Saturday, August 22, 2020

The Spiritual Discipline of Discomfort

 For thus says the Lord: Only when Babylon’s seventy years are completed will I visit you, and I will fulfil to you my promise and bring you back to this place. For surely I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord, plans for your welfare and not for harm, to give you a future with hopeJeremiah 29:10–11.

 

I have sleep apnea; I have a CPAP machine on my nightstand that I should use more regularly than I do.  So, why don’t I do it?  Well, I never can seem to get the seal just right, and so it drives me crazy to hear myself breathing inside the mask.  Or, I don’t remember to put it on before I fall asleep at night.  (For those who’ve never had to use a CPAP, you really do have to be ready to be completely still before you put it on.)  Even on the nights I do put it on, I usually wake up after three or four hours thirsty or having to go to the bathroom—and they say you really need more time than that for the treatment to be effective. 

 

While these are all valid-sounding reasons for not wearing a mask, in the end they are excuses.   If I’m honest they all come down to one answer: I don’t want to be uncomfortable.   It seems I’d rather risk my health (and subject family to snoring and worrisome erratic breathing) than wear the mask.  When I put it on paper it seems obvious!  My decision is fairly self-centered.; my personal comfort trumps all other concerns. 

 

Who is that masked man?!
Who was that masked man?!
Wearing a mask.  Now there’s a topic that we’re all familiar with right now, thanks to the ongoing pandemic.  COVID-19 spreads primarily by aerosol transmission and solid science tells us one of the best means of protecting ourselves from it is to wear a mask.  Nevertheless, some of us still resist wearing them.  It isn’t so much that it protects you (although it does); it’s more that it protects the other.  Like me not using my CPAP,  those that choose not to wear masks do so for a variety of reasons they consider valid—e.g., they can’t breathe when they wear them, they don’t want to live in fear, they have the right to do as they please, they believe COVID-19 is not real and/or is politically motivated.   Ah, we human beings get so creative when it comes to coming up with excuses, but in the end, they all come back to the same root: I don’t want to be uncomfortable.  That is to say, we choose to put our personal concerns ahead of concerns for the common good of all. 

 

Of course, since our institutions are made up of individuals we shouldn’t be surprised when we find the same reluctance to be uncomfortable at work in our Churches.  At a recent webinar, the Rev. Emily Kegler said: “The white American Church is unwilling to be uncomfortable.”   She argues that our “discomfort with discomfort” has made the Church buy into constructs designed to make us feel comfortable.  She includes viewing whiteness as superior and maleness as the default gender, and our infatuation with American consumerism, as examples.  She argues we become protective of (dare I say, we worship) these constructs (or idols).  When we do that, we’re constantly in damage control mode, trying to protect the sanctity of the structures we’ve created to make us comfortable.  It’s hard to embrace others—and to embrace Jesus—when we’re so busy protecting our personal comfort.

 

Although I think she’s spot-on, I admit these are hard words to hear. Kegler’s statement challenges me as a white male.  She speaks like a prophet, and I don’t know too many prophets that are warmly embraced by their audience.  When I hear it, my knee-jerk reaction is to begin making excuses—to protect my comfort. 

 

But Kegler argues that our challenge is to find ways to embrace discomfort, not just once in a while, but on a regular basis.  

 

Discomfort needs to become a regular spiritual practice.

 

After hearing this, if we are open, we might be inclined to ask: In what ways am I willing to be uncomfortable?  While that’s a good starting point, we need to go further.  Left to our own devices, we will tend to limit our discomfort to “small doses” that we can tolerate.  Therefore, says Kegler, the real question we should ask is: Where does God’s world call me to be uncomfortable?

 

The post-COVID-19 world has forced us into uncharted territory.  It’s now clear this isn’t just a temporary inconvenience.  We’re in this for the long-haul.  Although we pray there will be a day soon when there is an effective vaccine and the spread of COVID-19 is controlled, I don’t think we’re ever going back to exactly the way things were BP—before the pandemic.  The world has changed, and so must we—both as individuals and institutions, such as churches.  We can’t go back to the way things were; we can only live in the present moment and move forward into whatever the future holds, knowing that God promises it will be good—Jeremiah 29:11.  

 

In the meantime, just as was true when Jeremiah wrote the verses above, discomfort is already here—and there’s much more to come.  So, perhaps instead of avoiding it, it’s high time we learn to embrace it, and even to thrive in the midst of it.  It’s not like we have a choice at the moment.

 

FOR REFLECTION: What is the discomfort you’ve been avoiding and how does God call you to embrace it?

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