In my
pilgrimage from cynicism to faith, gratitude is my final frontier.
In case
you’re new to this blog, I have one exhortation: read Ann Voskamp’s One Thousand Gifts. This book is “a
celebration of grace and a recognition of the power of gratitude”—in the most
powerful and compelling language I have ever read. It is my current obsession
(besides Hunger Games) and progression in my spiritual journey.
Photo credit: Ann Voskamp |
Ann’s words
have challenged my heart, but they’ve also challenged my mind. She’s addressed
gratitude in the face of injustice, gratitude in the face of the mundane, and
gratitude in the face of pain.
But today I
ask, what about evil?
Ann writes
that ALL IS GOOD. All is grace.
She says,
“All God makes is good. Can it be that that which seems to oppose the will of
God is actually used of Him to accomplish the will of God? That which seems
evil only seems so because of perspective, the way the eyes see the shadows.
Above the clouds, the light never stops shining.”
That doesn’t
sit well with me.
She asks
could it be, “that which feels like trouble, gravel in the mouth, is only
that—feeling? What if faith says all is good…I think it. But do I really mean
it?”
In my world,
there are some things that don’t just feel evil; they are evil.
Death and
war and rape and genocide and a million other forms of selfishness and
injustice that pepper our world with pain. How are those moments grace, gifts?
I relate to
Elie Wiesel, Jewish survivor of the Holocaust and Nobel Peace Prize winner,
when he says,
“I feel like
screaming, howling like a madman so that the world, the world of the murderers,
might know it will never be forgiven.”
Sometimes I
hear awful stories and I think I could scream for eternity and it wouldn’t be
okay.
I think of catching and stopping warlord Joseph Kony. I think of the incredible victory that will be. But the tens of thousands of children who have been abducted and forced to murder, scream out to me that it will still not be okay.
That it will never be okay.
But God is
reconciling ALL THINGS?
I can’t mean
it. I can’t.
Not yet. Or
maybe not ever.
Photo credit: The Christian Science Monitor |
I can see
good and hope and love. I see things being made new everyday. As Gungor says, I
know God makes beautiful things out of dust and out of us. But I can’t call it
all beautiful—not in my macro-theology.
In my
personal micro-theology I can believe it. I can name my own gifts, my graces. I
can name my hurt and pain and walk the path to wholeness, to redemption, to
beauty.
I can
consent to each of us, on our own micro-level, acknowledging the gifts.
But I refuse
to gift-wrap the world’s pain in glib statements of gratitude without the victims’
approval. Like my bloggy friend Adrian Waller commented the other day, I refuse to say, “God causes bad things that
are "really" for good.”
I refuse to
say that it is okay that this world is so messed up.
I used to
think that meant I couldn’t believe in God. Or that I didn’t believe in God.
I used to
think I couldn’t be angry and grateful at the same time. That I couldn’t be
angry and faithful.
But the
other thing I learned from Elie Weisel is that you can.
In fact, I
can be angry with God precisely because of my faith in Him.
Elie writes,
“I have never renounced my faith in God. I have risen against His justice,
protested His silence and sometimes His absence, but my anger rises up within
faith and not outside it.”
And so today—from within faith—I wrestle. I protest a world
with warlords like Joseph Kony and hot topic issues such as sex trafficking and
child soldiers. I protest the poverty I
have seen in the city dumps of Nicaragua and Guatemala and in my own
neighborhood in San Diego. I protest the less sexy atrocities of lack of access
to land and food and crops that I encounter every day at my work. For a few
minutes, I let my growing fears that I’m a Capitol dweller in the circus of the
21st century Hunger Games consume me, and I—in the same breath—I ask,
“Where are you, God?”
and “Please rain down your GRACE.”
Amen.
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Can you relate to this tension between anger and gratitude? Do you think it's possible to be angry at God and remain faithful? I'd love to hear your thoughts!
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Can you relate to this tension between anger and gratitude? Do you think it's possible to be angry at God and remain faithful? I'd love to hear your thoughts!
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