Finding our way to The Way one situation at a time. I don't know how great it will be, but I expect it will be interesting, and I look forward to it going on past all reason because wonder is just that way. Are you coming or not?
Lake Haigler 12/26/0211 — Anne Springs Close Greenway, Fort Mill, South Carolina
Last night was my best bad night ever.
Nightland is where I wrestle with my demons and make my peace with how things are, coming to terms some more again with what I have done and with what has been done to me, what I have failed to do and what failed to happen to me along the way.
"Forgiveness" is a ridiculous term. An absurd concept. As though we can just go on with what we have done to the Africans who are now Americans, and the native tribes who always were Americans. Etc.
The Wailing Wall is forever. We grow up over time. Growing up is squaring up with what is and with what isn't-- with what was and with what never will be.
I make very good use of Nightland as a great place to grow up some more again each night. Getting up and living life as it may yet be lived, anyway, nevertheless, even so.
And, to do that without any apparent addictions or escapes of any kind, represents, for me, a courageous squaring up with the truth of what's what and what's to be done about it, with it, in the time left for living-- in a "Here we are, now what?" kind of way.
Which is as close to "forgiveness" as I ever want to be.
(I will always think of "forgiveness" with quotation marks because I see it as cheap grace-- playing the game of pretending not to be pretending, making nice, as though nothing happened, but it did.)
I'm retired, and still finding my way--but now, I don't have to pretend that I know what I'm doing.
I retired after 40.5 years as a minister in the Presbyterian Church USA, serving churches in Louisiana, Mississippi and North Carolina. I graduated from Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary, in Austin, Texas, and Northwestern State University in Natchitoches, Louisiana. My wife, Judy, and I have three daughters, five granddaughters, one great granddaughter, and a great grandson on the way, within about ten minutes from where we live--and are enjoying our retirement as much as we have ever enjoyed anything.
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I would replace the word “forgiveness” with “acceptance”….acceptance of what we are ‘now’, and acceptance of the path it has taken for us to walk, so we could be ‘here now’, willing to look back at what we ‘were/ did’ with awareness and compassion, which we may have lacked “then/ there”, but which we feel “now/ here”.
Forgiveness may or may not spontaneously flow from this acceptance…we leave it at that.
Good Morning
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I would replace the word “forgiveness” with “acceptance”….acceptance of what we are ‘now’, and acceptance of the path it has taken for us to walk, so we could be ‘here now’, willing to look back at what we ‘were/ did’ with awareness and compassion, which we may have lacked “then/ there”, but which we feel “now/ here”.
Forgiveness may or may not spontaneously flow from this acceptance…we leave it at that.
LikeLiked by 1 person