On
Monday, I pointed out that often our minds love to fill in the gaps in a
story. We all have biases that block us
from seeing/hearing/connecting to others.
We tend to see people not as they are, but as we believe them to
be. And sometimes, because they resent
and resist such characterizations, the relationship cracks and crumbles. Why do we do what we do? Why do we say what we say? Sometimes we don’t know. We are all in the middle of a story called
“Our Life” that we don’t know how it will end.
As author Margaret Atwood says, when you are in the middle of a
story, it isn’t a story at all. Just
confusion like a glass shattered or wood splintered. The story starts to take shape as the sharp
shards of glass are swept up to see what can be salvaged, or the piece of art
begins to emerge from the whittling down of the wood. It is only when the melody finds harmony or
the notes begin to create what is a symphony. In the messy middle, which is where most of
us find ourselves, there isn’t much of a story.
In a world addicted to certainty, confidence, and being correct, this
reality rubs our souls raw. I am not
sure what cliffhangers you carry with you today. It could be medical, as the doctor adjusts
your medicine, or you wait for an appointment with your therapist. It could be spiritual, as you wait for God to
send you a neon sign, text message, or wait for the pony express to bring a
telegram. It could be waiting to see if
that frozen conflict has any hope of thawing.
Or culturally, as the world waits to see if peace is possible and if
humanity can ever stop hurting and harming each other. We get a glimpse into the lives of Mary and
Martha. We don’t know what happened the
day before or year before in their relationship. But we do know what happened to us last week
with our sibling, and so we inject and project that onto the screen of
Scripture. We don’t know what happened
last year to that neighbor with that political sign, so we are glad to fill in the
gap of our knowledge with certainty that all people who vote that way or go to
that church or have that bumper sticker are like that. We are in the middle of a story, our own as
well as our family story and cultural story and our church’s story and the
bigger cosmic story of God’s world.
These stories can be in tension with each other, and we are
seeing/living through the cracks in the stories colliding right now ~ like eggs
dropped on the floor. May you and I
continue to awaken to the truth that we don’t know what we don’t know. Or I like to say that the older I get the more
I don’t know..and I realize/recognize I may never know. So I sit in the mystery of life that isn’t a
puzzle to be solved but a way to be in the world here and now with love that
truly makes a family. Amen.




