Tuesday, April 26, 2011

I Don't Know the Answer, but I Am Willing to Guess...

I read several blogs...mostly those of folks I know, friends. Mike Mather is someone I know, a friend, and in his blog recently he posed this question: What Get's God Pissed Off? (To see how Mike answered that question you can go to his blog, "bibfeldt's inquiry.")

I wonder if God is distressed when I give up the quest to become the best "me" I can become. If so, I have honked God off many, many times!
Quitting is easier than continuing on.
Giving up is easier than giving my all.
Going back is easier than moving ahead.
The good old days are safer than the unknown future.
Doing the same-old same-old is easier than seeking a whole new future.
As a recent best-selling book pointed out "Good is the enemy of Best." And so, I settle...I settle for less than I could become. I settle for what is instead of striving for what could be.

I don't know the answer to Mike's really good question...but I am willing to guess that I have disappointed family, friends, colleagues, and maybe even God when I sell out to what is instead of continuing the search for what could be.

Friday, April 22, 2011

Sweet - Tart

When was the last time you ate/enjoyed a cinnamon coated apple? Maybe at the County or State Fair? Maybe on vacation at a seashore boardwalk? Whevever it was, can you recall the taste right now?
The sweet and the tart together...or, more in line with the order in which the taste expereince goes: first the tart and then the sweet.

Its like that with so many things, isn't it? First the tart, then the sweet. I wonder how that plays out in our thinking about the Holy Week/Easter experience: The evil that displays itself as Jesus is tracked down and murdered because he is causing way too much consternation for the political and religious establishments...the slaughter of the innocent...and then, when its all over, upon reflection (and through the eyes of hope and faith), the sweet belief that evil has not overcome good, wrong has not prevailed against right, even death has no victory over life...what a powerful jolt to the senses!

Happy Easter! Enjoy one of life's real sensual treats...just remember to be ready to taste the tart before the sweet!

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Movie Music...

I visited my mom, and my sister and her family in Huntsville, Alabama over the New Year's holiday. One evening we went to see the movie "True Grit." The original movie won John Wayne an Acadmey Award...which many folks thought was awarded not so much for his work in that particular movie but for his life-long work in films. It was, to my thinking, an OK movie, but nothing to write home about. The new re-make of the movie was, to my thinking, much better than the first. It was more pithy, more tense, more true to what I suppose life would have been like in the time in which the movie was set. And it most certainly was more true to the human nature I have any speaking acquaintance with, than was the original.

The background music, woven throughout the movie, was the old gospel song, "Leaning on the Everlasting Arms." I didn't expect that...in fact it took me some time to recognize the song as it played...sort of sparse-like, and in a country-music bluegrass style. A lady named Iris DeMent sings the song...what a wonderful voice she has.
I remember singing that song (and others like it...gospel songs) in the little-town church I grew up in. I was informed in seminary that my appreciation for these kinds of songs showed my low-brow taste in church music. Hymns are about "we" while gospel songs are about "me," I was told, and that would be a problem for someone going into church ministry.
That may be. But I took a very pleasant trip back in time during my watching of "True Grit." I watched the movie but let my memory travel back to small-town norhtern Indiana in the 1950s and early 60s.
I don't want to actually go back to "the good old days" (if they really ever were that), but I do admit that hearing "Leaning on the Everlasting Arms" while watching a good movie was a most pleasant surprise. Like good comfort food, I think.
Come to find out, the song was used in another movie, a 1943 film titled "The Human Comedy", starring Mickey Rooney. Like the new "True Grit," it was nominated for several Academy Awards.

What a fellowship, what a joy divine,
Leaning on the everlasting arms;
What a blessedness, what a peace is mine,
Leaning on the everlasting arms.

Refrain

Leaning, leaning, safe and secure from all alarms;
Leaning, leaning, leaning on the everlasting arms.

You know you started humming or singing that song when you saw those lyrics!

Friday, April 1, 2011

Embrace Your Imperfections

So, I read this on-line article that offered 7 ways to become more approachable. I don't think of myself as being unapproachable, but I figured a quick read couldn't hurt...and maybe I could apply the time spent reading the article toward my required annual continuing-education requirement.

One of the ways the article suggested as a path to becoming more approachable is to "embrace your imperfections."

Well, I don't know if that is an area of my life I really want to open up and deal with. Imperfections. Seems to me I am about as perfect as I'm gonna get...at least any time soon.
Honestly, of course, I am not perfect in so many ways: not a perfect dad, haven't been a perfect husband, not close to being a perfect pastor/preacher, never gonna be perfect at golf! Haven't bowled a 300 game! Haven't pitched a perfect game! Haven't written the great novel!

There's so much imperfection to embrace, in my case. And even if I do embrace it, how is that going to make me more approachable? Do I want to be more approachable? Maybe I could be perfect in my unapproachableness!

Good thing that God and the occasional human being say they love us and really mean it...even if we aren't perfect!

A little love every now and then makes it all better...