Washington, D.C. isn't used
to the kind of sub-freezing weather we've had this winter. I can't wait
to scamper home after work, where my warm house, teenage daughters, two
happy dogs, and husband are waiting for me. As I emerge from the Metro,
I see a homeless, addicted woman begging at the top of the escalator.
She is not wearing a coat or gloves. It is dark and sleety drizzle is
coming down.
For a very long time, almost my entire adult life, I did not believe in
a good God because of suffering and mental illness and torture and
genocide and homeless people with frozen hands. It happens that my life
has been greatly blessed – or, rather, greatly lucky. I had a good
family, a good education, good health, and meaningful, valuable work to
do. But I strongly believed there was no integrity to believing in God
if one had my life. Who wouldn't be grateful? The real
difficulty for me was the apparent absence of a loving Lord from the
lives of the suffering, the despised, the raped, and the hungry. My
refusal to enjoy the comfort and joy of faith was my own act of
solidarity with them.
But I learned that people actually feel God's presence most tangibly
when they are in the depths of suffering and loss. A Ugandan landmine
survivor named Margaret made that clear when I met her in 2001 at an
international conference to ban landmines. Margaret had been on a bus,
returning home from work, when it was ambushed by Ugandan rebel forces
of the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA). The fighters pulled women and girls
off the bus and raped them. To escape, Margaret scrambled off the road
into the bush. She stepped on an antipersonnel mine; it tore her leg
off.
Now in my 2001 worldview, Margaret's horrendous injury – the stump of
her leg was badly infected when we met and she was in incredible pain –
should have been reason enough for her to curse God and go on about her
business. But she didn't. When she got up on the podium to speak to
several hundred activists from around the world, Margaret thanked God
for her amputation. She said she experienced Jesus' presence much more
after her injury, that he had blessed her daily with love and friends
and had given her good work to do in helping other land mine survivors.
I was embarrassed. I was a lifelong atheist and so were most of my
friends in the crowd. This woman was apparently a religious nut – who
knew? But my thoughts shamed me. Margaret had something I didn't. She
was powerful and gracious, and she lived a life of radiant gratitude. I
didn't live a life of any gratitude, come to think. In addition to being
embarrassed, I was envious.

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