Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Tuesday Sabbath

Meditation Before Turning Off All Connections to the Internet for the Day

Yesterday was my  normal day off but I worked. 

Quite productively, I might add. 

So today is my replacement Pastor's Sabbath. 

I celebrated by getting up 45 minutes early for meditation and muffins. The meditation from Henri Nouwen. The muffins from Betty Crocker. With fresh fruit, a nice breakfast with my cool kids who, today, didn't seem "wild about" going to school but whose attitudes seemed positive and pleasant nonetheless. 

My day off, in my dreams, includes finding my way via backroads and fall colours (in spite of the rain) to a little cafe near the Mississippi. But, in my real life--my everyday, ordinary life--we're looking at (a) catching up on housework, (b) making a big batch of my Really Amazing North-by-Northwest Chili (giving me the motive-for-action [motivation] to clean the kitchen first), (c) making a sack lunch for Elyse's last regular season volleyball game, (d) a walk, and (e) a late afternoon drive to Alden for Knights Volleyball. 

The dream will wait because life's present reality is pretty darn OK. And grace isn't found in dreaming about tomorrow, you know. But in living today's moments today.

Pax Agape Java,
Randy        


The Church is the body of Christ fashioned by baptism and the Eucharist. When people are baptized in the Name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, and when they gather around the table of Christ and receive his Body and Blood, they become the people of God, called the Church.
Henri J.M. Nouwen. From the October 15 meditation in Bread for the Journey 

Friday, June 7, 2013

Portland Top Seven List

The kids and I visited Portland last summer and had a great time. For those of you heading that direction this summer, here's my "top seven" list of places to see and things to do... Certainly not all-inclusive, but a good start... (OK, now it's 10, not 7... I gave Voodoo Doughnut the top spot instead of sharing a listing with Powell's, and added two more spots at the end...

  • VOODOO DOUGHNUT
    Voodoo Doughnut -- your tummy will thank you!
  • POWELL'S CITY OF BOOKS - The largest independent bookstore in the world is in downtown Portland--we spent HOURS there and then walked from Powell's through Chinatown to Voodoo Donuts. "City of Books" fills a whole city block (multistory) and has over a million books! It's an amazing place and right on the light rail line For a real adventure, park in their ramp! We did, using Powell's as our home base for a whole day of downtown exploring.
  • OMSI - Oregon Museum of Science and Industry ("OMSI" on all the signs) including the submarine used in the movie "Hunt for Red October."
  • GARDENS - Portland is the "City of Roses" so if the kids are in the mood visit the Portland Rose Garden (and nearby Japanese Gardens).
  • FARMER'S MARKET - If you have a Saturday morning available, we had fun at the Vancouver, Washington Farmer's Market (and the fresh fruit and lunch options are amazing)... "Ice Cream Renaissance" is close to there and totally fabulous... in a quaint part of town....
  • OCEAN - Road trip to the ocean via Astoria and Fort Stevens State Park and a visit to the site where the Lewis & Clark Expedition spent their long winter.
  • COLUMBIA RIVER ROAD TRIP - Road trip the other direction towards Multnomah Falls Lodge (REALLY great breakfast spot!) and lots of other stuff farther up the road. On your return trip take some of OLD U.S. 30 including a stop at Vista House and the Portland Women's Forum State Scenic Viewpoint--the latter overlooks the Vista House and the Columbia River. Breathtaking plus fun falls stops along the way. Or do the route in reverse. We did the Multnomah Falls Lodge first because we wanted to have breakfast there and beat the crowds. This road trip turned into a full day for us.... and finally.... the restaurant we fell in love with...
  • BEST RELAXING PLACE TO EAT AND DRINK - The Island Cafe.... casual, reasonably priced, good service and food, and the closest you'll get to being in Margaritaville!
  • ANOTHER BREAKFAST OPTION - Order "The Breakfast Baby" at The Original Pancake House
  • PORTLAND ART MUSEUM
    Luke's 13th Birthday at Multnomah Falls

Thursday, May 30, 2013

A Simpler Life

A small book of prayers by Avery Brooke jumped off the bookshelf and into my lap this morning. Once again the Holy Spirit brings a both a roaring fire and a cool breeze into my life, just when I least expect it, just when I'm lazily adjusting the contents of a shelf, waiting for a sermon to come....





