GIVING THANKS – FOR COMPASSION
A light shines in the
darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.
John 1:5
I once heard a description of
heaven and hell that has stayed with me.
I have no idea of its origins. It
goes like this: In hell, there is a
great banquet laid, with all of the most wonderful food that you can imagine,
and everyone is gathered around the table.
But no one is eating. They cannot
feed themselves because their arms don’t bend at the elbow. They are eternally tempted but unable to
enjoy. In heaven, the same feast is
laid, and everyone is gathered around the table. They are laughing and talking and eating and
enjoying themselves. Their arms don’t
bend at the elbow either, but instead of worrying about feeding themselves,
everyone is feeding their neighbor.
So it is in life. When we are concerned about ourselves, and
whether we have our share (whatever
that might be) and whether it is as much as the folks next door have, we are
doomed to unhappiness, to dissatisfaction.
When we only give of our leftovers, after we have “enough,” there is
never “enough.” But when look to others, when we see their need and offer to
them something of ourselves, a listening ear, a meal, a spare coat, some labor
to fix the house, some time together, a place to stay, a refuge from the storm,
financial help, then we know our own blessings, and the blessings of
fellowship. As the prayer attributed to
St. Francis teaches us, “It is in giving that we receive; it is in pardoning
that we are pardoned; it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.”
I was recently at a church service in support of a church that had been the victim of a hate crime. The local community came out in force to support this church. The sanctuary was filled with hand-made signs of love and support, there were flowers on the steps, and the sanctuary was full of people of different faiths. It was church indeed. After the service, on the way out, I was chatting with a Jewish woman who had come with her family. I thanked her for coming and for showing interfaith support. “Of course,” she said. “I wish, instead of focusing on diversity, when we talk about multi-culturalism, we would focus on community and on what we have in common. We are all here together on the same journey.”
Rembrandt, The Good Samaritan |
I was recently at a church service in support of a church that had been the victim of a hate crime. The local community came out in force to support this church. The sanctuary was filled with hand-made signs of love and support, there were flowers on the steps, and the sanctuary was full of people of different faiths. It was church indeed. After the service, on the way out, I was chatting with a Jewish woman who had come with her family. I thanked her for coming and for showing interfaith support. “Of course,” she said. “I wish, instead of focusing on diversity, when we talk about multi-culturalism, we would focus on community and on what we have in common. We are all here together on the same journey.”
Wise words. And as it is with our fellow humans, so it is
with our fellow creatures. I attended a
Thanksgiving feast this year at a nearby sanctuary for farm animals. The event featured a great feast for the
resident turkeys (the chickens and a goat also joined in), followed by a vegan
pot luck dinner attended by hundreds of people.
The tables were groaning with delicious and compassionate food to be
shared (a precursor of heaven, perhaps).
Here, too, we focused on commonality.
The staff of the sanctuary talked about each of the turkeys, telling us
their history and their personalities.
The turkeys and other animals at the sanctuary, like humans, know pain
and fear, they know contentment and fellowship.
They, too, are on the same journey.
When we, as humans, recognize that shared life, that shared nephesh, it brings us joy.
St. Francis also said, “If you have men who will exclude any of God's creatures
from the shelter of compassion and pity, you will have men who deal likewise
with their fellow men.” So, too, I
think, when we learn to show compassion and pity to God’s creatures, when we
see what we have in common with them, so we will learn to deal likewise with
our fellow humans. In our relationships
with animals, we have the opportunity to exercise our moral muscles for
compassion or cruelty. We must decide,
and we must be aware that how we decide is likely to have a broader impact than
we might imagine.
Hicks, The Peaceable Kingdom |
In a world that can sometimes
seem overcome with fear, suspicion, anger, cruelty, and division, I am
profoundly grateful for those lights shining in the darkness who reach out in
love and support to help their fellow creatures – human and non-human – through
difficult times and for those who
stay to celebrate the good times. Joy
longs for companionship, just as pain does. I am grateful for those who find and respond
to the things we all have in common: the desire to feel safe and to be
loved. I am grateful for those who light
the path for the rest of us, and I pray for a heart to follow them on the road.
Anne Lamotte, in her book Stitches, notes that Ram Dass “said that
ultimately we’re all just walking each other home.” The journey is so much better together: with
friends, neighbors, and strangers, people with two feet and four, those with wings
or fins. The Lord God made us all, and
loves us all, and it is only when we are all working together, in support and
fellowship, bearing each other’s burdens, that He calls us “very good.”
(Genesis 1:31).
Wishing you the blessings of love
and companionship during this holiday season and for the whole journey
home.
3 comments:
Thank you, Lois! Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family, and blessings of abundance!!
Thank you, Kathy! Happy Thanksgiving and a blessed Advent. And thank you for your wonderful blog!
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