Memorial Day

  • Henri-Chapelle WWII American Cemetery
    “It is good that war is so horrible, or we might grow to like it.” -Robert E. Lee There is a terrible cost to be paid when we decide that we must fight rather than continue to talk...

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March 02, 2010

Comments

I remember, as a child, having a profound distaste for the song "Jesus Loves Me." I wasn't able to articulate why until I was in my 30s, after a conversation with a Pentacostal woman while I was in the throes of a breakup (and a foundering atheist). She said, "Girl, you don't need a boyfriend, get Jesus!"

When a year or so later I did go back to church, I realized that there was some metaphoric truth to this. My return to faith was hinged upon the realization that I'd been placing too much faith in humans. The narcissism was of a different stripe--I couldn't understand why people I loved would not love me back. But then, when I opened myself up, that needful place was wrapped in a blanket, if that makes any sense; I became more able to participate in a functional relationship rather than, as that ex of 2002 put it, suck the life out of someone.

I think it's that comfort that people ascribe to Jesus loving them, especially for folks who can't quite parse the great big Love Of God. And if that comfort makes them more able to become disciples, it's not a bad thing.

That said, I still don't like "Jesus Loves Me." I guess I'm more of a "For God So Loved the World" kind of gal.

Helen - I think there's a big difference between the idea of a God who loves you personally, and a personal God. I think you're talking about the former and not the latter.

But either way, I'm glad you found a way to be part of the Body!

Language is difficult to use. I was brought up in an abusive school. School and family were both severely broken bodies. For the last 40 years since my 25th or so, I have both needed and known a 'personal' 'relationship' with the One who is not ignorant, nor abusive, who grows me out of my own abuse, and whose body broken for me is whole even within its fractured state. I am in the elect from Adam to Abraham to Christ Jesus to those anointed per John's first letter. Election is not my doing but I am doing and am done within this body of God's beloved.

Finding words to express this close relationship - no holds barred - is a gift. 'Yes, Jesus loves me' and also invokes me into unimaginable fullness of life now and in the age to come. This One is gift - but not 'taken for granted' - such a love includes rebuke as well as kindness - both words can be understood from the covenant chesed of the Hebrew scriptures. And such a love allows me to complain and question.

I am also convinced that the same anointing is gracious in all ages and to all who call, the elect of Israel as well as those 'in Christ' who fear his name from the Gentiles. (Such is the inclusive message of the psalter). This is no cheap sentimental 'buddy' but equally - this is no distant, impersonal, wrathful or unavailable abstraction. There is more to Spirit than meets the mind. God incarnates metaphor in us.

Our theology (and ontology) of the three Persons is one based upon Persons-in-Communion (koinonia). The same can be said of our own personhood with the caveat that we are not perichoretic in the same ways as the Three AND that our personhood while shaped by one another is ultimately residing in the Three. To speak of Jesus as person and personal is not at odds with a communal faith. The two cohere. After all, Luther emphasized "for you," pro me, of the eucharistic distribution. What I see lately here is a want to emphasize the communal that does not adequately account for the sometimes need for God to rebuke the community when particular persons are not treated as part of the commons. Imbalances can be both of a personal or communal nature. In the latter, they tend to codependence or worse. After all, the worst examples of humanity in our time were communal affairs. I recommend reading Miroslav Volf on the Trinity as a moderator of over-enthusiastic Trinitarian and thus communitarian theologies/ecclesiologies.

I would add that warmth of piety toward Jesus in prayer and poetry is a long-standing Anglican tradition we dare not dismiss just because we're turned off by some expressions of such. Thinking of God in terms of friendship is also a longstanding tradition and indeed has been the heart of some theologies, St. Aelred (and surprisingly is at the core of Andrewes' eucharistic theology), for example. To separate out out to strongly the homo-affection, that is affection for the same, of our desires by which only the God become one of us in the flesh can work through us and reorient us (work salvation once wrought in us) is to dismiss a major part of the liturgical complex, namely piety. Piety is a multifaceted thing, and rather than focus on others', we might better focus on developing our own.

"We never experience God as a vague atmosphere of the divine; we encounter God always as a person who confronts and challenges us." Anselm Gruen, Benedict of Nursia: His Message for Today, 24.

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