Sunday, November 29, 2020

Cleaning up the Sh*t

 

Cleaning up the sh*t

 

       Ever so often I have a bowel movement that simply astonishes me. Now, I know I have crossed over into Those Things No One Wants To Know About. Nevertheless, it is something that needs must be shared—as untowardly and disgusting as it is. My feces are, from time to time, a source of Wonder and Amazement to me that boarders on the holy.

          My first reaction is to ask: “How in the Lord’s Name could that have come out of me?” There aren’t many people I can have a conversation about this with—those who’ve I’ve tried to engage are generally disgusted though their disgust is often tinged with curiosity.

          “You look at your…your…you know…?” some have asked.

          “My shit?” I reply. “Yes I do.”

          It is always of interest to me that most people I’ve honored with my observations about my solid waste tend to be quite squeamish about such a natural function. It would never occur to me not to check out each wipe and then to examine the product of my alimentary canal prior to sending it on it’s way to poo-poo heaven. Yet, I’ve been severely discouraged from sharing my observations and the resulting comments and reflections prior to the Big Flush. My wife is convinced I think too much about bodily functions; however, they fascinate me in some primitive, primal way.

 

          (I once took part in an “ice-breaking” exercise that divided the people involved around preferences. The leader would say, for example: “Vanilla to the right, Chocolate to the left”, and we would organize ourselves by virtue of which ice-cream flavor we preferred. Or the leader might have said: “Summertime to the right and Wintertime to the left,” or “Liberals to the right and Conservatives to the left” (that would cross us up a bit!) or “Airplanes to the left and Trains to the right.” Those would divide the room around favorite seasons, political persuasions and preferred mode of long-distance transportation.

          The “divide the room” instruction that left everyone but me standing still in confusion was this: “Folders to the right and crumplers to the left.” Only I—and the leader, obviously—in a room of 25 people recognized one of the cardinal distinctions of life…the one having to do with the treatment of bathroom tissue. I moved resolutely to the left of the leader. No one else moved. And even after he explained the meaning and import of the distinction, most of the people in the room made mews of disgust and claimed to have bathroom amnesia. They didn’t know, they claimed, which way they treated toilet tissue and refused self-righteously to close their eyes, take deep, regular breaths and try to remember something so often done in the course of life.

          It was then that two things occurred to me: my wife might be right about the inordinate attention I pay to my toilet practices and the leader of the exercise might be someone to engage in that conversation so few want to have!

         

          I just checked my word count on this document—506 words—enough to satisfy the requirements of most high school essays. And I’ve only begun to flush out my thoughts about defecating and squeeze them into words. So, it is perhaps honorable and right to move on to why all this is so important to me and such a vital image for ministry. That’s what it is, by the way, a metaphor for ministry.

 

“SH*T HAPPENS”, is a favorite bumper sticker of our time. (It might be worth the money of a marketing firm to do a survey of folks who like that bumper sticker. There’s no telling what they might learn about the wants, needs and attitudes of the sub-culture who wants to proclaim that insight to those following them in traffic.  I would be tempted to have that bumper sticker myself if my car wasn’t often parked by churches. There is something both fatalistic and well-adjusted about its sentiments. Fatalists, by nature, may tend to be well-adjusted people—folks who take the inconsistencies and disappointments of life in stride, with a shrug and a barely imperceptible rolling of their eyes. Then they move on to what comes next.

I once had a priest friend who was the Rector of a historic old Anglo-Catholic parish. Don, let’s call him ‘Don’, and I were having lunch about a week before he was going to retire and totter off to live out his life on an island off of Somewhere, far away from people and crowds and the Episcopal Church. It was at that lunch that he told me the story he’d been carrying around untold for most of his life. (I’ve noticed how often people tell me really important stuff just as they’re setting off for someplace where I won’t be able to pursue them for more details. For example, people drop bomb-shells as I’m greeting them at the church door after the Eucharist. “How are you today, George?” I’ll say, innocently enough. And they’ll reply, “much better now that the surgery is over” or “not too good, but the final court date is next week” or “I’m fine but I don’t think my daughter will ever be the same.” Then, before I can react or respond, they’re through the door and on their way to their car and someone else is there, waiting to tell me something to get it off their chest and escape.)

It was like that with Don. He was packed and ready to go. We were eating crab salad and drinking a chilled white wine. He probably figured he’d never see me again—and since it’s been 15 years and I haven’t, that was a good bet. So, one foot out the door and the other on a dropped piece of seafood, Don told me this story:

“For over 45 years I prayed every day to God to grant me a wish. What I asked God for was to speak to me, out loud and in English, and tell me what to do next. It started when I was in college and deciding whether or not to go to seminary and be a priest. I prayed and prayed and prayed—with all my heart and soul—‘tell me what to do next!’ But God never answered that prayer. I muddled on through life, making some difficult choices, some painful decisions, always pleading in my prayers each day for divine guidance, for God’s direction, for some help sorting out my life.

