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How are you today, Nancy?" I asked. It was during a coffee-hour, after worship a number of years ago. "I'm fine," she answered. Knowing that she was going through a divorce, and facing other challenges as well, I responded, "Are things really OK?"
She blinked, then answered, "Oh - We're being honest here!" She then proceeded to tell me how she really was.
Flannery O'Connor once said: "I come from a family where the only emotion respectable to show is irritation." I thought of Nancy when I read O'Connor's words this week. I also thought of my own family of origin. And I thought of many churches, where being respectable is valued more highly than being honest.
Lent is not a season for polishing our facade, or putting our best foot forward. Lent, especially Holy Week, is a time for being honest with ourselves: honest about our weaknesses and our fears; honest about our hopes and our desires. Holy Week is also a time for being honest with God.
Praying the psalms - which express the gamut of human emotions from fear to joy, from grief and anger to praise and exultation - can help us. As Kathleen Norris writes, "the earthy honesty of the psalms ... defeat[s] our tendency to try to be holy without being human first."
She goes on to say, "The psalms make us uncomfortable because they don't allow us to deny either the depth of our pain or possibility of its transformation into praise."
So spend some time with the psalms this Holy Week. Don't leave out the angry parts. Pray them aloud, write your own paraphrases, allow the images to lead you to the depths of your own heart. After all, we're being honest here.
--by Bill
Sources:
"The Writer's Almanac," March 25, 2014. http://writersalmanac.publicradio.org/index.php?date=2014/03/25
Kathleen Norris, "The Paradox of the Psalms," in The Cloister Walk, New York Riverhead Books, 1996.ng!"
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