
When I became a teenager and chose to go to a popular church and youth group, I found myself facing rigid views I had never come across before. There was a way I was supposed to believe, feel, think, and act in order to be part of this Christian community at large. I spent a time trying to conform, as though God wasn’t attainable in the truest sense unless I jumped through these hoops. I began feeling rebellious, in my continual failure. The teachings never sat right with me. God, the one from my childhood, and Christian community soon became two very different places for me. I was careful not to let the latter too close to destroy the God I knew.
It was sometime around my mid teens when my family switched to a church with an intellectual pastor who had the mind of an artist. He thought outside the box and allowed me a glimpse of hope that my faith might still be legitimate. Still, my 20’s saw me firmly established as “one to pray for” in some Christian communities and I felt a strange compulsion to stir the pot and provoke them.

It was around this time that I decided to announce I was no longer a Christian. It seemed the best way to eliminate the pressure of other’s expectations and to allow me a clear space to think out what I believed. The first thing I did was clear the entire shelf of jars. Everything went on the floor. In doing this I realized that what I was really searching for was truth and love. Truth, because there I would find God. Love, because even as a child I knew without a doubt that love was the most important thing in the world.
Two jars went on to my shelf. Two jars I was convicted of: firstly, Love and secondly, the fact that there was a creator who loved me. That was it. As simple as that. No doctrine. No having to feel washed in the blood of a lamb. Nothing. There were no barriers that God had to conform to. No rules of engagement that I could feel secure seating myself in.

I was heavily involved in the arts and found an extremely accepting community among them. Artists by nature are somewhat counter culture and so accept each other with all their warts and bruises, destruction and rebelliousness, and ever realness. I could be myself there and people appreciated who that was. I found I could openly talk about my deep protected faith at unguarded moments and they still accepted me.
I've had a handful of friends over the years that between us we could share our faith in a way that supported the other. One was a Muslim. One practiced her First Nations ancestor’s beliefs. One was exploring Buddhism. I hate these titles, because these individuals are so much more than labels, but it makes the point that I felt a deep connection with what might appear on the surface to be very different people. We were each either searching for love and truth or we had both in some way met the Creator.

My last thought and a profound realization for me is this simple truth:
“Dear friends, let us love one another, for love comes from God. Everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God. Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.”
5 comments:
H.L. Mencken, the American writer who critiqued and satirized American culture, once wrote, "Church is a place in which gentlemen who have never been to heaven brag about it to persons who will never get there."
While my earlier experiences are different from yours I'm learning to travel more lightly.
Michal, what a wonderful commentary on the spiritual side of your life. I marvel at your wisdom and thank God that He is walking with you, hemming you in behind and before.... I am so glad that we learned/knew that you girls were probably smarter than us....maybe even more wise than us.
Your simplicity of faith is very refreshing...and speaks of who you are.
Love Mom
Why am I not surprised at all?!
Oh, maybe because I work with you...for now.
LOL!
That sounds like my kind of faith. I, too, have found religions too narrow in their view of God and what it means to be a "good person". Love is the most important thing and knowing that has provided guidance as I've never experienced before. I'm still looking for an organized religion that matches my views, so if you find one...
I have loved reading this and relate to some areas of your writing - especially the feeling of 'having to conform' which I find very difficult (actually, I just don't always). Life in western 'Chrisitanity' often seems pretentious and limiting. I'm sure God wants more than this! But in the meantime I'll keep running the race with perserverance!
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