FCCUCC Book Group discussion
Learning to Walk in the Dark
>
Chapters 1 and 2 -- LWD
date
newest »

Hi everybody. Cindy here. I've been thinking about question 4) above. Although my first career was in publishing, I had a short stint in insurance sales before going to seminary. I was working for a managed care company when my call to ministry was clarified, and I think that work contributed to my call. Part of my job was explaining our benefits to the employees of the companies to whom I had sold the coverage. I went to everything from law offices and garment factories, facing all the differences you might expect along the spectrum. The law offices typically paid for full family coverage--or at least subsidized the family cost--but the factories covered employees only. I would explain to those factory workers that they could go to any doctor in the network for $10 or $15, any specialist for $25, and 90% of the docs in town were on our network. Many of them had a $1000 deductible prior to our plan, so they were thrilled. And then they would invariably want to add their families--and I had to give them prices I knew they could never afford on their pay. One man refused to accept his own insurance because he couldn't provide the same for his family. It was heart-breaking.
This story may not directly address my question of who taught me about human nature, but it certainly taught me about the system--which is, of course, a reflection of our nature.
Anybody else have thoughts to add? I'll post new questions tomorrow. (Sorry I'm a day behind schedule.)
This story may not directly address my question of who taught me about human nature, but it certainly taught me about the system--which is, of course, a reflection of our nature.
Anybody else have thoughts to add? I'll post new questions tomorrow. (Sorry I'm a day behind schedule.)

My favorite quote (referring to people at the bar and at the altar): "We were all seeking company, meaning, solace, self-forgiveness . . .
Sometimes I wondered if it even mattered whether our communion cups were filled with consecrated wine or draft beer as long as we bent over them long enough to recognize each other as kin."


In point #3 I love the phrase that says God exists in a place of complete and dazzling darkness. To me, God is un-knowable - so completely beyond comprehension that we can only grasp at parts of the whole picture. "Dazzling darkness" conjures up such bright and overpowering light that it creates blindness (darkness). Not a bad way to describe our inability to comprehend the divine.

When I face my dark moments, I think of Grammie Johnson and Finn sisu and faith. It gets me through it all.

(As a politican, my friend had a particularly great stump speech joke with the punch line "I'm the guy in charge of the butter." It's about a gutsy busboy standing up to a bigwig member of Congress,but I'll save the rest of that joke for another time!!)
1) Barbara Brown Taylor (BBT) says "each of us has a personal history of the dark." She also says we have "been taught what to think about the dark, and most of us only have to think a minute to come up with the names of our teachers." Some of you shared your personal histories of darkness last week, but I wanted to open up the question in case others would like to explore the question.
2)Another writer, James Bremner, says that courage (which is the management of fear) needs to be practiced. "For this, children need a widespread, easily obtained, cheap, renewable source of something scary but not actually dangerous." He says darkness "fits that bill." I like this in theory, but I'll admit to putting a really good nightlight in our new toddler's bedroom because he was waking up scared. What are your thoughts? And do you think we need to practice courage?
3)Gregory of Nyssa said "Those of us who wish to draw near to God should not be surprised when our vision goes cloudy, for this is a sign that we are approaching the opaque splendor of God. If we decide to keep going beyond the point where our eyes or minds are any help to us, we may finally arrive at the pinnacle of the spiritual journey toward God, which exists in complete and dazzling darkness." Personally, I have a hard time imagining the pinnacle of the spiritual journey is darkness. What do you think?
4) BBT says she "learned as much about human nature waiting tables" at the bar as she did in seminary. Where or what were your greatest teachers about human nature?
5) Near the end of Chapter 2 BBT writes about how the God of Moses is not a grandfatherly type of God. She says that God offers no safety features or guarantees, just letting us assume the risk for the sake of the reward of intimacy. Do you like this? Do you agree with it, even if you don't like it?