Frank’s 2004 Christmas Letter

My friend Frank in Kalamazoo always writes spiritually provocative letters at Christmas. This year he wonders what Jesus would have been like “if he had gotten to be seventy-five like me.”

Frank loves Christmas but complains that it doesn’t tell him much about being old. Of the beginnings of life, this event speaks eloquently. It celebrates important things, he says, like poverty and smallness. And it lifts up important people, not CEOs, but shepherds and the Magi from the East.

But the gospels say precious little about old age, Frank regrets. “There are times,” he writes, “when I think one of the limitations of the gospels is that there is lots of good news for people up to about thirty, but not much for the geezers.”

This generalization may be true by and large; however, one of the most beautiful passages in the gospels is surely St. Luke’s depiction of the old people Simeon and Anna seeing the child Jesus and feeling fulfilled in their lives.    

My friend is sure that all people, even if they die young like Jesus, carry their beginnings and scars with them as they move through life. What he loves about growing old are the new challenges that come along, things that he never would have dreamed of when young.

For example, he has been learning about Chinese religion and Buddhism, only to be amazed at the connections with his own Christian tradition. He now wonders if there were more Messiahs than “my beloved Saviour, more than one person who saw the shallowness of great deeds and the depth of being true to yourself, deeds or no deeds.”

To his satisfaction, he also finds that women play a vital role in Chinese religion, the way they do in the Christian gospels. He takes note of the reality that, from Jesus’ day till ours, many Christians have been embarrassed to acknowledge this role.

When he was 30, Frank admits, he did not know about other great spiritual leaders who “saw some of the same deep things that are at the heart of my own Christianity.” This discovery makes him joyful as he realizes that his own people do not have a corner on holiness. Those others deserve his reverence because they, too, belong to the Kingdom of God that Jesus speaks of so frequently.

Working toward a fine frenzy of a conclusion, Frank speaks from his vantage point of oncoming old age:

“And so, sitting in this old bag of bones, I wish you all a joyful Christmas and I remind you and myself that these Ones who come from the East are part of the mysteries of Christmas, harbingers of later insights on the part of us who, when we were young, thought we were the sole possessors of holiness, salvation, and the Kingdom of God.”

Frank is clearly feeling his age, but he continues to strike me as more alive than a great many of the rest of us. His enthusiasm for the things of the spirit seems rarely to flag. Like everybody else, he has his down moments, but they invariably give way to new hope.

He also displays a remarkably affective relationship with Jesus, his Messiah. His words addressed to the Lord are often familiar and endearing. And Frank, despite his now advanced years, still regards himself as a work in progress. Seeing his life as open-ended, he looks forward toward continued discovery and spiritual adventure.

Reading his letter not only gladdens my heart but encourages me to live in the same spirit that he manifests. I admire the way he allows the mysteries of faith to suffuse his life. Pondering the events of sacred history, he draws from them food for his soul.

Another influence pushing him in the direction of joy is seeing his two sons living “the early years of their married lives, each with an altogether remarkable woman.” They also reside in Kalamazoo, a vicinity that much pleases Frank. And he also welcomes into retirement his own wife who has been a psychotherapist for almost 25 years.

For this old friend of mine, it all makes for a merry Christmas the joy of which he extends to me and all his other friends as well. This is an old fashioned letter that is good for the soul.

Richard Griffin

Frank Gross’ Problem With Xtmas

About Christmas, my friend Frank has only one problem. As he views it, this event tells us more about the beginnings of life than about the later stages.

Contemplating Christmas, my friend interprets it as saying something important about smallness and poverty, about what is truly important and what is not. “I love this feast,” he says, “but it doesn’t tell me much about being old.”

These themes emerge in Frank’s annual letter that he writes from Kalamazoo, where he lives with his wife Toni. With his recent birthday putting him at the three-quarters of a century mark, he ponders more and more what his advancing age means.

