Leonard Pitts, Jr./Knight-Ridder
It has become axiomatic that just about anyone who invokes God in public these days is seeking to hijack either your pocket or your politics.
We have created God
in our own image, endowed him with our characteristics. Small wonder that when people come
before us claiming to speak with his voice, what we hear usually speaks only of human frailties
and fears. God wants a yes vote on Proposition A! God wants you to send $100 to Rev. Jim!
God wants you to elect a new school board! They say they speak
with the voice of God, but they don't. This isn't the voice that whispers when raindrops fall.
Rather, it's a thunder of insecurity, a roar of self-righteousness, a clamoring racket of religious
and political hacks all claiming a hotline to heaven. I guess that's
why Chris Carrier's story resonates. I guess it's why I'm struggling to conceive what seems
inconceivable. You see, Carrier, of Coral Gables, Fla., was
abducted in 1974, when he was 10. His captor burned him with cigarettes, punctured his skin
with an ice pick, shot him in the head and left him to die in the Everglades. The boy survived,
though he lost sight in one eye. No one was ever arrested. Then,
recently, a man confessed to the crime and Carrier went to see him. He found David McAllister,
a 77-year-old ex-con, frail, blind and living in a North Miami Beach nursing home that reeks
of excrement. And Carrier befriended him. Began dropping by every day to visit, read to him
from the Bible and pray with him. No arrest is forthcoming; the
statute of limitations on the crime is long past. Carrier says that's fine with him. ``When I look
at him,'' he told a reporter, ``I don't stare at my abductor and potential murderer. I stare at a
man, very old, very alone and scared.'' First thought: Is Carrier
crazy? Maybe. But if so, it's a good crazy. Or at least, a crazy that gives pause. The man is serious about God. I don't say that because he has a master's
degree in divinity and until recently was the director of youth ministries at his church. Nor
because by the time you read this, he will have moved to Texas, where he and his wife and two
daughters plan to open a Christian bookstore. I say it because he
bowed alongside a man who tried to kill him. I know I couldn't
do it. The same probably goes for any number of TV preachers and pious politicians. We lack
the humility, I think. We haven't the guts or the conviction. Yet
at the same time, those same sellers of sanctimony fill our political and social arenas, preying
like hawks upon troubled minds that just want to reach a state of grace. It's worth noting that Chris Carrier didn't stump for money, a vote, or
``family values.'' Instead he tried against all logic to redeem one weak and dirty little scrap of
man. His deed reminds me of something I heard once in a gospel song: ``Maybe God is trying
to tell you something''. It's a quaint notion, I'll grant you. Does
anyone still believe the deity speaks in a voice that fills the stillnesses? Isn't that just a conceit
we wished up one day out of loneliness, a way of avoiding the idea that we might be
unaccompanied in the universe? I don't offer an answer, only an
observation: believing gets hard sometimes. Because we have created God in our own image,
and it's not a pretty sight. So I'm glad Carrier did this crazy deed.
It strikes me as an affirmation of things I'd like to believe. That the highest work of a lifetime
is to become a truly human being. That courage sometimes disguises itself in unconventional
forms. And that divinity often speaks not in the crash of thunder, but in the soft murmur of
rain.