by Serena S. Sellers
There is no denying that there is joy in
the gospel, But sometimes I am surprised by
how hard it is to live in the gap between
the promise and the perfection. There are
times when, despite the waters of my baptism
behind me and the promise of the Reign of
God before me, I find myself standing in a
place that seems dry and lifeless. On the
evening news, I hear that once again, someone has blown
himself up in the midst of a crowd. I hear
the word cancer and the name of a good
friend in the same sentence. There are arid
valleys everywhere. Sometimes the desert is
even in my own heart, when I feel the weight
of all those things that I have done and
those I have left undone.
I want to sparkle, drenched with
baptismal waters, but sometimes there is
barely enough love and mercy around to
dampen my parched lips. I even begin to
wonder if the flood of grace and joy that I
remember and yearn for was nothing more than
a mirage. Words of encouragement and
promises of peace taste like dust in my
mouth.
Ezekiel was transported in a vision to a
valley of dry bones (Ezekiel 37:1–14). These
were the dry bones of the house of Israel,
the bones of people who had given up hope
even in God. The Israelites had been
defeated by foreign armies and carried off
in chains to slavery in Assyria and
Babylonia. They had called upon God, but God
did not save them from their enemies. They were no longer able even to
dream of being released from slavery. They
became hope less, without a future, like old
dry bones. In the midst of this despair,
Ezekiel had a vision. He found himself in a
valley of dry bones, much like the dry,
hopeless places in our own world. What could
he do? What can any of us do in the face of
such hopelessness?
Dry fear
I went to see Russ soon after he was
diagnosed with ALS, Lou Gehrig’s disease. I
didn’t know what I would say or what I would
do. I thought that as a pastor I should
somehow know the right word of hope or help,
but I had nothing. Russ was a construction
worker. He hadn’t ever been an introspective
sort; Russ would be the first to tell you he
was a doer, not a thinker. His great
strength had served him well over the
years — he’d played sports with his kids,
lifted, carried, balanced, and hammered on
the job, and brought home the bacon for his
family. Now, in the prime of his life, a few
clumsy moments on the worksite had led to a
diagnosis. He had an incurable disease that
would inevitably lead to a wasting away of
that great physical strength and agility. He
would lose the ability to move first his
voluntary muscles, and then his involuntary
muscles. Finally he would not have the
strength to breathe, or even pump blood with
his own heart. There is no treatment. There
is no cure.
I was actually afraid when I visited Russ
in those first months after his diagnosis.
He wanted to know why this had happened to
him, what he could have possibly done to
deserve such an awful fate. My feeble
attempts at pastoral care were entirely
inadequate. He was depressed at first, and I
told myself that a day was surely coming
when Russ would get angry. Angry at the
doctors, angry at his body, angry at God,
angry at me. I dreaded that day, because
despite the clumsiness that came with the
onset of his illness, he remained tall,
strong, and muscular. I believed that I was
afraid of his anger.
Russ’s decline was surprisingly rapid.
Even as his physical presence was
drastically diminished, I discovered that my
fear was as strong as ever, maybe stronger.
I came to realize that I wasn’t really
afraid of Russ’s emotions; it was my own
helplessness and ineptitude that frightened
me. I was never more terrified than the day
I went to see him in intensive care, when he
could no longer stand or walk, and even
speech was too difficult. Russ communicated
by pointing to letters on a card, slowly
spelling out words. I tried to imagine the
depths of his frustration, and it scared me.
What hope did I have to offer him?
New life
In the valley, the voice of God asks
Ezekiel a question: "Mortal, can these bones
live?" Ezekiel’s answer is much more honest
and more faithful than anything I imagine I
might say. Ezekiel answers, "Not by anything
that I can do, God." What could any mortal
do in this valley of death? Yet he has faith
enough to add, "You know, Lord." Ezekiel
doesn’t stay focused on what he can’t do but
leaves room in his reply for what God can
do, if God chooses. After all, hadn’t God
started with the clay of the ground and
breathed the first human beings into life?
Bones would be a head start. "You know,
Lord."