With typical provocativeness, Frank seems to hold it against Jesus that he died so young. “I am wondering what Jesus would have been like,” he writes, “if he had gotten to be seventy-five like me.” Of what he has learned in recent decades he says: “I didn’t know that when I was thirty and I don’t think Jesus did either.”

This issue reminds me of a passage in Fifth Business, a 1970 novel written by the late Canadian author Robertson Davies. His narrator meets a Jesuit scholar, Padre Ignacio Blazon, who has strong and hardly orthodox opinions about Jesus. Thay go like this:

“The older I grow, the less Christ’s teaching says to me. I am sometimes very conscious that I am following the path of a leader who died when He was less than half as old as I am now. I see and feel things that He never saw or felt. I know things He seems never to have known. Everybody wants a Christ for himself and those who think like him. Very well, am I at fault for wanting a Christ who will show me how to be an old man?”

My friend Frank would surely not go this far, nor in real life would any Jesuit I know. But Frank has raised a question worth thinking about: how does a person growing old learn from a spiritual tradition that puts emphasis on the young?

Or, as he puts it in his own distinctive language, “There are times when I think one of the limitations of the gospels is that there is lots of good news for people up to about thirty, but not much for the geezers.”

What Frank loves about growing older are the new insights and discoveries that open up to him. Broadening his experience to include his age peers, he says: “Our lives never cease having new challenges in them we never dreamed of and, if we live to be old, we can learn things we never could have when we were young.”

Specifically, he has been studying Chinese religion and Buddhism in recent years. After mentioning other findings, he writes: “It has blown me away to discover that the position of the feminine in Chinese religion is clearly more fundamental to human living than the stuff of us males.”

He also finds himself now wondering “if there are not more Messiahs than my own beloved Saviour, more than one person who saw the shallowness of great deeds and the depth of being true to yourself.”

He also has come to see how what he once considered exclusive spiritual gifts are actually shared by people outside his own tradition. Among the mysteries of Christmas for him now is “the later insight on the part of us who, when we were young, thought we were the sole possessors of holiness, salvation, and the Kingdom of God.”

Being able to raise questions and receive insights like this are among the gifts that bring this vibrant correspondent from Kalamazoo “real joy in being old.”

Also contributing much to this joy is his wife Toni who, in the same mail, announces her retirement after 25 years as a psychotherapist. She will soon leave her work “for purely personal, life-transforming reasons.” It sounds as if hers will be a retirement graced by further growth, like that of her husband’s.

Among his other blessings, Frank cites the proximity of his two sons. They are both in their early married years, “each with an altogether remarkable woman,” according to this devoted father-in-law.

For fear I make it seem that everything is always upbeat with my friend, he would be the first to correct this. He speaks of himself as filled with “wisdom and forgetfulness, thinking clearly one day only to have the next day finding me with a head full of sawdust.”  

Nonetheless, “sitting here in this old bag of bones,” Frank wishes all his friends a joyful Christmas. And so do I wish you, my readers who celebrate this day, a blessed Christmas, filled with the grace of the event. For those who celebrate other special days, let me wish you also the best of health, and prosperity both physical and spiritual.

Richard Griffin

Seeing More Deeply

The neurologist Oliver Sacks, in an essay reprinted in The Best American Spiritual Writing 2004, discusses various experiences of blindness. Some of those who have lost their sight (or who never had it in the first place) have found an amazing increase in the power of their other senses.

Sacks describes what happened to an Australian, John Hull, who became blind in middle age. He lost all visual memories and images, becoming like someone blind from birth.  

But, as if in compensation, Hull came to know, in time, a striking enhancement of other ways of experiencing reality. About this change Sacks says: “He seemed to regard this loss of visual imagery as a prerequisite for the full development, the heightening, of his other senses.”

His blindness came to transform the way he hears various sounds. For him, the impact of rain falling on different surfaces creates all kinds of auditory effects. Raindrops on the roof, for example, sound very different from raindrops  on trees or on pavements.. Before he became blind, John Hull, like most of us, did not notice the difference.

