Tuesday, October 22, 2019

#metoo Prayer Crafted by Rev. Debra McKnight

God Beyond all Face and Form

You gift us with stories, ferrous and faithful, stories that shine a light on the depth of human suffering and inhumanity. The stories of bodies broken, battered used and owned, grabbed without consent, traded, bartered and bought as objects, betrayal by family, stranger and friend. 

These stories terrify us, we hate to read them, especially in church. 
But they are there. Brave ones shouting, whispering just between the printed lines, 
      witnessing, raging “ME Too.”
      Tamar and Hagar
      David’s Daughter and Israel’s son, both had tunics, fit for a princess, torn
the concubines, the slaves, 
      the prisoners and captives
      and the daughters all of them unnamed.

They are there, witnessing to humanities great sin, dismissed quietly 
     Powerful women, simplified by history, brought down in size,
         Mary the quiet, downward glancing saint and 
             Eve the wild haired sinner hardly covering her breasts, 
sculpted and re-sculpted  in word and stone 
             over 2000 years of the patriarchy’s fearful gaze, 
proclaiming just how good girls ought to look and behave.

But Mary…You give us Mary and she sings anyway, 
      sings of God lifting up the lowly and throwing the mighty from their throne. 
“Times Up” she cries in an ancient song, “my soul magnifies the Lord.”
              Vashti, Queen of self possession roars, “no,” 
                  times up on kings controlling, demanding, deciding what my body is for.
The Woman at the well preaches times up on the old ways, we are filled with the water of life
       Times up on crumbs from the master's table and slurs dismissing our humanity
Times up on sacrificing bodies with Jephthah’s Daughter we dance in defiance.
Times up on God only looking like “He.”

We remember the pain of me too, past and present.
But the future must look differently, times up for the epidemic of inhumanity. 
Our hands are made for helping, 
our hearts are made for loving, 
           our bodies are sacred and our dreams are worthy of living, 
               we gather witness to our resurrection faith, Love making all things new.
God’s love creates us brave, Jesus teaches to turn the tables for change 
              and the Spirit calls us to rise for we are fearfully and wonderfully made. 
God you give us stories, 
        people of faith to guide our path as we write our own verse in creation's eternal song.
Times up on false humility and quiet little women in church, 
      Deborah and Lydia lead with wisdom and courage and grace.
Times up on ‘cat fights’ and old narratives; girls support girls, we celebrate our strengths, 
      Mary and Martha both have our back.
Times up on the vulnerable going it alone, Ruth taught us to stand side by side,
      no matter how challenging the road. 
Times up on the glass ceiling, Mary Magdalene calls us into the mix, finding the funding, proclaiming the truth and crushing the patriarchy, 
      so all, all people
          he, she and they, can be free.  
Let’s do this. And all God’s people said, Amen.

Princess Dresses and Hardened Hearts


Princess Dresses and Hardened Hearts
By Rev. Debra McKnight 

We know this story about Joseph and his tunic, sometimes it is translated as a coat of many colors and occasionally it’s technicolor and dreamy. The translation is important and the word is rare because its not just any robe with long sleeves. The other place this language resonates is with Tamar, King David’s beautiful daughter. She is wearing the ornate, long sleeve tunic reserved for the unmarried princess and, like Jospeh, her dress ends up torn. But the dress gives us some context the translation doesn’t offer on the surface. We can imagine the setting of Jospeh. Israel, who once went by Jacob, loves Jospeh most of all, he is the clear favorite…annoying if you are one of his big brothers. The youngest son pestering all the others, arrogant and bold, dreaming big dreams and then telling his big hulking brothers that in his dreams they all bow down to him…super annoying. The baby of the family who starts giving bad reports on his brothers while they are working in the field…beyond annoying. We can understand how they feel (even if most of the time we think we are probably everyone’s favorite child). Joseph’s brothers annoyance grows into something ugly and hateful. We can imagine the moment their little brother, the tattletale dreamer, dressed like a Princess and practically floating in the field while they toil. Suddenly their hate-filled hearts take action and they attack their brother, selling him into slavery, removing him from everyone he knows, stealing his ability to control his own future and his own being and destroying the princess dress their father had given to Joseph.

