Tim Tebow, Jason Collins, and What It Means to be a Christian

We Begin with a Meme

Tim Tebow: I’m Christian.
Media: Keep it to yourself!
Jason Collins: I’m gay.
Media: This man’s a hero!

Maybe you’ve seen a version of this internet meme circulated by shocked and dismayed Christians.  Here’s another one:

tebow collins meme

Good grief!  When did we Christians get so whiny?  This reminds me of the so-called “War on Christmas” that I blogged about previously . . . it’s the Politics of Petulance.  And petulance is never a good evangelism strategy.

In a bit of synchronicity, Tebow and Collins were both in the news on the same day. Last Monday, Tebow was released by the Jets, and Collins came out as the first openly gay athlete in any of the Big Four professional sports (Football, Baseball, Basketball and Hockey).

A Quick Joke

Now that Jason Collins has admitted he is gay, I wonder when he will make the more difficult confession that he plays for the Wizards.

But Seriously Folks . . .

So some vocal Christians are upset that the mediocre gay basketball center is getting more positive reaction than the mediocre Christian football quarterback.

Last week some parishioners asked me what I thought of the whole Tebow vs. Collins thing.  My answer was that I wished both of them were better athletes.

Tebowing

I like, even admire, Tim Tebow.  He was an awesome college quarterback.  As a pro quarterback, he is still an awesome college quarterback.  He joins a long list of Heisman Trophy winners who flopped in the NFL.  Who can forget the storied pro careers of Andre Ware, Eric Crouch, Danny Wuerffel, and Desmond Howard? (Those last two are particularly painful because they flopped in part with my Redskins.)

Unlike those others who went from the Heisman to the bench to the street, Tebow has millions of dollars in endorsements.  According to his representation, Advertising Age estimated that he could make over 10 million dollars pushing products.  His endorsement potential ranks higher Will Smith, Bill Gates, Hank Aaron, Tom Hanks and Jack Nicklaus. They say he’s “on par with Katy Perry and Beyoncé.”

Beyoncé!

Why?  Because of his incredible success on the NFL gridiron, where he is currently unemployed and last year managed just 6 completions for 39 yards? Sure, his Broncos made it to the playoffs the previous year, but that was more due to the defense than his golden arm.  And one year of so-so passing doesn’t typically translate into all that endorsement loot.

tebow jockey adFar from being “persecuted,” Tim Tebow is wealthy and successful (at least off the field) precisely because he has been so outspoken about his faith.  In a nation where more than 3/4 of its citizens identify as Christians, it doesn’t hurt to be associated with one when you want to sell underwear and stuff.

And I say, good for him!  He seems like a nice guy and to be someone who walks the walk as well as talks the talk.  I don’t agree with some key elements of his theology, but Christianity is about relationship with Jesus, not correct religion.

The Center of Attention

Which is why I am also an admirer of Jason Collins.  Did all the Christians who want to bemoan the positive press that Collins got miss that he professed his Christian faith in his coming out statement?  Were they too busy hyperventilating over his sexuality to see this paragraph?

I’m from a close-knit family. My parents instilled Christian values in me. They taught Sunday school, and I enjoyed lending a hand. I take the teachings of Jesus seriously, particularly the ones that touch on tolerance and understanding. On family trips, my parents made a point to expose us to new things, religious and cultural. In Utah, we visited the Mormon Salt Lake Temple. In Atlanta, the house of Martin Luther King Jr. That early exposure to otherness made me the guy who accepts everyone unconditionally.

Look, we Christians can disagree about homosexual behavior.  Just like we disagree about how Creation happened and women pastors and whether to baptize babies.  But in our disagreement, let’s remember that we – all of us Jesus-followers – are the Body of Christ.  Certainly Jesus was someone who not just accepted but reached out to “otherness” and accepted everyone unconditionally . . . except maybe those Pharisees and other religious leaders who clung so tightly to right behavior as the key to salvation.

Can’t we stop obsessing about the specks in other Christian’s eyes (especially when those specks are sexual) and start being more aware of the logs of judgment that are in our own eyes?

It’s not up to us to decide who is “Christian” and who is not.  That job, according to what I read in my Bible, was delegated to Jesus.

And Then There’s Chris Broussard

It was not a job given to folks like ESPN’s Chris Broussard.  Let me be clear – I have no problem with Broussard saying that he believes gay sex is a sin.  But, he crossed the line when he said that because of his sexuality, Collins is not a Christian.  (The exact quote was “So I would not characterize that person as a Christian because I don’t think the bible would characterize them as a Christian.”)

Grace, Grace, Grace

This gets at the very root of what it means to be a Christian.  Are we saved by keeping the rules?  Then we are all in big, big trouble.  Are we saved by keeping some special rules, especially the ones about sex?  We’re all still in trouble, because Jesus said if we have lustful thoughts about someone we’ve committed adultery.  (That should cover, well, everybody.)

Or are we saved by the grace of Jesus Christ?  In spite of our imperfections, our failings, and our misinterpretations, it is by grace we are saved.  “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— not by works, so that no one can boast” (Ephesians 2:8-9).

So if they believe Christ is their savior – and I don’t know their hearts so I can’t make that determination -Tim Tebow, Jason Collins, and, yes, Eric Broussard are Christians. Period.

And I admire Tebow for his forthright faith.  But I don’t feel sorry for him or think he’s persecuted in any way, not when Christians around the world are thrown in jail, tortured, and even killed for their faith.  (It would be awesome if all of us American Christians stopped whining about how bad we have it.  It’s not that bad, and if it was, Jesus said we’re blessed when we’re persecuted for our faith.  So either way . . .)  Don’t weep for Tim Tebow.   As a person of European descent and a Christian he is in the majority ethnicity in the majority faith.

And I admire Jason Collins.  If coming out as a gay man in big-time professional sports was so easy, someone would have done it by now.  To be gay and African-American makes him a minority of  a minority, and I see the support he’s getting from “the media” and even from the President as a good and positive sign.

Yes, some folks are upset that a “big deal” is being made about Collins’ sexuality.  I understand that, but it is a big deal because it is something new (at least publicly) and because Collins did evidence courage in being first.

However, I pray for a day when it will truly not be a big deal, when we accept and even love folks no matter who they are.  Sort of, as Jason Collins reminded us, like Jesus did.

Posted in Christian Living, Christianity, Homosexuality | Tagged , , , , | 8 Comments

Does Being a “Missional” Church Mean Neglecting Each Other?

Go Sign“The church may be the only organization on the planet that exists entirely for the sake of those people who don’t belong to it yet. In fact, as soon as we forget this and start making it all about ourselves, we stop being the church.” – Kelly Fryer, Reclaiming the L Word: Renewing the Church from Its Lutheran Core

I repeat that quote from Kelly Fryer often.  It succinctly sums up the primary mission of the church, the warrant Jesus gave us in the Great Co-Mission: “GO and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit” (Matthew 28:18, NIV).

