You pass it off as a small thing, but it's anything but that.
Yeast, too, is a "small thing," but it works its way
through a whole batch of bread dough pretty fast.
So get rid of this "yeast." - 1 Corinthians 5:6, The Message
Last Wednesday, two speakers from Homeboy Industries visited La Casa de la Comunidad. These men shared their lives, both past and present, and how the compassion of Homeboy helped them to step away from the patterns of gang life in East Los Angeles. At one point in the presentation, a very poignant line from Father Gregory Boyle's book, Tattoos on the Heart, was referenced:
New Friends from Homeboy Industries meet our neighborhood. |
Indeed. It's not only taken root, it's produced poisonous fruit. It's infested our daily bread. This idea allows us to walk around dirty homeless folks sleeping outside a 7-eleven with no more than a "what-a-lazy-wretch" sneer across our face. This idea is the seed of the notion, "this side of the tracks, that side of the tracks." This is the idea that allows slavery, inhumane treatment of prisoners, allows us to look at people as problems, issues, statistics in a world population explosion, and not, as we all were intended to be seen: as the image of God.
One of the Homeboys spoke quite eloquently about the internal damage an idea like this causes. He said that he had no problem with people calling him a monster, a f*!&-up, a no-good menace to society. He believed himself to be all those things. But call him worthy of kindness, call him useful and helpful, call him beautiful even, well, his entire body rejected it, like an allergic reaction. He said, at first, he would become so angry with a compliment that he would retaliate and work to regain the more comfortable status of being a "low-life." The idea manifested in our sense of self, maintaining the lie that we can lose God's affection and can't hope of winning it back. Or, more to the truth, can't believe that we never lost it in the first place.
Dwellers, Neighbors, and friends from Oasis came out. |
I've been following the blog of an incoming Dweller, Ben Adam, who will arrive this fall. This quote is part of a larger work of his on the politics of the Resurrection, but I found myself feeling the resonance of it during the Homeboys' talk: "The Jesus movement, unlike Marxism or the Cuban Revolution, did not seek to make a poor person into a rich monarch. It was a movement that believed G-d was bringing down the powerful and raising up the powerless so that they could meet in the middle as equals." Meeting in the middle. It's the heart of what we're attempting here in Hollywood. God-willing, bridges of understanding, equality, and a kinship that only God could create, can continue to be built and nurtured.
I turned and looked at our current Dwellers. I thought about some of the ideas they are starting to share, starting to blog about. I'll leave you to ponder them, and I pray you are blessed in the thinking:
"God has called us to be present: to love His people as much as we possibly can, despite who they are or where they come from." - Alex
"Whether or not he stays does not detract from the fact that we cared enough to keep visiting him, find him help when he asked, and will continue to work with him, no matter the outcome of rehab. He knows we care about him." - Alayna
"I started thinking about how many people are truly involved in this process of volunteerism. This is not a one-man show. If I had to list everyone involved in the process, I know that it would take up pages in very small font." - Josh
"It's also hard for me to see what good a system is if it can only help some, but not all. I even get angry that people have to be homeless or that there's such a thing as homelessness." - Brady
"Help [homeless people] feel not invisible as they have been walked [over] by so many people ignoring them. We are all the same in Christ." - Kyle
May God meet you in your middle today. Thanks for reading. - Matthew
"He knocked tyrants off their high horses, pulled victims out of the mud." - Luke 1:52, The Message |
1 comment:
loved reading this today too!
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