Tuesday, February 11, 2025

THIS OUR VALLEY: A raggedy tale of a raggedy man

 

"Things don't have purposes, as if the universe were a machine, where every part has a useful function. What's the function of a galaxy? I don't know if our life has a purpose and I don't see that it matters. What does matter is that we're a part. Like a thread in a cloth or a grass-blade in a field. It is and we are.” Ursula K. LeGuin


It’s winter. The air is frosty, the ground frozen, and no matter how tight the house is, the air inside feels thin and cool. The thermometer says it is 70, but it doesn’t feel like it. I could turn the heat up, of course, and make the home’s interior toastier, but why on earth would I do that while I’ve got thermal unmentionables, sweaters, and blankets in which to bundle? 

Layering up is the key to conserving energy and staying warm. I suspect my chattering teeth are also burning calories, so that’s a good thing, right?

There used to be a fellow who lived on the streets just to the east of downtown Spokane. He was one of those “invisible people” who always seem to be around. I was a police officer back in the day (1970s!), and if I or my partner wanted to know what was happening around the city center when we had the paddy wagon detail, we would drive out near the railroad tracks just east of Riverside and Division. 

There was a mountain of rags piled up there (about ten feet in diameter and four to six feet high, or more). We’d call out, “Hey Rags!” After a moment or two, the mountain would start to shimmy and shake, and “Rags” would make his way out of his burrow where we could chat and catch up on what was happening. 

He wasn’t a TV-trope informant. He didn’t have details on who was doing what to whom, but he could give us a sense of what was going on or things he had noticed that could help us do our job better. When we finished our chats, we would hand him a token of our appreciation, he would burrow his way back to the center of his mountain, and we would return to our patrolling.

I don’t plan to live in the center of a mountain of rags, but Rags helped me appreciate the value of layering up when it’s cold. There wasn’t much we could do to change his circumstances, but then again, he never indicated that he was dissatisfied with his life or situation. He had no mortgage to fuss about. He was kind and gentle, and never a nuisance. 

I don’t know if God planned on Rags being a police informant or panhandler from the beginning of time. I think Rags simply fulfilled God’s purpose in being the best human being he could be, no matter what the circumstances of life steered him into making the choices he made. 

As silly as it may sound, I found him to be an inspirational character. He was a man of honesty and integrity, and I respected him for it. He lived by his wits and was among the most inoffensive persons I’ve ever known.

I have often counseled people who wondered what God’s plan for them is or was. I don’t think any of us are pieces on the great chessboard of life, with God and Satan moving us about here and there for sport. 

Life for some of us may be a tale of rags to riches; for others it may be a tale of going from riches to rags. Some will get what’s coming to them, while others will skate by never having to face justice for what they’ve done or failed to do.

What God requires of all of us, though, is to know we are part of the whole, part of the fabric of all that is, ever has been, or ever will be. We are rags in whom God finds warmth, light, and love. Rags don’t produce their own heat, but reflect the warmth of life within. 

We are rags, but rags in whom God dwells and warms here in this, our valley. We are God’s raggedy treasures. We reflect the warmth of God’s love. Wow!

Keith Axberg writes on matters concerning life and faith. Author of: Who the Blazes is Jesus? Good News for a Vulgar World (available through Amazon in Print and e-book)


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