Thursday, August 18, 2005

i have to blog this

i'm reading "operating instructions" by anne lamott. there is an amazing passage that i have to share. hang on...its long.

"my gay friend Jane, who like me, used to drink a little bit more than was perhaps good for her, said on the winter solstice this year that for her, being a pagan, the solstice is not just about the darkest night of the year but also abou the darkest night of the soul. she and her goddess-worshipping friends celebrate this because the seeds of new growth lie in this darkness and develop in the winter to bloom in the spring. i said, what do you pagan homos do at your midnight celebration--put a bunch of dogs in wicker baskets and push them off cliffs, with Hally Near playing on a nearby boom box? and she looked over at my big italian crucifix on the kitchen wall, at the thorns, at the bloody wound, the nails through his palms, and the she turned to me with a look of such amused condescension that all i could do was laugh. as soon as she left, though, i went and stared at the crucifix for a long time and breathed it in. i believe in it, and it's so nuts. How did some fabulously cerebral and black-humored cynic like myself come to fall for all that Christian lunacy, to see the cross not as an end but a beginning, to believe as much as I believe in gravity or in the size of space that Jesus paid a debt he didn't owe because we had a debt we couldn't pay? it, my faith, is a great mystery. it has all the people close to me shaking their heads. it has me shaking my head. but i have a photograph on my wall of this ancient crucifix at a church over in Cort Madera, a tall splintering wooden Christ with his arms blown off in some war, under which someone long ago wrote, "Jesus has no arms but ours to do his work and to show his love," and every time i read that, i always end up thinking that these are the only operationg instructions i will ever need."

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Anne Lamott is a genius. I never get tired of hearing her words. Thanks!

Suzanne Price said...

it doesn't surprise me one bit that you like anne lamott. have you read her newest book?

Amy Harden said...

to be honest, I haven't read much lately. Except Snuggle Puppy and the Very Hungry Catepillar.

Anonymous said...

I love the look Anne's friend gave her--it's so good to get other people's perceptions of Chrisitanity. My Muslim assistant once commented on how strange it is and even morbid that Christians use a symbol to represent their relgion that their leader was killed on. That does seem a little crazy. I had to explain to him that it reminds us what Christ did for us (but I have to admit, it is a little strange). At the school I teach, it would be considered "gang related" if I wore a silver gun around my neck because that was how my (for example)brother died.

Anyway, thank you for sharing.

Love,
erin