I Saw Love Yesterday

February 20, 2010

Sr. Wantabee was wheeling two wheel chairs with elders around the corner from the auditorium to the elevator to return them to their rooms. As she rounded the corner she saw a woman, perhaps 85 years old, sitting on a couch. She was a typical little ole lady with curly, permed hair, overweight face with deep set eyes and a rolly polly body. In a wheel chair next to her sat the little old man from the nursing Home.

He was memorable because his hands were frozen in an eternal fist. He weighs perhaps 300 lbs but faithfully attends church. Of course it is necessary to ask him if he wants a bulletin and he always says no because he cannot hold it. She was not sure he could even read but surely he must.

As Sr. Wantabee rounded the corner, he reached out his frozen fist to touch her hand. “Do you still love me?” she asked. “Of course I do,” he gently replied. “Why would I stop loving you?” She giggled and responded, “Well, I talk too much.” He held her hand in his frozen fist, smiled into her eyes with his toothless smile and said, “I will always love you.” She beamed her love back to him.


Medal/Metal of Honor

February 19, 2010

A little lady with redish hair and painted eyebrows beamed up at Sr. Wantabee as she entered the room. “May I enter?” Of course she replied. It is late afternoon, the day is long, and a change of pace is welcome. “I see you have a fractured hip. You fell?” Oh no, she shared. Her right knee has been replaced twice, her left knee once, and then her hip last Fall but then something happened and it just broke. “Oh my, the airport system will start beeping, just seeing you coming?” We laughed.

Gradually her story came out. After working as a secretary/dental assistant for 35 years she retired early and they bought 100 acres north of the city and it had a log cabin. Her husband had hoped to restore it but ended up selling it but her three kids and six grandkids loved coming to the homestead to ski, hunt, resort. Her husband, five years older than she, was a carpenter and loved the challenge of building their dream house with bedrooms upstairs. Their small town church provided community and they are happy.

At 71 she will have been married 50 years in October. She commented, “I deserve a medal of honor don’t I!” Sr. Wantabee replied, “Heavens, no, then you’d really set off the airport machines. Go for something nonmetalic.” We had another good laugh.

Driving home Sr. Wantabee reflected on how odd it is that our security systems can identify metal but not medal. The machine that finds the bad guys also pin points the good guys who have served our society and their family. It is hard to tell the difference between “saint” and “sinner” and often we misjudge by appearances.


Mr. ATM

February 19, 2010

You would notice this man in any room. He’s probably in his 80’s, possibly 90’s, but that is not distinguishing. His whole face is eclipsed by his nose. He has a huge snozzle that is hawk-like, almost cartoonish. Perhaps it would not look so noticeable if he had teeth but he does not. A little slot, not unlike an ATM machine rests under his nostrils.

The first time I met him, I was assisting the chaplain do communion. She stopped by his wheelchair, after a nod that he wanted to partake, she took a wafer, small, white, dry, dipped it in the juice and slid it in the slot for a mouth. Not unlike my ATM card, it slid right out. His tongue had not grasped it. She slid it in again. It slid out again. And so the routine continued until his tongue grabbed the wafer and there it sat to dissolve.

Wednesday, Ash Wednesday that is, he received the ashes on his forehead and then we weaved our way through the wheel chairs giving communion. Mr. ATM nodded agreement. Into the slot went the crumpled wafer and out it came. The chaplain had moved on so I pushed the reluctant wafer into his mouth a second time and moved on. Sure enough, afterwards on the way back from the elevator from delivering residents to be carried to their floor, I ran into Mr. ATM and the wafer was dangling from his lips. I removed the soggy thing and wondered.

Had the machine read enough of the information on the ATM card to receive the blessing? We believe it is not the saintliness of the giver nor the saintliness of the receiver that makes communion effective. It is God’s word working through the elements. I hope the word is enough for Mr. ATM and his malfunctioning receiver.


Soul Food or Food for the Soul?

February 15, 2010

Are you hungry?
On a scale of 1 to 10 reflect. 1 means “You betcha!” 10 means “Skip me this round.”

Number from 1-5 what feeds your soul:
Radio and music______________________
A cup of _____with a friend____________
A walk in nature_______________________
Read a good book_____________________
A night on the town___________________

African Americans had it right. When we are hungry, our spirits need food. It does not need to be fancy and expensive. In fact, home cooked with love often serves best.

Agree–Disagree
“The way to a person’s heart is through the stomach.”
The way to my heart is______________________________.


Ashes to Ashes

February 15, 2010

What to share in the Memory Care Unit Chaplain’s Corner this morning? Wednesday is Ash Wednesday and the start of Lent so I decided to share about “ashes.”

