Archive for the ‘house church’ Category

No More eggshells

October 31, 2012

   “Check on me in a half hour.” I told my wife this morning.

I planned to knock down 20 feet of rock wall  on  our 130 old barn.

barn-repair-001.jpg

The barn was built in the 1880′s.  I  can  still see broad ax marks  on many of  the supporting beams.

As a builder, I am in awe at the type of workmanship that went into this barn . Last September, I noticed the rock wall on the North side  starting to lean.   I knew if I didn’t do something about the rock wall soon, it was going to collapse.

As I tore into the rock wall , my mind went back to that season in our lives where we lived in a  Christian community.   For 18 months…. even though we had our own apartments, we shared  a common kitchen with two other young families.   Boy was that an experience. ;-)

Imagine 3 different households trying to coordinate  meal times, grocery shopping, and  parking.    There were some  intense moments….
(plus some great memories)

   One of the most valuable life  skills that came out of that  season  in my life was learning how to address issues instead of simply ignoring them.  Not only did I learn how to address and work through conflict with  the other people in our building,  we  learned how to work through conflict  in our marriage,  with our children, and on the job.

Our children are now adults.   I can see the fruit of conflict resolution skills  in their lives 20 years later.  They are much quicker to address things in their relationships than most of their peers.

Going back to that barn I was working on this morning, I couldn’t help but see some parallels to that time in our lives….

#1   Sometimes it can  get pretty messy when  I  first  wade into a problem.

#2  The bigger the issue, the more time and energy  I  will probably have  to expend.

#3  When I ignore a problem, it doesn’t mean it will somehow magically fix itself…all I am doing is postponing a bigger problem for  later…

guaranteed

#4  Living life this way (addressing problems instead of ignoring them)   has made my life so much richer…  I prefer relationships based on reality instead of  walking around on egg shells.

Another example….

Several years ago now,  we were attending a church  with a single  man  who had “emotional issues.”

Long story short,  he started wanting to hug my teen age daughters every week.    (Not the older women mind you, just the  young ones).  I approached the pastor and said,  he was making my daughters uncomfortable and someone needed to say something to him privately or I would  do it myself.

The hugging stopped.

One last story…

Healthy conflict resolution skills were NOT taught  or practiced in my family of origin..

They were not part of the family business I grew up in either.

I’ve refused to play along with the passive aggressive mind games and as a result, I am the black sheep.

Well, it’s about time to eat..better wrap this one up….

Thoughts, comments, questions?

As always,  thanks for stopping by the blog!  DM

House meetings

May 31, 2012

I sat there….amazed.

It was my first house meeting.

I was 29 yrs old.

We  had moved to New Jersey to  enable me to pursue a dream.

Return to college….  take some courses in counseling.

A local church had offered to help us out with housing.

They had an ongoing outreach to various groups…

Vietnamese boat people.

Missionaries on furlough.

Single young people wanting to deepen their relationship with God.

(Yea, he really exists – I talked to him this morning. ;-)

Young men trying to reclaim their lives/ just coming off the violent streets of Paterson …

And now…our family.  Recent transplants from the Midwest.

We had two little girls in tow…

And now that we were here, I ( at least)  was expected to participate in the “house meeting”.

I had no idea what to expect.

15 to 20 of us were sitting around  the conference room.

The tone was informal , relaxed yet moved @ a steady clip.

All of us had busy lives and this was not a time to just socialize.

“Was there anything anyone needed to talk about?”

Parking…parking had become an issue.

When Debbie came home from the grocery store with a trunk full of groceries, she  was not able to get anywhere close to the apartment..Wondering if there could be a way to keep that front spot open for those sort of things?

Use of the kitchen…

There were 3 different families sharing 1 commercial kitchen.  We each had our own living quarters, but shared a common kitchen area.  Different meal times,  different menu’s.. all three of our young families had children…

We lived in that setting  for about a year before moving to our own home.

The house meetings were only once a month as I remember them, but made an impact on me that exists to this day.