But what about those folks already in the church?  Shifting from a we’re-here-to-take-care-of-each-other mentality to a missional focus can be understandably threatening.  Folks in the church  hurt and get sick and die and lose their jobs and have family crises and on and on.  Does being missional mean we say to them, “Deal with it.  That’s not our thing.  It’s not the job Jesus gave us.”

Certainly not!  Remember, Jesus also said this: ““A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another.  By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another” (John 13:34, NIV).

In other words, taking good care of each other is essential to our evangelism.  When we nurture each other, we show the world what love looks like.  The church becomes a living parable of God’s love for the world.

Rather than hitting people over the head with the Bible and focusing on the specks in everyone’s eyes while ignoring the logs in our own, evangelism becomes simply taking the love of Christ beyond the walls of the church and into the world.

There is no conflict between Jesus’ commission to GO and his command to love each other.  As a pastor who often encourages his congregation to be more outward-focused, I realized recently that I need to make that more explicit.   We can only genuinely love the world when we love each other; our “no matter who you are, no matter what you have done” outreach begins with practicing it internally.

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Don’t Read this Looking for Answers About God and Boston (or anything else)

boston-marathon-finish-lineI began this day sitting for almost an hour in a large medical office waiting room.  On one wall was a big-screen television, tuned to a local morning news show.  Of course most of the program was devoted to news from the horrific Boston Marathon bombing.  I was trying to focus on the Read the Bible In the Year daily reading on my Kindle, but it was difficult with the bomb blasts and screaming that blared from the TV.

There didn’t seem to be anything new to add to the story; no arrests, no one knows why it was done, and the casualty figures haven’t changed.  So why do we need to see and hear an almost constant loop of explosions, terrified people, bloody sidewalks, and on and on?  Is there a point at which news coverage no longer informs or honors victims and responders, but instead gives confirmation to the perpetrators that what they did was indeed a big, effective deal?  Is there a point at which we become numbed to the images of violence rather than being horrified and outraged?

It’s easy to spew righteous indignation at news organizations, to accuse them of only being worried about ratings rather than their responsibility to inform.  But my guess is that people who make decisions about what to put on television news are people like us – trying their best to do the right thing under the circumstances, sometimes getting it right, sometimes screwing it up.  What they seem to be getting right, at least from my limited exposure this morning, is recognizing the bravery of those who responded to the blasts, the “helpers” as in the oft-posted Mr. Rogers quote.

Anyway, concentrating on the news folks is pointing an accusatory finger at the speck in someone’s eye and ignoring the log in our own eyes.  It is our eyeballs that produce those ratings, our fascination with violence and bloodshed that has spawned the “if it bleeds it leads” philosophy in local television news.  “Why don’t they ever report on good news?” we ask, without admitting the inevitable answer, “Because we won’t watch if they do.”

If we were having an actual conversation, this is the point where some folks would say, “How can you be so upset about violence, Pastor Dave?  There’s all kinds of violence in the Bible.”

And my inevitable answer would be the one I’ve heard from so many Christians committed to non-violence (like me): “But the Bible never glorifies violence.”

And yet . . . the Bible reading I was distracted from this morning was from the book of Joshua.  In those chapters the Israelites under Joshua’s command were wiping out city after city in the Promised Land, putting everyone in those cities – men, women, children, even animals – to the sword (or “cutting the hamstrings of their horses” in one case) and burning down everything else.

As much as we want the God’s Word to be simple, it rarely, if ever, is.  We can try to explain away the difficult passages, but they are there, in all their complexity and, sometimes, brutality.  The Bible doesn’t answer all of the questions that are raised in its pages; we probably wouldn’t understand the answers if it did.  “God’s ways are not our ways,” and some things we just aren’t meant to know.  Ultimately faith is trusting that God knows better than we do and that we have the answers that we need.  Faith is being willing to say, “I don’t know,” even as the supposed expert, The Pastor.

I don’t like that.  I like having all the right answers . . . or all the right questions (Jeopardy).

If the Bible doesn’t have all the answers to the internal questions raised, then why do we expect answers to everything that happens in the world?

Why did what happened in Boston happen? Why did God allow it? 

I don’t know. 

It’s when we try to fill in those gaps from our own biases and limited knowledge that we get into trouble.  Almost any statement that starts, “God did that because,” or “God allowed that because,” is just shy of blasphemy.

I am not called to explanation.  I am called to pray . . . prayer for the families of those who died, prayer for those are injured, prayer for the helpers, prayer for those who endeavor to keep us safe, and prayer for all who are traumatized or re-traumatized by this tragedy.

And yes, prayer for the perpetrator(s).  Jesus has called me to pray for my enemies . . . even when it doesn’t make sense, even when I don’t want to.  I will so pray, perhaps through gritted teeth.

I will pray trusting that God was, is, and will be present.   I will pray while clinging to the cross, where God was present even in the deepest sorrow and tragedy.

I will pray that I will be reminded that it is not what I know, but rather Who I know, that is of ultimate importance.

I will pray the words of the Kyrie:

Lord have mercy.  Christ have mercy.

Lord have mercy.

Amen.

Posted in Bible, Christian Living, Christianity, Prayer | Tagged , , , , | 8 Comments

In the Beginning, God (and then some stuff happened)

fred flintsone on a dinosaurI wish Christians would stop fixating on evolution and spend more time talking about Jesus Christ.  Look, if you want to believe that the earth is only 5000 years old, that everything was created in 6 literal days (with a 7th day for resting), that people and dinosaurs hung out together until the big lizards missed the Ark, fine.  Maybe you’re right.

But stop making it seem like creationism is the rock upon which the Christianity stands.

It’s not. Jesus is the Rock.

And it seems that the first chapters of Genesis are much more concerned with  “Who” rather than “how.”  Maybe we should be, too.

Dawkins vs. Wright, an Unfair Fight

What’s prompted this mini-rant is a video a Facebook friend posted a couple days ago.  Here’s a link to the video; by all means watch it if you’re the kind of person who watches NASCAR to see the car wrecks, because this is one long car wreck of a video (and it goes on for over an hour).

Famed atheist Richard Dawkins “interviews” much less-famed Wendy Wright of “Concerned Women for America.”  After viewing this video, I’m a concerned man for America.  Unfortunately, Ms. Wright uses lots of time debunking (I think that’s what she thinks she’s doing) evolution.  Dawkins is an evolutionary biologist.  A scientist.  Ms. Wright is not.

Dawkins repeatedly offers scientific evidence to back up his insistence that evolution is fact.  Ms. Wright does not, but she keeps asking him for more evidence like  she’s expecting him to pull a dinosaur bone out of his pocket or something.

She mostly talks about how terrible it would be if natural selection really operated in the world.  Like many Christians who attempt to get involved in this kind of argument, her basic fallacy is this: She believes the consequences of evolution being a fact would be detrimental, therefore she will not accept that evolution could be a fact.

