Skip to main content

Reunion

I personally enjoy reunions.  And I like watching other people enjoy reunions.  When I was a young guy, occasionally there would be family reunions.  It would be a time when I would see cousins whom I probably had not seen for a couple years.  It was also a time when the adults would sit around and talk about “old times.”  At that juncture in my life, I was sure I would never do that!  It seemed utterly boring to me.  I much preferred running off and playing ball.

When we finish our education, we typically belong to some class.  And at some point, you are invited to the reunion of your high school class year.  The same holds true for college reunions.  I remember going to my first high school reunion---it was the 20th, I think.  I was amazed how much so many people had changed.  Even though I was married late in my college years, we went on to graduate school and kids came along later than usual.  At my high school reunion, my classmates had kids and a couple even had grandkids!

Sometimes churches and other groups have reunions.  In every case the reunion seems focused more on the past than the future.  Of course, there is some catching up to do---quickly filling in the gaps about kids, jobs, etc.  But pretty soon the conversation sets off again in the direction shaped by the question, “Do you remember when…?”  And that provides a key link to reunions. 

Reunions are an exercise in remembering.  If there were no memory---in this case, shared memory---there would be no reunion.  That is why it is always difficult for a spouse or friend to have to go to someone else’s reunion.  There is no memory.  There are no common stories.  There is no feeling for everything being shared.

Personally, one of my favorite reunion times is when students come back to campus.  This happens, of course, after they are away after summer break.  But it also happens after the various holidays during the school year.  I delight in seeing someone coming at me whom I know from class or some other context.  There is a joy in recognizing and being recognized.  Recognition is a form of knowing and being known.  That is a rich experience for human beings.

This experience led me to some deeper thinking about the nature and meaning of reunion.  Perhaps the most obvious level is the meaning of the word, reunion.  Clearly, it is a compound word: re + union.  Since I know Latin, I know that “re” means “again.”  Literally, a reunion is a “uniting again.”  And that leads to the next insight.

You can never have a reunion without a prior union.  There has to be an initial uniting before there can be a re + uniting.  And I know the language of “union” suggests the experience of “oneness.”  If you are united, you have become in some sense one.  This is why marriages so often are called unions---the two become one.  Families are a union of persons.  By extension, graduating classes are united by a common experience in school that is solidified by a common graduation. 

To go further, I like to think about friendships as a form of union.  Friendships are unions of respect for each other, care, willingness to sacrifice, etc.  Friendships are unions in the sense that acquaintances are not.  Friendships are the relationships I feel for both colleagues and students.  So after a period of absence, it is nice to be reunited.  All friendships have a history.  It is not possible to have instant friendships---in spite of what Facebook alleges.

Because friendships have a history, it is always possible to have reunions, at which point there usually is a desire to share the memories of that history.  Again, those are naturally precipitated when someone asks, “Do you remember…?”  And at this point everyone in the conversations launches into a retelling of history. 

It is only a short step to see how clearly this relates to the spiritual level.  For example, when Jesus calls people into following him, he told them he would call the friends.  Discipleship is relationship.  And relationships have histories.  This is the individual aspect.  There is also a communal aspect.  When Jesus calls people to gather together, he said his Presence would be among them.  In fact he said even when two or three would gather, there he would spiritually be.

This is why community is spiritually so important to me.  The spiritual community is where friends gather and where human life is intentionally lived out in the way God designed it.  It is where love prevails.  It is where justice is worked out.  It is the place where peace is pursued.  And every time the community comes together again, there is a reuniting---reunion happens.

But in this reunion not only is the past valued, but the future is eagerly embraced.  In spiritual reunions the past is remembered, the present is a sacred moment and the future is tied to the kingdom of God.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

I-Thou Relationships

Those of us who have read theology or, perhaps, those who are people of faith and are old enough might well recognize this title as a reminder of the late Jewish philosopher and theologian, Martin Buber.   I remember reading Buber’s book, I and Thou , when I was in college in the 1960s.   It was already a famous book by then.   I am not sure I fully understood it, but that would not be the last time I read it.   It has been a while since I looked at the book.             Buber came up in a conversation with a friend who asked if I had seen the recent article by David Brooks?   I had not seen it, but when I was told about it, I knew I would quickly locate and read that piece.   I very much like what Brooks decides to write about and what he contributes to societal conversation.   I wish more people read him and took him seriously.           ...

Spiritual Commitment

I was reading along in a very nice little book and hit these lines about commitment.   The author, Mitch Albom, uses the voice of one of the main characters of his nonfiction book about faith to reflect on commitment.   The voice belongs to Albom’s old rabbi of the Jewish synagogue where he went until his college days.   The old rabbi, Albert Lewis, says “the word ‘commitment’ has lost its meaning.”    The rabbi continues in a way that surely would have many people saying, “Amen!”   About commitment he says, “I’m old enough when it used to be a positive.   A committed person was someone to be admired.   He was loyal and steady.   Now a commitment is something you avoid.   You don’t want to tie yourself down.”   I also think I am old enough to know that commitment was usually a positive word.   I can think of a range of situations in which commitment would have been seen to be positive.   For example, growing up was f...

Inward Journey and Outward Pilgrimage

There are so many different ways to think about the spiritual life.   And of course, in our country there are so many different variations of religious experiences.   There are liberals and conservatives.   There are fundamentalists and Pentecostals.   Besides the dizzying variety of Christian traditions, there are many different non-Christian traditions.   There are the major traditions, such as Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, and so on.   There are the slightly more obscure traditions, such as Sikhism, Jainism, etc.   And then there are more fringe groups and, even, pseudo-religions.   There are defining doctrines and religious practices.   Some of these are specific to a particular tradition or a few traditions, such as the koan , which is used in Zen Buddhism for example.   Other defining doctrines or practices are common across the religious board.   Something like meditation would be a good example.   Christians meditate;...