I posted recently about wanting to be a writer. This week I've thought several times: wow, I really should sit and write that down. It would make a great blog post! I can't wait to use that idea for a sermon! And then something else grabs my attention and I move on and don't do anything with it. The moments pass so fast and I never remember them. It's like chasing after the wind. The writing moment is really just a second in my eyes. The writing impulse is the tiniest tic of a hardly-felt nerve. If I gave my body more attention I'd notice it, but I can't usually be bothered. Fleeting and vain is my affinity for writing. I need a way to capture these moments and give them some attention and effort.
What would appeal to my sensibilities is to carry around a tiny little journal, a moleskine notebook to write everything down in, the way Jamal does in Finding Forrester (one of my favorite movies since I first saw it in high school). Except for the fact that I loathe carrying things in my pockets, it would work out well.
So, I decided to try to enter the (terrifying) digital age. I created a Twitter account. Literally for this purpose: to give myself a place to instantly keep and store some of the ideas that I want to go back to and write about later. It's my writer's notebook, if you will, a list of topics I need to come back to when I have the time and intention to write about them... at least, that's the ideal. Twitter is going to be my tool; we'll see if having it increases the labor for which I'm adding it to my toolbox.
Will it work? We'll see!
If you are truly desperately bored, you can find me on the Twitterverse at @pilgrimbarefoot
Sunday, April 28, 2013
Sunday, April 14, 2013
I Am a Words Person
One of the books I'm reading right now is Donald Miller's "A Million Miles in a Thousand Years." Donald Miller's writing has played a pretty important role in my life: "Blue Like Jazz" was one of the three most important books I read in college.
At the end of part three, Don is telling the story about meeting a remarkable man who writes down all his memories. He has, Don says, more than 500 pages of his own memories. As I've written here before, memory is extremely important to me, and I was really struck by the idea of writing my memories down (alongside realizing, as I scrolled through pictures recently, that memory is one of the driving forces in what makes the facebook so popular).
Reading "A Million Miles" is pushing me towards something I've known for some time but been too afraid (and too lazy) to admit, even to myself: I think I want to be a writer.
My last semester at Yale I read Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood. While the main themes of the story lean more towards dystopia, bioengineering and pharmaceutical corruption, one of the things that really stuck with me was when the protagonist is forced to go to a "low-level" university while his friend goes to the highest achieving school there is. The reason they are split up? Crake is a science and math genius. The protagonist is a words person.
I am a words person. I love to dwell on the resonance and symbolism of words and their meanings and their multiple meanings. Even though I knew from the start that my preaching class in seminary was taught from the perspective of a preacher who sees himself as a poet (rather than a herald or a prophet, as described in Thomas Long's book) I didn't expect my own style to emerge poetic at all (I don't know what I did expect). But when I think about my own style, I think of it as the poetic.
I wrote a lot of poetry in high school; you can find some of it out there on the internet without even trying very hard. It's probably embarrassing. But it captures my attempts at self-expression, my attempts to put emotion into words. I won't say it was ever a precise attempt, because it certainly wasn't that at all; again, I'm not seeking to hide from my own laziness at any point in thisconfession post. I couldn't even post here once a week during Lent!
This weekend at a TFA summit in Raleigh, I attended a breakout session on Social Entrepreneurship. It was fantastic. The presenters talked a lot about hard work. They talked a lot about reflection. They talked a lot about ideas. They talked a lot about possibility, potential, creativity, and even a little bit about joy. I love all those things (well, again, except maybe hard work). Even more exciting, albeit daunting, was this: Christopher Gergen, when asked how he became a social entrepreneur and why, said that for most people, their 20s are all about purposeful exploration. It's when you get to your 30s that you want to be building something. I'm still in my 20s. One of the things I know I want to purposefully explore in the next few years?
Being a writer.
At the end of part three, Don is telling the story about meeting a remarkable man who writes down all his memories. He has, Don says, more than 500 pages of his own memories. As I've written here before, memory is extremely important to me, and I was really struck by the idea of writing my memories down (alongside realizing, as I scrolled through pictures recently, that memory is one of the driving forces in what makes the facebook so popular).
Reading "A Million Miles" is pushing me towards something I've known for some time but been too afraid (and too lazy) to admit, even to myself: I think I want to be a writer.
My last semester at Yale I read Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood. While the main themes of the story lean more towards dystopia, bioengineering and pharmaceutical corruption, one of the things that really stuck with me was when the protagonist is forced to go to a "low-level" university while his friend goes to the highest achieving school there is. The reason they are split up? Crake is a science and math genius. The protagonist is a words person.
