Sue Monk Kidd: Incubation in Darkness

Sue Monk Kidd: Incubation in Darkness

“Today (August 12) is my birthday. It makes me think of the new life I’m incubating and the Birth-day still to come. Today I’ll talk to myself. I’ll say, ‘Accept life—the places it bleeds and the places it smiles. That’s your most holy and human task. Gather up the pain and the questions and hold them like a child on your lap. Have faith in God, in the movement of your soul. Accept what is. Accept the dark. It’s okay. Just be true.’” —Sue Monk Kidd, “A Journal Entry” in When the Heart Waits: Spiritual Direction for Life’s Sacred Questions (HarperOne, 1992).

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Today we continue to share stories from author Sue Monk Kidd. I found two copies of her book, When the Heart Waits: Spiritual Direction for Life’s Sacred Questions, unread in my home library. When I saw the book on the list for my spiritual direction studies at the Haden Institute, I took that as a sign to read it. I still remember the first time I met Sue Monk Kidd. She was on a tour for her book The Dance of the Dissident Daughter. I took all of my female partners in my medical group and my daughter to hear her. One of my partners cried the entire time and bought several books.

Kidd is as amazing a speaker as she is a writer. She reminds us of Marion Woodman’s writings about creative suffering in the dark. Creative suffering burns clean, as opposed to neurotic suffering, which creates more soot. Creative suffering “easters” us or transforms us, chooses a new way, owns our shadow, heals our wounds—as opposed to neurotic or self-pitying suffering, which is untransforming and leads to despair. Kidd continues to tell us that pain may not kill us but running from it might.

At a retreat she led at Kanuga conference center she described a healing exercise in which everyone placed on the altar cut-up scraps of colored paper representing wounds and pain from their lives—offering them up, turning them over instead of pushing them down, trying to escape from them.

She reminds us that the most significant events in Jesus’ life occurred in darkness: birth, arrest, death, resurrection. As tiny bits of light come out in our lives, we begin eastering—much like the lighting of the Paschal candle at the Easter Vigil. This is a great image for me, as the deacon usually carries the Paschal candle, saying “the light of Christ” three times before singing the Exsultet, praising the light. The Paschal candle we use is real wax and for some reason is always very difficult to extinguish!

Kidd describes how our addictions keep us unaware of what is going on inside of us as well as outside of us. This reminds me that when I am living in my addiction, I am denying the harm to my body and soul and heart that comes from wearing my many false selves. Twenty-eight years ago, when I was introduced to a twelve-step program, I got my voice back; but the recovery in the darkness of dealing with the tensions of all the false selves is still part of my recovery as I try to live the steps. I experience more and more easterings or resurrection; but it is still hard work. When the true self emerges, there is delight in life. Gratitude is what living in the true self brings. God becomes our playmate and we find our inner child.

Kidd writes about our accelerated, instant, quick “fast-food” society. I remember once talking to a ten-year-old about playing chess, and her response was, “It takes too long.”

Kidd reminds us of our desire for shortcut religion as well, looking for what Bonhoeffer called cheap grace, “Long on butterflies but short on cocoons.”

I go down to our den this afternoon and find my husband and our almost thirteen-year-old grandson quietly playing chess. I feel hope.

Joanna. joannaseibet@me.com

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Purchase a copy of A Spiritual Rx for Lent and Easter from me, joannaseibert@me.com, from Wordsworth Books in Little Rock, or from Amazon.

Resurrection: Second Look

Resurrection: It Takes a Second Look

“Seeing things as they actually are usually takes time. How else are we to explain the fact that no one—no one!—noticed the resurrected Jesus at first sight? Seeing the resurrection requires a second look, another glance. It takes a while for our eyes to adjust to the light of the resurrection, and then all of life looks radically different…Seeing God’s “new thing” is about seeing an old thing in a new way through a new lens. Such is the miracle of Gospel sight—to see what has always been there in such a radically new way that it becomes a new thing. This is always a work of grace, and we can only handle so much of it at once.”

-Kris Rocke and Joel Van Dyke in Geography of Grace, Doing Theology from Below from Daily Quote, InwardOutward/ Church of the Saviour, InwardOutward.org, April, 30, 2019.