I experienced first hand the freedom of addressing issues with the people in my life  instead of walking around on egg shells .

I did not see this sort of communication role modeled growing up.

I did begin to implement it in our home from that point on especially as the kids got older.

“Kathy took my good shirt and got it a stain on it….”

“Angie won’t share the remote on the  TV…”

“John  comes into my room all the time without out permission and starts bothering me when I’m trying to get a nap”….

“but she shouldn’t be taking a nap @ that time…”
 

You get the idea…

Once I tasted the freedom of genuine communication, it came to the job site with me.

Not to mention any names, but some of the  people in my work circle, suck when it comes to communication.

They will take things without permission,  promise to be somewhere @ a certain time but have no intention of actually following through…

Give me awkward messages to give to the customer..

Recently my cell phone rang while I was on the job….

“Doug, could you tell so and so we had to pull out but promise to be back in a week?”

my response…”Just a second..you can tell him yourself, he’s standing right here :-)

   Yea, it doesn’t win me any brownie points by  refusing to play by the old rules of no communicating/ or being a door mat  but that’s OK ;-)

I would rather tell you the truth up front, I can’t make it when you’re asking me to rather than lie, get my foot in the door and have you upset with me for not showing up.

Mrs DM and I work at keeping this  level of straight forward  communication alive in our relationship….

It is not automatic.

And we don’t do it perfectly I’m sure.

She’s a little slower to bring stuff up…hates conflict even more than I ;-)

Over the years, I can’t think of any  volatile subject that hasn’t been  discussed/ some of them multiple times.

Sex, money, parenting.. you know..the stuff every couple has to sort through

We ‘ve probably had the “sex” conversation 50 times in the 30 plus years of marriage.

Sex is  like fire.  It is a gift, but it can also cause a lot damage and pain.

Money.  Money = control.

Really the issue isn’t money.

There are a half a dozen other issues under the surface that are the real issues if you’re having a conflict about money

personal space, trust, greed, fear, materialism, etc.  those are the real issues.

I told someone  yesterday,   we haven’t been able to do things financially for our kids as much as I wished…But from where I sit, all of them prefer to address issues in their personal lives rather than play “let’s pretend”, and to me that is priceless.

Thanks for reading along ! DM

Hungry

May 6, 2012


That was then and this is now.  Things are different  today.” 

I didn’t buy his answer.

______________________________________

I was in my early 20′s , experiencing a spiritual hunger and restlessness I hadn’t  gone looking for it…

it had popped out of the ground of my life like a mushroom.

One minute I was minding my own business, doing my own thing, the next thing I knew, there was a hungry for something spiritual that was real.

It  started when I read  the following account:

All the believers continued together in close fellowship and shared their belongings with one another.  They would sell their property and possessions and distribute the money among all, according to what each one needed.  Every day they continued to meet as a group in the temple, and they had their meals together in their homes, eating the food with glad and humble hearts, praising God and enjoying the good will of all the people.  and every day the Lord added to their group…”

Just for a second, try not to get hung up in the “churchy” words and just try to imagine what it would be like to be involved with people on that level of relationship…

Certainly not like any church experience I’d ever had.

I tend to chew on stuff like this,  So there I was at work one morning,  setting up scaffolding with Lester.  He was in his 60′s,  an old retired farmer.  minding his own business, and there I was, wound tight, asking him  about deep spiritual things on a construction site. :-)

You got to love him ….we’d worked together for a few years so he didn’t just write me off as some nut job.

His answer didn’t satisfy me but I let it go…..

There was a major disconnect when I would read about the 1st century Christians and what  passes for “Christianity” today.

A major disconnect

I have a hair trigger when it comes to hypocrisy and  phoniness.

I have been known to get  agitated and  leave the room.

What happened was, my hunger for deeper, genuine relationships actually increased.

We’re all at different places in our lives.  As I’m writing this,   I’m talking to someone who is spiritually hungry, but put off by organized religion.