I took in a small glass bowl from my kitchen cupboard and wore a cross that I don’t usually wear. I announced that I was going to talk about these two symbols – ashes and the cross. A new lady who was sitting up front said in a stage whisper, audible to the whole room, “I don’t believe in that bunk!” Meanwhile the aid came in to claim men for haircuts! As we settled again I acknowledged her cynicism.

Putting ashes on our heads is not a recent practice that started with Christians, I had learned that morning.   Read the rest of this entry »


Bed 22 Update

February 15, 2010

Bed 22 taught me appreciation for life. Yesterday he passed. Today the unit was different.Dino was there looking to talk along with Jane who I haven’t told you about and many others but life was different. I didn’t walk down the hall. I stayed in the main area chatting with people.

Bed 22 not only reflected on his hard life with appreciation and suddenly hummed parts of tunes like “When the Roll is Called Up Yonder” in the middle of a conversation, he was appreciative for the opportunities in his street life to walk into a Catholic church and drop $5 in the box. “Pretty nice, huh?” he’d say.

A woman took him in later in life and loved him. I am unclear on whether they were married or not and I think that is my hang up because I don’t think those were issues for them. But she got him going back to church and he loved her. The greatest honor in his life was walking with her the 15 years that cancer slowly ate away her body.

Yes, I learned appreciation from bed 22 and I am appreciative that I knew him. He was a blessing to me.


Transfiguration – Transformation – Metamorphize

February 15, 2010

My Second Sermon
Today I got to preach my second sermon ever and the first in over a year. It was on the Mt. of Transfiguration. This text found in Luke always falls on the Sunday between Epiphany (the part of the church year that talks about Jesus’ life as a teacher, healer, leader and the beginning of the Lent season that starts on Wednesday with Ash Wednesday when we start focusing on the death of Christ.) Jesus tells his disciples he is going to die and rise and they don’t understand. He withdraws to the mountain to pray with Peter, James, and John. This is not an uncommon custom of his before a big event and is very similar to the Garden of Gethsemane. On the Mt. of Transfiguration, he is joined by Moses and Elijah to encourage him. At Gethsemane he is joined by angels. In both cases the disciples are sleepy.

Why Moses and Elijah? Could it be that Jesus as True Man and True God is being encouraged this Sunday as True Man? Two men join him who have remarkably similar stories to Jesus in three ways.

Moses is backed up to the Red Sea after leaving Egypt with his motley crew of Israelites when the Pharoah and his armies with chariots attack and the people turn to Moses and do a complete turnabout. Where there not enough graves in Egypt that you brought us out here to die? Jesus at the cross will have the government washing their hands of him and the crowd yelling “crucify him!” He will stand alone. Elijah on the other hand, believing himself to be the last remaining true prophet calls for a showdown between himself and the prophets of Baal and Asherah of Jezebel and Ahab. Whoever’s God burns the sacrificed cow is the real God. The people are quiet as they will go with the winning side. Bring on the show. Elijah stands alone. Perhaps Moses and Elijah could both encourage the Son of Man that God majors in dealing with impossible situations.

Moses had to turn his life’s work over to Joshua. Elijah, thinking he is the last prophet is told by God to anoint Elisha. Both men had to turn over their work and Jesus was about to turn over his work to his motley crew of disciples. Pretty scary.

Thirdly, Jesus was turning towards death. The Son of Man and most people experience some fear. Moses at his death was walked up to the mountain by God, shown the Promised Land and then God himself laid Moses to rest and buried him, no one knows where. Elijah bade farewell to the different school of prophets and then crossed the river when the chariots of fire swept him into a new reality.

Up on the mountain, Jesus transfigures in that his clothes are dazzling white but he also emerges to face the cross. No one could see the difference, but I think the difference was there. If he understands all our feelings then he knows the panic of facing the impossible, the dread of turning over our work to someone else, and the pondering of facing death.

In the face of a transistion, he withdrew for prayer, went with friends and was strengthened by friends, and headed into the change. May you know that God is always with you in your fears and your transitions.


Bed 22

February 13, 2010

The resident in bed 22 arrived in November 2009, believing he would die of leukemia perhaps by the end of the week. He is still with Sr. Wantabee visiting regularly. Today, February 12, 2010, he was a skin covered skeleton, too sick to open his eyes or acknowledge her presence.

His first reflections were reflections of gratitude. He reflected that it was good that his father had beat him and kicked him out in the streets when he was eight. It made him tough and taught him how to take care of himself. He used to walk the streets with his paper route and collect the kids for Sunday school by singing “I Come to the Garden Alone.” Sister Wantabee, do you know that song? Could you sing it?”

Sister Wantabee remembered back to Pat Boone singing the song on a record in the 60’s. She had it memorized. When she met her husband who had been raised in Africa, he had learned that album too. They sang the song together as they drove their children home from boarding school every quarter. In fact, the piano player of that song had gone to her church. Memories flooded her mind as she gently sang the song to Bed 22 who lay, enjoying his memories.

