Thursday, July 21, 2016

What If God Doesn’t Want To Make America Great Again?

What If God Doesn’t Want To Make America Great Again?
If I can’t make America great by living the way of Christ, then I want no part in that greatness.
 07/18/2016 09:45 am 09:45:26 | Updated 2 days ago
Chris Gilmore  Pastor. Human. Boundary Tester.

BRENDAN MCDERMID / REUTERS
Recently, I received an email stating that if Christians don’t support Donald Trump for president we can “kiss our country goodbye.” It said something to the effect of, “Sure he isn’t all that decent, but if that’s what it takes for our economy to be strong, our borders to be secure, and our nation to be great, then so be it.” It suggested God sent us Trump to preserve our capitalism, our patriotism, and general way of life; that perhaps Trump is God’s tool to save our country.
I’m not going to comment on whether any of that is accurate or not, but the email did get me thinking...
What if God doesn’t want to Make America Great Again? Or maybe, what if God’s definition of great looks a lot different than what many of us are hoping for? What if saving our country (whatever is meant by that) is not really what God has in mind?

I’m not saying that God wants to see America destroyed, but I’m wondering if we make some false assumptions when we think God wants us rich and safe or whatever other things people mean when they say they want America to be great again.
Set aside the fact that many of us will disagree on what actually makes our country great and consider why we think God wants us wealthy, secure and politically free. Jesus was none of the above. Nor were his first disciples or the early church or many Christians around the world today. None of those things are promised to us. None of those things are necessary to live a faithful life.
Have we become so attached to our stuff that we are certain God wants us to keep it? Have we become so accustomed to having a vote that we assume that’s how God orders the world? Are we so desperate for security that we are willing to compromise our most basic values to acheive it? And so opposed to our enemies that we are confident God hates them as much as we do?
If so, we are misguided. These things do not line up with the Gospels where I learn of a Jesus who says to welcome the stranger, forgive extravagantly, give radically, and do not resist an evil person (and love them instead). A Jesus whoerases cultural and political and religious divisions.
But we have little time for that sort of greatness. “Be A Servant” isn’t an attractive campaign slogan. Not when we have elections to win and businesses to boycott and borders to secure. Jesus says his Kingdom is not of this world, but we would say our kingdom certainly is and, well, all that loving and forgiving stuff works in church, but this here is the real world.
And so we declare our allegiance. We choose earthly greatness and power and success and security over the way of the cross. We justify our lack of loving our neighbors because we have to protect our version of the American dream.  We cling to political liberty at all costs and find ourselves chained to platforms and politicians.
I’m not anti-American. I’m not an anarchist. I plan to vote in the coming election. I’m just not going to assume that God’s deepest desire for us is something as fleeting as prosperity or political freedom. I’m not convinced God is hoping we elect the proper candidate so he can finally get to work in our country.
While I strongly believe in “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” and want those things for all people (literally, all the people), I am not dependant on them. Nor do I think those are the highest things a person can acheive.
Not when our Savior started life as a refugee, lived under the military occupation of his enemies, spent his ministry years homeless, and was persecuted to the point of execution. 
Not when the majority of our Scriptures were written to or about people with no freedom, no security, and no wealth. Peope who often neglected their faith whenever they had actually attained those very things. 
And not when many of us are willing to ignore the teachings of Christ in order to make a nation great. If I can’t make America great by living the way of Christ, then I want no part in that greatness. And I don’t think God does either.
If we live and love like Jesus of Nazareth at the expense of privilege or safety, I believe America (and the rest of the world) will be greater because of it. Not because we have accumulated all the power and all the wealth, but because we have been faithful. Because being faithful to the way of Jesus is the only way to be truly great.
So inform yourself and vote if you feel so led. But long before and long after your ballot is cast, consider what things you are grasping for, what things motivate and excite you, and what things you assume God wants for you. And then compare them to the life of Jesus. 
I imagine we will find we have spent a lot of time and money and energy and yard signs on a greatness that is at best temporary and at worst idolatry. We’ve been invited to something better than anything a politician can offer and we’ve been charged to live in such a way that it doesn’t ultimately matter where we reside or what we possess.

May we be faithful first. Even when the alternative sounds safer and more comfortable. May we choose Jesus and his cross today and every day. Even when it costs us elections and political position. And may we see the world become as great as its ever been

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Stop Judging The #BlackLivesMatter Movement

Dear Christians, Stop Judging The #BlackLivesMatter Movement And Start Defending The Oppressed

#BlackLivesMatter isn’t perfect, but neither is Christianity.

 07/18/2016 12:47 pm 12:47:16
If Christians reject Black Lives Matter because the movement is filled with flaws, they must also reject Christianity for the very same reason. Because Jesus himself was perfect, but the people and institutions that claimed his namesake’s faith certainly weren’t — and aren’t.
History is filled with Christians committing numerous atrocities under the guise of Christianity. Events like the Crusades, the Inquisition and other countless examples of misuse — including modern evils such as child abuse, bigotry, xenophobia, exclusivity, and hateful rhetoric — reveal that the religion of Christianity has routinely fallen short of Jesus’ example.
Despite this, I can still look beyond the countless shortcomings and see the foundational truth of Jesus. Yet many Christians refuse to give the Black Lives Matter cause the same benefit of the doubt. Just as Christians don’t judge Christianity by its worst moments, we also shouldn’t do the same for this movement.
For many Christians, it’s hard now to imagine that Jesus was hated and judged by the religious leaders of his day, being unfairly criticized throughout his ministry, and routinely facing a wide variety of vitriolic accusations.
A movement that’s pursuing equality, justice, dignity, respect and accountability should be supported, because these are virtues that the gospel of Jesus is all about.
But Jesus and his followers had a horrible reputation, and he was accused of being a blasphemer and deceiver. He hung out with sinners, prostitutes, the “unclean,” the demon-possessed, the Romans, foreigners and those on the fringes of society. His disciples consisted of a tax collector, a zealot, a sword-wielding attacker, and a traitor. Jesus started riotous mobs, and even created havoc the most sacred of places — the temple.
So to denounce a movement because of immoral associations, or contrary beliefs, or unlawful incidents, or because of its notoriety is ironic, especially for Christians who base their faith on a man who encapsulated all of those things.
Jesus, who came from a people that often suffered under the Roman ruling class, was eventually unfairly arrested, abused, tortured by government authorities, mocked amid a jeering mob, and humiliatingly executed on cross.
He angered too many leaders, confronted too powerful a government, and enraged too many people — so they eventually murdered him.
The life of Jesus is always the best example for Christians to follow, and anything that is anti-Jesus (violence, hate, shame, racism, bigotry, and apathy) should be rejected, while everything Christ-like (seeking justice, revealing truth, serving, protecting, uplifting, encouraging, healing, caring, sacrificing, empathizing, empowering, freeing, reconciling, restoring, forgiving, and loving) should be honored and pursued.
The reality is that the Black Lives Matter movement, like most things in this world — including you and me — is an imperfect and complex entity consisting of both good and bad elements. But a movement that’s pursuing equality, justice, dignity, respect and accountability should be supported, because these are virtues that the gospel of Jesus is all about.
This doesn’t mean Christians should excuse sin, condone violence, or dismiss hurtful actions. And it doesn’t mean you can’t support cops, or be a Republican, or disagree with anything being done, said, and communicated. The danger is when Christians downplay, disregard, or completely throw out the truth that people of color have been — and are being — oppressed by a broken system that’s infected with inequality, discrimination, lack of accountability, and racism.
Unfortunately, some Christians — especially white, conservative Christians (but not all of them) — are using the imperfect aspects of the movement as an excuse to support rhetoric that denies the existence of racism, inequality, white privilege, and works on the assumption that the cause is some sort of made-up overreaction, misunderstanding, or liberal agenda.
It’s not.
If Christians have nothing to do or say to support the lives of the marginalized and abused, what good is Christianity at all?

