Reflecting Verse: “When
he said this, he spat on the ground and made mud with the saliva and spread the
mud on the man’s eyes.” John 9:6
I
grew up in a small town named Tamenglong in the state of Manipur, a
close-knit tribal community, where everybody knows who is there and what everybody
does. Almost all social engagements revolved around the land and its produce. Particularly,
young people find leisure hours for swimming in a pond
alongside buffaloes and ducks or picking snails and fishes in the river. However, young people today find it filthy and grimy. In the process of growing up with bliss and bruises, I found humility and restoration that
evolve around dirt and creation.
When
we look into the Genesis creation narrative, we see humankind (Adam, meaning
“Earth”) is the only creation that was created by dirt and thus remain in toil
with dirt until return into dirt. This circle at the same time shows the
humility of God’s creation and the very breath within it.
It
was at the reeking dirty fishing dock where young Jesus found his first
disciples – a low class stinky foul-smell fishermen and the man involved in a
corrupted tax collecting profession. It was in these “dirty” places where God found
the saints. The sanctified Godself Jesus, walked among these dirty places engaging
with the dirty-outcast people throughout his ministry.
The physical embodiment of God walked in the country among the people with sickness and outcast suffering with leprosy, blindness, disability, woman menstruating constantly for twelve years (which means twelve years of being considered impure, filthy and outcast by the society!). These are the least opted choices by the people to be with where there are no public dressed-ups, no OOTD (outfit of the day) hashtags, and no #Trashtag challenges. It is the place where hygiene and sanitization were unheard of. It is a place where people are socially distanced and untouched. It is the place where young people saw no future, saw no encouragement, no passion and no life. Yet, it is in this place, upon this people the Church was born and built (Matthew 16:18). In the passage, Jesus could have just healed the man by just telling him to open his eyes or by just touching the man’s eyes with his hand. Rather than a quick fix, Jesus took time to make a mud out of dirt and saliva, apply it in the man’s eyes and sent him to wash his face in the pool of Shiloam, literally meaning “sent”, which is on the other side of the city.
The
dirt that Jesus, the “Son of Man” (here ‘Adam’- earth/dirt), used to heal the
man reminds us the humility nature of God’s manifestation in that dirt and
rejected dwelling. It further reminds us to bring ourselves in humility and
restoration of life and fullness.
This
lockdown and physical distancing (“social distancing” has a negative
connotation and I would encourage others as well to not use the term “social distancing”)
has let down many people. The young people are suffering from depression, loss
of jobs, anxiety, fear of missing out (FOMO) and losing out their youthful lives
and physical social engagements. In this time of physical distancing and
shabbiness, bedraggled hair and unbrushed teeth, may we find God with humility
and healing, restoring our lives as we seek in our bathroom and dirt-filled
rooms.
Prayer:
O God,
open our eyes and hearts as we toil amidst the dirt and filth searching for restoration of our lives. Help us, particularly the young people who are
undergoing depression, loss of jobs, fear and anxiety that we all may find
solace in you. Amen.
**********
Author: Jianthaolung Gonmei
About the
Author: Jianthaolung comes from a small
town Tamenglong in Manipur. He completed Bachelor of Divinity at The United
Theological College, Bangalore and is currently working as Executive Secretary
– Youth Concerns in National Council of Churches in India, Nagpur
Beautifully portrayed...
ReplyDeleteMore power to you Jian!
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