This uncharitable sentiment is brought to you by…well, me.
It was my first instinct as I scrolled through my Facebook newsfeed this month
and saw an explosion of thanks-giving. My second instinct was to be deeply
ashamed that I grumbled about heartwarming posts about “the LOVE of my LIFE,”
the ones marked cheerily with “#soblessed.”
Pinterest has a lot of happy, thankful people (who make pretty memes). |
And another part of me felt a little smug that I was not at the point of publicly gushing a list of wonderful things about my life to social media. Because sad is happy for deep people.
So I started writing a response to those Facebook posts:
There are some very happy things that I’m thankful for. I’m
thankful for the smell of something cooking in my Crockpot when I come back to
my apartment. I’m thankful for that feeling that settles over you when you sing
old hymns and they still mean something. I’m thankful for crunch fall leaves, wonderful
co-workers, good books, hearing little kids laugh, friends who care about me,
people with British accents reading audiobooks, discovering I actually like
oatmeal, and all the other blessings that it’s okay to put on Facebook.
But there are other things I’m thankful for.
I am thankful for weakness—from the ache of fragility during
fasting to tiny risks of being honest with others.
I am thankful for uncertainty, especially the kind that
comes with humility about something bigger than me.
I am thankful for fear of inadequacy, because it’s a nice
change from pride.
I am thankful for silence, for the focus it provides and for
the way it jerks the approval of others completely out of your possible
motivations for doing something.
I am thankful even for silence from God, and I’m not quite
sure why yet, except that if God always did what I demanded and responded when
I wanted, he wouldn’t be much of a god.
I am thankful for goodbyes and the way they hurt, for mail
that can’t turn into hugs, for conversations that won’t happen anymore, for
long-distance friendships that aren’t the same, because they are broken things
that point to a reality where brokenness won’t exist.
If someone told you that faith was pretending everything is fine, they were wrong.
Faith is saying that everything would have been all right,
if we hadn’t messed it up. But we did.
And faith is saying that everything will be all right again
someday. But not always when we want it to be. And sometimes not even during
this life.
Faith is the final scrap of Job’s theology, the words Joshua
and Caleb said at the last of their friend’s funeral, the midnight prayers
whispered by the enslaved Israelites in the generation before Moses showed up.
It is the “yet” in the psalmist’s defiant cry “I will yet praise him” and the
“if” in Martha’s weary statement “If you had been here, my brother would not
have died.”
Faith is hard. Thanksgiving—the act, not the holiday—is
sometimes hard. And that’s the way it’s going to be for now, though not for
always.
Great. And now, I present…
My Response To Myself
Um…yes, this is actually a rebuttal of the first half of
this post. That’s why I usually write these a week ahead of time; so I have
time to realize I disagree with myself.
I still agree with most of what I wrote above, in the idea
of a brave faith and the fact that sometimes being thankful when life is hard—and being
able to say that God is good even when life is hard—can be a beautiful act of
worship. Those last four paragraphs…totally on board with that.
But I worry that my argument might be taken too far. That
maybe thanking God in all
circumstances is different than thanking him for those circumstances. It’s “Yea, though I walk through the
valley of the shadow of death,” not “YAY! I walk through the valley of the shadow
of death!” and I don’t think it’s a good idea theologically to confuse those
two.
In my examples, the distinction isn’t that important. It’s not going to
change my theology much if I say we should thank God for loneliness and the
opportunity it provides us to grow. But if I carry that logic on, I’ll start
saying that rape victims should thank God for assault, that the people whose
lives were destroyed by the typhoon should be grateful for the storm, that
targets of genocide and oppression should raise hands in praise, not for the
God who is still just in spite of evil, but in praise of evil itself.
Be a Heretic Monday, most likely. |
I don’t want to say that. Ever.
You can't write this postscript, I told myself. It will diminish the rhetorical power of the first part. Anyway, it's not that important. (Sidenote: when your argument pits "rhetorical power" against "theological tenability," you know you've gone off the cliff of nerd-dom. And that's without the earlier reference to Dr. Who.)
But I told those voices to shut up. Because what we as Christians think and say about evil is important. Like, really important. Taking one extreme to fight another makes for an extremely engaging and share-able post, but in this case, it wouldn't be honest.
So, instead, I will say that I am thankful for the God who is good when we are not. As an act of faith, I will be thankful for the growth that comes through broken things…but I refuse to be thankful for the broken things themselves.
Amy,
ReplyDeleteThis was an excellent distinction to make, and one that really helped me today, as I am going through a difficult season and I find myself struggling with what it means to rejoice in all circumstances. Thank you for acknowledging the dark truth that life, even if we have God, doesn't leave us happy all the time. The things that are broken are too big for us to fix, and it's all right for us to notice that and to be saddened by it. Even during Thanksgiving. Still, "yet" is a powerful word. Well put, Amy.
Blessings,
-Kathryn
Thanks so much, Kathryn. If I didn't have the hope that someday there wouldn't be broken things, I'm not sure how I'd cope.
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