Thursday, May 24, 2007

Unlikely Places: Swimming Continued

If you don't already, allow me to highly recommend reading the comments to whatever this blog is; I've known for a long time that everyone who reads this blog has far more interesting insights than I can conceive of, and the people who comment here serve only to prove that. (I only wish y'all wrote more on your blogs!! I love hearing all that y'all have to say, and hope to hear what it is that you spend your time thinking about!) To start this post, here are some that y'all left on the last post:

"I totally agree, God never intended for us to try and walk it out on our own strength." You know, this is what I was trying, rather violently and unsuccessfully, to say in those flailed words below, so I'm glad that you got it, Jessica. Oh, and I really, really didn't want to do swimming either...but it ended up being one of the greatest experiences of my time at ORU. Look for the lessons.

"In my swimming class, we'd all take turns and watch each other, there was no hiding the fear, either you got over it or you were scared and every one knew which one it was. I kinda wish it was harder to hide our problems in the church. Ya know?" You completely knocked it out, Malia. But, you know, instead of wishing that it was tougher to hide my problems I find I more often wish that I had the courage to admit my problems and deal with them in the context of a healthy community. I think that everyday I'm moving closer to that, but it's definitely a struggle.

How do we find such a healthy community? (which is the segue* now into the meat of the post)

True community arrives whenever we say, a la Aaron Weiss, "If I'm afraid and you're afraid, then we don't have to be afraid anymore," and agree to put down our weapons against one another (isolation, rejection, abandonment, negativity, fakeness, condemnation, et al.) and choose instead to humbly love, one broken piece to the other.

An illustration of this is found in the story of Josh from Beginning Swimming (which is certainly not his real name). I had passed my swimming proficiency test (25m front swim, 25m back swim, 2min tread) very early in the semester, partially because my fear of water was not as developed as many of the others in the class and partially because my feet and hands are like natural flippers, so I've got quite a distinct advantage over the common "well-proportioned" man. Still, I waited until after class so that if I would have failed, as few a number of people as possible would be around to see it.

Josh attempted it a couple of weeks later, after a handful of others had completed various portions of the test. In the middle of class, he got out of the water and told our instructor that he thought he was ready. He began the long journey down toward the deep end. She swam down. We all watched at the edge, standing at the various depths at which we could keep our heads above water by standing on our tip toes.

He jumped in and began swimming toward us on his back. Now, I'm certainly not a swimmer of any merit (I mean, I was in Beginning Swimming). But everybody else seemed to have trouble getting anywhere when they were swimming compared to me. Like, I definitely wasn't fast, but I was always moving when I wanted to be (and even when I wasn't really trying to be). Josh was one of those who splashed a lot and moved through the water very little. It was like one of those nature documentaries, where the great white is devouring the family of sea lions, only the violence on the surface lasted more than mere seconds.

Minute after minute passed as we watched Josh thrash about in the water, fighting with what seemed to be his whole life for every inch. But we weren't just passively watching. We were shouting and cheering and encouraging and doing our very best to will Josh halfway across the pool. But, you know, it's strange now thinking about it--not one of us yelled anything all that practical, or at least, what you'd think would be practical.

You'd think we would have yelled out corrections to his form, or the distance he had left to go, or instructions for every motion, but instead we just yelled out unmitigated support. "You've got this!" "You can do it!" "You're doing great!"

These kinds of things probably would have seemed to ludicrous to an actual swimmer passing by, since Josh obviously wasn't doing very well. But for those of us in the pool, we loved him and we saw only success in each failing stroke. Maybe it was because we didn't know what we were shouting about, or maybe it was because when we looked at Josh, we saw ourselves; our hopes and our fears swam alongside him.

But, strangely enough, he was making it. Whether he was riding on our encouragement or the current from the deep end, he was less than five feet from the ladder which was our finishing mark. And then it happened.

He tried to turn his head to see where he was at. His body failed to properly balance itself. His face ended up underwater. Struggling to surface, he turned himself perpendicular to the path he had been on. We screamed as passionately as we could at him. He was so close. He started to panic. He started coughing. He thought he was going to drown. His hand instinctively grabbed the lifeguard buoy that the instructor had held the whole time.

He had failed. Four or five feet from the finish line, he had failed in front of his friends, peers, and most fervent supporters. There was a silence as he settled his mind and discovered just how close he'd come.

And then we cheered. Josh had failed the proficiency, but what he had done had been an incredible feat of endurance and mental fortitude. And we cheered for him. We knew that he'd pass the proficiency test, sooner rather than later, and that what he most needed at that moment was the same unconditional support which we had given him throughout.

Imagine if the Church was like that.

Instead of everybody yelling what you should or should not be doing instead of what you are or are not doing, instead of the constant judging of whether your Christianity is kosher enough, instead of the disgusting and depraved response of fully rejecting our failures, imagine a Church filled with unconditional support that was actually unconditional.

In the meantime, I wish fully peace, love, and joy to you all.


* I totally thought that this word was spelled "segway" until FireFox red underlined it. After ninjawords and dictionary.com confirmed the incorrectitude, the OneLook Reverse Dictionary came to the rescue.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

wow tim. such a simple analogy for such a seemingly high hurdle for today's church to overcome.

a lot of the things you said here reminded me of the lesson that dan edelen guy was trying to get across in his post on pastors/ted haggard. (yeah i was reading an old entry of yours where you quoted him. you suggested reading his whole article, so i did. then i sent a link to my dad.)

if we would actually encourage our own through their obstacles, and even their failures, (especially their failures,) we could be such a stronger body of Christ.

That is what the church is called to be, after all: a BODY, a FAMILY, rather than an INSTITUTION. in a family, all the members serve/give of themselves for the individual good of each other member. in an institution, the church members are there to serve and give of themselves for the 'greater' good of the church. it's no wonder we have gotten so stuck on keeping the church's reputation so spotless that we either cover up or disown those that stuggle. what a perversion of the function it was intended to have.

maybe this was only in my experience, because my family was stuck on the whole 'big church' thing for a good while. but i have seen an awful lot of emphasis on "serving in the church" (i.e. be an usher, join the choir, work in childcare) and not nearly enough of the church giving back. this leaves us with only the institution, serving little purpose aside from draining its members who keep it running.

i just think the church should be there to serve/build/heal/grow its people, instead of the other way around. perhaps i'm crazy... or at least a little biased or opinionated. this happens to be one of my soapbox issues, if you can't tell.

basically i'm just trying to say that it's time we started seeing the church as an organism, rather than an organization. if this were the case, we'd see a lot more healing and growth (and definitely way more inclination to be open with our struggles and real with each other) than we do now.

Colleen said...

That whole metaphor about grace being the medium through which we move as opposed to the lifesaver thrown to get us out of the water...i liked it.
wait. was that in your last post? ummmm....nonetheless. It is still a great, thought-provoking analogy.

Lia Renee said...

AWESOME! :)

And you're right. I do need to post again. I'm sorry for being such a slacker.

Lia Renee said...

Oh and one more thing...

Wouldn't it be easier to admit your problems if it were harder to hide your problems? I completely agree with you. That's actually WHY I was saying that I wish it were harder, because then it would be easier to do what you said. It's definitely wishful thinking on my part though. :)