My wife and I were walking through a local park this afternoon to the shopping arcade and the local coffee shop. We crossed paths with someone who had been involved in a bit of a scandal in our community; this person smiled and waved and we did the same, but I think all of us knew that we all knew the situation.
It was sad and beautiful all at the same time because this person is carrying the shame/guilt of being part of a scandal in a small community and, like so many other folks I know, their sense of identity is grounded in their brokenness. So when they see others, all they see is a mirror of shame and guilt.
I said to my wife as we passed farther away, "I love being an agent of grace." And I do. As a Chaplain, I get to hear lots of stories of brokenness. I hear so many things that I don't want to know or don't need to know, but I hear them. And as I hear the stories of the folks in my community, I become more and more certain of this one thing: Everyone needs compassion because everyone is broken.
We all have stories and within those stories are some notorious episodes that have the potential to mark our spirits with guilt and shame. I believe this to be a universal truth: we are all broken, and we all need compassion.
I hope that if I can leave the many faith communities I have served one thing it is this: the Church (capital C, universal Church) needs to embrace something that most recovery groups practice and that is acceptance of brokenness. I would love to lead a worship gathering that begins with the words "Hi my name is Daniel and I am a sinner." To which everyone present would say, "Hi, Daniel," and nod knowingly because we hold this one thing to be true: We are all broken and we all need compassion, and in that we have common ground.
Paul writes to his protege Timothy, "This saying is reliable and deserves full acceptance: 'Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners'--and I'm the biggest sinner of all." (1 Timothy 1:15 CEB)
Yes, I can walk around my community and tell you stories about so many people. But I don't because we all have stories and not every part of our story is something to be proud of. I have stories, too; and a few of them are quite colorful (and some are pretty dark). But I am not defined by my scandals; they make up who I am today, but they do not define me. Compassion defines me...most of the time...hopefully...
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