After he returned from his adventures, Ulysses sat by his still hearth wondering what to do next. Getting older includes reflection upon life lessons we've learned and discernment about what comes next, but life is meant to be lived. We have become wiser than we think and we are meant to use the wisdom we've gained. Whether philosophy or observation, discovery or poetry, this is a depository not only for passive thought or memory, but a springboard for action. Life is more than breathing.
Posts
Tuesday, February 27, 2024
February 29 is not a real day
Wednesday, February 21, 2024
Building a Life, Stone by Stone
Did you know that when the builders in the Middle Ages erected their cathedrals with their great barrel vaults and pointed arches and flying buttresses, it was the not the mortar between the stones that kept them standing? The mortar didn't serve as medieval masonry glue but as a thin layer of leveling, smoothing the imperfections between them, one to another, to provide a continuous contact surface so that when one brick sat on the one before it and was followed by the rest, their combined weight would press them into a geometric shape whose weighted thrust extended in straight lines right through them into the ground.
It wasn't the mortar that kept the building together. It was the horde of gradually assembled stones that wouldn't work until each had taken its place. Not until that had happened, and the stones had time to sink into one another firmly by virtue not of a masonry glue, but only by their own accumulated pressure, would the great soaring structure be finished.
And so it is that the weight of years forms a life.
It has often seemed that as the years of my life increase, so does the weight of them so that I carry them as a kind of burden, like a sack I have to throw over my back before I can go anywhere. But I've been looking at them wrong, I think. Maybe they aren't a burden, but a building - a magnificent cathedral of lived days that I don't carry, but live in, roaming its rooms, examing its structure, admiring its beauty. Each stone has been laid painstakingly on the one before it day by day, adding weight, yes, but also creating stability.
My building isn't complete yet until I've lived my last day, but it is taking shape into something I couldn't see coherently until now, when the building is nearly complete. What began as a fortress has morphed into a cathedral of Gothic lace, and I can't help but think that is what it was meant to be all along.
And it is beautiful.
Sunday, January 21, 2024
Who's Your Daddy?
I gave the following message at the First Congregational Church, Rochester, WI, January 21, 2024
I’m going to talk about Abraham today and I’m going to
start with the lyrics of a song, not a hymn, but a song Bob Dylan wrote in 1965....
God said to Abraham, kill
me a son.
Abe said, man, you must
be putting me on.
God said no. Abe said
What?
God said you can to what
you want to, but
Next time you see me
coming, you better run.
Abe said, where to do you
want this killing done?
God said out on Highway
61.
Okay, so I used this because it’s fun, but also to show
not only how famous Abraham’s story is that even a not so good Jewish boy from
Minnesota knew his Old Testament well enough to write a protest era rock song about
Abraham. But also to show how easy it is to get stuff within the story
wrong. Dylan got the killing part right, but he missed something important
about God. Anyway, Abe’s story starts a long
time before the killing incident, so we’ll start with a brief review.
Abraham, one of the Old Testament patriarchs, is often said to be
the biblical example of faith. Born almost
2000 years before Christ, Abraham did a lot of traveling under God’s direction,
but didn’t start until he was already an old man. When he was 60, he left his
home in Ur to go to Haran because God told him to “Leave your country and go to
a land I will show you. I will make of you a great nation.” He didn’t know
where he was going but he believed God, so he did it. Fifteen years later, when Abe was 75, God
sent Abraham to Canaan. God said, “I will give this land to you and your
descendants” and this was harder to believe because Abraham and his wife,
Sarah, had no children and he couldn’t figure out how, at their age, that was
going to work. He didn’t understand, but Abraham still did it. A year later, after
he took his family to Egypt to avoid a famine and returned to Canaan, God said
again, “I will give this land to you and your descendants.” This time, Abraham
spoke up. He asked God how in the world he was going to do that because he
still had no children. By then, Abe’s wife Sarah thought God might need some
human help, so when Abe was 76, Sarah told him to sleep with her handmaid and
sure enough, Abraham had a son, Ishmael, but God was not distracted by that. Ishmael
was not the promised son. Finally, 24 years later, when Abe was 100 years old, after
they’d waited 40 years and Sarah was 90, she finally had a baby by Abraham –
Isaac. Isaac was the promised child. Isaac would be the future of the Hebrew
people. They were overjoyed. Their belief had been rewarded. Abraham, through
Isaac, WOULD be the father of a great nation.
