Saturday, August 23, 2014

Life Together

No one talked much.
The gathering held no demands.
Men sat around the fire waiting for nothing but expecting and already receiving the reward for being there. As the laughter and shouts of children played in the distance, their fathers and their father’s friends considered in conversation and in silence the glory of their lives.

As each man arrived that evening the satisfaction intensified within the circle. Everyone knew their place and their place was here. To belong means that you become less of yourself but more than you could be alone. So, everyone became more and more and each man could sense it.

Those absent were mentioned and missed yet all was complete. It was complete for it was not the first, but one, of several such occasions. Every event is as complete as an event can be. They are memories in the making—some better than others and none contrivable.

So we sat together.

The fire danced before us masterful and bright; warming our legs and keeping us mindful of mystery. For a few moments we considered this phenomenon of light and heat and energy confined within a circle of stone and maintained with split wood, leaves and twigs. We spoke of it as magical, as an ethereal form constantly restructuring itself. 

The conversation moved further into creation as a breeze caressed the trees. We heard a sound and someone pronounced it to be an owl’s call. There is silence built into owl wings, another explained and somehow the conversation turned to the fact that everyone is known by some part of their story more than by their name. Then we soared. The stars were shining and the sky was ours. The stories came easy, of fish caught and trails hiked. We laughed knowing and relating and appreciating every detail. Tipped canoes, gathered wood, timber frames and back country camping.   
We brought some of the past back into the present, considered it, and then acted as if it went away and returned back to its own place. But it didn’t, it stayed there with us as it always does, as it always has.

One of the men read from a book; from part of a story somewhere in the middle. We sat in the middle of our own story listening. The historic fiction was close to home. We laughed at the realism and lauded the author, a favorite of the group. And considered how magnificent and normal all stories are.

Then, another ritual began. Iron skillets were carefully placed in the fire. The spoonful’s of lard swirled on the super-heated surface and then evened out in an invisible pool and prepared to answer the battered catfish with a sizzle. Those who tended the iron pans did so by lantern and flashlight. Glimpses of brown perfection assuring that the heat and turning had been naturally and properly timed.

Hushpuppies, unknown to many but well known here, were also part of the evening fare landing in men’s laps on the cheapest of paper plates.
So we sat and ate together.

The fish was fried, white-flake perfection; the taste amplified by the sense of place.  
The men ate with the satisfaction of the company they were keeping and the work they had come from and the conversations that continued. 

We reveled in the simplicity of our thought, our food, and our friendship. This was one evening, a block of hours, an increment of life well lived. 

Responsibility rightly drew some away earlier but we all got home late smelling of wood smoke.  
Lying in bed thinking of the morrow, of the future where we would carry the riches of this night and all of its memory; feeling and knowing that if we were no different at least the difference had been maintained, making us more of who we are or guaranteeing it.

We are formed by these events; they contribute to our person and shape us. Each man contributes to how we should or should not be. Their words, we echo or discard.

We discover and then subliminally imitate—expression and humor, concern and importance.
We are brothers born of God finding our way together; as it should be.

For some, we are imitating our fathers. They too sat around open fires without agenda.
The presence of other men in their lives—shaping—all together telling their stories until they all become one of our own; recollected and shared.

God must delight in such men who can talk of Him in such a place and at such a time. He is in their thoughts as naturally as His presence is known. And they know.

They know that He is the reason for their delight; all these image-bearers imitating the Trinity in love and laughter and communion as they enjoyed the three-tiered world of the heavens, the earth and the seas by eating fish under the stars. 

 What is man that You are mindful of him,
 And the son of man that You visit him?
 For You have made him a little lower than the angels,
 And You have crowned him with glory and honor. 
         
 You have made him to have dominion over the works of Your hands;
 You have put all things under his feet,


         



Friday, August 22, 2014

Hospitality


“I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that you present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is your reasonable service. And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God. …given to hospitality.” (Romans 12:1-2, 13)

You wouldn’t normally think of hospitality as a 'living-sacrifice' item but according to the apostle Paul it is. Some bible translations use the phrase practice hospitality and that is ok but the intentioned meaning is one of a deliberate pursuit. Given to hospitality is closer to the idea. And this action on our part is a proof, a tangible manifestation that we have indeed entered into our reasonable service. Hosting others is right there in the same chapter with prophesy, exhortation, and mercy. It is a big deal.

So, when we are told to give our lives totally over to the Lord, He is kind enough to tell us what the results will look like. And on this point, it looks like a crowded table.  


Thursday, August 21, 2014

Transformation

For we are
4 we R
we R
R His
we R His
His work we R
R His work
His workmanship
His we R
His work
His ‘craft’
His ‘poem’
His ‘masterpiece’
for we are His workmanship
His ‘masterpiece’
His ‘poem’
His ‘craft’
His work
His we R
His workmanship
R His work
His work we R
we are His
R His
we R
4 we R

For we are

Parenting

A Father’s Touch

He had been complaining of nausea all morning and the night before, but without any incident. But soon after the family had settled in for worship he seemed be in distress so I asked him if he needed to head for the restroom. Bravely, he said, no. I put my hand on his back to let him know that I was aware of his discomfort and if he changed his mind I was ready to help.

The church that we were visiting that day was on our route home from vacation and was known for great doctrine and beautiful tradition. The sanctuary was magnificent, arched, columned, stained glass and high ceiling. Central, was the pulpit, which rose like a tower to elevate the supremacy of the preached word. The sound from the pipe organ confirmed and conveyed the beauty and importance that song has in the worship of our Lord. I was glad of heart to sit with my family and celebrate covenant renewal in such a place, even though my attention was compromised by my 12 year old son as he struggled to man-up when he really didn’t need to. Really, all he had to do was say the word and I would have taken him outside. We could wait in the van for the others until church let out. But he stayed, so we stayed.  