Typically, blind people’s sense of touch differs greatly from that of the ordinary sighted person. They use their hands to explore their environment, and learn a great deal about it

Smell is another sense that can be rendered more powerful by deprivation in one part of the brain. Dr. Sacks mentions another blind man who can recognize people by their smell, even detecting anxiety and tension in those who approach him. It seems as if a system of compensations is at work.

Lose your ability to see, and you may develop ways of making up for this loss. Perhaps this phenomenon renders it easier to understand why some blind people who have had their sight restored do not welcome returning to the world of the sighted.

Reading about these experiences, I came to draw two conclusions.

First, what gifts the five senses are! Being enabled to see, hear, smell, taste, and touch is a precious gift of God. Taking these powers for granted, as most of us do most of the time, is to underestimate the glory of being human.

Secondly, each one of these powers has much greater potential than we commonly realize.  Becoming more aware of the beauty of what we see, or the form, or the shape, or the color, is to increase appreciation of the world around us.

Empowered by this realization, I sometimes leave my house, resolved to see things anew. For a time, at least, the world takes on a splendor that is usually lost on dull old me. No one, of course, can keep this up for long; to try it would be to flirt with madness.

Too easily do we become dull to the sights and sounds of our environment To some extent, this is understandable: it is to protect ourselves from sensory overload. But ignoring the songs of the birds that perch in our trees and the beauty of the night sky exacts its price.

And surface often leads the way to depth. Creating one of my favorite poetic lines, Gerard Manley Hopkins writes, “There lives the dearest freshness deep down things.”

These reflections, in my mind, have a vital connection with Christmas. I see the birth of the Christ child as prompting a celebration of the senses.

It is a feast that calls contemplators to appreciate the light more deeply. This is the light that enlightens every person who comes into the world, as the beginning of John’s Gospel asserts. At Christmas, one can allow that light to suffuse one’s soul.

Paradoxically, the Christian tradition shows this Christmas light in the midst of darkness: the glory breaking on the shepherds’ night watch, the star shining in the east. It inspires attention and wonder.

In a season when commerce assails our senses with holiday sights and sounds, we can still recover the gift of perception, by appreciating darkness and silence. We can then recover the celebration of the light of Christmas, as well as the wonderful evocative odors of pine and balsam, the sounds of childrens’ voices, and the touch of a friend’s hand.

As Oliver Sachs learned, each sense is a gift in itself.

Richard Griffin

The Gap God Leaves

On a brilliant June morning, I departed from the cemetery along with a crowd of other mourners, leaving behind the body of my friend Bob. Since then, I have been thinking about Bob, his life and his death. That he died only a few weeks after discovering a fatal disease still shocks me and his many other friends. We had thought ourselves to have more time with him than that.

Understand that Bob and I were friends for 61 years, ever since we entered high school together. We had stayed in touch all during that time, bound as we were by ties of respect and affection. Also we shared spiritual values that became even more important as we aged.

I feel Bob to be still present to me despite his death, but I continually revolve in my mind and heart how that is true. In this contemplation, I have found help from Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the German Lutheran pastor who was executed by the Nazis in 1945.

In his Letters and Papers from Prison, Bonhoeffer wrote the following words to his wife: “Nothing can make up for the absence of someone whom we love, and it would be wrong to try to find a substitute; we must simply hold out and see it through.

Bonhoeffer continues: “That sounds very hard at first, but at the same time it is a great consolation, for the gap, as long as it remains unfilled, preserves the bonds between us. It is nonsense to say that God fills the gap; God doesn’t fill it, but on the contrary, keeps it empty and so helps us to keep alive our former communion with each other, even at the cost of pain.”

For me, the words carried a vital message as I thought about Bob.

I find at least two important ideas in this passage from the German theologian’s letters. First, that God does not fill the gap that is left in our hearts when a loved one dies. Asserting that God does so is a mistake; it would be bad theology and a misrepresentation of human life.

