Part of me wanted to stand up and declare to my fellow moviegoers that
you can come to church and trust us, that real Christianity is nothing like
this, that we are all about compassion, holiness, and serving humbly. But no.
We are eager to listen. Tell us you
are mad at us, tell us we’ve disappointed you, tell us you want nothing to do
with us. Instead of rushing to defend,
we hear you.
And we are sorry. I’m Methodist,
not Catholic, and our founder John Wesley’s first simple rule is key: “First do no harm.” We Christians have harmed. If you have ever felt harmed by the church,
whether it is something as horrible as abuse, but maybe a failure to support
you in your hour of need, or hurtful remarks directed at you or those you love,
or however we have wounded you or driven a wedge between you and God, then on
behalf of all of Christianity let me say We are so very sorry.
I wonder if we can help each other back toward what we’ve lost. On the morning of Martin Luther King day, I
thumbed through some of Dr. King’s speeches, and I shuddered when I noticed
again how often he spoke of love. And he
wasn’t talking about private love, as in romance or family. He was talking about the big public,
political issues of the day. In the face
of violence, he spoke of love as the way out.
Today, when there is controversy or frustration, all the talk is about
rights, crushing our foes, blaming everybody else, with much fist waving. As Christians, love is supposed to be right
in our wheelhouse, but we’ve failed to talk about love in the real world, and
we haven’t loved out there ourselves very well.
My Muslim friend Rose Hamid made national news when she showed up at a
political rally with the sole purpose of stirring up some love. When asked how she feels about “those
people,” she said she doesn’t want them to be “those people,” but for all of us
to be our people. Once again, a
non-Christian shows Christians how to be Christian better than many Christians
can. Church has labored long and hard to
earn the reputation that we are a hard, judgmental people. For this, we are sorry.
We believe some beautiful, energizing, healing things about God, but
sometimes we come off as dogmatic, wielding a Bible as if it were a weapon
instead of a window into the heart of a good God. Or sometimes we are just plain boring. For this we are sorry. I should add that we also believe you are
beautiful, a thing of wonder, and we really do wonder what you think and how
you feel. We are learning to be better
listeners.
I hope you have fallen in love
with Pope Francis as I have. He was
handed the reins of a church with much to apologize for: priestly abuse, financial scandal, and an
unfitting, conspicuous opulence in the face of poverty. This pope delighted us by riding in a Ford
Focus instead of a limousine, and sleeping in a modest hostel instead of the
papal palace. He offered the Swiss guard
outside his office a chair. He washed
the feet of a Muslim woman, and tenderly embraced a man suffering from neurofibromatosis. Instead of asserting papal infallibility, he
everywhere asks people to pray for him.
His humility and immense compassion are palpable.
Photographs of this pope are telling.
It is hard to find a photo in which he is not smiling, whereas it is hard
to find a photo of his predecessors who are smiling. Pope Francis reminds us that there is joy at
the heart of life with God, and in our own selves. That joy springs out of a mindset of
mercy. The pope loves mercy, enacts
mercy everywhere, and has even proclaimed 2016 to be The Year of Mercy.
I like that, and I’d begin this Year of Mercy by asking you out there
for mercy. We all need it desperately,
and need to show it too, I believe. When
we in the church ask for mercy, we simultaneously commit to do better. And we do. There still is a good, beautiful
God. As the Washington Post headline of
Dec. 11, 2013 put it, “Like Pope Francis?
You’ll love Jesus.”