But something being positive or negative does not affect its reality.  I think it is terrible that chocolate and peanut butter Easter eggs make me fat if I eat too many.  But it is still a fact.

Unfortunately, Ms. Wright presents as having a closed mind, as her presupposition about the consequences (which are of course irrelevant to the truth/falsehood of the proposition) will always cause her to ignore any facts which do not support her position.  And she just reinforces the stereotype that Christians are folks who prefer to remain ignorant about science, which does no good for our 21st century witness.

This attitude is more reminiscent of the 17th century, of the Roman Catholic church and Galileo.  (Ironically today the RC Church officially has no problem with evolution.)

God is Bigger than the Gaps

The even more basic problem is that some (many?) Christians back up their faith with “God of the gaps” thinking – i.e. God is the explanation for things science does not (yet) explain. As science advances and the gaps get smaller, their faith is threatened, so science becomes the enemy.

As a Christian, there are two things that irk me about this.  First, as I said when I started, when we focus on evolution vs. creationism, we’re not focusing on Jesus.  We are giving people the impression that in order to be a Christian you have to embrace the literal account of creation as described in Genesis 1 (or Genesis 2, they are markedly different).  

It is not a belief in creationism that saves.  It is Jesus Christ.  Period.

So I’m concerned about the effect stuff like this has on our witness to non-Christians.  As I said in a previous post, when I was an unChristian one of the easiest ways to deflect a Christian who was trying to tell me about their faith was to get them going on evolution.  I no longer had to hear about Jesus . . . or about my need for a Savior.

I also feel bad for the Christians themselves who seem to be afraid of science that does not confirm their presuppositions.  It is sad that they cannot see the wonder of scientific discovery as actually revealing the amazing creativity of God.  I’ve blogged before about how my reading and learning about Quantum Physics – the science of the infinitesimally small – has only enhanced my worship of God.  

Science doesn’t and will never disprove the existence of God.  Science only reveals – gives glimpses of, really – a God of Wonders.

Let me throw out some Scripture here:

From Romans 1:20 – “By taking a long and thoughtful look at what God has created, people have always been able to see what their eyes as such can’t see: eternal power, for instance, and the mystery of his divine being.” (The Message)

Psalm 19:1 – God’s glory is on tour in the skies, God-craft on exhibit across the horizon.” (The Message)

Evolution Is Not the Boogeyman

God is not threatened by evolution.  Faith does not have to crumble in the face scientific evidence for natural selection.

The most incredible miracle I ever witnessed was the birth of my daughter.  Science can describe how she physically came to be – from the union of the egg and the sperm, through the stages of fetal development and finally the tiny, beautiful person in my hands.

That didn’t make her any less of a miracle.

Science can explain a lot about how things work in the world.  Who knows, maybe science will even be able to someday explain what happened before the Big Bang (one of those “gaps” that some Christians hold onto to “prove” the existence of God).

But no amount of scientific discovery will ever be able to diminish the absolute wonder of the universe that God has created – whatever “created” means in the context of how God has operated in the universe to bring it into being and to sustain it.

Posted in Bible, Christian Living, Christianity, Faith and Science | 5 Comments

“Happy Lent”? – An Ash Wednesday Homily

ash cross“Happy New Year!”  “Happy Easter!”  “Merry Christmas!”  “Happy Fourth of July!”  “Happy Groundhog Day!”  Happy Birthday!”

These happy greetings are appropriate for most holidays and special occasions.

“Happy Ash Wednesday!”  “Happy Lent!”

That just doesn’t sound right, does it?  Ash Wednesday, and the Lenten season we begin today, are not thought of as happy times.  In fact, quite the opposite.  Mardi Gras takes place right before Lent, as if a special time is needed to wring out all the happiness before the suffering of Lent begins.

It’s true – Lent is not meant to be a time of exuberant celebration.  It’s a season for quiet introspection – for looking inward to see where we fall short.  That’s certainly no fun.

Lent is a time for honesty – a time for reality.  You know those pictures of yourself that make you wince because “I really don’t look like that, do I?”  That’s the soul-picture we get when we take an honest look inward.

Being honest with ourselves can be painful.  Especially when the standards we use are unattainable . . . as they are during Lent.  During this season we are encouraged to hold up the Ten Commandments against our words, deeds – and this one is especially humbling – even our thoughts.

We’ll find that we break all ten of the Commandments.  Before you protest, remember that Jesus said if we get angry at someone we’ve broken the commandment about murdering, and he holds us to a similarly high standard for our thoughts when it comes to the sixth commandment.

If we don’t come away from our Ten Commandments checkup feeling miserable enough about ourselves, there is the other standard we are called to hold up against ourselves – the perfection of Jesus Christ.

That’s worse than comparing our singing voices to a great opera singer or our basketball talents to LaBron James.  We will inevitably fall short.  We will be found wanting.

All have sinned and  fallen short of the glory of God.”  All means all.  ALL of us have fallen – and keep falling – short of God’s glory.

It is during Lent that we are invited to get in touch with what that really means – what it means that we have let God down over and over again.

“Happy Lent” indeed.

It reminds me of when I was growing up and I would be mean to my younger sister.  My mom would send me to my room – sometimes to sit in a hard chair in the very middle of the room away from any distractions.  “You sit there and think about what you’ve done,” she would say.

Needless to say, that was the last thing I would think about.  “How much longer” was about as deep as I got.

Maybe that’s why I ended up in that room and on that chair over and over.

Lent gives us 40 days to think about what we’ve done.  Are we going to plod through this season asking, “How much longer?”  “How many days to Easter?”  Or are we going to make good use of it?

We began worship this evening with the 51st Psalm.  It reminds us that we are hopeless when it comes to being sinners – “Indeed I was born guilty, a sinner when my mother conceived me.”  We never had a chance.  We are, in the words of the old George Thorogood song, “Bad to the Bone.”  Actually, we are worse: we are bad to the SOUL.

After that dose of hard reality from the 51st Psalm, we had ashes placed on our foreheads that remind us of the inevitable result of our sinfulness.  “Remember, you are dust and to dust you shall return.”  The inevitable result of sin is DEATH.  We are DYING; that’s what the ashes on our foreheads proclaim.

Our sin and our sinfulness are killing us.

By the way, did I wish you a happy Ash Wednesday?

BUT . . . when I smeared those ashes on your forehead this evening I did my best to leave them there in the shape of a cross.  Because Lent is not just a time of introspection, a time of looking inward . . . it is a time of looking at the CROSS.

No, that’s not strong enough.  If we get real with ourselves about our spiritual condition, and we let it sink in that we’re literally dying of sin, then we won’t just look at the cross.  We won’t just stand under the cross.  No, in the words of the hymn we sang earlier (Rock of Ages) we’ll CLING to the cross.  It’s our only hope.

The ashes in the shape of the cross proclaim that there is something more powerful than death, something that defeated death and sin and Satan once and for all.  The cross.