Ever wonder how you can sort out all of the conflicting voices out there telling you this is truth…no, this is truth…no, there is no such thing as absolute truth,  all paths will eventually lead you to the truth…bla bla bla.

Here’s a tip-  look @ the person  or the source of who’s talking to you and look at their life...If they’re married do they seem to have a healthy marriage or does it feel phony. If they have children…do they look like they’re nurtured, or is something not quite right? Does this person for some weird reason give you the creeps?  (don’t discount that sort of thing/ I think it’s discernment)

We moved to the East Coast so I could pursue some schooling.    A local faith community took us under their wing, full of imperfect but genuine people who had also decided they wanted nothing to do with the phony crap that passes for “church” today.   It was there I had my thirst for deep significant relationships slaked.   We were there 5 years.  When we did eventually return to the Midwest, I brought back with me the know-how , the first hand experience on how to cultivate those same type of relationships….genuine, loving, trusting,  practical and real.

Reminds me of doing an internship at an organic farm for 5 years.

After 5 years you would  hopefully come away with the ability to grow fresh vegetables.

So here I sit this morning thanking God for the spiritual hunger and restlessness he puts into my heart so many years ago now  and for the ways he regularly satisfies it.  DM

That’s not a knife…

January 28, 2012

Young  widow lives just up the road from us.

She called yesterday.

Wanted to know if  a red van  had stopped by our place  recently?

Why yes I said, but we hadn’t answer the door only because our son had called and given us the heads up.

Red van had stopped @ his place.  A young hispanic, in her late teens/ early 20′s had asked if she  could clean his carpet for free.  They had a couple of crews in the area and  were checking with  all the neighbors…  see who else might want a free cleaning…..  all they asked was  to have a chance to give a short sales pitch.

She was very smooth,  asked too many questions,  was way too observant.. Son said it took 15 minutes to get rid of her….

Young widow who called me  was not so lucky. The 3 cleaning guys weaseled their way into her house, even after she’s point blank said she was busy and didn’t have time.  She told me it took over 4 hours to get rid of them, and that was only after she  threatened to get out her shotgun…and yes she really does have one :-)      This same van then stopped by her brothers place.  The sheriff  was called.  Turned out all three men had criminal records, and one had an outstanding warrant.  Warrant said he was to be considered possibly armed and dangerous.

___________________________

We live in a broken world.

That is the cold hard truth.

Even if you mind your own business and play by the rules.

___________________________________

Have to tell you a story my grandpa told me…

Grandpa was   one of 13 children, 6 boys and  7 girls.

That’s him in the back, far left

He grew up farming with horses.

The boys used to wrestle in the  haymow  for entertainment.

In his prime, grandpa stood  6 foot 2, weighed  240 pounds.

One of the gentlest, most soft hearted men you would ever meet.

I heard it said more than once, there was not a person Grandpa didn’t get along with….that’s probably where I get some of my disposition.

One Saturday afternoon   grandpa stopped by  Hayen’s  general store, collecting for their country church.   Five young men were hanging around  outside waiting for the dance to begin.

Grandpa said  “hi”  , but the guys just grunted. Back  in the 1920′s some people looked down their noses @ the Germans in the area.

Twenty minutes later as he  walked  out the store, someone hit him on the back of the head.


  ”As I came out the door of the store someone hit me from behind. 

The next thing I knew I had 4 or 5 guys piling on top of me. 

I got  up and started swinging.

By the time it was over,  the last one  was in  the car  hiding in the back seat.”

________________________________________________________

Heard on NPR yesterday, that the crime rates in New York City and elsewhere continue to trend downwards…while @ the same time, gun sales and gun ownership is @ an all time high…..Makes sense to me.

The trick is to love people,  be engaged with life yet  without loosing sight of the fact there is such a thing as evil.

I’ll close with this short clip from one of my favorite movies…..

dark horse

July 10, 2011

Preface

“Why don’t you write a story about Ron?” she said one morning after breakfast.  My wife often has song ideas for me.  It’s a hit and miss kind of thing.  Her own identity is strong enough that she’s not afraid to miss.  This idea was definitely a hit, even though I fought it for a moment.