“I even gave up on ever getting an answer to that prayer, though I prayed it every day of my life for over 45 years. But I kept praying it, even when I had despaired of an answer. I kept praying for God to speak to me out loud and in English and tell me what to do next. I simply couldn’t stop. I couldn’t appear to have lost my faith. So, on and on I prayed.”

I was making a dent in my salad and my wine since Don was doing all the talking. I was thinking how I’m not sure I ever prayed for anything for 45 days or 45 minutes, much less 45 years. Then he dropped the bomb.

“But about a year ago, my prayers were finally answered,” Don said, turning his attention to eating and leaving me, fork half-way to my mouth, staring open-mouthed at him.

After a stunned few minutes that gave Don time to ask the waiter for some more rolls—they really were quite good—I finally found my voice and said,softly: “God spoke to you?”

Don nodded as he chewed.

“Outloud?” (Softer still.)

Another nod and a sip of wine. 

  “In English….” I was whispering the way you might inside the Sistine Chapel, or at Stonehenge, or if you saw Elvis sitting across from you.

Don looked up and shook his head. “I can’t hear you,” he said, “you’re whispering.”

I felt like my throat was closing and my lungs were in my mouth. Finally, after a couple of tries, I said it loud enough for him to hear: “God spoke to you in English?”

“Yes,” Don replied, reaching over politely to take the folk from my hand and lay it on my plate. “It was most definitely English, though he had some sort of accent—Middle Eastern, I imagined, though it could have been from Baltimore.”

God with a Mid-Atlantic accent—it was all I could do to keep from leaping across the table and dragging it out of him.

“SO WHAT DID GOD SAY?” I asked, between clenched teeth, a moment from major systemic failure accompanied by spitting out my lungs on the table.

Don took a drink of wine, wiped his mouth neatly with his napkin, leaned forward across the table and said (I swear he said this!): “He did not seem pleased to be speaking with me, a tad annoyed, in fact, but he did speak out loud, in English and told me what to do next. ‘Don,’ God said, ‘do the next thing.’ Then it was over. The room smelled faintly of some spice—coriander or ginger, I’m not sure which.

 

          Okay, so I embellished the story a little, just a tad, as Don would say. But the essentials are there. And they are—I’m telling you this while holding my hand over my heart (which makes typing rather awkward)—just as I told them. God finally relented—like the householder awakened from his sleep—and gave Don the crumb he’d been begging for over most of his life. And what was the Revelation Don had spent 45 years prying out of the Deity? Was it some message that would bring world peace or end hunger on the planet? No! Was it the Secret to Happiness? No! Was it a message for the Ages? No, again.

          What God told Don, as near as I can tell, was simply this: “Sh*t happens, Don. Move on to the next thing.” End of transmission. God signing off.

 

          For about six years I went to a Jungian analyst every week. His name was Victor and he practiced in his condominium. Whenever he came to greet me and lead me to his office we would pass a bathroom. Victor would invariably say to me, “do you want to wash up?” And he said it like that—like the words wash up were in italics. I never did want to wash up, but after a couple of years I asked Victor why he always asked me that.

          “I ask everyone,” he said.

          “But why?” I asked. “The people that see you wear suits, they’re not coming from working in a garage.”

          Victor, who could talk about the most outrageous secrets of my soul with a straight face and without batting an eye, actually blushed. “Well,” he told me, shyly, “Sometimes people need to…how should I put it?...void their bowels…before a session.”

          “People need to shit before they talk to you?” I asked, a little startled.

          “Oh yes,” he told me, “sometimes the body reflects the psyche’s needs. People need to share their soul’s shit and the body shows them that truth.”

          I always thought Victor was a little weird—in a creative but dangerous way—but I knew then he was a genuine nut-case. I thought that until a day when I had secrets to share I hadn’t even told myself yet. Just as I settled into the leather armchair across from Victor’s identical chair, I felt cramps that either meant I had to “wash up” or I was having labor pains.

          “I have to wash up….” I said, leaving the room.

          When I came back, Victor said, calmly, “the plunger in under the sink if you need it….”

          “You don’t mean….” I started.

          He nodded. “Sometimes the toilet stops completely up around here.”

          I had flushed twice. It was the most painful and important 50 minutes I’d ever spent with him.

          (Actually, the “labor pain” image isn’t bad either—but now I’m writing about shit.)

 

          The word itself: shit, is interesting enough. It’s definitely from Old English—the most ancient form of our language. I find it fascinating that some of the most vital and basic words in the language—those “four letter words”—have survived almost intact from the earliest form of our common tongue. I guarantee you the “seven words you can’t say on television” from that old George Carlin comedy routine, are mostly from that pre-historic version of English. The funny thing is that you actually can say those words on television now!    

