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A former Lutheran pastor sharing thoughts on faith and life. Please join the conversation! I love your comments!

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Lenten Truth Facing Week 2: Lack of Certainty

Here is week 2 of Lenten Truth Facing.  I have proposed the Lenten discipline of facing a new truth about faith or life each week.  If you missed last week or want to review, I have included last week's post below.  
Week 2:  Face honestly the limits of faith.  Being a Christian does not mean we know what happens after we die.  It does not mean we have an answer for everything.   It does not mean certainty about anything.  It does not mean we know exactly what God wants us to do with our lives.  It is perfectly possible to have great faith in something and be absolutely flat out wrong.  Think through your own personal creeds and beliefs and callings and consider the possibility you might be wrong about any of them.   Talk with a friend about one thing you feel sure about and then ponder together what it would mean if the opposite were true.  Face the truth you might be wrong. 


Last week's post:   In preparation for Ash Wednesday I wrote these words: “It is easy for Christianity to dissolve into platitudes.  What is intended to be about speaking hope can become dodging reality.  We speak platitudes to diminish the pain of others.  We speak platitudes to run away from our doubts.  But tonight we stand boldly on the edge of the abyss, acknowledging our faith does not prevent death.  We stand on the edge of the abyss with nothingness spread out before us and proclaim there is hope to be found even here.”

It did my heart good to think about the church boldly facing reality.  But it lead me to wonder at how many ways we, the church, fail to face reality or even do things which intentionally obscure reality.  How do we use faith to avoid uncomfortable truth?  How does such behavior damage any credibility the church might have and get in the way of being love and justice in the world?   

So, I propose a different Lenten discipline: each week of Lent let’s face honestly a new truth about church, faith or life.  Such as: 
  

Week 1:  Speak honestly about someone else’s pain.  I don’t mean tell someone else how they feel, but resist temptation to minimize someone else’s pain.  We use our religion to minimize the pain of others all the time.  We use euphemisms and platitudes.  We talk about faith as though it is proof against pain.  We talk about ministry as though it is a prize for suffering.  This week, pay attention to how you react to other people’s difficulties.  At least once, respond to someone by frankly acknowledging hurt without any caveats or comforts.  Resist using phrases like “passed away” “with the angels” or describing how God is at work.  Say something like “I am sorry he died” or “that sucks” or “how awful” or just “I am sorry.”  Listen without fixing or comforting.  Face the brutal reality of suffering in this world. 


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