Wrestling God+Fear and The 3 Word Prayer You Need

         Wrestling season will begin soon. I’m thinking of it now because this week I’ve been teaching one of the strangest passages in all of the scriptures--- God wrestling with Jacob. It is not strange that Jacob would wrestle God, but that God would wrestle him! (God, what are you doing here?) And in all of this, I learn something about fear.

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          I can write and teach about wrestling all I want. I’ve earned it. With 5 boys and 19 years logged in on gym bleachers watching my sons (and one year my daughter), and with 7 years to go, I figure I’ve got  the right to speak, even if I know  hardly anything about wrestling. But here is what I DO know: It’s the worst sport possible for mothers. Let me summarize its joys for those unfamiliar: Two people wearing nothing but a singlet and flat sneakers circle each other like panthers, trying to vanquish the other by pinning him or her, helpless, to the mat. Spit, blood, and sweat are often involved.






                                                      














         It's primal and intense, a display of strength and athleticism nothing short of astonishing. And if you are a parent of one or two of those ripped, twisted bodies being taken to the mat, it's sheer fear. Necks aren't supposed to bend that way. (Please stop!) Backs should not fold, and bloody noses deserve more than a coach ramming a twisted piece of Kotex up the nostril. O child of mine! I can hardly watch.




                 At the last tournament, tired and desperate, I took up my camera. Thus armed, I stood at the edge of the mat, 20 feet from the action, with the lens to my face, but all was changed. Now it was about snapping a decent photo, not worrying about the other guy snapping my son's back. It was about recording a drama, trying to capture a moment of art in the spar.



         I thought, too, of the essential role of the artist and writer as a witness, a dispassionate recorder of the often unpleasant.

              I needed no further justification. I was now the photographer safely and objectively documenting my sons' pins, wins, and losses. It saved me a section of stomach lining. It was so much easier.



But the longer I stood there at the end of the mat, the more my objectivity shrank. By the eighth hour, I had put my camera down to watch the blind wrestler tapping his white cane to his next match. I cheered on the gutsy girl wrestlers (“You go, girl!”). I brought my embattled sons bottles of water. In short, I drew close.

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              The whole notion of writers and photographers as objective observers and witness just didn’t cut it for me this day. Or other days.


            I remember a terrible day a few years ago. A woman I knew lost a child. This was her third child to die. I could hardly think about it. I did not want to go to the funeral (Please! Anything but that!  Please let me keep a safe distance, far away! Let me just stay home and pray!) What did I have to offer her but what she possessed too much of already: tears, despair, unanswerable questions.  And I knew once I began crying at the service I would not be able to stop.



          But I could not stay away. It happened as I expected. I wept through the entire service. And after, as the casket was loaded into the hearse, I had no idea what to do, but stand there, hovering near my friend, my face bitten with grief. Just before it left, I looked into my friend's ruined face, hugged her hard, and left.







I am haunted still these years later. I am haunted because I believe in presence. I believe in a God who did not stay coolly distant and "objective," but who came close enough to us to spend his own blood and spit, a God who came so close, he took our place so that we "who once were far off have been brought near." Look, there he was with muscled arms and legs grappling with Jacob on the night plain. He came THAT close! I think of Emmanuel, "God with us," who ate dinner next to the possessed and dispossessed, who expended his presence extravagantly to the near and far-off alike.

           But does this really help? I am not Christ! How puny my hugs and my tears before the magnitude of my friend's grief.  Haven’t you felt this? Is this all our presence can offer? Is this it?



In my own helplessness now, I remember Jesus' words: "'For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them'" (Matt. 18:20). We usually speak these words before we launch into lengthy supplications in large gatherings. But I am beginning to understand that maybe my silent presence with her was a prayer. Maybe Jesus' words are really true. Maybe our physical presence beside those who grieve, who feel abandoned, who wrestle against the muck of life is itself an embodied prayer that invokes—or somehow actually becomes—"I am there among them." God with us.


       I hope this. But I am trying to do more than hope. This season, I will step off the bleachers sooner now, with water or a hug for someone alone.  My hands, my legs, my feet will be praying: God with us.


God with us.




24 comments:

  1. "I am beginning to understand that maybe my silent presence with her was a prayer." Yes. I've come to understand that our simple, physical presence is often the best communication to someone who has experienced a deep loss, such as a loved one's death. Now I will think of it as prayer, too, a way of inviting Jesus' presence.

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    1. Connie---you know, it's taken me so long because I'm so much about words . .. and always wanted, thought I could find the right words. But there are times you just have to give it up, and move, and let your body be your prayer. (thank you)

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  2. Connie---you know, it's taken me so long because I'm so much about words . .. and always wanted, thought I could find the right words. But there are times you just have to give it up, and move, and let your body be your prayer. (thank you)

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    1. --especially when the grief is new and raw. There is a time for words (spoken or written) later when the heart hemorrhage stops, and the mind regains "consciousness."

