I've been wounded for a long time.
Woundedness has been my language and my grounds for operation. It’s how I’ve
partially functioned in the last few years. As I began pastoral ministry in
2013, my naiveté convinced me that I was ready for whatever would come into my
path. I thought I knew what I was doing. I did not. I failed miserably and
burned some bridges in the process. I craved mutual love and was met with
conditional tolerance.
I was forced to conform to a specific
ideal or teaching. To move beyond this concept was to subject oneself to
scrutiny, isolation, and backlash. So, I reluctantly conformed; being
internally convinced that faithfulness was akin to production. If I made the
grades, then I was a faithful and obedient follower. And in any social
experiment where you force a stubborn, hardheaded independent into conformity,
ugliness bursts forth and continues to spew until the fountain is empty.
I finally found the bottom of the pit.
There was no acid to regurgitate – just a gag reflex.
In this time of toxicity, much of what
made me special had been shoved deep into a dark corner, so far that I barely
recognized her anymore. I miss her. I miss the girl who was known for her
laugh. I miss the girl who made silly dance videos just to make others laugh. I
miss the girl who played bass in the worship band. I miss the girl that my home
church knew and still talks about.
The Church killed me...or so I thought. ‘She’ took away my voice, my laughter, my happiness. And while I called out for help, with few gracious responders, I felt alone and helpless. I believed in her and she seemingly disowned me. It became this journey of asking what I did wrong, why wasn’t I enough, and what more I must do to prove myself. Since 2015, I’ve operated under this dismal world of guilt, fear, and shame – that I must achieve to be heard. And I had to work twice as hard because I had the wrong gender and struggled with emotional boundaries.
And yet, I still loved her. I realize
now that those screaming voices of division and exclusion do not represent the
whole Church. They were broken and battered people who probably didn’t even
realize how much pain they were inflicting. They probably still don’t even know
how deep the wounds are. I forgive them. I thought I already did. But just
today I realized that I needed to do it again, while also asking forgiveness
for myself – for the toxicity I permitted and perpetuated, for the disgraceful
attitudes I’ve assigned to others who remind me of them, for the judgment and
blame I’ve placed on leaders, for the disbelief of freedom and grace, for the
weight I keep picking back up that God has already taken away. Melissa, I
forgive you.
I still fight for the Church because I
believe in her – what she believes and how she lives it out. I believe in this
God of redemption; though I was floundering in darkness, somewhere deep within
me believed that the light still lingered, that my imprisonment would not last
forever. It’s just now dawning on me that she
never abandoned me. The Church didn’t kill me; it was only my perception of
the church. She never left me alone in the darkness; she chose to walk with me
in it – parents, siblings, aunts and uncles, grandparents, Sunday school
teachers, youth group leaders, pastors, mentors, counselors, professors,
colleagues, co-workers, friends, a spouse…I was never alone. God orchestrated a
big, beautiful community that has been cheering me on since birth.
Through a recent Facebook post, a
former youth leader posted this: “I have always known that God has His hand on
you and will use you to bring honor and glory to His name. I pray for you
often.” Looking back, I’m not sure I could say I brought honor and glory to
God. But maybe God received what little gifts I could give in the midst of
naiveté and depression. I’m sure somewhere in between I did good. To quote the always-beloved
George Feeny from Boy Meets World,
“Believe in yourselves. Dream. Try. Do good.”
Though the darkness felt isolating, I
was always surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses and cheerleaders. The
Church has always loved me well. I’m
just now catching up. Now that I’m in a healthy environment with people who
choose me, believe in me, and love me, I can actually move from the brokenness
and into life. I want so much to believe in myself again, although this time to
really mean it. I want to dream, to try, to do good. And I will.
As part of the staff at DCC, we’ve been joining with another local church staff to journey through a Huddle (3DM), where we learn about ourselves, how God sees us, how God uses us, and how God is shaping us. Today’s session was particularly uncomfortable. Given my proclivity towards emotional response, I process as such regardless of my surroundings. Although when I’m PMSing, it’s mostly a mood swing and carried by hormonal imbalance. Yet today, and this week, I’ve been feeling heavy. I haven’t slept well for some time; anxiety has riddled my body with cold chills, stomach aches, headaches, and blurred vision. Entertaining thoughts of ordination, rediscovering my personality type through the Enneagram and processing it with a co-worker, and then recognizing that the tides are about the change, I have been a wreck.
Beginning with the thought of
ordination and wondering what it would be like to be asked to interview again,
I’ve felt the heaviness of what resembles PTSD. That’s a different story that
I’d rather share face-to-face. I’ve been ruminating on what it would mean to be
ordained. It has nothing to do with accomplishments or achieving goals. It is
not owed to me and I haven’t earned it. What I’m coming to understand is that
it is about trust and belief.
The Church has believed in me all along
– Sunday school teachers dedicating their time to teach me the Apostle's Creed,
pastor/mentors investing their experience and passion into me and first affirming
my call to ministry, providing theological education and connecting me with
professors who were determined to help me understand and own my beliefs, parents
who loved me at my worst and empowered me towards my best, aunts and uncles who
longed for renewal and provided funds to pay off debts, grandparents who cut
out devotional clippings and mailed them with letters of encouragement, church
ladies who crafted personalized bookmarks and cards that redirected my attention
towards the loving God. The stories go on and on of how the Church has believed
in me and actively supported my call to serve God through her.
To me, ordination means that the Church
trusts me as a leader, that all her time and investment has shaped me into the
pastor God has called/is calling me to be. She trusts me to keep learning and
growing, to remember that everything I do/say/think/act can give honor and glory
to God, to continue believing in her and loving her well, and inviting others
into this incredible journey of grace. What an honor that would be!
I’m so ready for the freedom – to be
myself and love myself, to give honor and glory to God right this second with
every word I type, to fill the void with bouts of pure joy and laughter, to
dance once again. I’m ready. Watch out, world – Melissa is back.

What a way to start my day . . . WOW! I absolutely loved reading this, Melissa. Your faith, your commitment, your forgiveness of others and yourself, the grace and mercy you have extended to so many (including yourself), and most of all, your joy in Christ and His body, warms my heart so much! Up close here at DCC, I have seen the difference over just the past year and know that it will continue beyond any expectations we could possibly have because God's got this! We are SO blessed to have you as part of our family and serving as our pastor. You are a special jewel that has been added to our priceless staff.
ReplyDelete