Saturday, February 19, 2005

listening to life and letting you in on a few secrets

just a few moments ago, while reading andy crouch's unexpectedly engaging article about jerry b. jenkins, the christian writer's guild and the calvin festival of faith and writing, a lump arose in my throat and tears filled my eyes. in moments like these, uncle buechner often intones, you are very near to either the truth or something like it. thus, in honor of my physical reaction to this piece of non-fiction, i would like to enter the booth and offer confession. please take a moment to listen.

i confess:

that there are a few authors i cannot critique. indeed, i hold the life and work of these authors so close to my heart that they have gradually become gatekeepers. senior among these are henri nouwen and frederick buechner. i know it would be more pious to give Luke, Paul or the preacher of Ecclesiastes pride of place, but i might as well be honest. years ago, when someone critiqued nouwen's exegetical approach in professor windham's senior seminar class, i almost broke into tears. nouwen was the only one who dared to speak into my loneliness. he was also the pastor who taught me that upon the narrow road, the way up is down. finally, uncle henri lead me to L'arche, where, for a moment, my life became a fusion of faith and action. L'Arche was the context wherein i was able to be the Christ-follower i had always wanted to be, and want to be still. Buechner, well, he rends me in ways i cannot describe. in fact, crouch's mere description of how buechner came "onstage looking like a bemused hound dog" is what brought me to this place. over the past three years i have not had a more trusted guide than uncle freddy. well, that's not exactly true. there is another. but some cards are meant to be played close to the chest.

on friday i have an interview with the good folks at the beverly bootstraps food pantry. i know, i know, the name sucks, but they are the most influential social service organization in beverly. i have been volunteering with 'straps for the past two and a half years and have recently been working part-time with them in hopes that that they will be misguided enough to hire me. i am well aware, as my wife has often reminded me, that not everyone has the opportunity to line up their occupation with their vocation. but when that opportunity arises, i think you have to take the chance.

speaking of my vocation, i once expected more clarity in that area. when they taught us in leadership class that we could boil down our life mission to a short sentence or simple paragraph, i took them at their word. but i do so no longer. i am beginning to realize that my vocation is not only more complex than i originally imagined, it is also evolving as i move from age to age. if someone unexpectedly violated my personal space (read: my cube. yes, rhys, i am fulfilling your uncanny foreshadowing) and inquired about my vocation, this is how i might respond (in a stream of consciousness style). "i feel called to: love God and listen carefully to what he says; incarnate Christ's compassion among the poor; help Christ's body grow up into its head; sacrificially love my wife; share my story through writing; educate the young; be a trusted companion of the old; follow my Pa Pa's lead; seek out wisdom and invest it wisely; watch the cardinals win their tenth world series; learn how to listen to and relate with those i love more than others, and those i love less; let my story unfold within the boundaries of beverly; run a marathon; proclaim the promise of reconciliation; read a library full of books; and die well." i think that's a good place to start.

that when i'm in a public place, and see someone i know before they see me, i will most likely leave before stopping to say hello or calling attention to my presence.

that you can "take the boy out of the country, but can't take the country out of the boy." a couple of times a week, i can still hear oklahoma in my voice.

that i still kind of miss monological, expository, stand behind the pulpit and pound-on-the-wood-for-emphasis preaching.

that i will always love katy more than dizzy (especially since the latter just interrupted me by pissing on the floor). i do love the latter dog, but have never felt compelled to love all friends, family members and animals equally.

that the farther removed i am from my time at soybean bible college, the more i appreciate it.

that i haven't read a serious theological book in over a year and am completely unrepentant.

that i was once a rabid republican.

that i once had a confederate flag bumper sticker on my car.

that's enough for now. may you experience Christ's peace, and receive a good dose of r & r this weekend.

4 comments:

james said...

As previously mentioned, and as always, I am glad to be alongside you for the journey

Anonymous said...

Jeff. You rock.

such are the musings a a befuddled mind...

