June 08, 2013

Grief

 
 
Grief began the day in sleepy-headed dismay
 
But as the afternoon came all too soon,
 
Grief sprawled on the floor, playing with another's toy,
 
a little boy, refusing (NO!) to go home
 
lest he remember
 
what he can never forget.
 
 
--- Darrell Arnold

The Duke of Hazard

(The following summarizes my Clinical Pastoral Education Experience)







Daisy could see Farmer McDonald’s breath in the chill morning air.  She had never given birth before, but had witnessed many of her barn mates moan and groan as they flopped about in the hay during the routine yet always precarious ritual of labor.  When ole man McDonald looked into her rheumy brown eyes and gently patted her head --- “It’s OK Daisy, almost there” --- she wondered if he believed animals felt pain.  Daisy felt pain, like her insides were being ripped from the walls of her ribcage, as she began to lose consciousness.  Do animals feel pain? Am I an animal?  And then in the brittle straw she saw this life’s work, covered in blood, a wet lump of nearly unrecognizable flesh.  She had given birth to herself, but not herself, something entirely other, a baby bull calf craning his neck and struggling to stand.


And stand he would, and stand he does, longing for his mother’s teat even during his first dizzy dance.  Here a wobble.  There a wobble.  Old McDonald had a farm, and Duke’s first conscious thought was to run away --- not because he had to, but because he wanted to embrace the freedom that felt intrinsic to his burgeoning strength.  He could not yet walk without falling, but he dreamed of running, rutting, bucking in the knowledge that life was power and power was life.


 “I’m afraid we’ll have to put her down.”  “Birth done killed her”,  the animal in the funny clothes said --- as he put a steel rod to the mother’s head,  and so “BAM” Duke’s first memories of life would forever be colored by death.



 

Lot and His Daughters

 


LOT







I was cold again last night, and I coughed a little blood into my pillow. Food for the stomach and the stomach for food, but God will destroy them both. This I know. Yet I am ready to go the way of all flesh. My heart’s been dead for a long, long time anyway --- ever since the day the wrath of Abram’s God fell from the sky.


Horrible day. I dream of my uncle sometimes. I would give anything (if I had anything to give) to see Abram once more. Did the LORD Almighty bless him with that son he was always praying for? Is it right to expect him to come and rescue me, yet again, from this self-imposed exile?


So many times I have wanted to walk across this desert and return to Bethel. I would fall on my face --- I would --- I would fall on my face and tell uncle how foolish and proud I have been. That he was right and that I was wrong. But I haven’t. I don’t know why I haven’t. I just haven’t. Perhaps pride is all I have left to hold onto.


The girls seldom come to see me. I remind them of the guilt time has yet to erase. My father’s heart longs to reach out to them both, but I don’t know how to love them anymore without feeling ashamed.


I have forgiven them, but in truth they are odious to me because I don’t know how to forgive myself. I made them what they have become. I raised them to value this world more than the promises of the Living God. I sacrificed them to my own ambition. The choices I made seldom had anything to do with their spiritual welfare. You see I was drunk --- long before they took advantage of the weakness I allowed into my life --- I was drunk with the need to make a name for myself and enjoy every comfort this world has to offer.


I told myself I only wanted to give them a better life. Isn’t that the goal of every parent? But I failed. I failed. Henceforth and forevermore I will be the great example of what it means to fail --- yourself, your family, and your God.

Did I destroy their souls? As surely as God destroyed Sodom. I would give anything (if I had anything to give) to go back, back to the days when we used to laugh and play together, back to those days when I would tell them stories about the stubborn faith of their Great Uncle Abram, back before the riches of Egypt captured my imagination, back before the sins of Sodom poisoned our souls. Sin IS a poison, you know, a sweet tasting and slow-killing elixir. You imbibe with gusto only to discover too late that you have killed yourself.

Sodom killed us all. Oh how that wicked city vexed me, but I was weak, too rooted in rebellion to fight for change. My wife --- that’s another story. That woman’s love of finery drove me to distraction. She spent every ounce of silver we accumulated trying to get into the social center of a world we should have fled.