Tamar’s dress is torn just like Joseph’s and her betrayal is rather like his; also the work of her brothers. In 2 Samuel 13, we find Tamar’s story even if we don’t always find her voice. Tamar is the beautiful daughter of Israel’s most powerful king, David. The Bible says her brother, her half brother falls in love with her. Chapter 13: 1b-2 says:

David’s son Absalom had a beautiful sister whose name was Tamar; and David’s son Amnon fell in love with her. 2Amnon was so tormented that he made himself ill because of his sister Tamar, for she was a virgin and it seemed impossible to Amnon to do anything to her.

Of course while love may be an accurate translation it is a terrible use of the word. A better word might note Amnon’s desire to possess Tamar, control her, have her, “do a thing to her” - and that is not love. Unfortunately, Amnon has the worst kind of  BRO. His friend is a “crafty man” and he concocted a plan so the first born, most favorite son of David can get what he wants. “Tell the king you are sick,” he says, “and that the only thing that will give you comfort is your sister Tamar making you cakes…in your room” (that is my retelling…you can read all of it in 1 Samuel 13).  King David does not sense anything dangerous in this plan and he, complacent in want happens next, sends his daughter like prey to the predators. The story continues with Tamar, vulnerable in the room of her half-bother, making cakes when he attacks her. She tries to reason with him in verses 12 and 13.


12She answered him, ‘No, my brother, do not force me; for such a thing is not done in Israel; do not do anything so vile! 13As for me, where could I carry my shame? And as for you, you would be as one of the scoundrels in Israel. Now therefore, I beg you, speak to the king; for he will not withhold me from you.’


He refuses to listen to her voice. She knows her role in the patriarchy. As a beautiful daughter of a powerful king, she is supposed to marry well for the good of the whole people and perhaps to her own advantage. Her role is to make a new trade alliance and ensure peace and even with all of that, she knows that if her brother asks their father, he will forgo the diplomacy and give her to Amnon in marriage. He refuses and attacks her. Then the second sin - filled with shame, he shuts her out. It is the custom that the assault victim becomes the wife of the assailant; he has taken her value and she cannot marry anyone else. As Amnon shuts her out, she in grief rents her dress and cries out loud. Her bother, Absalom, takes her into his household and carries her pain.

The rest of the story is the story of the men. Tamar is a desolate woman and the narrative is the intrigue of the men. Tamar’s brother begins to hate, to concoct a plan to kill his brother in revenge (which also, just incidentally, places him next in line for David’s throne). David for his part grieves these but never grieves for his daughter. He doesn’t take her into his household, which he could have (and I imagine should have). The greatest King in Israel’s history proves to be among the worst. 

These are the stories we inherit, and even as we can say thank God we don’t have something so bad today, the truth is we continue these systems of injustice. Statistics speak of people believing they are entitled to the bodies and well-being of others, campuses are dangerous places, human trafficking plagues every zip code, and domestic violence remains ever-present. Court cases speak just like David did, when Judges refuse to punish a young man like Brock Turner for assault because one mistake shouldn’t have such a big impact on his promising future. We witnessed the election of a man known for “locker room” talk and haven’t done much to change the narratives in locker rooms. The church, the state, and every institution struggles in this era of change and truth telling; this season of Me Too and Times Up. But thank God we are in a season of change.

Every time there is a season of change, big change, big shifts, there is this other reality - hearts are hardened. The archetype of this might be Pharaoh. When the people of Israel seek their freedom from slavery and escape from genocide, Pharaoh’s heart becomes hardened, epically. It happens when Jesus engages people with his message of abundance and they don’t want to relax their tight grasps. It happens when the early faithful live a different way and confront the systems of oppression by their very presence…hearts get hardened. Yesterday we witnessed what hard hearts look like, as protestors gathered outside because a young sacred soul in a princess dress was reading books about love to children in this sanctuary. Then a few of them, larger men, stomping around in boots with an air of hate and fear seeking to intimidate, disrupted the space and shouted two expletives right here in front of the very children their signs said they wanted to protect. It was hard to watch. Fortunately, the kids were so focused on the book they didn’t seem to notice; and to my great gratitude, our downtown police officers came quick to help clarify the boundaries that can make our space safe. Their hearts were hardened, impenetrable to conversation or reason or actual statistics or the sweetness of the stories or the beauty of the reader and her dress. The ugly moment did not stand without response, which brings me to the gift of community. Five people rose to the occasion, countering the voice of hostility, a voice of love and welcome outside. And inside, parents and friends of the Abbey stayed calm and loving and protective all at once. 

