Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Departed


I would like to say that I am innocent… But I am not.
Psalms 18:21
For I have kept the ways of the LORD, and have not wickedly departed from my God.
When I was nine years old, I was a thief.  Not only did I steal gulps of wine with my friend from the kitchen (warm alcohol in a Mickey Mouse tumbler) and grams of chalk dust from the school gym supply (folding it up in some paper and sticking it inside my wheelchair while waiting for the short bus to come and take me home) and various small things – construction paper, carbon, broken chalk – that I wanted and I judged no one would miss… but I also stole knowledge.  At the end of third grade, I was allowed to stay inside with my friend Beth for recess one day and we decided to open our teacher’s desk drawer and find that secret list.  A secret list existed near the close of every school year with the names of the teachers that each student would receive the next year.  We all wanted to know what classroom we would end up in – would we get our favorite teacher, would our friends be with us?  But, that information, as I recall, was never shared until the summer.  Beth and I didn’t want to wait.  We wanted to know.
 
If memory serves, I was the one who instigated and told Beth to do it.  Being physically limited, I was used to “bossing people around”.  Not only did we find out who we would have for teachers, but also who our friends, and people with whom we would like to be friends, were going to have.  Before the end of the school day, we whispered the secrets to everyone that we could.  Eventually, other kids in other classrooms let it slip that they knew – and when asked where they had heard the news, directed authorities to Mrs. B’s class.  Mrs. B made us all put our heads upon our desks until the guilty party, or parties, confessed the crime.  I did not raise my head.  I did not say a word.  And neither did Beth.  Mrs. B couldn’t keep us there forever, we had to go home.  But, as we were lining up to leave, a boy in my class told Mrs. B that I was the one who had told him, that I was the one who had stolen the list.  My teacher looked down at me and I looked up at her with my big brown eyes.  I remember myself mumbling something about Beth, ready to throw her under the bus – we really weren’t that close anyway – but Mrs. B had poor hearing.  She just regarded me through her glasses, her bright red lips extra thin and tight.  But, then her face softened.  She didn’t believe the boy.  She didn’t believe that I could do something so wrong.  To her, and to most everyone as I would find out in my life, I was an innocent.
 
Indeed, this may seem like a small and innocent offense – what real harm was done?  But, the harm was to my classmates who were all under the shadow of suspicion, for that afternoon with their heads down in the dark and silence, and, for all I know, for the rest of Mrs. B’s life.  And the harm was done to my relationship with Beth, for we never did get close.  Perhaps she overheard my mumbled ratting or perhaps the guilt was just too much for me.  And the greatest harm, I know, was to myself.  For I showed myself, in this incident, my true colors.  Thievery was easy to me and I honestly felt no guilt about that.  I was even proud.  Proud that me, who everyone thought was a little angel in a wheelchair, could commit such an act that got the whole third-grade buzzing.  The fact that I so blatantly got away with it just added to my happiness over the whole event.  But… what I was willing to do to Beth… how I was willing to hide behind the cloak of innocence with which my wheelchair draped me while pointing my finger at her….  I was not a good friend.  This is not only a crime against someone whom I considered a friend, this was, and I say this most seriously, a crime against God.  Sneaky, deceptive, smarmy, and proud of myself, I was bolstered up for many years by the memory of this robbed knowledge.  It was not merely the ignorant act of a child.  For, was there not some innocence in Eve when she simply wanted to gain wisdom, as I simply wanted to know?  And, was there not also pride and greed at grasping for something higher than herself, to put herself at the level of a superior?  And was there not shameful finger-pointing, a desperate attempt to inflict any punishment that she deserved away from herself and onto a co-conspirator?  Wasn’t Adam, too, guilty of this last crime, this greatest crime: willfully inflicting harm upon another in an attempt to hide from the consequences coming justly to oneself?
 
To escape justice, the first humans had to hide themselves from one another – to hide themselves from God.  But… there is no hiding from God.  And don’t I know that, too!  Knowledge thief that I am, did I not dare to proclaim that there is no such thing as God and devote myself entirely to a godless life with myself as the center of a meaningless universe?  No, I never committed murder in that life – although I did strangle my soul’s promptings and suffocate my own spiritual nature.  I did not steal – but I had already hijacked my own reason.  And I did not commit adultery or anything like that – although I did desecrate the temple of my body.  I broke the ways of the Lord by departing from my God.  From truth.  From real love.  From life itself.  And though this willful act was not committed through wickedness, I was still far from the truth of my identity as a being lovingly Created in divine image; I had banished myself far from the tree of life and the reality of reality.
 
Forever east of Eden, we thieves of knowledge go – and the innocent truth of who we really are, we can’t get to know.  There, but for the grace of God, would I, ever seeking, lie; it’s grace that’s brought me home again… I cannot hide from I.
Christina Chase
 

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