When I was a boy, and I found myself making a mistake, I
would often panic and immediately make several more mistakes in rapid succession. Maybe I’d spill my milk when pouring it into
my cereal, try to catch myself and drop the entire milk jug on the floor,
reaching to catch the milk jug only to knock the cereal bowl itself and several
neighboring dishes of stuff all over the kitchen floor. A dropped and broken glass could become three
or four broken glasses, and maybe a couple of plates to boot, in a matter of
seconds. My parents learned to just try
and grab me as soon as possible if I spilled or broke something.
I’d like to say that adulthood has cured me of that pattern,
but I’m afraid I can’t. That package I
forgot to send my sister for Christmas might not get there by Valentines Day,
even though I realized weeks ago I
forgot to send it. For me, I can despair
so much over the mistakes I’ve made, I lose sight of my ability to resolve the
issue while things slowly get worse and worse.
And before I know it, I’m a hot mess – agonizing over what a terrible
person I am.
I used to believe I was uniquely terrible, but I’ve been
lucky enough to have people in my life who are willing to share their own
struggles with me. Maybe it’s an
estranged friend or family member that they got into a tiff with several months
ago and won’t call back because they just figure the person hates them. Or a bill that is long enough overdue that
the collection company is considering resorting to a brut squad to get their
money back. Or a visit to the dentist
that they know is going to be painful, expensive, and full of bad news about
their prospects of eating solid food in the near future. I’m glad I have friends I can talk to about
this stuff – being a disaster is so much easier when you have company.
The pattern is easy enough to identify. There’s that flood of negative feelings when
we fail at something, or don’t achieve what we had hoped, or experience a
difficult and unexpected hardship, and we are left to cope with those
feelings. Do we run away? Do we dive into our hidey holes and hope no
one finds us? Do we allow despair
to engulf us to the point of nearly
drowning? How we cope with these storms
is one of the most important challenges of a spiritual life.
God calls to Jonah, a Prophet, to go to Ninevah and Jonah,
though a prophet jumps a ship in the other direction – as far away from Ninevah
as possible. A big storm comes and every
guy on the ship tries to figure out whose God is angry. Taking no chances, they
begin praying each to their own God and tossing everything they can get their hands
on overboard. Everyone, that is, except
Jonah, who is mysteriously passed out downstairs despite the storm. They rouse Jonah and ask him to beseech his
God, the God of Israel , for help. Jonah
tells them to throw him in the
sea. After trying to row to shore, they
give up and toss Jonah in, as he wishes.
Instead of allowing Jonah to drown, God sends a whale to swallow
him. Inside the whale, Jonah prays in
thanksgiving for his deliverance from the darkness.
One thing that really struck me about the story of Jonah was
that this guy running away wasn’t just any guy – he was a prophet. He was not a centurian or a farmer or a
fisherman, he was a man who had answered God’ call to ministry. A prophet.
There is no doubt he had a strong relationship with God, and had been
chosen by God as a representative of God’s word to people like the
Ninevites. And yet, away he ran, just as
fast as he could, prophet or not. I
think about my own call to ministry 20 years ago, and how it wasn’t until a
couple of months ago that I finally got around to answering it.
It makes me wonder – what was going on for Jonah? Why was he so afraid to go the Ninevah that
he jumped the first ship out of Dodge?
And why did he hide for so long from his own calling that it took him
getting thrown overboard and almost dying to find his way home again?
Listen to Jonah’s prayer after he’s swallowed by the
whale. “The waters encompassed me, even
to my soul, the deep closed around me, weeds were wrapped around my head, I
went down to the foundations of the mountains, the earth with it’s bars closed
around me forever.” Now if I went into
my therapists office and told them this, I’m pretty sure I’d walk out with a
prescription to Celexa, and rightly so.
This is a man who is describing depression. If you read later on in the book of Jonah, he
actually asks God, repeatedly, just to take his life.
When I read this scripture, I found the symbolism to be
remarkable. Many of us have found
ourselves on these metaphoric liferafts, clinging for life against the storms
raging against us – trying to figure out how to survive. In the middle of those storms, it feels like
it takes every last bit of strength you have to hold on for one more day. Maybe you’re that person, or maybe someone
you know or love is that person. When
the depression hits, it’s based on a very rational notion that it’s a waste of
energy to fight. In fact, biological
research on depression suggests that it is an adaptive behavioral trait in the
animal kingdom – allowing animals to save their energy to fight another
day. But the feeling is what Jonah
describes – sinking down, drowning, getting scraped down to the foundations of
our souls until it feels like there’s nothing left.
It hurts like hell.
And just when you think it can’t get any worse, you get
swallowed up by a whale. That last
vicious blow comes when we’re at that weakest point. For people who have experienced Jonah’s
story, this can take many forms – maybe it’s losing a job or a home, maybe it’s
the death of a loved one, or a divorce, of flunking a class, or an arrest for
drugs or alcohol. Either way, it is
often a moment of feeling utterly forsaken by the world, by ourselves, and by
God. Rock bottom, if you will.
Jonah was an interesting guy, though. Unlike some people who feel this overwhelming
sense of abandonment by God, he was aware that it was he who had abandoned
God. And so, overcome by his own guilt
and shame and self hatred, he believes that God should abandon him because he was a no-good rotten piece of
garbage.
But this is where the spiritual message makes it’s entrance
into the Scripture, and in ways that surprised and humbled Jonah.
Did God abandon Jonah, even when Jonah pleaded for it?
What does God do in this story?
He calls Jonah to go to Ninevah. When Jonah bails out of the job, God creates
a storm that causes Jonah to be thrown into the sea. When Jonah settles on his fate of drowning in
the bottom of the sea, God saves Jonah
from drowning via the whale. And when
Jonah is at the absolute end of his rope, to the absolute bottom of his soul,
God has the whale deposit Jonah on dry
land, giving him a second chance. It was
far from pleasant, due to the very natural consequences of Jonah’s choices, but
at every single step of the way, God is attending to Jonah’s redemption. Even if all Jonah is aware of at the time is
being in a pool of whale vomit.
Wherever Jonah was and whatever Jonah had done (or not
done), God met him there. God emerged as
a graceful and loving God. God showed up
for Jonah, had mercy for Jonah, even when Jonah had trouble showing up for much
of anything and had zero mercy for himself.
Everything that “happened” to Jonah was not to abandon him or leave him
to the storm, but to save him and redeem him to his rightful place as a beloved
child of God. As Jonah says, “you have
brought me up from the pit. When my soul
fainted within me, I remembered the Lord.”
I have experienced personally much of this story – the
running away, the storms of suffering and struggle, the depression, and the
unpleasant feeling of being scraped down to the rawest threads of my soul. I remember times when my soul felt like the
landscape after a volcano erupted – nothing left but scorched earth. It was not pleasant. It will probably happen again, periodically,
and that won’t be pleasant either.
However, I am immensely grateful for it. Because it is in these dark and hard places
at the bottom of things, seemingly at the end of things, that I have found and
learned to trust God. It is in these
very painful and unpleasant times that I have experienced redemption – not the
redemption that you think of as being an awful terrible person that is saved by
some jujitsu move of faith or good deeds, but the redemption of becoming aware
that you are always, no matter what, being attended to by God. The redemption of knowing that, no matter how
lost you become, you can always be found by God. The redemption of knowing that
wherever you are and whatever you’ve done (or not done), God will meet you
there. That God is a graceful and loving
God. That God is a merciful God.
And that feels very, very good.
Wow. This is wonderfully insightful. Thank you.
ReplyDelete:). The Christmas presents will still be good next year.
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