Why did God Almighty send his holy angels to pluck me and my family out of the fire? Did he care that much? Why does he care? Did Abram pray for us? And why did my wife, that blasted woman, why did she turn back? Regrets --- I have my fill (guess you’ve figured that out), but nothing stabs like the knowledge of what I did to that poor woman. She could be so headstrong.

But I loved that about her. I should have spoken my mind. I should have taken a firmer stance when it came to the way we raised the girls, yet I was never one to disturb the peace. You know I still miss my wife’s pouting lips and wicked sense of humor, but I don’t really miss her. Not really. Is that terrible?

So here I am. Alone with my thoughts, my disappointment, failures. It hurts to remember, but it’s impossible to forget. I’m not as unhappy as you might think. In fact, I could lie here and watch the blackbirds swirl above the valley for hours on end. And the changing color of each evening’s sunset has become more dear to me than all the gold in Egypt.

I might die content if someone would just bring me another blanket. Where are my daughters? I would die content if I knew my sons, the grandsons I myself unwittingly fathered, would shun my example and take the road less traveled. Maybe I should tell them about the God of Abram’s praise? Maybe I should call them to my side and make them listen?

Then again --- maybe not. You see my pride is all I have left to hold onto. So even if I die alone in this dank tomb, then at least the wasted years of my life can give testimony to the fact that the God I foolishly refused to embrace, though more patient than the kindest of men, will not be mocked. Let it be broadcast across the plain, let it echo through the haunt of every jackal, and let it be branded, dear God, let it be burned into the souls of my children, that every man reaps what he sows.

Sow a thought and reap a deed. Sow a deed and reap a habit. Sow a habit and reap a character. Sow a character and end up alone and cold in a cave.




Older Daughter




My sister tells me father is near death. Yippee. I can no longer endure the smell of his foul breath. Let him lie in his mountain hole and rot with regret. As for me, I will rejoice when he is no more.

Call me inhuman, but frankly my father represents a past I’d just as soon forget. We were never close. He was so emotionally distant.

I don’t recall him ever once asking me how I might have thought or felt about anything. You see, I don’t have any pleasant memories of daddy dearest. He was never at home. He cared far more about his precious career than he ever did for either my sister or myself.

I do remember how one night he and my mother fought over whether I should go to a dance at the city square or not. My father was set against it and started mumbling about the God of his Uncle Abram. He used to say what a parent excuses in moderation, the child will justify in excess. That was his habit. He conveniently found religion and used it against us when he needed to win an argument. But he never won. That self-righteous hypocrite didn’t have the determination to win anything.

I am bitter? You bet. Don’t I have the right? My sister says we should take personal responsibility for our action, but I say let the blame fall where it belongs --- on the sorry head of that old man. I can hardly control the anger that floods my heart when I think about the way he almost sacrificed my sister and I to the blood-lust of the mob. What kind of father would do such a thing?

That’s why I don’t have any time for organized religion. I’m not going to throw good money out the door and slaughter the family goat to appease the ego of some supposed deity I can’t hear or see. It’s too easy to hide behind the facade of a trumped-up spirituality.

Life has taught me to be a pragmatist. Don’t kid yourself. People do what people want to do --- and then the rationalizations begin. People do what people need to do in order to survive. And that’s what I am --- a survivor.

I won’t let anyone judge me. Did fire fall from the sky and burn up their fiancĂ©e? Were their friends snuffed out in an instant, their home incinerated? Did their mother turn into a salt lick for coyotes?

Besides, as far as we knew, we were the only humans left on the face of the planet. We wanted to save the human race. My younger sister even thought we might be helping out the God of our Uncle Abram. I don’t know --- nor do I care. I had suffered too much to endure the curse of barrenness, and I wanted to know a man before I died. I wanted a child. So, there you have it.

And I am not sorry. I will not apologize. In fact, if I had to do it all over again --- I would. How’s that for personal responsibility? My mother lived in the past, and it destroyed her. I must focus on the future.   Moab, my son, is my future. We will find like-minded souls and together we will build a new city, a better world. Let history judge me. They will yet say rulers of men and nations, kings and queens, have come from this body.

Sure, I might go his funeral. But you will not see me cry.





