Lockdown

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The fear-filled disciples bar themselves in the upper room, following Jesus’ crucifixion

Lockdown.

Only thing to do. Running scared after the bewildering events of the last three days, we shut the doors, barred the windows. A coded knock to gain entrance. We couldn’t, wouldn’t let anyone in. Fear. You could smell it in the room, appetites and sleep left in the street. We snipped and griped, unable to meet each other’s eyes. Nerves taut, and tempers short. When your world is tipped upside down, panic speeds the spin. Apply control. Lock the doors. Limit who comes in. Who can you trust? Listening for studded feet on dusty stone.

We might be next. Darkness falls and magnifies our fears, our imaginations flickering with the shadows in the lamplight. 

Ignoring codes, knocks, locks and walls, he is suddenly in our midst. The hairs stand on end, and we stare slack-jawed. A collective gasp, as we breathe in his exhale. Soft, warm breathing body, freshly scarred. ‘Peace be with you’. 

 

The words melt into souls as he meets our eyes, one by one. 

Holds out his hands, parts his garments to show his wounds. 

‘This is my body, given for you’ words spoken days before, now writ in blood. 

 

Hope and joy and terror fight for space, strangling our words. For once there is no sound.

He smiles. 

‘Peace be with you’ he repeats, calming the turbulence of fear and guilt, as once he calmed the waves.

‘As the Father has sent me, so I send you’… …‘Open the doors’ was left unsaid, but each one heard. Looking round our bolted room, our robust self-defence, he sighs a heavy sigh, and expels courage.

Receive the Holy Spirit. Know the power your forgiveness brings.’ (Take that freedom to bound hearts)

Beloved voice that made our spirits leap. 

 

Stunned to silence, and he was gone. Was he here and did we feel his breath, when we had laid that body in the grave? We rolled the stories round our mouths and told our own of what we’d seen. (Behind closed doors)

Thomas had not seen, had not felt and did not know the truth we spoke. Pushed back our puzzled joy. 

 

We stayed locked in. Locked down. Our portals barred to keep the strangers out. Closed doors and guarded hearts. Like a feral cat, fear lurked and scratched. 

Yet still he came. Slipping through our defences and asking no permission to come in. Present. Presence that laughed, ate fish, and smelled of cassia.

Presence whose gentle hands took Thomas’s questions and pressed them to his side.

Thomas on his knees in obeisance, declaring Lord. 

 

‘Do you only believe because you see, you touch? Your eyes and hands the means of trust? Blessed are those who will not see, and yet believe.’ 

 

Fear grips and bites, for all our joy. We would rather stay within our own. Control the doors, and monitor who comes in. Control is all we have, and we clutch it with tight hands. Primal response to threat. It makes sense though, anyone can see that.

We cling to Peace, ignore the Send.

(He couldn’t mean that, look what they did to him!)

But what if he did? That question raps on the door of sleep.

 

What if? What if?

The riddle thrummed its fingers over our sturdy window bars. It mocked our barriers. 

He rarely kept their rules, what would he make of ours?

Never playing safe, he sat down with questionable sorts. Spoke with women. Crossed boundaries that should remain un-breached. Stretched hands that would be nail-pierced, to touch the leper.

 

We stay and pray, and keep our holy huddle tight. Soothe our conscience with religious words. 

It will take wind and fire to prise us from our prayers. 

Blow open shutters, doors.

And in the shadows the cat still lurks and scratches.

 

 I wrote this a couple of years ago, commissioned by The Preacher magazine for Sunday 27th April 2024 (2nd Sunday of Easter) with a remit of 850 words.

The icon above was written by Br Robert Lentz OFM

And Dr Kristina Rizzotto writes of it :

“Whenever we build walls to separate ourselves from those in need, Jesus chooses the side of the wall where the need is.” – Carlos A. Rodríguez

The icon of Christ of Maryknoll by Br. Robert Lentz, OFM, portrays Jesus always on the “other side” — of barb wire, prison bars, wall, border, door, ethnicity, citizenship, political party or religion. Do we dare recognize him there?

