There are three kinds of hunger
that humans have to deal with on a daily basis.
Some of the world battles with physical hunger, a portion of the western
world loses the battle to psychological hunger and almost no one pays attention
to spiritual hunger.
I’ve
never really been hungry before. That’s
not to say that my stomach has relayed a message to my brain that it is,
indeed, time to refuel. Usually, though,
the message is not that I’m running on empty, it is simply that my body has
gotten used to eating at certain times of day.
The psychology of hunger kicks in: I am not hungry because I am hungry;
I am hungry because I’m supposed to be hungry.
It
is said that Australians eat five times per day and that when they do eat, it
is in moderation – small proportions to take the edge off the gnawing edges of
the belly. My own stomach has grown used
to this repetitive encouragement of filling my gullet and I find that even
though I may have eaten a large breakfast, the Australian system of eating
would require that I eat something at 10:30.
They call it morning tea. I call
it justified gluttony. I’m not being
harsh, but I’m not sure that the body needs to eat every two hours in order to
wash down an inordinately small cup of tea.
As I raise my pinky finger and gaze around at the rest of those
partaking, I think to myself, This is
completely cultural. If I don’t cram a
scone smothered in Strawberry jam and whip cream down my throat, they will be
offended. I’m sophisticated,
too. You can tell by the four ounce cup of
tea in my right hand.
They
call it having a ‘cuppa.’ Just like
every other phrase in Australia, it is shortened as if saying the words, ‘let’s
have a cup of tea,’ would be too exhausting.
Let’s
have a cuppa while we discuss hunger, shall we?
Give me a second while I butter up two pieces of toast because I haven’t
eaten for thirty-nine minutes.
In
Western cultures, for the most part, we don’t have to worry as much with
physical hunger. By and large, we have
enough food to go around fifty times over, but if we ever actualized what
hunger does to us, we might be a little more careful with the way we spread
around the calories.
I
once led a youth group event where my high school kids had to come to church to
stay overnight. These events are called ‘lock-ins’
because once the youth have arrived they are not allowed to leave the premises
of the church – essentially, they are locked in. We had been doing a month long theme of
understanding the epidemic of homelessness that pervaded the southwest portion
of the United States. Because winter is
relatively short and not very harsh, many transient people made their way to
the southwest to live out their months on the streets living in cardboard
boxes, cooking over open fires started in fifty-five gallon drums.
Because
we had been studying life on the streets, our overnight at the church would go
with the theme of homelessness. In order
to attend the event, the kids ‘entry fee’ was a can of food from their parents’
pantry which would be, in turn, used at the local homeless shelter. Little did the kids know that the church
would be the homeless shelter.
As
the youth arrived, everything that they had brought for the twelve hours of the
lock-in (about ten changes of clothes, jewelry, perfume, walkmans (yes, it was
the 90’s), snacks, extra bags of just-in-case) would be stashed in my
office. Essentially, we were making them
homeless. Earlier in the day, the
chaperones and I had traveled around Mesa stopping at appliance stores
gathering large boxes which would be the kids’ homes (and beds) for the
night. There would be no entertainment –
no movies, no planned games, no MTV – nothing.
The kids had to fend for themselves and the only thing that they were
allowed to eat for the night was the can of food that they brought.
The
kids were not informed of this particularity before they arrived.
We had
a large contingent show up that night.
As usual, parents who normally have nothing to do with the life of the
church dropped their kids off early, squealing off into the desert sunset,
heading home to disconnect their phones so as not to be interrupted during a
teenager free night.
As
the kids arrived, about forty of them, they were asked to pile up all of their
belongings in a corner of the auditorium.
The cans of food that they had carried with them were to be placed in
the kitchen window. I smirked as I saw
what the kids had brought for the night.
It was as I suspected – they had rummaged through their parents
cupboards picking out those things that they most hated at home; cans of
spinach, beets, creamed corn, a jar of pickled onions. This was what they would be cooking for the
night. Cooking, that is, if they could
figure out how to get the cans open.
A
few kids showed up that I guessed would be difficult. Dennis already had been arrested for auto
theft – he was thirteen; his brother Manny was already flirting with the idea
of being part of a Phoenix gang; two girls, Darla and Hannah, who had already
perfected professional flirting and as they would be the oldest ones there were
probably thinking that any young male would be fair game.
I
prayed a little prayer for me.
Priceless
was the moment when we began to take away their belongings. Dennis thought it was funny as Darla and
Hannah began to moan loudly that they wouldn’t be able to change clothes for
the night. Desperately they tried to
stop us, asking for just a few moments to pick through their bags for
‘necessities.’ To no avail. We stayed strong.
Then,
to top it all off, the largest complaint came when we told them the menu for
the night. As their eyes focused on what
they had brought, it finally hit them: these
are the things that we hate to eat and yet we were going to foist them off to
the homeless people as if somehow they should just be thankful that we gave
what we did. Hungry people should just
be happy that we are so generous. Hungry people shouldn’t be so picky. They were going to be hungry and they were
going to perhaps understand, even just a little bit, what happens when you
aren’t fed.
When
people get hungry, they do things they normally wouldn’t do – even kids. As they didn’t want to partake of spinach and
beets, they decided to wait out the night and into the morning. But as the kids noticed the edge of hunger,
the anger manifested itself in other ways.
