Showing posts with label Mercy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mercy. Show all posts

Thursday, April 19, 2012

impending

“impending”

This is not an “Africa Journal”. This is a mindstream taken directly from my journal, recorded just about an hour ago as I watched a massive, ferocious storm light up the sky. It is simply my thoughts, feelings and memories as they came to me. This is effectively unedited. Please excuse the use of both past and present phrases. listen, do not fear.

I watched the storm approach. A tempest was already raging deep inside of me. I thought of Ronan’s timeless, inked words, “These are not words. They’re only feelings. There are no sounds that you can hear. There are no forms that you can touch. I tell myself, I keep repeating, that your ways are bringing you to me.” Yes, I thought to myself. I watched the storm approach the same way you watch the approaching moment your best friend marries the love of his life. It is that particular mix of joy and longing that steeled my soul in that moment. As the stars disappeared it felt like a warm embrace from a lover long since removed. I reveled in the moment and in impending fury.

The whole day I’ve spent considering the narrative of my life and the struggles and pain that seem to grow stronger every day. The flashbacks are more constant now as a dozen spent pens can attest to. There was this moment that came amidst the thousandth page of other’s pain that I was reading in which I started to feel myself. The loss and anger broke through the numbness and deadness that are my constant jailors, enslaving and yet protecting me from this overwhelming urge to stand in the lightening storm just to test my life, to prove that I’m still alive. It’s not safe to feel like this and people will ask, “What is wrong?” as if the catacomb of silence is an almost necessary state to experience the truth of my experience. How can I describe what it means to be an iceberg with the danger laying mostly beneath the surface? And yet that old friend, violence, having breached my prison bars embraced me. Now with the storm enveloping me I took the time to embrace back. It had been too long.

I thought of the stories that I’ve heard, both the hundreds and the few that have truly, utterly broken my heart. I remember the stories of others that have cost me more than my life. I consider that embrace, that rage, that impeccable desire for both wrath and shalom, that violence that courses through my veins. I can hear it pumping in the ringing silence of my ears. The storm is still too far away to be heard, but I know it draws nearer. The tears run stream down my face picking up the ashes that are imbued in my sackcloth soul in some ceremonial gray mud of remembrance. I stifle a scream, a scream to protest with God. “Why?!” is not a sufficient question. “You.” That is the accusation I level at the nameless, faceless person who embodies that which took everything and took it in the name of God. I would take your life. I would rip the page from the book and burn it alive.

Violence, I know. The streaks across the perilous sky remind me of counter-battery fire and the death that each audible report attests to. I think of the charred bodies, the blood stained glass, and the open graves. This, after all, is war. I think of the exchanges of hatred and fire and how such violence is the manifestation of that rage, that fury that is both boundless and patient. “You”, I whisper in to the now windy emptiness. It is black as sin out here despite the magnificent flashes and the irony is not lost on me.

“I hate you with the justice of a thousand nights that I’ve longed for, prayed for healing.” Yet I know that my own anger is second only to another’s. And by what right do I have to take their pain and make it my own? But it is now my own. I do not know where theirs ends and mine begins. “Someday”, I think. I stare intently at the flashes ignoring every close sound in hopes of hearing the distant sounds of fury. I want to hear it, but more than that I want to taste it. I want to know it. I want to remember that I was not there at the foundations of this earth and yet I will brace like a man for the impending gale. My heart and head collide as I hear the chorus of breakdown ring in my ears as I scream inwards, “Make him beg for his life!!!!” With the intensity only learnt through years of waiting for the opportunity.

But then the prose of feeling drops dead from my lips and as it hits the ground I stomp on its lifeless existence a couple of times just to make sure. The blood is again pumping in my ears and I think of the knife and the cold intimacy it represents. In the end only one of us walks away.

The wind is harder now. I wonder if it will carry me home.

And to think, I am standing here because of love.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Justice AND Mercy




Today I've pondered a great question, which I've wrestled with for years now. I praise God that I am personally emotionally detached from the reality of this great struggle, this struggle over the control of life.

Does anyone have the right to take a life?

I am pro-life. I view abortion as one of the most evil things a society can condone. It is interesting to me how the talk about abortion is all politics now. Few people on either side of the fence seem interested in why people get abortions or what societal factors create its acceptance... but that is not the story today.

