Slideshow image

Seek Shalom

By Pr. Lisa Rygiel

The following article was written by Amy Frykholm, who writes the lectionary essay every week for Journey With Jesus.

As of the day that I am writing this, there have been 326 mass shootings in the United States so far this year. For the Gun Violence Archive, which tracks mass shootings, a mass shooting is defined as one in which four or more people are killed or injured. On September 28 alone, there were three mass shootings in the US. And there had been three the day before. Sometimes these incidents make the news, and just as often they do not.

On the same day that I was scanning the newspaper in my usual way — taking note of these incidents, but not really capable of anything but a vague, terrible feeling — my eye caught another story. This was in The New York Times, and the headline read: How 106 People Got Together to Stop a School Shooting – Before it Happened.

In rural New York, a bullied and alienated young man on a school bus threatened other students. This is now perhaps so common an event that it is easy not to take it seriously, and yet there have been so many shootings in schools (one in my own home state of Colorado just a few weeks ago), that any threat seems like a credible threat.

What happened next is quite remarkable and worthy of our attention. One hundred and six people from 59 organizations began looking into the young man’s situation. They found many things that could point to him being the next school shooter: intense bullying by classmates, a deep sense of alienation, a troubled family life, and easy access to guns. The first thing that Sergeant Krystyna Feola of the Madison County Sheriff’s Department did was go to the young man’s home and make sure that the guns in the home were secured. “That’s the only training I had,” she said.

But following new protocols established by the governor of New York, Kathy Hochul, Feola activated a network of people, resources, and agencies with the intention of addressing the root of the crisis. I was perhaps struck most by the work of Mike Carinci, the school resource officer, who began by viewing hundreds of hours of video from the school bus so that he could deeply understand the nature of the young man’s distress. “Just horrible things, like nonstop,” he said. Carinci became the young man’s ally and a trusted person to whom he could turn. Carinci also worked with the students who were involved in the bullying, trying to reset school culture.

As I observed the choices that the adults made, I was struck by how nuanced they made the ideas of “victim” and “perpetrator,” how carefully they attended to the context in which these events were taking place, and how clear they were about their life-saving mission. The young man was, yes, a potential perpetrator, but they had the opportunity to intervene before he picked up a gun to harm others. He was also a victim of many things beyond his control. And while the students on the bus were potential victims of an easy-to-imagine scenario, they were also human beings with the opportunity to change and to grow.

I remembered the day when I, as a school board member, was briefed on a credible threat involving a student in our own district. I remember how helpless I felt, how vulnerable our schools and our kids were. I remember the pain I felt for the young man who was the source of the threat. He lived next door to the president of the school board, and she witnessed him sitting outside, alone, for hours at a time, smoking marijuana. Like the community members interviewed in the Times story, I knew that suspending him from school didn’t make our community any safer.

In the case of the young man in New York, with the help of all these people whose work was focused on the repair of a broken situation, he graduated from high school. During his senior year, he asked to meet with the team so that he could say thank you. He’s not out of the woods exactly. Chaos, violence, and brokenness attend his daily life. But he was surrounded by care, and that has made a difference.

In the story of the ten lepers in this week’s lectionary (Luke 17:11–19), we aren’t necessarily inclined to pause and feel the pain of the lepers before their healing. Many of us have heard this story a thousand times, and we’ve been taught to focus on the importance of saying thank you. But if you pause, like Mike Carinci did, to focus on what exile feels like, what it is like to be hated and excluded by the community in which you live, the story comes more potently alive. In every school in America, kids could probably point out who the lepers are — those children who for a variety of reasons feel deep alienation and exile. By no means will every one of these people turn to violence, but that’s not why we should care.

Ben Voce-Gardner, director of counterterrorism at the State of New York’s Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services, who worked on the team at the state level, points out that you can never know if you prevented an incident of mass violence. “That’s the point of the whole program,” he said. “We’re trying to get there early, so it will be difficult for us to ever get to a point where we can tell you definitively, ‘We stopped a mass attack.’”