This is how Hebrews 11 summarizes
the story: By faith qAbraham obeyed
when he was called to go out to a place rthat he was to
receive as an inheritance. And he went out, not knowing where he was
going. 9 By faith he went to live in sthe land of
promise, 10 For he was looking forward to vthe city that
has wfoundations, xwhose designer
and builder is God. 11 By faith ySarah herself
received power to conceive, even when she was past the age, since she
considered zhim faithful
who had promised. 12 Therefore from one man, and ahim as good as
dead, were born descendants bas many as the
stars of heaven and as many as the innumerable grains of sand by the seashore.
So far, so good.
Then when his son Isaac was 33
years old and in the prime of his manhood, God told Abraham to kill him. After
all the moving and waiting, God was asking Abe to do the one thing that would
make all God’s promises impossible. He for sure didn’t want to do it. He loved
his son. But he also wanted to obey God. It didn’t make sense to kill Isaac,
but it hadn’t made sense for God to send him moving from place to place either
and God had made all of that work out. Everything had happened so far exactly as God promised. So Abe would
kill Isaac to obey God and God would after Isaac was dead, make him, through
Isaac, the father of nations. He just didn’t know how God would do that. So Abe
went, not to highway 61 but up to Mount Moriah, to do the deed. He took His
son, and a rope, and tied him to an altar meant for sacrifices. And Abe raised
the knife.
This
is what we’re going to talk about today. We’re going to talk about what Abraham
did and why he did it. We’re going to talk about how Abraham believed and who
he believed in. And we’re going to talk about how it would look for us to have
the same kind of faith.
The
thing about faith is that it
doesn’t exist in a vacuum. A person has faith in SOMETHING. Faith doesn’t exist
apart from the object being believed in. In order to have faith at all, we have
to have a clear picture of the thing believed. And then, because of what we
believe, like Abraham, we DO something.
For
Abraham, he believed God was his sovereign King and he acted like it. He
listened and obeyed. He also believed God was trustworthy. God had promised the
birth of Isaac against every common sense and delivered on his promise. God had also promised him that Isaac
would be his inheritance and his gateway to a nation of descendants. Abe, standing
on Mount Mariah with the knife in his hand, didn’t know how God was going to do
build a nation from his descendants if he killed his only son, but he knew that
somehow, God would do it, just like he’d done everything else.
Now
we have to figure out who WE believe God is. Think about it a minute. Answer
the question for yourself. Who is God? Complete the sentence - God is blank.
Then fill in the blank.
How
many of you thought God is Love? You’re not alone and there are lots of
similar ways to express that love: faithful, good, kind, steadfast just.
the
Bible agrees:
1 John 4:16
God is love, and
whoever abides in love abides in God, and God abides in him.
Listen closely. That’s not only a definition, It’s an
instruction. It tells us to do something. It tells us, that if we love, we must
abide.
· So, if God is love, we abide in Him. That means
staying close. It means remembering God in everything we do. It’s making sure
he has a chair at every table, a seat at every meeting. It’s whispering to him
like pillow talk in prayer. It’s holding hands with him while we walk. It’s spooning
with him in sleep. It’s staying so close to Him that he’s like an extension of
ourselves and we couldn’t walk away even if we wanted to.
· If God is love, we also expect and accept
forgiveness for sins. Abraham never knew Jesus, but this kind of love was the
reason Jesus was born and died. This love is God’s assurance that there’s
nothing we can do, as long as we love Him, that’s irredeemable and even when it
seems like we’re lost beyond God’s reach, we’re not. It’s having confidence
that God never acts out of anger or revenge, regardless of how it looks from
our point of view. This is what Dylan got wrong. God doesn’t threaten us with
destruction if we go wrong. He forgives.
