
I’ve spent a fair amount of time in churches. Some great, Gothic cathedrals like Sagrada Familia in Barcelona and the Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi. Others, little more than rooms off of side streets, secret gems, suggested by locals.
As a Jew, the words feel strange, incongruent, as they fall from my fingertips on to the keys. As a traveler, one-time reporter, and student of faith, they make complete sense.
I’ve been in churches for professional reasons.
On a press trip to Israel some 20 years ago, where I replied to a colleague’s exhausted and overwhelmed inquiry, “Where are we?”, with “Somewhere where Jesus did something.” Laughing loudly, as Americans sometimes do, we were promptly chastised in a language we didn’t speak. My intention, never to be flip … just honest.
I’ve been in churches for personal reasons.
For a Catholic wedding – where I kept looking for the words everyone spoke in response to the priest – assuming I would find them in a book or on a card. I never did. “You’re just supposed to know them,” my friend Andre explained.
For a colleague’s funeral at a Baptist church in Oakland – which my friend Michael referred to as “a tame affair … nobody threw themselves on to the casket.”
But I’ve never been to a church, “just because.” Until now. Artist Date 112.
If I am to be honest, even this visit isn’t “just because.”
It is because my friend is a priest here – Iglesia Catedral del Redentor. It is because he is preaching this evening, in Spanish – about lepers. About touch. And about his own healing.
I think this will be a good way to practice my Spanish listening skills.
I liken it to watching Spanish television, something that has been suggested many times but that I have yet to do for more than a few minutes at a time – usually when my landlady is half listening to the news. I have not cultivated the habit, and I’m not sure I want to. I haven’t owned a television for many years and don’t miss it.
So I come here instead, to hear this story which I more or less know.
Except that I don’t know it. I cannot find it. My Spanish isn’t that good. I can understand words and phrases but I cannot put them together.
So I focus on what I can see instead.
The words to songs I don’t know, in English or Spanish, projected on to the wall with an overhead projector, an acetate sheet moved up and down by someone’s large hand as each set of lyrics have been completed, making room for the next. I haven’t seen an overhead projector since college, when a friend of mine would drop colored liquids onto the glass plate, projecting swirls of color onto the wall, and we would dance to the Grateful Dead.
The African women – some of them Muslim, wearing head coverings. The families from South and Central America, their children with big, almond-shaped eyes playing in the back of the sanctuary. Many are here for the free bag of groceries they receive after the service. Nary a non-Catholic Madrileño in the crowd.
“All driven out or killed by Franco,” R, a former minister from New York, explains to me.
He and his wife moved to Madrid some years ago after she dreamt about the two of them living here as missionaries. Being fluent in both Spanish and “Christian,” he explains different elements of the service to me.
Two velvet bags attached to wooden sticks are passed through the pews.The gesture requires no explanation and I drop a euro into one of them.
At the end of the service, S walks down the middle aisle – offering his hand, his cheek and his heart to the parishioners. The older ladies grab on to him. They clearly adore him.
Like I adore him.
I think of what my friend D calls “divine attraction.”
“Whatever it is that gets you to God,” she explains to me over coffee, many years ago, when I fess up to having a crush on a “man of the cloth.”
The piercing blue eyes and suede elbow patches of a college religious studies professor.
The compassionate heart of a rabbi who understands my need to convert to the faith of my childhood when I don’t quite understand it myself.
The friendship of an American priest who helps me navigate my way through a Spanish-speaking world.
An empty belly and a the promise of a bag of food.
pearly. touched. i keep up w/ you posts, love what you are experiencing. we are all learning vicariously through you. your turn to do stuff we don’t have the means to explore right now. love dre (aka your cookie)
Aww….Cookie!! What a wonderful surprise to wake up to your note. And a wonderful reminder that although I may not have heard from someone (or them, me), I may still be in their heart and in their thoughts (or them, mine). Thank you for your kind words. For reading. For writing. For witnessing. I miss you. XO