For Christians who deny that Black Lives Matter, the sin is failing to realize that people who are loved by God, and made in God’s image and likeness, aren’t being treated like it.
Black Lives Matter is a civil rights movement, a human rights movement, and deeply spiritual cause that requires followers of Christ to imitate the example of Jesus: to help, stand up, speak out, and sacrifice for those in need.
According to Jesus, Christians are called to:
Defend the oppressed, not smear their image.
Empower the maligned, not deny their cause.
Stop corruption, not rationalize it.
Seek justice, not ignore injustice.
Stop persecution, not blame the persecuted.
Historically, our nation’s most tragic civil and human rights victims have either been “not Christian enough” for mainstream churches and denominations to support, or there was simply too much passivity and apathy to do anything.
During the Indian Removal Act, Native Americans weren’t Christian enough to defend. During times of nativism, the Catholics and immigrants weren’t Christian enough to defend. Throughout the segregation era black Christians didn’t have the support of many white Christians, and when the U.S. put its Japanese citizens in internment camps during WWII, mainstream Christianity was largely silent.
In every modern opportunity to be a radical countercultural force for good in the U.S., many white Christians blew it by conjuring up excuses, looking the other way, and even being directly complicit in the subjugation of other human beings.
So here we are again, facing a historic crisis, where people are fighting for their rights and dignity, and once again many Christians will have to choose whether or not to act. Which begs the question: If Christians have nothing to do or say to support the lives of the marginalized and abused, what good is Christianity at all?
Many white Christians will be afraid to say #blacklivesmatter because they think it’s too political, or too progressive, or too liberal, or too unfair, or too controversial. But saying #blacklivesmatter isn’t denying one particular group’s worth at the expense of another. Rather, it’s affirming that people of color are to be loved as divine creations made in the image of God, and they aren’t being treated like it. Instead they’re being dehumanized by a society that has consistently devalued and exploited their lives.
In a previous article I wrote these words, and I think they’re more important now than ever:
The Bible tells us that Jesus cared deeply about the social causes around him.
Instead of saying all lives matter, Jesus said, “Samaritan lives matter.”
Instead of saying all lives matter, Jesus said, “Children’s lives matter.”
Instead of saying all lives matter, Jesus said, “Gentile lives matter.”
Instead of saying all lives matter, Jesus said, “Jewish lives matter.”
Instead of saying all lives matter, Jesus said, “Women’s lives matter.”
Instead of saying all lives matter, Jesus said, “Lepers’ lives matter.”
Even though Jesus loves everyone, even to the point of dying for their sins, he went out of his way to intentionally help specific groups of people — the alienated, mistreated, and those facing injustice.
So saying “Black Lives Matter” and participating in a movement seeking justice, positive reform, and empowerment is one of the most Christ-like things we can do.

God help us.