A Simpler Life

 Life has gotten confusing, complex, and full of pressures, God. I am pulled this way and that by too many demands and desires.

 It is impossible to be my best self in the midst of this. Yet it is also hard to know how to make life simpler.

 Help me to choose, God. Everything I do seems like something I should do, and yet I know that if I do not stop doing some things I will be able to do nothing well. 

 And if I do not leave some peace and quiet to listen to you, I will fail you, myself, and others.

Avery Brooke
Plain Prayers for a Complicated World, p. 29
Copyright (c) 1975 by Vineyard Books
Copyright (c) 1959 by Avery Brooke

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Cheers: A Sermon for Memorial Day weekend



Sermon preached May 26, 2013.
Scripture readings: Rev. 21:1-5; 22:1-5; Psalm 116

 
This weekend we remember “…those we have lost not only for what they fought for, but who they were: proud Americans, often far too young, guided by deep and abiding love for their families, for each other, and for this country. Our debt to them is one we can never fully repay…” (President’s Memorial Day Proclamation). Yet we remember not just those who died, but those who were there with them. And, of course, we remember and pray for their friends and families—all those who endured a real and painful loss when the earthly life of someone who may have been “their whole world” ended much too soon.
   
One Marine wrote online recently, “A toast to you (who died in combat), and a double toast to your families and friends. Blood washes off a lot easier than tears and we will never forget you.” War is hell not only for those who die…

Bloodied from battle, Lt Colonel Hal Moore stands overlooking the Valley of Death after the first major ground campaign involving U.S. forces in Vietnam. To a young reporter and photographer, Joseph Galloway, he says, “I'll never forgive myself.”

“For what, sir?”

“That my men... that my men died and I didn't.”

Later Joe Galloway would write, “We who have seen war, will never stop seeing it. In the silence of the night, we will always hear the screams. So this is our story, for we were soldiers once, and young.”

Over 2,000 years ago, Jesus gathered his disciples together and taught them—we know this teaching as the Beatitudes, the opening verses of the Sermon on the Mount:

Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.
Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.
Blessed are the merciful, for they will receive mercy.
Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God.
Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.

Blessings to those who mourn, cheers to those who weep, hail to those whose eyes are filled with tears, hats off to those who suffer, bottoms up to the grieving. How strange, how incredibly strange.

When you and I are left to our own devices, it’s the smiling, successful ones of the world that we cheer. “Hail to the victors.” The histories we write of the odyssey of humanity on earth are the stories of the exulting ones—the nations that won in battle, the businesses that defeated the competition, the explorers who found a pass to the Pacific, the scientists whose theories proved correct, the athletes who came in first… We turn away from the crying ones of the world. Our photographers tell us to smile (Nicholas Woltersdorff, Lament for a Son, page 84).

We raise our glasses and toast those who died too young. And offer a double-toast to those who grieve, and to those who weep with those who weep, and to those who ask why. And yet, with the Psalmist, we raise our glasses in a toast to the LORD, “I will lift up the cup of salvation and call upon the name of the LORD…. Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of one of his faithful ones” (Psalm 116:13, 15). 

If you watch the TV or read the newspapers, no doubt you have wondered and maybe even cried out in prayer in the face of tragic events. How many tragedies have there been since our last Memorial Day weekend gathering in this place? Among countless others, there was a bombing at the marathon in Boston; and a school where gunfire turned laughter into wailing, where bullets pierced the hearts of children and—in shared grief—countless others, turning joy into despair; and the path of destruction and death from the tornado in Moore, Oklahoma. 

