Saturday, March 7, 2009

Reflection on the movie Oasis

Does God watch over those who live on the street, the mentally handicapped, the poor, and the severely disabled? Theoretically most Christians would answer in the affirmative - 'of course, God watches over all individuals, each person is precious to Him'. Yet, upon an encounter with one such 'everyman', our instinct is often to turn away or to fear.

Why? They are shameful to look at it, without dignity. They stumble on sidewalks, sit on street corners. They limp in the mall, moan uncontrollably, grope in broad daylight. They are poorly dressed with sunken eyes, stained teeth and messy hair. .

If they are painful to our senses, are they not also painful to God's? Are they also His children? Does he 'gladly give them all things'?

Christians readily believe that God does gladly give all things for those who 'love' God, those who look like them who are in the same socio-economic strata and have relatively the same education level. But what about those who are, whether it is verbalized or quietly thought, objectively, at least by society's standards, stupid, ugly, sputtering, dirty, hungry, without shelter or clothing...etc.

How uncomfortable we become when they - they, by the very word we create an infinite distance between their humanity and ours - walk into our worship services. We silence, keep them quite, send them back out with a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, a bottle of water, and a 'go in the peace and blessing of our Lord'. Or worse, we stare and smile uncomfortably.

Has God really 'numbered the hairs on their head'? Has He 'written their number of days in His book'? Does he really unequivocally 'work all things for the good of those who love Him'? Did He really come to 'declare the good news to the poor'? Has he stopped?

Yet, how terrible, we hear a secret: These, those without clothing, food, without shelter or in prison, are not only human, they are Christ himself.

The Beloved one is the wretched one. How terrible a truth. How terrible a sight. How cursed a man. Yet, we sing to Him in our ignorance of who He is - 'glory, power and honor be unto the lamb who reigns forever and ever' - the man, in jail; the women, on the street; the family, without food - Christ.

How terrible these words:

"Depart from me, you who are cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels. For I was hungry and you gave me nothing to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me nothing to drink, I was a stranger and you did not invite me in, I needed clothes and you did not clothe me, I was sick and in prison and you did not look after me."

Yes, God does watch. His gaze burns through all pretension and division. We are them and they are us - our false distinctions collapse when He speaks and moves. Yet, God is more than a spectator. He has become us. We are Him and he is us. Humanity has become the divine and the divine, human. The Father reigns and watches, in love, over His many sons and daughters, in spite, yet also through those who are His. "God's dwelling place is with man", let us listen to his voice that we might love and serve Him in every man, women and child without distinction

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