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I’m friends with the Monsters

By February 8, 2017 4 Comments

 

In 2013 Eminem wrote the song “The Monster.” Together, with Rihanna, this song skyrocketed to the top of the charts. It’s a catchy pop ballad, but it’s the lyrics of the hook that capture my attention for this post.

I’m friends with the monster that’s under my bed
Get along with the voices inside of my head

We all have these little monsters that challenge our cherished version of ourselves. We are simultaneously sinner and saint, as Martin Luther said. We are made of great potential and we are fallible.

Walt Witman says something similar.

 

Do I contradict myself?
Very well then I contradict myself;
(I am large, I contain multitudes.)

My friend, Minister Candace Simpson says that “If I paint someone as a monster, she’s stuck. She can’t be held accountable because monsters do what monsters do. But if I paint her as a human being who has the ability to choose otherwise, I am freed and she is convicted.”

I think we have a tendency to manufacture monsters with people we disagree with.

I’m really good at making people I disagree with into monsters. There was this one time at General Synod that someone was saying something from the floor (anti-LGBTQ, anti-woman, more racist than they realize, and anti-anything to do with what the Spirit of God is doing now) and they were driving me nuts. I listened, but not good enough. I made them into a monster. They no longer had a name or a family, but they became my projection of why the church’s spirit is being stiffled. I think I even gave them a super power of church bully status. Every time I would see them in the lunch room there was an internal conversation with myself about the monster that they were.

Guess what. I made them into that monster. Yep, I did that. I gave them more power than they deserve. I stripped them of their humanity and made them into something bigger than they are. Instead, this person is someone I disagree with with a nuanced personhood just as much as anybody on the General Synod floor. A nuanced personhood just like me.

It’s no secret, I’m a Christian who is orthodox in her theology and very progressive in her social and political beliefs. Like many of my progressive friends I have been trying to figure out what in the heck is going on in American politics.

When I’m scared I create monsters to help me cope with my fears.

Maybe you do that, too?

I do that in how I talk about 45 and his picks for cabinet. I strip the humans from their humanity and instead make sweeping comments.

But what if I gave them back their humanity? What if I looked at the fear in my eyes and say “Monster, I’m going to become a friend of yours. I’m going to take some power from you and keep you accountable to be a person who is called to the common good.”

I must humanize the person I want to dehumanize if I want real radical change. I must humanize the person who is anti-lgbtq, anti-woman, and more racist than they know if I want to keep them accountable to the work we are called to as a church. I must look at the fearful, ugly monsters within myself, that challenge my cherished view of me and humanize me again.

The time is ripe for the church to be in the work of humanizing each other. I’m not talking about brushing our differences aside or coming to a lowest common denominator, I’m talking about doing the hard work of learning to be human again.

Thankfully we serve a God who wanted to teach us that the human project is the project that God is about. Not a far away heavenly place, but the human project, the one that took on flesh and bones and became an infant and grew to be the Divine Man called Jesus. The human project, the human Jesus, shows us how to be human again.

Join me in these endeavors. Now is the time, church.

 

 

 

 

 

Jes Kast

The Reverend Jes Kast is an ordained Minister of Word and Sacrament and serves West End Collegiate Church as their Associate Pastor.

4 Comments

  • Michael A. Weber says:

    You would think that those of us on the left who spent 8 years objecting to how the right “monsterized” Barack Obama, would now refuse to do the same to Donald Trump and, more particularly, to his supporters. However, in the months following Trump’s election, my feed has been filled with all sorts of people trying to explain away Trump supporters as “authoritarians who live in fear,” “racists and bigots,” and “ultra conservative reactionaries.” Both left and right talk ABOUT each other, but no one talks TO each other.

    The church should be the place where we do not cast stones, but listen and love. The best thing we can do is befriend someone who is on the opposite of our agendas and learn to love them. That doesn’t mean that we don’t need to oppose policies that demean and hurt people. But it does mean that we need to respect and befriend those with whom we disagree.

    As the Apostle Paul says, “Do not be overcome by evil but overcome evil with good.”

  • William S. Postma says:

    I agree with your sentiment but it seems that you have not completely given up on creating a monster. When a human being is labeled with a number, e.g. 45, in my mind I see the multitude of individuals who suffered in the Nazi concentration camps 80 years ago.

  • My message goes here: says:

    Thank you!! It is time the left drops their sinful pride and looks at our President Donald J. Trump as a fellow man. How sinful to do otherwise! Must love!

  • James Hart Brumm says:

    I resist that very temptation, Jes, to greater and lesser success, each and every day. And you are so very right, we, as the Church, must call the world to be better at this. But we must ever remember that we are also responsible to stand up to presidents who are wrong, and called to defend with our very lives the truth of the Word at the core of our covenant–not defending them from monsters, but speaking what the Spirit is saying within us to people.

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