Saturday, December 24, 2016

Oranges





Yesterday I tried to give a homeless man a bag of oranges.

I was on my way to Trader Joe’s to pick up some special Christmas day food when I passed him on a bench outside of Bed, Bath, and Beyond. Lately it’s been so cold outside that most of the normal panhandling that happens in the city has seemed to have stopped, so I had seen only a few homeless people in the last few weeks. With the decrease of that visual reminder, I realized I also hadn’t had to answer the question for a while of what to do when I see others in need.

Normally the almost immediate answer to that is: someone else with ____ will do it. Most of the time the noun or adjective that fills in the blank is driven by fear, or my desire for safety; that someone who carries all their possessions, smells, and hasn’t shaved in a while must also be dangerous and looking to take advantage of any young woman who stops to help them and therefore I must stay away. This is the most socially acceptable fear I know – I do not know more than one person in my whole social circle who says that they are comfortable with me being the person who helps. I’m a small, young, female. Someone else should do it.

Yesterday I realized exactly how much I had been struggling with that automatic answer when I passed this man on the bench. Two opposing phrases came to my mind at the same time: “we provide a hand up instead of just a hand out,” from an advertisement from the Eugene Mission, and “because lawlessness is increased most people’s love will grow cold,” Matthew 24:12. I’d been thinking about these thoughts for weeks, I realized, as I walked right by the item I had come to get at Trader Joe’s. I turned around, picked the item up, and blinked, trying to organize my thoughts and figure out what else I needed. The rest of Eugene Mission’s advertisement did more than just indicate the difference they were making in the community; they were almost outright telling people to stop giving the homeless handouts. I understand this: creating a reliant community that survives off other people’s charity with no way of ever being able to provide for themselves is a problem for both parties. But then how do we show love when the rest of the world has grown “cold?” How do I feed Jesus when he is hungry, clothe him when he is naked, and visit him when he is in prison? (Matthew 24:35-36)

I shook my head with no new answer to this problem than when I had deeply started thinking about it a few weeks ago, practically saying “I don’t know” out loud to the green beans I just picked up. I resigned to do nothing, as usual, until I could come up with a better answer. Maybe do some research, at home, figure out what exactly individuals can really do to help others without feeding into a part of society that can only survive off of handouts.

I started walking toward the checkout when the feeling of disappointment crashed over me like waves on a rock. I nearly looked around to see if it splashed anyone else. The small voice without language or barriers that had opened my eyes to my own realization of my struggle with this concept was expressing sadness. Sadness at my decision, not just the fact that the man outside was homeless. I’ve felt this sadness before, disobeyed before, and rationalized with sound reason why I was doing so before. I stopped dead in my tracks recognizing this feeling and the uncleanliness I’ve felt afterwards, when I had a chance to follow the light, honeyed, joyful prompt for an often weird and irrational action but I ignored it.

“Okay, Jesus,” I prayed in my head, “what do I get him?” I turned around and instantly saw the bag of oranges two aisles over and felt the light, joyful affirmation. I made my way over, confident, then paused before picking it up, then nearly put it back, then finally went over the cash registers, then didn’t make eye contact with the cashier, like that helped anything. (Side note, I’m with you: what is wrong with her? Apart from talking to green beans and looking around for proverbial splashes of disappointment in the grocery store, I feel like I’m a pretty sane person most of the time.)

With my groceries paid for, and oranges now in hand, the moment came where I had to approach the homeless man. His hood was down, almost like he was sleeping so my method of delivery was easy. I put them on the ground right next to him and said “Merry Christmas.” I waited for just a second to see if he would notice, and saw him jolt a little, like he had been taking a nap. “Oh, um,” he said, and I braced myself. Perhaps for the joy that comes from obeying in matters of the heart, of reaching out to give love when it is needed, perhaps out of fear.

“I don’t need those,” he said.

What? I was stunned. Confused. “I’m sure that is really good food,” he continued, “but with all the things I have to carry I’m just not able to carry them.”

