Friendly Fire
Are there any friends so precious as those with whom we have experienced some kind of mutually shared suffering? I think of programs I’ve seen showing gatherings of World War II veterans. There’s something in their faces, something in their eyes, something in the way they speak to each other, that reveals a bond that goes far beyond that of fraternity brothers or even most church members. I won’t claim to know anything like what they know, but I think this past Saturday evening, I at least had a taste of it.
Faces. Faces reflecting the fire. Faces that have seen fire before, felt it together. Gathered around a bonfire in a Virginia sheep pasture are friends whose lives had been somehow fused into mine by the heat of that “other fire.” For the first time since our former church had experienced wrenching changes that left those in this circle suddenly cast overboard, we were all together in one place. One of the former leaders of that congregation, out of a truly pastoral heart, had made it possible for us to be there. Almost all invited came. They knew, like those old veterans, that you didn’t turn down the “band of brothers (and sisters!)”
We sang the songs we’d always sung. We shared from our lives. We prayed. Nothing much different from what we did together in brighter days. And yet there was a profound difference. In some way, we had been through a war together, and we had survived to tell about it. Some of us still had a “limp” from “shrapnel” that hadn’t been completely cut out. Some of us couldn’t stop weeping for the “buddies” left behind. Some of us felt like we might be looking for the rest of our lives for what we knew when we were serving together.
Now at the risk of stretching this “war buddies” metaphor a step too far, let me bring in one last essential character. Sometimes in those documentaries, there’s a moment that stands out in the midst of all the unspeakable connections that are taking place among the vets. It’s that moment when the “old man,” the commanding officer, enters the room. He’s the one that went first out of the trench into the gunfire, who pulled their wounded bodies back behind the lines, who held them as they shook with grief over a buddy who wouldn’t be coming back. When he enters the room, the idle conversations stop, the shoulders go back, and everyone stands a little straigher.
So at that sheep pasture around that bonfire, we all knew we were glad that we had a great CO. One who took our wounds as his own was there with us, so we could have courage for one another. We could even sing, and even laugh a little. We remembered that the “Old Man” always pulled us through.
Romans 15:5-6 May the God of endurance and encouragement grant you to live in such harmony with one another, in accord with Christ Jesus, that together you may with one voice glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.


November 2nd, 2004 at 9:00 am
Just ran across these words to the song “A Sort of Homecoming” by U2 on Adriene’s blog. They seem to fit my feelings from the meeting I described above:
And you know it’s time to go
Through the sleet and driving snow
Across the fields of mourning
Light in the distance
And you hunger for the time
Time to heal, desire, time
And your earth moves beneath
Your own dream landscape
Oh, oh, oh…
On borderland we run…
I’ll be there
I’ll be there…
Tonight
A high road
A high road out from here
The city walls are all come down
The dust, a smoke screen all around
See faces ploughed like fields that once
Gave no resistance
And we live by the side of the road
On the side of a hill
As the valley explode
Dislocated, suffocated
The land grows weary of its own
Oh, oh, oh…on borderland we run…
And still we run
We run and don’t look back
I’ll be there
I’ll be there
Tonight
Tonight
I‘ll be there tonight…I believe
I’ll be there…somehow
I’ll be there…tonight
Tonight
The wind will crack in winter time
This bomb-blast lightning waltz
No spoken words, just a scream…
Tonight we’ll build a bridge
Across the sea and land
See the sky, the burning rain
She will die and live again
Tonight
And your heart beats so slow
Through the rain and fallen snow
Across the fields of mourning
Light’s in the distance
Oh don’t sorrow, no don’t weep
For tonight, at last
I am coming home
I am coming home
November 2nd, 2004 at 12:42 pm
Mark, your words beautifully describe the sweetness of that night. I am so thankful for the gift of our time in that Body of Christ, but how much more precious it is to know that we are still a family in Christ. It’s been incredible to see how God’s refining fire lead us to the melting point and brought out impurities to make us purer gold. How I long for the day when this transformation form ore to beautiful gold will be complete. I am thankful for the time to worship with you both.
And you say I never post
November 2nd, 2004 at 3:57 pm
Now I will never say that again, Beth!
Be sure to visit Karyn’s blog at http://rmfo-blogs.com/lsw for a beautiful balancing perspective to mine.
November 2nd, 2004 at 9:01 pm
[...] In her post Onward, Christian Soldiers, my LSW Karyn gives a beautiful balance to my Friendly Fire post about a meeting with some “wounded warriors.” [...]