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Biography
The Rev. Dr. Tex Sample is Emeritus
Professor of Church and Society at the Saint Paul School of Theology in
Kansas City, Missouri. Tex was born in Mississippi and over the course
of his life has been a cab driver, a laborer, a roust-about, a pastor,
and a teacher. He’s the author of eights books and is currently working
on his ninth. Tex lives in Arizona, where he serves as Coordinator of
the Network for the Study of U.S. Lifestyles [Biographical information is correct as of the broadcast date noted
above.]
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Sunday Evening Club
and 30
Good Minutes.
"The God Who Loves Us in Suffering"
Peter Bertocci was a Professor of Philosophy at Boston University when I
was a student there. Bertocci was not only a fine teacher; he took a
very active interest in his students. He used to tell the story of one
of his students who was quite attentive to his work and attentive in his
classes. But this young woman was virtually paralyzed in both arms. She
had enough use of her right arm that she could gather up a pen in
between two fingers and while bending over a desk write notes while
Bertocci lectured. Bertocci lectured quite rapidly and had a lot of
feeling and emotion in what he said and did. When one listened
carefully, one wrote a lot!
This young woman would sit there with that pen that seemed awkwardly
gripped between those two fingers and she would write furiously.
Bertocci noticed her, of course, and often noticed that she sometimes
would be in pain. The pain would be etched on her face, struggling to
keep up and obviously needing to stop writing, but she simple refused
to. She just kept on taking notes and bearing through the pain.
One day he stopped her at the door as the class was leaving and asked
her if she had a minute. She said, “Of course.” He said, “You know, I’ve
been watching you. You go through a lot to be here, don’t you?” She said
that she did. And he said, “You know, I’d like to know the story. What
happened to you? What happened to your arms?”
“Well, I was one of those kids. Many of us, you know, in my generation
got polio. And I went through the whole affair: the iron lung, the
hospitalization, and the rest. Finally, after what seemed an
interminable length of time, they told me that I could go home, but that
I couldn’t go home until I had certain kinds of physical therapy. They
told my mother that they could actually train her to do the therapy but
they weren’t sure at all that she could do it because it would be very
painful. Because I would not like it, they felt that my mother would not
be able to administer the kind of massage and treatment required. My
mother simply responded, ‘Teach me. I’ll do it,’
“When we got home, every day my mother would take me into my room, pull
down the windows, close the door, and, Dr. Bertocci, she would begin to
rub. And I cannot tell you how much that hurt. At first, I would implore
her to stop, pleading with her, ‘Please stop!’ When that didn’t work, I
would begin to cry. I would bawl and then I would beg her, ‘Please,
please mother! Stop!’ And when that didn’t work I began to call her
names. I called her every name I could think of and I even made up a
few, but my mother kept on rubbing. After those sessions would end, my
mother would leave my room, go to her room, close the door and cry. Dr.
Bertocci, that went on every day for a solid year.”
Bertocci dropped his eyes to the floor, obviously moved. But when he
did, the young woman raised that one arm and said, “But, Dr. Bertocci!”
I see that story as a parable of God, a God who is with us, who refuses
to absent self from us when we suffer, when we’re hurt and when we’re in
pain. I see that as a God who suffers for us, that God’s suffering is
very active. That’s meant a great deal to me, but I recently read David
Kelsey’s article in the Christian Century where he said an additional
thing. He says it’s not really enough for God to be with us and God to
suffer with us, you need one other thing. And he argues that what you
need is God’s active love of us in our suffering and our pain. I think
in that story, you get that kind of active love of that mother in her
daughter’s suffering and pain, and the kind of strength—the word comfort
is very appropriate here—and the kind of comfort that story represents.
In the death of my own son, who was killed accidentally on a motorcycle,
I personally experienced exactly that kind of God. I never believed that
God intended the death of our son. I believed then, as I do now, that
Steven died by accident. At the same time, I also believe that no one
was in greater pain over Steve’s death than God and that God was not
only actively with us, but suffered with us during that time. You see, I
never believed that God willed those kinds of tragic things to happen in
the world. I’d been taught places called Millsaps College, Boston
University, and St. Paul School of Theology, that God did not bring that
kind of evil on people. I believed that then, I believe it now. The God
whom I worship is a God who actively loves us in those times.
After Steve’s death, the funeral and all the hard times that that
represented—and being under girded by that kind of understanding of
God’s relationship to us in suffering and the rest—I do remember one
night. I was at home by myself. Everyone was gone. We had a tough time
in addition to Steve’s death. The dog that he had given us died within
days of his death and I believed that it was a death somehow in sympathy
with Steve. And then our daughter’s marriage split up within a week of
Steve’s death. But that night I had tried to start the car and even the
car wouldn’t work! It wouldn’t crank. I remember standing in the
bathroom, just feeling this rage: rage about Steve’s death, rage about
that divorce, rage about the dog’s death. But it took that triggering of
the car not starting and I found myself simply yelling, yelling at the
top of my voice at God. If a neighbor heard me, they had to think I was
crazy. And I was calling God names, quite frankly. And when I blew that
out and just turned it loose, suddenly I experienced an intimacy with
God that would match any time I ever spent in relationship with God. I
remember a calm. I remember a peaceable feeling. I remember a sense that
finally these things would come to a completion in God that would
sustain all of us in our part of the world and hold us together.