          And you need a word for it, after all. Besides eating and sleeping, passing food and making water are the most common of human activities. Some of the words we come up with to avoid saying “shit” are, at the very least, embarrassing. Think about it: “poo-poo”, “kai-kai”, “dukey”, “drop a load”, “take a crap”, “go poopy”, “number 2”—I mean, really, it’s hard to say any of that stuff with a straight face.

          Yet, defecating is the great leveler. Anyone you know or meet or view from afar must pause in the course of their day to do it. When people who teach public speaking advise shy students to “picture your audience in their underwear”, they aren’t going far enough. Picturing Catherine Zeta Jones or Sandra Bullock in underwear would more than likely leave me speechless rather than making me confident to talk. What really would give me courage in front of a scary audience would be to see them all on toilets, reading the paper, grunting and pushing and sighing in relief. President Lyndon Johnson may be the exception that proves the rule. It’s said that he would invite people into the Oval Office and when they arrived they would find him on the crapper with the door open. Carrying on a conversation with the most powerful man in the world while he was going poopy tended to intimidate even the most aggressive folks.

 

          Elephant poop, I’ve discovered, is one of the most advanced form of fertilizer. Something about what elephants eat and maybe even something about the insides of elephants—I’m not sure. But there is a farm up in Goshen that has elephants, and we have a member of the parish who will go up there with his truck and bring back a truck-load of elephant poop to put on the flower beds in the parking lot of St, John’s. Stuff does grow there like crazy, so maybe the elephant dung is the reason.

          If you own or have ever owned a dog, you know well how certainly we can get obsessed by shit. You walk your dog, a plastic bag in your pocket if you are a good citizen, and you beg the dog to squat and do his/her business so you can take it home in the bag and tell whoever you live with that Poochie has been a good dog. How crazy is that—grown up humans who build their life around the defecation habits of another species all together? But it is true—true as the day is long…shit matters.

 

          There’s a marvelous portion of a Robertson Davies novel—I can’t tell you which because my memory is so bad and I’m too lazy to use the Internet to find out—about a violin maker who buries his products in shit for a year to properly age them and make them sound better. Everyone in the novel agrees that this violin maker is the best in the world. Robertson Davies is, if I may slip into my old English major thinking, obviously pointing out, symbolically, just what Victor, my Jungian analyst would say—it’s in the shadow where the power of life lives, it’s in the shit of life that we find the meaning of existence. Something like that. Too long for a bumper sticker, admittedly, but there is something to it.

 

          It’s like the ducks my grandmother Jones owned. She always had three or four and they were her ‘pets’ since I never remember eating a duck at her house. I imagine she just liked the way they waddle around and that they can be both fierce and friendly—just like she was. Gram maw Jones didn’t have a bathroom in her little house up on the long hill outside of Conkintown. She had a two seat outdoor toilet about 50 feet up the hill from her back door. If you had to go at night, you used what we called a ‘slop bucket’, though surely there is a better name for it than that, then carried the porcelain ‘bucket’ out and poured it in the out house. I was always fascinated by the outhouse—like, why were there two openings in the wooden seat…did two people ever do #2 at the same time, reading the torn-up Sears catalog while passing the time and their bodily waste? I somehow can’t picture that. And, even though I am already judged guilty of being too, too interested in the process of elimination, the indoor thing made me anxious sitting there, over in the corner of the bedroom with a piece of wood on top to, I suppose, lessen the smell. So, even in the dead of winter, I would go out to the outhouse, galoshes over my bare feet because of the cold and snow, to use the outhouse. And when I got there, carrying an old flashlight, I’d have to shoo the ducks away from the door to get in. I was much older when I realized that the bodily waste and whatever it was we always threw a handful of onto it after #2—what was that stuff, a white powder of some kind?—produced heat. Even though the outhouse was made of wooden boards you could look between in some places, it was never as cold as the outside. The ducks were just trying to stay warm. Shit has its uses, after all.

 

          Since writing this has made me remember that we did, honest, sometimes use catalog paper—slick and not very effective—there was often toilet paper in the outhouse as well. A friend of mine who worked with me at St. John’s for two years before becoming a priest in New York had spend several years teaching in a school way off in the bush in western Africa. I once asked him what he missed most being so far from what we simply assume is ‘civilization’. “Toilet paper”, he replied. “Europeans who visited the village would bring rolls of toilet paper that were as valuable as money for barter.” And when he came home, he told me, he had to flee from the first American Super Market he went to because when he came to the toilet paper aisle he was simply overcome by the variety and quantity that was stacked there. “I’d remembered how much food there was in American stores,” he said, “more food than I’d seen in years, but I’d forgotten the abundance of toilet paper….”

          I neglected to ask him if he folded or crumpled.

