Hulga’s Revenge or
Joy’s Return?
Domestic violence is not entertaining. And I don’t spend my time scanning news
sites looking for more sadness than that which usually jumps out at me when I
check the Chicago Tribune each morning.
But… There was an incident
that caught my eye on a popular news/chat/gossip site a few days ago. And my first response was to send it to
a friend with the brief comment, “Hulga’s revenge?”
Flannery O’Connor fans know who Hulga is. A joyless woman, possessed of a degree
in philosophy but little common sense, Hulga - née Joy - lost a leg in a
childhood accident. She lives with
her mother on the family farm, where her position is, in today’s parlance,
resident “Debbie Downer.” In a
tragi-comical turn of events, Hulga seduces a Bible salesman who she takes to
be an innocent rube, and instead winds up as his victim. The Bible salesman is not what he
appeared to be and Hulga, in her haste to shame him, allows herself to be shamed. Not only is Hulga shamed, she is left
in the loft of the barn while salesman takes quick leave of her – carrying her
prosthetic leg as a trophy. (This
is better told by Flannery herself.
If you don’t have a copy of her collected works I would advise that you
find one. And make “Good Country
People” one of your first choices.)
How could Hulga not come to
mind when I read of a woman in South Carolina who stabbed her boyfriend and then
threw his prosthetic leg into the yard to keep him from chasing
her? And this woman was
thorough! She didn’t just through
his leg out in the yard; she tossed his spare leg, too. I wonder if any other
fans of Flannery and “Good Country People” also saw it as some sort of
turnabout on Hulga’s tale. (That is all I know of this sad story, except that
it coincidentally took place in the south, reminding me of what the great
author said about that, “Anything that comes out of the South is going to be
called grotesque by the northern reader, unless it is grotesque, in which case
it is going to be called realistic.”)
The
frailties of the human body show up frequently in Flannery’s work. As a Catholic she knew the importance
of the human body as being an offer of Divine Grace. Each human body. In the Resurrection, it will be our bodies, glorified, that
will rise. God himself became
human, incarnated in a body of flesh and blood – bones, tendons, corpuscles and
muscles. It is easy to see to make
a connection to the divine if one looks upon a body in its prime – adorable
babies, Olympic athletes at the peak of their fitness, gorgeous women on the
covers of popular magazines, men so good looking they must be deported.
Then
there are those of us whose bodies don’t draw an immediate connection to the
divine: the Plain Janes, those missing limbs, those with weak chins, weak
intellects, and chemical imbalances.
These bodies, too, are offers of Divine Grace. Afflicted with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus, Flannery
O’Connor knew more than enough about the trials that can afflict the human body. My family has seen their share of
suffering and challenge. Lately I
have been doing more reading on lupus and other autoimmune disorders. This not only helps in our immediate
situation, but also reconnects me with the background of one of my favorite
authors. I can read Flannery’s
work with knowledge of her understanding of the incarnational nature of
Catholicism as well as with fuller insight to the suffering and vulnerability
that she faced in her own body. (I
did find a good Flannery quote that has been a help; with a bit of humor consoling
one of my daughters as she faces illness and the baffling maze of our American
medical system: “Doctors always think anybody doing something they aren't is a
quack; also they think all patients are idiots.” A sense of humor in the face
of suffering is grace indeed.)
March
25 of this year would have been Flannery O’Connor’s 88th birthday. What beauty there is in the birth date
of such an ‘incarnational’ author being the Feast of the Annunciation! I can only wonder how a woman with such
a keen sense of humor felt about having a birthday which was a Feast day which
was movable dependent upon its falling during Holy Week. This year, for instance, we celebrated
the Annunciation on April 8. Would
she have moved her birthday celebration?
Celebrated twice? I know I remembered
her birthday on both days this year.
Our
bodies are important. They are not
just disposable, fleshy vehicles for our souls. As the Catechism of the Catholic Church says, “The human body shares in the dignity of
"the image of God": it is a human body precisely because it is
animated by a spiritual soul, and it is the whole human person that is intended
to become, in the body of Christ, a temple of the Spirit.” (CCC 364) God himself became one of us –
incarnate in a human body: an actual human body prone to colic, rashes, fevers,
and vulnerable to extreme suffering.
And death – death on the cross.
Is that not the most potent endorsement for the gift of our bodies?
So
here is an offer of Divine Grace.
We have only to run with it. Figuratively speaking. If we cannot run or walk or think with
extreme acuity, we still just pick-up where we are and go forward to embrace
and accept the offer of grace to the soul incarnate in the human body. In that offer of grace is also a charge
of responsibility, for our bodies are indeed temples of the Holy Spirit.
He
will change our lowly body to conform with his glorified body by the power that
enables him also to bring all things into subjection to himself.
(Philippians 3:21) Until that time when, what in some
translations are referred to as our “vile
bodies”, are brought into conformation with his glorified body – while they
are under our care – we must keep them in proper perspective. Naturally we should nurture and care
for them properly. We should also
understand our imperfections and accept the offer of Divine Grace that is
inherent in them, to cast off the Hulga and bring back the Joy; respecting and
honoring our own bodies, the bodies of others…and even their attendant
prosthetics.
1 comment:
That is a nice reflection.
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