The ashy cross on our foreheads retraces another cross smeared on our foreheads by the thumb of a pastor.  That other cross was drawn in oil, not ash, and it was made there on your forehead after you were baptized into the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.  When the pastor made that Cross, he called you a child of God and said that you had been “sealed by the Holy Spirit and marked with the Cross of Christ FOREVER.”

We speak of Lent as a journey to the cross.  But really we are on a journey from cross to cross to cross – from the cross in our baptism to the cross of ash to the Cross of Jesus Christ that we will remember on Good Friday.  It is a journey that we make every year, and Ash Wednesday is the way-station on that journey.  Ash Wednesday is a day of preparation, a day to look at what really and finally matters.

What does really and finally matter?  The cross, and our relationship with the Savior who submitted to death on that Cross.

Lent is a time to restore that relationship to its rightful place in our lives.  There are disciplines Christians have practiced for 100’s of years that help us do that, especially prayer, fasting, and acts of service.

But no matter what WE do to enhance our experience of Lent, the good news of this season is the same Good News we proclaim the rest of the year – that our hope is not in what we do, but in what Jesus already did!

So, I guess if the day Jesus died on the Cross can be called “Good Friday,” we can say, “Happy Lent.”

But the greeting I prefer is “Have a blessed Lent,” because it centers not on a fleeting emotion but rather on blessing, which can only come from God.  And one of the great blessings of Lent is this opportunity to take that honest look at ourselves and realize how sinful we are.

You might wonder, “And how is that a blessing?” Because it is only then that we can even begin to appreciate God’s grace, to understand that we really don’t deserve the forgiveness and salvation poured out in Christ’s blood on the Cross, but that God offers them anyway for the most basic of reasons – just because God loves YOU.

No matter who you are, no matter what you have done.

Have a blessed Lent.

(Based on a homily preached at Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church of Millersville on Ash Wednesday 2013.)

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Really? (or, Red Lights Aren’t Just on Christmas Trees)

Red Light!There are a couple of ways you can pronounce the title of today’s blog post.  “Really?!” is a statement of joyful disbelief, when you can’t believe our good fortune.  You got the job you didn’t think you were qualified for.  You passed the test you didn’t study for.  “Really?!”  It’s what you might say Christmas morning  if you find a big gift under the tree that you weren’t expecting.  “Really?!”

The other pronunciation is more exasperation.  Someone lets you down.  You find out the meeting you thought was at 9 was actually at 8:30.  “Really?”  You wake up Christmas morning to find socks under the tree.  “Really?”  I got to use both pronunciations one morning the week before Christmas.

You can probably figure out that the pre-Christmas week is a busy one for a pastor.  There’s a lot of places to be and people to see, extra sermons to write, and so on.  You’ve also got to take care of family stuff, which I was doing during a rare free hour one morning late in the week.  I was heading down Richie Highway to pick up Karen’s Christmas Present.  I was hurrying down the road – well not really hurrying because I was catching every light red.  I approached the next intersection and just then the light turned yellow.

Really?

I came to a quick stop.    I was first in line and figured it would be a while before the light turned green again because it had to go through all its sequence, so I took out my smartphone and did what you’re not supposed to do in the car.  I checked my calendar and my e-mail and so on.  I was stopped, I figured, what’s the harm?

Out of the corner of my eye, I saw cars begin to move in my direction.  So I started forward – slowly, because I was focused on shutting off my cell phone.

The car horn really surprised me.

You see, the cars I had seen moving were in the left turn lane.

Really?

The folks trying to turn left coming from the other direction weren’t too happy with me.  They were the ones honking.  I’m glad they stopped!

This is really stupid, I thought.  I was embarrassed.

At least embarrassment was my main emotion until I noticed the lights flashing in my rearview mirror.  Now, I’ve been driving almost 35 years and can’t remember ever running a red light.  Now, I had gone through this one at low speed and guess who was RIGHT behind me?

Really?

That’s right – an Anne Arundel Sherriff’s Deputy.  Those lights flashing in my rearview mirror were red and blue.  What are the odds?  It had to be the easiest violation this guy had ever seen.

So I sort of froze, then I pulled over in the closest place I could – off to the left across the intersection.  Richie Highway doesn’t have a real shoulder on the left side, so I was mostly still in the road.  I wasn’t thinking too clear at that point.

Oh, the other thing I did when I pulled over was put the car in neutral, pull on the emergency brake (I drive a 5-speed) and just reflexively unbuckle my seatbelt.

Really?

Anyway, the deputy got on his loudspeaker.  “PULL OVER ON THE OTHER SIDE.”  I had the radio on and didn’t really hear what he said, but I could tell he was talking to me and wasn’t real happy.  So I turned down the radio and sort of shrugged my shoulders.  “PULL OVER ON THE OTHER SIDE, IDIOT.”  He didn’t say that last word, but it was there in his tone.

So I did.  After a while he walked up to my car.  Now, I was wearing a clerical shirt but he stood sort of back from the window so he couldn’t see it.  I had to resist that urge to try to use that in my favor and twist my body all the way toward him – “Hey, I’m a pastor!”  But I didn’t.

He said, “Are you okay?”  He sounded real concerned about my mental state.

All I said was, “I messed up.”  And I handed him my license.  At that point I realized my seatbelt was unbuckled.

He walked back to the car.  I was doing two things while he was back there – praying and adding.  I guess it’s obvious why I was praying.  The adding was my trying to figure out how much the tickets – running a red light, no seatbelt – and my insurance increase would be.

Finally he came back.  He handed me my documents back and a yellow piece of paper.  “I’m giving you a warning today.  Next time, be careful.”

“Really?!”

That was an honest exclamation, but it didn’t sound quite right.  So I quickly added, “Yes sir, thank you sir.”  And I very carefully pulled back into traffic.

I deserved a ticket that morning.

I didn’t get one.

That, my friends, is GRACE.

Grace is not being punished when you deserve it.  Grace is the GIFT of forgiveness when you most certainly don’t deserve it.

Grace is Christ on the Cross, dying for your sins and mine.

Really!

(Adapted from the opening of my Christmas Eve sermon at Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church of Millersville.)

Posted in Christian Living, Christianity, Christmas, Sermon | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

POSTCARDS FROM A JOURNEY THROUGH THE BIBLE – January 2: Cain’s Mark of Grace

Cain - Fugitive and Wanderer by Wilhelm GrossJanuary 2: Genesis 3-5; Psalm 2

The Bible starts off with pure awesomeness.  God brings order to chaos as everything that exists is created.  We get to watch as God the artist paints on an infinite canvas, shades of light and dark poured out to become land, sky, sea; God’s voice the brush as planets, plants, and people take shape and live.  The first people dwell in what is absolute bliss not just because of the perfection of the Garden, but especially because of their perfect relationship with the Creator.