It would be easier to let our hearts become hard. To grow resentment from the hurt and hate of these men and how they violated, even if it was for just a moment, this sacred space. But I think that is the very call of our faith, to keep our hearts tender and open in the face of every system and sin that makes it so reasonable to armor up. So we do the things that give us courage and resilience and hope. We gather others to stand with in the hard spaces, we get a little closer and lean in to the story of love. We take action to make change, change of hearts, change of laws, change all the way around. When we were wrapping up, guests in the room named their gratitude for what they had just witnessed. They witnessed hospitality at our coffee bar even in the face of hostility. They witnessed resistance that was peaceful and powerful. They hugged me in gratitude for the work we are doing. One young man shared that he felt so embarrassed to be studying the Bible, those folks didn’t represent him or the Bible and he would be back next time to stand up outside with us. Showing up matters. It makes all the difference. We must do the things that keep our hearts open and fueled with resilience, that’s why we show up on Sunday. That’s why we worship and sing songs. That’s why we study the Bible and the prophets crying out for change. That’s why we go deep in small groups and hold the little ones a little closer during story time. 

We don’t know what happened to Tamar. Her story gets lost to history, but we can read between the ink because Tamar the desolate woman is not the last time she is named. She is named again in 1 Chronicles 3:9 when Israel is claiming its history and naming all the men, the who’s-who of David’s sons, this is how it ends. 

1 Chronicles 3.9:
All these were David’s sons, besides the sons of the concubines; and Tamar was their sister.

I am fairly sure that in a palace of wives and concubines that Tamar was not the only baby girl. Her story must have lived beyond the label of desolation. Her name places the sin of her family before us, it holds the brokenness of the system up to the light and it honors her resilience. We don’t know the story but we know a truly desolate women is not going to be named…she is going to slip into the background.  She is a name of resilience; I think that is why her brother names his own daughter after Tamar. Joseph is too, his presence names his family’s sin and the systems of brokenness and he rises above, resilient in the face of every reason to harden his heart and give up hope in humanity. Joseph’s story is one of resilience and even reconciliation. We inherit incredible stories. They are terrible and real, they are hard to read and they are filled with reasons to give up, but faith is about staying in and staying present. Faith is about tender, loving, open hearts. 

When Lila (my six year old daughter) and I were driving home after the disruptive protesters were outside, she asked some questions. I reminded her what I had shared with all of the children and families - that sometimes grownups are scared and when we are scared or angry we don’t usually make good choices. She started singing a hymn, “We Are Called to act with justice. We are called to love tenderly…” she knows this hymn because of this sacred place. This is part of what we do here, to seed our souls with resilience and courage. 

Let’s sing. Let’s pray. Let’s be present and by God, lets make a better way.

Amen. 

Monday, October 14, 2019

You are Loved, You are Valid, You are Supported by Torie Walenz

Hello everyone! Happy belated national coming out day. My name is Torie for those of you who don’t know me, I am a barista here at Urban Abbey but I wear many hats. I am also a program manager at the Office of Civic & Social Responsibility, an intern at Omaha Girls Rock, and the Director of the Queer & Trans Services student agency at UNO. So needless to say, I know a lot of queer people and have been subject to many a “coming out”. 

My own story came in 2018 when I organized the largest queer college conference in the nation (all while being straight), my rugby team won state, and I came out for the first time!

National Coming Out Day, to me, is a message to queer folks, in & out of the closet, that they are loved, they are valid, and that they are supported. 

In 1988 it was created to celebrate those who could visibly come out, and to support those who couldn’t.

For this reason, to me, National Coming Out Day is also a reminder that “coming out” and self discovery is not just a one-time event. You don’t just go “Hey Mom! I’m gay! What’s for dinner?” and that’s it, it’s over. 

