on the other hand...
posted 1 May 2008, Thursday
Another significance of resignation to hell presents itself as most right and salutary for us in this in between time of pilgrimage and repentance. He has, you know, a particular and peculiar regard for the abandoned, the tortured, the poor, the infirm, the oppressed, the killed for convenience and profit, the mourning and the lonely - for, that is, the offscourings of our successful world. If, dear reader, you got a shiver from the list, that's apposite. All of us will one day wind up playing one or more of those many parts.
Well, enough of that for now. Consider only that God mmight just call you who have been baptized and can trust in his goodness and faithfulness and his beauty, that God I say again might just call you into the place you fear the most. He might just call you thus as his instrument to minister to those for whom he has a particular and peculiar regard. He might, moreover, just do this for your own good. In short, he might send you to hell on earth for the sake of his name and the good of those whom he loves.
More than this, any of us at any moment might find ourselves plunged into darkness, confusion, pain, doubt - we might, that is, find ourselves under attack. Who attacks? God? Satan? If Satan, what is he but God's lapdog? Can he do anything of his own pure brain? No, no, it's best to regard the attack as what it is - God has, it seems, turned on you, and become to you a kind of devil. Getting up in the morning can become a burden. Just taking another breath will seem a demand beyond your strength. You will be, as far as you can tell, without hope and lost in the world. You may remain in this state a long time. You may remain in this state all your days.
This is hard. That sounds like an understatement? Steel, diamonds - hard, unyielding, won't give when you hit it [I know steel, for instance, gives when certain objects hit it; I'm certain that neither you nor I are one of 'em]: again, this is hard.
Then, too, you will most likely be oppressed by your sins. The maligned abused Simul - 'tis not a license to sin, you know. It signifies an apocalyptic battle as he attacks our sin and we respond with excuses in place of confession, interpretation in place of obedience.
Daily my sins pain me. I wonder how long it will be before I am finally freed from necessity, from this grind. Yes, yes, I am free even now in promise, a promise made real through a foretaste in the Eucharist. Still, we live in an overlapping, intertwining of times, pulled simultaneously [simul!] into the future of the Kingdom that is coming and has, in some way, come already, while dragged down, and back, into the Old Aeon of Law, Sin, Death. The force of this tormented pull on frail creatures like us would be too much to bear were it not that he holds all together and carries us through. So, trusting his sure and certain word of promise and pardon and peace, we can fight the sin that so oppresses us.
In between the times, there is sorrow, there is suffering - that loss which we experience whether sensible of it or not. We are peculiar creatures, with a peculiar destiny, living in space-time and so moving ever on a pilgrimage whether we like it or not. Which path we're on, well, that's another story. On that way, we may recall with Pascal that Christ 'is in agony until the end of the age'. The one who of his own nature can't suffer, has without change taken flesh and, in that all real humanity, suffered for us to the point of torture and humiliating death. Now, having been vindicated by the resurrection and glorified in the ascension, he yet suffers in his flesh for this deadly and yet, for all that, saved and cherished world.
So, as St Silouan says, 'remain in hell, and do not despair' - though only his word, his pardon, his forgiveness refreshed daily can keep that despair at bay. Remain in hell, for now, if need be, for he is surely coming. Even now, his appearing is imminent, and we with every step are on the brink of eternity. So remain in hell for now - he will come in a little while and sweep it all away with a wave of his sovereign hand, then wipe away all our tears.
Remain, then. Hold the line for just a little while.
Peace out.