That was Day One of the Read through the Bible in a Year plan.  The second day is quite a contrast.  Sin enters the world in what we’ve come to call The Fall, and people are barred from paradise.  Soon after comes the first murder.  Cain commits fratricide against his brother, Abel.

And then . . . grace.  

After God confronts him, Cain expresses his fear that he will be killed for his crime.

God told him, “No. Anyone who kills Cain will pay for it seven times over.” God put a mark on Cain to protect him so that no one who met him would kill him. (Genesis 3:15 – The Message)

That verse always blows me away.  God’s grace is always a surprise.  You’d think God would snuff Cain out.  Make an example of him.  An eye for an eye and all that.

But no.  God puts a mark on Cain.  Not to shame him or to make him a target.  But to protect him.  To show anyone who might harm him that if you messed with Cain, you’d have to deal with God.

I can’t help but think of the mark I received in baptism.  God’s mark.  I am as guilty as Cain of rebelling against God.  I may not have killed anyone, but I am a sinner deserving of punishment, just like Cain.  But instead, in baptism God marked me as God’s Child.

Through all my years of rebellion and even denying the existence of the One who marked me,  that mark endured.  Instead of letting me go, instead of snuffing me out, God continued to embrace me as surely as he stood by Cain.  Yes, God’s grace is always a surprise.

And now, called to be a pastor in God’s church, I pour the waters of baptism on those who come to the font, and then make God’s  mark, the sign of the cross, on the foreheads of those who are baptized: “Child of God, you have been sealed by the Holy Spirit and marked with the Cross of Christ forever.”

(I’m making another trip through the Bible this year, this time using “The Daily Message” as my vehicle for the journey.  I won’t be posting every day, but as motivation and time converge I will share some “postcards” from the journey.)

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POSTCARDS FROM A JOURNEY THROUGH THE BIBLE – January 1: SO!

The Daily Message(I’m making another trip through the Bible this year, this time using “The Daily Message” as my vehicle for the journey.  I won’t be posting every day, but as motivation and time converge I will share some “postcards” from the journey.)

January 1: Genesis 1-2, Psalm 1

It’s such a little word – only two letters.  But “SO” seethes with seeds of purpose.  “So” answers the question that 2-year olds and children of God ask so often: “Why?”

God spoke: “Let us make human beings in our image, make them
        reflecting our nature
    So they can be responsible for the fish in the sea,
        the birds in the air, the cattle,
    And, yes, Earth itself,
        and every animal that moves on the face of Earth.” (Genesis 1:26 – The Message)

Our problem with the first part of Genesis is that we try to make it answer the wrong question.  The writer of Genesis is not really concerned with  “how.”  These first chapters of the Bible are not a geological or biological treatise.  Christians can therefore agree to disagree about the “how” and move on to the primary concern of the author of this majestic account.

Who?

And the answer is simple: In the beginning . . . GOD.

But, as we see in verse 26, “who” is not the only focus.  That little word “so” tells us to pay attention, there is an answer to “why” on the way.

God created people with God-like qualities SO people could take care of the earth.  In the same way that God takes care of us, our purpose is to take care of the world that God has made.  The world, of course, includes each other.

One of the best definitions of “worship” I have ever heard (or maybe I made it up, I’m not sure) is this: Worship is glorifying God by fulfilling our God-given purpose.  We therefore worship God when we are faithful to our “SO.”

I worship God when I take care of that which is not myself.

That’s why I am here.  That’s why you are here.

That’s our “So.”

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A Homily for a Blue Christmas Service

Christmas StarA Blue Christmas Service, also known as a Longest Night service, is a time when we gather together to worship and to acknowledge those “blue” feelings we can get around the holidays.  The worship is planned to support each other as we experience grief and loss, but also to move us toward the hope that comes with the birth of Jesus Christ.   A Blue Christmas service is a wonderful time of rest and encouragement for those who have lost a loved one, especially recently, for those who are struggling with their faith, or for those who are simply stressed out by the holidays.   On that evening, we sing together, hear God’s Word together, pray together, light candles together, and commune together.  There is also a homily (short sermon)  This is the homily from last night’s Blue Christmas Service at Christ Lutheran of Millersville:

“A voice heard in Ramah, weeping and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children and refusing to be comforted, because they are no more.”

It is difficult to hear those lines from the second chapter of Matthew in the same way after what happened in Newtown, Connecticut last week.  But those lines, occurring in Scripture so soon after the story of Christ’s birth, remind us that Jesus did not come into the safe, sanitized world of Christmas cards and children’s pageants, but that Jesus – God in human flesh – was born into the real world of sadness and hatred and violence and fear.

After what happened last week, people wondered, “Where is God?”

Because of the birth of Jesus Christ, because Emmanuel – God with us – came into the world, we can say, “God is there.  God is right here.”

“The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it!” (John 1:5)

Of course it’s not just a tragedy in Connecticut or other bad news we hear and see in the media that makes us wonder, “Where is God.”

The reality of our own lives can stretch our faith, can leave us wondering if we are alone and if there really is anything besides this reality.

When the doctor says, “Your tests show something that concerns me,” we may wonder, “Where is God.”

When the bills come and there’s not enough money in the bank account, and there seems to be no hope of ever catching up much less getting ahead, we may wonder, “Where is God.”

When our children make bad choices and even reject us, when our spouses let us down and even leave us, we can certainly wonder, “Where is God?”

When we are confronted with disappointment and pain of all sorts that are part of life in the real world, we wonder, “Where is God?”

Jesus Christ is God’s answer to that question.  God is in the manger.  God is on the Cross.  God is walking out of the tomb.  God is here!

For me, today was a day of reassuring folks that God is here.  First came the phone call this morning about the unexpected death.  Then came the visit with a homebound member who wonders why God doesn’t do something about the constant pain.  Then the next visit and the question, “Why did God take my husband?”

The reality is that God does not answer our “why” questions very often.  We can talk about theology – about how there is evil in the world because of sin and free will and the influence of Satan, but I don’t think a discussion on theology is very comforting to someone who is hurting.  Anyway, I don’t believe we can answer the question of why any particular thing happens to a particular person.  Maybe we’ll get those answers in eternity; I’m hoping it won’t matter then when we live forever bathed in the light of God.

God doesn’t give us all the answers, but God always gives us . . . God.  God loves us so much that God never leaves us alone to face any trial or tragedy.    Yes, God is here, not just in a spiritual way but in ways we can experience with our senses.  God is here in God’s Word that we hear together.  God is present in the communion that we taste and see.  We feel God’s touch here in the support of a gentle pat on the arm or on the shoulder.  We can feel God’s love in a hug.

When Isaiah proclaims, “Comfort, comfort my people,” the source of that comfort is God’s abiding presence.  In Romans we are promised that NOTHING can separate us from the love of God – nothing in life, and not even death.  When you were baptized, God promised to live with you – to dwell in you – forever no matter what.

And God always keeps Gods promises.

