Sunday, July 24, 2016

Luke 11:1-13 - Jesus Teach Us To Pray

As a child, I was taught to pray by sisters at Saturday morning catechism. I went to public school, so my parents enrolled me in CCD - the Confraternity of Catholic Doctrine - at our local parish, which was run these charming older ladies in habits and veils. I don't recall which community they were from, but I remember they seemed happy to be working with me and the other kids in our small town in rural Nebraska where I’m from. They smiled at me, complimented me, they were patient with me in a manner my own parents were not.  There was something very loving about being in their presence I have never forgotten even after all these years.

So, it was the Sisters’ job to prepare us kids for the sacraments by getting us to memorize the words of the Our Father, the Hail Mary, and the Act of Contrition, among others. Talk about herding cats, I don’t know where they got the patience to do this work. It was hard enough to get up on a Saturday and show up to church, much less painstakingly memorizing prayers word for word. But eventually with repetition and perhaps the right amount of carrot ("Holy Cards, brown scapulars, plastic rosaries!") and stick ("You'll die a sinner and go to H-E-Double-Hockey-Sticks" if you don’t pray), I was eventually able to master my prayers like an auctioneer. So the sisters taught me well. In order to pray, you have to know the right words and say them really fast. Praying is like swimming laps in a pool. Take a big breath before you start and avoid stopping for air; if you get lost, don't stop, just keep moving toward the end. God knows what you mean even if you make a mistake. Just try your best.

Unfortunately, these sisters didn't have time to teach me the actual meaning of the words. Anyway I loved these sisters because they were so patient and so kind to us and seemed indescribably wise. And, somehow, I believed they loved me too, I guess, because we were all at Church on a Saturday morning when everyone else in their right mind was in pajamas watching Saturday morning cartoons eating pancakes.

But now here I am. I find myself reading this periscope in Luke and thinking this is not at all how I pray now. And I don’t find the memorized prayers particularly useful in my adult prayer life; at least I haven’t for a long time. Oh don’t get me wrong, I think they have great liturgical benefit. When people gather together in community and pray - or better yet, sing - in unison, I can feel the Spirit of God, sometimes I even get goose bumps. But alone? by myself? I don’t feel any connection to the divine that way.

I’m kind of like the disciple in today’s Gospel who approaches Jesus, presumably on behalf of the others, obviously marveling at the remarkable bond between Jesus and the Heavenly Parent, and expressing “Teach us to pray, just as John Taught his disciples.” I don’t it’s too unreasonable to say the disciple was essentially saying “I want to have that kind of amazing relationship with God.”

So Jesus gives first a practical answer in the form of the words and formula. “Father, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come. Give us each day our daily bread and forgive us our sins for we ourselves forgive everyone in debt to us, and do not subject us to the final test.” He is saying 1. Relate to God in a respectful yet lovingly intimate way, as one might with your parents. 2. Ask for what you need, your daily bread. 3. Please love us despite or wrongs and we will do likewise with our neighbor. 4. Finally, never abandon us. As a mental health counselor, I recognize in here basic human longings, essential needs for the kind of human connection we are all longing for.

So this is the practical part. And even though I may put other words to it, when I am praying on my own, my mind will zero in in these same essentials. And of course I pray in times when my need for connection seems particularly threatened. When I’m troubled by one of the daily mass shootings or terrorist attacks I hear about on the news, or when my partner and I have to navigate a strain in our relationship, or when I contemplate my anxiety about my ability to earn a living in an expensive city.

But then Jesus goes on to comment on what I think the disciples must have really been marveling at: Jesus’s relationship with God. Respectful, yet lovingly intimate, as one might relate to a parent. And Jesus accomplishes this, as he so often does, by sharing a “Suppose you have a friend” story.

"Suppose one of you has a friend to whom he goes at midnight and says, 'Friend, lend me three loaves of bread, for a friend of mine has arrived at my house from a journey and I have nothing to offer him.” This is ancient Palestine. It’s a desert. Traveling is extremely dangerous. And so the expectation is that hospitality in the form of bread and a place to sleep is a basic human right. And the neighbor well aware this, just doesn’t seem to want to get out of bed.

And then Jesus closes his parable with: “I tell you, if he does not get up to give the visitor the loaves because of their friendship, he will get up to give him whatever he needs because of his persistence.” And I had to look this up. The word translated as “persistence” is anaideian. Some Biblical scholars prefer an alternate translation that makes more sense in the context of the story “Shamelessness.” He [the neighbor] will get up and get the bread because of his shamelessness. Because of his desire to be without shame. Certainly it would be a shameful act to refuse hospitality to a traveler, especially when the reason for doing so is personal comfort or selfishness. We know, and Jesus confirms in the story, the desire to avoid shame is a powerful motivator that can bring us to set aside our own comforts so that our neighbor’s basic human rights will be respected. We must do this in order to be right with our neighbor and in order to be right with our relationship with God. 