Friday, July 15, 2016

Shaped by Prayer

Shaped by Prayer
July 24, 2016 
Written by Kathryn Matthews
Sunday, July 24
Seventeenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Focus Theme
Shaped by Prayer
Weekly Prayer
Generous God, in abundance you give us things both spiritual and physical. Help us to hold lightly the fading things of this earth and grasp tightly the lasting things of your kingdom, so that what we are and do and say may be our gifts to you through Christ, who beckons all to seek the things above, where he lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Focus Scripture
Luke 11:1-13
He was praying in a certain place, and after he had finished, one of his disciples said to him, "Lord, teach us to pray, as John taught his disciples." He said to them, "When you pray, say: Father, hallowed be your name. Your kingdom come. Give us each day our daily bread. And forgive us our sins, for we ourselves forgive everyone indebted to us. And do not bring us to the time of trial."
And he said to them, "Suppose one of you has a friend, and you go to him at midnight and say to him, 'Friend, lend me three loaves of bread; for a friend of mine has arrived, and I have nothing to set before him.' And he answers from within, 'Do not bother me; the door has already been locked, and my children are with me in bed; I cannot get up and give you anything.' I tell you, even though he will not get up and give him anything because he is his friend, at least because of his persistence he will get up and give him whatever he needs.
"So I say to you, Ask, and it will be given to you; search, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened for you. For everyone who asks receives, and everyone who searches finds, and for everyone who knocks, the door will be opened. Is there anyone among you who, if your child asks for a fish, will give a snake instead of a fish? Or if the child asks for an egg, will give a scorpion? If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!"
All Readings For This Sunday
Hosea 1:2-10 with Psalm 85 or
Genesis 18:20-32 with Psalm 138 
Colossians 2:6-15, (16-19) 
Luke 11:1-13
Focus Questions
1. What does the Lord's Prayer say about "who God is" to us?
2. How does it affect your hearing of this text when Jesus says that God will give us the Holy Spirit, rather than "all good things"?
3. Why do you pray?
4. Why do you think Jesus highlights persistence in his teaching about prayer?
5. When have you, and/or a situation, been changed by prayer?
Reflection by Kate Matthews
The disciples find Jesus at prayer. They're on the road to Jerusalem, where Jesus will face suffering and death, and he's teaching them along the way. The lessons of discipleship have been coming, one after another, reflected in our readings in the past few weeks. We've learned about the importance of traveling light on our mission (don't even carry bread, Jesus says, suggesting it will be provided along the way), the centrality of love for God and neighbor (including those folks we'd rather not call "our neighbor") and, in the story of Mary and Martha, the importance of not just listening to, but doing, the Word of God.
So what is this passage, as a whole, teaching the disciples - and that means us, too - about what it means to follow Jesus?
Show us how you do that
After all, that's what disciples do: they follow, and model themselves on, their teacher. That's why they asked Jesus to teach them how to pray, just as John the Baptist taught his disciples. In those days, you would be known by the prayer that was distinctive to your group, gathered around the teacher you followed. ("They'll Know We Are Christians by Our Love," but also "They'll Know We Are Christians by Our Prayer.")
The disciples were, of course, men of faith who were raised in a setting in which they had certainly been taught to pray. But did you ever think you knew how to do something, until you saw someone do it so much better, or you saw the remarkable effects of how they did it, and you wanted to say, "Show me how you do that"? Throughout the centuries, in many different places and cultures and many different faiths, spiritual teachers mostly teach "how," and many people come to them not so much for answers but for ways to practice their faith so that they can have the same peace, strength, and wisdom as their teacher.
Wanting what Jesus has
I think those disciples saw the power of the Spirit of God in Jesus. I think they saw the strength, the power, the wisdom of God in Jesus, and they wanted to be strong, and full of power, and wise. When they watched Jesus at prayer, and saw the coherence between his prayer life and everything else that he did and said, they longed to go deeper into the life of the Spirit that filled him. (Most of the time, by the way, the disciples didn't seem to know or understand what they were asking for, which makes them once again pretty much like us.) And Jesus responded with a short prayer that has indeed become the prayer that marks us, identifies and unifies us as Christians.
We come to church from many different places, not just geographically different, and we've followed many different spiritual paths, especially in the United Church of Christ. Many of us were raised in one of the mainline Protestant denominations ó Presbyterian, Methodist, Episcopal (some of us even in the United Church of Christ!) ó and many others grew up in the Roman Catholic tradition.
The prayer we share
There are other faith backgrounds represented in just about every congregation, as well, including the Jewish faith, of course. And some of us were not raised in any religious tradition at all. To most if not all of us, however, the prayer that Jesus teaches his disciples in today's reading is something familiar, something we share in common. It's the one prayer we're most likely able to recite by heart (along with Psalm 23): in fact, it's amazing and very touching when pastors visit people who are suffering from strokes or memory loss but are able to join in, when the Lord's Prayer is begun, however slowly, and recite each word.
Jesus models prayer as an intimate conversation with God. There are many references in the Gospel of Luke to Jesus at prayer, and I suspect that he listened just as much as he spoke. In any case, he tells the disciples ó and that includes us, too ó that we should talk with God as we would to a loving parent, a parent who listens to us, cares for us, forgives us, provides for us, protects us. Jesus doesn't talk obscure, intellectual theology. He brings the reality of God's love home to the people in terms they ówe ó can understand, the language of everyday relationships (at their best and not so best).
Faith is a matter of the heart
Could today's story be a missing piece in the life of many faithful Christians? Isn't it possible for a person to go along, trying the best they can to "do good" and avoid sin, to study the Scriptures and attend worship every week, and yet to miss out on that relationship of intimacy with God that can happen in prayer? I once heard a speaker describe the poignancy of those who live their entire (long) lives "serving God" but do so without a spirit of joy or love, and he asked us to consider the nature of true faithfulness if we have missed the mark of offering our gifts in such a spirit of love, a spirit that must surely be at the root of a life of prayer, or better, the fruit of such a life of persistent and consistent prayer.
Jesus gives us the words to say when we pray, and then he tells a story and gives an exhortation to persuade us that, if we who are limited, weak, even "evil," have sense enough to answer the door and help a neighbor, or to give our children good things, not bad ones, well, then, of course, God, who is infinitely greater, more loving, more generous than we are, will giveÖ"the Holy Spirit" to us.
What are we praying for?
In Matthew's Gospel, Jesus teaches in a similar passage that God will give "good things" to those who ask. But Luke says in our reading today that God will give "the Holy Spirit" to those who ask. At first, that may disappoint us. We want the good things, right? We want health, happiness, safety, and maybe, if we're really honest, we want some success, some comfort, some prestige, and a little wealth wouldn't be so bad, eitherÖafter all, we're only human.
However, this promise of the Holy Spirit is the key to understanding the passage as a whole, because the Holy Spirit and a sense of call always seem to go together. This prayer Jesus gave us is not just a comforting, private little prayer to get us through our tough times and personal crises. This is the prayer of the community, a community that was promised the Holy Spirit, in fact, it didnít become "the church" until Pentecost Sunday, when the Holy Spirit came upon them, just as Jesus promised.
Not "me," but "us"
And this community, the church, is called. We are called to be the Body of Christ - to be light, to be salt, to be leaven for the world. We are called to be bread for the world. We are called to live and breathe in radical dependence on, utterly trusting in, the God who made us and knows us, who listens to our prayers and calls us by name, the God who forms us into a community that prays together, "Give us this day our daily bread." Not just me, but all of us. Not for the long-term, but day by day by day. This God gives us the Holy Spirit to depend on and draw strength from. We can trust the Holy Spirit.
Of course, this is easier said than done. We're more likely to depend on our learning, our physical and mental capabilities, our own devices, our ability to figure things out for ourselves. Years ago, I heard a wonderful story about Mother Teresa and a famous ethicist who came to work at her house of the dying in Calcutta, at a time when he was seeking a clear answer to how best to spend the rest of his life. She asked him what she could do for him, and he asked her to pray for him. She said, "What do you want me to pray for?" And he said, "Pray that I have clarity." She replied, "No, I will not do that ó clarity is the last thing you are clinging to and must let go of." The ethicist observed that Mother Teresa always seemed to have the clarity he longed for, but she laughed and said, "I have never had clarity; what I have always had is trust. So I will pray that you trust God."
From prayer to compassion
And so, it seems to me, that spending time with God in prayer, in regular, intimate conversation, and opening ourselves to the Holy Spirit, will lead us on the way of compassion, and it will lead us to transformation, not just as individuals but as a community. Because this prayer is the prayer of our community and not just a private one, it reminds us, challenges us, urges and inspires us as a community not only to form this prayer with our lips but to be formed ourselves by this prayer, formed and shaped into a community of compassion and justice that makes sure that all of God's children have "their daily bread" ó and all that that implies today, all that they need from the abundance with which God has blessed us. The prayer calls us to join in the building of God's kingdom not up in heaven, but here, on earth, a reign of justice, healing, mercy, and love.
The church is not something abstract. It is something we experience as embodied creatures with a need for community and companionship on the journey, on the pilgrimage of faith. Even when we pray the Lord's Prayer, alone in our room, there are other Christians in other places, praying the same prayer, forming the same prayer in their hearts and on their lips, in many different languages, and all of us being formed and transformed by it. In those moments, we are one.
Hearing the prayer from others
(There is a beautiful wall-hanging in the Amistad Chapel at the Church House, the national offices of the United Church of Christ in Cleveland, with the Lord's Prayer in Arabic lettering, made by a Muslim artisan in the Tentmaker's District of Old Cairo ó a powerful illustration of our multicultural church, and the many languages in which we address God. I once had the privilege of showing this beautiful work to a couple who stopped by as they were walking past the building - they were from Cairo themselves, and they read the prayer out loud, in Arabic, for me. What an amazing and sacred moment that was.)
It is so difficult sometimes to follow the way of Jesus. For example, it's hard to forgive even though we stand in need of forgiveness ourselves, so we pray to God for one another and ask for God's mercy on us, but even more, we pray that we might be transformed into people of mercy ourselves.
Formed by prayer
How often do we pray for what we want more than what we need? What kind of life would it be to live intentionally from day to day (having only our daily bread), as so much of the world's population does, though not by choice? Indeed, Jesus teaches us to pray not for "my" daily bread but "our" daily bread, and if we really listened each Sunday as we prayed these words together, perhaps there would truly be bread shared for all the world to have what they need each day. In that event, our prayer will have shaped us more than our shaping the words we say, and our trust in God will transform the world. 