  “I don’t think it would work.  Who would relate to a song about someone they didn’t know?”

       “They could relate to your relationship.”

  “Perhaps.  No, I don’t think it would work.”

“I know,” she said. “Make it allegorical.  If Ron were an animal, what would he be?”

Pause.

      “A stallion, an Italian stallion,”  I joked.

     “That’s been done.”

“No.  He would be a black stallion.  A dark horse…that no one could ride.  You know, I think you might have something here.”

An hour later, the original song,”Dark Horse” was born…..

__________________________________________________________________

I (DM) came across the story Dark Horse  in the mid 1980′s   Of all the books I’ve ever read,   this one as much as any of them has shaped  my spiritual journey.

______________________________________________________________________________________

Chapter 1 Night Flight

For as long as I can remember, I had always wanted to be a white horse.  I wasn’t all white, but my good ancestry had left me more white than most horses I knew and fortunately, in the most important places.  Most of my face was white, and the white of my right front leg ran up to my shoulder so that if I stood at an angle…with my good leg out… and my head slightly cocked ….all you could see was white.

It was a good sign, I was told, and the mark of a leader.

It was for this reason when I came of age, I was sent to a special ranch where they trained horses like me to think, walk, and prance like white horses.  We learned how to make the most of our white parts; even how to pose so as to show the most amount of white (without looking unnatural.)

This was harder for some than others.  I remember one horse that had a beautiful white rump and tail and one white streak between his eyes.  His unfortunate fate was always having to present himself backwards – not to mention the strain on his neck from twisting over his shoulder so that the white on his head could be seen.

Life at the white horse ranch was very ordered.  We spent most of every morning exercising on the track – our muscles had to be developed to their fullest for a more impressive display.  Then, after a brief rest, we were washed, brushed, and groomed by our trainers for posing sessions.

Posing sessions were boring, but the preening and doting associated with them was something to which any horse could easily become accustomed.  During these sessions, the owner of the ranch would often come by and comment on our progress.  I was proud to be “one of the most promising animals he had seen in some time.”  (I often wonder now if he meant that, or if he told the same thing to all the horses simply to build up our horse pride.)

True or not, the words worked on me.  I began to form quite an attachment to my own whiteness.  I found myself more and more aware of it, almost as if it were glowing with light of its own.  But of course it was easy to become white – minded at a school where everything revolved around being white.

My favorite part of the day was after the posing sessions when we were led into a large pastured area, fed from long wooden troughs of hay, and allowed to run free in the late afternoon sun.  During the spring there was even real grass to pull up with our teeth.  I marveled at its sweetness and at the strange appeal of the gritty dirt in my mouth.

From the fenced pasture we would occasionally see small bands of wild horses moving across the plains in the distance.  Seeing them always gave me a curious, restless sort of feeling.  Like sniffing a spring wind that’s blown across distant fields of clover.  Almost in spite of myself I would move to the fence and watch them prance and canter on the horizon.

  What would it be like to be….out there?

Part of me was drawn  to the adventure, the freedom.  But another part was full of questions.  How would I be assured of food?  Who would keep me clean?  And – most important of all- what do they know of being white?  What do they care?  It was always this question that would shake me from such foal-ish daydreams and remind me that I was destined for a  “higher calling.”  Whiteness could not be important on the plains;  it would be impossible to maintain.  I was obviously dedicating myself to the true glory of horses – being white.

For this reason, the highlight of each year was when a white horse show came to our ranch.  It was the one time we were able to see real white horses in all their splendor.  Men would come to these shows in great numbers to see the bright spotlights reflect off these horses’ magnificent heads, powdery white manes, and rippling, muscular flanks.  I used to dream of being in that spotlight, because I knew with its help, even thought I wasn’t I could still look like a white horse.  All of us at the ranch shared that one burning dream – to one day join a white horse show.

It was during one of these shows that I first met him.  The shows always came during the first warm evenings of spring and this night was crystal clear, making the resplendent white horses appear unusually bright.

