Journal of Sacred Work

Caregivers have superpowers! Radical Loving Care illuminates the divine truth that caregiving is not just a job. It is Sacred Work.

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"You cannot find peace by avoiding life, Leonard." The character of Virginia Woolf speaking to her husband in the film "The Hours."

Virginia woolf   A young man approached an old man and asked him, "Do you still wrestle with the Devil?" The old man answered, "No, the Devil has grown old like me. I wrestle with God."

   "Do you hope to win?" the young man asked. "No," the old man replied, "I hope to lose."

   Why do we think we can find peace by hiding from life instead of wrestling with it? Why do we so often hide in fear instead of living Love's passion?

   Probably, we often choose to flee life because our fear of pain is greater than our faith in Love.

   When my doctor told me at age nineteen that I had Crohn's Disease, he followed that news by warning me that I needed to live "as quiet and stress-free a life as possible." When I told him I wanted to be a lawyer, he replied, "Absolutely not. That is far too stressful."

   As I have shared in the Journal before, I am grateful that I ignored him (click on "About" below my photo, above right.) Following the doctor's warning would have been, for me, like choosing fear and "avoiding life."

   The sacred life is lived by engaging the world through listening to our passion and living our calling. Caregivers engage the world of illness, suffering, death, and birth every day.

   So many routinely ask nurses, doctors and other therapists how they can possibly live in the difficult atmosphere of illness and injury. We know the best answer. The work is sacred because it involves the chance to heal deep need.

   In fact, living a sacred life is easy to describe for everyone and difficult to live for most. It involves bringing Love to every encounter. When we do this, God arrives and God's presence always brings Love.

   I write and speak about the subject of Love and loving care all the time. Yet, I am forever having to remind myself to live Love's grace instead of giving into my own fears and biases. 

   After writing some of the greatest literature of the twentieth century, Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) above left, ultimately went against her own advice. On March 28, 1941, profoundly weary of the world, she placed stones in her coat pockets and drowned herself in England's river Ouse. "I can't fight (the world) any longer," Woolf wrote in her suicide note to her husband.

   Virginia's Woolf's death was a heartbreaking loss for a world she could no longer abide.Yet, the point is that this valiant and eloquent woman did live a sacred life until the very end. Her writing clearly reflects this.

   Rev. Mark Caldwell delivered a Sunday sermon recently based on Genesis 32:22-32 – Jacob's famous wrestling match at Peniel. The text reflects that the man who fought with Jacob told him, "…you have striven with God and with humans and have prevailed." Did Jacob "prevail" with God through surrender? 

   Rev. Caldwell finished his sermon with a line I hope to inscribe in my heart. "We live on the edge of what's left of us and what's left for us.

   What is left for us? We have the chance to choose our answer every minute of every day. We can engage life with passion or we can try to avoid it.

   I believe there is no hiding from Love. We need to wrestle with God…and lose.

-Rev. Erie Chapman

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4 responses to “Days 258-260 – The Sacred Life”

  1. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    “Our fear of pain is greater than our faith in love”… Choosing love also brings great pain, even in the midst of attempting to live a sacred life. Perhaps this pain brings some great reward in the end? I hope so.

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  2. Victoria Facey Avatar
    Victoria Facey

    How ironic is the statement to hope to wrestle with God – and lose. Somehow I hear this fear when I read this out loud; yet, I believe in this challenge. I admit that I often wrestle with myself and sometimes I won’t let God in to help me; later I do see the loss(es). So goes the constant struggle to let go and let God…

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  3. Marily Avatar

    Whenever I fail to acknowledge God first, in whatever situation, I find it takes double to multiple energy to go through life. In my daily walk with the Lord, I feel the need to wrestle only when my heart does not listen, when I harden up and choosing the easy way out. For a moment it feels great to contemplate putting a stop, to end everything, having the control to just give up. But once we are made anew, we are the transformed man, we are equipped with gifts of self-control, faith, hope, perseverance, understanding and love. And with these we can go on living on the edge of what’s left of and for us. May we always have total confidence in the Lord as we let go and let God hold us in the palm of His hands as we enjoy the ride in calm and stormy sea of life.

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  4. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    I admire that you choose to blaze a trail across the skies. Thanks Erie, for sharing what is inscribed in your heart, and for your inspiration to not let fear stop us from reaching out to embrace life. I guess fear will always be there lurking in the shadows. The point is not to let it stop us. For me, it means even with a quivering heart, I can step forth into the light.

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