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What can I say after the U.S. election? So many people are already saying so many things, which makes me hesitant to add to the noise.

I’m weary; words feel weary; the world itself feels weary. As it did to the Gatherer at the end of Ecclesiastes, the world feels full of terrors, broken things and dust. The sloganeering is as worn-out as old bumper stickers on a Nalgene water bottle, and the cup we’re forced to drink tastes like the stale water sitting at the bottom of the bottle. We are tempted, with Shakespeare’s Gloucester, to lament, “O ruin’d piece of nature! This great world / Shall so wear out to nought.”

Our political words rub the world raw; they are buttons on a broken car dashboard. We keep pushing them, but we don’t know what they do any more. Our political talk rubs the faces off of people until they become masses of color pitted against each other. Our political talk beats words down, flattening them for crasser uses. Where once there was an ornate pruning hook, full of intricate detail, now there is a dented and soulless spear.

I sat staring at the election results late into election night, reflecting on how half of the United States was voting for a man who has publicly put Mexicans like me in the “rapists and criminals until proven otherwise” category. As someone who has experienced harassment and racial profiling from police, I wondered, What could happen now? I thought about Eisenhower’s mass deportation of Hispanics in the 1950s and if it could happen again. I thought about how as long as my children bear the last name Rodriguez, they will be considered outsiders in this country. I sat and stared at the racism of the United States mapped out in primary colors.

I wondered, Is this a Bonhoeffer moment? Have we come to that point where the church has to go into full-on prophet mode? I wondered, Is this a Barth moment? As I tried to sleep, Barth’s words from the Barmen Declaration kept cutting into me: “Jesus Christ, as he is attested for us in Holy Scripture, is the one Word of God which we have to hear and which we have to trust and obey in life and in death.”

There is something to the Bonhoeffer moment, but my heart is in too much of a mess to say anything about it yet. There is something to the Barth moment, something we need to keep central.

But I wonder if there is a third moment worth trying. Maybe this is a time for a Gerard Manley Hopkins moment. Even though the world feels dusty, can we say, with him, that “for all this, nature is never spent”? It is still “charged with the grandeur of God.” Even as “the soil / Is bare now, … the Holy Ghost over the bent /
World broods with warm breast and with ah! bright wings.”

Resist the decay of language. Witness to the enlivening breath of the Spirit. Resist the sanding down of reality. Carefully bend your spear back into a pruning hook. Attend to things in their particularity.

Every story you tell, every work of art, every careful observance into the inscape of things, is an act of resistance against a culture that is desperately trying to suck your identity into the meat grinder of us versus them. In Christ, there is no us versus them. There is only God for us, God with us.

NO MORE BINARIES

Resist binaries. Worship the Triune God. More people voted more against a candidate they hated than for a candidate they loved. The two-party system is the opposite of Christian unity. It is Manichean, dualistic, agonistic. It needs a dangerous, evil Other to justify its existence. We believe in one God, who created the world out of nothing. The world is a gift. There is no evil Other. There is only the sin in our hearts, a void that is swallowed up in victory by a bigger embrace, the enveloping cloud of the mystery of the Holy Spirit. We believe in one Lord, Jesus Christ, who has torn down the dividing walls of hostility. Stand as the third between Egypt and Assyria. Resist polarization. Die, martyred, with a hand outstretched to both parties. Maybe one of the most faithful things we can do as a church is resist dichotomies, A and B, and declare instead that “Christ plays in ten thousand places.”

Take time to identify the beauty right in front of you. Stop identifying with your voting bloc and start identifying with the hurting, scared, broken, sinful people around you. As I think about the horror of this election and the very real possibility that I will experience new levels of racial discrimination, I also think about the beautiful elderly man in my congregation lying on his deathbed, waiting for tomorrow, waiting for the end of his pain. I think about the way that old skin sags down over a human body, like a pile of rags. I pray for him, that like King Lear, he would find “in the heaviness of his sleep / We put fresh garments on him.” I pray that the empty void of his mortality would be clothed with the infinite grace of immortality.

As I think of his last days, I think of Emily Dickinson:

The World — feels Dusty
When We stop to Die —
We want the Dew — then —
Honors — taste dry —
Flags — vex a Dying face —
But the least Fan
Stirred by a friend’s Hand —
Cools — like the Rain —
Mine be the Ministry
When thy Thirst comes —

“Mine be the ministry.” Mine be the ministry when your thirst comes, and let me not give you the dregs of the world’s Nalgene but offer you the living water of Jesus Christ. Mine be the ministry of reconciliation. Mine be the ministry of spiritual friendship, covenant faithfulness and cruciform listening. Mine be the ministry of sitting with the dying, of paying attention to the slow growth of trees, of resurrecting old words. Mine be the ministry of trading colors for faces, data for stories, ideologies for gospel.

As the world wears out like a garment, put on Christ. Clothe yourselves with love.

Steven Rodriguez pastors Lakeview Community Church, a Reformed Church in America congregation in Greece, New York.

Photo: Gerard Manley Hopkins, by Rowan Gillespie, Wikipedia [CC BY 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Steven Rodriguez

Steven Rodriguez has been a pastor of Lakeview Community Church in Rochester, NY and Pillar Church in Holland, MI.