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    2. Yes, I think you're right. There's a time for words later, much later. Especially if/when the friend asks ....

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  3. This is so good - as I feel like I'm in a season of wrestling with God I must not forget that He is with me or there would be no "wrestling match." I need that perspective!

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    1. Angie---such a good observation! And you know, this is God's promise,t hat He won't leave us alone. Sometimes that "not leaving" is the kind of tackle that Jacob received from God on that dark plain. Think of the alternative--what if He abandoned us to ourselves?? SO thankful He sticks with us!! Thanks Angie!!

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  4. Yes...I am coming to think so differently about prayer...words are seem to be less important as they use to be...isn't our very lives a prayer...is this one way we pray without ceasing???? Presence is a very powerful this...if I really believe I really carry Him...the risen Christ within me...I would be so much more careful with my presence...great way to start my day....thanks for this focus this morning!!!

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    1. Just wondering...is the post you lost ...or a different one?

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    2. I lost another post---on something else entirely. But glad for these words this week. (And now I realize how absolutely Providential the loss of the other was. Can't explain but ... it was God at work protecting me.)

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  5. Leslie, your words challenge me in my deepest, darkest places. I've always been one to hold myself back at a distance. To observe. To offer my prayers from the safety and security of my own home. But, God doesn't hold Himself at a distance from us. He threw Himself in the ring and dwelt among all our sin, and pain, and suffering. Because He loves us. I'm asking myself today, "Am I willing to love like that?" Thanks for shaking up my world a little. I needed it.

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    1. Tarissa--so very welcome. It's hard--and I'm no master at it, believe me. But I am trying harder--to simply be there. And to not worry about saying the right thing ...

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  6. Last year, a friend found out that her cancer had come back and had spread to her brain, and she took her own life. Six weeks later, her husband passed away in his sleep from a heart attack. They have 3 children.

    I've had my own losses in the past 3 years, but this was humbling! What could I say to their daughter, who found both of her parents? Or the sister who lost her best friend, and will now finish raising the children? It was so hard at the service, missing my friend and seeing her grieving family. What could I do? How is my sitting there helping? But then I saw the family, shaken to the core, seemingly draw strength from those of us there, from the love and support we were sending out with just our presence. On such a sad occasion, we were all united in love.

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    1. Mary----I cannot imagine such grief, such horrid circumstances ..... tears come. SO glad you were there among them. It seems SO small, but it's all we have: ourselves and God within and among us. Thank you for sharing this hard story.

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  7. Leslie, Thank you. Your words stirred up memories of the time in my life when I worked in a pediatric intensive care unit. One time in particular, a 17 yr. old patient of mine died. The best I could offer to comfort his mother, and to honor this young man's life, was to gently bathe his body. I washed off sticky tape residue, blood spatter, and combed his matted hair. I prayed for his mother as I did this holy work. She was a stranger to me. I had no children at the time; my words would not do. Hugs seemed false and intrusive. As you wrote:...there are some times you just have to give it up, and move, and let your body be your prayer."

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    1. Everyone is making me cry this morning!! Lisa, this is so achingly beautiful, your words, this image. Thank you for serving this mother this way. Thank you for washing his body so tenderly. Thank you for washing us with these words .... I am thanking God for you.

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  8. Leslie, thank you for that! I still wonder about Jacob and the God wrestling. Sometimes we can only cry, hug and be silent with deep grief. But they will remember. Yes, God is with us.

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    1. There really are amazing things going on with Jacob and GOd wrestling . . but I didn't want to turn the post into a theological treatise! But it's just one example of how close God comes to us---he has come down to us as a flesh and blood man to fight with us and for us in this life. So incredible. BLessings to you this day, friend!

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  9. Your hug after I shared my experience from 1999 in our workshop was the simplest and one of the most meaningful reactions I have received in 14 years. This blog post reminds me of that and to say "thank you" for praying "God with us" :o)

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    1. Carey---thank you for receiving that hug .... (and thank you Lord for giving it to me). Yes, God with us.

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  10. A couple of years ago I read Psalm 46 in the Message and found "The God of Jacob" rendered "the Jacob-wrestling God" three times, framing the psalm. And as I've chewed on that since, I continue to be rattled that God would name Himself in this way. And yet, how often do I read "The God of Jacob" without stopping to consider what it means?

    I was in a season of coming to terms with some deep pain in my growing up, and it was as if God slipped my name in there "...the Amy-wrestling God." It was a way of naming me that was so unexpected, so intimate, so earthy that it still disarms me. It was--and is--ok for me to wrestle. In fact, he expects it, and wants to name me again some day, finally, at our wrestling's end.

    What mercy. God with us, indeed.

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    1. I love Peterson's THe Message. And yes, it's all about the name change, from "deceiver"--from all our stunts and methodologies to get what we want---to get even what we think God wants us to want---and to simply surrender to Him. It does seem to take a lifetime. I can't wait for that name! (thank you for these wise wise words!)

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  11. Beautiful, beautiful, Leslie. Thank you.

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