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Nov 22nd 2016

Tears for Prayers

11/17/16. Nine days since Election Day,

I hadn’t really been able to pray. Words eluded me.

A preacher unable to pray.

Well, now.  What to do with that?  How to understand that?  I’m supposed to go to God in prayer, aren’t I?  Cast all my cares, right?  So on top of being angry, sad, and depressed, I was now also confused and ashamed that I wasn’t able to go to my “prayer closet” when, in sane moments, I knew that was where I needed to be most.

Instead, I cried. Not right away though.  At first, there was just a steely reserve.  A depressed acceptance.  A cool detachment.  And fatigue.  Bone deep weariness.  I didn’t even cry on Election Night.  It was probably the next day when I felt tears bubbling, but I was in the company of someone I did not wish to console me, so I stuffed those tears down, willed them away, and looked to the sky, to the ground, to my phone, anything to distract myself.  Over the next few days, I lay in my bed and sat on my couch and paced my apartment and stood in my shower and sighed and moped.  But I did not cry.

Sunday came and social media suggested that I watch the cold open of Saturday Night Live. And there was “Hillary Clinton” singing an abridged version of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah.”

They say there was a secret chord
David played and it pleased the Lord
But you don’t really care for music, do you?
Well, it goes like this
The fourth, the fifth
The minor fall and the major lift
crying-tearsThe baffled king composing hallelujah …

Baby, I’ve been here before
I’ve seen this room, I’ve walked this floor
I used to live alone before I knew you
I’ve seen your flag on the marble arch
But love is not a victory march
It’s a cold and it’s a broken hallelujah

I did my best, it wasn’t much
I couldn’t feel, so I tried to touch
I’ve told the truth, I didn’t come to fool you
And even though, it all went wrong
I’ll stand before the Lord of song
With nothing on my tongue but hallelujah 

 I was in rapt attention at the bareness and rawness of the performance. And by the end of the third stanza, I was in a complete meltdown.  Stuffed down tears burst through my hastily made seams and roared to the surface.  I cried and cried and cried.

I couldn’t pray, but I could cry.

I cried for lost hopes and dreams. I cried for destroyed vision.  I cried for impeded plans.  I cried for hurting people and lost souls.  I cried for all those who felt unsafe, for all those who would face attacks, whose realities were jolted, who would have to rethink their entire lives.

I cried because I was angry, because I was sad, because I was hurt, because I was frustrated. I cried because of the idiotic social media posts, the ignorance, the stupidity, the insensitivity, especially that coming from armchair quarterbacks and others purporting to be experts but who had no experience or context.

I cried because there was no food in my house, because the laundry was piled up, because the pizza delivery was two hours late. I cried because I was alone in my house crying, because I woke up in the morning alone crying, because I lay down alone at night crying.  I cried because the one I wanted to cry with didn’t want to cry with me, and because the one who wanted to cry with me wasn’t the one I wanted.

Then I cried because I was crying and I hate crying, and there didn’t seem to be anything I could do to stop the crying.

I had lots of tears, lots and lots of tears, but I had no prayers.

And yet, I knew that I was not alone. Of course there were, I believed, millions of people who were also crying, but that’s not what I mean.  I mean that, through all my crying and all my aloneness, I never felt abandoned in my spirit or bereft of friendship.  I had a miles-deep knowing that God, my faithful and ever present companion, was with me.  In my space.  In my apartment.  Watching over me.  Minding me.  Surrounding me.  Tending to me.  Being the kind of friend I’ve always valued:  one with whom I can be quiet, with whom I can rest in the silences, with whom I can be, in whatever state I am being.

There was comfort in that. That even though I wasn’t talking, my Friend was still listening.  That though I spoke no words, He heard my heart and was at work tending and mending my wounds, even the ones only He could see.  That though I fretted about colleagues and friends, including Hillary, I had not a single worry about myself, somehow completely, deeply certain that God would take care of me.  That though my waking hours were full of confusion and dismay and questions, my sleep was unaided and uninterrupted, sustaining and refreshing.  I understood now, deeply and personally, a passage that I’d preached dozens of times before:

We are troubled on every side, yet not distressed;
We are perplexed but not in despair;
Persecuted but not forsaken;
Cast down but not destroyed. (2 Corinthians 4:8-9)

Comforted by the embracing Spirit of God, I’ve stopped crying now. I’m not over it, but I’m at peace.  I’ve started planning … and writing … and praying with words.  Oh, I’m still disappointed and I’m still angry … but this anger is motivating me and compelling me to work harder, to push further, and to love more … there is much to do to move our people forward, to empower women and girls, and to protect our progress.

Now I realize that my tears were prayers. And God heard every one.

I stand before the Lord of song with nothing on my tongue but hallelujah …

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Debbie - Apr 2nd @ 04:17pm

Leah, I thank you for sharing this awesome word. I had my melt down on this past Friday . This word confirmed everything that I felt inside of me when I erupted like a volcano . So glad to see I'm not alone on this journey called life. Even though I felt so alone and discouraged on Friday . This word gives me hope to keep pressing on toward the high calling of God .

Carla Sorey-Reed - Jan 13th @ 01:25pm

Dearest Leah, Thank you for these words, for sharing your deeply personal journey in the wake of the election. What you have written is powerful and healing. I feel blessed that God placed us on each other's path, so that I could bear witness and benefit to his grace and love, through you. I, like you, through all of the chaos, have no worries for myself. God is in charge and all things are a part of the plan. As mere mortals, we just can't see the whole plan. Peace, my Sister. I love you. Carla

Tom Keefe - Dec 6th @ 09:11am

Leah. Thanks for writing about your experience after the election. I know many of the emotions you experienced are identical to what I am feeling. I thought after the theft of the 2000 election nothing could surprise me anymore, but 16 years later again the results have me questioning God's plan for our country. Please keep me in your prayers. Thank you. Tom

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Sep 13th 2016

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Aug 18th 2015

Apropos of #BlackLivesMatter and @HillaryClinton

I’m talking about the video of the conversation that is making its way around the internet. Consider this the beginning of a rant …

  1. If you have not watched the entire video … THE ENTIRE VIDEO … from start to finish, unedited, you are unqualified to comment.
  2. If what you know about the conversation is what you learned from twitter, Facebook, Medium, the (insert city) Times or Post, CNN, NBC, ABC, other networks, or –lawdhammercy – FOX, you are not qualified to comment.
  3. If you have spent any time at all complaining about the MSM and its “biased” viewpoint, then don’t use the MSM as the basis or the confirmation of your opinion. How you gonna declare that the MSM is a tool of the government, the Republicans, the Democrats, the oppressor, or whoever else is allegedly holding us  back, down, or under, and then believe everything MSM says about everything?
  4. If you are posting commentary and reaching conclusions based on a redacted statement or ONE LINE or ONE PART of the conversation, your commentary, conclusions, and analysis cannot be trusted. Any one statement considered outside of its full context is a soundbite, and not useful for either critique or praise. Remember what “they” did to Jeremiah Wright or Adam Clayton Powell or INSERT PUBLIC FIGURE’S NAME based on one snippet of one moment in time.
  5. Where we are in the political cycle and in the life of the Movement deserves more than fly-by analysis and unthoughtful (and unhelpful) commentary. The advance of the Movement is at stake. The future of the country is at stake.
  6. And God’s sake, stop posting vapid, uninformed, one-sided, unconfirmed accounts of stuff with the disclaimer “I’m just gonna leave this right here.” You are helping no one and are potentially contributing to the intellectual deficiency of way too many people. No, don’t just leave it here; take it with you.  Or better yet, keep it to yourself.

Done … for now …

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