{"id":5781,"date":"2022-04-03T17:20:13","date_gmt":"2022-04-03T21:20:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/?post_type=ctc_sermon&#038;p=5781"},"modified":"2022-04-03T17:20:13","modified_gmt":"2022-04-03T21:20:13","slug":"god-shaped-hole","status":"publish","type":"ctc_sermon","link":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/messages\/god-shaped-hole\/","title":{"rendered":"God Shaped Hole"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Rev. Ken begins this week with remembering his father, who passed away last Fall. He shares with us a poem\/song his father wrote called &#8216;Tsuris,&#8221; a Yiddish word equating to &#8220;stress.&#8221; He tells us about his father&#8217;s experiences in the Korean war, and how traumatic they must have been. We are invited to listen to a poem quietly, and consider the busy nature of our lives, and whether that&#8217;s serving us. He shares a story about another veteran recounting his war experiences at the end of his life, and dedicates the lessons learned from that story to his late father.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">God Shaped Hole<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p><br>START OF TRANSCRIPT<br>[00:00:00] Speaker1<br>The following is a message from WellSprings congregation.<br>[00:00:05] Speaker2<br>So who thought when you came to WellSprings this morning that you were going to get a tutorial in the Yiddish language? Guess<br>what you are. And by tutorial I mean you are perhaps going to learn two additional Yiddish words. Which some of you probably know<br>already. One of them is Tsuris, which roughly translated means worries, aggravations, anxieties. The other is nachas, which<br>autocorrect loves to make into nachos. And nachos actually fits with nachas, at least because I love nachos. Nachas means intense<br>feeling of of gratification, joy of blessedness. All right. Tsuris meaning. Good enough for the goyim. Sorry. It&#8217;s not all of you. I know.<br>Nachas meaning. Awesome. So my dad, who died last November 2nd. At the age of 88. He joked, although not entirely joking, said<br>that he had been working on a play over the last couple of decades, which turned out to be the last couple of decades of his life.<br>Think of it as kind of a Jewish-American, upper middle class story of a husband, father, grandfather. Kind of like Fiddler on the Roof.<br>But with one song and not just one song, but really just a verse of a song. And the play was called Tsuris. Now, before I show you the<br>lyric of Tsuris, I want you to know that the. The first act of the play tsuris ends like this. Hey, Dad, guess what? I&#8217;m going to be a<br>Unitarian Universalist minister. That&#8217;s that&#8217;s the one scene that my dad established in Tsuris. This is the lyric.<br>[00:02:44] Speaker2<br>tsuris, tsuris, tsuris That&#8217;s all I&#8217;ve got today. tsuris tsurs tsuris When will go away? Tsuris, tsuris, tsuris What hath my God wrought?<br>Tsuris, tsuris, tsuris, nachas can&#8217;t be bought. &#8220;If I Were a Rich Man&#8221;, it is not. But it&#8217;s not bad. By Sanford Beldon. My dad had some<br>insight into himself. He was pretty good at making light of some of his challenges in this life. And my dad lived with an awful lot of<br>tsuris. Worries, anxieties. Aggravations that got kind of under his skin that at least part of him knew. He would rather they didn&#8217;t. But<br>they did. That&#8217;s the not funny part of this. There are reasons. That my dad was very familiar with tsuris. Not just as his son, but<br>perhaps even more so now as a full time mental health practitioner. I understand the reasons. An early childhood that was marked by<br>certain kinds of developmental trauma that led to a lifelong, not terribly close relationship with his parents and estrangement from his<br>younger brother. The untimely death of my mom. When she was 47. A number of traumas that led to my dad being beset by<br>anxieties. And it was a big one. It&#8217;s actually the one that I knew the least about. It&#8217;s the one that my dad hid the most intentionally. My<br>father was a veteran of the Korean War. And as I&#8217;ve shared a little bit over the years, I&#8217;m going to share a little bit more about today.<br>He for years did not convey the truth of what his involvement in that war was.<br>[00:05:09] Speaker2<br>For years. The story went that he was drafted, helped him get some GI Bill money, helped him progress, reach prosperity in this life.