Since I was born it was assumed I was straight. Since my first time coming out, every conversation, every outfit, every haircut I have is part of “coming out”. This is true for most every queer person. It's a process, an invitation into someone’s self, and it helps to have support and allies to know you are not alone. That’s what this day is all about- showing that support. 

So, today (and everyday) I challenge you to assume everyone you meet is queer unless proven otherwise.

10 Things I Hate About You by Maris Kingfisher


For me, “coming out” was a painful experience with a common theme of betrayal, both blatant and complicit.

I moved to Nebraska when I was 18 to serve in a Christian Leadership program.  I didn’t know anyone and I quickly became reliant on the church for a sense of direction and purpose for my life. 

I invested my time, money, and focus into this church for over 10 years; doing everything from “cleaning ministry” to preaching.  This church was my community, my family, my home.

Here is just one example of blatant and complicit betrayal:  The summer before I “came out,” I led worship at a camp for foster kids for the second year in a row.  I was asked to come back the next year because I was “anointed, called by God, and could hear the voice of God.”

However, when I came out, leadership used church policy to disqualify, discredit, and discard me from participating and associating in ministry and leadership.  And when I told my best friend, she told me that I was “no better than a pedophile, a pervert in God’s eyes.”  Needless to say, that friendship is over.

Due to countless situations such as these, I have a complicated relationship with the church, with religion, and with identifying as a Christian.  I struggled to articulate my thoughts on “coming out” and the damage done by the church, so I borrowed some verbiage from a poem that inspired me in my younger years, (written by Katarina Stratford about Patrick Verona) from the 1999 film: 10 Things I Hate About You.

I hate the way you talk to me
I hate the way you stare
I hate how you discredited me AND
How you say you care.

I hate the way you treated me
I hate it that you lie
I hate that you made me cry
BUT MOST OF ALL, I hate the way I don’t hate you,
not even a little bit, not even at all.

You see, despite your cruel words and all your wrong deeds, Ohana means family, family means no one gets left behind or forgotten.  I hope one day you will join the Right side of history and choose to Truly love unconditionally.

In closing, until homophobes stop catastrophizing consensual love between adults, we will continue to celebrate National Coming Out Day.

Cheers! 

