{"id":4540,"date":"2020-12-22T14:20:35","date_gmt":"2020-12-22T19:20:35","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/?post_type=ctc_sermon&#038;p=4540"},"modified":"2020-12-22T14:20:36","modified_gmt":"2020-12-22T19:20:36","slug":"darkness-visible","status":"publish","type":"ctc_sermon","link":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/messages\/darkness-visible\/","title":{"rendered":"Darkness Visible"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Ken shares a story from Anne Lamott wherein she talks about calling around to different friends asking about what Advent means to them. She doesn\u2019t have much luck until she reaches a Jesuit friend who has 35 years of sobriety. He shares a dramatic event which happened early in his own recovery wherein folks at a 12-step meeting showed compassion to a man in a terrible state. The patience they showed then, evoked the feeling of Advent for this friend.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Darkness Visible<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p>[00:00:01]<br>Good morning, Wellspring&#8217;s. It is good to be with you again. This morning for my message, I want to share a story<br>with you.<br>[00:00:10]<br>It&#8217;s from the writer Ann Lamott, some of you might know her from our Wellspring&#8217;s 2.0 Listening to Our Lives group<br>from the chapter in a book entitled Into Thin Mud. And some of you may have just read her on your own.<br>[00:00:25]<br>Now, the thing about Anne Lamott, if you&#8217;re at all familiar with her, is that she has a deep writerly.<br>[00:00:33]<br>Capacity for profound irreverence and for profound reverence, and it&#8217;s about some of that irreverence that I want to<br>give you a little heads up today, because the irreverence directly plays into the reverence. So in the story I want to<br>share with you, she talks pretty honestly about bodily functions, not all of the story, but it&#8217;s a part of it and it&#8217;s<br>integral to the story. Now, I&#8217;ve cleaned up some of her language about those bodily functions, but I do want to give<br>you a heads up that&#8217;s coming. And the second thing is this. She, like me, is a person in long term recovery and a<br>decent part of this story is about what can happen in recovery. And in it she uses some language that those of us in<br>recovery sometimes use to refer to other people we know in recovery.<br>[00:01:34]<br>And in that context used between us, these words take on a quality of connection and belonging and actually<br>become terms of endearment. But when these are words used about us by people not in recovery, these words take<br>on a quality of exclusion and looking down on us and actually contribute to stigma. So the context in which these<br>words are used is incredibly important. So the story that she tells is about Advent, which she says, for Jesus, people<br>like herself is an incredibly important time of year. It&#8217;s the time of year of opening the heart of preparing for<br>Christmas. And really what Christmas signifies, what it means the in the Hebrew, the Emmanuel, the sense of the<br>divine really dwelling amongst us and within us and for and with all of us. What is stressed, what&#8217;s important in the<br>time of Advent is a kind of patient waiting and openness for that presence to gain root within all of us, so that a<br>realm, a way of being of of peace and justice and compassion, regardless of what we believe belongs to and with<br>and for all of us. She says she deeply wants that that way of peace and justice and compassion for all of us.<br>[00:03:12]<br>And she&#8217;s even open to the waiting and the patience of this time of year, especially for those of us who live in the<br>northern hemisphere for this time of the year in which the sunlight is diminishing.<br>[00:03:25]<br>Sometimes that can be a real challenge, especially when it&#8217;s cold as well, and she says it&#8217;s not that she lacks faith,<br>it&#8217;s that she has some real mental health challenges. And so this particular adventure some years ago when she<br>was writing the story about she says that it&#8217;s almost like she developed a kind of childlike chant that was going on<br>inside of her mind all the time at this particular advent that went something like this worry, worry, worry, worry,<br>worry, worry, worry, worry, worry, worry, worry, worry, worry, worry, worry, worry, worry, worry, worry, worry,<br>worry, worry, worry, worry, worry, worry, worry.<br>[00:04:04]<br>She was not doing so well.<br>[00:04:07]<br>No, she wanted that patience and that peace. She was having a tough time locating it.<br>[00:04:15]<br>And so she thought about reaching out to her own pastor, but this was early on in Advent and it is a busy season<br>for folks who are clergy. And so her pastor was away on some self care, R and R to prepare for the time of preparing<br>for Christmas. And and Lamont wrote tongue firmly in cheek. She said, if we knew that we were going to hire a<br>pastor who was so committed to their own boundaries and self care, we would have thought twice about what she&#8217;s<br>getting. And so her own pastor not being around, she decides she want to reach out to some of what she called<br>God&#8217;s other spokespeople.