·
If God is love, we are loyal and forgiving not
because a person earns it but because God is. We give the kind of love He
gives. We treat everyone as equals because He created us all and we are equal. We
look past our differences to our similarities. We act humbly and inclusively,
not boasting or excluding anyone. Anyone. We’ve all heard about the tax
collectors and prostitutes Jesus hung with. If God is love, we take care to recognize
our own tax collectors, our own prostitute. They are there, waiting for us to
love them. I was recently reminded that people who treat us badly often do it
because they are afraid of being hurt themselves. We look past our prejudices
by always ascribing a worthy motive to someone else rather than judging them. We
think good of them, not ill. That’s what loving someone else as we love
ourselves means.
God is a
lot of other things, too: omniscient (all knowing), omnipotent (all powerful),
eternal, sovereign (in charge of everything), and of course, holy, but the idea
of transferring our understanding of who God is into action is the same for all
of these cases. This is the kind of faith Abraham had. And, in a
perfect world where we can do all of this, we would, too. However, what really
happens can look quite different.
Faith in action can be hard. It was for Abraham, too, because faith is more than knowing God exists. Understanding that God exists is a starting place waiting to be made into flesh and blood. Real faith is built in individual communion with God.
Like
Abraham. He didn’t tell anybody what he was going to do when he took Isaac to the mountain. He didn’t tell Isaac, or his
wife, not anybody. Abe’s act was not a public one –It was a one on one
interaction with God. He didn’t expect Isaac to survive. He expected him to die.
Abe didn’t know what God would do after Isaac’s death, but knew He would do
something.
Isaac
was Abe’s whole world and future. He was the promise. In Abe’s willingness to
kill him, Abe gave his everything to God. He resigned all his plans, all his
future and that of his people into the unknown. Why? Because he believed. And
because He believed, he trusted because if God is love, we also trust Him. We
behave with confidence in whatever circumstances come, no matter how they look,
remembering that God always – ALWAYS-has our best interests in mind. If the
circumstances are hard, we know that the difficulty is good either for us or
for someone else or both. If the circumstances appear to be evil, we remember
that Jesus came to have victory over evil, so no evil can confound God’s plan. We
don’t worry about what we don’t have or what
we want to happen or spend a lot of time trying to make things work out our
way, but instead letting God arrange them his way.
The
thing is, God doesn’t always, or even often, leave easily recognizable
signposts saying “Here I am” and as a result, we spend a lot of time guessing,
and sometimes getting it wrong. And that’s okay, because God is love, remember?
It’s not about getting things right every time. It’s about wanting to. It’s
about leaning into God all the time and looking for Him right there with us,
because He is most likely to show up in places we least expect Him, like in a
burning bush or on Mount Moriah, taking the knife out of our hand.
God,
because He is unimaginable, lives in the place we can’t imagine and He reminds
of this us every time He does something we didn’t think of or don’t want to happen.
God lives in the unthinkable because He Himself is unthinkable. When He tells
us not to fear, it’s not because nothing scary will ever happen. It’s because
our plans are the only ones that will be upset. His will not.
But
when our plans are upset, what happens? We worry. We’re afraid. We can’t sleep.
When the unexpected comes, it takes us by surprise and confidence in God isn’t
always our first response. So when it’s not, then there’s something in the
adage Fake it Till You Make It. It works. Abraham did it. If we’re scared, behave as though we
are not. If we irrationally worry, do what we should. We disarm our fears not by
running the other way but by entering into them, grabbing them and shaking them
until they reveal the damage they are doing. Making them show their real face. Does
that take courage you don’t think you have? You bet it does.
One of my favorite stories is about the a Chinese Christian mystic named Watchman Nee. He was considered a holy man and one night, while he was just hanging out smoking his pipe in his living room, a demon appeared on the staircase. Now the demon was doing scary, demony things like growling and snarling and cursing him. After a minute or two, Nee stood up, walked over to the demon, looked at him and said, "Oh, it's only you." He was scared when he did this, of course, but the demon didn't know that. All he heard was Nee saying, "I know who you are. You can't hurt me because I know who God is." The demon had no defense against
Nee’s faith.
Remember,
God only brings us what we’re supposed to have. He means us good, not harm.
It’s a trust fall. Did you ever try one? To stand in front of someone and just
lean back and let go without asking first, without looking to see if they’re
paying attention, and just collapse and see whether they’ll catch you. It’s an
amazing experience, and God wants us to do that with Him. Every time. We can
fall into His arms with complete confidence regardless of our fears and reservations
because that is the only way to faith, the only way to find out how magnificent
God really is.
