Mountain-top Moments and the Valleys of Reconciliation
Marcie Gibson is a graduate of the Centre for Christian Studies, currently in ministry with Kahnawake United Church on Kahnawake Mohawk Territory, near Montréal, Québec. She has been involved in various social justice concerns over the years, and attended the April 2013 TRC event in Montréal as a volunteer. This is here reflection on Matthew 17:1-9, originally published on the Kairos Canada website:
Justice Murray Sinclair states, “Reconciliation is about forging and maintaining respectful relationships. There are no shortcuts.” As finishing touches are underway for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s seventh and final National Event in Edmonton, on March 27-30, 2014 (www.trc.ca), I am reflecting on the theological wisdom of such TRC events.
For many people, the TRC events are mountain-top moments: deeply sacred time set aside from the crowd and the disparaging eyes of everyday life. These are times when revered prophets and wise elders who have passed on are named and honoured, and their stories are told in concert with those of the present. These are opportunities for truth to be revealed, for transformation of those who speak and those who listen and witness. Though still set in the midst of a post-colonial empire, there are opportunities for deep connections to be made among those who share in this sacred time.
In these moments, as truths are spoken, and participants have human to human interactions, reconciliation seems both momentous and possible. Unfortunately, there is sometimes a rush to assume that, in the difficult speaking and listening alone, the work has been complete. There are gratuitous pats on the back, and an all-too-easy switch to building monuments of memory. Like Peter’s offer to build dwellings for Jesus, Moses, and Elijah we skirt the messy work of living out reconciliation in the everyday. There are no shortcuts. Like the transfiguration, the TRC is not an end in and of itself on the mountaintop, but a series of revelations in the long and lived valley of reconciliation. “While Peter was still speaking, suddenly a bright cloud overshadowed them, and from the cloud a voice said, “This is my Son, the Beloved … listen to him!” (Matt 17:5) I imagine the exasperation in God’s voice. ‘Just stop your fussing and listen!’ It is not enough to listen only to the prophetic story; we must listen for the wisdom of how to act beyond the mountain, and some of this is much more complicated. It is not enough to speak or listen to survivors’ stories of residential schools, and then pretend we have reconciliation all figured out. It is in this speaking and listening that deeper speaking and listening can begin.
What is reconciliation? Read the rest of Marcie’s reflection on the Kairos website.
Comments: 1
I have prepared a series of power point presentations, one of which concerning forgiveness and its impact of justice and righteousness. I will embed the youtube link below for folks who might be interested in an additional perspective on the importance of forgiveness in Christian experieince.
5. Existential Christian Forgiveness
http://youtu.be/Ghba3pSTEyM
If any find it of interest, I would interested in feedback.
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