Younger Daughter



I’m going to check on daddy this afternoon. The night air is unusually chilly for this time of year, and it makes me sad to think of him cold and alone. My sister says I shouldn’t concern myself, but I find her bitterness more unbearable than the awkward silence I share with my father.

It’s fair to say that our lives didn’t turn out the way any of us dreamed. When did it all begin to spiral out of control?

I think daddy feels compelled to impart some sort of wisdom to me before he dies. He rants and raves and cries and looks at me with such tenderness in his eyes. I suppose daddy’s right --- “a thousand sins lie in the womb of one sin, and they are like bees, one lot swarming from another.” That’s what he used to say. I just wish he had listened to himself.

So, what family isn’t a little dysfunctional? We’re all selfish in our motivation and calculating in our behavior. You see I’ve reckoned with my wrong doing. Between you and me --- I am ashamed. I haven’t always felt like I’ve been in control of my life. It seems like THE crucial decision has always been made for me. But I know that’s not true. You always have a choice.

I would like to believe that the pattern of destructiveness can stop somewhere. I would like to believe that forgiveness is possible. I really would. I’m tempted to pray to the God of my father, the God he told me about when I was a child, the God of his Uncle Abram, but then I might have to embrace dad and tell him I love him. And I just can’t do that.

I do yearn for something more though. I desire better than this hell we have created. But I don’t know. I don’t know what the future holds for my son, Ben-Ammi. Maybe I’m not as strong as my sister, but if I could believe in a promise to hold onto, then I think I would hold on to it with all my being because I don’t know what else to do --- except take daddy a blanket because it’s late, very late in the day.





Lot





The blackbirds have settled on the ledge, and I know that my time is short. I pray God will bring my children to me. By the sheer power of my will I shall summon Abram to my side, and he will come and we will make amends. And as my grandsons kneel by my bed, I will tell them, “Do not make the mistakes I have made. Do not make the mistakes I have made. Do not make the mistakes I have made.” And they will listen.

I will tell them to read the story of my life and to learn from it. I will tell them not to waste their life in pursuit of things that do not really matter. I will tell them to store up treasure in heaven, where the moth and the rust do not destroy. I will tell them no one can serve two masters. I will tell them that the hour of danger is when you first begin to choose, so that they will choose wisely. I will tell . . . hello . . . God Almighty has heard my prayer and Abram honors me with his presence. He has come to rescue me once again, that I might lean my head upon his chest as I did when a boy.

You are kind to come. No. No. It is my wife. Is that you sweetie? Are you still cross with me? Don’t be mad. See, you have such a pretty smile. I like your smile. It is like the smile of an angel --- my daughter, my angel --- come at last to take me home.





Older Daughter





So, the old man finally croaked. Hip. Hip. Hooray. I will probably go to the funeral. But like I told you before --- don’t expect me to shed any tears.





Younger Daughter




When I arrived at the cave, daddy was shaking uncontrollably, his eyes were glazed over, and he was talking to himself. I bowed to the ground and just looked at the man whose sheer presence (or lack thereof) had so dominated my life. This wave of mixed emotion swept over me. I wanted to laugh. I wanted to slap him back into consciousness. I wanted to weep, and I know that I will for many days to come. But the strangest thing happened, daddy reached up and grabbed me by the back of my neck. He pulled me close, searched my face and whispered, “Grace, grace is everywhere.“* And then he died.

(*The final quote is a play on the ending of George Bernanos masterpiece “The Diary of a Country Priest.”)



















June 07, 2013

Psalm 121

 
 
I find comfort in the Psalms. Comfort --- like a blanket wrapped about me on a cool morning. Comfort --- like that glass of iced-tea that satisfies my thirst on a muggy afternoon. Comfort --- like the promise of the Living God applied to my latest worry, a word of hope that takes me back to the basics of who God is, and who I am in God's eyes.


Psalm 121 is my favorite "Comfort-Psalm". It was one of the psalms I clung to years ago when I traveled though this big, bad, and scary world trying to find my place. Life is a journey, a journey that is often filled with uncertainty. I’m sure you have faced unnerving situations, times when you were overwhelmed by the potential for disaster. Psalm 121 is a psalm for those moments --- a song for the twilight, a hymn for the pre-op, a pilgrim chorus for those times when you’re walking down dark and dangerous paths and need to be reminded that God is “Your Keeper“.