<br>But the truth is, my dad did see conflict. And fighting in the war. And it left him. As much as I can tell. Pretty deeply scarred. Part of<br>what has happened in the time since his death in little bits of drips and drabs, a little conversations with friends, stories shared in<br>some cases 30, 40, 50 years ago, a conversation shared, I believe, in 1967, even before I was born. Over, as was my dad&#8217;s. Want a<br>few too many drinks? The story came out that. The commander of his unit. His battalion was killed. My dad being forced into a<br>firefight, took out a number of the enemy and actually was awarded with a medal citation for that. Again, this conversation happened<br>so many decades ago. Part of what I&#8217;m going to do this summer when my ministry is over here is dove into that history and to see<br>what it is that I can actually find out. But my dad never told any stories of medals or heroism. My dad didn&#8217;t tell any story at all about<br>that to me. One other piece that we&#8217;ve been able to find out. And again, it leaves a hole or an outline, but not a full story. Is that after<br>my dad was discharged from active service, the Korean War.<br>[00:07:02] Speaker2<br>He came back to Washington, D.C.. And stayed there for several months. And what? I might and my family might assume is some<br>form of 1950s PTSD treatment. Again? Don&#8217;t know exactly. I share all this with you. Because there was a hole in my dad&#8217;s soul.<br>Some of you on Facebook. Friends with read the obituary we posted for him. My dad had tremendous accomplishments. Rodale<br>Press, an organic gardening magazine in prevention magazines and gardens that he built, cooperating with a certain number of high<br>profile political personalities and people for folks who were unhoused or whose capacity to access food and shelter was challenged.<br>My dad did all these things. And it was never quite enough for him. It was never quite enough for him. There was this gnawing<br>anxiety. That he lived with. And perhaps some of you. Know that experience. And perhaps some of you love. People here still living<br>or dead with that experience. I know I am not alone in this. As being related to someone who carried painful burdens. I&#8217;ve been<br>thinking a lot about my father. Particularly in connection with this message series. Which are calling the great integration. And takes<br>as one of its inspirations, this movement. That we&#8217;re seeing now, kind of not so much a movement as a trend. Well, it&#8217;s called the<br>great resignation. Of people perhaps looking for deeper wholeness or work life balance. Or more integrity in their relationships. More<br>places where their lives might sync up. More perhaps yearning for wholeness.<br>[00:09:34] Speaker2<br>We don&#8217;t know what it means yet because we&#8217;re in the middle of it and we won&#8217;t know what it means for quite a while. I see it in my<br>mental health work. The sense that although I don&#8217;t share this with clients. I can see part of their story as my dad&#8217;s story as well, too.<br>This yearning for wholeness that has not been addressed. And that certain ways that we have organized this culture, this society, this<br>economy. Well, kind of reminds me of The Matrix. Not Life in the Matrix, but what the Matrix is. Which is essentially a system of<br>extraction for energy. Based on trauma. So many of us. Are still making sense. Of what the last two years have meant. And we&#8217;ll<br>continue to for such a long time. In connection with this series. It&#8217;s caused me to look more deeply within myself. And so in some<br>ways the timing is perfect that after today I only have three more messages left here before my ministry comes to the close to close at<br>the end of June. I am someone who absolutely wore his busyness as a badge and counted the number of double digit hour days. As<br>a source of pride. And please hear this. I don&#8217;t regret everything I did, especially in the early days of WellSprings to help WellSprings<br>Come to thrive as a community. But I now do have a different perspective on that pride of busyness as a badge. Because the truth is.<br>[00:11:42] Speaker2<br>There was something underneath that. Which was this gnawing sense that unless I was productive. My unworthiness would show.<br>This is something familiar to many of us. It is a burden I have intentionally set out in my own healing process to work with and to<br>relieve myself of. This is the recovery within my recovery. Recovering from alcohol use disorder. I got to say, it was much easier.<br>Then the recovery from the feeling of my unworthiness. It&#8217;s been relatively easy for me to go 16 and a half years without a drink. To<br>wake up with an inner feeling. Of love and peace within myself. If I&#8217;m not doing a good job at my job. That is not so easy for me still.<br>But it is healing. Part of that healing is sharing the story with you. I have a confession to make here a little bit. And it might. I recognize<br>land differently depending upon what our experience has been over the last two years. So I&#8217;m not asking my experience to be yours.<br>As we&#8217;ve had the two year anniversary of the start of the pandemic. I&#8217;ve noticed myself yearning. Yearning for this first couple of<br>weeks of the pandemic. I am not praising the means or the mechanism of the virus. Please hear me on this. It is saw as cause such<br>tremendous disruption and suffering right from the get go. So I&#8217;m not praising that. What I&#8217;m finding myself yearning for is something<br>akin to the days of the weeks.