Weeping may linger for the night, but joy comes in the morning. -Psalm 30:5
Prison
At church inside the women’s prison last Sunday, Pastor Samm raised her hands after communion and said, receive this blessing. Immediately a roar of feedback from the mics and monitors behind her angrily filled the room.
A gal rushed to the stage and shut off the extra mic.
Geez. Worst blessing ever, someone said loud enough to be heard above the dimming feedback.
Everyone, including Samm, laughed. Then, raising her hands again she said “OK, well…receive THIS blessing….” and went on as scheduled:
May we who have been fed at Wisdom’s table, take her welcome out to where doors are locked and tables are bolted to the floor. May The Spirit drive us to break our bread on the altar of the world.
The thing that I think would surprise people the most about church services inside the women’s prison isn’t the possibility of a lock down, or the congregation’s predilection for facial tattoos, or even the fact that at any point the service may or may not be interrupted by two residents being busted for having sex in the gym bathroom.
I think what would surprise folks the most is the joy.
The joy is unbelievable. But so is the suffering. I am starting to believe these two things are related.
There’s just no way to successfully hide hardship in a place like a women’s prison. The accumulated effects of generational trauma, addiction, neglect, poverty and undereducation are written indelibly on everyone who lines up for communion in their shapeless green pants and aggressively yellow T-shirts.
Basements
Unlike many of us on the outside, the suffering these women have both caused and endured is not so easily hidden. Maybe this is why I feel so comfortable at New Beginnings; because like in AA, most folks don’t end up there because everything has gone really well for them. There is a conspicuousness to the difficulties of life in both prison and in AA, which I find very relaxing; because you just know what you’re dealing with. And I think maybe this “no way to hide how shitty life is” dynamic in prison allows for something else as well, and that is (perhaps counterintuitively): joy. A bursting out loud, celebration of life. More than I have experienced in most churches, if I’m honest.
I just wonder if perhaps there is a relationship between a community’s ability to hold suffering with honesty and its ability to also experience joy with abandon.
See, often what I hear in most churches … in the prayers or the preaching ... is, I guess, true. It’s just (in my estimation) seldom honest. But what I hear shared in AA meetings is entirely brutal and compelling in its verisimilitude AND almost always accompanied at some point by raucous laughter. As I have said many times before, I have experienced people speaking honestly about their lives and connecting to God and to one another more frequently in church basements than in church sanctuaries.
I have experienced people speaking honestly about their lives and connecting to God and to one another more frequently in our church basements than in our church sanctuaries.
Hearts
Facing, holding, and speaking honestly of our own suffering and the suffering of others can feel brutal. Like pieces of ourselves are being scooped out. True. But what is also true is the way that it excavates something in us that joy can then fill that much deeper. It doesn’t justify the suffering, it just follows it.
All I know is, every time someone has sat with me as I wept, that eventually … eventually we usually end up laughing. I love those bleary-eyed laughing fits, even if I will do anything to avoid the breaking down in tears part that precedes them.
But the thing is, there is no protecting ourselves from suffering in this life. Not really. What we can hold at bay is joy. Through formality. And legalism. And pride. And fear.
And the older I get, the less interest I have in any of that.
So receive this blessing:
As you wander through your bafflingly painful and breathtakingly beautiful life, may you find the most honest words possible to speak of it all. May you find people who will not say stupid shit to you when the bottom has fallen out. And may they not try and fix you, but simply allow their own tears to join yours, soaking the holy ground of your broken heart until that same heart is filled again with the joy that comes from a perfectly timed fart joke.
Amen?
Amen.
Alleluia.
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Yes. My Dad, who had a shitty childhood and then PTSD from being in New Guinea in WWII, and who drank to numb the terror, (and who nevertheless was a really good father), had a wonderful way of comforting me when I was a kid. He used to say, "Cheer up, it's always darkest before the storm." I thought that was funny till I was an adult (in ACOA) and realized that he was acknowledging that things were hard and maybe--likely--going to get worse, and that somehow we could hang in there. Which he did. He always got a kick out of small pleasures, always--wood ducks and carrots from the garden and grandchildrens' antics. I'm still trying to learn that.
Since I posted that, I've been thinking about the weather metaphor. I'm (more or less) a fifth generation Vermonter on my father's side, and though I happen to live in a part of the state that isn't washed out and/or under water, I'm devasted by all the damage. The national news has been focused on Montpelier and the roads, but so many farmers (especially the smaller ones) are just--done in by this. A very late freeze took out maybe half the apple crop, and the flooding has wiped out fields of vegetables and low-lying hay fields, and chicken coops. And more rain is coming. As it happened after Irene, we consider ourselves "Vermont Strong" and the sun will shine again, but. . Dad's metaphor works.
Like you I have experienced this beautiful dichotomy of spiritual experiences both in the church and in AA. Also like you I do a lot of prison work. I have been a Christian 25 years, out of prison 18 years, and clean almost 13 years. Last week I told the guys in a weekly class I'm teaching in prison that I don't know if anyone of will really get out and stay out but I just want to say thanks to them for helping me stay out. In AA it's very obvious to us we only keep what we have by giving it away and that is why there's more power in the basement sometimes than the sanctuary. Keep up the good work sister.