By Rachel Rueckert
Mom gave me the idea, an object lesson given to her as a girl. “Pass it around,” I said to my Bible study class. After a pause, the other preteens passed around the slice of Wonder Bread.
“Who wants to eat it now?” I asked.
No hands.
I had tried to convince them, and myself, that sex can ruin a body, rendering it an object of disgust for some distant, future spouse. Consumable. Disposable.
Brother John had assigned the task: “Bring something to turn into an object lesson, to show how Jesus is in everything.” We used to be fond of object lessons: golf balls and sand in a jar to teach prioritization, drops of bleach in a Solo cup of dyed water to teach repentance, attempts to snap a twig, then a bundle, to teach the strength of unity.
Also, a smashed cupcake, brownies made with dirt, an ice cream cone with a roach on top, or a chewed piece of gum to teach chastity.
Without saying it directly: the dangers of women’s bodies.
My body.
Brother John took all the objects and tacked them to the class bulletin board. The bread lived in a Ziplock bag for months among the other objects. I watched but never saw mold or evidence for my perception of sin. I wonder now if maybe Brother John was right. Perhaps Jesus is in everything, despite ourselves. The Jesus that said, This, this is my broken body.
Take.
Eat.
Photo by Cats Coming via Pexels
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