Friday, October 28, 2011

To be Part of a Broken Body

I get why so many people I talk to are disenchanted with church and Christians. I’ve been to a handful and have heard of countless churches that were filled with veneered, holier than though types. Where pastors recite extreme, outermost feather on the right wing poetry and read from newspapers instead of opening the Word of God.

Last week, I went to coffee with one of my favorite people, Kelsey. We snagged the only outdoor table at this little café so we could enjoy the subtle crispness in the air and the freedom to become boisterous if the occasion called for it.

Kelsey is a senior at a public high school in Harford County. The age gap is six years between us. I used to babysit her and her sister way back when. Then, after graduating high school, I got involved helping with the middle school youth group at my church which Kelsey was a part of. After a couple years hanging out with the young’ns and hearing all about… everything (boy, middle school girls can talk!) I aged up with them when they moved to the high school youth group. So yeah, for a while I was a contracted mentor of sorts, but Kelsey has become this wise, beautiful, interesting woman and one of my best friends.

Anyway, there we were, perched on cast iron stools at the matching pedestal table, talking about school, work, friends, faith, boys—the usual. One anecdote she shared was about a recent conversation she had at school with several peers. Somehow religion came up and Kelsey and another girl identified themselves as Christians.

“You’re a Christian?” one boy asked Kelsey incredulously. “You don’t act like one,” he added. At that point Kelsey’s mind whirled, Oh no! Why is that so unbelievable? What am I doing wrong?
     “What do you mean?” Kelsey asked, casually.
     “I don’t know. You’re cool.”
     Fwoo! What a relief!

The relief didn’t last long though. Sure, she can feel good about herself—she is representing Christ in a way He’d be proud of. But Kelsey and I ended up solemnly sipping coffee amidst this realization that hung like a cloud of smelly green smoke around our table. The title of Christian has come to be this awful thing in our culture. Something I’d never volunteer to be a part of: goody two shoes, legalistic, feeble-minded, “God hates fags” sign-toting hypocrites. But…

I am a Christian! I mean—I wear the name of Christ; “It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me.” I wish there was some way to separate what we’ve let Christianity become from the life, love and sacrifice of Christ; or that we could throw Christianity like a dirty towel into some cosmic washing machine and that it’d come out all Bounty fresh. Even if that was possible though, we’d mess it up again—just give us a little while.

The reality is that we are a bunch of sinful people and that we’re completely imperfect and that there is no way we can represent Christ in the way that He deserves, especially when it comes to the large scale stuff—the media and all that. ‘Course we’ll always look bad. (Everyone looks bad.) Kelsey and I will just close our eyes to all that stuff though, and live our normal, boring, ordinary lives trying our best to make friends and love everyone and stand up for the weak and lonely and be responsible and praise God for all the ways He has blessed us.

Yes—rainbows and butterflies. Cupcakes and sunshine… cookies… and milk. There’s plenty of hurt and sorrow and death in the world; I’m glad to be the smiling fool who remembers every day that I don’t have to worry about that stuff anymore because Christ did. He suffered all and conquered death and now--we live.

3 comments:

  1. Elizabeth,
    Here is a link to a literary journal that will -- I guarantee -- interest you. And yes, it publishes creative nonfiction. Brian Doyle, who wrote "Joyas Voladoras," is a regular in its pages.

    http://imagejournal.org/

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  2. I too am often bothered (and effected) by groups of people who give Christianity a negative connotation. And it is sad.

    also, after the rainbows and butterflies I had the immediate urge to interrupt with "She doesn't even go here!" (mean girls)

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  3. I've become weary towards church over the years as an institution because I don't feel like many churchgoers represent the religion well, I actually came to the conclusion that church was unnecessary a few years ago. However, when my grandfather offered to take me to church every week early in October I decided to go and it changed my mind. I need to be reminded of God's love for us and what Christ has done for us at least once a week because it is too easy to forget in this world.

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