Monday, December 19, 2011

Hope Will Lead the Way

Author Andrew Lester wrote, "Hope is always moving toward what it can barely see, but yet trusts."  I'll be the first to admit that trusting is not the easiest of endeavors.  For some trust has been broken, reinstated, then broken again.  Brokenness can often lead to mistrust because of spiritual and emotional wounds that are difficult to heal. 

I'm comforted by the understanding that hope moves me forward.  Hope will not allow me to wallow in my grief or tears or struggle.  Hope is like a gentle friend taking my hand and guiding me to take a step even if it is just one step. 

I can't see the days ahead of me nor can I predict what they might bring.  I can do this:  I can hope in the midst of my struggles, doubts, and fears with the assurance that hope give me eyes to see in the darkness.  The light ahead is not an oncoming train but the beginning of a better day. 

"The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; those who lived in a land of deep darkness - on them a light has shined."  These words in the Hebrew Bible are for me words of comfort, assurance, and yes, hope.  Christmas is coming, bringing with it the light of hope into the world.  Let's take a step forward. 

Hope will lead the way. 

Thursday, December 15, 2011

It's About Time

As a child I begged (literally begged) my parents to buy me a Mickey Mouse watch. Apparently, I was persuasive because they relented and on my 7th birthday, I received the watch. I believe one of the reasons that my parents had been resistant to the idea of my having a Mickey Mouse watch (the watches were also rather expensive) was out of concern that I was tooyoung and would lose it.
One day, as fate (I don’t believe in fate but this was uncanny) would have it, I was outside with my friends and we all dared one another to jump off the neighbor’s garage roof. Of course, I accepted the dare and before jumping off the roof, I took off my watch and placed it carefully on the ground where I would pick it up after completing my daring feat. I climbed on the roof and jumped landing awkwardly contorted but unhurt. I was proud of myself. Since it was late, I went home. I later realized I had not picked up my Mickey Mouse watch. I went back to the spot where I placed it and it was nowhere to be found. I never found the watch.
“But when the fullness of time had come, God sent his Son...” (Galatians 4.4). As a person of faith and belief in Jesus Christ I realize that I may not understand all that life is about but I do affirm in my life that God’s Son has entered into the world, broken through our time to usher in the advent of God’s timing, God’s incarnate presence among us.
The days leading up to Christmas and the days following are an invitation to participate symbolically and spiritually in the timing of God. So, take time. Find time. Spend time. Use time wisely. Invite God to enter into the time of your life. Time can get away from us just like a lost Mickey Mouse watch. Life is all about timing. In Christ, the time is now.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

We All Want to Win at Something

When I began my third year in grade school, I was one of the new kids on the playground at recess time.  Needless to say, the new kids had to go through an approval process.  Did we measure up to the other kids who were more popular or more athletic?  Several days passed in the new school year and I had been chosen last every day during recess to play the daily pick-up game of football.  As it would happen my moment of glory appeared.  I was on the losing side but with the football in hand I dodged and skirted around the really good players on the other team.  Touchdown!  I scored.  I won that day in more ways than just points for my team.  For the first time in a long time I felt as if I had accomplished something.  I felt like I belonged and was no longer an outsider.  From that day forward I was never chosen last again.  We all want to win at something, don’t we? 

Thursday, December 1, 2011

The Gate at the Birmingham Botanical Gardens; Birmingham, Alabama
As far as photography goes I am a novice's novice.  I like to think at times that I have a photographer's eye for seeing things uniquely but mostly I humor myself with photos not very well composed.  At the Birmingham Botanical Gardens there is a gate that looks out over a reflecting pool to a large granite orb.  In the winter it is especially stark and the lines of the walkway and the gate draw the eye to the distance.  I like this photo.  It's not a great photo but when I look at it my mind meanders a bit and gives me pause and permission to rest for a brief moment.