Alienation itself is a kind of violence, and it’s everywhere. What Carinci did was like what Jesus did: he sought healing first through empathy. He witnessed the pain. Then together with many others, Carinci began to find the means for healing.

Right now, in communities everywhere, there are opportunities to do what these 106 people did. We know, all of us, where the pain is, where the alienation is, where the exiles are. Alienation and exclusion have many different names and causes. When Jeremiah writes to the exiles in Babylon, he says, “Seek the shalom of the city where I have sent you into exile … for in its shalom you will find your shalom” (Jeremiah 29:7). The word shalom has a number of important resonances. Not only peace and welfare, but also harmony, fulfillment, and flourishing. If we are to seek shalom in our communities, right now, in these conditions, it seems to me that we can follow this very same advice: seek the shalom of the exiles. Their shalom will be our shalom.

Oct. 12, 18th Sunday After Pentecost
10 a.m. Sunday Worship

Announcements

  • Meet the Candidates: Please consider meeting this Thursday October 9th at 6 PM at Main Street LIVE located at 131 W Main Steet in Trinidad to meet those running for office in November. Each candidate will have 5 minutes to present to the audience followed by a brief Q&A session. Free to the public.
  • Fellowship: Join us after worship next Sunday for food and fellowship. All are welcome!
  • Church Council: The next Zion’s church council meeting is after worship next Sunday (approx. 11:30 a.m.) downstairs in the Fellowship Hall. All are welcome to attend.
  • The Way Ministry: At 1 p.m. each Sunday, Zion’s welcomes the Way ministry to our fenced lower yard as they offer food and worship to the unhoused and others in need.
  • Children’s Choir: Children’s Choir resumes at 3 p.m. each Sunday, through Nov. 30, in the Fellowship Hall. (Please note that this is an hour later than originally announced.)
  • Yoga: At 5:30 p.m. each Friday, join Cora Gardiner for evening yoga in the Fellowship Hall.
  • Weekly Christian Education Studies: Our next study sessions are at 10 a.m. on Thursday, Oct. 8, (repeated at 12:30 on Saturday, Oct. 11), Pastor Lisa is leading a Study entitled By What Authority: Rethinking Early Christian History.
  • Thanksgiving: Zion’s will serve its traditional community dinner on Thanksgiving Day. Everyone who receives 5-Loaves meals will get a Thanksgiving meal automatically. People who do not want a Thanksgiving meal, or who need extra meals that day, may let us know by calling Zion’s Lutheran at (719) 846-7785 or send an email to 5loaveszions@gmail.com. If you know someone who should be added to the Thanksgiving and/or 5-Loaves lists, please let Jo Moss or Norine Hazen know.

E-formation – 18th Sunday After Pentecost, Oct. 12

This coming Sunday the gospel reading is Jesus’ healing ten people of leprosy. Come to worship; join with these ancient people to pray for God’s mercy; and in Christ join with the community of faith to be healed.

Luke 17:11-19

Most Christians have used this narrative as a call for the faithful to give thanks to God. At holy communion today, we do just that. In Lutheran parlance, “law” is ordering Christians to be grateful, and “gospel” is proclaiming to the community the healing and saving mercy of God.

2 Kings 5:1-3, 7-15c

This narrative is set next to Luke 17 as another example of God’s healing of those with leprosy. Like Elisha, also Jesus restores the world to the health that God desires. Reference to the slave girl indicates that even a child can testify to the power of God.

2 Timothy 2:8-15

In this the second of four semicontinuous selections from 2 Timothy, the human condition of suffering and death is contrasted with the power of the living word of God. Those who are faithful are promised a future of glory, reigning with Christ. Passages such as this that address controversies help us avoid naïve conceptions of the primitive church as more idealistic than our own.

Zion's Lutheran Church

A Reconciling in Christ Community
zionsluth@gmail.com
719-846-7785