[1]The two texts for the meditation this evening have each held
significance for me for years. First, Micah 6:8: "He
has shown you, O mortal, what is good; and what does the Lord
require of you, but to do justice, and to love mercy, and to walk
humbly with your God." Second, II Corinthians 5:19:
"God was in Christ reconciling the world to Godself, not counting
their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the message of
reconciliation."
[2]Pastor Holm suggested, during our conversation regarding this
meditation, that I might wish to base my reflections on my
experiences as an oncologist. Since his invitation many
images, memories, thoughts, and emotions, some of them
extraordinarily powerful, have surfaced. They have as much to
do with my frequent visits to the Boundary Waters Canoe Area, my
love of music, and my roles as son, brother, husband, son-in-law,
graduate student, teacher, and father as they do with
oncology. Although I think about my faith and the practice of
medicine and oncology daily it has been surprisingly difficult to
focus my thoughts for this evening into an 8-10 minute
meditation. I have a new found respect for those who must
prepare sermons frequently. It is my hope that this
meditation will contribute to each of your Lenten journeys, and
also to our journey together as members of First Lutheran
Church.
[3]Two experiences from the last week provide a ground for what
follows. Friday evening, as I was driving our baby sitter
home, she told me that she was to begin a process in school that
would, as she put it, "tell me what I'm supposed to be good at and
what will make me happy." She turned to me and said "I know
you are a cancer doctor, but what is it, exactly, that you
do?" I told her that oncologists help to diagnose and stage
cancers; they then address a complex array of factors-most
importantly patient goals and values-in order to develop a
treatment plan unique to each individual patient. Oncologists
also, I said, frequently accompany patients in their journey at the
end of life. "Sounds stressful," came the reply, followed
immediately by "Do you love what you do? Are you
happy?" Taken aback (after all, she was only a high school
sophomore), I hesitated somewhat, eventually offering a reply
worthy of a politician. "Well, uh… I find a
great deal of meaning in what I do," I said, sidestepping
completely whether or not finding meaning in what one does equates
to loving what one does, and how this may or may not relate to
happiness and personal fulfillment. Happily the conversation
shifted to her dreams; she hopes to become a pediatric cardiologist
and serve underprivileged inner city children.
[4]On a different day last week I was walking down a hallway on
the third floor of Saint Mary's Hospital. It was hard not to
overhear the conversation of a couple behind me. I heard a
woman say "Oh, there are the gloom rooms." "Huh?" came a male
voice in reply. "You know, the gloom rooms-that's the
oncology unit." "Oh," said her companion. I winced but
kept on walking, wondering what kinds of experiences had led her to
such views.
[5]Do you love what you do? Are you happy? Do you
find meaning in what you do? What are your dreams and life
aspirations? Where are your "gloom rooms"?
[6]Perhaps during this Lent you, too, have reflected on your own
life, your own personal "ashes" and "alleluias." I have been
extremely fortunate in my life, but have had some "ashen"
moments. I recall vividly my very first Little League
game. I was on the bench until I pinch hit in the bottom of
the last inning. The bases were loaded, there were two out,
and we were one run down. The stuff dreams are made of, a
chance to be a hero-and I struck out (I sometimes think I never
really recovered from this event). On a cold, windy, gray
August 1979 day my sister and I visited Dachau, one of the Nazi
concentration camps outside of Munich. We walked together,
silently, through the grounds. We were overwhelmed,
voicelessly asking Why? How? Our discomfort was
increased markedly by a woman who, inexplicably, carried her child
across the ropes to have their picture taken by the crematory
ovens, as if they were at a routine tourist attraction.
[7]I have had many alleluias in my life. Graduations, my
parents' 50th wedding anniversary, participating in uplifting and
powerful performances with choirs, bands, and orchestras, and being
present at the births of our children. Most powerfully for me
stands Karen's and my wedding, and the ongoing celebration of our
live together.
[8]There are also events that I recall as both "ashen" and
"alleluia" moments. I remember coming home from spring break
in Texas in 1978 with my mother and sister. I had fallen
asleep in the front seat of our station wagon. I awoke while
flying into the back seat as the car rolled several times after
sliding off an icy overpass. I rejoice that all of us
survived, but I still recall with awful clarity my first waking
image of that morning-my sister, who had been driving, screaming in
pain and terror, silhouetted against the shattering windshield as
her hand was smashed between the windshield and the steering wheel
as we entered the first roll.