Interview with Tex
Sample
Lydia Talbot:
Tex, we are all moved profoundly by your message and, of course, your
sharing the tragic death of your seventeen-year-old son, Steven, on a
motorcycle. Your dialogue with God was ragingly angry but you were also able to
come to grips with this terrible struggle, in reality, out of the framework of
your faith. What works for people or what words do you use for people who do not
have faith or say things like, “I lost my faith?”
Tex Sample: I don’t know what the words are.
They come up at strange times. It seems to help with people who lose children,
for example, to know that you’ve also lost a son or a daughter. And in our case,
I often will tell that story simply because there will be people inevitably in a
room or an auditorium where I am speaking who fairly recently lost a child or
perhaps a spouse, or whatever. And it seems to help them to come over and see
somebody who survived it. I’ve even had people say that. “Your son died how long
ago?” And I say, “Seventeen years.” And they say, “Well, and you’re surviving?”
And I say, “Oh yeah. I’m surviving.” In fact, let me say one other piece about
that. I think, too, part of the thing that God does in loving us—and that’s what
I would say—I think God’s grace is what is so powerfully operative there. I
think one of the dangers of losing somebody that close to you is you take on the
identity of a victim so that you become a person who’s lost a son, in our case.
And that kind of seeing yourself as a victim I believe means not only that the
grief work has not been done but that the conversation with God needs to go
farther. Because, you see, if your identity is all in being the victim of a
death then you really haven’t gone on. I miss Steve. I will always miss Steve. I
don’t ever want to get over him. But it’s like an amputation, you know. It
heals.
Talbot: A dismemberment.
Sample: It heals. But the vacancy is there.
It’s not there. But there is a sense in which, too, there is a warmth and good
memories about Steve. And you can cherish those without making loss your
identity as a person.
Daniel Pawlus: I’m curious to pick up on
what Lydia said. You study American culture and lifestyles. I’ve always been
interested in people that don’t have an active faith life or a faith that they
turn to. What do you find that people turn to in these times of suffering if
they’re not plugged into some faith?
Sample: Well, I think there are two things.
One would be that they turn to friends or people they are close to. And I don’t
think that there is any way to get around the power of having people surround
you and enable you to make it through that night. So that’s very important. You
see, what I believe is that God acts whether people believe in God or not. So I
would argue that no one gets through these times without God but they might not
be aware of that God is actively loving them through those times.
Talbot: Our viewers, many of them right now
listening to this program, are suffering or know people who have suffered a
death of a loved one or whose cancer is back. What’s the first step in learning
to trust the journey?
Sample: One thing I don’t want to do is to
trivialize suffering, to argue that suffering is always good. Suffering
sometimes destroys people and it can certainly distort a life. But in terms of a
first step in dealing with it, I would think facing into it is a very important
piece, getting past that denial. “Yes, your son is dead,” or “Yes, I have
cancer,” or yes this. My mother used to say to us, taught us this many times:
lean into the pain. She didn’t mean enjoy pain. She didn’t mean become
compulsive about it. But she meant don’t run from it, don’t hide from it, face
into it, lean into it, know it’s there, and deal with it. So I think that helps.
In other words, don’t escape into illusions or fantasies or distortions. Face
into how angular and bad and difficult things can be.
Pawlus: I loved what you said about
accessing that rage. I think a lot of us are afraid when we’re suffering to
really yell out at God. You found that to be very helpful for you. How about for
other people?
Sample: I had the benefit of some great
teachers. One of the things they taught me was that raging at God was a form of
prayer. Now, if you do that all the time there may be some other things going
on! But I think raging at God is a form of prayer.
Pawlus: Is that a place to put the pain and
the panic?
Sample: Sometimes. But sometimes you put the
panic and the pain into the panic and the pain. Rage can be a way of deflecting
yourself away from the pain. Rage can be a way out. Instead of being hurt,
you’re angry. So sometimes you really need to be hurt and know you’re hurt. Do
you know what I mean? But sometimes, I think, you just need to rage. You just
need to blow that out of there.
Talbot: Who helped you most in seminary or
growing up in your journey to come to this kind of sensibility?
Sample: Peter Bertocci helped me a lot
obviously. Walter Muelder was immensely helpful to me. Paul Deats and Howard
Thurman, the Dean of the Chapel at Boston University. Those people were great
helps. The faculty at St. Paul School of Theology was an enormous help to me
during that time.
Pawlus: Thank you very much, Tex, for
sharing your thoughts with us and your great insights.
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