Remember
that God asked the worst, the hardest thing of Abraham and Abe walked right up
to it and he raised the knife over his son. Do you think Abe’s hand wasn’t
shaking? I’m willing to bet it was. He does the same with us. God gives us
situations we don’t like and puts the knife in our own hands and asks us what
we will do next. When we have the faith and courage to raise it, he will say,
see! Look what I am doing. I am making all things new in a way you could never
have imagined.
To
God, unexpected change cannot unmake His plans. To God, death cannot unmake His
plans. When we act according to what we believe rather than how we feel, God
meets us there, hands out to catch us, because we know who He is. He is love,
and he is just, and he is sovereign and he is holy. When we reach back to him
in return, we find, like Abraham, that God moves His heaven and his earth to give
us faith and bring us rescue. That is Jesus’ story. That is Abraham’s story. It
is meant to be our story, too. May it be.
Sunday, January 14, 2024
Requiem
Requiem
December
18, 2023, New York Times: U.S. Steel to Be Bought by Japanese Rival
Pure power.
I saw it once.
Showering from the pregnant mouth
of a smelter in liquid stars.
Birthing its own dawn,
cascading into wide waiting trenches,
consuming every atom it approached.
scorching even the air.
What began as iron and cool coke
exploded to life and purpose
from a chemist’s dream,
not steel but vision
grown into monument
carrying us shoulder high
wide as invention,
broad as courage
solid as unbound minds.
It was so beautiful.
It lost no grandeur
even as it grayed into slab,
cooling as it moved.
Dignified even while consecrated
to
hot rolls pressing it to near
paper,
and rocketing out, thundering,
into coils,
bending into the place mortals
live
to meet a Hephaestion future
forged in its own furnace.
But when future came,
the god lingered and lagged.
Grandeur and dignity faded,
romance reduced to pragmatic
function.
Steel still breeds from formulaic
components
but the spark smoldered and died.
No fresh sun rises to the blast.
No new charge promises a bloom.
There is weeping in Gary.
Image courtesy of Science Photo Library
Saturday, January 6, 2024
First Snow 2024
Everyone begins
in the dark, stumbling, grasping for purchase.
Looking for the
way to light. Footsteps to follow.
Hearing hollow
echoes, distant owl-sounds,
Emptiness so complete
that breezes make the only noise, and
snow muffles
even that.
Mother-love is not enough, the
breath of God that bolsters only infants.
Beauty nestles
there, and warm refuge, but no passage.
Giving little
revelation when delivered into an urgent, constantly turning world
both whirling on
itself and wheeling through a star-cast space
That forces motion
without specifying direction.
Show me the
way.
Ah! A companion!
Reason, logic,
formula, rule,
Discernable patterns
with stable roots.
Frames.
Handholds. Stakes in the ground.
Paths marked by
firm signposts that climb clear one on another.
Someone to walk
with. Aristotle’s salvation.
But that path
tends toward a crowd, bending in common direction,
All finding the
same solace in coherent method:
Syllogism.
Analytics.
Forward circles
on itself, becoming backward in helical stasis, patting itself on the back.
Leaving Beauty
behind. And Grace. And Good.
The din of
agreement going nowhere.
Nearby, nearly unnoticed, a cagy Socrates and refined Plato leave their marks.
Ignoring the crowd, they stalk, leaving reasoned steps behind, to a riverbank.
They point to where measured feet have no place to land and where only the willingness to flow allows movement.
The crowd
scatters.
The way
forward, effortless and punctuated only by geese rising, laughs in delighted rapids
And the place to rest appears.
All images photographed by the author
Tuesday, January 2, 2024
Trust Fall
I was thinking this morning of something I used to do.
From time to time, usually in the confined space of our galley kitchen, when I was standing casually in front of Dave either cooking or talking or generally doing something else, I would collapse. I'd just let go limp and fall to see whether he could catch me before I reached the floor.
It was a test of some kind, I guess, because we both knew I had trust issues, like a lot of us do. It's hard to relinquish control, after all. We work so hard to get it and when we do, don't want to let go. After all, who knows what would happen if we actually fell? It's true.