As we listened to the minister’s sermon, I raked my fingers through the back of his hair and soon thought about how I never had the same experience with my father. Suddenly I was seriously conscious of what my hand was doing, stroking his hair and lightly rubbing his shoulders when he was able to sit up; drawing small circles on his back when he bent over. I wanted him to know that I was there—I was there for him like my dad wasn’t for me.

Don’t read too much into that. I loved my dad and he loved me in his own way. He was wired differently and that I say to defend him. I know enough about his life and his past to realize that he probably gave me more than he had to give.

How appropriate that all of this was taking place in my heavenly Father’s house. I have no love of my own to give. I love this son of mine (and my other sons and daughters) because I am loved by God. He loves me—I love Him—I love my children by Him and because of Him.
Being there for my children is only a reflection of the Lord being there for me. Without God I only would love myself.

So I make sure that this son of mine and my other sons and my daughters know that I am always there for them. Not out of some reaction to my own childhood deficit, for that type of well is always dry and the motive isn’t so much to give but to desperately receive. That’s why love is so important and necessary for our being. All of our wells are dry but by the Spirit of God, we can be all springs and overflowing.  

He almost made it through the service. When we rose to sing the recessional, he started shaking and said that he needed to go. He only just made it out of the pew and vomited in the aisle.
I crouched by him as his sickness defeated his will and like the sincerest confessor, he spilled his guts. As the congregation sang on we knelt together and fellowshipped in each other’s suffering: he, because of illness and I, because of empathy.   

Bile, mixed with food particles, splattered making a putrid smelly puddle all over that beautiful tile floor. Thankfully, we were sitting over to one side of the sanctuary so most of the congregation was spared a scene that those sitting next to us are likely never to forget. “Remember that Sunday when a visiting family’s kid threw-up all over the right side of the church?”  

When and if they retell that story, I hope that they don’t forget the part about the kid’s dad. About how that he wasn’t embarrassed and how he was there for his son during the whole ordeal. About how he was so close that his shoes were also splashed and that through his entire son’s discomfort he stayed with him, with his hand on his shoulder.   


    

Providence

‘Wish Dream’

I recently confessed to both of my teenage daughters my sorrow for not having built the family dream house that they have heard about their entire lives. They are 18 and 19 now and they still occupy a small bedroom together. It is so small that if we didn’t have bunk beds they would probably have to climb in through their window to enter the room.

“You know, Daddy is sorry that he was never able to build the house we always talked about. I wanted, by now, to have you waking up in the morning in your own room looking out your window to see trees and sky.” They both responded with an “It’s ok Dad” which gave me little relief for, you see, I still have a Wish-Dream.

Loss of investments, personal failure and a predilection all my life of taking jobs that do not pay very much has stifled my ability to build the house. And there are other things besides the house that I have on my list that have never been accomplished. In these I have failed or have been providentially hindered. I am left seeing what is not there, and knowing what is missing. I am sure that you know how I feel. And this where we all can find ourselves calling for another round, drinking in more regret while we consider the what ifs.

But believing in the loving sovereignty of God I am deeply comforted and relatively satisfied. There is always more that I want and want to accomplish but (thankfully) never to the forgetting of what I already have. Cramped as they may be in their tiny room my daughters have seen the world through books and travel and relationships. They know that there is an invisible realm—a kingdom that manifests its presence through the Wind, the Holy Pneuma transforming the hearts and lives of men. When called upon, they rise to help others dutifully and with cheer. They are rich in friendship and wealthy in experience and in exposure to the world as it is and how it can and how it should be.

This, by God’s grace, I have given them…and it is better than square footage.  They live within the environment of a sacred community that is sustained by the One who created all things. I have found it true and can testify, unless the Lord builds the house, the life, the community, they labor in vain…

What my girls actually have is more than my imagination could ever have conceived. Our lives are so much more special and spatial than my wish-dream for them; and for my whole family and all the families that dwell with us. The parameters and scope of our lives constantly expand in both the visible and the invisible universe; physically and spiritually.

There are many people who accomplish all that they have set out to do and I pity them. There are many more who live their lives believing that they are the have-nots and that this is ‘just how it is’. I pity them too because there is so much more for everyone. And I am not talking about the unbelievers—I mean people in the church.
What everyone really wants is to be happy. And too often happiness is defined by what you have or what you want. That is the illusion based on the lie that the apostle Paul warns about in his opening chapter in Romans. “They…exchanged the truth of God for the lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever.” The illusion/lie is ascribing worth to your dream, your way, more than to the worship of God. Seeking first the Kingdom of God allows for the prosperity of Job and the poverty of Lazarus but surely both found themselves, at times, chaffing at God’s providence in their lives. We have plans—and plans are not bad in themselves, if fact, they can be very wise—but God has plans too.

So, I see that my family is rich in some ways and poor in others. And here is where I think we all should consider our respective wealth. For I do believe that there are ‘riches’ that God wants all of His children to have and financial worth and social standing do not factor here. But peace, joy, love, contentment, shared life, wisdom, patience, godliness, kindness, virtue…these cannot be bought or bartered for.

The Lord promises food, clothing and shelter to all who seek His kingdom first. Sometimes the floors are marble and sometimes packed earth but if the heart is right, then heart is right.

And just so that you know, I haven’t given up on building the house (don’t tell Angela and the girls). If our fortune changes and the Lord is willing, I have plans.