Coming Into Authenticity by Sangeetha Kumar


Thank you, Urban Abbey family and friends, for allowing me to share a small piece of my story today. Here is what coming out means to me and I hope there is something in here that can inspire you to live more fully as you.
I love scars. Anyone here have scars? Scars say that you’ve faced danger and lived to tell about it. Scars show the reality of healing. Scars tell a story, and in the end, scars don’t lie. Scars are, in essence, authentic. I’m here today to talk with you about being your authentic self. I laugh at myself when saying that aloud as I am still trying to figure that out some days! But in all seriousness, I do know a bit about trying to be, act and live authentically. The hard part is that almost always does it involve getting scraped up, bloodied, bruised and scarred, proverbially that is, hopefully. Living authentically means becoming bed fellows with pain. So where is the buy-in? Why on earth should anyone strive to become authentic? Why should a person come out?  I guess that is what I am attempting to answer today.
Brene’ Brown is another one of my favorite authors and speakers. Many in this room know her. She is my social work hero.  She found through her research that the only difference between people who felt a deep sense of love and belonging and those who didn’t was that the other group believed they were worthy of love and belonging; therefore felt it. That belief alone changed the course of their life, for if they felt loved, they felt secure. And if they felt secure, they could be vulnerable, even amid pain, hardship and life struggles. Vulnerability is the heart and soul of authenticity. However, it is also where the pain (and shame) enters. This is the hardest part of coming out, in my opinion. This is the point where people come to a crossroad. Do I stay and face this pain? Work through it? Or do I run, hide and continue to wear this mask? Ultimately, the choice is yours.
So what do I know about being authentic, you might ask? Well, my authentic-self and my, let’s say, conditioned-self had to battle it out a few years ago.  A battle makes it sound pretty, actually.  It was more like they had to beat the crap out of each other every day for the sake of survival.  To summarize a very long story, let me just say that a few short years ago I entered into what became the most painful years of my life. And actually, in one year, ONE year, the following happened:  divorce after a 14 year relationship, coming out as bisexual, losing family and friends because of coming out, changing churches, changing jobs, changing names, changing families, changing pets, moving houses and unexpectedly losing my father to a toxic medication reaction just after my parents had moved 3000 miles across the country to be with their grandchildren. All true. (Insert explicative of your choice here!) Just one of those things is traumatic enough to go through, yet alone all of this in one year. The processing of those events took years to work through and I am still working through them to this day. Coming out for me was not an empowering process. It was painful and scary and filled with rejection. And yet, I found love in the strangest and most unexpected ways—Urban Abbey was actually one of those ways! People have asked me how I got through, or at the time, were getting through, and I would always say because of my strong faith, my family and friends.  That’s true. But looking back, I discounted something in that process.  I discounted me—or rather God working through me at the time. At each turning point in those years, I had to face my worst fears, I had to choose to be vulnerable or not, and I had to persevere.  Every day was painful. It was grueling and it was bloody. I developed wounds and scars. I cried a lot and I even had days where I didn’t think I could go on living. But something surprising happened too. Every day that I chose to get up, to keep going, to keep fighting for me, layers fell off, facades shattered, and a beautiful, broken vulnerability started to emerge. This is also known as the “ain’t nobody got time” metamorphosis.  I became the most real version of myself that I had ever been.  I was becoming authentic.
We, in the Midwest, see the ever-changing Nature in our weather, don’t we? (Aka. Winter sucks!) There isn’t a thing in nature that stays the same. Ever. Yet, we, in our humanity, fight that change constantly. We get whiny when someone “moved our cheese” or when someone loaded the dishwasher “wrong”. If changing those trivial items upsets us so, imagine the actual pain our souls experience when something huge and life-altering happens? Scripture says, “the Holy Spirit prays for us with groaning that cannot be expressed in words.” (Romans 8:26). I believe that’s what happens when we are stripped to our core and cannot explain how we feel or think or even have the energy to get up the next day. Something inside our spirit changes—and God, intervenes in a way we cannot imagine. Soren Kierkegaard once wrote, “God creates everything out of nothing. And everything which God is to use, he first reduces to nothing.” This is where we find ourselves, where I found myself—at the foot of the Cross. The Cross re-creates. I experienced this and it changed me.  When your heart and soul experience the actual you it’s as if they are unleashed for the first time—to dance, to sing, to laugh, to be angry, to disagree, to agree, to be real—freely and fully.  Once that is experienced it is hard to go back any other way. It’s like everything is aligned and you are coming into your true self. You are no longer a false version of yourself.
At some point the pain will be over, the fear will be conquered (or at least lessened) and life will march forward into a new normal. So why should you buy in to being authentic? Why is coming out so important (or even supporting those who are)? Here is what I am learning for myself and want to pass on to others. Because you were created to be authentically YOU, not anyone else—to live your life, to touch the lives of others that only you can, to share the stories of your perseverance and your faith, to live in your own identity and your own soul, to step into the paths and purposes that are yours alone.  You being someone else will do the world no good. Coming out is a process, a journey that takes time. I feel I am coming out over and over to every new person I encounter. It gets a bit easier over time but I still hold my breath each time waiting for a reaction of acceptance, ambivalence or rejection. Reflecting now, however, I guess I realize if I wanted a different life outcome, I needed to come out. And in the end, I am glad I had the courage to risk making a new scar and coming out as my authentic self. Thank you and God bless you.

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

Faith Brings Joy

Scripture: Romans 5:1-5
      1Therefore, having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, 2through whom also we have obtained our introduction by faith into this grace in which we stand; and we exult in hope of the glory of God. 3And not only this, but we also exult in our tribulations, knowing that tribulation brings about perseverance; 4and perseverance, proven character; and proven character, hope; 5and hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out within our hearts through the Holy Spirit who was given to us.

Sermon by Dr. Evelyn McKnight
THANK YOU for inviting me to speak today. Cancer touches so many people that I am honored to be the one invited to speak.