My best friend from seminary told me a story about a worship conference she attended. The preacher invited those gathered to come forward and be anointed as they said what it was they were praying for. He told them that the children should come forward, too. My friend Mary told me about a little boy, about nine years old, who came up to her station. Mary asked him what he wanted her to pray for with him. He said, "I want you to pray that I will go to heaven." And so she did.
The trust of a child
It seems that we could learn a lot from nine-year-old boys. Isn't a trusting, intimate relationship what Jesus is describing when he uses the word "Daddy" for God? Isn't this close and loving relationship what he describes when he speaks of the love of a parent who would give only good things to their beloved child? And doesn't this kind of prayer say something about "who God is" to us? God is the One we can trust, the One who loves us, the One who is present with us, day by day, providing what we need. Not clarity, but trust. Not our own efforts, but trust.
Our other reading, from Psalm 138, unlike the Lord's Prayer, sounds very individual, using "I" language instead of "we" language. But the last verse is one of my favorites from the entire Bible, and I believe it goes perfectly with the theme of trust and call: "God will fulfill God's purpose for me; your steadfast love, O God, endures forever. Do not forsake the work of your hands." If the Lord's Prayer is a "corporate" prayer, not an individual one, and "we" pray to our loving Parent-God, asking for "our" - not "my" - daily bread, than we could also pray this psalm in the same way: "God will fulfill God's purpose for us; your steadfast love, O God, endures forever. Do not forsake the work of your hands."
We, as a community, are the work of God's hands, and we have been given the gift of the Holy Spirit. Let us become then, in our life as a community, daily bread for the rest of the world, for one another and for all of God's precious, beloved children.
A preaching version of this commentary (with book titles) is athttp://www.ucc.org/worship_samuel.
The Rev. Kathryn Matthews (matthewsk@ucc.org) retired in July from serving as dean of Amistad Chapel at the national offices of the United Church of Christ in Cleveland, Ohio (https://www.facebook.com/AmistadChapel).
You're invited to share your reflections on this text in the comments on our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/SermonSeeds.
For further reflection
Mahatma Gandhi, 20th century
"Prayer is not asking. It is a longing of the soul. It is a daily admission of one's weakness. It is better in prayer to have a heart without words than words without a heart."
Martin Luther, 16th century
"Pray, and let God worry."
George Bernard Shaw, 20th century
"Most people do not pray; they only beg."
Mary Gordon, 21st century
"Prayer is having something to say and someone to say it to."
Mother Teresa, 20th century
"May God break my heart so completely that the whole world falls in."
Kahlil Gibran, The Prophet, 20th century 
"You pray in your distress and in your need; would that you might pray also in the fullness of your joy and in your days of abundance."
S¯ren Kierkegaard,, 19th century
"Prayer does not change God, but it changes the one who prays."
Anne Lamott, 21st century
"There are really only two kinds of prayer: help me, help me, help me, and thank you, thank you, thank you."
(Anne Lamott later added "Wow" - a prayer of praise and wonder.)
Meister Eckhart, 14th century
"If the only prayer you said was thank you, that would be enough.


Friday, July 1, 2016

Caring Neighbors


Caring Neighbors
July 10, 2016
Written by Kathryn Matthews
Sunday, July 10
Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Focus Theme
Caring Neighbors
Weekly Prayer
Ever-faithful God, whose being is perfect righteousness: reconcile us in your Son with the helpless and the needy, with those we would ignore or oppress, and with those we have called enemies, that we may serve all people as your hands of love, and sit at the feet of those who need our compassionate care. Amen.
Focus Reading
Luke 10:25-37
Just then a lawyer stood up to test Jesus. "Teacher," he said, "what must I do to inherit eternal life?" He said to him, "What is written in the law? What do you read there?" He answered, "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and your neighbor as yourself." And he said to him, "You have given the right answer; do this, and you will live."
But wanting to justify himself, he asked Jesus, "And who is my neighbor?" Jesus replied, "A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell into the hands of robbers, who stripped him, beat him, and went away, leaving him half dead. Now by chance a priest was going down that road; and when he saw him, he passed by on the other side. So likewise a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side. But a Samaritan while travelling came near him; and when he saw him, he was moved with pity. He went to him and bandaged his wounds, having poured oil and wine on them. Then he put him on his own animal, brought him to an inn, and took care of him. The next day he took out two denarii, gave them to the innkeeper, and said, 'Take care of him; and when I come back, I will repay you whatever more you spend.' Which of these three, do you think, was a neighbor to the man who fell into the hands of the robbers?í He said, "The one who showed him mercy." Jesus said to him, "Go and do likewise."
All Readings For This Sunday
Amos 7:7-17 with Psalm 82 or
Deuteronomy 30:9-14 with Psalm 25:1-10
Colossians 1:1-14
Luke 10:25-37
Focus Questions
1. What do you think went through the mind of the Samaritan in this parable?
2. What is "a higher righteousness"? How do you define "holiness"?
3. How might you retell this story in a way that would make your stomach churn?