And, secondly, that God does us a favor in keeping that place empty. It’s God’s way of helping us preserve the bond with the one we love. At the cost of allowing us to feel pain, God lets us experience a vital absence.

This approach goes against conventional wisdom and the way we think and feel about death. Bonhoeffer’s message could make us think differently about people who have lost a friend to death. Of course, their feelings of loss will normally diminish in intensity over time, but these emotions can still serve as signs of spiritual value.

In this way, the absence turns into a kind of presence. We are continually reminded of our loved one, of that person’s place in our life. So long as the gap remains, we feel him or her to belong to us.

That is the way I am now feeling about my friend Bob. Though his bodily presence has disappeared, he remains present to me spiritually. Bonhoeffer is right: the gap abides and God is not taking it away.

Does Bob still feel that way about me?  This question brings us further into the realm of mystery. The very act of asking it plunges the questioner deeper into reality than we can handle.

Yes, I believe that my friend can still hold me in affection. Yet, I have no evidence for this nor do I want such proof. Rather, I leave it to the realm of hope rather than science. That is the way Bob would have approached the question, had I been the one to die first.

To me, Bob’s life was worth so much, was so precious that I cannot imagine it lost. The gap that I feel serves for me as testimony of my friend’s ongoing life. The convergence of faith, hope, and love that we shared suggests a communion of friendship that abides.

Richard Griffin

Coffe Hour as Ecclesial Reality

The coffee hour after church seems, on the surface, to be like any other kind of social gathering. The smell of freshly brewed coffee greets the arrival of guests. People enjoy finding doughnuts and pastries to munch on, as they drink their coffee, tea, or juice. It offers much small talk as those present discuss politics, sports, personalities and the other staples of conversation.

To me, however, this weekly event has a meaning that goes beyond mere socializing. I consider it part of the experience of church. It can be seen as an extension of what happens during the public worship that precedes it. Coffee hour and liturgy have something vital in common.

In my tradition at least, the worship of God does not establish merely a one-to-one relationship, me to God. Instead, it forms a group of people into a community of spirit. We pray, not simply as individuals, but as those who have a spiritual bond that ties us to one another.

When, at a point in the liturgy, the time comes to profess the faith, the phrase used is “We believe in one God.” These words do not provide any quarter for egoism, for concentration on the self, but rather they focus attention on the bonds that make us one.

What I love about the gathering at coffee is the variety of people present: children and grown-ups, young adults and the old, people of color and whites, those with disabilities and the able-bodied, those of modest incomes and the rich, the highly schooled and those of more modest education, all come to share experiences with one another.

This shows forth a microcosm of what church is meant to be. Ideally, at least, we come together without pretension, minus the titles and achievements that set us apart in so much of daily life. Here, by virtue of the spiritual bond that mysteriously works within our souls, we are one.

If yours is a spirituality of finding God in all things, then the coffee hour is a happening where you may make that discovery. A French-speaking friend likes to play on the name of a commercial coffee establishment down the street, by calling our gathering “Au Bon Dieu.” She does so lightheartedly but this fanciful name does point to the presence of God in our midst.

In talking to others in this setting, you discover something of their satisfactions and their struggles. You learn of personal breakthroughs but also of trials and reverses. At least sometimes, people reveal what the quality of the past week has been for them. You can identify with them in both the highs and lows of their lives.

Inevitably, this may sound like pressing the case. After all, some will say, it’s just a plain old assembly of people who wish to eat, drink, and talk. Looking for further meaning here seems to border on absurd exaggeration.

But this objection ignores the frame of reference established here. This gathering, after all, takes place just after the community has worshiped God by joining together in prayer, song, and sacred gesture. The bonds that tie the congregation together have been given expression once again, and people have come away from that experience at least virtually strengthened in their identity as members of the community of faith.

