God Is Love
Some twelve years ago,
I stood watching my university students
file into the classroom
for our first session in the Theology
of Faith.
That was the first day I first saw
Tommy.
My eyes and my mind both blinked.
He was combing his long flaxen hair,
which hung six inches below his shoulders.
It was the first time I had ever
seen a boy with hair that long.
I guess it was just coming into
fashion then.
I know in my mind that it isn't
what's on your head but what's in it that counts;
but on that day I was unprepared
and my emotions flipped.
I immediately filed Tommy under
"S" for strange ...very strange.
Tommy turned out to be the "atheist
in residence" in my Theology of Faith course.
He constantly objected to, smirked
at, or whined about the possibility
of an unconditionally loving Father-God.
We lived with each other in relative
peace for one semester,
although I admit he was for me at
times a serious pain in the back pew.
When he came up at the end of the
course to turn in his final exam,
he asked in a slightly cynical tone:
"Do you think I'll ever find God?"
I decided instantly on a little
shock therapy.
"No!" I said very emphatically.
"Oh," he responded, "I thought that
was the product you were pushing."
I let him get five steps from the
classroom door and then called out:
"Tommy! I don't think you'll ever
find him,
but I am absolutely certain that
he will find you!"
He shrugged a little and left my
class and my life.
I felt slightly disappointed at
the thought that he had missed my clever line:
"He will find you!"
At least I thought it was clever.
Later I heard that Tommy had graduated
and I was duly grateful.
Then a sad report , I heard that
Tommy had terminal cancer.
Before I could search him out, he
came to see me.
When he walked into my office, his
body was very badly wasted,
and the long hair had all fallen
out as a result of chemotherapy.
But his eyes were bright and his
voice was firm, for the first time, I believe.
"Tommy, I've thought about you so
often. I hear you are sick !" I blurted out.
"Oh, yes, very sick. I have cancer
in both lungs. It's a matter of weeks."
"Can you talk about it, Tom?"
"Sure, what would you like to know?"
"What's it like to be only twenty-four
and dying?"
"We'll, it could be worse."
"Like what?"
"Well, like being fifty and having
no values or ideals.
Like being fifty and thinking that
booze, seducing women,
and making money are the real 'biggies'
in life."
I began to look through my mental
file cabinet under "S"
where I had filed Tommy as strange.
(It seems as though everybody I
try to reject by classification
God sends back into my life to educate
me.)
"But what I really came to see you
about," Tom said,
" is something you said to me on
the last day of class."
(He remembered!)
He continued, "I asked you if you
thought I would ever find God,
and you said, 'No!' which surprised
me.
Then you said, 'But he will find
you.'
I thought about that a lot,
even though my search for God was
hardly intense at that time.
(My "clever" line. He thought about
that a lot!)
"But when the doctors removed a lump
from my groin and told me that it was malignant,
then I got serious about locating
God.
And when the malignancy spread into
my vital organs,
I really began banging bloody fists
against the bronze doors of heaven.
But God did not come out. In fact,
nothing happened.
Did you ever try anything for a
long time with great effort and with no success?
You get psychologically glutted,
fed up with trying. And then you quit."
"Well, one day I woke up,
and instead of throwing a few more
futile appeals over that high brick wall to a God
who may be or may not be there,
I just quit.
I decided that I didn't really care
. . . about God, about an afterlife, or anything like that.
I decided to spend what time I had
left doing something more profitable.
I thought about you and your class
and I remembered something else you had said:
'The essential sadness is to go
through life without loving.
But it would be almost equally sad
to go through life
and leave this world without ever
telling those you loved that you had loved them."
"So I began with the hardest one:
my Dad.
He was reading the newspaper when
I approached him."
"Dad". . .
"Yes, what?" he asked without lowering
the newspaper.
"Dad, I would like to talk with you."
"Well, talk."
"I mean... It's really important."
The newspaper came down three slow
inches. "What is it?"
"Dad, I love you. I just wanted you
to know that."
Tom smiled at me and said with obvious
satisfaction,
as though he felt a warm and secret
joy flowing inside of him:
"The newspaper fluttered to the
floor.
Then my father did two things I
could never remember him ever doing before.
He cried and he hugged me.
And we talked all night, even though
he had to go to work the next morning.
It felt so good to be close to my
father, to see his tears, to feel his hug,
to hear him say that he loved me."
"It was easier with my mother and
little brother.
They cried with me, too, and we
hugged each other,
and started saying real nice things
to each other.
We shared the things we had been
keeping secret for so many years.
I was only sorry about one thing:
that I had waited so long.
Here I was just beginning to open
up to all the people I had actually been close to."
"Then, one day I turned around and
God was there.
He didn't come to me when I pleaded
with him.
I guess I was like an animal trainer
holding out a hoop,
'C'mon, jump through. 'C'mon, I'll
give you three days . . . three weeks.'
Apparently God does things in his
own way and at his own hour."
"But the important thing is that
he was there.
He found me.
You were right.
He found me even after I stopped
looking for him"
"Tommy," I practically gasped,
"I think you are saying something
very important and much more universal than you realize.
To me, at least, you are saying
that the surest way to find God
is not to make him a private possession,
a problem solver,
or an instant consolation in time
of need, but rather by opening to love.
You know, the Apostle John said
that.
He said,
"God is love,
and anyone who lives in love is
living with God,
and God is living in him."
"Tom, could I ask you a favor? You
know, when I had you in class you were a real pain.
But (laughingly) you can make it
all up to me now.
Would you come into my present Theology
of Faith course
and tell them what you have just
told me?
If I told them the same thing it
wouldn't be half as effective as if you were to tell them."
"Oooh . . . I was ready for you,
but I don't know if I'm ready for your class."
"Tom, think about it. If and when
you are ready, give me a call."
In a few days Tommy called, said
he was ready for the class,
that he wanted to do that for God
and for me.
So we scheduled a date. However,
he never made it.
He had another appointment, far
more important than the one with me and my class.
Of course, his life was not really
ended by his death, only changed.
He made the great step from faith
into vision.
He found a life far more beautiful
than the eye of man has ever seen
or the ear of man has ever heard
or the mind of man has ever imagined.
Before he died, we talked one last
time. "I'm not going to make it to your class," he said.
"I know, Tom."
"Will you tell them for me? Will
you . . . tell the whole world for me?"
"I will, Tom. I'll tell them. I'll
do my best."
So, to all of you who have been kind
enough to hear this simple statement about love,
thank you for listening.
And to you, Tommy, somewhere in
the sunlit, verdant hills of heaven:
"I told them, Tommy . . . as best
I could."
John Powell
A Professor at Loyola University
in Chicago


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