Gela

Gela
He leads me beside still waters

Saturday 17 May 2014

Journey from Theodicy towards Lament



Kate Bradford

Early in my time, ministering as paediatric chaplain I was called to attend to the withdrawal of life support to a baby a few weeks old. The baby looked perfect in every way but he had an in-operable genetic condition. I felt nervous and inexperienced.

I prayed with the parents acknowledging the deep sorrow and pain of the situation, praying that they may know God’s comfort as they and their little son, pass through this deep, dark valley of the shadow of death. On that cold winter’s morning, together we asked Jesus in his mercy to prepare to receive this little child today into to his eternal care. At the moment the monitors ceased to register any vital signs of earthly life, the father left the room.

I stayed with the mother as a nurse gently removed intubation tubing and canulas, gently placing Pooh Bear plasters over wounds where tubes and lines had been removed. The baby was clothed in a baby jumpsuit and placed in his mother’s arms. The nurse left.

The mother cradled her baby, weeping noiselessly. We sat together in the silence. After an interval she asked me, ‘Have you ever seen a dead baby before?’ I thought for a moment and answered, ‘Not in this hospital, but in another on the other side of the world.’ ‘Where?’ she asked. ‘A rural hospital in Africa,’ I replied.
The mother asked simply, ‘What would they do in Africa? What would it be like there?’ I explained that the room would be filled with women all sitting on the ground with shawls and scarves covering their heads, some women would wail, but most would be murmuring – weeping for you and crying out to God softly. Every one of those women would be with you in your loss.’ We fell into silence.
After a time she replied, ‘I think I would have liked that.'

Sometime later I was leaving the room as the husband entered. As we passed each other at the door he asked me directly, ‘How does a good God allow this to happen?’ I replied without thinking, ‘We live in a very fallen and broken world.’ He glanced at me with incomprehension and walked past me into the room.

I walked back to my office.

◊―◊―◊

Thus a journey had begun. How had I got it so right and then immediately, so wrong? I had spoken truths to both parents, one had been comforted yet the other, utterly bewildered. It became clear to me that truth and timing were intimately related. The right thing said at the wrong time, was not half right – it was wrong.   I started to search for answers. I read John Munday and Frances Wohlenhaus-Munday’s Surviving the Death of a Child (1995). John and Frances include a chapter called; ‘There are no easy answers’. In this a chapter the authors suggest a ‘theology of accompaniment’ and advise that if something is easy to say, then, don’t say it.  I then read Stanley Hauerwas’ Naming the Silences : God, Medicine, and the Problem of Suffering (1990). He explained the mechanisms of theodicies and why they are not helpful. I heard Christian sociologist and spiritual director Susan Philips speak, Susan demonstrates that glib theodicies are not only unhelpful but destructive, as they have a further consequence of allocating blame to the sufferer. This theme is further explored in her book Candlelight: Illuminating the Art of Spiritual Direction, (2008).  I encountered the concept of the use of lament in the writings on pastoral care by Eugene Peterson, Five Smooth Stones for Pastoral Work (1992), and Walter Brueggemann, The Spirituality of the Psalms. (2002). I later found Walter C. Kaiser’s Grief and Pain in the Plan of God: Christ Assurance and the Message of Lamentations, (2004) and Henri Blocher’s Evil and the Cross: An Analytical Look at the Problem of Pain (1994) helpful for thinking through issues of sin, grief, pain and evil through theological grids. I spent a lot of time looking at Wisdom Literature and The Writings in the Bible observing the way in which they dealt with life as it was not as it might, or should be. Wisdom was interested with the real not the ideal.

When I sat with the mother, there were silences and accompaniment. I listened and responded appropriately as I shared the memory of the African women. I offered a picture of a community who had come to help bear the pain, the extended fellowship and companionship and time together with honoured rituals of mourning and lament. The image had connected the grieving mother to others who grieved far beyond the room in which we sat, there was a world beyond this incomprehensible tragedy – we shared in a glimmer of love and a fragment of hope.

