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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  Jesus in hell 2  "When you are that sick you fall into real hell. It's just you & God," she told me years ago.

   The torture of twin cancers had horse-whipped my dear friend Rhonda Swanson into an agonizing vortex only the empathetic appreciate. Hell's searing quicksands suck down each of us during some moments of existence.

   Who appears amid our most profound loneliness?

   Scripture records an under-appreciated day on the Christian calendar. Sandwiched between Good Friday & Easter, Holy Saturday marks the Harrowing of Hell when Jesus descended to save "the righteous." He was newly qualified to understand suffering.

   On the cross Jesus (correctly portrayed crucified naked) underwent physical agony & the profound isolation of God's abandonment. Freed from these pains and exquisitely mindful of them he descended to save "the righteous." 

   The story's power makes one wonder why it does not garner more attention. 

    Crucify naked 2Jesus visited a place caregivers see every day. Earth's hells are the asylums of the sick & wounded. There, caregivers descend to rescue us from our suffering. 

    Rhonda's faith in caregivers below & above brought cures to her body & healed her spirit. Today, instead of hiding from her time of torture she lets it enrich the compassion she offers others in the same hospital where once she lay dying.

   Rhonda Swanson lives love, not fear. She remembers what she wanted from others during her pain so she never asks intrusive questions or utters nonsense like, "I understand."

   Instead, she offers her quiet presence. And, sometimes, her tears. 

-Reverend Erie Chapman  

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5 responses to “Days 109-114 – Between Easters: Love & The Harrowing of Hell”

  1. Anne Milligan Avatar
    Anne Milligan

    Very powerful, Erie…

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  2. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Yes, in times of our greatest need, it helps to know we will not be abandoned and that we are not alone. My mother taught me this through her presence when I was 10 and critically ill. She literally changed the course of my life and it wasn’t until many years later that I realized her profound influence.
    BTW, you were the catalyst for my epiphany when you asked a reflection question on this JSW about our mothers’influence. For this connection I will always be grateful to you.
    At times we may feel awkward, we don’t know how we can help or what we can do…and it is not so much about doing as it is about showing up.
    Thank you Erie, for this deeply moving reflection.

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  3. sbeng Avatar
    sbeng

    Erie; the title of your subject matter makes one think what to say when one is by the bedside of a very sick person. A “loving and supporting presence” means a lot especially when visiting a Hospice patient while in the hospital or home.

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