Webinar introduces a timely Presbyterian Women
December 7, 2020
When author and artist P. Lynn Miller proposed the theme of “lament” to the national Bible Study Committee of Presbyterian Women four years ago, no one had any idea how timely the topic would be now.
Because COVID-19 has kept Presbyterian Women/Horizons from introducing its 2020–21 nine-lesson Bible study in person at synod and presbytery gatherings, “Into the Light: Finding Hope Through Prayers of Lament,” has been introduced by Miller through Zoom webinars, hosted by JyungIn “Jenny” Lee and Susan Jackson Dowd, national moderator and executive director of Presbyterian Women, respectively.
“I think, in our culture, we often hesitate to lament, and when we do, we are eager and sometimes hasty to get to happiness and hope too quickly,” Lee said. “It will be a good practice of faith to be lamenting together, especially in supportive settings like PW circles.” She added, “Lamenting is not the same as complaining. At the moment, there are so many things going on in this nation that we feel helpless about. We may feel hopeless because we feel helpless.”
Lee hopes that small group study of “Into the Light” will provide opportunities to listen and process unspoken groans as participants sit together with heartfelt laments in the presence of God, while finding hope again.
“One of the foundational points of the study is that, in Scripture, lament usually leads to hope,” writes Miller, a pastor in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). “After crying out to God, the one who laments remembers God. And while that doesn’t fix things in the moment — the injustice, the loss still exists — the lamenter is strengthened to face the world and to hope.”
“For us as Christians, hope is not just an emotional response or an attitude of pie in the sky,” Miller said. “Hope implies movement: both God’s inherent movement toward justice and our movement toward God. Recovering lament may be one of the church’s most timely gifts to the world. Lament is a proper theological response to the difficult situations of our world.”
This year’s Bible study suggestions for leaders are provided by Dee Koza, a certified Christian educator, and commissioned ruling elder in the PC(USA). Koza serves Geneva Presbyterian Church in Geneva, Alabama.
When Miller shared with others in her circle of Presbyterian Women at Fondren Presbyterian Church in Jackson, Mississippi, that she would be writing a PW Bible study on the topic of lament, she remembers they all stared at her blankly. Then one brave soul said, “So, essentially we’re going to be depressed for an entire year. Thanks, Lynn.”
Certainly, this study topic grew out of sadness, Miller said, explaining that her Christmas Eve 2015 was spent getting her dad set up for home hospice. He died in January 2016. Miller’s mom had to have two operations, one of which the family had been told would likely find ovarian cancer. It did not, but even as they celebrated that hopeful news, Miller’s 30-year-old niece was diagnosed with breast cancer. That was also the year the family’s beloved dog, Sandy, had to be euthanized.
“To paraphrase Queen Elizabeth, ‘2016 is not a year on which I will look back with undiluted pleasure,’” Miller said. “You may have had years like that too,” she said. “Hard years filled with questioning and adjusting and feeling and adjusting some more, and feeling some more, and questioning some more.”
“What do you say to God in years like that?” Miller asked.
The biblical answer is that you lament, she said. “I think if you ask most people, they would equate ‘lament’ and ‘grief.’ Those things share some qualities, but they aren’t exactly the same thing.”
The purpose of lament, at its heart, is really about turning to God, crying out to God in prayer and finding hope, Miller explained.
“Just look at the world in which we live today. What do we do about those things in our world that cannot possibly be aligned with God’s will and purpose for this world? Rather than spending our energy name-calling and vilifying one another on social media, I would offer lament as a theological response.”
Tammy Warren, Communications Associate, Presbyterian Mission Agency
Let us join in prayer for:
PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
Donald Walker, Board of Pensions
Jacklyn Walker, Presbyterian Mission Agency
Let us pray:
God of grace, we know that we are stronger and more effective in mission when we work together. Guide us, by your Holy Spirit, into a life of ever-increasing connection to each other. In Jesus Christ we pray. Amen.
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