Thursday, June 10, 2010

Inhale Exhale - By Grace


http://youtu.be/HB59EdpX3iE



My eyes roll back into my head.
I'm trying to keep my head on straight to understand.
Remember what he said, "Yes, I do believe".
A smile reached the surface.

Free me. You have freed me,
I will not suffer anymore,
Suffer anymore. I'm alive.

I'm scared stiff, I'm shakin' in my boots.
When you come face to face with the reason you exist.
I'm holdin' on to truth, and livin' like a king.

Free me. You have freed me,
I will not suffer anymore,
Suffer anymore. I'm alive.

I'm tired now; somehow I will survive.
I can't remember how it feels to be alright.
I'm tired now; somehow I will survive.
I can't remember how it feels to be alright.

By grace, you have freed me.
I will not suffer anymore.
I will not suffer anymore.
Suffer anymore.
I'm alive.
By Grace Inhale Exhale


When I first tripped over this song on the internet, I was repulsed—no, not because of the screamo metal sound (although I am more of a jazz aficionado than a fan of thrashed out vocals)—because I was sure that the lyrics were yet another pie-in-the-sky, fairy-tale take on Christianity.  “Just find Jesus and all your pain will go away.”  The Disney-esque Jesus who makes dreams come true. I was irritated at one more example of the ridiculous promises to which Christians cling in the all-too-human experience of suffering.  In my very literal childhood (all children are very literal and, as fundy Christians, we were taught to remain very literal long past the time to grow up), I heard version after version of the Cinderella-style “come to Jesus” fairy tale.  And I was disgusted that such a very modern band was singing such a old and worn-out story.

But I couldn’t get myself to write the contemptuous, dismissive post on this song that I wanted to write.  Believe me, I tried.  I wanted to pour all the bitter cynicism bred in Sunday School lesson after sermon after Christian storybook into one long diatribe against the absurdity of this young current group promoting the same tired lies.  Jesus doesn’t save you from suffering.  In actual fact of Scripture, he promises his followers the same and more! No one in the Bible EVER promises that we can escape the pain of living a human life.

Despite many attempts, the post never went very far and each time I found myself reading the lyrics over and over (admittedly, more than I listened to the song itself, but I did that too).  The more I cast out Fear, the more I wrote about Grace, the more I listened to the heart behind the music, the more I realized I was wrong about this song and, perhaps, this group.

It finally occurred to me that this song wasn’t a false promise of Easy Street but a triumph of having found jubilant meaning in human existence through which a transcendence of suffering is possible.  Not that life won’t hurt after finding Jesus but that living with the awareness of grace means the soul is no longer trapped in the pain and fear of pain.  Noticing grace means that suffering is not what defines life; compassion defines the gracious life.

The experience of suffering is universal.  Understanding, not denying, deeply experiencing our own suffering is the key to loving our neighbors, our enemies: we all have deep hurts in our lives.  In our pain, we can act with compassion—literally to “feel the pain with” others as the same as our own pain.  Suffering is what makes us each and every one equally human.  Grace is what allows us to see past our finite painful humanity into the eyes of the Divine, or, perhaps, with the eyes of the Divine.


3 comments:

  1. Dang. I love your honesty. This post rocks!

    It hit me on so many levels, I can't put it into words. But thanks. Again.

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  2. Since we share a love of theology, and I have time, I'll explain a little of this.

    In Gregory A. Boyd's God of the Possible, he puts a very good case for the Open View of the future, which opponents like to call Open Theology.

    In the Open View, our marvelous, incredibly loving, incredibly complex and intelligent, Creator God makes a world of open possibilities. He uses recombinant DNA to open up multitude possiblilities, laws of nature and truly free will to make a world of rich variety and novelty.

    This vast intelligence can easily hold in its mind the full range of possibilities, even be able to give good odds for each particular outcome. And of course, be powerful enough to specifically intervene at any time the Creator chose to intervene.

    So there in the mind of God, the possibility of me existed. Yet there was genuine delight and joy when the choices were made that *I* would definitely be born. Foreknowledge and novelty both. I believe God would have delightfully welcomed children which might have been conceived but weren't. Are you following this?

    This means there are no guarantees in life, but the guarantee that Our Loving God will respond to us when we reach out to Him. He has promised to never leave us nor forsake us and to be with us always, NO MATTER WHAT!

    This view of God makes the Bible make sense, why God can honestly say "I was going to do this, but you chose something else so now it's something else". It makes Romans 8 about the inseparable Love of God more amazing than ever! It does not detract from the Power or Intelligence or Love of God at all, at least that I can see.

    So suffering will happen. It will happen to all of us because of the laws of nature and the will of men and animals. But our Loving God is with us! He will be our ally in all of our challenges, because He is for us. But we all still live in the world He has made, governed by the laws set in motion at the beginning, until such time as He chooses to wrap up this experiment and start a new one. And all who choose Love get to be a part of that, too.

    WHAT JOY! =D

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  3. I thought I replied to this comment. I know I spent time on wikipedia looking up Open Theology because of this comment! I even tried to add the referenced book to the widget on the sidebar but apparently none of that actually made it to the blog.

    Thanks, SS, for this mini-essay. It sounds a lot like what I had concluded for myself from my years of studying science, "heathen" religions, and meditating but I have never been able to formulate my thoughts in Christian terminology. I'll definitely be adding this book to my reading list.

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