Disciple Accomplice
in a consecrated conspiracy by Ken Sehested
I was a senior in high school when it happened. It was our first football game
of the season, and we were playing New Iberia, not far from Avery Island where
Tabasco hot sauce is made, 90 miles or so from home in Houma, Louisiana, southwest
of New Orleans. The year 1968 is now, 30-plus year's hence, a metaphor for a whole
new reality for my reading of history: assassinations, civil unrest and troops
in the streets both here and abroad.
Back then, though, I was a star athlete and a traveling youth evangelist.
Headline news failed to factor into my world view, not so much because of my age
as because of my piety.
I regained consciousness at half-time, sitting on the bench at my locker, head
in hands, my thumb curled around the face-mask of my helmet. A blow to the head
had knocked me silly sometime during the first half of the game, but I was still
upright. As my teammates loitered about the locker room -- sipping the sticky
sweet beverage designed to maximize energy and rehydration, some retaping ankles
or hands, complaining in small huddles about busted plays and brutal humidity
-- my rattled brain began to regain its composure.
"You gonna be okay?" said a voice from behind. I mumbled something-or-other, just
enough to dispense with the distraction. My mind was intensely occupied, on something
distant and obscure, but strangely compelling. When the fog finally lifted, I
found myself quoting, over and over again, very much like a mantra, the words
from John 3:16 -- the sine qua non of evangelical Christian preaching texts, which
begins: "For God so loved the world ..."
"IF ANY WANT
TO BECOME MY FOLLOWERS, LET THEM DENY THEMSELVES AND TAKE UP THEIR CROSS,
AND FOLLOW ME."
MARK 8:34
Although I did not know her work, novelist
Flannery O'Connor's paraphrase of another text from John's Gospel would later
become my all-time favorite and would describe my spiritual journey, my intense
desire to be a disciple of Jesus, beginning with my preadolescent baptism, through
the momentous and genuinely mystical experience which overtook me in my early
teens, all the way through the years of theological dissonance, deconstruction
and reconstruction of young adulthood. "You shall know the truth," O'Connor wrote,
"and the truth will make you odd."
There was a time when my spiritual journey was characterized by a profound sense
of schizophrenia. Who was that person, sharing my name, pictured in that hometown
newspaper article headlined "FUTURE EVANGELIST"? By then I was caught up in a
barely-secret cynicism, my inherited faith quickly dissipating and emerging new
faith still en utero. My own personal "sacred canopy" was coming apart -- foundations
shaking, as Bro. Tillich would say -- and instinctively I read through the book
of Job, slowly and deliberately, during breaks between classes, at lunchtime and
during study hall.
I felt destined to be numbered among the damned; but regardless the cost I stubbornly
refused to grovel before a gangster god or prostrate myself on an altar festering
with pompous religious posturing.
My new-born faith would come with much labor, after an emotionally-panicked transition
-- something akin to the fear felt by all childbearers as the birth canal's trauma
threatens to halt the beat of one, if not both, monitored hearts.
Like Job, however, I was caught up in a whirlwind of sorts. Part of the joyful
surprise on the other side of that rebirth was sight of the bridge which connected
my present to my past journey of faith. However crudely conceived ("We don't smoke
and we don't chew, and we don't go with the girls that do"), at the core of my
earlier faith was the credo that belief could get you in trouble (or at least
make you "odd"). And that core remained, intact, sharper than ever.
A favorite hymn from my earlier years was an old Gospel tune, "This World Is Not
My Home," a song I had come to revile for its escapist piety. Now, suddenly, the
lyrics made sense, when "the world" is understood (as used in the New Testament)
not as creation but as the complex web of social, cultural, economic and political
arrangements which govern the earth.
Indeed, this present world is an inhospitable home to a vast array of creatures,
human and nonhuman alike; and they are, in fact, the ones signified by biblical
references to the "lost coin" and "lost sheep" and "the children" and "the poor,"
all those on whom God's attention is riveted: all those for whom "the world" has
no use, is abandoning, will "write off" as an acceptable loss.
"To choose the road to discipleship is to dispose oneself for a share in the cross,"
wrote the U.S. Roman Catholic Bishops in their 1984 "Challenge of Peace" statement.
"It is not enough to believe with one's mind; a Christian must also be a doer
of the word, a wayfarer with and a witness to Jesus."
Or, as Bonhoeffer would write from prison to his grandnephew on the occasion of
the latter's baptism: "With us thought was often the luxury of the onlooker; with
you it will be entirely subordinated to action." (The original German title of
Bonhoeffer's classic The Cost of Discipleship was Nachfolge Christi, literally
"Following Christ.") Faith, as Clarence Jordan would say, is not belief in spite
of the evidence, but life lived in scorn of the consequences.
The disciple is one who refuses "the luxury of the onlooker," but chooses, instead,
the role of accomplice in the consecrated conspiracy of life against the reign
of death. Those so immersed (sometimes literally by both water and by blood) discover
their buoyancy, not by the will to power or the weight of moral urgency, but by
the wonder of grace. As Matthew Fox has written, "The paranoid and the pious share
one thing in common: The former believe the deepest forces of the universe are
allied against them; the latter, on their behalf."
So rejoice, you "odd ones," even though you are reviled; for yours is the future
vowed in creation and vouchsafed in the new creation.
Ken Sehested is executive director of the Baptist Peace Fellowship of North America.
His football career finally ended, at Baylor University, after a fifth concussion.
But he can still quote a host of Bible verses by memory.