<br>[00:04:51]<br>She called the ministers she knew and she said, talk to me about talk to me about God. And the other minister said,<br>who&#8217;s that? And she thought, OK, that&#8217;s not very promising, moving on.<br>[00:05:04]<br>And so she reached out to a Jewish friend of hers and she picked up the phone and she could hear immediately in<br>the background this person&#8217;s children keening and crying and all kinds of tumult in the background. And Anne<br>Lamott still went on with it. She said, tell me about the preparation for the time of Hanukkah, the miracle, the<br>Festival of Lights. And the friend immediately says, are you joking? Hearing the sound of the chaos in the<br>background? And Lamott says, Well, I know you&#8217;re I know you&#8217;re reformed. And the friend shoots back. We&#8217;re so<br>reformed. We have a crucifix on the door of our house. So, again, not so much what an Lamott maybe was<br>searching for in the way of peace and patience. And the friend says, call me back tomorrow as the kids are creating<br>even more chaos in the background. Call me back tomorrow, she says, and I will talk to you about Hanukkah and<br>the kicking out of the old invader&#8217;s. The old Assyrian kingdom invader&#8217;s thousands of years ago from the Holy Land<br>and by the Holy Land. No, I don&#8217;t mean Miami Beach.<br>[00:06:09]<br>So an Lamott moves on to her next friend, another minister. And says, talk to me of God, talk to me of of people<br>who are doing all right, and the friend just kind of sighs and says, Oh, Bobby, you&#8217;ve you&#8217;ve got a you&#8217;ve got a big<br>one there. And the friend says, this is what I know. Take care of God&#8217;s children and God will take care of you. And<br>Anne Lamont says, is that written somewhere, the friend says it&#8217;s right there under what&#8217;s called the special<br>instructions for living.<br>[00:06:45]<br>And Anne Lamott still not quite getting what she was searching for.<br>[00:06:51]<br>Calls her friend Tom.<br>[00:06:54]<br>Tom, who she describes as a hopeless alcoholic of the worst sort with thirty five years sobriety, Tom, who is a Jesuit.<br>Tom, who she trusts because Tom is still very open, even after thirty five years of sobriety, that he can suffer with<br>struggles over the images or at least the images that he believes about his body, and he can fall into despair at<br>times. And so and Lamott trusts him because he is honest and real. And Ann Lamott, her Jesuit friend, Tom.<br>[00:07:39]<br>Tell me of people getting well. Tell me a story of people getting well. And Tom pauses for a moment.<br>[00:07:53]<br>And he thinks.<br>[00:07:55]<br>And he says, this is my story of people getting well, this is my story of Advent. It was many years ago, it was 1976,<br>and I was very newly sober.<br>[00:08:10]<br>And terrified of everything.<br>[00:08:12]<br>He said, at that point, I was living in California, I was living in what they called the time the People&#8217;s Republic of<br>Berkeley, and I kind of liked the meetings, the recovery meetings I was going to at the time, because unlike in L.A.,<br>where I was a little bit familiar with as well, too. And I think Anne Lamott was familiar with L.A. at that time, that the<br>people in Berkeley, they didn&#8217;t kind of whoop it up. There wasn&#8217;t too much clapping at the meetings. It was kind of<br>more sedate. And he found people like himself, kind of folks who had been in school real long time.<br>[00:08:45]<br>And he said the problem was, is that in addition to being in early recovery and scared of his own shadow. He was<br>transferred within his order, within the Jesuit order to Los Angeles. And all he really knew about Los Angeles. Where<br>where the bars were in various parts of town, and so he was terrified even to leave his apartment for fear that he<br>would see himself going to one of those bars again. Remember, he is in very early recovery. And so we called up his<br>cardinal and one of the higher ups in his order and the cardinal said, I want you to search out Terry. Terry, it turns<br>out, has five years of sobriety, which Tom says makes Terry God to me, couldn&#8217;t even imagine that five years of<br>sobriety at the time. And so during this time, add Advent in 1976, he makes contact with Terry and Terry asks him,<br>I want you to come and meet me at a at a men&#8217;s meeting in downtown L.A. at the Episcopal Cathedral, which was<br>located real close to what was called Skid Row.<br>[00:10:08]<br>And Tom gets there and he meets Terry and he sees all the people hanging out in the courtyard of the church,<br>people who look like real hard core alkies and addicts.<br>[00:10:22]<br>People who look like they might be numbering their days of sobriety in hours, people who look like they&#8217;re on the<br>edges of society. People who look like they&#8217;re barely hanging on. And the truth is, although Tom is fairly well<br>scrubbed, he thinks he feels like he&#8217;s barely hanging on.