  “Have you ever seen a white horse?
The nicker came from behind me – so softly that only I could hear.  I turned my neck to lay eyes on the most startling horse I had ever seen.  Wild as a prairie storm.  Dark as the night plains.

   “Who are you – and how did you get in here?”

“I am not new to you.”

Suddenly it came to me.  He was the dark horse I had seen earlier outside the pasture fence.  He had been the only wild horse to venture close to the ranch.  Once he came near enough for me to strike up one of my more impressive, rehearsed poses.  I had imagined this heathen horse would gasp with awe and gape in astonishment.  But he didn’t gasp or gape at all.  He simply chewed on a mouthful of grass and looked me straight in the eyes.  That look – I’ve never been able to erase it from my memory.  It had a piercing clarity that seemed to burn even from a distance.

And now, up close, that look was making me every uncomfortable.  It was as if he were looking right through my eyes into my very thoughts.

“Have you ever seen a white horse?”  he repeated.

“Well of course.  Isn’t this a white horse show?”

      “But have you ever seen a white horse?”

  “I see the white horses that come in the show.  And some of us here at the ranch are almost all white.”

        “Have you ever walked completely around a white horse?”

Now he was starting to rattle something in my thinking.  True, I had only seen the real white horses from a distance.  When they were through showing they were whisked away to the separate stables where they were always quartered.  And then I thought of all the horses at the ranch, none of which were all white.  I thought of all the hourses I knew and had to admit.  I had never walked completely around a white horse.

  “Look at that horse right now in the spotlight,”  He said, “Do you see all of him?”

“No.”

“Of course you don’t.  And watch – when he’s through posing he’ll walk off in the darkness.  Do you see?  The light only shines on the pose, not the real horse.”

I was bewildered.  Couldn’t find the words for an answer.  Who was this dark horse?  Where had he come from?   Was he some kind of cynic?  An enemy, perhaps, trying to discourage me from my calling?  And how could one with no white on him seem to….well, shine the way he did?

I turned toward the stage.  I had to find relief from this wild horse’s scrutiny.  I had to collect my thoughts.  But as I stared at the staging area, something looked different.  After looking at the dark horse, the stage lights looked – somehow lesser – more diffused.  The light on the horses was a frothy glow, reflecting back a surface sheen…. but the light in the eyes of the dark horse flashed with pinpoint clarity and burned deep as a branding iron.  I watched the horses come and go in the spotlight, striking their poses with casual grace.  They’d all been through this many, many times before.

Suddenly it all seemed so hollow.  Useless.  Lifeless.

And then with the new light that was already illumining my thoughts , I saw in an instant the folly of this whole procedure.  How foolish that it had never occurred to me before!  I wasn’t going to get any whiter by being at this ranch - only more clever at appearing white!

I looked back again at the dark horse and his eyes were dancing with excitement.  He knew what I was going through.  Without even speaking he was willing me to ask the ultimate question.  But who could ask such a question ?  To speak those words would be….horrifying.  It would undermine everything I’d ever learned about the glory and purpose of horses.  It would alter the whole course of my life.  But it was no use holding back.  The question had already asked itself in my mind and there was nothing that could keep it from falling out of my mouth.

  “Do you mean to tell me….there are no white horses?”

      “No, he replied. “There is one.”

      “You mean the White One?”

     “Of course.  He is the only white horse there ever was or ever will be.”

    “Aren’t we to be like the White One?”  It was another horse from the ranch speaking, for there was now a small group listening in on our conversation.

“Yes,” said the dark horse. “But whiteness is not on the outside.  It is in the heart.  White isn’t what you look like, it’s what you do when you follow the will of the White One.  You cannot change a hair on your body, but he can change your heart and shine his light in your eyes.”

As I stood there the whiteness of my leg and face began to tingle as if it were glowing – not in a good way this time, but in an embarrassing way.  Suddenly it seemed like a thousand eyes were focused on that small area of whiteness I had cherished for so long.  How insignificant it became.  I wanted to hide.  The whiteness had been the focus of my trust, not the White One.  I was ashamed.

