Wednesday, June 25, 2008

"Holding Pfaltzgraff - inclusion" from L.L. Barkat

Struggling to find a sense of belonging has long been a problem of mine from my childhood days of not quite fitting in with friends, or at school. And even left to myself I felt like an outsider or on the verge of it, much of the time. When I commited my life to God through Jesus, this opened up a new chapter in which I suddenly felt on the inside with God and other Christians. Though I've come to realize over the years that this can still be a struggle as a sort of exclusivism can wrap itself around us (some of that from the truth, but much of it from error), making it easy for us miss the point of why Jesus came, and why we in Jesus remain here in this world.

L.L. in this chapter helpfully unfolds for us this problem of exclusion which is part of sin and God's curse and scattering of humankind. And of God's answer for inclusion, back to his very heart. Continuing with her on her journey she recounts her days after college when she settled down in her own place and ate off her pfaltzgraff stone plates after which with delight she'd wash them in the suds in the sink. This was therapeutic for her in that she felt on the inside, contrary to what her stepfather had drummed into her that she was an outsider who couldn't do anything.

L.L. shares with us in a way I've never seen of God making his heart known to humankind through Israel in the form of the beautifully woven crimson, blue and purple of the tabernacle/tent pitched in the middle of the tribes of Israel as they traveled through the desert. Through the priestly sacrificial system God was making himself known, the high priest entering the Most Holy Place once a year in front of the ark of the covenant with the carved cherubim overshadowing it, the center of God's heart, to make atonement again and again, annually, for the people in forgiving their sins.

Jesus in the incarnation came as the Word became flesh and made his dwelling, or more literally pitched his tent or tabernacled among us. Jesus is the new tabernacle through whom access is given to God's very heart. No longer would the people of God just see it, but now through faith in Jesus they enter it for themselves, into the Most Holy Place through the blood of Jesus, meaning through his death.

Jesus' heart was broken in the process of making this true and open for all. He was treated in the most inhumane ways and even felt like his Father had turned his face away in excluding him as well. But he suffered this that we might be included again, back to God and with all peoples, in Jesus. In Jesus we become the place where God wants to bring other outsiders in.

L.L. reminds us that God gives to his people in the new covenant, a new heart, his very heart. It's a heart that is inclusive, that wants to bring all people in through Jesus and the message of the gospel. The question for us is how do we see this? Is this just for ourselves, or does it include others? This was a major issue Jesus had with the Pharisees and religious leaders of his day. Yet Jesus' example was just the opposite, reaching out to the outcasts in his day: the lepers, tax-collectors and sinners, and really to all, including those who excluded others. We in Jesus are to do the same, knowing that this inclusion we have found in Jesus is not just for ourselves, but for others.

It has taken me years to have a settled sense of inclusion in spite of all the ways I can feel excluded at times. God's heart for us in Jesus revealed to us by his Spirit and his word makes it clear that we are included and that God is inviting and welcoming home in Jesus, all who are outside. We are to live as those in Jesus before the world to help others find this same inclusion in Jesus.

Read this chapter (and book) slowly and enjoy.

What would you like to share in your thinking or from your life about what this means to you?

1. Stepping Stones - conversion
2. Christmas Coal - shame
3. Tossed Treasures - messiness
4. Heron Road - suffering
5. Sword in the Stone - resistance
6. Howe's Cave - baptism
7. Palisade Cliffs - doubt

Next week: Indiana Jones - fear

6 comments:

preacherman said...

I can't wait to read this book. I am so looking forward to enjoying it slowly and taking it into my life. I have really enjoyed this series. You have done a wonderful job. L.L. from what I have read off your blog has done a fantastic job in his writting.

Rachel Mc said...

I still feel like I am living in two worlds - christian and secular.
I haven't figured out how to bring the christian Rachel into the secular world, so I feel some exclusion in the secular world. I don't always fit in, exactly.
Of course, at church and doing church stuff I fit right in....
this has bothered me for some time.

Ted M. Gossard said...

Kinney,
Yes. There's no way I can do justice to her writing with these postings, but I try to do the best I can in the time I have.

She is working on another book which I'm looking forward to.

Thanks!

Ted M. Gossard said...

Rachel,
This is a tough one. It's interesting that Dietrich Bonhoeffer more and more towards the end of his life felt more at home around the nonreligious than the religious of his time and place. Of course he was in Nazi Germany, and the religious were adherents to the Lutheran Church, some to the confessing church which formed to resist Hitler, but weakened so that there was probably no real resistance from most professing Christians in the end. So Bonhoeffer was naturally dismayed, to say the least. But I want to see what I can learn from him on this, because he still held true to the faith and witnessed Christ until the day he was executed.

There is so much to say on this. But all people are included as made in God's image and God's children by creation. Of course it takes regeneration in which sinners are born again into a new life and the family of God in Jesus.

I think trying to become all things to all people in order that we may save some (1 Corinthians 9) is certainly a pattern for us in Jesus. And Christians are often hard on creation and think in dualistic terms that are not biblical. There is much we can enjoy in fellowship with those not in Christ, even though the most important fellowship of all, in the Father and in the Son- we don't have with them. I think we need to major on what we do have in befriending them, and pray for God to open the way to share our faith, which is really a part of who we are.

But your question and thoughts are good, and something for us all to work on, because it can be more than challenging to stay true to Jesus in the world you work in. But over time they can appreciate your witness to the faith in how you work, as well as who you are in deed and word.

I want to learn more and grow in this as well.

Thanks.

L.L. Barkat said...

This was one of my favorite chapters to write. All those thoughts about the tabernacle, the stunning visual imagery I discovered as I delved deeper. Like I said in the book, I used to have this view of the tabernacle as being some kind of barely glorified tent. But, how beautiful it was upon actual exploration! It seemed only natural to turn it towards metaphor, a symbol of God's beautiful, beautiful heart.

Ted M. Gossard said...

Thanks, L.L. Yes, that was a new, fresh take for me on the tabernacle.