The ancient Israelites often sang as they traveled towards Jerusalem to observe some appointed festival. As they walked, they would offer hymns to God in anticipation of bowing before God's presence. And some of these hymns, these songs of ascent, have been preserved for us in Scripture.



Psalms 121 is a song for the road, a song for people who are marching towards God, who wish to walk in God's ways, who desire to speak God's truth, who want to live God's life, but who aren’t quite there yet. Psalm 121 was written to allay fear-filled minds, to encourage careworn hearts , and to bolster flagging spirits.





“On the highway to death trudging, not eager to get to that city, yet the way is still too long for my patience --- teach me a traveling song, Master, to march along as we boys used to shout when I was a young" --- because I’m still 500 miles away from home.





I lift up my eyes to the hills.
From where does my help come?
2 My help comes from the LORD,
who made heaven and earth.

3He will not let your foot be moved;
he who keeps you will not slumber.
4Behold, he who keeps Israel
will neither slumber nor sleep.

5The LORD is your keeper;
the LORD is your shade on your right hand.
6 The sun shall not strike you by day,
nor the moon by night.

7The LORD will keep you from all evil;
he will keep your life.
8The LORD will keep
your going out and your coming in
from this time forth and forevermore.



June 06, 2013

My Better Angel

 
 
 
 
I saw an angel dancing in a splash of rain
or maybe it was just a spark of sunlight
to give me hope
that I might yet be, even yet,
 a better person
 than my calcifying choices would determine. 
 
--Darrell Arnold

 

 

The Mother

 
 
 
It was the sweetest smile,
 
healing and holy,
 
straight from the heart of
 
a mother crouched upon a sidewalk
 
gazing into her daughter's eyes,
 
nose to nose and
 
forehead to forehead,
 
consoling her toddler
 
with, "It's OK baby, let mommy wipe your tears ---
 
and don't you be such a sourpuss anymore",
 
in a language I didn't understand
 
but for the kindness of her face
 
so unlike that frown in the other woman's voice
 
the one on the phone
 
with her own mother
 
talking too loud for a bus-stop.
 
"They don't think she's being cared for properly."
 
"New Jersey?  She can't go to New Jersey!"
 
"Why do you say things like that?"
 
"Why don't you think before you speak
 
about my daughter?"
 
Her daughter who I could only imagine somewhere
 
far away from the warmth of her mother's love.
 
 
 
At that moment I wondered if all these sleepy-eyed Baltimore mornings
 
would destroy
 
or restore
 
my faith in God
 
because we all laugh and cry
 
cajole and control the same,
 
human beings being human,
 
and is that enough
 
or do I need
 
because I do need
 
(oh how I need)
 
a Buddha or a Sophia or a Jesus or
 
his healing mother,
 
the mother of God,
 
to hold my face
 
in her hands
 
and assure me that everything
 
"will be OK
 
and don't you be such a sourpuss anymore"
 
--- as if such were possible
 
 while basking
 
in the radiance of her holy smile.
 
 
--- Darrell Arnold
 

June 02, 2013

The Waitress


 
 
The waitress looks haggard
 
and beautiful.
 
Beautifully haggard as she tucks
 
 a wild wisp of hair back into its ponytail
 
while gliding through the kitchen door of Don Jose's Mexican Restaurant
 
holding a tray of enchiladas and sweet tea over her head with one hand
 
all the time
 
knowing she is haggard
 
--- and beautiful.
 
Beautifully haggard
 
and lovelier than most women half her age
 
yet past the prime of her sex's power and
 
sad
 
in the knowledge of how pride (or is it fear?) keeps her
 
from being kept
 
or domesticated or
 
bowed to another's will so
 
she waits --- tables
 
as she waits
 
for the soul-mate who will not come
 
the children (two boys and a girl) who will never suck at her sooner than later sagging breasts
 
and the satisfaction of being wanted for her heart not her
 
beauty turned haggard ---
 
beautifully haggard and
 
sad.


--- Darrell Arnold