4. Are there people for whom you have a hard time feeling compassion?
5. How are our lives structured in a way that keeps us from noticing those in need?
Reflection by Kate Matthews
It might be the world's most famous story about showing compassion even for people we may not like: a nice little story with a nice little moral, especially for those of us who like to do good deeds for those in need. Our story from the Gospel of Luke certainly doesn't make our stomach churn or offend our sensibilities; in fact, we may hear it with an almost satisfied ear, as if we believe we too would surely do what the "Good" Samaritan did when he was moved by compassion to help the poor victim of highway robbery. At least, we'd like to think we would.
In other words, when we hear this story, we put ourselves in the place of the Samaritan, and that's a pretty comfortable place to be. Reading enough commentaries on this familiar passage, however, will lead one to feel as if we are in unfamiliar territory, and on dangerous ground.
Where were they coming from?
To begin with, we have to deal with all sorts of perplexing disagreements among the scholars: was the question put to Jesus by the lawyer in sincerity, in respectful argument (what we might call a fruitful debate), or did it involved entrapment and shame? Maybe the answer to that question is less important than Jesus' answer to the lawyer's question: faithfulness has to do with what we do, not just what we say.
Indeed, we might hear this as an ancient version of "walking the talk," as Richard Swanson translates Jesus' final instruction to the lawyer ("go and do likewise") with the word, "walk," because the Hebrew words for "walk" (halak) is used to speak of doing Torah. This prompts all sorts of interesting questions about grace, and about salvation being predicated on simply accepting Jesus as your Lord and Savior. Jesus, however, doesn't mention these when he instructs the lawyer to "go and do likewise."
Pointing to the goodness of God
There is also the issue of the Pharisee's attempt to "justify himself," which we may hear with different ears than a Jewish audience of Jesus' or Luke's day. "In such a context," Swanson writes, "'be justified' ought rather to be translated as 'be strictly observant,' which means to live a life shaped by Torah, a life which points to the goodness of God and the possibility of safety." We don't know what was in the heart of the lawyer, but it seems reasonable to hear in his question a request for some clear boundaries for his "neighborhood."
The road to Jericho doesn't run through comfortable, familiar territory. Instead, travelers there find themselves on dangerous ground, uncertain and often, alone. Much better to stay home in Jerusalem, with one's own kind, surrounded by the temple and the walls of the city and the institutions and community that provide what's needed, including a safety net if anything goes wrong. At home, we know who we are: we are "Somebody" in the web of relationships that we've wrapped around ourselves, and that identity gives us a lot of comfort and assurance.
Whom is it okay not to love?
Now, for the lawyer who tests Jesus, this identity draws lines around people and protects us from one another, but it also puts some reasonable limits on the possibly unreasonable demands of the Jewish Law he cares so much about obeying. Give me some parameters, he says to Jesus, I mean, whom might it be okay not to love? After all, I'm only humanÖjust give me a list of which people I have to take care of, and who's on the outside of that line I need to draw around my community of care.
Yes, yes, of course I know that I need to love God ó that's a no-brainer ó remember, I knew the answer to your question when you asked me what's in the Law (I am a lawyer, after all), but give me a break, okay? Whom all do I need to love just as much as I love myself? Who is this neighbor whose needs and welfare need to be as important to me as my own? The question itself implies, of course, that there are people who are not my neighbor, people who it's okay not to love.
What do we think Jesus will say?
You think Jesus is going to give this lawyer a pass? Do you think the Jesus we know from the Gospels and from the past two thousand years of a church struggling to be faithful and from our own personal and communal relationship with him, is going to say, "Well, if you can manage to love your family and friends and maybe throw a coin at a beggar every once in a while, that's pretty good. Just be sure to worship regularly at the temple, obey all the religious laws about sexual morality, and pay your pledge every year. Then you're all set ó or as you put it, you'll inherit eternal life, and you'll go to heaven when you die, because, after all, you will have earned it."
No such luck. But Jesus does help the man out in his search to be faithful, to live an observant life shaped by the Torah, the Law of his people. He helps him, as he so often does, with a story. Laws can spell things out, list them, forbid them, require them, but stories ó stories get to the heart of things, to the heart of us, to that place of feeling and gut response. And Jesus goes for both the heart and the gut this time.
Who's listening to the story?
But as we hear the story, let's remember that there are two other audiences for it, in addition to us today: there's the group of people, including the lawyer, gathered around Jesus that day, presumably all or mostly Jewish people. Then there are the early Christians of Luke's community who are trying to live their lives as followers of this Jesus, and they're just as interested in being faithful and in knowing what that means for how they live their lives. So let's hear the story through their ears, if you will, as well as our own:
All of us know the taste of fear. The traveler in Jesus' story was probably nervous on that road from Jerusalem, and his worst fears were realized when he was set upon by bandits who beat him and robbed him and left him for dead, stripped naked and bleeding by the road. What a nightmare, lying there, hoping that someone would come and helpÖand then, Jesus said, along came a priest.
Things get tense
Now in that setting, the folks listening would have tensed up. For a lot of reasons, these peasants and tax collectors and lepers and women and other pushed-out people would have resented the priestly classÖJesus hung out with sinners, we recall, with people who were unacceptable in the eyes of the religious elites, and that's what the priest and the Levite were. And that may be why Jesus put them in the story.
No matter what some folks say to try to excuse them, they didn't have to worry about ritual purity if they touched a corpse ó if they were on the road away from the Temple and its rules, as Sharon Ringe observes, then that wasn't a problem, and besides, the Law said they had to help someone in need. Besides, when so-called holiness keeps us from being compassionate, Jesus knows what true religion is, and what the Law says about helping those in need.
A priest, a Levite and an Israelite...or not
In those days, Stephen Patterson tells us, it was commonplace for a story to begin, a priest and a levite came by, just as we might begin a story, a doctor, a lawyer and a priest walked into the bar ó you know ó and the people there expected to hear that the next person was an ordinary IsraeliteÖthat was the usual third person in that trio: a priest, a Levite, and an Israelite.
