CHRIST IN WINTER: The
Somewhat Relevant Stories of An Old Friend—
We heard our friend, Suzanne, tell this story in a public setting of a hundred or more people, and I’m sure she has told it more than once, so I’m not revealing anything private…
Suzanne was an Anglophile. She loved all things English. Cricket, tea, royalty, the whole nine yards. Especially the music of the Anglican Church. She is an excellent singer. So when she graduated college, she moved to London to work. There she joined an Anglican congregation and sang in the choir.
One day, in a parking garage, a man grabbed her and raped her. She is a small woman. Five foot-three, then not much more than a hundred pounds. The man who raped her, over and over, was huge—six foot-seven, and 300 lbs. Each time he raped her, he told her than when he was done using her, he was going to kill her.
She said, “I had no doubt he would do it. But throughout that whole time, I prayed, saying silently to God: Just don’t leave me. I can take the pain and the misery and the injustice and the indignity and even the death, as long as you don’t leave me.”
But he didn’t kill her. Someone intervened. He was stopped. He was sent to prison.
But, later, she learned she was pregnant. She had an abortion.
As a true Anglophile, she loved the liturgy of the Anglican Church, and she loved her priest, a little white-haired man with rosy cheeks and twinkling eyes.
As fate would have it, on the Sunday after her abortion, her priest preached an anti-abortion sermon. She approached him tentatively after the service and said, “You know, if abortion is outlawed, many women will die at the hands of backstreet abortionists.” He replied, with vigor, “Good! They should!”
She said, “I felt more alone right then than I had at any time during my ordeal. When I was being raped, when I was told I’d be murdered, I was sure God was with me. In the church, it seemed like God had abandoned me.”
She knew better, of course. In a life-long attempt to correct that wrong, she came back home and went to seminary and was ordained and is preaching and pastoring to this day, trying to listen and respond to the voices that are afraid to speak their needs.
A prayer for Lent: God, don’t leave us. We can take this world, its pains and injustices and indignities, and even the failings of the church, as long as you don’t leave us. Amen.
John Robert McFarland









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