They began to fight – two boys almost got into fisticuffs over a
refrigerator box. They began to argue –
a couple of the kids were not happy that can of spinach was distributed so
sparsely. They began to get tired; they
learned that homelessness and hunger are not holidays from societal
responsibilities, but usually structural identities put in place by ruling
authorities.
Hunger
changes whole cultures.
2
Kings 6:24-30
Some
time later, Ben-Hadad, king of Aram, mobilized his entire army and marched up
and laid siege to Samaria. There was a
great famine in the city; the siege lasted so long that a donkey’s head sold
for eighty shekels of silver and a half pint of dove’s dung sold for five. As the king of Israel was passing by on the
wall, a woman cried to him, “Help me, my lord the king.”
The
king replied, “If the Lord does not help you, where can I get help for
you? From the threshing floor? From the winepress?” Then he asked her, “What’s the matter?”
She
answered, “This woman said to me, ‘Give up your son so that we may eat him
today, and tomorrow we’ll eat my son.’
So we cooked my son and ate him.
The next day I said to her, ‘Give up your son so we may eat him,’ but
she had hidden him.”
When
the king heard the woman’s words, he tore his robes. As he went along the wall, the people looked,
and there, underneath, he had sackcloth on.
There,
is real hunger – so violently present, that the people would do anything to not
be hungry. Anything – including eating
their future, their children, their hope – anything.
This is
not one of the Bible stories told in any Sunday school class that I’ve ever
been involved in, but it is a biblical story that speaks to our present
time. We are a hungry people, a starving
people, a people so hungry that we would even consume our children’s future so
that we can stave off this incredible sense of emptiness that is gnawing at the
edges of our consciousness. We hunger
for the Word of God, and God himself, but we are not even conscious of it.
When
the devil said, ‘Turn these rocks into bread,’ Jesus response was not just, ‘No
thanks, even though that sounds good, I’ll refrain,’ he also had a lesson for
Satan.
“Humankind
cannot live on bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of
God.”
Yes,
it is true that humans can, and do, live without consuming the Bread of Life,
but are they really alive? Are they
really living abundant life?
And
without knowing it, while starving for the Word of life, society begins to
consume its children. Not physically, of
course, but emotionally and spiritually.
Because we don’t offer Daily Bread as the main course, (we don’t even
offer breadcrumbs to the kids), they begin to hunger for everything else. Because they have no sense of the Word of God
and its importance or essentialness for life, they learn to consume each other.
In
the end, the devil has what he wanted in the first place: sustainable, perpetual and unrecognized
emptiness.
The
consumption of our youth is visible in the church’s statistics: Only one percent of youth have an active
faith in Jesus Christ.
In
a Christian studies class, a discussion arose from a group of eight grade
students wondering about the realities of the Creation story in the book of
Genesis. The discussion took place
mostly between four students; the rest of them stared out the windows, drew
pictures on their spiral bound notebooks or picked their noses. Ideas floated back and forth – a literal
understanding of Creation is the only one that works. No, no, said one student. There is too much scientific evidence to
support that the world is much more wonderfully made than in six days. Another student questioned the reality of how
Adam and Even could bring out the entire human race from their genetic
material.
At
the sound of Adam and Eve’s names, one young boy at the very back of the class
raised his hand and asked,
“You
keep talking about this Adam and Eve.
Who are they? Are they from the
Lockyer Valley?”
The
physical, psychological and spiritual hunger has enveloped our children in a
cloud of despair and we, as adults, have done very little about it. We have simply replied to the starving,
‘What can we do about it? If God can’t feed them, how can we? We’ll just put on our mourning clothes and
rue the day the world changed. We’ll
reminisce about the good old days when families came to church, when there was
no soccer on Sundays, when this new fangled device called the mobile phone
didn’t interrupt existence. We can’t do
anything about this.’
It’s
the great Christian cop out that we hold in our hands the Bread of Life, that
which can feed the entire world, and we are reluctant to distribute it. Even knowing Jesus had extraordinary powers
to replicate and multiply the power of God through the Bread of Life, we are
unable at best, and unwilling at worst, to save this generation of young people
from starving.
The
Church is in need of transition also – to lose the mantle of yesterday’s wonder
years and gain a whole new generation with dreams and visions for the future of
God’s kingdom.
Let’s
feed them.
Later,
as Jesus transitions us from humans who struggle with an understanding of
scarcity, we will look at God’s abundance and what it means for a wide-eyed
world who, for the first time in decades, may never have heard of the saving
love of Jesus Christ. But for now, let’s
move to the next temptation to overcome – assurance.
1 comment:
As they say on public radio here in the US, “you learn something new every day.” I had to read the Bible passage in 2 Kings for myself. Incredible! I never knew this story was in the Bible.
I couldn’t agree with you more Reid. We are starving our children! The hunger theme is a helpful analogy and it was well written, but I think it states the obvious.
What I’d like to know is how we can feed the children and youth so they will enjoy and consume the meal! We can teach them at our churches in many unique ways that engage them well, but the instruction really needs to continue at home. We need parents to bring their kids to church on a consistent basis. The church I belong is in one of the poorest zip codes in the US. The only way kids arrive at church is by the church bus. Attendance is inconsistent to say the least. I rarely see parents accompany their children to church.
How do we feed them?! My heart breaks with this dilemma!
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