          But there you go—that’s how important our bodily fluids and solid waste are: this brilliant man had become ‘toilet paper deprived’. Getting used to always having it was like a kind of withdrawal—one day at a time. And, remember, he had forgotten those towering shelves just chock-a-block full of the stuff though he was prepared to see the produce section and meat department without getting spooked. That’s because most of us choose not to think of bathroom things the same way we think about food—which, just to state the obvious—is where the bathroom stuff comes from in the first place.

 

          Here’s a really sick memory, just in case you haven’t decided I’m sick enough already. When I was in college, there was an artist who had created what he called “Auditory Sculpture”. He had a big show and it went like this—you went into a dimly lit room that was full of wooden boxes painted in pastels. On top of each box were several holes, about the size of one of those old silver dollars some of us have hidden away somewhere, and a bowl full of various sizes of steel balls—some like marbles others as large as golf-balls and everything in between. He must have gotten them from an auto supply store or something like that. So, to experience Joe Moss’s art (I still remember his name!) you dropped some of the steel balls into one or another or several of the holes. Obviously, what was inside was a system of gutters with various metal things hung above them. Each ball would create a different cacophony of dings and dongs and bangs as it traveled along the gutters. That was Joe’s art, God love him.

          So, I wrote a review of the exhibit for the student literary magazine where I reviewed, not Joe Moss’s exhibit, but the exhibit of John Algae’s ‘gastronomical art’. In that art form, people are invited to eat one or another of a wide variety of food then wait 8 to 12 hours and view the art. I thought myself quite clever and, at that time, didn’t have a high enough respect for shit and a too “English major superiority” about what was good and bad in the world. But it went on for two pages and hopefully no copy of it still exists and, I learned from friends in Joe Moss’s classes that he was sufficiently angered by my satire.

          I spend most every Tuesday morning with a group of priest, most of who are retired. We have Eucharist in St. John’s Chapel and then sit in the library and have coffee and sweet things and ‘shoot the shit’. (See how that words shows up so often and descriptively in our common language?) One day, one of the retired guys, who are worth more than gold and silver to me, told this story he swore was true though I suspect they all embellish their stories a bit. A personal friend of his was in WWII and on some farm in France, looking for Germans, when the Germans he was looking for started dropping mortar shells on the farm and the Americans. The way he tells the story goes like this: his friend was terrified (as I suspect most people are most of the time during war) and ran to jump a fence that turned out to be a pig pen. A mortar shell landed about 12 feet from him and he thought he was dead, but the shell embedded itself so deeply into pig shit that when it exploded he was covered with shit but not wounded. That man came home, my friend says, and went to seminary and became an Episcopal priest because God had saved his life with the unlikely but effective vehicle of pig shit. Shit happens, we all know, but who knew it happened like that?

 

          Almost to the point, beloved—we are almost to the metaphor I want to make about sh*t and the church. It starts with something Kurt Vonnegut, God rest his soul, wrote in the preface to his collection of short stories called Welcome to the Monkey House. He tells about the letters he’d gotten recently from his brother and his sister. His brother was the father of a new baby and his sister was dying from cancer. “So it goes,” as Vonnegut would say, true fatalist that he was. His brother says, “Here I am cleaning shit off of almost everything” and Vonnegut’s sister tells him, “Everything is beautiful and nothing hurts.” I have always been haunted by the unfathomable irony of those two statements: a man dealing with the beginning of life is cleaning shit and a woman about to enter that lonely door thinks the world is beautiful. And those two statements pretty much sum up the work of the church in the world: the church is called to clean the shit off almost everything and to proclaim the improbable and un-provable truth that everything is beautiful.

         

          St. John’s practices what we have come to refer to as “the Bathroom Ministry”. Literally hundreds of people come through St. John’s every day. We have 7 bathrooms in the building though only two—the two in the hallway outside the office—are for general use. These bathrooms were installed in the 1930’s, most likely, and the sewer system from that era is antiquated and most likely damaged. (We actually have a video tape of the sewer from St. John’s to the main sewer on West Main Street—I can show it to you if you like. It shows what is some damage that makes its too small capacity even smaller.) And all the waste water from the Soup Kitchen goes into it as well as the waste from the bathrooms goes into that old and inadequate sewer. Little wonder then, that from time to time the whole thing backs up and water plus whatever is in the water starts running in the wrong direction. Plus, as if we needed more problems, some of the people who use the bathrooms during the day have bowel movements that would make a Jungian analyst rejoice. It may be something about their diet or that they don’t get to use a toilet much or that they put other things down with the shit and use too much toilet paper since we live in a culture that has more of it that anyone needs. Perhaps because I have an unhealthy relationship with my bodily waste, I am convinced that one of the great services and ministries St. John’s, as an urban church can provide is the use of bathrooms. There is really no where else down-town where someone who is basically ‘on the street’ can go to have a #2 except the library, which, I’ve been told, keeps the doors locked and is thinking of eliminating use of toilets for patrons who obviously aren’t checking out books or doing vital research.

