I’ve been thinking a lot about abandonment lately, abandonment and prophets.
I’ve grown up quite comfortably. I have a wonderful and supportive family, am blessed with a significant number of mentors and surrogate parents and have developed a number of fulfilling and real friendships that I can still cling to.
I’ve never had to worry about food. I’ve never had to worry about a warm bed in which to sleep. No body has ever threatened to take my possessions, my family, my life away from me. You’d think that I’d be able to go on with my life thinking that everyone was as happy as I am.
I remember one day walking out of the Metro to some museum or other educational destination that my mother was dragging us to (which I am grateful for by the way). As we were walking, I noticed a significant number of people sitting along the corridor with vessels for money and change. The first thought I remember having, is that Paris Metro stations were very dirty, and smelled bad.
The second and more significant has to do with a scene that has stuck in my mind ever since. There was a woman, sitting on a blanket, leaning against the wall. She wasn’t saying much that I can remember, although it was very noisy. What I can’t get out of my mind are her feet. They were deformed. She may or may not have had a child with her and she was more than likely starving. The thought I had: there is something seriously wrong here
I am still not sure today whether I imagined this scene, pieced it together from other scenes that I witnessed as a child in a foreign country or if it is indeed what it is. What I do know in whatever case is that the world had and has abandoned this woman. There were thousands of Parisians and visitors walking by, not giving her a moments notice. What of her hunger? What of her pain? What of her opportunity for life? Love? Happiness?
“All those who in anyway seek to bring light to truth, injustice and the world’s abandoned places will not be liked, in fact they will be hunted, hated and beaten until they are silent.”
Rules of History, clause 578 “The Prophet Clause”. (yes I made this up.)
Jesus was, among other things, a prophet. He was constantly found doing things that “he should be doing” but knew he had to anyway. He was rejected by the religious leaders of the time for this, and was subsequently rejected by the political leaders.
My question is, if it is not our place to speak on behalf of those who have no voice, to be willing to break laws that don’t make sense in a world created by God, what is our place? To sit quietly and watch people suffer? Are we not called to be today’s prophets, providing “profound moral insight” to the world around us?
1 comment:
This is such a rich example of the distinction and profound gap between what it means to live as God's society and what it means to live as the world would call us to. According to the world of course it doesn't make any sense to extend such grace toward immigrants who are not only breaking the law but who are not citizens of the United States. The secular mentality is to hold on to what's yours and make sure no one else gets it. But what you illustrate in your blog so beautifully that this is not God's standard and that often times what God calls us to does not actually make sense to the world's morals or standards. We must be citizens of God's Kingdom first and foremost.
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