We cannot help but ask, “Why God?” And yet we are wiser to offer the gift of shared suffering by weeping with those who weep than by trying to explain such events theologically.
I cannot answer the questions by saying there was nothing God could have done. God is sovereign. And yet I cannot fit it all together by saying God did it. God’s Sovereignty is a sovereignty of love, not a sovereignty of causality. God does not cause tornadoes to strike one town and not another anymore than God causes a man to pick up a gun and kill children.  Indeed, I could not—I would not—worship such a capricious, vengeful, hurtful god.
Jesus said, “Aren’t you more valuable the sparrows? Yes, even the hairs of your head are numbered…” And Paul wrote, “Nothing can ever separate us from the love of God….” 

Don't trust anyone who claims to comprehend the meaning of this storm. Don't trust anyone who points with absolute certainty to a single cause for this storm. Don't trust anyone who treats a tornado as anything but indiscriminate and cruel. These tragedies are not punishments or object lessons. Such natural forces do not reach their conclusion with a pat moral or a simple "they lived happily ever after." (Eric Barreto, Luther Seminary, St. Paul, Minn.)

Instead of claiming to have all the answers, as some are prone to do, instead of trying to figure it all it, we more closely follow God when we try instead to feel for one another, to be compassionate, to mourn with those who mourn. 

As the news of hundreds of dead and wounded reached stateside during the early days of the Vietnam War, the Army was ill-equipped to handle the task of notifying families. Telegrams were given to taxi cab drivers for delivery, as depicted in the film We Were Soldiers. 


On a beautiful autumn morning, a taxicab arrives at the house of Julie Moore, wife of Lt. Col. Hal Moore. She gasps audibly, then reluctantly answers the door. The cabbie removes his hat and inquires, “Mrs. Moore? Colonel Moore's wife?” Her heart already breaking, it is all she can do just to respond, “Yes.”
“I need help finding an address, says the driver, “I'm looking for—“
She interrupts, shouting, “You jackass! Do you know what this is?! Do you know what you just did to me?!”
Making his way sheepishly toward his cab, the man stops at the curb at the curb and confesses, “I don't like this job, Ma'am. I'm just trying to do it.”
“Wait. Wait!” she says, running to the cab, “I'll take it to her.” She takes the telegram and says “Tell the cab company, if there are any others, just bring them to me.”


Although in real life the wife of Lt. Co. Moore did not actually assume responsibility for the delivery of the telegrams, she did follow close behind the wake of the taxis, grieving with widows and families, attending the funerals of those who fell under her husband's command. And based on her complaints to the Pentagon and her example of Christ-like compassion, the Army almost immediately set up notification teams consisting of a uniformed officer and a chaplain.
Blessed are they who mourn, for they will be comforted.

It sounds too tame when we say it—we hardly know what “blessed” means anymore. It’s not just a holy pat-on-the-back. It’s real and total happiness, fullness of life, joy and delight. Being blessed is hearing God say CHEERS TO YOU

And so on the Memorial Day weekend…
A toast to those who gave their lives.
A toast to those who mourn. And to those who mourn with those who mourn.
And CHEERS to God who holds us in the palm of his hand through it all—the God who has promised a day when war will be no more, when death will be finally and forever overcome, when sorrow and pain and sickness will be no more. When all tears will be dried by the tender consolation of our Savior. 

May the time not be too distant when we meet by the river shore;
'Til then dream of that wonderful day, as we sing once more, once more:
There is a river in Judea that I heard of long ago,
It's a singing, ringing river that my soul cries out to know.
Hallelujah!



