PART 1
Traumatic Faith
Understanding the effects of violence upon the workings of our imaginationāand upon the bodies and souls of persons who have been traumatizedāis the central task of this opening section. Too often we believe that when physical healing occurs, mental healing naturally follows, and that with time, all wounds heal. Such is not always the case, however. Violence often cuts so deeply into our minds that surface healings cover it over and, hidden away, allow it to expand. The balmlike work of theology and of religion is to uncover and mend such wounds. And what medicine does this? Healing lies as much, if not more, in the stories we tell and the gestures we offer as in the doctrines we preach.
1
Trauma and GraceāBeginnings
BROKEN COMMUNION: LEAHāS STORY
Late to church as usual, I took a seat in the back pew. Leah, who had started attending services only six months ago, soon joined me. Quiet and intense, she had recently asked if I would be her official church-appointed sponsor because in several weeks she planned to join the congregation. As we discussed her life, her faith, and her decision to become a church member, a friendship had taken root.
When she sat down in the pew next to me, I smiled at her and we let ourselves be drawn into the familiar rhythms of worship. We stood and sang of Godās glory; we sat and prayed for the world and ourselves; we listened to Scripture and then the sermon; we gave up our offerings and then rose to sing again. It was an ordinary Sunday morning: two friends, a familiar liturgy, and the calming power of prayer, silence, and song illuminated by the slant of midwinter light filtering through the sanctuary windows high above us.
After the offering, our pastor moved to the communion table. Since childhood, this part of the service has been my favorite; I like the image of Jesus gathering folks for supper and offering the mystery of Godās grace to us in bread and wine. But as the pastor began talking about the night ābefore Jesusā death,ā Leahās body grew rigid. Her nail-bitten fingers began to twist the folded order of worship paper in her lap, her face assumed a frighteningly blank look, her fear was cold and palpable. When the pastor then invoked the words of Jesus, āThis is my blood, poured out for you,ā she slid out of the pew and left the sanctuary. As I turned to see the back doors close softly behind her, I heard the pastor intone, āAnd this is my body, broken for you.ā
I followed her into the back hall and found her just inside the open door of the bathroom, where she stood shivering and staring at the sink. I stepped inside and asked her if she was all right. She looked over at me and haltingly said that she needed to put a little water on her face, . . . but she couldnāt remember which faucet was hot and which was cold. It was such a simple thingāhow could she not know? Before I answered, I tried to imagine what she might be thinking and why she was so afraid. For a moment, I felt the tightening grip of the terror that held her, and I seemed to be standing beside herānot in church, but in a chilling, static, confused world. We seemed far removed from the grace spoken about at the communion table and far from the warmth of the church that, literally, still held us deep inside itself.
After a few seconds, I turned on the hot water faucet for her. When the warm water finally came through the pipes, Leah put her wrists under it and slowly relaxed. We stepped back into the hall as the service ended. Leah found her coat, said good-bye, and moved outside into the late Sunday morning light as I stood there, now speechless myself, unnerved and guiltily uncertain about what had just happened or what I should have done.
My anxious uncertainty was not just personal; it was also theological. I was her mentor, and the fact that the communion service had sent her running from worship troubled me to no end. How was it that the very thing she was reaching for was the thing that so terrified her? I knew from her talks with me about her faith that coming to know graceāGodās unmerited love for herāwas central to Leahās growing sense of spiritual connection with the church. Just the week before, we had talked long into the evening about grace and Godās desire that she flourish and know the fruits of life abundant, a concept that was new to her but one to which she was rapidly warming. This week, however, a story-ritual about Jesusā love for her, grace incarnate, had thrown her into a cold, frightening place where violence seemed to stalk her. How could this be? How might the church not harm her in the very same moment it is trying to convey to her the treasure of a love unending?