          The big sign board with the service schedule on it also has those little international symbols of a man and a woman and a wheelchair, indicating we have bathrooms available. Waterbury is no different than most American cities—there just aren’t any free public bathrooms. Europe is different. Even Israel has lots of public bathrooms—I especially remember the one I used near the Dead Sea, which, when you think about it for a while, would obviously have trouble with gravity, being the lowest place on earth. The flushing is such a problem at the Dead Sea that you are asked not to flush any paper—even toilet paper—but to put it in a wastebasket beside the toilet. There are people whose job it is to periodically remove those baskets and empty them somewhere or another. Talk about a metaphor for the role of the church! Once, before a ‘state funeral’ for a murdered Waterbury Police Officer, I was standing out on Church Street with the last ‘beloved Rector’ before me, who had come to be a part of the funeral because the young man had been the ‘head acolyte’ when he was the Rector of St. John’s.

          Mike looked at the service board and pointed to the bathroom symbols. “That’s a remarkable ministry,” he said, sincerely. “I’m going to try to get churches in our diocese to open their bathrooms to people who need them….”

          One of the things I do around the church is plunge out the stopped up toilets when they backup from Jungian sized shits. I actually don’t mind doing it, though walking through the shit water that is running under the door and down the parish hall steps is a tad unpleasant. It’s part of my job and one of the community service people working in the soup kitchen and our sexton usually help me. The rest of the staff seems genuinely astonished at how willing I am to go use the plumber’s helper and clear the toilet. I just wish I had a handful of whatever that was we threw in Gram maw Jones’ outhouse to toss in once the water is running free again.

          But I do have limits. One day when I was in the parish office talking to Harriet and Sue, I saw a young man go by the window unzipping his pants. I went to the door and opened it and discovered he was peeing on the other of the double doors to the Close.

          “Don’t pee on the door,” I said.

          “I bet you live in a house,” he said, still peeing. “How many bathrooms are in your house? I’m homeless, I don’t have any bathrooms.”

          I was about to get hooked by Middle Class Guilt when I realized it was useless and wrong. Actually, having once built a “logic machine” for a science project in high school, I realized he had a flawed syllogism. What he was saying is: You have multiple bathrooms. I have no bathroom. Therefore I can pee on the door. Clearly a messed up attempt at logic.

          “I have three bathrooms in my house,” I told him, “and there are seven in this building. DON’T PEE ON THE FUCKIN’ DOOR!”

          Bathroom Ministry has its down moments, I must admit.

         

          You know what three professions I think should be the highest paid in our culture? Pre-school day care teachers, garbage collectors and aides at nursing homes, that’s who I’d lavish the big bucks on. First of all, imagine if we didn’t have dedicated people to change our children’s diapers and care for them while both mom and dad go off to work. Then imagine the chaos and collapse of the culture if the trash we put out each week wasn’t magically gathered and disposed of. Then, last of all, wrap your mind about what would happen if we had no where to send ourselves when we can’t take care of ourselves any longer and need our diapers changed again. Well, the Whole Damn Thing would fall apart, wouldn’t it? Life as we know it—and assume it will always be—would end in an instant, a moment, a heartbeat.

          From time to time, people start wondering about clergy compensation and how to evaluate what Episcopal priests and other, equally well-educated clergy should be paid. Usually we are measured against academics and public school administrators. And when we do it that way, we clergy-types end up looking woefully under compensated. Just one thing—the teachers’ union in Waterbury has a contract that allows them to accumulate sick days and personal days and get a check for them when they retire. I’ve known public school teachers who got enough money to buy a second home when they retired. Just in that way, we are radically cheated when measured against people with equivalent education and position in institutions.

          But I’m not complaining since I think we should be compared to day-care providers, garbage collectors and nursing home aides. Obviously we spent a lot more time in classrooms than most people in those positions. But I contend that what we do as priests is a lot more like what those three professions do than it is like teaching two classes a semester or being an assistant superintendent of a school system. For one thing, none of those folks ever have to plunge out the men’s toilet or fish tampex out of the women’s toilet with an unrolled coat hanger so the water will flush. And none of those folks—full professors and administrators—usually sit by death beds and hold people close whose lives are unraveling and clean the shit off almost everything and proclaim that everything is beautiful in spite of the evidence to the contrary.