Of course, we all know that whatever control we think we have is an illusion. We are, in the end, all subject to forces way beyond our control, but who wants to admit that, much less live it?
But you know what I learned? It's freeing. It feels absolutely fabulous to the point that, even if I actually fell, it wouldn't matter. It would be absolutely worth that one moment of freefall.
In time, I came to understand that the trust fall thing was just a metaphor for something else. What I really wanted wasn't just that single moment of freedom, but an assurance that there existed somewhere a kind of erasure when the bounds of what divided me from the rest of the created world, even from God Himself, slipped away.
It was about more than trust.
It was about a momentary union with the infinite, a kind of flight that released me from all the strings I was trying to hold, all the future I was trying to weave, all the security I was trying to purchase with the precious energy of my life. We can't do it, though, and if we live long enough, we realize that. Eventually, what we work so hard building melts away in a single moment beyond our control.
That's why, I think, Jesus told us to build up treasures in heaven. He didn't mean not to live our life, but to live it with what really lasts in mind. Circumstances twist and turn, but the energy we invest in building up God's treasures, the world and people He made, well, that lasts. It shatters the boundaries that separate us not only from each other, but from Him.
I don't intend to erect or fortify one more barrier in this world. I have little time and no constructive energy for it. And, when I remember what it feels like to trust that God really does intend the best for every one of His creatures, I can fall into His arms with ease.
It's reassuring to remember, too, that He reinforced that thought in the last thing I was able to do for Dave while he lived - to catch him, to keep him from falling when he was too weak to stand on his own, and to tell him, "Don't worry. I've got you." He had done it so often for me, never failing to make the catch. Of course, all those catches were illusions, too. In the end, it was God doing the catching every time.
Sunday, December 31, 2023
Standing in the Prow of the Ship: A Lesson from FDR
Franklin Delano Roosevelt used to describe the porch at his "little White House" in Warm Springs, Georgia as being as "high as the prow of a ship." He established Warm Springs not only to bring him a place to rest and rehabilitate in the face of a depression and wartime presidency coupled with the ravages of a twenty-five year detente with polio, but to provide the same for other polio victims. He described it, however, not in terms of a fixed place on earth, but in terms of motion, of vast strength, and of unlimited space. Not the usual frame of reference we expect from someone living with a handicap.
There is a lesson here, and it grows from two aspects.
The first is pretty obvious - FDR was crippled. He had no use of his legs for half of his adult life but before the affliction, he grew up in New York, close to the ocean, and before he became President, served as Secretary of the Navy. He knew well the feel of being on the water - not just a lake or river, but a watery expanse of biblical porportions, with no end in sight from any angle. No landmarks, no obvious road ahead, and no guideposts. Just water in every direction. That boundless view, along with his natural optimism, kept him from focusing on a world collapsing in on itself because of physical disability. Rather than looking inward and seeing his world shrink, he looked out and saw it without restriction. He saw is spreading out on all sides before him, split by the prow of a great ocean liner, steaming ahead into a future he not only welcomed, but helped engineer.
The second is seeing, if only in retrospect, that FDR's disability could have been the single qualification that made him most uniquely able to guide a floundering country through the 30's and 40's. As a nation, we were faced with a brokenness we'd not known since the Civil War and had no idea what to do next. FDR did, every time he remembered his useless legs. He knew what it took to go on when the future looked hopeless. He knew that handicap and death were not the same thing. He knew that, even the boundless ocean has a shore somewhere, and had already developed the grit needed to hold firm in search of it.
Those of us who are aging have the same choice to make. We may not have polio, but we have other maladies and restrictions to endure. We can let the horizons close in, or we can board our own ship, raise our eyes to the horizon, and welcome each broad sunrise, engaged to the full limits of our ability, aware that storms will come, but so will the rainbow.
We are exactly where we're supposed to be. Every time we are given is intentional - a trust, a gift. Like FDR, we have something to do and the only way to begin is to take whatever step we are able, with or without legs that work.
Death is not the worse that can happen. Missing the life we're given is.
Photo 1: View from QM2 via Facebook group Queen Mary 2 Experiences and Advice
Photo 2: FDR sailing a yacht in 1933, photo courtesy of ebay