“My tears have been my food day and night,
while men say to me all day long,
'Where is your God?'"
When my alma mater called to ask if I’d be interested in
leaving Arizona and coming back to Iowa, I never really considered not
going. I loved high school teaching because
I loved high school kids; but I understood that if I were ever going to write,
I’d have to teach in college, where there simply is more time.
Greenway High School was brand new, on the edge of a northern
suburb of Phoenix. I’d been hired
precisely because I was a
Christian. I was also male, experienced,
and newly outfitted with a masters degree; those were also factors. But, illegal or not, I got the job on the
basis of my faith. The district
interviewer, a man named Bill Sterrett, was a Christian too. That’s another story.
Only two years later, a college teaching offer in my
hand, I decided to leave. When I told
Mr. Sterrett, I got scorched. He looked
up from behind his desk and shook his head.
“Why would you want to go there?” he said. “Everybody there is just like you.” He slapped that desk lightly with his
hand. “Here, you’re really different.”
Mr. Sterrett died several years ago, but that line still reverberates
through the echo chamber that is my soul because he was right. We’re not talking about the difference
between Vanity Fair and the Celestial City—there’s far too much manure in the
air to make any heavenly claims about up here in Siouxland.
But living out my allotted years in a burgeoning new suburb
of a huge metropolitan area would have made me a different person than spending
those years in an ethnic conclave huddled against the winds on the edge of the Great
Plains. I chose the monastic life, and,
as Frost would say, that choice has made all the difference.
I say all of that because in my many years here I’ve
never been anywhere near someone who might say to me, sardonically, in my
distress, “So, Jim, where the heck is your God?” Hasn’t happened—and won’t. I am surrounded by a cloud of believing witnesses.
Had I stayed in urban, public education and American
suburbia, I’d know people who would ask me the very question David that burns
in his soul. Some of them are still
friends. Last summer I got an email from
an old teaching buddy, a “jack” Mormon, who wouldn’t let the silliness of my
faith rest, in fact, because he’s quite adamant about not having any himself.
But I’ve been cloistered for nearly forty years here, and
those few voices who might mock my faith are accessible only on-line. That doesn’t mean, however, that I don’t hear
those burning questions. They rise,
instead, from inside me somewhere; and what I’m wondering this morning is
this: if I’d have stayed in a more
diverse neighborhood, would the voices I would have heard supplant the ones I
now do, the ones from inside? What would
be the pitch of my own personal faith?
Those questions are
here, even in the cloister, and they are packaged in the same taunting voice
David heard. That voice I swear I hear, that
burning question, even in a cloud of witnesses.
But I’m thankful, very thankful, that God almighty has
given me, as he did David, a faith that won’t let me take those voices to
heart, even though I hear ‘em. Only by
grace, do I come anywhere near to having a faith that is equal to that task.
No comments:
Post a Comment