The first two, according to Patterson, the religious elites, were ones the Jewish audience around Jesus would have had very strong feelings about, and they would have expected them to show indifference to human suffering. But the next one around the corner, they were sure, would be one of their own, the everyday Israelite: Yay! One of our kind, a regular guy like you and me, and he'll come to the rescue of the poor, wounded man. He'll save the day! (Pattersonís reflection on this text in The God of Jesus: The Historical Jesus and the Search for Meaning is particularly helpful).
A most unwelcome hero
Instead, Jesus' audience is shocked and probably deeply offended that the hero coming around the bend is a hated Samaritan. Even the earliest Christians hearing this story would have remembered a few verses back (9:53), when a Samaritan village had refused to welcome Jesus, not a good move in a time and culture when hospitality meant everything. Charles Cousar calls the Samaritans "half-breeds," traitors who had colluded with Syria against the Jews. Roger E. Van Harn notes that the lawyer, even after this moving story, "could not bring himself to say the 'Samaritan' word." That's how deep the hatred ran.
This was a most unexpected and unwelcome hero for either audience to consider. It's not one of our own kind who saves the day ó it's that enemy, the hated Samaritan, a guy who's definitely on the outside of our community of care. They don't worship like us, they don't hate the same people we hate or love the same people we love, they don't live where we live, and there's no way they should provide the hero of the piece. The stomachs are churning by this time, and the sensibilities are definitely offended.
More than enough hatred to go around
A lot of hatred, of course, is religiously based and rooted in historical things like wars and other arguments. The Samaritan had probably been taught, from his side, to hate the Jews, too. And remember that he's in their territory, and the robbers could still be hanging around, waiting for their next victim. But this man doesn't let the Law, or fear, or the knowledge that he is hated keep him from what Cain Hope Felder calls a "higher righteousness." And a higher righteousness is what Jesus is all about.
I think the most moving words, and the most challenging ones, written about this story are, again, from Stephen Patterson: "You Need Your Enemy." Jesus seems to have it all backwards: when asked what we have to do, he tells a story about us. But he's not talking about "us, the good Jewish lawyer," or even "us, the 'good' Samaritan." No, Jesus tells a story about us, the person lying there in the ditch. That's the place we ought to find ourselves in when we hear this story.
We're the ones in the ditch
We're lying in that ditch, and we desperately need our enemy to have compassion on us, no matter what. We need our enemy, Patterson writes, to forget what he's been taught and what he understands his rights to be. He needs to forget the risk and the robbers, and to stop and help us in our need. He needs to be moved by pity for our suffering.
I wonder when I hear this story about what might have happened to the traveler afterward. Once his wounds were healed and his family came to get him and he went home to the security and comfort of life among his own kind, I wonder if he still laughed at Samaritan jokes. I wonder if he turned the other way when someone said unkind things about a Samaritan person, or treated them cruelly. I just wonder if his heart was broken open, permanently, long after his broken bones were healed. I wonder.
Costly, risky compassion
And that's not all. When I think about this story, I think not just about people as individuals, long ago, and each of us today, but about communities, nations, and races. Bernard Brandon Scott says that we have to "cross the lines" weíve drawn both individually and as communities, that every act of kindness, random or otherwise, toward an individual brother or sister is a starting point and an inspiration for wholesale kindness and compassion, woven into the fabric of our communities, our institutions, our world, reminding us of who we all are as beloved children of God. We kick-start this kindness especially when we act in times and circumstances that are both costly and full of risk.
I once heard a story of a would-be robber in Washington who walked into a group of people having a backyard barbecue. He pointed a gun at the head of one of the women. Everyone remained very calm. One woman said, "Why don't you point that gun at me instead of her?" He did. They asked him, calmly, what his mother would think of what he was doing. He said, "I donít have a mother." Their hearts were moved to pity. They said, "I'm so sorry," and offered him a glass of wine and some cheese. The would-be robber, with his hood down, took a sip of wine and a bite of Camembert cheese and put the gun in his sweatpants.
What happens "after"?
Then the story got even more bizarre. According to the New York Times , the man with the gun apologized and said, "Can I get a hug?" The guests stood up one by one and wrapped their arms around the man. A few moments later the man walked away with a crystal wine glass they had given him. It was good wine, I guess, but I suspect the compassion, and the hospitality, were more powerful than even the wine. Like the traveler, and the Samaritan, we might wonder what happened to him "after."
But for our purposes, the inheriting eternal life thing, the question arises: are we talking about how to earn a place in heaven, after we die? I don't think so. I think we are talking about an inheritance, a gift, a blessing, that we can enjoy here and now, the fullness of life, as Jesus says, all of God's good and abundant gifts for our bodies and our souls, a sweet balm for our wounded spirits, and gladness and joy for every human heart. We just have to open our hearts, our eyes, our minds, to these gifts all around, and then share them with one another in gratitude and joy.
A preaching version of this commentary (with book titles) is at http://www.ucc.org/worship_samuel.
The Rev. Kathryn Matthews retired from serving as dean of Amistad Chapel at the national offices of the United Church of Christ in Cleveland, Ohio (https://www.facebook.com/AmistadChapel).
You're invited to share your reflections on this text in the comments on our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/SermonSeeds.
For further reflection
Ralph Waldo Emerson, 19th century
"Always do what you are afraid to do."
Shirley MacLaine, 21st century
"Fear makes strangers of people who would be friends."
The Dalai Lama, 21st century
"If you want others to be happy, practice compassion. If you want to be happy, practice compassion."
Henry Ward Beecher, 19th century
"Compassion will cure more sins than condemnation."
John Green, Looking for Alaska, 21st century
"The only way out of the labyrinth of suffering is to forgive."
Plato, 4th century B.C.E.
"Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a harder battle."
Arthur Schopenhauer, 19th century
"Compassion is the basis of morality."
Mother Teresa, 20th century
"If we have no peace, it is because we have forgotten that we belong to each other."