Throughout the Hebrew Scriptures, God promises God’s people that the Messiah – God’s anointed Savior – is coming.  God made the promise to Abraham when that father of God’s people was called – “All people of the world will be blessed through your descendent.”  The promise was repeated again and again through the prophets.

And then . . . in Bethlehem over 1000 years after that promise to Abraham, over 2000 years ago from our perspective,  those promises were fulfilled when an unmarried mother gave birth to a baby boy and laid him in a manger.

That baby boy was born into the real world – a world where a powerful empire, Rome, could cruelly dominate the Jewish people into which that boy was born.  It was a world where a pregnant woman and her betrothed could not find anyone who would take them in, so they had to deliver their child in a place where animals fed.  It was a world in which a cruel king – King Herod – would order all the children under two years old to be killed because of his jealousy and fear of the newborn king.

And it was a world in which that baby would grow up and be hung on a Cross until he died, even though he was the only person who ever lived who never sinned, who did not deserve death at all, much less to be humiliated and executed as a criminal.

Jesus is a real savior born into a real world – into the world in which we live.  He was not immune to the disappointments and sadness and suffering and grief that we experience.

In fact that was kind of the point.

You see, whatever it is that we are going through, whatever it is that is interfering with our ability to celebrate Christmas whether in the news or in our lives or in our very being, Jesus understands.  Because he’s been there.

Or more accurately, he’s been here.

And if you’re having trouble getting into the Christmas spirit, I don’t think Jesus is disappointed in you or angry at you or is critical of your faith.  The reality is that when we struggle we get disappointed in ourselves and angry at ourselves and we wonder about our own faith.

But Jesus – that baby in the manger, that man on the Cross – Jesus only responds to our struggling with empathy and offers himself to us with those words that he said at the last supper and that we hear every time we receive communion:

FOR YOU.

Christmas . . . it’s For You.  Not even though you’re struggling this Christmas, but especially if you are.

AMEN

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IT’S WONDERFUL – A Christmas Short Story (Complete)

it's wonderful art by Karen Simpson(Here is IT’S WONDERFUL in its entirety.  Feel free to share it. Merry Christmas!)

I stared at the lost solitaire game on my computer screen and considered the wreckage of my life.   It was early on Christmas Eve. I sat alone in my study.  Already my wife had retreated to bed after some argument or another.  The only growth for us was ever farther apart.  Everything I touched seemed to deteriorate through my involvement.  The company that had provided my livelihood since I was a young man was shutting down after the holidays.  I couldn’t pay my double-mortgaged, maxed-out credit card bills now – what was I going to do without a job?  My life was a mess.  And worse, my mess was contagious.  I thought maybe it would have been better if I’d never been alive in the first place.

Suddenly I became aware that I was no longer alone.  I was startled to be joined by an elfin older gentleman wearing an outdated dark suit with an old-fashioned, white ruffled shirt.  I couldn’t put my finger on it, but he looked sort of familiar.

“Hello,” he said, his voice friendly, almost child-like.

“Who let you in?” I asked.

He smiled, a twinkle in his eye, “Nobody.  Let myself in.  But you sort of invited me when you were thinking it would be better if you weren’t around.”

Something about his friendly tone, about his innocence, sparked recognition.  “Clarence!  You’re Clarence the angel from that Jimmy Stewart movie! The Christmas movie.”  I was excited to know who he was, not to mention that he was a celebrity.  Almost immediately, though, I was chilled by rationality.  “But . . . how, I mean . . .”

“Tut tut tut.  I have some things to show you.”

“You’re going to show me how much better off people are because I’ve been alive, right?  I’m going to get to see how miserable everyone would be if I hadn’t lived, just like in the movie.”

“Something like that,” was all Clarence said.  He beckoned me to follow him.

I was feeling better already.  Even though I couldn’t explain Clarence, I was ready to be transformed by what he was going to show me.  I’d seen the movie a hundred times, after all, and now it was my turn to see how important – how wonderful – my life had been.

Our first stop was my old high school.  We went into the lobby – locked doors mean nothing to an angel – and he led me over to the trophy case.  Clarence didn’t say anything; he just pointed down to a trophy on the bottom shelf.  I got on my knees to look.  The marble foundation and silver pillar were topped by a golden baseball player frozen in a home run swing.

I read the trophy’s inscription.  ”It’s a mistake.”

I looked up at Clarence but he just nodded back toward the trophy.  I pressed my face to the glass of the case to make sure I had read the inscription correctly, then I got back up.  ”It’s a county championship trophy from my senior year here in high school.”

“Yes indeed it is.”

“But . . . it’s a mistake.  We lost in the semi-finals.  I know.  I know better than anybody.  We were losing by one run in the ninth inning with two outs and two men on base. Coach put me in to pinch hit – said he had ‘a hunch.’  Then . . . “

“You struck out.  The game was over.  No semi-final, no championship game.  I know, I know – I was briefed before I came.”

“So you know that the trophy’s a mistake?  Then why . . .”

“It’s no mistake.  Remember, you don’t exist.”  Somehow he was too cheerful about this for my taste.  “So you weren’t there to strike out.”

“And someone else . . .”

“Hit a home run.  The team went on to win the state championship in the next game.”  He sounded like a real fan.

“Well, I certainly feel better now,” I said, my sarcasm covering the sting of my long-ago high school failure.

Clarence ignored me, and we moved on.

Although we had but that moment been at the school, we were instantly in the busy streets of a city where hurried pedestrians on last-minute Christmas missions passed and re-passed, heavy laden with packages and shopping bags full to the brim with presents for friends, relatives, and those for whom gifts were obligated.  Business-people spilled out of the office buildings and onto the streets, walking the crooked line of post-office party inebriation. The streets were lit with festive lights of all colors, and the bass beat of dance music pounded through the doors of nearby bars and clubs, momentarily louder as revelers opened the doors to enter.  Here was a thriving metropolis, not the dead city in whose suburbs I lived.

“Where are we?” I asked Clarence, both disoriented and energized by the sudden busyness around me.

“Why, it’s your hometown.  Don’t you recognize it?”

I looked around for something familiar on which to anchor my perception.  “I don’t see anything.”  Just then I noticed the street names on the corner sign.  “If this is my town, well, then it’s been revitalized overnight.  This is the warehouse district.  There’s been no life down here for years.”

“In a way, it has been ‘revitalized overnight’ as you say.  In less time than that, actually.”

He motioned for me to follow once again, and I complied until we were at the base of a megalith of a skyscraper, the like of which had never existed in my distinctly lowrise burg.  Silently, Clarence craned his neck until his nose pointed to the top of the building.

I followed Clarence’s gaze.  There, at the top, I could just make out the red and green neon letters that stretched across.  I blinked and read the sign again.

“They’re lit that way especially for Christmas,” Clarence said, shaking his head.  “Isn’t that pretty?”

“But that’s my company’s name up there.  We could never afford a display like that.  We’re in the red, not the red and green.”

“This is your company’s building.  They . . .”