God does choose to bring life to these
dry bones, but he doesn’t breathe life into
them in the way that he inspired the first
people of his creation. He gives Ezekiel a
job, work to do in this life–giving moment.
God says, "You prophesy to these bones, you
tell them what I am going to do, that I will
draw them together into skeletons, that I
will lay sinew on them, that I will bring
muscle and flesh upon them."
When Ezekiel speaks the word of the Lord,
it is done as if the Lord himself had spoken
that word. The bones rattle and the sinew
and muscle are laid on. Now Ezekiel faces
the sea of still bodies and God says,
"Prophesy to the breath." Ezekiel dares to
obey and calls to the wind from every
direction to come and fill these bodies with
life. Ezekiel cannot cause this to happen
himself, but God can cause this to happen
through Ezekiel’s call to the wind. The
winds hear and obey the word of the Lord
spoken by Ezekiel, and there stand a
multitude of living, breathing people of
God.
We see dry bones, and more often than
not, we try to get past them as quickly as
we can — we cannot bear to stay and watch. But
sometimes, people of God, we stand in God’s
presence and we realize what the power of
God can do.
Hope in the valleys
The nurses had supplied Russ with a
letter board. This board had letters,
numbers, and short words that Russ could
point at to communicate. It was a slow and
tedious process. At first his family and I
would try to guess the word after the first
few letters, but gradually we came to
appreciate the holiness of waiting for Russ
to make himself clear.
The first thing Russ spelled to me that
day was, "I am so grateful." I was immensely
relieved that he was glad to see me. I said,
"Oh, Russ, I am glad to come and visit." He
responded without hesitation, practically
stabbing the board, "No, not for you, for
this." I looked, expecting him to point at
something that pleased him, maybe the Bible
on tape, or the bulletin that we sent each
week, or a devotional booklet, but his hands
were still. Seeing my puzzled look, Russ
painstakingly spelled, "A L S." I was more
puzzled than ever. "I am loved. You all take
care of everything. My family, the doctors,
the church, you take care of me."
I was flabbergasted. I thought about this
man who had always taken care of other
people and now, for the first time in his
life, was helpless. Rather than feeling
inadequate because of his limitations, or
frustrated by his losses, he was grateful
for what he had gained. Russ discovered that
he didn’t have to worry: Everything he
needed was lovingly given by those around
him. They loved him more than he had ever
imagined possible, and without any other
options, he chose to bask in that love, to
let it wash over him and affirm him, as he
watched his body deteriorate.
Russ reached for the board again, "First
I was afraid, but now I am grateful. My body
is going but my mind is not. I have nothing
to do. I have time to pray; I never prayed
much. Now I pray 15 hours a day. I’m making
up for lost time. I’ve been waiting to tell
you. I am so grateful."
I had thought I was coming to a valley of
dry bones, as if there was nothing in that
hospital room but a dying man. I felt
inadequate because I could not fix what was
broken. It had never occurred to me, that
through brokenness, God could make a man
more whole. Russ’s mouth could no longer
form words, but his eyes were smiling.
While I feared to approach dry bones, I
found a room full of resurrection and new
life. Even in his dying, all of us who
watched Russ waste away to a skin–encased
skeleton, saw that the resurrection was not
waiting for his death but was emerging in
the midst of the life he was still living.
Like Ezekiel, we see a valley of dry
bones, but God calls all of us, all of God’s
church, to trust God’s power, to be the ones
who will stand in the dry and terrifying
places and be the voice that will speak
God’s words of life and hope.
These are not our words of power, but
God’s word. God is not counting on us to
change anything, but is inviting us to be
part of the transformation that God is doing
in this world, to bring what was dry and
dead into life.
I was humbled by Russ. He reminded me
that there is no point in trying to provide
comfort and hope on my own. I have nothing
to offer. He also taught me not to fear the
valleys. It is there that God may use me,
and simply by being there, I may be honored
to bear joyful witness to the whisper of the
wind on dry bones.
The Rev. Serena S. Sellers is assistant
to the bishop for connections and resources
in the Southeastern Pennsylvania Synod of
the ELCA. She is the mother of three and is
married to the Rev. Raymond Miller. They
live in Quakertown, Pa.
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