Three days prior to my hospital visit, a
neighbor had found Jorene lying unconscious on the floor of her bedroom.
Apparently her neighbor had not seen Jorene leave the house that day nor had Jorene
picked up the phone when her neighbor was trying to check on her. The neighbor
let herself in the house and saw Jorene on the floor. She must have been lying
there unresponsive and helpless for hours on end. The neighbor quickly called
for an ambulance. As my supervisor and mentor Justin wisely pointed out to me, this neighbor is a
testament to the love that old friends have for one another, the kind of love that
proactively checks in on a neighbor and reacts to whatever you find.
On
our way to the hospital, Justin told me that an aneurism had suddenly attacked
Jorene. I knew what aneurisms were. My great-grandmother died from an aneurism
and her daughter, my mother’s mother, died from one as well. They are a type of
stroke where capillaries burst in the brain and render the brain without oxygen
until, well, until you find the person unconscious on the floor. Strokes are
vicious to the elderly. They attack without preference to persons or mercy. I
knew that whatever Justin and I found in the hospital, it would not be pretty.
Now,
Jorene and I are friends. She is a sweet, grandmotherly woman who stays as
active as a person half her age. She eats Mexican food and drinks margaritas
with the same group of gals every Friday evening (I have been the grateful
guest and only person under seventy in this group on several occasions). Jorene
also took me out to lunch on my second Sunday of field education this summer.
She told me stories about her life, her grandchildren, her affinity for the
Republican Party, and was genuinely interested about my life story and what
brought me to Houston, Texas this summer. Jorene is one of a host of
grandmothers who has spoiled me this summer. She is funny and sincere, caring
and compassionate, the kind of person you want to hang out with.
The
person I saw in the hospital that day was not Jorene. That ghoulish looking
figure was a disfigured shadow of the sweet person I remembered.
Justin
and I walked into the intensive care unit of the neuropsychological ward and
saw Jorene lying on a hospital bed, her head hanging to the side and a plate of
half-eaten food on the tray in front of her. The doctors had shaven off half
her hair, and a long, horrendous looking scar traversed the top of her head
where they had to open her scalp for surgery. Her face was swollen twice her
size. She could not remember my name or what day it was. She could not string
an entire sentence together. Her overall countenance was like a mask, glazing
over her eyes with a sullen mist, as she stared off into the distance and
slowly turned her eyes toward us without a glimmer of recognition.
And
yet she could hold our hands. Justin took one of her hands to close our time in
prayer. She slowly covered his hand with her other one. She closed her eyes as
if she were trying to pray with him. When Justin finished praying, I took her
hands in mine and said, “It was good to see you Jorene.” Her hands were still
soft and kind. I could tell she was trying to smile at me.
I
was speechless as Justin and I dragged our feet back to his car. Our feet were
like cement blocks weighed down by grief. Justin’s eyes were red. He did not
want to cry.
“In the
beginning,” says John, “was the Word. And the Word became flesh and lived among
us.” The Creator of peoples took on flesh to dwell among the people. He makes
the tangible holy and the body sacred. Jesus lived in a body just like mine,
just as sickly and beautiful, with cuts and sores and bright eyes, nimble
hands, swift feet, and tears. Jesus knew we would not be content with a God we
could not touch. He gave new worth to the human body by redeeming skin and
bones. He has sanctified the material and made the body His dwelling place.
“Listen!”
shouts Paul. “I will tell you a mystery. When this perishable body puts on
imperishability, and this mortal body puts on immortality, then the saying that
is written will be fulfilled: ‘Death has been swallowed up in victory!’” Paul
knew God’s plan for our bodies: the body was given new worth in the
Incarnation, and will finally be restored to perfection in the Resurrection.
God wants to resurrect our bodies so that we may enjoy eternal life with God in
the flesh. Resurrection is our final hope! It is a laugh in the face of death,
the triumph over sad decay, and the victory lap around defeated evil.
Resurrection makes the body new again after death has had its way. There is
hope in death and hope for our wrecked bodies. God will never let death have
the last say.
Oh,
that we would see eternal hope in the Table! I wonder if my congregation this
summer knows what it is happening in the bread and wine in front of them. Do
they see God sanctifying the material world for everlasting life with the
Creator? Do they see Christ in the flesh making the flesh his dwelling place?
Do they taste Christ coming into their very bodies? The bread may be broken,
but it is made new again by the Spirit! Our bodies may die, but they will be
remade! Broken bodies are not part of God’s dream. The table shows us that
brokenness ends in redemption and the renewal of all things.
I
realized that day in the hospital that I fail to see hope in broken bodies.
When I looked at Jorene, all I saw was decay in all its horror. I was afraid of
death looking me in the face, indeed laughing at me as it reigned terror over
my friend’s body. My fear made me a worse pastor in that moment. I could not
speak life into my friend. I could not utter a single hopeful word. Yes, I know
my mere presence was comforting, but what would I have done if Justin were not
there? Could I have stepped out of that paralyzing fear and mumbled one word of
hope?
I realize now that
death begets fear. Fear is death’s favorite accomplice in making us forget our
gospel hope. My fear of death blinded me to the truth of the incarnate and
resurrected Deity.
But now I see it. Now I see that
truth that gripped Paul and made him shout, “Where O Death is your victory?!
Where O Death is your sting?!” Death cannot stop the restorative justice of
God. God is too stubborn for an aneurism to steal Jorene away from Him. I
failed Jorene by succumbing to fear and forgetting to have hope for her
recovery, in this life or the next. But God will not fail her. As John Wesley
loved to say, His mercy is over all His works.
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