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Finding sanctuary

Being fully seen and fully known

Sanctuary

Masks are on my mind.  The masks we wear to protect and love our neighbors in the midst of a pandemic. The masks that my children are looking to purchase for Halloween costumes. The masks that we often find ourselves wearing as we try to make sure we “keep it all together.”

Masks serve a purpose whether it be protection from aerosols, the “ticket” to get candy at the neighbor’s house, or a tool to help us “save face.”

However, no one can wear a mask 24-7.  Many of us know the relief we feel when we get in our vehicle, our dorm room, or our home and can finally take the mask off.  My kids often don’t last all of trick-or-treating with their masks on. The masks we wear to try to prove to ourselves and the world that we “have it all together” can become a heavy weight to bear. 

One of my favorite stories in scripture comes from John chapter 4. In this story Jesus encounters a Samaritan woman at the town’s well. There are many reasons this was an unusual encounter; to start, it was strange for a man to be engaging a woman, especially a Jewish man and a Samaritan woman. Noon would not be the typical time a person would go to the well to draw water. Jesus reveals that he sees and knows this woman’s story, that she has no husband and in fact has had five husbands and the man she is living with now is not her husband. When I was an adolescent, this woman was often portrayed to me as “loose,” a “slut,” and “unclean” and that Jesus was making her repent of her sinful behavior. Yet, there is more to this story. In those days a woman would not have been able to leave a husband.  For her to have had five husbands meant that they would have either had to die or divorce her because of something like infertility. The shame she carries may come from others looking at her with pity or because society sees no value for her.  Yet Jesus sees her. He asks her for water. Jesus offers her living water. At the end of the exchange she leaves her water jug and goes into the community, proclaiming that she has met the Messiah, and many came to believe in Jesus because of her testimony. The power of being seen and known helps you to believe that you are loved.

Unfortunately, the power of being fully seen is often lost in our communities of faith.  The pressures we feel to “have it all together” often follows us into our church buildings, Bible studies, and small groups. We make sure we are dressed in our “Sunday best,” have the correct “Sunday school answer,” and try to wear a mask so no one will question our faith.  

The funny thing is that faith is not the absence of questions or doubt, but faith is the courage to be authentic — doubts and all — and to trust that God is present in that space. Our prayer at the Chapel is that you might find a place that you can come and be fully seen and known. That in the midst of pressures, doubts, and stress that it may be a place of sanctuary where you can meet Christ, be filled, and share that love with others.

Dcs. Kristin

Oct. 21, 2020

Pastor Jim and Deaconess Kristin take turns writing weekly devotions for the Chapel of the Resurrection.