Diving Into the Waves

No doubt, there are moments in life that bring us struggle, anxiety, worry, and unease.  Our lives are filled with places to be, people to meet, and bills to pay.  It can sometimes seem like a mad dash to the "finish line" but that line keeps moving.  We never seem to get there.  One of my favorite authors over the years has been Gerald May who died a few years ago.  Once in an email correspondence with him he shared with me a little of his thoughts on peace.  Specifically I had asked him about something he had written that had never left my thoughts.  He wrote: "Peace is not something you can force on anything or anyone... much less upon one's own mind. It is like trying to quiet the ocean by pressing upon the waves. Sanity lies in somehow opening to the chaos, allowing anxiety, moving deeply into the tumult, diving into the waves, where underneath, within, peace simply is."   Maybe it's not for us to escape the chaos or anxieties of living.  Maybe if we can find that peace within ourselves then the waves won't force us to crash into the rocks of pain and struggle.  Can it be that diving into the waves of living is the key to finding peace after all?

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Looking for ADVENTure

Advent...think about it. Two words: "ad" and "vent". The days leading up to the coming of Christ at Christmas are inundated with ad after ad after ad telling us which thing to buy, put on lay-away (yes, lay-away has returned), and anticipate. Our days are dictated by Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and now Cyber Week. 
This year the stores opened up on the day of Thanksgiving. People lined up outside hours before the doors opened foregoing time with family and the general spirit of gratefulness. Why? Well, the "ads" were telling us to be there! Don't wait! Hurry! Make haste! Be the first in line. So, Advent has the word "ad" in it...intriguing. Consider the other word, "vent." News story after news story told of people getting angry and "venting" that anger on other shoppers. Arrests were made; people were pepper-sprayed. Why? Because the "ad" told us that we had better be quick about finding the best deal, the lowest price, the perfect gift. 

Stop now. Consider something else. Advent also has the beginning of the word ADVENTure in it. Adventure implies a journey. Adventure implies that something is happening or about to happen. We anticipate adventure. We want adventure. Why, we want to be like Indiana Jones and go on the adventure of our life! I read one definition for the word, "adventure" as a "bold, usually risky undertaking; hazardous action of uncertain outcome." Both the word "advent" and "adventure" are very similar in their etymology. 

Maybe the season of Advent is really about a bold risky undertaking. Maybe it is implicit of a "hazardous action of uncertain outcome." Some definitely experienced a hazardous outcome shopping on Black Friday. What if, however, the bold undertaking is accepting the advent or arrival of Christ the King into our lives.   If the word "advent" means arrival then we might ask ourselves if our hearts are open for the arrival of Christ. It seems that some shoppers took their lives into their own hands as they pushed and shoved with other shoppers to find the next great gift. 

What if this Advent we simply put our lives into the hands of the One who came to bring peace in the midst of chaos, hope in the midst of despair, and life in the midst of death? What an ADVENTure that would be.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Forced to be Unhappy?


     In his book, "The Holy Longing," author Ronald Rolheiser writes, "Some of Christianity's harshest critics have suggested that what is wrong with it is that it sets itself the absurd task of teaching happy people to be unhappy so that it can minister to their unhappiness."
     As far as I can tell people are unhappy for a variety of reasons.  Some of the reasons might have to do with family of origin issues, job stress, socio-economic concerns, etc.  Any one of us could probably come up with our own list personalized to our unique situation.
     What is apparent to me is that Christianity doesn't have to seek out anyone to make them unhappy in order to lead them out of their unhappiness.  We are unhappy enough!
     What the reality of living does tell me, however, is that not every day can be a pleasant one nor every illness receive a cure or even every utility bill be reasonable.  Life and living is fraught with struggle and sometimes the struggle is great.
     Perhaps the key to living a life of faith or being centered and balanced is to find that in the midst of pain and suffering, doubt and cynicism that God became a human being to bring witness to the realization that everyone has sacred worth and value regardless of one's station in life.  We are not forced into being unhappy but are given an opportunity to find hope in the midst of whatever life brings us.  We find direction.  We discover new life.  We claim true happiness.

We are together in the journey.