayer, the time to just “be,” invoke a certain kind of calm I rarely enjoy elsewhere.  I sense the presence of God, and it is as if nothing else matters – not the latest news, nor the work projects left unfinished, nor the bills still waiting to be paid, nor even rightful family concerns and responsibilities.  For now, in this sacred geography, I rest and renew.

The Limitations.  Until two years ago, the monastery did not have electricity or wi-fi.  Alas, both are available now, although the latter irregularly.  The rooms are quite simple, with concrete floors and an occasional spider web.  The climate can be cool at night and very hot in the afternoon; there are no air conditioners.   The food is basic, but given in generous supply.  Coffee is limited to instant mixes.  Adapting to these changes from normal life is at times a bit jarring but more so refreshing.  On my third day, I made the mistake of checking my email – a common computer in the breakfast room is provided for that purpose – only to find an alert about a supposedly very low bank account balance.  Immediately stress returned, until I found a way to actually verify the phish.  We typically live attached to our cell phones, going about our busyness among the noise and excess and exhaustion.  Experiencing limitations helps me to recover a sense of what matters and what does not.  It restores in me a desire to live more purposeful toward good living and being when I return from the monastery.

The Reading.  Rarely, and sadly, in the academic world do I focus on personal spiritual growth, and when not preparing for a lecture, I am drawn to contemporary issues in politics, science, and religion.  Somehow, the setting at the monastery seems not best suited for the mundane.  I brought enough theology and philosophy books to keep me going for a month, but I found myself drawn to Merton, Benedict, and the Desert Fathers instead.  How refreshing!

The Health.  At the monastery, one is not so quickly drawn to the kitchen for a late-night snack, or to the couch for an evening of numbing television.  You certainly can just sit and sleep, both of which are good and healthy.  But I found the desire to walk – at a good pace – each day.  I even went about five miles one morning.  And with only the ginger snaps made by Sharie to parcel out each day, I found the monastery fruit to actually taste good.  I only lost five pounds on this visit, but both mentally and physically I feel better.

The Encounters.  The monastery is supposed to be quiet.  One does not talk to a monk, nor do monks generally talk to each other.  All meals are eaten without conversation, though a reader does share from a designated book.  The guesthouse policy is silence, except for a common room.  But along the way, there are whispered hellos, after-meal exchanges, and short inquiries and answers.  And every time I have visited here, there have been unexpected but special meetings.  A young man appeared very unfriendly and sad until I realized he was there grieving the loss of his father in the previous week.  A woman knew Lubbock because she had played in an all-girl rock band at the air force base there in the early 1970s.  Once I ran into an old college friend there with his wife.  This time I paused to realize that a neighboring guest and I had once served on a spirituality and health committee in Lubbock.  And then there is Paul, a lanky, intelligent, octogenarian who works here each summer slathering shingle oil on exterior doors and exposed wood.  A Catholic theology teacher entering his 50th year at a Philadelphia prep school, he invites me for coffee once or twice each year; I ask him about the rituals, and he updates me on the brothers (monasteries have their own drama).  This year, on a final day at None, Leander – the oldest monk -- shuffled over to me after prayers, leaned in, expressed hope that my visit had been a blessing, and added that he knew I had been a blessing to Paul.  These kind of moments of grace coming through chance encounters are serendipities that even this introvert treasures.

The Takeaway.  While I am learning to be simply grateful, I do come back home with a bit of guilt that I get this rare pleasure in the summers.  My hope is that I come back different – less stressed, more resolute toward kindness, renewed in spirit and body, less caring about the urgent, and more committed to developing and maintaining habits of attentiveness to the presence of God in all of life.  In time, I have learned, I do not succeed.  But with each visit and return, perhaps I become a little more consistent over the long haul.

So why not just become a monk?  Oh, goodness, no!  I like beef too much.  Seriously, I cannot imagine being distant from my wife and family, nor from the life of the university, nor the engagement with social justice in the public arena.  But I am grateful that there are monks in the desert, and I am thankful for the blessing they give.