Tuesday, May 23, 2017

Same Genre, Different Specifics


The Same Genre, But Different Specifics

We were swapping stories, as my deacon friend and I often do.  We were talking about “God-incidences.”  A recent author also referred to these occurrences as “God-winks” – where something happens that you just know is a little nod-and-wink from the Father upstairs who truly doesn’t miss a trick.  He told a great story of something that happened recently; I chuckled and then told a similar story with the point:  for him, those kinds of things happen in a reasonable way.  For me, those kinds of things always have a strange, perhaps humorous, twist to them.  I’ll let you decide.

The deacon was speaking with another church staff member in the parking lot.  A young distraught woman came across the tarvia with a bag in her hand.  Deacon went out to meet her, presuming she had some temporal need (ie. food bank access) that he could facilitate.  But when he spoke directly to her and she shared her story of a critically ill family member, he realized that she had come for support that was more spiritual in nature.  She reached into the bag and produced a rosary and simply asked that it be blessed so she could give it to her family member.  Deacon prayed with her asking for consolation for the family member who was suffering as well as the people who were affected by this sad situation.  The young woman expressed her gratitude, “Can I give you a hug?” and both walked away from the interface feeling buoyed-up.

So the ministry interface he had was like this:  broad daylight, visibly observed by another team member, situation was clear on how to proceed and no churchy-rules or regulations were bent or broken in the process.  And then there’s the way that my ministry stuff unfolds:  in the dark, abandoned by any sense of personnel back-up in case the person tries to kill me, and I have to use what little good judgment I have left to decide if/how I can help the person. 

I pulled into the church parking lot at 9pm when it was quite dark, but the autumn air had that warm-yet-crisp feel to it.  I was on my way into the chapel for an hour of prayer.  As I almost always do, I make a visual scan of the area before stepping out of my vehicle.  I see a distraught young woman perhaps in her mid-to-late-twenties clutching a stuffed animal in her arms.  She was looking around as if not knowing what direction to walk.  I stepped out of the car and onto what is now the Stage of God.  Somehow I get the feeling He is watching and orchestrating this to see how I am going to respond. 

“How can I help you?” is really the only question to ask at this point.  She steps toward me, still looking uncertainly behind her across the street toward the rectory where the priest works during the day.  She hesitates and then holds forth the stuffed animal.  I want to say I think it was a dinosaur or a bear of some kind.  “I wanted to see if I can get this blessed for my friend who was just put in the nursing home with only a few weeks to live.” 

I’ve been Catholic all my life.  We typically bring things like rosaries, crucifixes or religious statues or holy pictures to a priest for a special blessing.  The user thereof may then find the object helps them draw closer to God Himself.   

So we’ve got a few irregularities in this current scenario:               #1 no priest present or attainable at this hour (unless you are in the hospital and the priest is called in to give you the final anointing blessing); #2  I’m not ordained clergy to be handing out blessings officially like priests and deacons are; and #3 the item to be blessed is not the norm.  So, I’m thinking, wracking my brain, for what I know about the Scriptures that will justify this break with protocols that I’m about to do.  And the lightbulb over my head pops on and I remember that people brought things like handkerchiefs to St. Paul to bless and then they’d take them home and lay them on the sick person as if the handkerchief represents the presence of the holy person doing the praying.  Those people got healed.  So, this young woman is giving me this stuffed animal that she just picked up at the corner store and is going to bring to the dying woman in the nursing home.  At that point, I started seeing the path forward.  I invited her to step into the church.


I took some holy water and made the sign of the cross on the stuffed animal.  Then I asked her if I could pray with her.  She said yes.  I prayed for healing and consolation in her life, and for the Lord to bring His love to her… then the tears came …. she had given over some of her emotional load and went away feeling a little better.  That’s what I had hoped would happen.

As she walked out the church door and I settled into a time of quiet prayer for my own re-charge, I mused how The Leadership would view me doing this – me, a non-ordained woman just following the leading of the Spirit to help heal His people.  Another Bible passage popped into my mind – where a prophet of God was going in the wrong direction and the donkey he was riding refused to move.  He began to beat his donkey, which then buckled to its knees and spoke to its owner:  “Do not beat me.  I can see the angel of God standing before us blocking this path.”  And I got the message:
If God will use a talking donkey to straighten out a prophet in the Old Testament who was going in the wrong direction, why can’t he use me to help His distraught child find peace?



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