Welcoming newcomers, visitors, and those who have returned gives further meaning to this weekly event. It makes a difference to those unfamiliar with the community and the area to find themselves warmly greeted on arrival. To those of us already long on site, it can prove stimulating to get acquainted with new people with the perhaps unfamiliar experiences they bring.

The people who are obviously hurting often bring out warm-hearted responses from members of the community at coffee. Some members of the community suffer from psychic problems or physical disabilities. Being able to find help in the community, even if only in the form of a sympathetic conversion, can make a difference in their morale. Somebody cares.

The smell of coffee is not incense, to be sure, nor does the conversation amount to prayer. Nonetheless, this hour has a spiritual value that makes some people who cherish faith, and those seeking it, return again and again.

Richard Griffin

Rachel Encounter

Turning the pages of a large book on the store’s table, I suddenly saw a photo of a woman I had known for the previous four years. This photo was one of a series taken of employees at Harvard University, with which I have been long associated. All of them pictured there had also been interviewed and an edited version of what they said about themselves and their work was also published.

When I glanced at my friend Rachel’s text, I felt the blood rush to my forehead. I could not believe what I was reading. All of a sudden, my world felt turned upside down. She was telling everyone something important that I had never known: she used to be a man.

Yes, she was tall and her voice rather deep. These personal characteristics might have served as clues for me, but that she had ever been a he had never occurred to me. The disorientation that I suddenly experienced made me, for a time, lose my psychic bearings. How could I have been fooled like this, I wondered?

Part of what felt to me like deception came from my knowledge that she was the single mother of a young boy, admittedly adopted, but now become her own son. From time to time she would share with me details of her son’s behavior and problems. Without ever questioning her background as a mother, I just assumed her to have been always maternal.

This marked the first time I had actually known anyone who has changed genders. I had read about Christine Jorgenson and other pioneering people who had made the leap, but never had I actually met a person like them. To me, it seemed almost unbelievable that I had been blind to a matter of such vital moment.

Ironically, in her printed interview Rachel argued that changing genders was a matter of little importance. For her, going from being a man to being a woman counted for hardly anything surprising. Though she admitted having been the object of harassment at earlier workplaces, she felt herself to have carried off the transition rather easily.

For me, however, this transformation amounted to a gigantic event. It went against all my categories, especially those that defined what it was to be a woman and what it was to be a man. My spiritual tradition has always placed great emphasis on the differences between the sexes, starting with Adam and Eve in the garden. Though I have never been fundamentalist in my thinking, I could never slough off this distinction with abandon.

I resolved then and there to continue treating my friend with respect and affection. Admittedly, I had to go against immediate emotions that inclined me to change my approach to her. I felt almost queasy about contact with someone who now looked to me decidedly different.

Fortunately, these feelings had dissipated by the time I next saw her. It was different now, but not so as to harm our friendship. Something in my mental world had changed, but my behavior had not. In fact, my inner world had been enlarged, quite to my amazement.

Before this experience, I had already encountered changes in my notions of family and community. Considerable contact with gay and lesbian people had taught me not only the fact of sexual diversity but, to my surprise, it value. Among other experiences, belonging to a liturgical community where such people worshipped along with my family and me had led to greater understanding and acceptance. Once gay and lesbian weddings became legal in Massachusetts, I would take part as a guest and congratulate the same-sex spouses as I would more conventional partners.

Still, I felt myself changing radically under the pressure of these events. They went against so much of what I had taken as certain. My upbringing had been quite sheltered: until reaching my early twenties, almost incredibly I did not even know that homosexuality existed. Then, after finding out, I had no contact with anyone avowedly gay or lesbian and my theological studies emphasized the sinfulness of that situation.

For a parallel in psychic change, I cite the experience of astronomers. Until the year 1919, those scientists all thought there to be only one galaxy, our Milky Way. Since then, they have come to know that there are some 140 billion other galaxies in the universe! And the roster of their further discoveries goes on without end.