I asked another question, trying to get the attention off myself for a moment.  “Why then do we have white horse shows?”  I asked.  What’s the point?”

      “That’s the point…. there is no point.”

He was becoming restless as if my question had finally brought our discussion to  the conclusion he was seeking.  He pawed the ground, tossing his great head up and down with anger.

There are thousands of horses out there who have never heard of the White One and there is an enemy afoot – crouching at the door – while you waste your time comparing whiteness.”

At that he reared back and his cry was a mighty thing.  “If you would follow the White One, then follow me!”

Just as quickly he was gone – vaulting two fences and galloping hard toward the open plains.

There was now no small commotion created in the white horse show.  The air was choked with dust.  Horses  panicked and whinnied- people panicked and cried.  The thunder of the bolting dark horse seemed to echo and reecho from the stable walls as the spotlights turned off their subjects to search the crowd for the cause of the disruption.  And a few of us who had heard the words were stamping our hooves in an agony of indecision.  Even as  I watched, the eyes of two of my companions began to flicker and flame.  And in that instant I knew.  It should have been a hard decision.  But it was not.  The truth was too clear.  The challenge was too compelling.  The alternative was too costly.  There was a choice, but there was no choice.

The next events happened so fast that I only remember flashes and pictures.  But those pictures will always stay vivid in my mind.  The flying dust, the easily – vaulted fences, the pounding hooves, the sweat and dirt mingled to mud and caking on my white leg, the faint outline of the other horses – black against the night sky.

Racing into the darkness, we had only the stars for light.  That, and the light of the White One, shining through our eyes, driving us across plains we had never run, towards mountains we had never seen.

__________________________________________________________________________-

If you’d like to read the rest of this allegory you can get a copy of the book here

No turning back

November 28, 2010

         

When  I logged onto Facebook this morning, I found myself scrolling down the friends of a friend…..people we used to attend a local church with.   

        It stirred up this feeling of being on the outside looking in….

        I felt like a little boy standing outside a store window @ Christmas time, with my nose pressed against the glass, watching  people shop.

     If you sense a hint of  bitterness toward that church  (small c) or the people in it, you would be wrong.    I’m not. 

      What I was (and still am) turned off by, is the  spiritual climate, the spiritual apathy,  served  there on a week to week basis…. 

 A.W. Tozer  puts it like this :

      “There is today no lack of Bible teachers to set forth correctly the principles of the doctrines of Christ, but too many  of these seem satisfied to teach the fundamentals of the faith year after year, strangely unaware there is in there ministry no manifest Presence, nor anything unusual in their personal lives.  They minister constantly to believers who feel within their breasts a longing  which their teaching simply does not satisfy.

      I trust I  speak in charity, but the lack in our pulpits is real.  Milton’s terrible sentence applies to our day as accurately as it did to his:  “the hungry sheep look up and are not fed.”  It is a solemn thing, and no small scandal in the  Kingdom, to see God’s children starving while actually seated at the Father’s table….” 

     It all started in 1998 my wife asked me a  few harmless questions (or so I thought)…

     “Where have you felt the most  refreshed spiritually?

     ”Think of the times when you  were most encouraged spiritually?  “

       I remember saying things like

“At that  lay ministry  weekend retreat back in 1981.”

 ”Not always but on occasion in a small group get together.”

“That “body life service “we used to attend in New Jersey @ Gilgal.”

“Sometimes  AFTER  church when we are hanging around catching up with Leslie, or Lance, or Thomas…..” 

  Then we  tried to identify what was it about those times that made them stand out?

 Having a  genuine sense of connectedness both to people and to God.

 Masks were down.

 people  really listening to where each other was at.

 God’s word was talked about as it practically applied in our current situation.

  Then she asked: “How can we get more of that  in our lives?”

      and the rest is history

At  this point, we are part of a  small house church. 

As much as I miss those people we used to attend church (small c) with, I would never go back.

