Monday, April 30, 2018

Meditation: The Body of God

First presented at Super Saturday on March 17, 2018.


Imagine the body of God.

Imagine it with all the genders and races and physical descriptions of the world. God is male and female and both and neither and all. God is black and red and olive and tan. God has hair in long braids, slanted eyes, flat nose, big lips, long beard, curvy body, long arms, short legs. God wears flowing dresses, and blue jeans, and saris, and turbans, and tuxedos, and lots and lots of jewelry. God has tatoos of every animal of the world, and a single heart-shaped stud in their right ear.

And God has every ability, and every disability in the world.

God walks, God limps, God rolls, God crawls. God gets where God needs to be, gets to us, however God can.

God's mind works with the speed—and sometimes the randomness—of ADHD. God feels pain with the depths of depression, and joy like an episode of mania. God hears voices: the voices of all people and all living things. God has no one way of solving problems. Sometimes God moves from step to step with the most analytic of minds. Sometimes God makes great intuitive leaps that cannot be explained. Sometimes God gets stuck in a loop because the present, whether good or bad, is the time where God lives.

God paints with their feet and reads with their hands. God can dance by swaying and shuffling, and sing by making noises that are not words, but express emotions that words cannot.

God is too busy reaching out to us to be concerned that they cannot see. God is too busy feeling the rhythms of music in their bones to worry about what it sounds like. God is too busy loving, loving with all God's arrhythmic heart to be anything but grateful for the body they have.

Is it any wonder that we have trouble grasping God, when God's body does not move the way we expect a body to move? Is it any wonder we have trouble understanding God when God speaks with the slurred words of Cerebral Palsy? Is it any wonder that we cannot comprehend God, who bares the chronic pain of the suffering of the world?

How can we come closer to this being beyond our comprehension, this bodymind that meets none of our expectations?

By freeing ourselves of expectations.

By searching for God in the unique bodyminds of our fellow human beings.

By seeking to understand that which challenges us, and confuses us, and frightens us.

By accepting ourselves, and the bodyminds that make us who we are.


When we pray that all of this may be so; when we pray to love all bodies and minds; when we pray to be both broken and whole at once: we are praying to be more like God.

4 comments:

  1. This is beautiful. I’m working on an ADHD Liberation Theology. Can I quote this?

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    1. Absolutely! And I'd love to read your ADHD Liberation Theology when it's ready.

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  2. Hi! I just wanted to let you know that I am using this meditation as one of the readings for worship this week at Keystone UCC in Seattle, and as a centerpiece for my sermon reflections. Two Justice Leadership Program/Young Adult Service Community interns you met at the UCC’s Eccumenical Advocacy Days meeting last year, E and Daniel, brought this to my attention and i love it so necessary for the work of imagining a world that means justice for everyone. How we imagine God is show we imagine ourselves and each other, so thank you for your words and witness.

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  3. I learned about this beautiful message through a Silver Lake Dean's retreat March 2022. I would love to try to turn it into a message for my church this summer.

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