<br>[00:13:54] Speaker2<br>Even closest analogy I can think is after 911. Something perhaps as close as we might ever get in this culture in this country towards<br>a sense of unanimity. Or feeling as if our eyes were directed, our hearts open to a sense of normalcy. Being put to the side. And<br>something more like care. Coming to the fore. The opportunity to care for those most vulnerable. The opportunity to care for those<br>who are the carers. That&#8217;s what I most in addition to the disruption and having to relearn my job onto a computer versus being in<br>person. That&#8217;s what I remember for those first few weeks, and it didn&#8217;t last long. And I&#8217;m not saying we should have gotten stuck there<br>or stayed there. What I remember in that shaking of the foundations. Was a glimmer. Of a different world. A more compassionate and<br>honest way of being. The most consistent guide and reading that I&#8217;ve held within myself is I&#8217;m going to read you right now. You won&#8217;t<br>even see it up here. It&#8217;s by Pablo Neruda. Was the poem keeping quiet? I&#8217;ve used it actually as a source of meditation and<br>contemplation, and I wanted to read it to you right now. I&#8217;m going to ask you to go inside with it, maybe just close your eyes and see<br>how it lands with you today. Now we will count to 12 and we will all keep still. For once on the face of the earth. Let&#8217;s not speak in any<br>language.<br>[00:15:50] Speaker2<br>Let&#8217;s stop for a second and not move our arms so much. It would be an exotic moment without rush, without engines. We would all<br>be together in a sudden strangeness. Fishermen in the cold sea would not harm whales, and the man gathering salt would not look at<br>his hurt hands. Those who prepare green wars, wars with gas, wars with fire, victories, with no survivors, would put on clean clothes<br>and walk around with their brothers in the shade doing nothing. What I want should not be confused with total inactivity. Life is what it<br>is about. I want no truck with death. If we were not so single minded about keeping our lives moving and for once good to nothing.<br>Perhaps a huge silence might interrupt this sadness of never understanding ourselves and of threatening ourselves with death.<br>Perhaps the earth then could teach us as when everything seems dead and later proves to be alive. Now I&#8217;ll count up to 12. And you<br>keep quiet. And I will go. I adore that poem. Especially now two years in. When at some point in the next month. We will reach a<br>milestone. Of 1 million people in this country dead. Where is that grief? It&#8217;s the loss. The collective mourning. It is largely. Save for a<br>few public expressions absent. And this is not new, by the way. There is an Atlantic article. One of my favorite go to sources over the<br>last couple of years. Article from The Atlantic magazine. They said, How do we think I&#8217;m paraphrasing the title, how is this normal?<br>Talking about the death.<br>[00:18:12] Speaker2<br>And it&#8217;s not new. From that article said this After the 1918 flu pandemic, there was no large scale off or effort excuse me to<br>memorialize the substantial losses. It was tied up in over one. And President Woodrow Wilson tried to avoid projecting weakness by<br>even acknowledging the ravages of the pandemic. I&#8217;m not trying to shame any of us around this. Because shame won&#8217;t help us grow.<br>What do we do with all this grief and all this loss? I mean, if two years ago, before the word COVID 19 was on our lips, we just said a<br>million people are going to disappear now who are alive. And yes, some of those people were sick. And yes, all those caveats, which<br>are things that we say. To push the grief away. What do we do with the grief and the loss? What do we do with the weakness, quote<br>unquote? Last few months, I&#8217;ve tried to understand, as many of us have, what the hell is in Putin&#8217;s mind? For this madness and this<br>horror that we are seeing in Ukraine. Maybe you&#8217;ve heard this quote from Putin. And perhaps it&#8217;s not that far from us. Or at least it&#8217;s<br>on a continuum. The lesson Putin said that he took from the post-Soviet world is that we demonstrated weakness and the weak are<br>beaten. It is not easy to show weakness and grief, although I think it is profound.<br>[00:20:06] Speaker2<br>Strength is in fact. Seen often by the world as a weakness. And so to not show it. Not expressed loss or sadness. In ways that<br>hopefully feel safe. Sadly, it&#8217;s been a part of America since America&#8217;s been America. Right. Some of you know the name Resma<br>Menakem. African-american trauma treatment specialist. Who has asked those of us with white skin. He came or his ancestors came<br>to this country. Essentially as colonizers. To look into the pain of our lineages. The people that we came from who fled. Horror and<br>suffering. When I read Resma Menakem, I take him seriously. What I started to see is this so called Protestant work ethic. Even for<br>those of us who aren&#8217;t Protestant. What if it&#8217;s a mental health symptom relabeled as a virtue? It&#8217;s kind of a controversial thing to say.