He was thirsty and hungry because in the course of events in his tiny life last night, he had missed dinner. The rest of those even I chose not to replay in my mind.
I held him facing the desk that had become our makeshift table at midnight. It was easier that way. That way his inquisitive blue-grey eyes did not meet mine so often.
He had beautiful eyes. That wasn't the problem. Looking at his chubby one-and-a-half year old face, my gaze was drawn from his eyes, to the dark purple marks on his forehead, cheeks, and chin, and to the red scrapes and cuts the dotted his scalp, his nose, ears, and spilled down onto his neck and chest. Looking at his face, the effect was almost like a palate of purples, reds, pinks, and flesh, mingled together, with a terribly darker theme that I wanted to see.
Sitting with him in my lap, I was caught in a strange tension. A sweet boy, eating, drinking, babbling, playing, whose face conjured up the awful images of the blows that marred it. He made me want to cry, to hold him, to protect him. He made me want to look away. Looking at him forced the reality: Someone did this to me.
So the reaction is then, why? How could a person unleash such brutality upon this defenseless, fragile child? What on earth would motivate a person to this evil? How is it possible? I don't particularly care to know, to be honest. The fact that it happened, it does happen, and it will happen was sitting in my lap.
What do I believe about life that helps me to face this little boy and care for him? The fact that men are wretched, and are capable of things like this. That I know. The fact that one day, the Avenger of the weak, the marginalized, the abused, will come to make all things new, and to bring justice, that I also know. YHWH says that bad things will happen, but that in the end, they will not have been so for nothing.
This doesn't mean I can make sense of why this particular child, these blows, this night. And the lack of those specific answers leaves in me in the tension of faith. Do I believe what I know to be true, when it hurts?
I am thankful I live in country where children have rights, and abuse is a crime. I am thankful that when this happens in Chicago, there is a justice system to step in and punish the ones who are responsible. I am thankful for hospitals, where children can come to be safe. And I am thankful for social workers, who try to find a safe place for these precious ones.
I write this mostly for myself, and for my coworkers, who face the same things that I do. Keep loving the least of these, keep caring for them. It's good work.
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"My thesis is that the practice of non-violence requires a belief in divine vengeance…My thesis will be unpopular with man in the West…But imagine speaking to people (as I have) whose cities and villages have been first plundered, then burned, and leveled to the ground, whose daughters and sisters have been raped, whose fathers and brothers have had their throats slit…Your point to them–we should not retaliate? Why not? I say–the only means of prohibiting violence by us is to insist that violence is only legitimate when it comes from God…Violence thrives today, secretly nourished by the belief that God refuses to take the sword…It takes the quiet of a suburb for the birth of the thesis that human nonviolence is a result of a God who refuses to judge. In a scorched land–soaked in the blood of the innocent, the idea will invariably die, like other pleasant captivities of the liberal mind…if God were NOT angry at injustice and deception and did NOT make a final end of violence, that God would not be worthy of our worship." -Miroslav Volf
I'm thankful for nurses, those in our liberal cul-de-sacs who refuse the offensively unjust notions of a god of leniency. I'm thankful to God that you serve the least-of-these. I'm thankful for Lydia House. I'm thankful for Christ, who endured wrath for the worst-of-these like me.
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