Old man   He is easy to ignore as he stares passersby in downtown Nashville. It is simple to dismiss him "homeless." 

   "The heart is the whole thing. We are only pieces." Rumi wrote. The 13th century Persian mystic wrote glorious poetry & not a verse of it is out of date. 

   We want our hearts to be dwelling places for God's Love. Reading Rumi is one way to open the gates. Helping those in need is another.

   Yet, the hardest people to touch with out love can sometimes be those closest to us. Caregivers are hemmed in by patients who are seen as needing diagnosis & treatment, not love & a listening ear.

   Longtime lovers may have fallen into habits of taking each other for granted. One day a tragic accident or a sudden illness mocks their folly by stealing the chance for more joy. 

   We want our hearts to be homes where love offers strength as well as comfort, kindness as well as companionship, warmth & safety as well as the affirmation of embrace. 

   The man on the street seems isolated from all of this. Once a baby, a small boy, a young man, perhaps a father, he is now the man on the street. Once hope lived in his heart.

   One of the "pieces" of God's love, this man gazes out from his smooth stone perch as if waiting – watching for someone who will never come. 

-Reverend Erie Chapman

3 responses to “Days 292-296 – Pieces of Love”

  1. Todd Meador Avatar
    Todd Meador

    Erie – you covered so much in this piece. It really has me thinking about who needs our love, compassion and open ear.
    Sometimes the people closest to us are the easy ones to neglect.
    You also spoke about the people we work with and how easy it is to get caught up in completing the tasks at hand. To focus on the “work” that needs to be done. However, much of the real “work” that needs to be done is to offer a warm heart and open ear.
    And finally, the strangers in our lives who need our hearts, who are lost and may have been forgotten.
    Much to think about. Thanks for the reminder.

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  2. sbeng Avatar
    sbeng

    Erie: It is true that sometimes we take each other for granted e.g. those who are closes to us, friends and neighbors. You have an example of an individual by herself. Today I see homeless families encamped by the riverbed. deprived of a roof over their heads, sleeping in tents, without proper utilities for meal preparations and shower.

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  3. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Thank you for your humanity, Erie, for bringing in to clear focus the person before us who was once a baby, a small child, someone’s son. How easy it is to lump people into categories of the faceless, the stranger and then they become the enemy or the target of blame.
    Thank you for seeing through the sacred eyes of Christ and opening our eyes as well.

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