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When friends ask what life must be like in the resurrection, I remind them that our only stories are those of the resurrected Jesus. The disciples on the road to Emmaus after the resurrection did not recognize him. Mary Magdalene did not recognize him. The disciples meeting Jesus on the beach were not sure who that was. Jesus came and went through closed doors. The resurrected Jesus gave fishing tips, cooked meals and ate dinner with his friends.

The Easter season is the perfect time to read and mediate on the appearances of the resurrected Jesus on Easter Day and the next forty days (Acts 1:3-8).

We may be more familiar to the four Easter Day appearances of Jesus (Mary Magdalene in John, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary in Matthew, two disciples on road to Emmaus in Luke, upper room to disciples first time when Thomas absent in John). There are at least 12 appearances of the resurrected Jesus. This Easter Season is an excellent time now to practice Ignatian meditative practices putting ourselves into the scenes not as familiar to us.

Jesus appeared to the disciples eight days after the resurrection (John 20:24-29) with Thomas present in the upper room. He appeared to seven disciples at the Sea of Galilee where he asked Peter to feed his sheep (John 21). Jesus appeared on a hillside in Galilee (Matthew 28:16-20) perhaps to over 500 people as referenced by Paul (1 Corinthians 15:6). Jesus was later seen by his brother James (1 Corinthians 15:7). Of course, Jesus’ final appearance was the Great Commission after the disciples returned to Jerusalem and were led out to Bethany at the Mount of Olives. (Luke 24:50-52, Acts 1:9-11). Then we know that Paul also encountered Jesus a few years later on the road to Damascus (Acts 9:5, 1 Corinthians 15:8).1

The fact that people have difficulty recognizing Jesus tells us as least two things. The resurrection was so overwhelming that it was almost impossible to believe at first. Second, Jesus looked different in the resurrection.

May we in turn learn from this how it may be for those we love as well as ourselves in the resurrection.

1Msgr. Charles Pope, Blog, April 9, 2012, blog.adw.org

Joanna. Joannaseibert.com

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Purchase a copy of A Spiritual Rx for Lent and Easter from me, joannaseibert@me.com, from Wordsworth Books in Little Rock, or from Amazon.

Normal Resurrection

Resurrection

“Our memory of Jesus’ resurrection fails us if we only understand his resurrection as a miracle. Jesus’ resurrection was indeed a miracle; however, Jesus’ resurrection needs to be more than a miracle. It needs to be normal … every day … how we live and breathe: with resurrection power.” —Br. Curtis Almquist, SSJE, from “Brother, Give Us a Word,” a daily email sent to friends and followers of the Society of Saint John the Evangelist (SSJE.org).

Easter Banner, Trinity Cathedral

Easter Banner, Trinity Cathedral

This is at the heart of spiritual direction, helping spiritual friends see daily, yearly resurrection in their lives in the daily, yearly Good Fridays that present themselves. It often does take more than three days to become aware of these resurrections. As we grow more conscious of the resurrections, we become more open to trust and become a little more patient that there will be a resurrection out of each new darkness we face.

My experience also is that I most often draw closer, spend more time with God during the darkness. It is in the dark Good Fridays of my life that I learn about surrender, where I “re-turn” my life and my will over to God.

A close family member or friend dies. We learn about the sacredness of life and spend more time living in the present with gratitude for each day. We learn to honor and be grateful for the relationship we had by extending to others the love and kindness we learned in that relationship.

Our children act out. We see our part in it and try to change our relationship with them. Our job becomes more and more difficult. We finally leave it or maybe even are fired. After much time we find a job that is our bliss. A medical illness slows us down. We seek a more meaningful life by living at a slower pace, a day at a time. We are caught in our addiction and lose our job. We change our whole life-style and outlook on life in order to live without the addiction. Someone has harmed us mentally, physically, or spiritually. Over much time we realize that unless we can forgive and move on, that person is still hurting us. We then slowly learn about daily forgiveness for the small hurts we feel each day.

Miracles that become the ordinary. God at work in our lives. Resurrection.

Joanna joannaseibert.com

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Purchase a copy of A Spiritual Rx for Lent and Easter from me, joannaseibert@me.com, from Wordsworth Books in Little Rock, or from Amazon.