I don’t remember what I said as I picked them back up off the ground. This was a new heartbreak I had not experienced before. “Okay,” I ended up saying before I left. “I wish you a merry Christmas anyways.”

I put my groceries in my trunk then sat in my car for a few minutes, nearly crying. He couldn’t carry more things. My mind reeled at the common perception most people have of trying to help the homeless. Don’t give them money because they might spend it on booze or drugs, give them food or other necessities. Perhaps both of those might be true, for some, I’m sure. But what if the man or woman you choose to bestow your acts of good service on doesn’t need those things? Why is it that we automatically think we need to give things to people in need?

I choked as I realized that the reason for my obedience today was to change me and not him. That I’m the one that needed the lesson of how to care for my neighbor in need. That if I had asked him what he needed and went and bought it for him I could have blessed him much more than dropping a bag of oranges at his feet and nearly running from pride and/or fear. That I wasn’t doing anyone good in the situation where I treated him with “love” at the end of a ten-foot pole.

That perhaps what we should reconsider when caring for those in need is whether it is material possessions that they need at all.

Want to know how to help the needy, Mary Jo? Ask them. Better yet, ask them what their name is and ask them how they are. Ask them what their story is, and listen for the human soul that Jesus loves just as much as you. Chances are, you won’t be able to do a single thing about their situation. But perhaps they just need someone to help unload some of the things they carry rather than add to it.

Will I stop and talk to the next person I see with a sign on the street corner? Possibly not. But my prayer right now is that God will move in me like he did yesterday, helping me see the joy of obedience to the law of love the next time I can make a difference and that he’ll guide me from there.

Saturday, June 4, 2016

Plan or serve?

"Therefore I tell you, do not be anxious about your life, what you will eat or what you will drink, nor about your body, what you will put on. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothing?" Matthew 6:25 ESV

During the last three weeks I experienced something amazing. I met life-changing, stunningly beautiful people, saw wonderful (and heart breaking) things, and lead a great group of students, but none of these things are what I'm referring to. What I'm thinking of right now, is the transformative power of serving without boundaries; the energizing practice of serving without thinking of self. I've experienced how beautiful it is to serve others without care or concern for my own well-being. Now that I'm back in the States, I'm wondering if that is even possible here, or if it is impossible anywhere except on a mission trip where your food, lodging, clothing, and the daily activities are decided for you.

Through some counseling, I have figured out for a few months now that choices are honestly the cause of most of my stress. Initially I was paralyzed to make the wrong choice, but even with getting over that fear of making mistakes, there's still a lot of pressure to make a somewhat good choice most of the time. Ever since starting my current job almost a year ago I still take over an hour to get ready for work after I get out of the shower, whereas before I could get ready easily in 15 minutes. Most of that time is making decisions about what shoes, outfit, and jewelry I will wear, how to do my hair and makeup, and which purse and sweater to bring that won't entirely clash with my outfit. Then every day when I get home I am paralyzed by making the right decision of what to do with my time with my husband. What do we have for dinner? Should we have dessert and/or popcorn? Will I really work out tomorrow if I choose dessert tonight? TV show or movie? Which TV show, which movie? Movie in or out? Or board game? Which one? Read a book out loud together? For how long (because I might fall asleep)? Indulge and ignore chores now or do chores now and feel like we haven't relaxed this evening? Have separate time? What do I do in separate time? And that's just weekdays! Although I'm not sure that it's the right fix for my heart and character, I recognize that a healthy dose of the chill-pill could fix most of these problems, and I'm working on it. What I'm nervous about are the larger choices.