<br>Well, maybe not. There were moments in my dad&#8217;s life. In my case in which I could see something trying to break through. He would<br>sit and listen to the song. Amazing Grace. Over and over again and cry. Back when people were still making like, burned CDs.<br>Remember when we all used to do that? I made him a CD with 25 different versions of Nothing but Amazing Grace, and it was one of<br>the favorite, favorite gifts he ever received from me. My dad, like so many of us, experienced what is often known in recovery circles<br>as a god shaped hole. That he tried to fill with all that achievement.<br>[00:22:16] Speaker2<br>And yet it never was quite enough. Now my own use of that word. God, I want to be careful here has changed a lot in the 17 years<br>I&#8217;ve been here. Wellsprings. You might notice my preaching. I don&#8217;t talk about God a lot anymore. It&#8217;s not because I&#8217;m an atheist. It&#8217;s<br>just that I don&#8217;t think talking about God as a concept does all that much. And even the word God I actually find pretty unhelpful these<br>days because it comes with a whole bunch of baggage. For me. Tick, not Han. He of blessed memory and continuation and said it<br>best. The concept of God can keep us from touching the God of non fear, wisdom and love. That is a pointer. Towards what it is to fill<br>the God shaped hole, but not as a content once and for all, but as a kind of relationship with this life. There&#8217;s some really great<br>pointers that help me. Paul looks great sermon. You are accepted. Accepted by that you may not know the name of, but simply can<br>we accept acceptance? It&#8217;s been my biggest, biggest burden. My life. Mary Oliver, there&#8217;s a. There&#8217;s a podcast, a story that she told<br>years ago in an interview that she did, she blessed memory in which she simply said, Nature saved me. There&#8217;s the God shaped hole<br>being filled. But you see it&#8217;s relationship. It is a relationship that fills the God shaped holes within us. Of ourselves. With ourselves. Of<br>ourselves with each other.<br>[00:24:06] Speaker2<br>So a story I want to tell you right now. Is a story that didn&#8217;t happen to my dad. And I really wished it would happen. I really wish it<br>would happen. But stories like this exist. And they are real. It comes from this book. Rebecca Parker, who is a Unitarian Universalist<br>and United Methodist minister. And Rita Nakashima Brock, who is a disciples of church, disciples of Christ, excuse me, theologian<br>and minister herself. It is one of the most profound, both personal and theologically enriching. Epix I want to call it book doesn&#8217;t quite<br>capture it. Argument against the idea. That violence can ever be wholly. And that suffering is somehow a sign. Of God&#8217;s will for us.<br>Rebecca, who I know somewhat professionally I&#8217;ve met a few times over the years, tells a story of one of her congregants named Bill.<br>Bill was married to Martha. Who was on the board of. Rebecca&#8217;s church. Bill was nearing the end of his life. Losing his battle with<br>brain cancer. And Bill asked if Rebecca would come see him. He said, I&#8217;d like you to hear my testimony. And they sat together and<br>build hard, started to tell a story. About his service in the Korean War. He said. I was a young man serving there and we were in the<br>jungle for months and we were exhausted. I was there with my best friend Joe, and all the rest of the people in my unit. And we were<br>given an order that I knew would be a suicide mission to take this particular hill in the jungle.<br>[00:26:28] Speaker2<br>And I argued with my commanding officer about it. And still we had to do it. And nearly every man in my unit was killed. And I held<br>Joe. The sweetest and most honest man I ever met in my arms as he died. After that. I felt done. I felt as if I had failed as a soldier, as<br>a man, as an American. And I came home and I drank for 20 years. At this point, Rebecca said. Bill took his arms around him and he<br>started hugging himself and rocking. He said. And then with Martha&#8217;s love. I found recovery. I found people who would listen to my<br>story and not tell me I was right or tell me I was wrong, but would simply listen. He said, Now what? I know. And he started. Beating<br>out the time of his own heartbeat. Hand on chest. That this is my manhood. That I can love. That I can grieve. That I knew what was<br>right. And that I can share this with you now. Bill took Rebecca&#8217;s younger hands in his old. Wrinkled and worn hands. He said, This is<br>my testimony. And I just needed you to hear it. I&#8217;m just going to sit with that testimony for a second. And I will say, Dad, that was for<br>you. Thank you all for witnessing that. There&#8217;s a quote. That&#8217;s attributed to the Dalai Lama that perhaps you have seen social media.