When it was all said and done my parents bought an old
farmhouse and forty acres of land about 25 miles from the subdivision. Neatly
landscaped lawns and paved streets were replaced by cornfields and a dusty,
gravel road. Instead of being surrounded by similar looking homes the farmhouse
was encircled by barns and sheds. The closest neighbor lived over a quarter
mile away. The nearest town, and the place I would attend school, was five
miles away but the bus ride to get there was over an hour long.
The farm held all kinds of new experiences for me: There were
trees on the property that were actually big enough to climb. There were barns
to explore. There were fields to play in. The old house still had a coal-fired
furnace. Every morning in the winter my dad or mom would go down to the damp
and dirty basement to shovel coal onto the fire so the house would warm up for
the day. My parents began remodeling almost immediately. Walls were knocked
down, a stone fireplace was installed and we started living in what would become
and endless construction zone.
Moving from a suburban culture to a rural lifestyle and having
to make new friends was difficult enough without having to adapt to a second
cultural change. Our new community was predominantly populated by the spiritual nemesis of Lutherans around the
world: Catholics.
Evidently 480 years hadn’t been enough time to forgive each
other for insults spoken during the Protestant Reformation. There was (and
still is to some extent) a fear among parents that conversion was a real
possibility and would result in eternal damnation if not eternal parental shame. For
five centuries the animosity has run so deep that even today I still get surprised
looks when I acknowledge that my Catholic friends are indeed Christians. Nobody
was hostile towards us but there was always a sense of awkward wariness.
The most surprising
part was just how Catholic the new community was. I was one of only four kids
in my grade who were not released to participate in religious education and
attend weekly Mass (and whenever there was a feast day if I remember
correctly). In fact, the public school system arranged for the middle school
classes to be held in the school building owned by the Catholic parish that
stood adjacent to the elementary school. I can’t imagine such an arrangement in
today’s climate of church/state separation but it worked out well enough for
the community back then.
I learned a lot from my new friends. I learned that they got
bored during church services just like I did. I learned that they also wondered
why church doctrine seemed so important to adults. I learned that, like me,
they weren’t supposed to talk about these things but were to obediently attend
worship and learn the rules. What I really learned is that we are more alike
than I had been led to believe.
In the Bible, as people move to new places there is a dynamic
tension between being integrated into the culture and maintaining a strict
separation for purity reasons. (Since each group had its own god/s it’s hard to
separate the racial and spiritual reasons for maintaining this separation.) It
seems that no matter how strong the urge is within us to meet new people and
learn from them there is always someone (sometimes ourselves) telling us that
it is dangerous and that we should stay apart.
What I am learning is that I enjoy life a lot more when I can
find the similarities between other people and myself. It’s easy to spot the differences
and to be captivated by them making us wary and afraid. Seeing the way we are
similar is harder. It often requires looking deeper into ourselves as well as
the other. And when we see similarities it often reveals things about ourselves
that we would rather not admit.
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