      I have no idea who might @ some point read this…but just so you know….

      I’ve spent years…literally years  in three  different local churches thinking we  could/ should  ”reform” them  from the inside out.   

      Finally came to the realization  that the pastor and leadership in a  local church casts a long, long shadow spiritually. 

        I only have one life to live…  Do I spend it settling for second best just so I have lots of friends or is there a point where I  ”take the road less traveled”?

     If   you get a chance, pick up a copy of John Fischer’s Dark Horse.

Letters to my son

November 5, 2010

      

Dear J,                                                                                  11/6/2010

 

                I am excited to see a renewed interest in your relationship with God the past several months.  

     As I said to you last week,  Mom and I tried real hard not to  jam our faith down your  throat as you were growing up …nothing worse than growing up  with heavy-handed parents.

        Too often, Christians have a habit of answering questions, no body is asking :-)  

       I hate it when I feel I am on the receiving end of a canned conversation…so that’s the last thing I want to do with you. 

   But now that you are asking some great questions, I do want to share with you what I believe.   

     As you know, I grew up attending a Lutheran church and mom grew up Catholic.  I won’t bore you with all the details, but to make a long story short, I decided to join the Catholic church once we made the decision to get married.  That meant I had to attend a series of classes on becoming Catholic.  The classes raised several questions for me, not the least of which, who is right?????
       Are the Catholics right?  Was the denomination of my childhood right? What about the Baptists, Methodists, Assembly of God, Nazarenes, charismatic, and the list goes on? 

     Who could I talk to find out who is right and who is wrong?  

 Everybody can’t be right.

And obviously, anyone I would talk with would be convinced that their belief system was right. 

  It was a very unsettling time in my life, I felt like I was in the middle of a  spiritual earthquake….

the very ground under my feet was shaking…but out of that time of sifting and shaking came a nugget of  insight for me…and  to this day, 3o years later believe this with my whole heart….are you ready? :-)

    To the degree a particular church or denomination is in line with the Bible, to that degree it is right.

      Since this is first letter is going to be posted on my personal blog, I’m a little reluctant to go any further  in this conversation,  lest I be guilty of answering questions that nobody is asking myself.

__________________________________________________________

      If you are one of the handful of  regular visitors here  and are  interested in following along on this conversation with my son , you’re welcome  to click on this link   

  I’ve been  wanting  to share some of my more personal  stuff on-line for a while now  but have never felt like the  ”heart to heart” blog was the place.

Losing My Religion

March 2, 2010

 

     I got a call last week from a friend- her  son had taken  a World Religion class last year  and no longer believes in God.   Our conversation took me  back to a time when something similiar happened to me- for a spell.

      I grew up Protestant, fell in love with a pretty young Catholic,  decided I’d convert which ment I  had to attend a series of classes- which stirred up a bee’s nest of questions.  For the first time in my life I found myself genuinely  wrestling with questions of faith, religion, spirituality, absolute truth.  

Who is right?  Who can I go to with my questions?   The Catholic priest  thinks  he is right,  my former Protestant minister  thinks  he is right…everyone’s  biased.  Then try to  make any sense out of all the denominations just within the Christian faith.  -   there are over 400 different Baptist denominations alone-not to mention, Pentecostals, Congregationalists, Presbyterians, Episcopalians, Fundamentalists, Nazarenes, and  non-denominational, plus  all of the world religions that claim to have a corner on the truth….then you have your sincere atheists, Agnostics, and New Agers…have I missed anyone ? ;-)

  yep, what an emotional  roller coaster ride that was.

I went through a time of intense questioning- It felt like I was in the midst of a spiritual  earthquake-  the very foundations of  my life were  shaken – hard.

