Wednesday, June 15, 2022

Theology of Suffering

I was in an Urgent Care this evening, crying my eyes out due to the pressure in my ears. I remember when I was maybe three years old, sitting on my mom's lap and crying my eyes out for the same reason. I remember saying something about God to her, like, "Why does God let this happen?" or "Why does God hate me?"

Tonight, I practiced all the breathing techniques I know (maybe three... mostly different counts of inhale-hold-exhale) to deal with the pain. I paced, I sat, I prayed. I prayed not just for myself but for a few other people I know to be in pain right now, including people who are literally in war zones or being tortured. I pray for them most. I told God that he is still good, even though I was in pain. I thanked him for being with me while I was in pain. And that's my entire theology of suffering. That's it. 

I drove to the pharmacy and acquired at little cost: Sudafed, amoxicillin, and prednisone, all of which I dosed up in the parking lot, and prayed to drive safely home in spite of my compromised reaction time. All was well. I lay down on the couch and writhed and wailed until the medicines took effect. 


"Only Physical"

Something else is going on with these thoughts. While I was waiting for the doctor, I thought, "at least it's not losing my child. She's safe at home, going to bed. At least this is only physical." But I don't believe in "only physical." If I had lost my child, the pain would be so acute as to actually be physical, not just psychological. And is any pain psychological only? Aren't we experiencing it with our physical mind? Praise God for the physical. "Only" nothing. It's a seamless everything. 

Wednesday, January 12, 2022

Moving to East Lancaster

Right now, we have a bedroom dedicated to storing the puzzle we're working on. Another bedroom is just laundry drying. An office upstairs contains a blow-up mattress and an old rug. We move the rest of our stuff in on Saturday, when, I assume, I will find our plates in an unlabeled box. We've been eating all our meals out of the same three bowls around a card table in camp chairs for almost three weeks. I'm not complaining. I can't believe we get to live in a city where we've already made and begun to make friendships. I can't believe we get to live in a big house with guest rooms! I can't believe how many people we're going to be able to host for dinners, or for a weekend, or much longer! I can't believe how yellow our kitchen is. 

All our books are in boxes, still, and the bookshelves waiting to be wedged into vans from various quadrants. We live in meanwhile, and there's something serene and sad about how empty the house still is. We don't know who will share it with us, or when. We don't know how full it will get, or how empty. We're hoping. And hope can fill a house.