I am a words person. I love to dwell on the resonance and symbolism of words and their meanings and their multiple meanings. Even though I knew from the start that my preaching class in seminary was taught from the perspective of a preacher who sees himself as a poet (rather than a herald or a prophet, as described in Thomas Long's book) I didn't expect my own style to emerge poetic at all (I don't know what I did expect). But when I think about my own style, I think of it as the poetic.
I wrote a lot of poetry in high school; you can find some of it out there on the internet without even trying very hard. It's probably embarrassing. But it captures my attempts at self-expression, my attempts to put emotion into words. I won't say it was ever a precise attempt, because it certainly wasn't that at all; again, I'm not seeking to hide from my own laziness at any point in this
This weekend at a TFA summit in Raleigh, I attended a breakout session on Social Entrepreneurship. It was fantastic. The presenters talked a lot about hard work. They talked a lot about reflection. They talked a lot about ideas. They talked a lot about possibility, potential, creativity, and even a little bit about joy. I love all those things (well, again, except maybe hard work). Even more exciting, albeit daunting, was this: Christopher Gergen, when asked how he became a social entrepreneur and why, said that for most people, their 20s are all about purposeful exploration. It's when you get to your 30s that you want to be building something. I'm still in my 20s. One of the things I know I want to purposefully explore in the next few years?
Being a writer.
Thursday, April 4, 2013
To Wash the Feet of a Hurting and Embarrassed World
I was fortunate enough to be asked to preach Maundy Thursday this year at the church that is sponsoring me for ordination. Below is the text I preached from:
Jesus said: You do not
know what I am doing, but later you will understand.
And again,
You also should do as
I have done to you.
May I speak in the
name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.
I’d like to tell you,
just for a minute, about my best friend Ryan.
Ryan is a very clean human being.
He is a neat-freak, a
germaphobe, an obsessive cleaner.
He wrote rules for his
housemates and put them up by the sink,
Rules for how to keep
the sponge clean.
Ryan knows that I’m
not going to wear my shoes,
But he still thinks
I’m crazy.
Ryan would never go around barefoot.
Ryan is the kind of
person who comes to Maundy Thursday and says:
No way - no how - no
chance am I taking my shoes off to have my feet washed.
Dirty. Gross.
Unsanitary. Weird. EMBARASSING.
How good of Jesus to
be honest,
As he knelt to wash
his friends’ feet:
You do not know what I am doing, but later you will
understand.
How many times did
Jesus say this that we do not have written down?
How many times should
Jesus have said this?
When the storm raged
all around that little fishing boat,
Jesus took a nap.
When the crowd of
five-thousand was half-starved and far from home,
Jesus sent the twelve
out with two pieces of fish between all of them.
When the Pharisees,
the strictest of all Jews, confronted Jesus,
He told them
straight-up that they didn’t understand the Sabbath.
When a hated
tax-collector was in the crowd,
Jesus broke
everybody’s social rules and invited himself over for dinner.
You go to the nicest house in Oxford
and try that.
When the mob was already
holding their stones, intent on righteous murder,
Jesus dropped down and
drew in the dirt.
When a voice from
heaven announced the start of his ministry,
Jesus fled / into the
desert and disappeared // for forty
days.
You do not know what I am doing, but later you will
understand.
In Bible study last
Sunday morning
Pastor John told us
that when we get baptized
We don’t have to turn
in our brains at the door.
I’m glad for
that. I’m a teacher! I’m glad for that.
But I also know
something else:
A life that follows
Jesus is going to be filled with a whole lot of confusion.
You do not understand what I am doing, Jesus said,
but later you will understand.
Peter did not
understand.
Brash, impulsive
Peter.
Peter,
Who named Jesus rabbi,
master, teacher, messiah.
All Peter could see
was Jesus,
Doing the work of a
slave.
It was a slave’s job
to deal with the feet,
The lowest slave of
the low.
Jesus took his job,
Taking sandaled feet
that trod the dusty, unpaved roads where the animals ran wild,
And washing them
clean.
{Peter did not
understand,
“Lord, not my feed only but also my hands and
my head!”
Peter did not
understand.}
For all that Maundy
Thursday is concerned with our feet,
It says a lot about
our hands as well.
Jesus knew, the gospel
says, that the Father had put ALL things into his hands.
It reminds me of that
song:
“He’s got the whole
world, in his hands…”
The Father had put all
things into Jesus hands.
ALL things.
Justice.
Dominion.
Glory.
Power.
The Kingdom.
Do you remember the
temptation?
“Now Satan took Jesus
to a high mountain.
And he showed him all
the kingdoms of the earth.
And he said to him:
And he said to him:
“All this I will give
to you,
If only you will bow
down and worship me.”
