William Stringfellow for Lent
To become and to be a Christian is not at
all an escape from the world as it is, nor is it a wistful longing for a
“better” world, nor a commitment to generous charity, nor fondness for
“moral and spiritual values” (whatever that may mean), nor self- serving
positive thoughts, nor persuasion to splendid abstractions about God.
It is, instead, the knowledge that there is no pain or privation, no
humiliation or disaster, no scourge or distress or destitution or
hunger, no striving or temptation, no wile or sickness or suffering or
poverty which God has not known and borne for [humanity] in Jesus
Christ. He has borne death itself on behalf of [humanity], and in that
event he has broken the power of death once and for all.
That is the event which Christians
confess and celebrate and witness in their daily work and worship for
the sake of all [humanity].
To become to be a Christian is,
therefore, to have the extraordinary freedom to share the burdens of the
daily, common, ambiguous, transient, perishing existence of [humans
beings], even to the point of actually taking the place of another
[person], whether he be powerful or weak, in health or in sickness,
clothed or naked, educated or illiterate, secure or persecuted,
complacent or despondent, proud or forgotten, housed or homeless, fed or
hungry, at liberty or in prison, young or old, white or Negro, rich or
poor.
For a Christian to be poor and to work
among the poor is not a conventional charity, but a use of the freedom
for which Christ has set [humanity] free.
Comments
Post a Comment