Sunday, June 18, 2006

Seeking DeathPhotobucket - Video and Image Hosting
A good friend of mine was killed tragically in a car accident about three weeks ago. I hadn’t actually spoken to this girl for several months, and I can’t remember the last time that we saw one another. Yet, we attended college together, and upon reflecting on those short years I realized that her passing would certainly administer a profound effect on the lives of many. She was one of these folks who is involved in everything, and somehow appears to be fully committed to everything—not for the approval of others or for self-glorification but out of a genuine concern to make life better.

My purpose here is not to compose an exaggerated eulogy of her virtues but to articulate how death has suddenly become a real thing to me again. The most sobering moment for me during this time did not occur at the visitation when I met her parents, or at the funeral service where friends and family gathered to pay our final respects, or even at the subsequent informal gathering at a friend’s home where a small group of us reflected on her life and the fluid give and take of life and death. No, the incident that touched me most deeply occurred several days later when I taking a break at work, searching for a particular phone number in my cell phone directory. It was then that I unexpectedly came across Rebekah’s name and phone number.

As that contact information gleamed brightly at me from the screen, I was gripped by several emotions that I honestly was not in the mood to experience on my break from work. I became frightened—maybe because I realized my own mortality. Nostalgic—maybe because my college memories of Rebekah are such fond ones. Pensive—maybe because I became immediately aware of the trail of memories that all humans (for better or worse) leave behind them on this earth. Saddened—probably because I understood the personal repercussions of this death, that a person in my private phonebook had left this world. Torn—and this is the strange one, at the prospect of either retaining Rebekah’s contact information in my phone, or deleting that information, thereby severing my last personal connection to this life that had been taken.

While “penning” this entry, I’ve done something that writers are wont to do...or at least should be wont to do...I’ve reviewed some of my earlier ramblings on a similar topic. I once considered the idea of home and irony that any home on this earth is not really a home because we are constantly wanderers in this transitory world. Along with that idea comes the observation that we consistently use terms of bondage and deliverance metaphorically, a habit which perpetuates our inability to see ourselves as real wanderers.

I have also been considering a different sort of metaphor—one that is overwhelmingly more true than the modern Christian verbality of which I formerly wrote. That metaphor is the Christian conception of dying to live. St. Paul speaks of this figurative death consistently in his letters to the church, but his teaching is actually no more than an echo and reverberation of Christ’s message that any man wishing to follow must die to self daily and “carry his cross.” I’m constantly perplexed at what Christ actually means by taking up my cross daily and dying. It’s become one of those catchphrases that preachers can say really easily, but it does not seem to carry much water when applied to daily living. I’m pretty sure it doesn’t mean making decisions that are the best for me only. I’m pretty sure it doesn’t mean complaining about others. I’m pretty sure it doesn’t mean worrying about the potential of being harmed by others. I’m pretty sure it doesn’t mean getting even, or staying on top, or having the upper hand. I’m pretty sure it doesn’t mean seeking respect at all costs. I’m pretty sure it doesn’t mean looking impressive, or being comfortable, or becoming established. I’m pretty sure it doesn’t mean having time and space to oneself. In fact, it must mean complete reckless abandonment of my own needs. How such a proposition actually plays out in day to day situations is personal and circumstantial; however, the spirit is inescapable. Any thing that is done for my own benefit may not necessarily be wrong, but it should certainly be held suspect and viewed in light of Christ’s call.

More interestingly though, it occurs to me that Christ’s language is problematic because it is figurative. He uses the image of death—something that is very real and concrete to mankind—to illustrate the spiritual transformation that is to occur in a person who follows Christ in the sort of lifestyle noted above. Somehow, Christ means to argue that true life is found in this sort of “death.” Yet, if we view Christ as God incarnate, it seems odd that he would apply metaphoric speech to an issue as paramount as individual salvation; he obviously wouldn’t want us to miss his point.

In considering Rebekah’s death, I have become convinced that Christ’s language is less metaphoric than we initially realize. For the Christian, along with “spiritual life” comes the tangible reward of eternal life; hence, the spiritual life that a Christ-follower receives by “dying daily” is paralleled by the real, concrete life that follows real, concrete death. The idea of Christian conversion here becomes a reflective image of God’s eternal purposes. It is as if Christ takes God’s eternal truth and compresses it into the basic step of faith so that human beings, as shortsighted and as prone to experiencing life in momentary spurts as we are, can grasp an idea that is humanly ungraspable. Christ’s choice of figurative language, we now see, presents us with the eternal truth in the only way that we can understand it, and though it is metaphoric in a sense, it differs from the real only in degree—exchanging one sort of life for another, the physical for the spiritual.

You may be interested to know that I didn’t delete Rebekah’s phone number from my phonebook. I suppose that I wasn’t quite ready to sever those ties completely. If nothing else, the existence of that contact information has spurred me on to dwell more on these eternal truths. German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer is often quoted from his book The Cost of Discipleship: “When Christ calls a man, he calls him to come and die.” I am somehow comforted by the thought that Rebekah has preceded me in dying both kinds of death…and in knowing that each kind leads to life.

2 Comments:

At 6/20/2006 12:04 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great post, Tim.

The struggle with comprehending death is tough enough but adding to it the parallel of Christianity and Christ's message of redemption is all the more profound.

I'm so sorry for the loss of your friend and I totally empathize with your mixed emotions...especially when they are brought to a head by something as seemingly trivial as looking at a phone number listing.

But the fact that you were able to take this loss and use it to delve deeper into your beliefs gives such honor to your friend and her memory.

 
At 8/17/2006 9:11 PM, Blogger General 5A Pigott said...

yours was better than mine

 

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