“That’s crazy.  I work out at the old Industrial Park.  Out of the city.  We don’t even own the space there, we rent, and the lease is up soon, and we can’t . . .” Remembering my work troubles took some of the rush off of the trip with Clarence.

“Remember, my friend,” Clarence said, and reached up to put an arm around me.  I had him by a good half-foot.  It was like being comforted by the grandfather I never knew.  “Remember that you don’t exist.  Never have. You weren’t there to fake your resume to get that job with the company.  You weren’t there to sneak out when you were supposed to be working, or to inflate those expense reports.”  I must’ve looked awfully down because I saw a wisp of sympathy in his expression just then.  “You were never really qualified for that position. That’s all.  You did the best you could . . . most of the time.”

“But I’ve been loyal.”  Loyal to my paycheck anyway.  “And I’ve done some good things for the company.”  Please don’t ask me to name them, I thought.

Clarence just continued his spiel.  “The woman who got the job that you weren’t there to beat her out of – well, there was a woman of vision.  She developed a new process in the first year she was with the company, and they patented it and things just took off from there.  She’s the president now.”

“So, they were better off without me?  Like the high school baseball team?”  I took in the activity around me.  My city had grown up around my company.  But that wasn’t exactly right.  It was neither my city nor my company.  Not anymore.  “I kept all this from happening?”

Clarence grinned and patted me on the arm.  “It sure looks that way.  You really messed things up, didn’t you?”

“Clarence!  The baseball team, the company . . . the whole city!  HA!  You’re not making me feel better.  You better start making me feel better, Clarence.  One of us might end up getting hurt.”   I knew it came across as a threat, but I didn’t care.  I just needed to decide which one of us I was going to hurt.   People walking by began to swing wide around us as I grew more agitated.  “I think you’ve forgotten the drill.  You show me how things areworse because I wasn’t around, then I feel all better and me and Donna Reed . . . I mean me and my wife . . . live happily ever after.  And you get your wings.”

“Already got them.  They fold up under my clothes.”  He smiled proudly and pointed over his shoulder.  “You’d never know those wings were there.”

A besotted young professional had stumbled next to me.  I reached out and steadied him by his elbow as Clarence talked on about his wings.   At first the young man looked surprised, and then like he was going to accuse Clarence of being out of his head.  But when he looked at my escort, he smiled with recognition, signaled a thumbs-up, and said, “Atta boy, Clarence!”  The young man took a couple of steps away from us and, without looking back, pulled a flask from his overcoat.  He shook his head as he threw the bottle into the trash.

The nature of this encounter took the edge off my antagonism, and I just wondered where Clarence would take me next to further pummel me with my failure.

I returned my attention to Clarence who was having a conversation with . . . nobody.

“Oh, yes.”  Clarence looked like he saw someone there to talk to.  Even more disturbing, he seemed to hear the other half of the discussion.   Passersby gave us an even wider berth.  “Yes, that does remind me.  Should I?”

“Clarence.”  No response – at least not to me.

“You really think so?  It might overdo it.”

“Hey, Clarence!”

He came out of the trance or whatever.  “Let’s go,” he said, and didn’t wait for me to reply before he was off.  I followed.   We seemed to step from the city street onto a suburban sidewalk in one stride. “All this has been a setup for the good stuff, right Clarence?” I asked hopefully.  He just kept walking.  I braced myself for what was coming next.

Clarence and I approached a large house.  In a subdivision of huge homes, this was the neighborhood mansion.  It loomed, impressive as the downtown skyscraper, at the end of a cul-de-sac.  We strolled across the landscaped yard, dodging Santa, Rudolph, Mrs. Santa Claus, and a variety of other lighted Christmas displays.  We had to be careful not to trip over the camouflaged green extension cords running everywhere.   “Man, Clarence, this is something.   I’m doing good if I can get a few lights strung around the bush out front of my house.”  I stopped and grabbed Clarence gently on the shoulder.   “Why are we here, Clarence? There’s nobody around here that would have known me.  This is a little out of my socio-economic class.”

Clarence moved gently out from under my hand.   We were right next to the house now.   He walked around to a window on the side, then motioned for me to have a look through it.

I looked around to see if the next part of Clarence’s plan to make me feel better involved my arrest as a peeping Tom.  It was then that I noticed all the cars parked out front, and that all the lights inside seemed to be on.  We’d arrived at a party.  It was appropriate that Clarence had brought me to a home that reeked of success where I was to be on the outside looking in.

I stood next to Clarence, peering over some shrubbery and through the full-length, multi-pane window.  There was indeed a party going on inside beneath the cathedral ceilings.  I thought about the contrast to the artificial tree that my wife and I joylessly put up and decorated every year.  Last year, we hadn’t gotten to the decorating part – something about which chair to move to make room for the thing had launched us into a battle that stifled what little Christmas cheer we had been able to manufacture for the occasion.  This year the whole mess was still in boxes in the crawl space.  Neither of us had mentioned the pathetic excuse for a fake tree – no use injecting another catalyst for argument when there were plenty of things to fight about already.

She was never really much on Christmas anyway.  She said it was really a time for kids, and since we couldn’t . . .  I forced my attention back to the party through the window.  “Looks like a lot of fun.  And lots of food and drinks.  I don’t suppose we could . . .”

“Could?”  Clarence looked puzzled.  “Oh, go inside?  That would be wonderful, wouldn’t it?  But no, no, no.  We can do what we need to do from out here.”  His cheeriness was certainly aggravating.

“And what is it we need to do?”

“Just watch.”  Clarence pointed toward one of the doors into the party room.

Where Clarence had pointed was a woman who greeted with hugs and kisses a couple that looked to be just arriving.  This hostess wore a long black dress.  I couldn’t see who she was as her back was to me.  The guests shed their coats, and the hostess turned to call someone to come get them.

As I caught the hostess’s profile I had to remind myself to breathe.  “Clarence . . .” I grabbed him by the front of his shirt.

Two children answered the hostess’s call.  They took the coats and a playful kiss each from their mother.  It was all so easy to put together.

I pulled Clarence closer.  “This isn’t . . . I didn’t . . .”

Just then my wife was joined by a debonair, some would say “dashing,” gentleman just a little older than she and I.  She slid her arm around his waist as he joined in welcoming conversation with the new arrivals.

I had to turn away.  I pulled Clarence with me.   “This isn’t fair.  What are you trying to do, get me to off myself?  You know, I never really considered that an option until you came.  That stuff about not being born, I mean, it was about not being born.  It wasn’t about ending things now.  Until now.”

Even though I had a tight grip on the front of his shirt, Clarence didn’t look concerned, at least not about his safety.  I guess I couldn’t have really hurt him anyway.  I mean, what can you do to an angel?  But there was concern in the way he looked at me.  Concern forme.