<br>[00:10:44]<br>And although he has been told to seek out Terry with the five years of sobriety, Terry, as it turns out, is a complete<br>introvert who has almost no social skills and is really, really awkward interpersonally.<br>[00:11:00]<br>And so he&#8217;s trying to make small talk with Terry, but it&#8217;s not really working. And at one point, Terry simply asks<br>them, So how are you doing?<br>[00:11:14]<br>And he says, I am scared. And Terry says, yeah, gently.<br>[00:11:21]<br>That&#8217;s about right, and so there they are hanging out in the courtyard of the Episcopal Cathedral with all these kind<br>of folks who look really down on their luck pretty much.<br>[00:11:34]<br>And a door opens and Terri finds himself going up the stairs. Very, very long, narrow set of stairs.<br>[00:11:48]<br>I think I said, Terry, I mean, Tom, Terri&#8217;s in back of Tom and he&#8217;s feeling his legs absolutely shaking.<br>[00:11:56]<br>This set of stairs that feels almost limitless and in front of him, there&#8217;s a guy also youngish about Tom&#8217;s age who<br>looks even shakier than Tom feels.<br>[00:12:10]<br>And at one point, the guy in front of them who looks like he is perhaps measuring his sobriety in minutes, loses<br>control of his bodily functions.<br>[00:12:23]<br>And Tom says inside, I look like Edward Munch&#8217;s The Scream, I just want to get out of there, I am nauseated and I<br>feel Terry&#8217;s gentle encouragement, easing me up the stairs because the guy in front of me doesn&#8217;t seem to know<br>that he has defecated on himself and they get up to the very top of the stairs before they enter this airless,<br>windowless room. And the guy whose job it is, is to kind of greet people as they come into the meeting, kind of like<br>a volunteer position. He&#8217;s got a big shaved head and a big barrel chest and one of those big, bushy, vulga Viking<br>mustaches. And he gets one whiff of this guy who&#8217;s gone to the bathroom on himself and he vomits all over the<br>place. And so now this windowless, airless room is filled with the smell of human poop and vomit, and everyone<br>starts madly smoking cigarettes to try and get the stench off of them. And the guy who&#8217;s gone to the bathroom on<br>himself just kind of stumbles in and falls into a chair and everyone kind of starts to freak out.<br>[00:13:34]<br>But not Terry.<br>[00:13:37]<br>Tom just wants to run, this is too much to deal with. Terry goes over to the guy who&#8217;s vomited, the guy with the big<br>vulga mustache, he says, seems like you got a bit of surprise there, my friend. And Terry and the guy with the big<br>mustache and the shaved head just start laughing. And Terri walks over to the man, so down on his luck.<br>[00:14:04]<br>And he sits down next to him.<br>[00:14:07]<br>And he says it looks like you&#8217;ve run into some trouble here, my friend.<br>[00:14:14]<br>The man doesn&#8217;t say anything, just nods and he says, we&#8217;re going to help you out.<br>[00:14:21]<br>Now, first, what they do is because this isn&#8217;t the first time something like this has has happened like this in this<br>particular meeting, is Terri sends a bunch of guys off to get some towels and some kitty litter to start soaking up<br>the effluvia.<br>[00:14:37]<br>Not the first time this has happened there. And he gets Some men. Who are very early in recovery themselves.<br>[00:14:47]<br>Some men from a nearby halfway house right next door to the Episcopal Cathedral.<br>[00:14:55]<br>And they steady the man who&#8217;s gone to the bathroom on himself and they guide him down that set of stairs and<br>they bring him over to the halfway house. And they feed him. And they give him coffee. And they clean his clothes.<br>And they care for him. And they give him respect. Now, these men who kind of themselves are barely hanging on.<br>[00:15:26]<br>The kinds of addicts and alcoholics that are so often looked down on by society, they care for this man because he<br>is one of them. He is one of their own.<br>[00:15:41]<br>And back at the meeting.<br>[00:15:45]<br>Tom says and feels for the first time something he has not felt in months. Which is a little tiny shred. Of hope. He<br>sees the way that Terri has kind of calmly, gently, kindly.<br>[00:16:06]<br>Turned everyone to action for care, and he said, you know what?<br>[00:16:12]<br>I was back in Berkeley. I thought everyone looked like this. Nineteen seventy six now, David Niven, very debonair<br>British actor.<br>[00:16:20]<br>And I thought I would get sober with people just like myself.<br>[00:16:26]<br>Housebroken, overeducated and fun.<br>[00:16:33]<br>But the truth he saw at that meeting. Was that was not to be. And more than anything, he thought he would be Tom<br>would be restored to health overnight. And that was not to be either. It would be a patient process. A process that<br>took some time.<br>[00:16:57]<br>And some care. And some waiting. And in the midst of his fear.