To have discovered their world to have been too small to an almost infinite degree must have come as a tremendous shock. But, they will have admitted, an exciting one as well. In this other sphere, I too now find excitement in discovering how much more diverse the world of human beings is than I ever imagined.

In late life, perhaps I can apply to myself what Hamlet said to his friend: “There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.”

Richard Griffin

Sunday Afternoon, 63 Years Ago

“Where were you on the afternoon of December 7, 1941?” This question, posed by the narrator of “I Can Hear It Now,” introduces the cataclysmic event that took place 63 years ago this week.

Once more I have listened to one of the old LP recordings that recalls this history and brings it back excitingly. “We interrupt this program to bring you a special bulletin,” the voice announces, sharing with the American people the grim news of the Japanese attack on Pear Harbor.

We also hear President Franklin Roosevelt speak to a joint session of congress on December 8th as he brands the day of the attack “a date that will live in infamy.” At the same time, he boldly predicts: “We will gain the inevitable triumph, so help us God.”

In answer to the question at the top of this column, I must reply: “In my room, banished there for bad behavior.” Then a 13-year-old adolescent, I was being punished by my father for an offence long since forgotten.

To console myself, I had turned on the radio and thus was the first in my family to hear the fateful news. Immediately I bolted out of banishment, ran downstairs and breathlessly announced the Pearl Harbor events to my parents. In the emotion of the moment my misbehavior appeared petty and I was free, my punishment forgotten.

My father, a writer for the Boston Post, realized at once the implications of the surprise attack. It would bring us into a new era of history and change the lives of all Americans. Following his lead, the mood of other family members turned somber as we envisioned the effects on us of our country being at war.

Roosevelt’s confidence on the next day improved the morale of just about everyone. However, most of us did not realize the extent of the destruction that rained down on the American fleet. It took boldness on Roosevelt’s part to predict victory when American military preparedness was so feeble. Then, a few weeks later, when we took on the other major powers in the Axis –  – Germany and Italy –  –  the challenge became even more daunting.

My age exempted me from the military service into which so many fellow Americans were drafted or enlisted. In any event, I would never have been accepted for the armed forces because of a disability dating from my birth. Thus my experience of war would remain second-hand, gained through the media (though we did not then use this word).

Habitually I would read with rabid interest newspaper accounts of the fighting in both the Pacific theater and the European. In addition I saw movies that presented the enemy in almost exclusively negative images.

I still remember pilots of the Japanese Zero fighter planes, grinning as they shot down American defenders. And the deadly comic portrait of Hitler as portrayed by Charlie Chaplin in The Great Dictator made an indelible impression on me.

Like almost all other Americans, I was wholeheartedly supportive of the war effort. Long after that war had ended, I discovered that my friend, the scholar Gordon Zahn, and some few others had registered as conscientious objectors and were confined to a camp in New Hampshire. But they would have struck me as weird in opposing a war that seemed amply justified.

Only much later, as an adult, did I develop a political consciousness that prepared me to take a critical view of some actions of our national government. That shift in awareness ranks as one of the most significant developments in my interior life.

Living in international communities was a chief factor in bringing about this transformation. My year in Wales with colleagues from a variety of European countries made me see my own country in a different perspective. Even more did the following year in Belgium where I studied with people from Africa, South America and other places.

Entering into their worldview, I came to evaluate the actions of the United States government more critically. That shift in perspective would become most evident during the Vietnam War. Like so many others, I felt stricken by the tragic mistakes of our leaders in that agonizing time of struggle.

Tracing the physical events in one’s life usually does not present great difficulty. Recognizing the shifts in consciousness is much more difficult. Unless you have documented those shifts or can call on the observations of friends, recalling how your psyche has changed is a challenge.

My shifts in outlook from that nationally traumatic December 7th go far to make up the story of my life. Thanks to journals and other writings, I have been able to put together at least a fragmentary account of inner changes to accompany the ones that happened in full view.

To have been given enough length of days for giving expression to that story continues to gladden my heart.

Richard Griffin