I sat down to write an epilogue to close off the Coming Home series. This came out instead. And I don't know where exactly it came from, but I like it very much, and I hope you find something of value in it.
***
Last night as I drifted off to sleep I contemplated running away. Running away from home, from school, from church, from ministry, from friends even. Hoping that I would find God, I guess.
This morning I woke up with a mouth full of blood. Life's like that, sometimes.
When I first woke up this morning, I didn't even realize it. As I was washing my hands, I happened to look in the mirror and spot a little bit of dry, crusty blood attached to my beard where my lips meet on the left side of my face. I opened my lips to survey the damage.
My teeth were this faint, dull brown, and dried blood filled the gaps between my teeth. How blood dried inside my mouth, a place known for its moistness, I don't really know. And I don't really care to either. All that matters is that it was there.
I checked the sutures I can see. From my count in the chair there are somewhere around two dozen in my mouth right now, one-third or so holding together the two ends of a gap on the left side of the roof of my mouth and the rest holding a piece of flesh from up there to the spot where you used to be able to see a screw right at the front of my bottom jaw, just beneath those mostly real teeth. One of the sutures actually connects the gum tissue on the front of my lower jaw to the tissue on the back by stretching over the teeth. It's really very annoying. But the sutures were all solid and no new blood seemed to be entering my mouth.
It tasted awful. I have this bizarre obsession with taste...that's where the whole Listerine thing comes from. The taste thing--if I'm honest and a little bloody in front of y'all right now--I think comes from some article on kissing I found on some dating advice for teens website back when I was in my second or third year of high school. There's a lot of jokes in that sentence just waiting to be formed. Ultimately, I can't decide which is more pathetic: a 16-year-old turning to the Internet for a how-to guide on making out or a 22-year-old remembering it and, in fact, building a whole set of compulsive behaviors on it. Either way, the article had some line written in the language called trendy that said something like "If you can taste anything other than minty-freshness, don't even think about trying to kiss her."
So I became a compulsive gum chewer. It's not that I constantly had girls wanting to kiss me until they experienced my halitosis; I guess I was just motivated by the fear that "The One" would come along and I'd screw it up unless my mouth was screaming FreshMint. Or CinnaBurst. Or WinterFresh. Or MintWinter.
That was a long diversion, the point is that I can't stand bad tastes in my mouth (this has, I think it's safe to say, progressed far beyond this boyhood fantasy of random attractive women wanting to make out with me and developed into an independently paralyzing compulsion; in other words, just because you smell Lister, don't assume I'm looking to lock lips). Morning breath is made significantly worse by the presence of blood. So I walked into my kitchen, grabbed a glass from the cupboard, filled it with water, and began to rinse out my mouth.
I hadn't thought anything of it until I started typing up this entry and thought that it would make a killer hook to write: "I woke up with a mouth full of blood." Connecting it to my thoughts of leaving everything last night just made the hook better. Maybe they'll think I'm a drug addict, or I got the crap beat out of me, or that I did run away. Then they'll read.
And then it all seemed so clear.
I have wounds. We all have wounds which we bring with us on our spiritual journeys. Mine don't really come from before I was "saved," since life before I was four was pretty peachy, but I think we can pick up wounds after that, too. Maybe we're even more likely to--I don't know. A lot of Christians give off the impression that that's not the case, that salvation is just some big healing moment and no longer are we capable of anything negative; I guess I just think they're wrong.
I think of salvation more as sutures...the metaphor could even expand. Salvation is this soft tissue graft. Something from above gets sewn into us--when they do it, they have to harm the tissue their attaching the graft to. Last time they scraped and cut and burn...this time they just cauterized it with a laser. This way the tissue will start its natural healing process, grab onto the graft, and grow together.
Unfortunately for us (maybe, I'm still not sure), this takes time. And what we get in the meantime is these sutures. They hold everything in place, but it's not perfect yet. The tissues are still independent, growing slowly into one flesh. Jesus set up the relationship between us, the Father, and himself as "I in them, you [the Father] in me, that they may become perfectly one." I think we're just in the suture phase.
And sometimes, because these tissues haven't all connected yet, there's blood. There's pain. And, more than occasionally, I look at myself and I see the blood in my mouth. The failure. The disconnect between the me in me and the One towards whom I claim to be ever trying to progress. That's where the blood comes from, the pain; it's not from the new tissue, it's from that spot where the old tissue and the new tissue haven't yet come together to form one tissue.
Last night, I saw the disconnect in my life as clearly as I saw the blood in my mouth this morning. I wanted to give up. I wanted to leave. I wanted to hold it in, close my mouth and run somewhere where I would never have to smile, so that no one could ever see that inside of me was blood and a chaotic jumbling together of string and flesh.
This morning, the first step was so obvious: grab water, rinse out the blood.
Tonight the first step is so obvious.
The title of this blog is transparency|inaction. In that spirit, then, I just want to say that while my mouth is disgusting, and sometimes the sutures can't quite hold, and some days I'm going to wake up with blood in my teeth--while all that is true, I'm proud of my sutures, because they speak to a hope for tomorrow rather than yesterday's failure. I smile wide, bloody teeth and all, because they speak to a grace that I can't at all comprehend. And as for my disgusting mouth: a day is coming when this will be a finished work, and God himself will cleanse me from all the guilt of my sin.
Please bear with me (as I promise to with you) until then.
Peace, love, and joy to you all.
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1 comment:
well, dang. i love this.
i am going to come back and read it when i am fresh and can leave a coherent comment. but until then, just know i think you are brilliant. :)
mattie.
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