My CANCER JOURNEY started 19 years ago with breast cancer. There was a second occurrence one year later and then a diagnosis of Hepatitis C because the oncology nurse reused syringes during chemotherapy, egregious medical error. Then last year I was diagnosed with sarcoma of my right brachial plexus, which necessitated amputation of my right arm. The sarcoma was caused by excess radiation treatment of the breast cancer. Medical treatment is the reason I am still alive and I am grateful for my life. I am GRATEFUL FOR MY LIFE. I have seen my sons grow up and marry and father their own children. And now I'm eager to start retirement with my dear husband of 40 years. But medical error has also been a defining part of my journey.

Disclaimer: I have NEVER GIVEN A HOMILY BEFORE. But I’ve preached about medical error and patient safety to thousands of healthcare workers for the past 12 years so please forgive me if I slip into a rant about patient safety. Better yet, more than forgive me, please stop me and orient me back to my reflections on struggle and hope. Writing this homily has been very healing for me, and I want to have the full experience of preaching it.

We all have struggles. As the Buddhists say LIFE IS SUFFERING. You may not have cancer but whatever your trial, this is a day to honor it and see what it has to say to you.

I have a feeling that Paul never got the news that he had cancer, because I don’t think any cancer patient REJOICES AT THE START of their struggle. in my own experience, I have seen so much good come from my cancer and hepatitis C tribulations that now, from this perspective, I am grateful for the struggles.

Rather than rejoice, at first we have to grieve what we have lost. We have to send up our sighs, mourning and weeping in this valley of tears as my Catholic tradition describes. But it is the grief, the heaviness of the sorrow that breaks us open and allows in unmerited grace that transforms us into a better version of ourselves.

Our culture barely tolerates grief. What the culture says that life should be FUN, FAST AND EASY. Grief is not fun, fast or easy. So we may resist grieving and deny that we have lost something very important. Sometimes we confuse hope or encouragement with denial. Denial is not reality based whereas hope is based in reality,

I have watched a lot of YOUTUBE VIDEOS about limb loss and amputation. One channel that I came across was on cooking with one arm. In the opening lines of the video, the cook said, “I can do anything with one arm that I could with two arms.”

That is not true. It simply is not realistic.

The REALISTIC AND HOPEFUL STATEMENT is “I can do many things with one arm that I could with two. When I find something I can’t do I will either find a substitute activity or I will find someone to help me or I will decide i can do without.” One thing I gave up was playing the accordion. I shed a tear when I gave away my accordion although I think everyone else discretely rejoiced. But my niece took the accordion, and as a senior in college, she is teaching herself to play in her college apartment. So there is hope.

We may feel very alone and our grief. And even when we are surrounded by an outpouring of love from friends and family, we are still the one who is struggling with grief. But WE ARE NOT ALONE. We have a divine companion. My 99 year old mother died recently. Her name was Sophia, which is the Greek word for wisdom. One day I was stir-frying vegetables, chasing the skillet as it slid around the electric stovetop and feeling very frustrated. I felt her voice saying to me, “You can fill your head with thoughts of “I miss my arm so much,” and “This is so hard,” and “Life will never be the same.” Or you can be in the moment, and fill your head with thoughts of “The colors of the veggies are so pretty,” or “This smells delicious,” or “I can’t wait to taste this.” “You make the choice.’” Now my mother was very wise but I don’t think this guidance came solely from her. I think she was a channel for the Holy Spirit. As Paul said, “The love of God has been poured out within our hearts through the Holy Spirit who was given to us.” Hearing voices is not a common occurrence for me I don't want you think it is. And I have not heard her voice since that time. I think what allowed me to hear the Holy Spirit was the experience of being in grief. The vulnerability that comes through grief opened me up to the grace of wisdom.

Social scientist Brené Brown has STUDIED HOPE in controlled studies. She has confirmed what Paul said about hope in our reading. He said,"Tribulation brings about perseverance; 4and perseverance, proven character; and proven character, hope.”  Dr. Brown found that those who have the greatest hope have had the most struggle in their lives. They have developed a sense of agency--they know that they have done hard things in the past and believe they can do hard things going forward. This is the same for all of us--we are up to the challenge.

So, whatever your tribulation, I urge you to take some time to TAKE IT ALL IN. Recall the grief, remember the comfort and wisdom of others, and acknowledge the growth that you have made because of it. Sit with all of it for a while and see where it leads you. I believe that exercise will bring you hope. And hope does not disappoint.