Kirkepiscatoid

Random and not so random musings from a 5th generation NE Missourian who became a 1st generation Episcopalian. Let the good times roll!


(Logo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)

(Originally written for Daily Episcopalian, February 12, 2012)


So, friends, every day do something
that won't compute. Love the Lord.
Love the world. Work for nothing.
Take all that you have and be poor.
Love someone who does not deserve it.
Denounce the government and embrace
the flag. Hope to live in that free
republic for which it stands.
Give your approval to all you cannot
understand. Praise ignorance, for what man
has not encountered he has not destroyed.



--From "Manifesto:  The Mad Farmer Liberation Front," by Wendell Berry


Last Lent, I did something that many of my friends thought absolutely, positively did not compute as a Lenten spiritual discipline--I fasted from my personal e-mail and Facebook for "a meal a day"--the eight hours between 2 p.m. and 10 p.m., with Sundays off as feast days, of course, and one exception--I would work on the parish weekly e-newsletter every Thursday night.


Several of my friends and connections in the social networking and blogosphere thought I went absolutely, positively, stark raving mad.  They know me (and rightly so) as a bit of a staple in those spheres.  But it was such a successful Lenten practice I am repeating it for 2012.


Now, I admit, once upon a time I was all about "penitence" in Lent--and I still think penitence is an important aspect of Lent--but it's now merely an aspect rather than the aspect.  I have come to discover, through the various Lenten practices I've engaged in over the years, that feelings of penitence--as well as feelings of awareness, openness to change, recognition of the sufferings of others, and a whole host of other feelings are supposed to evolve as a result of doing Lenten spiritual disciplines.


In my younger days--even when I was estranged from the institutional church--I still "gave up something for Lent."  It was one of the threads I never seemed to cut from my two decades in the unchurched wilderness.  In fact, I was doing it all wrong--I was using it as an ego thing.  I would pat myself on the back for giving up things and being as Spartan as an Airborne Ranger about it, and pride myself for being more disciplined than "church people."  It was part of the "Me and God and Jesus and I don't need anyone else" attitude I cultivated in those years.


When I returned to the church, this strange evolution began--the notion that my Lenten discipline ought to be equal parts of "empty" and "full."  I would pick a spiritual discipline that had a sacrificial quality to it, but I would also pick its counterpart discipline, one that would add to my spiritual life.


So last year, I took a deep breath and announced I was going to be absent from my personal e-mail and social networking from 2 p.m. until 10 p.m. on a regular basis, and instead I was going to work on more time connecting with my friends face to face locally, and over the phone for my more distant ones.  My time in front of the computer started being replaced with walks and dinners with friends, and phone calls, and various loving gestures towards my friends.  The responses were interesting.  Some of my friends argued with me that it was impractical--that I had lived near my Amish neighbors too long.  "Why don't you just shut the electricity off for 8 hours?  It's just as dumb," one remarked.  Some of my connections complained of their own social withdrawal--that I was isolating myself from them.  I saw some of their own insecurities come out.  A few even suggested I was suffering from depression.


As it turned out, though, there was also a small group that started postulating these and other ways to fast from technology...and a tiny cluster tried some variant of it themselves.  I can't speak for what they learned, I can only speak for what I learned from my practice.  I tend to be a bit of a loner anyway, so the "aloneness" of being unplugged for eight hours was not as big a thing for me as I thought it might be.  Oh, I suffered a few twinges of "is anybody out there?" but it wasn't bothersome.  What I discovered was it wasn't what I was without that changed me, as much as the things that I had never bothered to notice when I was regularly interrupting myself to answer an e-mail or comment on someone's status.  

I found myself listening more and talking less with my friends on meals or walks.  I caught myself focusing on the words in books I was reading without my self-interruption of looking up at my screen to see if anyone had sent an e-mail.  I embarrassed a friend at dinner by saying, "Please don't think I'm sucking up to you, or coming on to you, but you know, I've never noticed what marvelous eyes you have.  You have absolutely joyful eyes, and I am sorry I never noticed it until just now.  I was wrong not to notice that."  I learned that there were things in my yard I had never bothered to notice.  I had thought I was actively practicing a "fast" at first, but instead uncovered the converse--that my attention to the cyber-world was causing me to fast from the small joys in life at times.  More than once I found myself moved to tears over something mundane, or shouting with enthusiasm into the sky at how there really are fleeting moments of perfection in this broken world.


In short I discovered the last two words in the Wendell Berry poem I quoted above--"practice resurrection."  

In that upside down, backwards and sideways path living the Gospel takes us, the real spiritual practice that cries out to be uncovered by our Lenten spiritual discipline, is that we are actually practicing resurrection.  Resurrection demands stripping off layers of the varnish and polyurethane we've heaped upon ourselves over time, and exposing our natural grain.  Resurrection insists on having us dig our own graves, crawl inside them, and look out at the sky a while, smelling the wet humus surrounding us, in the hopes that when we are lifted out, the light we've been exposed to all along, looks somehow just a little different.  Resurrection gets in our faces during Lent like a red-faced baseball manager and an umpire, nose to nose, never laying a hand on us, but kicking dirt on our shoes.  We strive to live in the stillness of Lent, to hear the thunder of Resurrection.


What are you doing this Lenten season, that does not compute, but helps you feel Resurrection burrowing beneath your feet?

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Kirksville, Missouri, United States
I'm a longtime area resident of that quirky and wonderful place called Kirksville, MO and am wondering what God has hiding round the next corner in my life.

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