Tuesday, 1 November 2016

When the fire all but died

I have been trying to avoid writing this blog for some weeks. But after several 'coincidences' over the past 2 weeks, I'm taking the plunge. So here is the warning: this is going the be a brutally honest post.

Prayer. Talking to God.


Prayer. Giving space for God to talk to you.


Prayer. A somewhat crucial part of being a church leader.


When I went to my Vicar Interview (Bishop's Advisory Panel) in January 2015, I received the following feedback: 'There is a certain naivety in the way that Poppy suggests that prayer 'works'.' This has become a bit of a joke amongst my close friends because how dare someone hoping to be selected to go to Vicar School suggest that prayer works?  How utterly ridiculous to confidently assert that you think that there is a point to talking to God when you would like to lead a church in the future.


Well, the joke is now on me. Kind of.


I have been hugely affected by the death of a young woman who I never met. I won't go into much detail about how silly I feel about this, considering I never met her, but nevertheless, after 2 years of praying for healing it did not happen. 5 weeks before her death, I saw my Mum in hospital tied up to all kinds of tubes, unable to speak, with a very swollen face. She is now, thankfully, better. But these two events brought me face to face with suffering in a way that I am yet to get over.


Added to this, being constantly soaked in theology, Church services and passionate debate at Vicar School has left me somewhat numb to it all. In my previous patches of struggle in my spiritual life, I have moved past it by a close encounter with God in church. But at Vicar School, church happens every day and the depths of my confusion and pain are yet to be overcome.


The link between prayer and the death of a young women I never met is this: the world is a mess and people die unjustly. I cannot change that, but I know and believe someone can (that's God, by the way). So what is he playing at?


I do not believe that God needed another angel.

I do not believe that God made this happening to prevent further suffering because the God I love wouldn't slowly kill someone with a terminal illness for two years in order to save them from pain later on.
I do not believe that this suffering has taught us any lessons that were worth learning compared to the pain caused.

I wrote my undergraduate dissertation on The Problem of Evil and came to the conclusion that this an important question to ask, but it's what we do about the suffering that matters. Yeah, good 'un Pops, but what can be done about this kind of suffering? I am helpless to prevent this kind of suffering, and loss of life like that is just wasteful. I've gone round in circles for months and I've been in a bit of a rut. I'm left with nothing but a stubborn kind of conscientiousness in which this trainee vicar is at a loss about what to say to God. But I plod on anyway because I refuse to do this vicar thing without integrity, and if I'm not at least trying to pray then what is the point?


But that doesn't mean to say that there haven't been special moments between last December and now, because there have. Several Bible readings, worship songs, Church services, conversations with people I love and humbling encounters with congregation members have really touched my heart. Greenbelt was great, Thy Kingdom Come was great, placement was great, Holy Week was great, Christmas was great and weekly College Communion is pretty much always great. But nothing has yanked me out of this theological hole that I've been exploring and getting to know quite well.


I'm used to spiritual storms. Storms, I can do. It's the drought that is new. Feeling like my prayers are hitting the ceiling and falling to the floor with a kind of limp, near lifeless thud. I've been feeling like everything is dry, old and cracked. I've had to do a lot of discerning over the past year, but I've been leaning on my past experiences and been having dealings with God is a more military fashion. 'What do you want me to do next, Sir?' as I stood to spiritual attention and awaited the next command. The result is that I've followed to directions given, but my relationship with God has not deepened. Like I said, it's very dry and barren at the moment, but I do feel like I'm moving forward. I may be heading out of the desert or I might be heading into yet more desert, I can't tell other than I am in fact, moving.

But there is hope, as this morning's Bible reading reminds us:

'The desert and the parched land will be glad;
The wilderness will rejoice and blossom.
Like a crocus, it will burst into bloom;
It will greatly rejoice and shout for joy...
Water will gush forth in the wilderness and streams in the desert.
The burning sand will become a pool, the thirsty ground bubbling springs.
In the haunts where the jackals once lay,
Grass and reeds and papyrus will grow' (Isaiah 35. 1-2, 6-7)

When I was on placement over the summer, I expressed a little of what I've written about here and what advised to read 'God on Mute' which, conveniently, I was given about 18 months ago and have been meaning to read ever since. I have begun reading this book, and I think it's going to help. I just wanted to capture this feeling so that I could encourage myself should it ever happen again.

And what if 'God on Mute' doesn't help? Well I'll keep going and pushing forwards with that stubborn conscientiousness until something works, because I know something will at some point.

Ultimately, I like to think that what my Mum says is true. She says that when it comes to God, we get points for trying.

7 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. Dear Poppy. On the day you were born the IRA devastated our town by planting a bomb and killing 2 children, at the same time changing the lives of many forever. The following day, the leader of prayers at our church prayed "Lord, I don't know what to ask for". I have used this prayer often in the ensuing years, as well as the one Jesus taught us "Thy will be done". They have become my default prayers. Thank you for being brave, as always, and sharing your thoughts and experiences. Lots of love xxxxx

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  3. I stumbled upon your honest entry through a friend who happened to react to it on social media. All I can say is: man, I can relate to the tension of numbness and burning pain, the hunger and yet the overwhelming sense that the unknown desert brings. I have walked somewhat similar roads and I champion you for your courage to push through beyond your own capacity, to fall into this beautiful, humbling dependency on the One you are so familiar with and yet only just begun to know at the same time. He loves your yes. Your steps leave a trail of beauty in the wilderness. I love how God drew Israel out into the wilderness to woo her, to come close. I pray that this tenderness will echo through your draught season. much love, a distant sister :)

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  4. Thank you for your honesty. I have been struggling since my eldest son killed himself, 2 years ago tomorrow actually. I feel like I'm in a wilderness too, and I hope I'm moving too. Thank you for the scripture from Isaiah as well. I pray that you will feel truly replenishment soon x

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  5. I can only say 'Thank You God'. Eleanor, you have given voice to the deafening silence I have been plouhing through. I too know I'm moving in whichever direction and I hang on to my experiences of prayer answered and God's voice discerned in the past. Please God that we both continue to move trusting God for our direction and destination.

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  6. I too stumbled across this after seeing someone react to it on Facebook. It's such a huge question and one that I've been forced to face (and am still facing) myself - you are most definitely not alone. I've wrestled extensively with, 'why doesn't God act?', 'is there a critical mass of prayer (or prayers) before he hears us?', 'is it that we lack enough faith?' etc. etc. etc. I've come right now to a place where ALL I know is that God is there with us in the suffering - when I weep, he weeps, when others weep, he weeps, when I weep for others, he weeps for them too. I hold firm to Immanuel - God IS with is, and that is no small thing. It still doesn't answer the how or what to pray issue though. On a recent weekend on Theodicy (also in theological training here!), we looked at a sermon by Sam Wells about three types of prayer which you might (or might not) find useful, just google it and it'll be there - it's not an answer but then what is? Thank you for sharing this - it's a brave thing to do. With love and prayers, Heather x

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  7. Ah Poppy. Such honesty. Such wisdom and strength though you do not see it.
    I have sat here and typed and deleted a million other things but realise that they will translate as trite.
    And we definitely get points for trying.

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