My
Sunday
Journal
By
Dalton Roberts
IPS Features


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IT'S ALL ABOUT YOUR MERCY BUS

My sister has taught me this: if your spirituality doesn't manifest at home, it is not real.

On mornings when she is not out and about on personal business or errands of kindness, I love to drive over and have coffee with her. One morning she was giving me her itinerary for the day and her husband commented, "She is gonna run the wheels off her mercy bus one of these days."

She has never been a religious person and only became a regular churchgoer in recent times. Our father was a minister and she was under family pressure to join the church from the start of her life. She never gave in to it. She had to find her own path and she explored many. I remember how she loved the Huna religion and their teaching that the only sin is to intentionally hurt another person or sentient being.

Over time she developed her own spirituality and the central feature of it is kindness and practical personal service. Right now her main focus is standing by a friend with cancer and  healing and finding a home for a mangy dog someone threw out on her street.

I am reminded that Jesus gave us a wonderful formula for our personal service to this world. When He sent his followers forth to share what they had learned from Him, he said to go "first to Jerusalem, then Judea, then to the uttermost parts of the world." Jerusalem was home and Judea was their area -- like their state.

There was good reasoning behind His formula. You cannot do a thing for the uttermost parts of the world until you learn how to help yourself, your family and your circle of friends and acquaintances. This is your practice field. Most of us don't even know our neighbors and we might get acquainted with them and see what they need before we take on the Timbu Tribe in darkest Africa.

What would the people on your street or in your apartment complex think if they suddenly heard you had dashed off to Africa as a missionary? Would they be surprised to learn you were interested in serving suffering humanity? Would they say, "Well, I do declare, I never saw George do a thing for anybody all the years he lived next door? We had sick and dying people all over the place and never saw his face."

Before we can serve we must open up the well of kindness in our own being and cultivate it. We must learn to love skillfully by doing something in Jerusalem. It may be that we never get any further than Jerusalem but there are always  plenty of needs right where we are. We may never get beyond our own family. Surely our own spouses and children have need of our loving kindness. Some people have acute family situations like a beloved one who is chronically ill, mentally retarded or emotionally disturbed and they can best serve the world by serving those of their own household.

My sister adopted an abused and neglected brain-damaged child and has devoted a large slice of her life to his care and development. Is there anyone in the "uttermost parts" who needed her more than that child?

Denise Roy says, "For decades I have broken bread, prayed, told stories, bestowed blessings, taken care of the sick, and heard confessions. I have been a parent. These have been the sacraments of my daily life. These are simple, sacred acts. We minister to our own little congregations -- children, spouse, family and friends."

I am not trying to send you on a guilt trip. I am trying to send you on a thinking trip. I am always reminding myself of these basic, neglected truths. I am trying to send you on a scouting trip to see where your love is needed right where you are.

Real spirituality comes from running your own mercy bus. Start by loving your own self. You will always be your main responsibility. Get yourself happy and joyful. Get so much love and joy going in your own being that it starts spilling out to others.

That's the key that fits the ignition to your own personal mercy bus.

You might enjoy Dalton's website: www.daltonroberts.com. His writings are gathered at www.ipsfeatures.com.