I let go.  “It’s not your fault, I know.  But Clarence, what’s the point?”  I sat down on the grass, bathed in the white light of a glowing Frosty the Snowman decoration next to me.  I put my head in my hands.  “What’s the point of showing me these things?  What’s the point of . . . anything?  I mean, if I just make things worse, then what good is it?  What good am I?”

I felt like I was in back in 2nd Grade, in the principal’s office sitting in a wooden chair too big for me, my legs dangling as my teacher and the principal and my mother told me I was “bad.”  And I knew it was true.  Then and now.  I looked up at Clarence through a fog of tears that came from giving up.  Even trying not to cry was worthless.

“Yes, you have hurt a great many people.  You’ve made many mistakes.”  He patted me on the head, an action so demeaning and yet so . . . right, coming from him.  “Now you’re ready.”  He announced my readiness like I had accomplished something.

“For what, Clarence?”

“To see what Christmas really means.”  He put out his hand and helped me up.

“Great.”  I said.  “What mall are we going to?  You know I hate to shop.”

Clarence kept hold of my hand.  “Everything I’ve shown you so far has been in the present.  Yes, a different present because you were not a part of it, but where you are going now might be a little harder for you to take.”  He got that look like he was talking to someone else again.  “Quite right,” he said to the unseen presence.  Then back to me, he said, “Not so much where, but when you are going.”

“Is this going to be a Dickens thing?  Look, I’m not Scrooge and I don’t think I could take seeing myself as a little boy.  It’s bad enough seeing my adult shortcomings.  So if you’re going to take me back to my childhood . . .”

“Tut, tut, tut.  Don’t worry, much farther back than that.  You’re going back to where Christmas really got it’s meaning.”

“Oh, the manger and all that?”  As fantastic as it sounded, I brightened a bit at the prospect of seeing the baby and the shepherds and the wise men and all that.  I guessed angels could do anything, and now that he had his wings – well why couldn’t we go back a couple thousand years?

“You just kneel down a little.  And shut your eyes.  It might be less of a shock.”

I went down on one knee, figuring that would be an appropriate posture.  It seemed like there was always a shepherd or a wise man in a pose like that in the manger scenes.

“Goodbye.”

“Goodbye?  You’re not coming with me?”

“This you need to do alone.  Now, close your eyes.”

Already his voice was fading.  I shut my eyes tight and bowed my head.  I was a little scared but even more excited with anticipation.  After having my nose rubbed in so much of my failure, it would be wonderful to see a new life full of such promise.  But I couldn’t help wondering – what was the point?  What was I supposed to do when I got there?

The first thing I noticed was the smell.  The stench burned my nostrils.  The air was redolent of rotting meat, of the acrid stink of shed blood.

This all happened in an instant and my brain raced to process the sensory input.  The grass of the lawn had given way to bare ground.  Sand pushed by an arid, unforgiving wind stung my face and hands.  I began to sweat under my winter clothes.

It was no longer night.  I opened my eyes and the soft glow of the decorative snowman had been replaced by the blaze of the sun.  I couldn’t see anything at first as my eyes struggled to adjust to the change.  It was like awaking from a summer nap or emerging from a movie theater after a matinée.

I began to be aware of groaning.  Of course there would be groaning because, well, birth was painful.  Even His birth.  But these groans sounded too deep to be coming from a woman’s throat.

I looked down away from the sun as I knelt there and images began to form before my eyes.  I noticed something shining in the dust and reached out for it.  I picked up the metal object and felt its shaft that ended in a sharp point and the flat head at the other end.  It was a large nail.  As it came into focus I saw that it was crudely fashioned; it looked as if it had been tooled by hand, not like the machined nails for sale at the hardware store.

I looked up a little as I got used to the light and saw that there was a tree just in front of me.  I heard the faint sounds of weeping behind me, and further back what sounded like a restless, angry crowd.  In front of me was only the groaning.

My gaze was drawn up the trunk of the tree.  The sun was directly behind the top of the tree.  I blinked against the light and for the first time saw Him hanging there.

“Clarence,” I whispered, “you’ve gotten me to the wrong end of it.”

I could only make out His silhouette.   The shadow slowly, rhythmically rose up and down.  He breathed in deeply with every movement upward.  Each time He eased Himself down He let out a lung rattling, groaning exhale.

I felt moisture in the wind now.  The breeze picked up speed.  A storm was blowing in.  From the distance I heard a roll of thunder.

Clouds began to move across the sun and I could see Him more clearly.  I wanted to look away but my attention was locked upon His suffering.  I was sick with the scene and with the stench of this place of death.  I swallowed hard against the taste of last night’s partially digested dinner.  I pushed the point of the nail against my palm to fight any urge to faint.

The sun was completely blotted out now and I could see . . . everything.  The pierced wrists and feet and the blood and the sweat and His face filled my awareness.  I was so alive, so awake to what was going on that I could hear the drops of blood that ran from His wrists and plopped into the dusty ground.

I dared to look at His face.  He was not handsome, there was nothing in His features to draw me to Him, but still, there was something – His eyes!   The most beautiful, most knowing eyes I had ever seen.  As those eyes turned to meet mine I was first filled with awe.

Then I was gripped by terror.  He knew me.  He knew me in a way that I did not know myself.  He knew beyond my ability to condemn myself how much of a failure I had been.  He knew everything Clarence had shown me and more.  He knew how badly I had messed up not just my life, but how I had sucked so much potential from the lives around me.  I searched His eyes.  All I could see was a hint of accusation.

The rise and fall was much slower now.  He seemed to gather up all of His strength to push up to take in a breath.  My stomach unleashed a tremendous spasm as He rose there above me.  I did not throw up as I expected, but rather heaved a great sobbing sigh.  I wept.

I could not take my eyes from His.  As He lowered Himself I began to see that I had misread those eyes.  I had seen them through the gauze of self-condemnation.  It was not accusation at all; in fact what was there in His gaze was quite the opposite.

I felt myself fading from the scene.   I had seen what I needed to, just as Clarence had said.  I cried as I drifted away, but the tears were for joy as well as for His suffering.  My last perception of that place and time was his articulation of what I had read in His eyes.  He rose up, took in another deep breath, looked deep into my being, and said this in the harsh whisper that was all He could manage:

“For you.”

I’d typed out the experience while it was fresh.  Now what?  As I turned the nail over in my hand, I made a plan.

I got up from my desk and climbed to the crawlspace.  As quietly as I could, I pulled down the box with the parts of our scraggly fake Christmas tree.  It took me a while, but I got it all set up in the living room.   I softly sang Christmas carols I thought I had forgotten as I strung the lights and hung the ornaments.  After the tree was decorated, I plugged in the lights.  The soft multi-colored glow chased the midnight gloom from the room.  It matched the warm light that filled my being.

My wife will be so surprised in the morning.  Christmas morning!

I know it’s not much, but I’ve got to start somewhere.

For Him.

By Dave Simpson, theunexpectedpastor.wordpress.com

Posted in Christianity, Christmas, Short Story | Tagged , , , | 5 Comments