<br>[00:29:20] Speaker2<br>Dalai Lama didn&#8217;t say it. Bill or excuse me, David or set it. The plain fact is that the planet does not need more successful people. But<br>it does desperately need more peacemakers. Healers restore storytellers and lovers of every kind. It needs people who live well in<br>their places. It needs people of moral courage willing to join the fight to make the world habitable and humane. And these qualities<br>have little to do with success as we have defined it. It&#8217;s not either or, right? Won&#8217;t have to stop being successful to live this way. My<br>dad lived a lot of this way. He did. I just wish she could have felt it a little bit more. But his son does. I can see from your faces that<br>you do to. In whatever ways we can today. May we be among the healers and the storytellers. And the lovers of every kind. Even if it<br>is just. Attending to our own holes in the soul. Amen. May you live in blessing. Would you pray with me? God whose name is not God,<br>but something even greater. And yet as intimate as this very breath. May we invite ourselves to be among those. Who do the work of<br>the Hebrew tikkun olam. The healing, the mending of this world. We invite ourselves to be those who allow ourselves to grief when<br>grief is called for. Because scratching the surface of grief, we find their love again. And it is love that heals us. Amen.<br>[00:31:55] Speaker1<br>If you enjoy this message and would like to support the mission of WellSprings, go to our web site WellSprings uua org. That&#8217;s<br>WellSprings the letters u u dot org.<br>END OF TRANSCRIPT<br><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Rev. Ken begins this week with remembering his father, who passed away last Fall. He shares with us a poem\/song his father wrote called &#8216;Tsuris,&#8221; a Yiddish word equating to &#8220;stress.&#8221; He tells us about his father&#8217;s experiences in the Korean war, and how traumatic they must have been. We are invited to listen to a poem quietly, and consider the busy nature of our lives, and whether that&#8217;s serving us. He shares a story about another veteran recounting his [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":5708,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","ctc_sermon_topic":[139,144,140,141],"ctc_sermon_book":[],"ctc_sermon_series":[],"ctc_sermon_speaker":[122],"ctc_sermon_tag":[],"class_list":["post-5781","ctc_sermon","type-ctc_sermon","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","ctc_sermon_topic-grief","ctc_sermon_topic-families","ctc_sermon_topic-mental-health","ctc_sermon_topic-recovery","ctc_sermon_speaker-rev-ken-beldon","ctfw-has-image"],"featured_image_urls":{"medium":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/thumbnail_Integration-5-300x169.png","large":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/thumbnail_Integration-5-1024x576.png","thumbnail":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/thumbnail_Integration-5-150x150.png","medium_large":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/thumbnail_Integration-5-768x432.png","post-thumbnail":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/thumbnail_Integration-5-720x480.png","saved-banner":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/thumbnail_Integration-5-1280x400.png","saved-square":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/thumbnail_Integration-5-720x720.png","saved-square-large":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/thumbnail_Integration-5-1024x1024.png","saved-square-small":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/thumbnail_Integration-5-160x160.png","saved-rect-medium":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/thumbnail_Integration-5-480x320.png","saved-rect-small":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/thumbnail_Integration-5-200x133.png"},"appp_media":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/5781","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/ctc_sermon"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=5781"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/5781\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":5783,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon\/5781\/revisions\/5783"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/5708"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5781"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_topic","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_topic?post=5781"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_book","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_book?post=5781"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_series","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_series?post=5781"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_speaker","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_speaker?post=5781"},{"taxonomy":"ctc_sermon_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.wellspringsuu.org\/new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/ctc_sermon_tag?post=5781"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}