After this Jesus went out and saw a tax-collector named Levi, sitting at the tax booth; and he said to him, ‘Follow me.’ And he got up, left everything, and followed him. (Luke 5:27-28)
George Bluebird appeared out of nowhere. I hadn’t thought about him in years, decades actually.
I interviewed him in the mid-1990s as part of a story
on prison ministry in South Dakota. The pastor of the congregation in the S.D. state
pen directed me to George and set up a time for us to talk over a small table
in the room where the men worshiped.
My first impression was that this man could reach across
the table and squeeze the life out of me in seconds; his entire physical
presence bristled with strength. But I had nothing to fear. George rested his
forearms on the table, his immense brown hands lifting to illustrate his story.
He was serving a life sentence without the possibility
of parole for beating an elderly man to death in a drunken stupor. He remembers
little; the details are lost in the fog of drugs and alcohol that cloaked the contours
of a lost night.
He showed me pieces of his artwork and told me about
the purpose that kept him going though he knew he’d never again see the prairie
sky as a free man. He worked with other Lakota prisoners like himself, telling
his story, sharing what wisdom he gained lest they, too, get sucked into the black
hole that defined his existence and determined his fate, to say nothing of the
man he killed.
They’re young, George said. They’ll get out some day.
I tell them what happened to me so they don’t come back here.
George was an elder, a sage, who’d reaped a bountiful harvest
of humility and wisdom from stony ground. That labor had taken years behind
bars and far too many days of disorientation and isolation in “the hole.”
The reason George came to mind is the verse above
these paragraphs recounting Jesus’ invitation to Levi, a social reject, to
follow him. Levi got up and followed. George got up and followed, too, though
he could go nowhere other than where he was ... and still is as far as I know. I’m
trying to find out.
When I imagined the scene, Jesus calling Levi, George
was there. He appeared out of nowhere, walking just behind Jesus. He looked
back at me and motioned for me to come long.
And that’s just about right. George is ahead of me,
and I’m okay with that. I’m certain he possesses a depth and painful wisdom
beyond my own. It’s not a competition, of course. The important thing is that
we are there—that we understand we belong and are wanted there—following the One
who is Divine Love personified, no matter where we happen to be at the moment.
We are where we are through decisions we made and didn’t
make, through the actions others took or did not take in relation to us,
through things that worked out exactly as we wanted and things that went
wonderfully or terribly wrong. The idea that we have control over much of this
is a grand illusion the strong whisper in others’ ears, trying to convince
themselves.
Wherever we are, wherever we end up, however we got
there, Jesus’ call lives in our souls. ‘Follow me,” the voice says, and on our
best days, we do, recognizing the voice within is Love’s voice inviting us to
learn, however poorly, how to live the Love who abides in the inmost room of our
souls.
That’s what I saw in George and what I want to hear
and know, feel and do every day, humbly recognizing and giving thanks for those
who are ahead of me.
A few years ago there was a movement to secure George’s
release. I’m trying to find out what happened with that, if anything. I’d
really like to hear George is walking under a prairie sky, free as the heart I
met years ago.
David
L. Miller
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