Thursday, October 25, 2012

Broken Open by Love


I recently returned from a gathering of my peers (fellow liberal Swedenborgian ministers) in beautiful Laport, Indiana.  I was asked to give the talk to the local congregation Wednesday night.  We had been fed and housed by the several generous, quiet, and amazingly kind ladies of this congregation as we listened, discerned, and upheld each other in love. This was the message, from our hearts to the whole congregation. 

Broken Open
Scripture: John 12 20-26
Rev. Alison Longstaff
The Laport New Church, Indiana
Joint worship at the close of “Peer Supervision,” October 24, 2012

John 12:24 “Timeless truth I speak to you: unless a grain of wheat falls and dies in the ground, it remains alone.  But if it dies, it yields a great abundance.”

What do we do in peer supervision?

Do we discuss deep points of doctrine? 
Do we explore the deep underlying existential and theological implications of ministry in modern western global consciousness today?


Nope.


We come for fellowship.

We come to listen and to heal. We come to share in the one community that really gets us.

So what happens in these meetings?  A great deal of heart truth.  What happens in these meetings?  Listening, sharing, empathy, comfort, and support; insight, respect, often tears, sometimes heart-wrenching sobs, and always uproarious laughter.

And this was a point of insight for us --- that without the willingness to go into our depths of sadness and struggle, we would not also be opened to the moments of tremendous light.  Unless we allowed ourselves to be broken open by the love and safety here, we would tend to remain tightly bound in our need to be strong.  Pastors need pastors too. And so here we find that when we let ourselves be supported by each other --- when we let ourselves feel our deepest vulnerability, we rediscover our greatest strength, which is God’s relentless, persistent, unconditional love, experienced through each other.

Like the seed in the scripture falling to the earth, we must surrender.  We would prefer to hold on to “life.”  To feel strong and competent and capable.  It is much harder to look openly at our fears and insecurities.  It is much easier to be strong.  Who likes feeling vulnerable?  Yet through our descent into the dark earth of vulnerability, God cracks us open, and THEN the sacred and creative and the beautiful burst into life. 


It is a universal truth of the human condition: that deep in the heart of each soul is the terror of not being good enough.  Deep in each psyche lies the fear of being innately unlovable.  This is commonly called shame, and every mistake we have ever made piggybacks on this shame and seeks to convince you and you and me that we are somehow truly unlovable, and that some day, someone will figure this out and the game will be up.  We will be rejected, “as we deserve.”

But guess what?  There are no throw-away people. 
None. 

Every single one of us is the absolutely perfect, bright, and innocent soul that we were at the moment of our birth.  Nothing has changed, except that we have come to believe that we might somehow have lost our right to have love and human tenderness and connection, because our culture tells us so.

So let’s just admit it right now.  We all have warts.  We are all afraid of being just too broken to love.  And we are all completely beautiful and full of light!  And only through our vulnerability and heart-honesty, do we experience God’s presence among us, in compassion, gentleness, healing tears, and then deep belly-aching laughter. 

If we isolate and try to maintain the illusion of strength, we remain alone.  But when we allow ourselves to die, and to let our pride go, we are open to finding true intimacy and the abundant life of true heart-relationship --- which is the kingdom of heaven.

We came to these meetings holding it together.  
We leave whole and together. 

We came needing healing.  
We leave with such gratitude for this congregation’s quiet, amazing support and hospitality.  
Thank you for your light and love.  

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