The next time Leah and I met for afternoon tea, as was our custom, she shared with me the story of her childhood, a tale that threw light on why she had fled but not necessarily on the theological challenge of supporting her spiritual formation. As she told it, her parents had been hippie types in the early 1970s; until she was five, they had lived in a tent and traveled around the country with a caravan of folks, doing drugs and picking up short-term work here and there. During that period she remembered ālots of weird sex stuff and lots of stoned people frightening me as they stumbled around at night.ā When her family finally settled down, her father began sexually abusing her on a regular basis. āWe were a liberated family,ā she sarcastically informed me. Her parents split up when she was in junior high; by the time she reached high school, she was doing drugs herself, trying to be cool. She was raped during her senior year, by a supposed friend; they had been drunk, and she never told anyone. By the time she started junior college, she was ātoo depressed to do much.ā With the help of a teacher, she had ended up at a community center, joining a group for young women. It was here, she explained, that she first heard a social worker use the word ātrauma.ā She had gradually come to see that ātraumaā fit the way she felt most of the time, that her whole selfāher body and her soulāstill held within it the shock waves of the violence she had known for so many years.
Since that time, she had been in and out of various treatment programs for people who suffer from what is called post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), in which they remain haunted by the ongoing effects of violence in their lives long after the events themselves have passed. Sometimes she felt she was getting better; at other times, she despaired about the future, including times like that Sunday when, out of the blue, she was suddenly thrown back into an old state of terror and confusion, which she could not stop or control. Afterward she had gone home and made razor-blade scratches on her arm, a ritual action that, she admitted with embarrassment, restored order to her world.
She took a sip of tea and said softly, āIām sorry about church. I didnāt mean to act so weird. I hate feeling so out of control.ā I assured her that there was no need to apologize and that I was sorry about the violence she had experienced: āIt must have been horrible.ā My words sounded insignificant in the face of what she had revealed, but I didnāt know what else to say. Once again, I was the one who felt frozen. She, however, looked relieved and rested her arms on the table as she continued her tale.
āI started coming to church when I moved into the city last year because I was lonely andāthis may sound strangeābut I really wanted to be in a place where I could do things like sing and pray with other people. And be with God.ā Growing up, her family had not been particularly religious, except for the few times when her mother, in brief fits of spiritual fervor, had taken her to a nearby church. She remembered how much she liked the hymns and hearing people lift up prayers to God. She told me that now she sometimes awakened in the morning with one of those songs rolling gently through her mind, its rhythm comforting her. Sometimes, too, out of nowhere, she found herself intoning small prayers that came from a deep place within her.
She then looked back into her teacup on the table and tried to explain what had happened the previous week:
It happens to me, sometimes. Iām listening to the pastor, thinking about God and love, when suddenly I hear or see something, and itās as if a button gets pushed inside of me. In an instant, Iām terrified; I feel like Iām going to die or get hurt very badly. My body tells me to run away, but instead, I just freeze. Last week it was the part about Jesusā blood and body. There was a flash in my head, and I couldnāt tell the difference between Jesus and me, and then I saw blood everywhere, and broken body parts, and I got so afraid I just disappeared. I thought the bathroom might be safe, but even it scared and confused me. I forgot my name. I forgot the hot and cold.
She fell silent and started chewing on the side of her thumbnail. I tried to find words to reassure her, but she demurred: āI appreciate you listening, but . . . I know itās my problem, and Iām working on it.ā
āNo,ā I responded quickly, words pouring out of my mouth before I even knew what I was saying. āItās not just your problem. Itās our problemāmy problem, the churchās problem, Godās problem. You donāt need to be alone, and I hope we can work on it together. Thatās what faith communities do.ā
She eyed me with slight suspicion, for only a brief moment. The corner of her mouth tried a smile. Then she looked away and turned back to me with a new conversation topic.
During the next few days, I found myself looking at people differently. As I gazed out into the classroom during my lecture, I wondered how many students had felt the traumatic reactions Leah described and how I might use the words of my teaching in a way that could better reach them. Over dinner with friends, I took a sip of wine and suddenly remembered Leahās story of rape. How many young women would be caught in a similar place tonight? I thought about Leah living in a tent: did she eat regular meals? These thoughts disturbed me and even reminded me of times in my own life. I was beginning to realize that Leahās terror had touched places in my own past that, while unlike hers in form, were hauntingly similar in feel. Trauma. In my mind, I began to see it everywhere.