In musing a thoughtful response to all the wonderful
wisdom shared recently regarding democracy, history,
the essence of Spirituality and what and who we
consider Divine, a familiar phrase just came to mind.
One of the college students who attends the Gathering
has many artistic talents. One of them is to make
their own t-shirts with catch phrases. A recent
edition, titled, “shift your paradigm” made me think
– not – as you might expect – of how I – the christian
Fanatic – would get you Pagan to change your paradigm
and convert – but it got me to thinking about what
really matters most in life and what the whole purpose
is of interaction of divergent worldviews that we are
blessed with here at Circle and Cross? I don’t even
think a “purpose” even needs to be defined – for our
true goal is to have all of our paradigms shift
through constant communication – i.e., my goal is to
seek to understand even as I seek to be understood.

So at the root of it all, what is the substance of our
dialogue? It may evolve into comparison and into
debate. Debate that often proves futile because it is
based in reality less than that which is most real –
what is in all of our hearts and all of our souls.

I am the first to admit that I have willingly allowed
myself to be “brainwashed” into a fanatical belief and
vision that the complete Divine is embodied in Jesus
and embodied in me. The evidence I use is certainly
motivated by my own prejudices. Yet, evidence aside,
isn’t the communion others experience with their
Divine equally as real, as meaningful, as good, as
pure, as noble?

Jesus embodies love – that much both Pagans and
christians can agree upon. Pagans see the Divine love
of Jesus as an incarnation of what we all might become
– an embodiment of all true religion – not religion in
the sense of a group or a church or belief system –
but the true religion of the self. And Christians
share this view of Jesus as well.

But where does the scale tip for the christian,
propelling her towards wild abandon to her Christ,
when does the scale fall from her eyes (as if she ever
were in darkness, the Pagan would say)? Why this
deluded fanaticism of a figure who sought not to be
defined but to define reality itself?

For some, there is a familiar answer. An experience.
A joy. A love. A loss of guilt. A redemption. A
restoration. A moment in time when the world stood
still and stars shone brighter than the ever have or
ever will again. For others it may be a collection of
moments. A lifetime of adventure. A longing
fulfilled. A lost love found. Who is to say what it
is that draws a believer to a fearful, often wavering,
devotion to a source of good and light and love and
purity and hope known as Jesus?

I don’t know what it is for you. It may be a moment.
It may be an experience. It may be a dialog. It is
always a process. Yet, the effects are undeniable.
Though some see a transformation from the kingdom of
darkness to the kingdom of light as merely a state of
mind, recreated in thousands of places, over thousands
of years past and to come, do we dare take a stand to
enter the presence of the Divine?

How limiting. How flawed. No source of Ultimate Love
and Ultimate Power would ever need or ever require the
devotion of vessels of clay. Her needs are too grand.
His purposes too beyond searching out. Why would the
Creator stoop to us? Why would a Savior need us?

Some movie character – I forget which movie – was
told, “you asked for the reason… You… are the
answer...” We are the reason. Jesus is the answer.
Love is the reason. And love is the answer. Maybe
not so much as to answer the pain as to belong and to
know and to become.

Coming home. Eating dinner – for eternity – and so
much more. Art and music and life and love in
glorified reality that is more real than today.

Such are the musing of a befuddled mind…

In Him,

mike

mikeofearthsea said...

SuperJeff,

outreach = spirituality in the workplace tonight...

http://www.gathering4square.com/Gathering_Web/NewPages/calendar.html

(not a vote for Stan event...)

Peace,

mike

g13 said...

mike, thank you for taking the time to read and comment. your commentary is much appreciated! i would love to attend the dialogue night at the gathering (the last one, quite frankly, kicked ass), but i have a church meeting to attend. yeah for responsibility!

jamie, you mean a lot to me, so how could your words not? i am so thankful that you are one of God's beloved and one of my companions upon this road. (btw--as either my wife or my sidekick could tell you, i'm a pretty emotional guy as well. i just express it in rather odd ways).