[9]I believe that there is a profound and deeply ingrown human
need to move through experiences of "ashes" to experiences of
"alleluias." "Ashes" to "alleluia" stories have been embedded
in human civilization since antiquity. Consider, for example,
the legend of the bird called Phoenix, present in different forms
in Egyptian, Greek, and Chinese cultures, and transmitted through
Western civilization by the likes of Shakespeare (Odin's Raven) and
Hans Christian Anderson (The Phoenix Bird). More recently,
J.K. Rowling has made the phoenix of central importance in her
immensely popular Harry Potter series. In the Greek legend
the phoenix was an eagle-sized bird of scarlet and gold
plumage. Only one phoenix lived at a time; it was always male
(of course). As its death approached, so the legend goes, the
phoenix built a nest including the finest and most fragrant
spices. The nest, ignited by the power of the sun's rays,
would become a funeral pyre. The phoenix met his death on the
pyre, while singing the rare, beautiful phoenix song. From
the ashes that remained the next phoenix would arise, thus renewing
the life cycle.
[10]The practice of oncology is replete with experiences of
"ashes" and "alleluias." There is the devastation of the
diagnosis, no matter how gently delivered. There is the fear
of treatment and side effects and diminishment of quality of life,
the always-present fear of recurrence, suffering, pain,
abandonment, loss, financial worries, distrust, death; the list
could-and does-go on and on.
[11]But there are "alleluias" as well. There are the
triumphs, the cures, the phoenix songs of those who "beat the
odds." These "alleluias" are wonderful, and not to be
minimized. And yet, in my mind, these victories are "easy"
when compared to those situations in which treatment options have
been exhausted, and patient and families, together with their
care-givers, are brought face to face with the realities of
death. It is in these moments, in my view, in which true
respect, compassion, and mercy grow. Reconciliation,
acceptance, forgiveness, forbearance, and peace are common
attributes of these situations, at their best.
[12]I have been enormously privileged to witness this numerous
times. These are experiences of unrivaled intensity-sorrow,
joy, tears, laughter, shared intimacies, and, often, genuine
love. I cannot, based on these experiences, easily accept the
shallow alleluias brought to us by much of popular culture, and
occasionally by believers. We need a more fully developed
theology, in which Easter Sunday is maintained as a defining moment
of Christianity, yet that does not minimize the Good Friday depths
that many experience. Perhaps such a theology could help us
minister to those around us more effectively.
[13]Do you love what you do? Are you happy? What are
your dreams and aspirations? Where are your "gloom
rooms"? Is there a human yearning for transformation and
rebirth? Ashes? Alleluias? Which is more real for
you, this Lent?
[14]There are many things hanging on the wall of my office at
work. These things are not diplomas (in fact, I'm not sure
that I know where my diplomas are right now); instead they are
meaningful notes and mementos from patients and families, art work
from my children, pictures of our family, pictures of bears in our
back yard, and pictures from the Boundary Waters Canoe Area-loons,
moose, flora, waterfalls, sunsets. These images are intended
to create an ambience of peace in the midst of the demands of each
day. The newest picture is of Split Rock Lighthouse, perhaps
one that some of you have seen. It is taken on an overcast,
calm, fall day threatening rain, the usual sunlit brilliance of
birch and poplar muted. The lighthouse stands as a sentinel,
quietly, almost humbly present, amidst the surrounding natural
splendor. This piece reminds me that after the mature, solemn
glory of fall comes the cold, stark-but still pregnant-death of
winter. It reminds me of the courageous patients and families
that have taught me that even in the midst of the soon to come
ashes-the "gloom rooms"-one can still hear the phoenix and alleluia
songs of rebirth, that even in the midst of death we have each
other and signs of God. It reminds me that even in the midst
of ashes we have the humble hope of justice and mercy, of walking
together with each other and in service to God; that even in the
midst of death we can, indeed, march, dance, and sing in the light
of God, carrying forth an alleluia ministry of transformation and
reconciliation. Amen.