Now that I've been back from my mission trip for a few days, some of those larger choices are either too gross or too intimidating to ignore. When I came back from this trip I allowed myself to emotionally withhold re-integration for a few days as I focused on getting myself physically readjusted. During those few days I had a similar attitude as I did while on the trip: I was laid back, enjoying my time whatever it was I was doing, and genuinely interested in what others were feeling or doing. Then we started running out of food and the dishes started forming little piles from the few meals I had just eaten. The trash and litter smelled and the cat's meowed so loudly from mom being gone while only that other human was there to pet them. I had to look nice for work again, and think about what I was doing after work that I needed other clothes for. The receipts from while I was away had piled up and the finances and budget for the month probably needed readjusting. The toilets, sinks, and mirrors all had gross stains and spots, and my feet picked up a protective layer of crumbs when I walked across the kitchen. The car needed gas. The year's big project was staring me in the face, reminding me I lived in this house and needed to care about what happened to it all the time because we very well can't look like white trash now can we? And with each realization I felt my servant's heart slipping away. Hard choices leaked into my contentment and selfish decisions about how to entertain ourselves stole chunks of my joy.

And in such a stark contrast to what I just experienced for three weeks it was clear to me for the first time that Jesus was speaking to the servant's heart when he said not to worry about what we would wear or eat. I had always pictured that instruction from Jesus as just another item on a long list of how to live a better life, or at best, how to trust God. But thinking about not worrying about your life because someone told you to is just as effective as learning to make a budget because someone shows you how. You learn to budget by practicing making choices and looking at number patterns, but you learn to budget when you want something and you want it bad; like a house was for me because I knew how great it was versus an apartment, or a new toy as a kid because you know just how great that set of Playmobils will get along with their new family. For me, not worrying has a whole new appeal when I know the joy and liberation of what it feels like to get the focus off of me. Holy cow, does it feel good to not have to make decisions focused on my own selfishness.

As a task-oriented person, now that I've figured something out I'm already ready to jump in and start working on it. "Give me a list," brain says, "or we won't know how to do it." "Checking things off will make us feel good," heart adds. But I feel like this is where the warning alarms should go off because I think that's where I start to go wrong. Just like trying to make a budget with no goal ends often in frustration (maybe this comparison isn't helpful to you guys, but it sure is to me), changing your actions because someone told you to is not likely going to end in established new habits (even if that someone is someone you love a lot). Not worrying when I sit down to do the inevitable finances will only work if I remember that God has provided for me so that I can focus on loving him first, and then others as I "do myself" (or as I often mistakenly love myself as the MJ paraphrased version says). Not allowing myself to be anxious when faced with the decision of what to eat for the next week that will be healthy, affordable, and timely will only work when I remember that greater joy comes out of relationships built off genuine care and sacrifice to each other, rather than perfectly planned meals with culturally matching desserts. Finances are important, and well-planned meals do actually bring a significant amount of pleasure, but letting yourself focus on what will help the other people in the room flourish is priceless.

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Missing people, but not sweat

Well, we're back from Cambodia! After 3 hours of sleep in 30 hours of travel on Tuesday, the 31st, we arrived at the airport at midnight and quickly departed off to our own beds to sleep as much of the night away as possible. But as much as Pastor Troy's recipe for speedily eradicating jet lag is working, my brain is not up to functioning at its normal capacity yet, so I'll keep this short.

I'm sorry to those that I told I would be blogging on this trip, since I clearly did not! I really had full intentions to, then at the last minute I decided to use a different device to keep track of the trip finances on (my main administrative duty), and that one did not have a big enough keyboard to comfortably write more than a tweet. I plan on taking a few days, or perhaps weeks, to share my stories. If you are really that interested, I believe there is a way for you to sign up to get email notifications when I post things. Most of you I know me on Facebook and/or we are on a texting basis, so text me or message me if you want to get those updates but can't figure it out.

For now, since my eyelids are heavy and my brain is stretching to think of words I think I knew before jet lag, I will just tell you that I am 1. not missing the humidity and the heat (although honestly, most of the time that was SO awful) but 2. Joyfully missing the beautiful people we had the privilege of ministering to. It was incredibly challenging to see certain horrors so up close and personal, but such a blessing to see God working through such humble and dedicated servants, and a privilege to meet them before - as the team director of AIM put it - the final "party." I feel truly blessed to have been able to go on this trip and so thankful that it was touched by God's blessing the whole way through.

Thank you so much for your prayers - I know that's why certain things worked out the way they did.