In my brief exchange with the father, I did not hear his existential cry of pain, ‘why have we been forsaken’,  I had naively and thoughtlessly offered a theodicy, a justification for his sons’ death, –the world was a fallen place– but it was his son who had died, his, not someone else’s. I had offered nothing but cold comfort.
I have recently read John Swinton’s Raging with Compassion: Pastoral Responses to the Problem of Evil, (2007). I wish I had discovered this book many years ago. The first half of Raging with Compassion addresses each of these issues from a deeply pastoral perspective; the subjects are dealt with sensitively, with accompanying descriptions of a number of pastoral encounters to illuminate the ideas.

In Raging with Compassion Swinton leads us not towards the cold comfort of theodicy but rather towards warm silence of a friend who listens and then towards lament – Godward prayers of anguish. For Swinton wholeness is found in Christ. As we listen in silence and accompany people through their valleys of the shadow of death, we lament with people in their grief, exercising thoughtfulness. Over time we host a space where forgiveness may be found, we share hospitality and friendship, sharing the hope of Christ in both word and deed.

Talking about sin with the dying.

David Pettett

One of the most often asked questions of a hospital chaplain at the bedside of a dying patient is about forgiveness. Knowing that the end of their life is near, the patient wonders whether or not they have done enough in their life to please God. They express a belief that they will have to give an account of their life to their Creator and have not up until this point seriously considered what He might think of them. Often there is fear on their face and an anxiety in their voice. It is critical at this point how the chaplain responds. It is literally a matter of life and death.

The Christian chaplain has the great privilege to talk with people who anxiously face immanent death. The Christian knows that Jesus has paid the price for sin. It is an incredible moment of grace to understand that by God's grace there is no more price to be paid for sin. It is also a humbling experience for the chaplain to assure the dying patient of God's forgiveness by repentance from their sin and trust in Jesus.

I remember once being called into ICU. The patient was unconscious. His wife was standing beside the bed. She asked me to pray for her husband. I prayed that God would have mercy on him, forgive him his sin, and welcome him into heaven. As I finished praying, the man's wife looked into my face and said, "He has been such a wonderful man. He didn't have any sin."

This of course was a wonderful testimony to a happy marriage. But it said nothing about the man's relationship with God.

David's words in Psalm 51 after being confronted about his adultery with Bathsheba are an astounding testimony to the nature of sin. In verse four he says to God, "Against you, you only have I sinned." What about Bathsheba? Has he not sinned against her? What about Bathsheba's husband whom David murdered? Why doesn't David acknowledge that he has sinned against them also? He has committed a great offence against them, and yet he seems to diminish that. It seems like a religious cop out.

A modern society would be horrified at any political leader who committed adultery and then engineered the death of the offended husband in an attempt to cover up his transgression. Not only would he loose office immediately but would also serve a long gaol sentence. The crime would go down in the annals of history as one of the worst things a person could have done against another human being. And yet David seems to have no regard for the people he has offended against. He says that it is only God that he has sinned against.

The woman standing beside her dying husband could not believe that he could have possibly offended against a righteous God. David, in Psalm 51, could not see that he had done anything worse than sinned against a holy God.

So horrific did David see his sin against God that even the offences of adultery and murder paled into insignificance. David had a right understanding of sin. No matter how large or how small offences against a fellow human being may seem, the offence caused to God when we do those things he tells us not to do, far out weighs anything we might do against each other.

Any right thinking person would agree that David's offence against Uriah, Bathsheba's husband, would deserve the highest sanction and punishment. David saw that his highest offence was against God who sanctifies the marriage bed and human life, having created humans in His likeness. As evil as David's crime against Bathsheba and Uriah was, the greater evil was the neglect of God and His overall superintending of the world.

As a hospital Chaplain in a life and death situation, it is impossible to speak of anything less than the holiness of God and our accountability to Him. The fear and anxiety of a dying person is often an acknowledgement of this accountability. The Christian Chaplain brings words of comfort and life, encouraging the dying person to repent of sin and trust Jesus for life because Jesus has paid the price for sin and has risen to life.