New Creation: Moments That Interrupt the Darkness
"We all know love when we see it. All the rest are labels."

Naomi Shihab Nye, a Palestinian American poet, shares a story of a woman who was at the Albuquerque airport when she heard an announcement: “If anyone in the vicinity of Gate A-4 understands any Arabic, please come to the gate immediately.”
Since it was her gate, she went there.
An older woman in full traditional Palestinian embroidered dress, just like her grandma wore, was crumpled to the floor, wailing loudly. The flight attendant pleaded with the young woman to talk to her. “We told her the flight was going to be late and she did this.”
The woman stooped to put her arm around the woman and spoke to her haltingly in Arabic. The minute she heard her words, the elderly woman stopped crying. She thought the flight had been cancelled entirely, and she needed to be in El Paso for a major medical treatment. The young woman assured her, “No, we’re fine, you’ll get there, just later, who is picking you up? Let’s call him.”
They called her son and the young woman spoke with him in English. She told him she would stay with his mother and would ride next to her. Then they called her other sons just for the fun of it. Then they called the young woman’s dad, and he and the elderly woman spoke for a while in Arabic and found out they had ten shared friends. This all took up about two hours.
She was laughing a lot by then, telling about her life, patting the young woman’s knee, answering questions. She had pulled a sack of homemade mamool cookies—little powdered sugar crumbly mounds stuffed with dates and nuts—out of her bag—and was offering them to all the women at the gate. Not a single woman declined one.
It was like a sacrament: the traveler from Argentina, the mom from California, the lovely woman from Laredo—they were all covered with the same powdered sugar. And smiling.
And then the airline broke out free beverages, and two little girls from their flight ran around serving them all apple juice, and they were covered with powdered sugar, too.
All around that gate of late and weary travelers, not a single person seemed to be apprehensive about any other person.
If we are alert, those are the moments that interrupt the darkness in our world. If we are mindful and observant, it happens all around us all the time.
We are living in a season of expectation – but not only for something that will happen in a week or a month or a year. It is an expectation that calls to be alert and recognize God in our midst in the here and now. And when we do, like Gate A-4, we find that we are in communion with one another.
Rondell is a young man from our community – from PBMR – who was incarcerated for almost a year in Cook County Jail, Chicago. He is only 19. He is well loved. Rondell would call regularly – really regularly – 5-6 ties a day. The phone would get passed around from person to person until the voice recording comes on, “you have one minute left.” Often, he’d call right back. Sometimes he would call and just have us on the phone as he played cards or engaged in some activity on the living deck. He needed to be connected. He needed to be in communion.
In that darkened place – in the darkened moments of our lives, joy creeps in, light bursts forth.
What we anticipate – what we have already experienced – is that intimate love of God.
God had to be born among us so that we could know the love God, that God lives among us, that we belong to one another.
Amongst Indigenous peoples – of all lands – there is no separation of the sacred and the profane.
· There is no Hindu, Christian, Jewish, Islamic way of loving.
· There is no Methodist, Baptist, Catholic way of running a soup kitchen.
· There is no Black, White, or Latin way of hoping.
We all know love when we see it. All the rest are labels.


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