In this video he explains the icon himself:

https://youtu.be/kmHNRD-LU1U?si=Qg6QVoZXCbji9Kyq

https://youtu.be/kmHNRD-LU1U?si=Qg6QVoZXCbji9Kyq

Cascades of Grace

Panning for gold.. I have done it a few times, usually with children- standing with a sieve/pan usually in cold water, scanning through an awful lot of grit and gravel to see if there is the teeniest glint of gold. Didn’t feel dissimilar to what I have spent the last few weeks doing – trawling through many many books for essay research.  I never did find any of the real stuff- but I have this time around.

I am writing about taking a congregation through the sometimes tricky and painful process of change, and looking at the subject from a whole variety of angles.  Fear not, I will not be foisting my essay on an unsuspecting public – but I thought a few of the nuggets I found along the way were definitely worth sharing.  They were worth finding, regardless if I can use them in the essay or not..

John O’Donohue, late poet/writer/thinker/priest, is writing about the intoxicating combination of hope and insight.      “Some of the most decisive moment in one’s life are when someone shows you a new frontier and helps you across into a world of new possibilities and promise. To be helped towards a new way of seeing is to be given access to a whole new world. At its highest point of intensity and possibility Meister Eckhart refers to this as the Birth of God in the Soul” 

“the Birth of God in the Soul” what a wonderful way of expressing it! Perhaps it particularly appeals to me, as a former midwife. Being a ‘spiritual midwife’ is very much part of what I see priesthood being about. Helping to birth God in the souls of others. It was an awesome privilege to deliver each of the  precious babies I brought into the world. A wonder that I never got blasé about.  My last delivery ever, was undiagnosed twins on a GP unit ( the 2nd one, a breech) but that is another whole story.

Going back to nursing, I took up palliative care nursing- very much a type of ‘midwifery’ at the other end of life. Travelling barefoot with individuals and their families on the Holy ground of the approach to death. Both birth and death involve the whole family, and are perhaps the most dramatic points of change that happen to any of us. Both types of midwifery involve reducing the fear, and the pain and retaining as much dignity as possible. Both involved   (for me anyway) staying with the person in and through the pain, physical or psychological. Accompanying with compassion. ( the Latin root of the word compassion means ‘to suffer together with’  . A costly, but precious privilege.

Travelling with individuals and more particularly with whole groups and congregations through the processes of change has many echoes of both sorts of midwifery.  I loved the way Ann Morrisy in the book Journeying Out  uses the phrase ‘cascades of Grace’  to describe what happens when a congregation starts to look and then move outwards into the community, perhaps for the first time.

Willingness to be alongside those who know deeply about struggle, are without power and aware of the possibility of being overwhelmed is what venturesome love is all about.  Community ministry involves the provision of structures that enable people to express venturesome love..”  

And in so doing, so venturing, start off a cascade of grace benefiting everyone involved.  Morrisy also links this with the miracle of the water in to wine.  Likening the church to the worried wedding hosts whose wine is running out.. what do we do?

What do they do? What do the servants do when they are given a nonsensical command by Jesus in response to the predicament? Go and fill up huge water jars with water ( no mean feat and involving a fair bit of work and effort) and then serve them up as if they were wine.  And behold, their obedience, their willingness to ‘journey out’ of common sense and comfort zones  result in the finest of wines  being available in abundance.  A cascade of grace. God’s extravagance revealed in the first miracle.

Returning to where I started.. crossing frontiers, entering new worlds. A wondrous but often frightening experience. In morning prayer today, the Old Testament passage was from Joshua chapter 1 . Joshua is about to take the people of Israel across the Jordan, into an unknown land. God speaks to him and says:

“I will not fail you or forsake you. ..Be strong and courageous; do not be frightened or dismayed. For the Lord your God is with you wherever you go. “

Only thing that counts.