          Day care providers, garbage collectors and nursing home aides do that kind of thing everyday. They are the secular and under-compensated “priests” of our culture. They are there at the beginning of live and growth. They are there to clean up life’s mess. They are there at the end of life and for death. Pretty much what I do day by day. And compared to them, I get paid a king’s ransom for my work. My cash compensation this year is only a few thousand dollars short of six figures. Add in my pension fund payment and my health/life insurance plan—none of which passes through my checkbook—not to mention my ‘continuing education allowance’ and my ‘travel reimbursement’ check each month: somebody thinks what I do is worth more than $125,000 annually. Put that kind of package together for day-care providers (who after all are caring daily for our prodigy and our ‘future’) and garbage collectors (who make the world beautiful by carrying away the mess and trash we create) and nursing home aides (who, by the way, are usually the ones who wish us bon voyage as we sail off into that good night—offer that kind of pay and our children and parents (who we would claim are the lights of our lives) would have impeccable, remarkable care and love and the garbage collectors would come every fall to rake the leaves and be more than happy to shovel the snow away in winter. “Worth”, like ‘beauty’, is in the eye of the beholder and in the amount of the pay check. As my dear dead mentor, Kurt Vonnegut would say: So it goes….

         

          Why is it a surprise that people who have to deal with the shit of our lives are so undervalued when most of us are squeamish about revealing, or even remembering, whether we ‘fold’ or ‘crumple’ toilet paper? Shit is so elemental, so much a part of living, it just seems we’d be more willing to take a look at it once in a while and acknowledge what a significant role it plays in our existence. Pig shit and chicken shit have become big problems for the water table and public health in places where pigs and chickens are raised commercially. Some scientists (God love ‘em for their irony!) suggest that the flatulence of cows has something to do with the hole in the ozone layer. Lord, help us, shit happens and shit matters. Sanitation engineers probably describe their job as something esoteric to people at cocktail parties, a bit ashamed of what they actually do. Truth is, they are the demigods of our sanity and lives. Someone, after all, has to deal with all the waste we produce. There aren’t any other options I can see, unless we all decide to quit eating….

 

          I really mean it when I say the role of a priest is to clean the shit off almost everything. The metaphorical and psychological shit in peoples’ lives often shows up running under the door in our work as priests. Being as low-church as I tend to be, I used to devalue the confessional. Not any more. It’s like Victor asking me if I need to ‘wash up’ before one of our sessions. We all need to ‘wash up’ and drop a load most every day. And I blame the church for creating the aversion to shit that makes most people have to come to a point in life when the cramps are about to kill them before they come to me. The church has spent most of the run of Christendom providing people with all kinds of reasons to ‘feel like shit’. The stupid rules and outrageous canons and absolutely irrational sins the church made up in order to ‘control’ people have left their marks on all of our psyches and hearts.

          (Here’s where I lose folks, I know. I want to suggest that most of the ‘stuff’ that we have all come to accept as ‘Truth’ is simply things the church made up to control people. I’m going to be unreasonably compassionate and imagine that when the church made that stuff up they did so with good intentions. It just didn’t turn out that way. I tend to start blaming the church for messing with people’s minds and hearts in a bad way around the time of the Council of Nicea. When we, as Christians, moved from the catacombs to the cathedrals we mostly lost touch with being “Jesus” people and began being “Company men” (and ‘men’ is literal, by the way). It started before that, surely, when more time was spent on ferreting out heretics than with living into ‘the new commandment’—but there’s nothing like being awarded the prize of “Official Religion” to jump-start the nonsense.)

          Here’s my whole theology and understanding about Jesus: Jesus went around for a few years ‘cleaning shit off almost everything’ and proclaiming clearly that ‘everything is beautiful and nothing hurts’. The only people he ever bitch-slapped (oh, that is politically incorrect!) were the stuck up Pharisees and the obsessive compulsive Sadducees. The priests and the scribes—those folks who were trying to control people with rules instead of love, with tradition instead of compassion, with limits instead of possibilities. Jesus hung out with the dregs of society, would have probably paid day-care providers, garbage collectors and nursing home aides a couple of million denarii’s a year and wouldn’t have hesitated to grab the plunger when the plunger was needed.

          Someone once said to me, “I wouldn’t feel worthy to do what you do. I couldn’t be a priest.”

          I almost lost it…I said, stammering, bereft of logic or rationality, “Worthy? Worthy? You don’t feel ‘worthy’! None of us are ‘worthy’ and ALL OF US ARE!!!”

          It didn’t make much sense, but I believe it. I believe that the two contradictory statements: “none of us are worthy” and “all of us are worthy” are, combined and shaken together, exactly right. The church has been too long in the ‘giving shit’ to people business. We need to be in the ‘you are worthy’ business. We don’t need—“we” meaning the church—to control people. What we need to do is liberate them to be the shining children of God that they are, each of them, all of them. Jesus condemned the Pharisees and Sadducees and the church, God help us, decided to become the Pharisees and Sadducees all over again. None of us are worthy and all of us all.