Friday, June 24, 2016

Surprising Prophets

Surprising Prophets

July 03, 2016
Written by Kathryn Matthews
Sunday, July 3
Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Focus Theme
Surprising Prophets
Weekly Prayer
God of fresh beginnings, you make all things new in the wisdom of Jesus Christ. Make us agents of your transforming power and heralds of your reign of justice and peace, that all may share in the healing Christ brings. Amen.
Focus Reading
2 Kings 5:1-14
Naaman, commander of the army of the king of Aram, was a great man and in high favor with his master, because by him the Lord had given victory to Aram. The man, though a mighty warrior, suffered from leprosy. Now the Arameans on one of their raids had taken a young girl captive from the land of Israel, and she served Naaman's wife. She said to her mistress, "If only my lord were with the prophet who is in Samaria! He would cure him of his leprosy." So Naaman went in and told his lord just what the girl from the land of Israel had said. And the king of Aram said, "Go then, and I will send along a letter to the king of Israel."
He went, taking with him ten talents of silver, six thousand shekels of gold, and ten sets of garments. He brought the letter to the king of Israel, which read, "When this letter reaches you, know that I have sent to you my servant Naaman, that you may cure him of his leprosy." When the king of Israel read the letter, he tore his clothes and said, "Am I God, to give death or life, that this man sends word to me to cure a man of his leprosy? Just look and see how he is trying to pick a quarrel with me."
But when Elisha the man of God heard that the king of Israel had torn his clothes, he sent a message to the king, "Why have you torn your clothes? Let him come to me, that he may learn that there is a prophet in Israel." So Naaman came with his horses and chariots, and halted at the entrance of Elisha's house. Elisha sent a messenger to him, saying, "Go, wash in the Jordan seven times, and your flesh shall be restored and you shall be clean." But Naaman became angry and went away, saying, "I thought that for me he would surely come out, and stand and call on the name of the Lord his God, and would wave his hand over the spot, and cure the leprosy! Are not Abana and Pharpar, the rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel? Could I not wash in them, and be clean?" He turned and went away in a rage. But his servants approached and said to him, "Father, if the prophet had commanded you to do something difficult, would you not have done it? How much more, when all he said to you was, 'Wash, and be clean'?" So he went down and immersed himself seven times in the Jordan, according to the word of the man of God; his flesh was restored like the flesh of a young boy, and he was clean.
All Readings for this Sunday
2 Kings 5:1-14 with Psalm 30 or
Isaiah 66:10-14, with Psalm 66:1-9 and
Galatians 6:(1-6), 7-16 and
Luke 10:1-11, 16-20
Focus Questions
1. When have you transformed a situation by a simple observation or suggestion?
2. Who are the ones who exercise power in your community in quiet but important ways?