If the God who revealed life to us, and whose only desire is to bring us life, loved us so much that he wanted to experience with us the total absurdity of death, then—yes, then there must be hope; then there must be something more than death; then there must be a promise that is not fulfilled in our short existence in this world; then leaving behind the ones you love, the flowers and the trees, the mountains and the oceans, the beauty of art and music, and all the exuberant gifts of life cannot be just the destruction and cruel end of all things; then indeed we have to wait for the third day.   (Nouwen. A Letter of Consolation)







Monday, May 20, 2013

An Open Invitation to Attend Baccalaureate



Each year we honor high school graduating seniors with parties, gifts, cards, and sometimes a short service of recognition in our individual churches. This is all good. But Baccalaureate is the one chance for the entire school district and for every person of faith to honor the graduates, to honor and celebrate teachers and other life-mentors, and to praise and give thanks to God. This is an open and personal invitation from me to you to attend Baccalaureate.
      It sometimes seems like many people are forever complaining that religion seems absent in the public sphere. You might hear something along these lines, “They need to put prayer back in the public schools!” But, truth be told, there is no “they” and the freedom to pray as one’s own conscience dictates has never been taken away.   
      To be sure, the baccalaureate service is not an official, school- or government-sponsored event, which is as it should be. The service is planned by clergy working directly with graduating seniors—every student is given an opportunity to be involved—and is open to all persons, regardless of their particular faith tradition. Wouldn’t it be a great irony if those most vocal about the good old days (when baccalaureate might have been “required”) would fail to show up? Of course it would. But, there you go. 
      Now, lest this sound like just another pastor whining about apathy, let me clarify my intentions:  Those of you who know me well will also know quite well that I have never been one to use a guilt-trip as a tool of motivation—not with my kids, not in my church, and not even to stifle colorful language “when the pastor shows up at coffee-time.” Guilt is not a positive motivator—not for learning, not in sports or music or losing twenty pounds, and certainly not in living a God-connected, faith-based, love-rooted, Spirit-filled life. What motivates is deep, deep gratitude. We love because God first loved us.   
      So, based on gratitude, who might attend the baccalaureate service? Well, certainly the graduates have reason to give thanks; and their family and friends too. And teachers, right? (Yes, I realize things are crazy-busy for teachers and there is too much required with too few resources, but if I was a high school teacher I’d really want to be there, if it was at all possible.) And, who else? Maybe everyone who has shared learning experiences over the last 13+ years of school and preschool; summer softball and baseball coaches; Sunday school teachers; confirmation mentors; neighbors; others… you know who you are, right? Really, when you think about it, don’t we all have reason to give thanks?  Besides, how many times do you get to see “BACCALAUREATE” spelled correctly?

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

O Taste and See

Another poem we looked at yesterday during "Poetry and Preaching" --

By Denise Levertov

O Taste and See


The world
is not with us enough.
O taste and see


the subway Bible poster said,
meaning The Lord, meaning
if anything all that lives
to the imagination’s tongue,


grief, mercy, language,
tangerine, weather, to
breathe them, bite,
savor, chew, swallow, transform


into our flesh our
deaths, crossing the street, plum, quince
living in the orchard and being


hungry, and plucking
the fruit.



Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Poetry and Preaching

An amazing day--worshipful, quietly powerful, filled with surprising insights and fresh perspectives. I spent the day at United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities attending "Poetry and Preaching" led by Sam King. Just wanted to pass along my THANK YOU in a public forum for the seminary, the class, and Sam King; along with her bio; and a poem that "rocked my world" today. And, one more thing, also attending the class was Pam Wynn, author of Diamonds on the Back of a Snake.

 Susan Deborah (Sam) King teaches writing at various institutions including the University of Minnesota and the Loft Literary Center. Formerly a Presbyterian minister and psychotherapist, King leads retreats on creativity and spirituality and is the author of Tabernacle: Poems of an Island, One Breasted Woman, and, her most recent publication, Bog Orchids: Island Poems.