I considered the promise I made to her about not going through it alone as she āworked on it.ā God, the church, and I could be with her. The more I thought about my urgently issued assurance, however, the less certain I was as to what I had meant by it. How could the churchās profession of grace reach Leah in the cold space of her distress?
These questions came into particularly sharp focus for me at a meeting with a dozen church deacons convened to discuss fund-raising for the urgently needed renovation of a local soup kitchen. The conversation was lively, but instead of engaging in it, I listened and watched. Looking around the meeting room, I saw twelve familiar, concerned faces. Our church had a long history of engaging in social issues: homelessness, illiteracy, racism, hate crimes, hunger, AIDS, domestic violence. We were experts at setting up committees to investigate community problems and formulate effective plans of action. We didnāt like walls that separated people from each other or walls that separated the church from the world around it. But what of the walls constructed inside the self and between Leahās terror and our songs of grace and mercy?
I was certain that if this group knew about Leahās experience, their faces would immediately be filled with earnest concern. But I feared that our response to it might be to form a social action committee. I was confident that such a committee could begin to address, as we already had, many of the social conditions that led to Leahās terror. But I wondered, Could a trauma committee do the work that would help Leah heal? I suspected not. Perhaps we needed to obtain therapy for her. But she clearly had had that and had chosen a church for other reasons. How could liturgy, community, and faith work together best to encourage healing in broken places?
The meeting came to a close; we decided to make renovating the kitchen a top priority. A good decision, I thought. But I walked away filled with worries about Leah and the church. Worries about walls and about the absence of answers to my still unspoken questions about trauma and grace.
The next week I arrived at church, late again, and was happy to see Leah already sitting in our usual pew. This morning, however, the routine felt different. Sitting next to Leah, I waited for even the smallest sign that something might be going wrong. I tried to imagine what the songs, prayers, silences, Scripture readings, and sermon might sound like to Leah. I tried to recall what I knew of traumas in my own life, what it felt like in my body to be terrified and confused. In a new way I was also aware of the people sitting in front of and behind me and what they might be thinking. Scattered around us were veterans, one from World War II, one from Vietnam, and another from Desert Storm. There was a mother whose son had died from driving drunk last spring, a fourteen-year-old girl who had witnessed a drive-by shooting and had testified about it in court, and a father who had emigrated recently from Rwanda, a place about which he seldom spoke. And there were others, Iām sure, who had suffered violent losses, some of whom had never spoken of them to anyone. āHow did the Lordās Prayer sound to each of them?ā I asked myself. āDid our collective words of thanksgiving to God make sense in the face of so much pain and loss?ā
The whole world of worship as I had known it in the past began to shift and change before my eyes: there, in Center Church on the Green in New Haven, I came as close as a Congregationalist comes to having a mystical experience. The vision was powerful. A new world appeared before me. In it, we were still in the sanctuary, but Leahās cold, ice-white tiled bathroom had expanded to hold a whole congregation of shivering souls. It was a world in which I could not rely on normal assumptions about human perceptions and actions. Here memories were blurry. Commonly held notions of order, like the order of the hot and cold faucets, seemed unstable, elusive. Scenes of violence erupted without pattern, overwhelming both thought and sound. Bodies were frozen in fear, and a sense of utter helplessness filled the air. Mouths were gaping open in screams, but no sounds came out, no language worked. And cold blankness constantly threatened to descend.
What was most strange about this scene was that its chaos was unfolding not off in a corner bathroom but in the midst of worship itself. The belly-body of the sanctuary held all of it within its viscera; the liturgy moved in and through its midst, circulating through its aisles and around the many lives it held. At times, the words spoken, sung, or prayed struck violently against the fragile, traumatized people that gathered there, deepening the terror. I knew at once that such words and actions were not harbingers of grace but the spawn of the churchās own brokenness and history of violence. I wanted to reach over and shield Leah from their assaultive force, to shelter her, others, myself.
At other times, however, our faith-born words and ritual motions seemed truly grace-filled as they circ...