God so loved stories
that He created human beings.
Elie Wiesel
She had merely pronounced the title of her story and the
tears started welling up in my eyes. I couldn’t control it. “How I Met My
Birth-Mom.” Her story hadn’t even begun but those five words were pregnant with
vulnerability, courage and self-disclosure. I was not expecting the emotional
impact of the stories that were shared that day but I will not soon forget them
– a mother’s excruciating struggle with a sick newborn fighting for life, a
young college student leaving the security of home and the comfort of a
boyfriend to follow the call of Christ, a young man (years later) meeting the
nurse who’s tender care nurtured his delicate life as a preemie, a true
“miracle” baby.
This was the first session of a series of ecumenical
dialogues I gathered this week between Protestants and Catholics as part of my
doctoral research. I invited this group of faithful men and women to probe
their inner attitudes about “the other” and share their most sacred stories –
how they have experienced the transformative presence of God. They were not
there to prove their denominational positions or win theological arguments.
They were simply asked to share stories about how they’ve experienced the
living God. What I’m interested in is the effect that storytelling (not just any
stories but the deep, sacred stories of our encounters with God) has on our
perceptions of “the other”.
Narrative psychologists suggest that stories and
storytelling are at the center of identity formation. “We are storytellers, and we are the stories
we tell,” noted Dan McAdams, professor and chair of the psychology department
at Northwestern University.[1] Human beings, by their very nature, are
storytellers. Not only do we enjoy a good story, it seems that our brains are
hardwired for it. The need for narrative
is the very “cornerstone of consciousness.”[2]
We are the stories we tell.[3]
So the question becomes: What are the stories that we are living into and what are the stories our lives are telling? What are the stories that frame our understanding of ourselves and those who we consider “other”? When Protestants and Catholics think about one another do their minds jump straight to doctrinal differences? Do we rush through the list of reasons why we are “in” and they are “out”? Do we grope for memories that will reinforce and calcify our separateness and justify our bitterness?
Pursuing these questions can lead to startling realizations:
Is my identity grounded in intellectual concepts and doctrinal prepositions,
or do my stories and the stories of others reveal something deeper, more fundamental, more unifying, more human? The
stories told this week lead me to believe that deep and abiding unity is not a pipedream
but a gift waiting to be given. The real question is: Do we have the patience
and humility to hear the sacred stories of others, listen with our whole being,
and embrace the other as a part of ourselves?
A Vision of Embrace
In
an embrace I open my arms to create space in myself for the other. Open arms
are a sign that I do not want to be by myself only, an invitation for the other
to come in and feel at home with me. In an embrace I also close my arms around
the other. Closed arms are a sign that I want the other to become a part of me
while I at the same time maintain my own identity. By becoming part of me, the
other enriches me. In a mutual embrace, none remains the same because each
enriches the other, yet both remain true to their genuine selves.[4]
[2] Peter Gruber, “The Inside Story,” Psychology Today (March 15, 2011) found
at http://www.psychologytoday.com/articles/201103/the-inside-story,
Accessed 1/15/13.
[3]
So pervasive is this consensus that many scholars suggest that the brain is
“first and foremost a vehicle for storytelling.” Dan P. McAdams, The Stories We Live By: Personal Myths and
the Making of the Self (New York: The Guilford Press, 1993), 28. See also G.S. Howard, A Tale of Two Stories: Excursions into a Narrative Psychology
(Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1989); M. Landau, “Human
Evolution as Narrative,” American
Scientist, 72 (1984): 262-268; T.R. Sarbin (ed.), Narrative Psychology: The Storied Nature of Human Conduct (New
York: Praeger, 1986).
[4]
Miroslav Volf, “A Vision of Embrace: Theological Perspectives on Cultural
Identity and Conflict,” The Ecumenical
Review 48(2), April 1995, 203.
Michael- I am so thankful for your blog as well as the type of articles you share in it. The topic of your research sounds fascinating. Thank you!
ReplyDelete-Liz VandeMoortel
this is so good. i love your stories and your research sounds so interesting. it was such a gift to have the time with your family last weekend.
ReplyDelete