Radical Community
July 24, 2008
By Jerry Scott
I recently visited my father and went with him for his
first appointment with the oncologist (cancer specialist). That’s an unnerving
experience, to say the least. Though heart disease and diabetes are greater
health problems in America by far, cancer still has the edge when it comes to
the “fright factor.” Just the word makes us feel dread.
The tension built as Mom, Dad and I waited. What
would Dr. Patel say? What treatment would Dad face? That’s the other
thing with a cancer diagnosis. Sometimes the treatment looks as bad as the
disease. As it turned out, before a prognosis could be offered or a treatment
regimen suggested, there were more tests the physician wanted, so we did not
really get answers to our questions.
However, there was a bright spot of encouragement in the
day.
When my parents moved to Pennsylvania in March of 2006, I
was not happy about their decision to be that far away, in case of the very
kind of circumstances they are dealing with right now. But God had a different
plan.
Dad is a friendly guy who feels the need to talk to everyone
he meets. In the area where they now live there are many members of
the Old Order Mennonite sect as well as the Amish. Both groups reject
much of the modern world, living without phones, electricity in their homes,
automobiles or computers. They dress plainly in homemade clothing, live simply,
and most distinctive of all, practice radical communal living. They
are tightly knit groups that few in the world outside really know. As the
Lord would have it, Dad has become friends with many, and they have reached out
to care for him.
After our doctor’s visit, around 7 that evening, there was a
knock at the door. An extended family of Old Order Mennonites greeted us. There
were about 12 adults and several little children. Jason, one of the young
men in the family, has been doing some work for Dad and knew of his illness. So
he rallied his family to encourage Dad. They asked if they might come in and
“lift up Gerald” (they are a very formal people, too) with songs.
They gathered around the dining room table and opened their
hymnals. For more than an hour they sang without accompaniment, in simple
harmonies, songs about heaven and hope. They communally gave my parents
(and me) a great big hug. These strangers touched my heart so deeply that even
as I type these words the tears fall from my eyes.
What a simple gift, but powerful,
amazingly powerful. These people know the meaning of love that is beyond
sentiment. They don’t send a card or flowers, they bring themselves. I realized the genius of their form
of Christianity. It’s not merely about hats, homemade dresses,
or horse-drawn buggies. They survive by depending on each other. And, now
they were giving that love and support to my parents, who are not even “in”
their group.
I am not suggesting we all need to go back to farming, sell
our cars, and try to return to the 17th century. But we absolutely must
recapture the radical love that is the heart of Christian faith.
Jesus said, “By this all men will know that you are my
disciples, if you love one another” (John 13:35, NIV).
That truth came to life for me on a night
when hope seemed slim and friends far away.
— Jerry D. Scott is senior pastor at Washington (N.J.)
Assembly of God.