THE CHURCH: COMMUNITY
I don’t
remember how old I was – I was a young schoolboy – but I do remember the rainy,
cold day. I had walked from school to
the beauty shop in the Cleburne Hotel on Cherry Street, where my mother worked
as a beauty operator. It was now time to
walk home in the cold rain. I bundled
up, shivered and set out, wondering why I had to do this. I crossed Cherry Street and looked up Porter
Street, where my home was a mile away. I
was walking past Plaza Drugs when I heard a car honking at me, and I turned to hear
and see Mrs. Lyda Kitchens roll down her window in the rain to ask me: “Do you want a ride home?” My heart leapt up, and I said “Yes, M’am,”
and I ran to get into her back seat. On
the ride home I do not recall what she said, but I shall never forget the
feelings of warmth and acceptance and gratitude that this woman had rescued me
from a cold rain.
Lyda
Kitchens was a wealthy white woman, and I was a poor white boy, but the church
connected us – we were both part of First Presbyterian Church. Though class
boundaries remained strong in my town, in my church, they were less clear. Our Presbyterian church was a mixture of
white society, and in this milieu, I didn’t really notice class as a harsh
barrier. When Mrs. Kitchens gave me a
ride on that cold and rainy day (can I say it one more time?), my first thought
was not: “OK, a rich white woman is picking me up!” My first thought was gratitude that anyone
with a car was picking me up! The
church had linked us together, and I was grateful, especially on this kind of
day.
It was this
kind of community that Jesus sought to build in his ministry – rich aligned
with poor, women sharing leadership, those who were healthy paired with those
who were sick and frail. In Mark 1,
Jesus encounters a man with leprosy, and the man calls out to Jesus: “Lord, you can heal me – IF YOU WANT
TO.” The person with leprosy not only
wants healing for his body. He also
wants healing for his soul. The words in
Greek call him “a leper,” an indication
that he has been pushed to the margins.
His humanity has been taken, and his identity is now the disease which
wreaks havoc on him. He is asking Jesus
to return his humanity to him. “Jesus,
you can heal me……if you want to……do you want to? Or, are you simply like everyone else, who
sees me as unclean and unworthy and inhuman?”
Jesus replies: “I want to,” and
he breaks the law by touching and healing this man whom society has deemed
“unclean” and has pushed out of the community.
The church
can do this – it is our mission and our lifeblood. We are called to be that body which can help
break down the dividing walls between us and to build community. We are privileged to offer the opportunity to
all of us to recover our humanity, to help each of us hear that our primary
definition is not whatever the world tells us, or even what we tell ourselves. Our primary definition is that we are the
daughters and sons of God. I felt this
in my church as a boy. I believed this
stuff – I believed that class was not important in the church. I believed it because I experienced it. At its best, the church can be a place like
this, a place where each of us and all of us can find our home, can find our
“true north.” We, of course, have failed
miserably in this calling as church, but I know that it can be done, because I
experienced it as a boy and as a youth. And,
I experienced it as a pastor. The church
can be a powerful place to build community, to build the interdependence that
it is at the heart of the gospel.
My
experience is a key component in this story, but it is not the only
component. Even as I experienced the
gift of a warm ride in a cold rain, my imagination had not yet seen – nor was
it allowed to see – that our vision was severely truncated. Strong community that we were as church, we
were very much afraid to engage an even larger barrier to community: the power of race. No people of African descent were allowed in
worship or membership. In that sense,
the community of church that felt so warm to me was far shallower than I had
imagined. The corrective glasses that we
as white people needed were the lens of justice. To that we shall turn next week.
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