          That’s both parts of the work the church is called to do in this period of irrelevancy. We must clean the shit and unworthiness off everyone and we must proclaim—in word and deed and liturgy and sacraments—that everyone is beautiful and nothing hurts.

          Big job—we need to get busy…. 

 

 

 

Saturday, November 28, 2020

An Avent I sermon from 2008

 

ADVENT I—“WAITING”

I was going to do some nonsense like saying ‘wait a minute’ and going into the vesting room and then the back of the church and then around the yard. And then come back and say to you “How was that for you? Isn’t it a pain to be kept waiting?” But then I realized all that business would have either worried you or made you question my sanity—which maybe you should…

          But it’s true, none of us like to “wait”. It’s the worst thing in the world.

          Doctors’ offices, public offices, the grocery store, even ‘drive through’ lanes—we all hate to wait.

          I was one of those people who didn’t get a letter about my license plate expiring so I was pulled over and had to go to Motor Vehicles in Hamden to get new license plates. Talk about waiting! The only thing, I believe, that kept there from being a riot is people were all looking at the phones as we moved up a step or two at a time. I, myself, was reading a book I’d brought.

          We hate to wait.

          Yet…Yet…Isaiah tells us in today’s lesson “…no eye has seen any God besides you, who works for those who WAIT on God…”

          And the season of the year that begins today—ADVENT—calls us to “wait” …to “wait upon the Lord” ….to have patience and focus and concentration and to WAIT, to WAIT….

          During the Thanksgiving holiday, I spent most of four days with four granddaughters—Emma and Morgan who are 11, Tegan, who is 8, and 16- month-old Eleanor. “Wait” is not a word that Eleanor understands.

          She reminded me of a poster I used to have in my office in the first parish I served as a priest. The poster said: GOD GIVE ME PATIENCE…RIGHT NOW!!!

          We are not much different from Eleanor….We don’t know the meaning of the word “WAIT”.

          I can do the little things this time of year. I saw people driving by our house on Friday with Christmas trees tied to the roofs of their cars. We avoid putting up our Christmas trees until it is a little closer to the actual day—though they may be out on our front porch for a while. But we don’t decorate them until the week before Christmas—we “wait” for a while.

          And we, as a church, avoid singing Christmas Carols during the Advent services. We “wait” until Christmas is actually here.

          But those are minor things—little waitings…. Besides there are Christmas decorations everywhere and carols all around us. I’m even humming “O Holy Night” in my head right now….

 

          Yet we are called to “wait”—to wait and watch and listen. “Waiting” is not a passive activity…it is full of focus and attentiveness and ‘watching’.

          “Waiting” is only boring and painful if we see it as something ‘passive’.

          “Waiting” is full of action.

          Back where I grew up, in the narrow valleys of the West Virginia mountains, there were signs beside every railroad crossing. The coal from where I grew up, went to Pittsburgh to make steel and to Roanoke to make electricity. And it got to those places by the railroads.

          So, there were lots of railroad crossings on the narrow, two lane roads. And there were lots of signs to remind us of three things: STOP, LOOK and LISTEN.

          The signs were in the shape of an X. They were always white with black letters that said: STOP, LOOK and LISTEN.

          The mountains were so high and the valleys so narrow, that often simply stopping and looking wasn’t enough. You had to ‘listen’ for the train coming.

          Advent is like that. We are called to “wait”—and to stop, look and listen. The mountains of life are so high and the valleys so narrow, that it isn’t enough to simply ‘stop and look’. We must listen as well.

 

          “Waiting” is an important, profound and vital way to live. We must ‘wait’ for the moment—the right time, the opportunity, the revelation, the truth and wonder. We can’t hurry it along. We must learn the difficult lesson of patience. We must wait—ready, expectant, awake—for the Moment to come.

          It is God we wait for, after all. And God will come in God’s own time.

          But when God comes, we must be ready and awake and eager to welcome what is Holy, what is Wondrous, what is True. God ‘WILL COME’. Believe that as if your life depended on it—because, in a real way, it does….

          Wait a moment!

                  

          Just like that.

Friday, November 27, 2020

Something I wrote years ago that touched me today

 

The View from the Left Coast…

 

           “Vocatus atque non vocatus, Deus aderit.”

                --quote on the tombstone of Carl Jung

 

     “Why don’t you stay for a while?” Bishop William Swing of the Diocese of California asked me on the plaza outside Grace Cathedral, San Francisco, during the reception for the three priests and six deacons he had just ordained.

 

     “I don’t know, Bishop,” I answered, trying to be truthful, “I think I have to ease my way into being on the West Coast. I’ve been here less than 24 hours and I already feel a little anxious….”