A crusty, seasoned steel worker who “lived life in the fast lane” joined hands with Sister Wantabee who lived her life sheltered by her faith and the two worshipped together in music.

Bed 22 is still with us and she visits him when on duty and he still teaches her.  She always sings “I Come to the Garden Alone.”  Their garden is planted in a care center. And the Lord always meets them.


Dino

February 10, 2010

Today Sr. Wantabee visited with Mr. J. He suffers from a major stroke that left half his body paralyzed and he is wondering if life is worth living. As we have talked he shared that he was in a foster home at age five and got baptized twice, once in a gym and once in a church. Next he shared that it was good that he was taken from that home or he might have killed his “foster mother” for she held his hand over the stove until it blistered at age five and would send him to bed with his underwear over his head with the accident in his nose. He could never love a god who allowed that.
Sr. Wantabee agreed that “love” is a word we toss around too easily. “If you love me, you’ll sleep with me,” was her experience. It is hard for her to use the word “love” also. How does the word “trust” work? If the god-being is not Santa Clause, perhaps he, she or it understands that “love” is hard for us to say and accepts “trust.” We trust that he walks with us as broken people living in a broken world and is working to make thing right, even when we can’t see or understand. Since we do not do a very good job of it with wars and cruelty, the Christ figure had to come to start setting things straight. He thought it sounded like what his spiritual advisor had told him.
Today I asked him about his spiritual advisor, Jiyo? No, said he. It was Dino. Oh, Gino, said she. No, Dino, said he. Dino, like the piano player, said she. Yes, he works at the City Bar. Sigh, I had thought I was agreeing with the local pastor who visited the Gospel Mission he came from. Some days are humbling.


Valentine

February 9, 2010

Yesterday Sr. Wantabee gave devotions to a memory care unit. She chose the story of Valentine. Ten little ole ladies lined the front row, ranging from age 101 to considerably younger (can 85 be considerably younger?), with two older men and a woman half coherent with her gerth spreading across a wheel chair.

We started by singing songs about love and heads started to nodd. 101 was already asleep on the couch. I quickly switched to the story. Around 300 AD a little girl was born blind in ancient Rome. She was thought to be cursed because of her limitation. Eyes opened. Also the emporer Claudius decided that soldiers could not be married because they would be thinking about their wife and children rather than war. A blind girl going for water and drunk soldiers celebrating the feast of Lupercalius in Rome. A drunk soldier grabbed the blind girl and said, who could love someone cursed by the gods and was going to whip her. (My arm went up in the air as this is a story dramatizeable.) Valentine, also at the water place, reached up and grabbed the soldier’s arm and stopped him. “This girl deserves to know that God loves her.” The soldier quickly replies, “What god? You’re not a Christian are you? You know what happens to them!” He takes the blind girl’s water jug and drops it so it is broken to pieces. Silence by all.

The girl Theodora, goes home to tell her father, the jailor, there is a god who could love her. Valentine goes to the woods to perform the marriage of a soldier to a maid, Lydia, in his household. Soldiers break up the wedding and arrest the servants of Valentine but leave him free and carry the servants to jail. Theodora and father are called to receive the people and close them up. Theodora’s job, as a blind daughter, was to carry a bag around that criminals dropped their valuables into – their “accursed crosses.”

Theodora runs to tell Valentine at the fountain. He ponders how to send a message to them. Could he write a note she would deliver? No, she would be killed if caught. But she could carry a verbal message. Valentine ponders about a token to show it was from him. Kids running in the square knock Theodora so that she spills red ink on some parchment for sale. Valentine’s question is answered. He takes the piece of red parchment and tears out hearts. (I take a piece of blue paper I found in a trash can and tear out a big blue heart.)

The hearts and messages are delivered but the news comes that the soldier and wife will fight the wolves in the collesium. Theodora tells Valentine. He goes to the jail and offers for a nobleman to enter the theatre in exchange for all the slaves of his household. Deal. As he enters the arena, he prays for Theodora to know God’s love and at that time her sight is returned and she sees the red heart with a glowing cross in it. SO, today we give hearts to friends a Valentine’s Day.

Hearts remind us of LOVE. I did an acrostic on LOVE. What does L stand for? Listening, leaning, loving. What words that start with O remind us of love? We came up with “open.” When people cross their arms and growl, we do not feel loved but when then run to us with open arms and hug us we feel loved. V is for visiting. When we visit with each other at meals we show love. E is for encouragement. When I say to to Ms 101, I believe in you, you can do it, she feels love.

St. Valentine’s Day: Love: listening, opening, visiting, encouraging. Reminding everyone, God loves you with all your baggage.