<br>[00:17:04]<br>And that windowless, airless, smelly room, he found hope for the first time in a long time.<br>[00:17:15]<br>And now addressing himself to Ann Lamott in the present tense, he says that is Advent to me. That God will set up<br>a tent before us. In which we are all invited. In which we learn to get well together.<br>[00:17:39]<br>That is Advent to me.<br>[00:17:42]<br>Not quickly. Not overnight. That is my Advent story.<br>[00:17:50]<br>And he signs off by saying, for you, Miss Crabby and for me. For us together. In time.<br>[00:18:05]<br>That is an Lamonte story about that.<br>[00:18:11]<br>Makes me think of. My life about 15 years ago when I walked up a different set of stairs here in Pennsylvania.<br>[00:18:21]<br>Not nearly as smelly, but I was just as terrified. I walked up that long set of stairs into a windowless, airless room.<br>Because I had to face. My own alcoholism. And I remember in the first couple meeting someone saying we take<br>everyone from Yale to jail here.<br>[00:18:46]<br>And I remember saying I got one of those and a guy in back of me I didn&#8217;t even know then said I&#8217;ve got the other I<br>guess maybe looking at my clothes, he was guessing which one, which can always do.<br>[00:18:54]<br>In this case, he was right. And we kind of laughed together.<br>[00:18:59]<br>I remember feeling that little shred. A little glimmer of hope. Then maybe I would know what it would mean to get<br>well. And that it would take some patience. And some time.<br>[00:19:16]<br>And it did. And it has worked and it continues to.<br>[00:19:24]<br>But I also think more broadly about us as well, to not just those of us in recovery. About this moment of being alive.<br>Of the last four years. Which has felt.<br>[00:19:37]<br>For those of us who set our hearts upon peace and and justice and compassion as felt that those things have been<br>under assault.<br>[00:19:50]<br>And at this moment, at this turning of the year, that perhaps things these problems that are much bigger than just<br>the last four years, that perhaps peace and justice and goodness and compassion.<br>[00:20:04]<br>That these things may have more than better fighting chance again. And I think of the last now almost 10 months of<br>this pandemic and seeing the images of the vaccines roll out. Hearing about people I know who know other people<br>who are starting medical providers to get the shot, the inoculation. And maybe for the first time in a long time, we<br>were feeling some hope. And yes, we know as well. That it won&#8217;t be overnight, that the pandemic ends and in fact,<br>right now, with the numbers skyrocketing, there is more death and more illness in our midst and there will be for<br>some time. This is what I love Ann Lamott&#8217;s adventure story. Because on this morning, one day shy of the solstice.<br>The day with the least sunlight of the year. And time of the year when many of us feel ourselves wanting so deeply,<br>more sunlight and more light in our lives. I find it so heartening to receive this remember this reminder to<br>remember, to look for both light and love in small and meaningful life saving patient ways. It reminds me of one of<br>my favorite readings for Advent, the solstice time of the year.<br>[00:21:44]<br>And from the great psychiatrist Carl Jung. Who says we become enlightened not by imagining?<br>[00:21:54]<br>Figures of light. We become enlightened. By making the darkness conscious.<br>[00:22:05]<br>And so in these days. The challenge and the promise. Even if that promise seems small. May we allow? Our eyes.<br>And our hearts. Time to adjust. So that hope and goodness and peace. Compassion and justice.<br>[00:22:32]<br>That these things can take root and grow in our lives. Even in the midst of winter.<br>[00:22:43]<br>Amen. And may you live in Blessing<br>[00:22:51]<br>I invite you to join your heart with mine in prayer right now.<br>[00:23:04]<br>Emmanuelle the Divine with us within us. The divine.<br>[00:23:13]<br>The spirit that might feel distant in many ways these days in the midst of all this struggle and all of this suffering.<br>We allow ourselves to have a sober hope.<br>[00:23:33]<br>The hope that. Even in the midst of winter. Allows us to plant some seeds.<br>[00:23:42]<br>Seeds that are not miracle grow. Seeds that take time. To become what they are intended to be.<br>[00:23:54]<br>May that hope that seeding hope take root within us this day. So that we can in time. All grow into the people in<br>this world. That we hope to be.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Ken shares a story from Anne Lamott wherein she talks about calling around to different friends asking about what Advent means to them. She doesn\u2019t have much luck until she reaches a Jesuit friend who has 35 years of sobriety. He shares a dramatic event which happened early in his own recovery wherein folks at a 12-step meeting showed compassion to a man in a terrible state. The patience they showed then, evoked the feeling of Advent for this friend. 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