A poem by Kathleen Patrick

Commuting


I think of you
When I am driving in my car.
On the way to work,
Picking up something at the grocery store,
Rushing for a quick workout.
There are other times, yes,
But the car is where you are closest.
You sit somewhere behind me, your voice
Not really there, but I can imagine it.
And when you laugh, I feel it
Through my chest and stomach;
You laugh more now.

You seem perplexed.
How could things have gotten so muddy?
Family slipped away,
Days rolled over to years,
Too many angry words
Said in haste.
But, mostly, I feel you smiling
When I recall the part of the past
That was worth photographing.
And when something has gone well
In my day, you seem to be there,
For the ride home,
Telling me how proud you are,
How you always knew I had it in me.


This poem can be found in this most excellent poetry anthology: 

The Wind Blows, the Ice Breaks: Poems of Loss and Renewal by Minnesota Poets

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

The Unbusy Pastor

TOO BUSY?

Eugene Peterson says the three most important things a pastor can do are (1) to pray, and teach people to pray; (2) to preach in such a way that people hear a distinctive note of authority from God's Word, and know that their own lives are being addressed on their home territory (and that kind of preaching is a creative act that requires quietness, solitude, concentration, intensity); and (3) to listen in unhurried leisure. 

For a pastor, being "too busy" is ignoble; a scandal, even blasphemy; being "busy" is a symptom of laziness ("letting others decide [priorities] rather than resolutely deciding myself") and vanity. 

...If I vainly crowd my day with conspicuous activity or let others fill my day with imperious demands, I don't have time to do my proper work to which I have been called. How can I lead people into the quiet place beside the still waters if I am in perpetual motion? How can I persuade a person to live by faith and not by works if I have to juggle my schedule constantly to make everything fit into place? (Eugene H. Peterson, The Contemplative Pastor: Returning to the Art of Spiritual Direction, 19).

And so here we are (fellow pastors, especially)... about to enter Holy Week... and how often do you catch yourself saying, "I'm SO busy" and wearing that like a badge of honor? I'm more guilty than anyone........


And so I "begin" Lent AGAIN today, praying "Lord, have mercy." 

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Shower the people

"Shower the people you love with love; Show them the way you feel; Things are gonna be much better if you only will" (James Taylor).

I heard this old song today and it brought back memories of singing along with it on the radio. But today it occurred to me that you could almost summarize the whole gospel in this song. Isn't this what following Jesus is all about? Following Jesus means showering people with love....

Well, this song *almost* says it all. But Jesus goes miles and miles further: "Love your enemies, pray for those who persecute you."

Love your enemies. Wow.

I don't think Jesus is necessarily (or merely) talking about far away enemies, rogue nations, terrorists--although we should indeed love them and pray for them too. But I think Jesus is MORE concerned about those "enemies" in our own communities; those "jerks" who always seem to get under your skin. Yes, THOSE enemies.

It's only possible in the power of the Spirit; with a "new heart" within us. It's a matter of attitude, I think.

Here is Eugene Peterson's translation of Jesus words: "You’re familiar with the old written law, ‘Love your friend,’ and its unwritten companion, ‘Hate your enemy.’ I’m challenging that. I’m telling you to love your enemies. Let them bring out the best in you, not the worst. When someone gives you a hard time, respond with the energies of prayer, for then you are working out of your true selves, your God-created selves. This is what God does. He gives his best—the sun to warm and the rain to nourish—to everyone, regardless: the good and bad, the nice and nasty...."

Shower the people you love with love. And shower the people who seem unlovable with love too. This is what God does.

Monday, February 4, 2013

Intimacy in the Body of Christ

The New Community in Christ (a.k.a. the church) should be a place where we share intimately with each other. We are, after all, one body in Christ. Among other things, we ought to speak aloud to each other (and often) affirmations such as, "I really love my kids," and then go on to explain why. Not just the "unconditional" reason--that's kind of a spiritualistic cop-out sometimes, don't you think?--but the things that sometimes frustrate us but yet make us love them all the more, the things that make us smile, the things that make us beam with pride.