3. What miracles do you dare to hope for in your own life?

4. When have you felt powerless but then received help from the most unlikely source?
5. How is God calling you to be a source of healing for others?
Reflection by Kate Matthews
Like so many stories in the Bible, the story of Naaman is about power. But it's also about the "little" people, the ones who are so often missed in the larger scheme of things, especially in the way history is written. (Barbara Brown Taylor, in her beautiful sermon on this text, "The Cheap Cure," says that it's also about freedom, an apt subject on this Fourth of July weekend.) The little people in this story make it move along, make things happen, so, in some interesting way, they have their own great power. Or, if they don't have the power, they at least don't stand in its way, as Naaman and the kings seem to do.
The movers and shakers in this story, Naaman the great general, two kings, and one prophet, are all men, and they all have names. They are Big Men in the eyes of the world; even Elisha, who mostly just sends messages here, is a "man of God." But the dramatic story of healing wouldn't happen if the "little people," the unnamed ones, didn't move things along.
Seeing the story through their eyes
Wouldn't it be interesting to see the story through the eyes of these "surprising prophets"? They live their lives in the shadow of the king's power and magnificence, but Naaman is the star general of the king, a celebrity, if you will, even if he does have an excruciatingly painful flaw, his skin disease. Of all physical ailments, a skin disease is one of the hardest to hide, and it makes Naaman, the mighty warrior, strangely vulnerable. Barbara Brown Taylor's re-telling of this story explores what the great general must have felt like in the simplest of everyday encounters, when his success and fame and power meant very little before the awkward discomfort of someone who might not want to shake his hand or stare too long at his disfigurement.
Walter Brueggemann calls the mighty general, ironically, "an invisible nobody" whose commanding presence could not betray his inner struggles and heartache. Still, this humiliation doesn't prevent Naaman from having a certain sense of his own place that puts him above ordinary people, and ordinary rivers. He walks and talks with kings, he rides at the head of an army, and he has the wherewithal to assemble a great treasure to offer in return for a cure he thinks he can buy, "the best available health care, no doubt anticipating a private, luxurious room for his period of confinement," Brueggemann writes. Everything can be bought, after all, when you live on top of the world.
Powerlessness among the powerful
That's how the king of Aram approaches it. He, too, is above working with a foreign prophet (probably not too well-groomed and definitely uneducated), even to get what he wants for his favorite general. So he does what comes naturally: he talks to his "own kind," his peer, and sends a message to the king of Israel; Brueggemann notes that this kind of letter from a king is unusual in the Bible, and he calls this "healing on demand, by royal memo." Power talks to Power ñ for what it's worth, in a situation like this one. So far, however, there is a whole lot of powerlessness on the part of such powerful men!
James Newsome notes "the hollowness of such arrogance," no matter how impressive the general and the king might appear in all their trappings. Frank Anthony Spina calls this story's two different kinds of power "conventional and unconventional." In the life of nations, powerlessness and power are related to politics and fear, so the king of Israel immediately goes to the place of thinking that Aram's king is trying to find a reason to attack him. He rips his robe and cries out, and Naaman is left without help.
Expecting world-class care from a humble prophet
Of course, Naaman wouldn't even be standing before the king of Israel if an unnamed little girl hadn't ventured to suggest that he consult "the prophet who is in Samaria." She is undoubtedly a captive, one of the countless victims of war between the powerful, and she must have some memory of what Elisha could do and what he represented. People without power have to work between the lines and behind the scenes, and this little girl gets things started with her observation.
However, when Naaman finally finds his way to the prophet and "gets stood up," or at least left standing outside, waiting, we hear him talking out of his pride and sense of place when he takes offense at not being received more respectfully by the prophet and not being provided with a more impressive, dramatic cure, something that would reinforce his stature in the eyes of all who would witness such a miracle. Brueggemann's account is amusing: "Obviously, he has been watching too much televisionÖ.The prophetÖ.only sends an LPN out with a prescription," but it's not a prescription Naaman finds worthy of his standing. (Brueggemann's study of this text is particularly engaging.)
A small gesture for a huge result
Fortunately, his servants have more sense of the possibility that the moment holds, and these nameless folks, little ones in their own turn, coax Naaman into forgetting his own importance (or, as we would say today, his "ego") and going for what will really matter: a cure. Dianne Bergant points out the double meaning of the term, "to go down," not just into the waters of the river, but as a demonstration of subservience in obeying this humble (and foreign!) prophet.
And in keeping with our focus on the importance of the "little people" in this story, we appreciate the way they encourage Naaman to make this one small gesture in order to be healed, when surely he would have been willing to do something much bigger, much more dramatic, for such a desirable outcome. Once again, the "little people" understand the great difference that "little things" can make.
Being healed of being a big deal
Barbara Brown Taylor's sermon on this text provides a moving description of what it must have felt like for Naaman to plunge slowly into that muddy river, the place of healing and power, a most unexpected thing. It's God who is really at work by these unexpected means, the little ones, the unnamed people, the muddy river, while the mighty are not only humbled but healed. Isn't it interesting that the young girl at the beginning of the story is the agent for the great general being given skin like that of a young boy? In his own way, Naaman is healed of being "a big deal" (at least to himself) and renewed by his openness to the power of the One True God.
Because the lectionary text ends at verse 14, we miss a very important part of Naaman's story that includes his gratitude for his new skin, and his acceptance of the One True God of Israel. (Oddly, Elisha seems to give him permission to appear to be worshipping the "required" god of his homeland, as was customary in those days ñ it was, after all, the expected thing to do, politically, to put on a good show). While Naaman may have brought treasure as a kind of payment for the cure he needed, Dianne Bergant says that his offer of a gift in verse 15 was his way of giving thanks for being healed.
Can we even begin to relate?
Brueggemann, on the other hand, suggests that Naaman is saving face, in a way, after all of that subservience and humility and "a folk remedy" that works, before lowly servants and foreigners; Brueggemann notes that the general moves "from leprosy to wholeness," a miracle so amazing that "we do not easily notice the drama and the wonderÖunless we have had leprosy lately."
Bergant says that this little story "champions monotheism and universalism," not only because Naaman professes faith in the One True God of a different nation, Israel, but also because his healing demonstrates that God's love does not stop with Israel but embraces all of God's children. Indeed, it's thought-provoking to approach this story from both directions of "outsider-hood." Yes, Naaman was an outsider in Israel, a military leader from an enemy land as well as ritually impure because of his skin condition. But it's even worse, because verse 1 tells us that Naaman was helped by Israel's own God in vanquishing Israel.
Leaving his comfort zone in order to end his suffering
On the other hand, Naaman humbled himself before the prophet of a God not his own, so, for him, Israel was the outsider. The great general had to go way outside his comfort zone and cross some serious boundaries, deep into the land of his enemy, to receive the healing he needed. Just as we want to think that we offer hospitality, justice, and healing to "outsiders" (one expression of "the haves and the have-nots"), aren't we called to be open and humble enough to receive in turn the gifts and hospitality, justice, and healing that "outsiders" bring to our lives and communities?
Brueggemann reminds me of Karl Rahner's "anonymous Christians," calling Naaman, when God earlier helped him defeat Israel, "an 'anonymous Israelite,' doing the bidding of the God of Israel, all the while thinking he is only a good Syrian military man." How ironic is that? After his healing, Naaman is no longer "anonymous" in his relationship with God, except for those times he will have to bow before his own nation's god, out of deference toward his king. (Brueggemann provides a more thorough reflection on outsider-hood by viewing each character in that role.)
What unexpected power do we have?
This text makes me think about our own power, yours and mine, and how God speaks through us to other people. Do we often think we can't do anything because, after all, we're not in charge? Do we realize the power that we do have, the power to move things along, to speak up, to make things happen, to be part of a great process of healing not just in our lives but in the lives of other, very surprising people?
God still speaks in and from the most unexpected places and through the most unlikely people, prophets in their own right, really. Perhaps it's a word of possibility and hope, like the words of the young slave girl. Perhaps it's a word of clear command, like the instruction from Elisha, that supplies a reality check on our own sense of importance when we've gotten a little carried away with ourselves. Or perhaps it's a word of persuasive reasoning spoken for our own good, a word that redirects us and puts us on the right path toward healing and wholeness.
Come to the water for healing
What I sense is that in each of these words from God, in all situations and from whatever source, however unexpected, however ordinary, in each of these words from God are the movement and the power of compassion in our lives. God's healing comes from surprising places and in most unanticipated ways, but it comes nevertheless. And you and I, along with "nameless servants" and mighty generals all the same, are free to move into the river, step into the deep waters of God's own care, and emerge restored and renewed. Let's pray for the good sense and the good grace to say yes when we hear those words, no matter the source, and to know God's healing in our lives.
A preaching version of this commentary (with book titles) is at http://www.ucc.org/worship_samuel.
The Rev. Kathryn Matthews serves as dean of Amistad Chapel at the national offices of the United Church of Christ in Cleveland, Ohio (https://www.facebook.com/AmistadChapel).
You're invited to share your reflections on this text in the comments on our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/SermonSeeds.
For further reflection
Drew Barrymore, 21st century
"My whole life, I've wanted to feel comfortable in my skin. It's the most liberating thing in the world."
Haruki Murakami, Norwegian Wood, 20th century
"What happens when people open their hearts?"
"They get better."
Maya Angelou, 21st century
"As soon as healing takes place, go out and heal somebody else."
Hippocrates, 4th century B.C.E.
"Healing in a matter of time, but it is sometimes also a matter of opportunity."
Simone de Beauvoir, 20th century
"I wish that every human life might be pure transparent freedom."
Frederick Buechner, 20th century
"Compassion is sometimes the fatal capacity for feeling what it is like to live inside somebody else's skin. It is the knowledge that there can never really be any peace and joy for me until there is peace and joy finally for you too."
Joseph Campbell, 20th century
"We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned, so as to have the life that is waiting for us. The old skin has to be shed before the new one can come."