Today I was in speech class, a class I really enjoy, a place where I've learned some amazing things about some amazing people. It's a summer class, so it's really fast paced, but I've still been able to have many deep conversations with the people in there. I absolutely surprised by the spectrum of faith I've found there. It's truly profound. I can't think of a single person in that class that would profess any athiesm or agnosticism, everyone has claimed God in some way I believe... but, again, that is not my point here. Today, Christina, a young latino girl with a heart of passion and the desire to become a prosecutor, gave a speech today defending Capital Punishment. She quoted the old testament where it says "an eye for an eye", and I'll admit I cringed. But she gave a decent speech that was a little lacking in logic, but still given with passion, which often, for better or for worse makes up for logic. I'm becoming a logic-junkie...so much so it is kinda scaring me, haha! After her speech I spoke with her a little bit, trying to pick her mind. We discussed some different ideas, and i tried to pull her ideas to their logical conclusion. I'm not sure if we saw eye to eye, but seeing eye to eye was, itself, the point. I had my bible with me and turned to Matthew 5:38-39 which says: "You have heard that it was said, 'Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth.' But I tell you, Do not resist an evil person. If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also." Earlier she had quoted what Jesus quotes in this passage, Exodus 21:24, where God is describing the punishment, in His law for His people, concerning someone who hits a pregnant woman and the baby dies. It says an "eye for an eye" which is interesting in this context and what that says about life and abortion.... but that is not the topic right now. I attempted to unpack how Jesus was qualifying what "an eye for an eye" meant during the sermon on the mount. I am no biblical scholar, and the old-testament law still causes me to ask God some honest questions, but Jesus' words ring true with his triumph over sin on the cross. Jesus' sermon on the mount was vertigo, flipping people's understanding of what the God we serve demands of us. Oswald Chambers in Biblical Ethics said "To preach the Sermon on the Mount apart from the Cross is to preach an impossibility". But Christ has made a way. He has made a way in a world there is no justice. He made a way for us to come to the Father, despite our sin....

I don't know if Christina heard my words, or if she knew the implications of this passage on her passion for retribution and worldly "justice". It was not my intent to argue with her or even prover her wrong, and we didn't argue although some class members asked me those loaded questions that, again, have zero logic in them: "so you're saying people who rape people should be set free?!?" which is a common idea about people, like me, who use morality to persuade people to give up their passion for capital punishment and admit there may be a better way. As if you were against Capital Punishment you would be against any prison time. I'm saying No CP but the alternate to CP being life without parole. So there, I said it. I'm against capital punishment... and the day I had to fight to define and defend my world view came on the day the Supreme Court made it illegal to kill a man who rapes a child.... As many of you know God is moving my expertise and passion into issues of gender rights and abuse rights etc... and rape is obviously one of the most evil and destructive acts that one can inflict upon a soul. It is easily akin to murder. It is wrong and there is no defense under the sun that should allow people who have committed these terrible acts to have the opportunity to inflict damage again. I was left with a quandary in my mind. How much do I believe what I believe? A long time ago, I used to argue for capital punishment, citing non-existent stats that show it lowers violent crime. I used to believe those people, those monsters deserve it (as if they were so different than me). When the Carr brothers executed my teacher, Mr. Bedford and five others, when I was in High School, I was for the death penalty. I had been, I always thought I would be.

Jesus changes some things though.... I'm the worst sinner I know, and I'm not afraid to tell you I've thought deeply about killing some people. Not so much recently, but in the past. A small part of my choice to join the Marine Corps was to fulfill my ideal of "judgment and justice". I never killed anyone during my time in the Corps, although my actions in Iraq could have resulted in the death of people. I am ok with that at this point in time. I have peace with God concerning this, but I cannot support the Death Penalty in the United States (or anywhere for that matter). We are not the most unjust nation, but I see severe amounts of injustice in our justice system and for the state to take a life is too much for me to condone. Capital punishment, in my opinion and conviction, is not justice. It is retribution. We as a society have given the stamp of approval saying "violence is ok". I see it more and more in my study of men's relationship to women in our own society, where misogyny is the rule, not the exception. Our society wrought with "Grand Theft Auto" and violent movies etc. I love violent movies, and i'm not immune to their affects. I guess I'm working out the particulars of my conviction... I'm full of contradictions perhaps. Some could call me a hypocrite at times. I am not categorically against war or killing when it is necessary to protect life. I'm not sure what to think about this war, but after my wrestlings with this subject I've come back to realizing the sinful nature of the world necessitates war, in theory, from time to time... but I'm open to a change of heart... I, along with the world, am in the process of being redeemed after all!

I don't say all this to preach to you, but to express the desire for people to perhaps hear me out and dialog with me about what they think. Please separate Kingdom values from Americanized cultural values please. Do you think that society can condone a life for a life? Are people redeemable? Do you think our nation has learned that justice is served when a heart stops beating in the lethal injection chair? Was Moses a murderer? Is there and Justice apart from God? What is your opinion on Capital Punishment?

I'm not arguing for "moral equivalency" but aren't those "monsters" we commit to death sinners like us? I can promise you I've committed 1st degree murder in my heart, Jesus says I'm guilty (albeit forgiven by His grace and love)

Questions I struggle with.... I'm not jumping for joy for the new Supreme Court ruling, even though it will keep people off death row... perhaps I'm somewhere in between... trying to balance all things in life with my conviction: Justice and Mercy

He has showed us, my friends, what is good. And what does the LORD require of us? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with our God. (Micah 6:8, emphasis and minor "you/us" language-changes mine)

Thanks.
Dan

ps. 1 week until Africa. I will tell you my opinion on this subject when I return from hearing these women's stories....