 

     Bishop Swing and I have a history—it’s not “shared” history, but it is a history all the same. We are both West Virginia boys, born and raised and ordained to the priesthood in the Mountain State. When Bishop Swing and his wife were visiting Yale/Berkley Divinity School, Jennifer Hornbeck brought them to Waterbury. We walked around St. John’s and had lunch together. The West Virginia history connected the Bishop and me. Whenever I meet someone from West Virginia, we tend to know each other in a complicated way. It’s not like “being blood”, as West Virginians refer to relatives—but it’s something like that. The shared story of strangers in strange lands.

 

     And San Francisco was a “strange land” for me. I wasn’t ready for the brown hills of the Bay Area. I expected greenness and lushness. But it is, in the odd northern California calendar, the dry season when everything is brown. Jennifer told me that spring and summer in New England astounded her because it was so green and alive. Such color and  vitality comes only in the fall and winter in San Francisco.  Two coasts: two different worlds.

 

     Going to Jennifer’s ordination to the diaconate was an impulsive decision. Bishop Swing was right—flying to the West Coast on Friday and back on Sunday wasn’t a logical thing to do. On Monday morning I woke up on both Pacific Daylight Time and then, three hours later, on Eastern Daylight time! I’m too old to throw my systems into such shock in so short a time.

 

     But it didn’t make much more sense to ride an Amtrak train to Richmond and then back the next day for my cousin Bradley Perkins’ memorial service. And when I got back, there was Ed Jefferson’s funeral to worry about. Too much dying in too confined a space—eight, or was it nine, funerals in May? Maybe I needed to fly across the country and back for a little new life.

                                *

 

     Bradley Perkins was my Aunt Georgia’s son. Brad and his younger sister, Mejol, were, along with my four Pugh cousins, what passed for my older brothers and sisters as I grew up. Mejol went on vacations with my parents and me. Gayle Pugh—the only girl of the four Pugh cousins—was a baby sitter for me. All this was concentrated around my grandmother’s house up on the hill in Conklintown, West Virginia. All six cousins lived on that hill as well. At Bradley’s “celebration”—which was what his family called his memorial service—they were all there: Mejol, Gayle, Duane, Marlin and Joel. I’m not sure when we were last all in the same room together—perhaps at my father’s funeral almost 15 years ago. I was overwhelmed with memory and nostalgia. Someone—Gayle’s husband, I think, took a picture of us all together.

 

     Maybe I should do a View from Mamaw’s hill next month and tell you more about them. But suffice it to say, what I did not, perhaps could not, say to them—“bidden or unbidden, God is present.”

                                *

 

     Then there was Ed.

 

     “O’ Ed…o’ Ed o’….”

 

     I was flying over South Dakota when Ed’s death really hit me. I was looking down from 37,000 feet on a landscape that is as barren and empty as anything in this world. Somewhere to the north was Mount Rushmore, but I couldn’t see it, we were simply too high and it was simply too small. Perspective is everything. From that height, the world looks different. And it was then I realized how utterly different my life was going to be without Ed Jefferson in it. Ed was Treasurer of St. John’s when I arrived a dozen years ago. And, through hook and crook, I had convinced him (never a hard job!) to stay on year after year. I learned to respect his opinions and follow his advice. And he and I never agreed on much of anything politically or theologically. We were Ying and Yang—the two opposites that completed each other. He filled up a space in my life as large as Mount Rushmore is from the ground. And suddenly, the landscape was bleak and vacant without him.

 

     And, 7 miles above the earth, I grieved for him.

 

     And I knew, in an inexplicable way, that “bidden or unbidden, God is present.”

 

     Jen’s ordination was glorious. Grace Cathedral’s impeccable Gothic architecture echoed the sounds of joy and hope and wonder and new possibility. Along with her parents, three children, her friend from Tennessee and the Rector of her home church, I presented her for ordination. My anxiety at being three time zones away from what I know and understand left me for an hour or so. Vocatus Deus aderit—my fellow West Virginian, Bill Swing, called on God to be present and the Spirit swirled around Jen and me and the 1500 people in that glorious cathedral. In my own way, I prayed for my cousin, Brad, and my dear friend, Ed. And, in ways I neither understand nor profess to be able to explain, a good 3000 miles from Richmond and Waterbury, God was present. And the Spirit swirled beyond my knowing to include Brad and Ed and all those “we love but see no more.”

 

     Reason enough for two long rides on airplanes. Reason enough and more….

 

                                Shalom,

 

                         

Thanksgiving was good

We went to J. and S's.

Their son, R., was there.

As were A. and J., our friends.

We were outside a lot and ate in two different rooms. Bern and I were at the two person kid's table, but we could all hear each other.

Too much food at 3 p.m. I didn't eat any more that day.

We came home to let Brigit eat late.

We slept well.

All was good.

As Thanksgiving should be.

Be thankful, always.

 

 

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About Me

some ponderings by an aging white man who is an Episcopal priest in Connecticut. Now retired but still working and still wondering what it all means...all of it.