Now is the judgement of this world; now the ruler of this world will be driven out. And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself.’ (John 12:31-32)
Two visions collided in my heart this week. One was the
image of ICE agents herding supposed criminals onto planes, ferrying them away
to brutal foreign prisons without the benefit of hearings or trials or anything
but the unsubstantiated claims of self-interested politicians.
The other vision melted my heart, feeding a soul-deep hope
that will not die.
It happened on Sunday morning. My pre-service prayer
complete, I opened my eyes and immediately knew prayer was not done with me.
Look and see, said the voice of the Spirit within me.
The crucifix hanging high above the altar first captured my
attention as the congregation gathered. Two Filipino mothers crowded in beside
me with five children, black and brown. An elderly Chinese woman kneeled ahead
of me.
An African American family sat three rows further up. Across
the room, a batik-clad woman and her children looked like they’d just arrived
from some west African country. And dozens of Hispanics from several southern
nations scattered among folk who are as white as me.
I didn’t see a suit and tie in the place, except for the
cantor and organist. More obvious were jeans, tennis shoes, the weathered faces
of people who work outdoors, and others, with softer hands, who labor in
classrooms and offices and over keyboards like the one beneath my fingers.
Looking at the crucifix above our gathering, it all felt
right. Jesus’ words rang truer than ever. ‘If I be lifted up, I will draw all
people to myself.’
For there we were, drawn together by the transcendent love
of the One who makes the many … into one. That’s what love does, but it is
better to say that is what Love does. The God who is Love, whose all-embracing
compassion bears the face of Jesus in his suffering, seeks ever more to draw the
human family and all creation into one loving union.
This vision held me through the service. I couldn’t stop
looking around. What I saw was profoundly hopeful, promising a gracious world
of welcome infused with the love of Jesus, whose heart is known in every
welcome and act of hospitality whether his name is spoken or not.
But as hopeful as it was to kneel at Divine Savior Church
and see what the Savior is doing among us, I was equally engulfed by a profound
sadness over the daily reports of ICE raids. However necessary and important
their function in society, too often human souls are being indiscriminately swept
up and treated like trash—the documented and undocumented, the guilty and the
innocent, the citizen, the green card holder and people who look like my
brown-skinned grandsons and son-in-law, for whom I worry.
The vision of a world-made-one is a true and deeply
Christian vision of God’s desire for the nations, including our own. The vision
of ‘one out of many’ is also deeply encoded in the history and DNA of our
nation. But it is daily attacked and shattered by the present administration as
it stokes anger and fear of those who look like they ‘don’t belong here.’
Tragically, many Christians also have lost sight and faith in
the vision of their Lord, who draws the many into one, ironically unaware that such
hatred and rejection stands judged by the cross of Christ and the entire
Judeo-Christian tradition.
But the vision of a world made new, born of God’s Spirit,
does not die. It lives in human hearts and appears in flesh and blood
gatherings, like Sunday morning, as we gathered beneath the cross of Christ
where the hope of the world was clear to see.
All we needed to do was look around … and see what Love does.