Jesus says, "And I tell you, ask and you will receive; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you.  For everyone who asks, receives; and the one who seeks, finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.” He wants us to develop a relationship with God without shame. We set aside pride by asking for what we want, and admitting that we need help. We encounter very real doors, barriers, in developing a respectful intimate relationship with God, as one might relate to a parent. But we must we willing to come to God and ask for our needs to be addressed.

And Jesus leaves us with this final image. Even bad parents, such as each and every one of us here in this room, would still not feed snakes or scorpions to our beloved children when they come to us hungry and in need. Imagine the delight of our Heavenly Father/Mother, who is all loving and all good, will be ready to send out the Holy Spirit to us when we ask.


I think the sisters who taught me catechism by virtue of their wisdom and experience knew this. They modeled it for me. Even if what they taught me was rote memorization, I still learned about respectful familiar relationships from their unconditional love of me.

Saturday, April 2, 2016

Quick! If you have five imaginary lives you could lead, any given time or place or circumstance, what would you do? What would you accomplish? And why would it be interesting for you?


  1. I would be a 16th century hospitaller monk living in a remote mountain monastery on a trade route somewhere between Rome and Constantinople. Pilgrims would journey to our beautiful refuge above the clouds for safety and the occasional exchange of arts and ideas. My job would be to train and care for all of the dogs used for finding and rescuing stranded travelers. My special devotion would be to healing those with broken hearts, and I would be earn a good reputation for my kindness, wisdom, and piety. This is interesting to be because I need greater discipline and spirituality in my current life, but it builds on my strengths of hospitality, healing, and service to others. 
  2. I would be a woman colonist sometime in humanity's future when Earth's people have learned to work together to develop the technology to travel across the galaxy. I might be a humble exobiologist with a rather boring day job. I would study and catalog the exotic flora and fauna of our new world, and my research would be to help protect these fragile life forms from negative interactions with humans. In addition to a fascinating career in this life, my true passion would be as a wife and mom with an amazing family. I would teach my children to respect the divinity in all life and be mindful of the consequences of their actions. This is interesting to me because of my spirit of innovation and novelty, but also because I love building a life that centers on family. 
  3. I would be a Lakota warrior in late 19th century Nebraska. As a friend and confidante of great leaders like Sitting Bull, I would bear witness to the rapid and heartbreaking problem of white settlement and encroachment. I would use strategic thinking to promote peace and equitable trade. Eventually, I would stand with the people, including my wife and children, to resist the soldiers and help them find safety. This is special to me because I grew up in Nebraska, a place where one can still hear the drum beats of Native people on a cool crisp night. 
  4. I would be a successful and prolific playwright for the Broadway stage in the 20th Century, contemporary with Eugene O'Neil, Arthur Miller, Lorraine Hansberry, Tony Kushner, Sam Shepard and Tennessee Williams. My work would begin as sweet innocent "slice of life" pieces  during World War II, that were sentimental, but boring. At first I am called patriotic, because my work embodies the "American Spirit." But then my work takes on increasingly daring and controversial themes in response to needs for social justice and reform that I see during the Eisenhower Years. I find an audience of like minds that emerges in the 1960s. I help launch the careers of some of the greatest actors and directors in our time I start a dialogue in academic circles about the purpose of theatre in democratic discourse. Somehow I manage to survive the hedonism of the 70s and the egoism of the 80s to make a comeback in the 90s with new projects that help launch Queer Theatre as an American institution. This is a former dream of mine that I let go of because I couldn't tolerate the risks artists take putting themselves out there. 
  5. I am a licensed counselor with a small private practice that I operate out of my home. I supplement my income by teaching coursework at a small private college, supervising interns, leading workshops, and consulting with nonprofit organizations.  I am adoptive father of two, and I live with a handsome and intelligent husband who loves me deeply. This is the life I'm currently working on.

Friday, February 26, 2016

Chion

Today from the office next door
Through thin chalky walls
I could hear a boy crying
Like for an hour
Or rather a therapeutic hour
So for 52 minutes straight
But still a long time
This little boy cried and cried
Muffled at first
Then graduating to full scale wail
No words, no reason, just sobbing
Unabated
Breathless
It was the cry only a mother could console
Deep solemn rhythmic
He cried with all is little might
And I realized that must be why he was crying
He must have no mother to soothe him
I thought to myself as I put my headphones on
But they weren't enough
To kill the sound
That punishing noise
He must not have a mom
And neither do I
Not anymore
So I cried too 
Right along with him
From the other side of the thin chalky wall
Only I did my crying 
In silence
Photo: Masseu. http://masseu.blogspot.com/2014/01/crying-boy-sketch.html