DREAMS OF MY FATHER – PART TWO
Caroline
and I were blessed to be with our children David and Susan over Father’s Day
weekend. I was reminded of the gifts of
parenting and grandparenting – thank you!
As I noted in last week’s blog, I did not know my father except in his
absence and neglect, so as I celebrate Father’s Day, I am aware that not all of
us are fathers and not all of us had great relationships to our fathers. My father died over 30 years ago, but I still
carry his neglect in my heart and soul.
So, the father with whom I wrestle is not my biological father, but the
one I carry in my heart.
Father’s
Day (and Mother’s Day) is a time that calls us back to our origins and to the
meaning of our lives. Biology is fate,
but it is not destiny. We have certain
limits within which we must live our lives, but not all is determined for us. Not all of us are fathers or mothers, but all
of us had fathers and mothers. Whatever
our relationship is to our parents, we are called to live our lives in a way
that we bring mothering and fathering to those we engage. This is certainly what happened in my life,
as recently as last week. After reading
last week’s blog, one of my older colleagues and friends, Gayraud Wilmore, mailed
me to say that he wanted to be my substitute father, and I said “yes!” In that great image from Isaiah 58:12, many
men (and women) have stepped into the breech of my absent father for me, and I
am truly grateful to them. I have tried
to do that also in my ministry, with some success and some failures, but I have
tried to be there for those who have not known their fathers or have had
terrible relationships with their fathers.
I have
counseled many people in my ministry, and although I try not to project too
much of my story onto theirs, I have noticed that an overwhelming number of
people are dominated by anxiety and feel unworthy of being loved. I know that story! I have sought to be a vessel of God’s love to
them. I hope that I have helped them to
hear that God wants our passion, not our perfection. I have certainly heard this from those who
have shared the power of God’s love for me.
I recently assisted the Open Door Community in moving from Atlanta to
Baltimore. As I was driving in the
moving van with my good and longtime friend Ed Loring on the way to Baltimore,
we talked of theology, politics, compassion and other subjects. As we got to the question of whether our
personal identity would survive death, I indicated that one reason that I hoped
for it was that I wanted to know, finally, that I was loved and not
abandoned. In the middle of my sharing,
Ed blurted out: “Nibs, your father’s not
coming for you! He’s dead! But, you are loved! I love you, and many others love you. Live out of love, right now – don’t live out
of anxiety and abandonment.”
And, that
hit home. It will take awhile to sink
down into the lower depths of my soul, but I am grateful to Gay and Ed and many
others who have demonstrated and shared their love and God’s love for me. As I reflect on Father’s Day and the opportunity it provides to think about the
power of love and pain in our lives, I return to President Barack Obama’s first
book “Dreams From My Father,” where he wrestled with his absent father. In his newer (2004) introduction to that book,
President Obama (don’t we miss him now!) wrote that if he had to write that
book again, it would be “less a meditation on the absent father and more a
celebration of the one who was the single constant in my life.” I know
that part of the journey. For most of my
childhood, I was dominated by the absence of my father, and I rarely ever
consciously considered the loving presence of my mother. I remember one of my great therapists asking
me: “You know, Nibs, I’m wondering why
you choose to center on the absent father in your life. Why not center on your mother, who stayed
with you and loved you and nurtured you.
Why live out of absence and anxiety rather than out of presence and love?” I am grateful to Robby Carroll for sharing
this insight with me years ago, giving me time to begin to turn the ship around
– and to let my mother know it too before she died.
So, to
close out these Father’s Day blogs, I’ll paraphrase Carl Sandburg’s poem “let
joy kill you – there are enough little deaths.”
I give thanks for those who have loved me and fathered me in joy and who
have taught me joy, even as I have longed to live in fear and anxiety.
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