“Love the Lord your God and worship Him only”
Jesus replied.
Satan thought the
kingdom, the power, and the glory were in his hands.
But Satan does not understand power.
When Satan in his
pride grabs for power
He thinks of ruling
and of riches,
Of fury and force,
of might and of majesty,
of command and of control.
Satan grabs power to
lord it over others and force them to serve him.
The temptation Jesus
faced in the desert was a double edged attack:
Jesus dodged one
temptation by not taking the power from Satan,
By staying true to the
One True God.
The other temptation
that Jesus now overcomes
The temptation was to understand power in the way that Satan
seeks to hold it.
The battle Jesus began
with Satan in the desert begins to reach its climax here,
In the upper room at
the last supper.
The Father had given
all things into his hands.
Don’t you know that
even now the tempter was there,
The echo of his voice
whispering in Jesus’ ear:
“Take up the sword
with a mighty hand and oustretched arm,
Attack your enemies,
force the Romans out of Jerusalem,
Set up a kingdom of
great power and glory
Put all the nations
under your feet!”
In that moment,
When Jesus had all
things in his hands,
He did not stretch out
a mighty arm,
But he knelt and took
up stinking, filthy feet.
Jesus understands
power.
Power is to be used
for the sake of love.
“He loved them to the end,” one translation
says,
Or in another “He
showed them the full extent of his love.”
He took off his outer
robe,
Tied a towel around
his waist,
Knelt before them to
do the work of a slave,
And used his hands to
wash their feet.
And he said to them:
“You also should do as I have
done to you.”
What has Jesus done
With his
hands?
He has done the work
of the lowest of the low.
He has ensured that
they are clean in their body and their spirit.
He has anointed the
feet of his friends
That he knows will flee from his suffering.
That he knows will flee from his suffering.
I was with my friend
Ryan one Maundy Thursday.
The bulletin for that
service told us that we were free to have our hands washed
instead of our feet.
And Ryan, germaphobe
that he is,
Instantly said “no way
am I taking off my shoes.”
I peer pressured him,
Embarrassed him into
doing what everyone else was doing.
I understand that many
of you may feel now as Ryan did that night.
No way am I taking off
my shoes.
Dirty. Gross.
Unsanitary. Weird. EMBARASSING.
I know you may not
believe it,
But even I know how
hard it can be to accept having your feet washed.
I know it can be truly
humiliating to take off your shoes
And allow someone to
go so low as to wash off your feet.
One of the most
humiliating experiences of my life was having my feet washed.
I was out in the grass
playing soccer with my friends,
And of course, I was
barefoot.
We played for hours in
the mud and the grass.
At one point, a friend
kicked me with her shoes on and cut open my foot.
It wasn’t that
painful, so of course I kept playing!
But when I went to
return to pick up my backpack from a classroom,
I passed by a friend
of mine.
She was shocked at the
sight of my feet,
Bruised and dirty and
still slightly bleeding.
She forced me into a
bathroom – a women’s bathroom! –
And made me sit on the
sink so that she could wash off my feet.
I was just like Peter:
No! Stop!
You don’t have to do
this!
I’m not worth this
kind of love.
Friends, the lesson
from 1 Corinthians is clear:
We must be humble as we
come to this altar to receive,
To discern the body
and blood of the Lord.
We must proclaim the
Lord’s death until he comes.
Friends, we are used
to coming to this altar.
But tonight, we are
invited to come forward not once, but twice.
One time will seem
familiar.
We come to kneel at
this altar,
To receive communion.
But when we do that
tonight,
It will be after the
first time we come,
When we come to we
have our feet washed.
We come to receive
communion
After we have been
humbled,
Embarassed, and even
humiliated,
After we have come to
realize
We do not deserve this
kind of love.
This is no empty
religious ritual.
We are coming forward
to meet the hands that hold the whole world in place.
The hands into which
the Father has given everything.
The hands that truly
understand that
Having power means to
love.
That having everything
means being invited to serve.
That the true kingdom
and power of God is NOT of this world,
But calls us to die to
this world.
To come to the altar
unsure, confused, and even embarrassed.
Calls us NOT to
understand,
But to stretch out our
own hands,
Weak, empty and frail,
And to hear the words:
The body of Christ,
the bread of heaven.
The blood of Christ,
the cup of salvation.
Then we will be called
to get up, on our feet, and to go out
To love and serve the
Lord with gladness and singleness of heart,
To do to others as has
been done unto us.
To be the hands of
Jesus,
Seeking not our own
power,
But filled with love,
To go out into a world
that is confused, broken, hurting and embarrassed,
And to wash its feet.
Amen.
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