   I  told my friend to get herself a copy of Lee Strobel’s book-

A case For Faith  

 As a former atheist, Strobel understands the rational resistance to faith. He even names the eight most convincing arguments against Christian faith.  Here is a partial list of issues he tackles:

1) If there’s a loving God, why does this pain-wracked world groan under so much suffering and evil?
2) If the miracles of God contradict science, then how can any rational person believe that they’re true?
3) If God is morally pure, how can he sanction the slaughter of innocent children as the Old Testament says he did?
4) If God cares about the people he created, how could he consign so many of them to an eternity of torture in hell just because they didn’t believe the right things about him?
5) If Jesus is the only way to heaven, then what about the millions of people who have never heard of him?
6) If God really created the universe, why does the evidence of science compel so many to conclude that the unguided process of evolution accounts for life?
7) If God is the ultimate overseer of the church, why has it been rife with hypocrisy and brutality throughout the ages?
8) If I’m still plagued by doubts, then is it still possible to be a Christian?

       My conversation with my friend didn’t get this far but the second thing I would suggest is look at the personal life  of  any person telling  others how to live and think-  They are a walking billboard for what they really believe.

I’m back!

July 30, 2009

“Doug, I was wondering if you would be willing to come with me on a short terms  missions trip with our high school youth group this Summer….”

                                    My sister Karen

     That’s how the whole thing started.

    Last year, Karen and our sister Kim went to Mexico on a short term medical missions trip.    They had a great time as siblings-  came home with lots of memories.  So that was in the back of my mind when Karen asked me about  tagging along this summer. 

     In 2008 Cedar Rapids Iowa was hit with a record breaking flood, left thousands of people homeless.  A year later  its old news, but  many are still living in FEMA trailers so Karen’s youth group decided to work closer to home so I said “Sign me up.”

      We reported for duty first thing Monday morning at the crisis management center, had a brief orientation and headed across town to meet our project manager Mike.  Our job for the week was to hang drywall.  

     I had several highlights.  Probably the biggest highlight was the good attitudes these  young people evidenced.   They had fun but knew  how to work- we kicked butt, once we got the hang of it.

      On one occassion we had to lift a 12 ft  by 4 ft piece of drywall over plumbing pipes,  another stack of drywall, then slip it into a tight corner.  Three young ladies, a young man, and myself grabbed it like it was a feather-  it slipped  in perfectly.  I told them  afterwards I felt like I was on an Amish barn raising crew- what a sweet feeling.

     Below are some pictures of our week:

Thursday w-new tshirts

Picture of our group on the last day- Karen and her hubby got it all new t-shirts to celebrate our week

new-tshirts1

Close up of some of the ladies

doug-Karen-Emily

Karen is to my right w/ a screw gun.  My niece Emilee is in front of us.

cailee

Couple of the kids using a sheet rock jack

being silly @ DQ

Having fun @ the DQ after day 3

hannah1    

Niece Hannah with a screw gun

mac-1

Here is Mac- one of my team members

me checking something

Picture of me inspecting something :-)

visitingw-neighbor

Visiting with the neighbor

     Things have been busy the past 3 weeks between a family reunion,  another concert,  guests from California, and this missions trip.  It doesn’t look like it’s going to let up any time soon.   I start my new part time teaching gig in just a couple of weeks- a construction  program  for Jrs and Sr high school students.  I wanted to post something on the blog in case I have any regular readers who stop by from time to time.

     Nothing too deep on this post- mostly wanted to stay in touch.

Suffering Without Pat Answers

February 3, 2009

    

     As my wife and I (DM) were having coffee this morning  I read the following introduction to the book of Job from The Message to her.   It echoes something I said to her this past weekend- 

       “When I am going through a hard time, I am NOT interested in listening to  the pat answers of  some fool  talking theory-   I want to hear from someone who has actually gone through it and come out the other side.” 

         _____________________________________________________

     Job suffered.  His name is synonymous with suffering.  He asked,”Why?”  He asked, “Why me?”  And he put his questions to God.  He asked his questions persistently, passionately, and eloquently.  He refused to take silence for an answer.  He refused to take cliches for an answer.  He refused to let God off the hook.

     Job did not take his suffering quietly or piously….It is not only because Job suffered that he is important to us.  It is because he suffered in the same ways that we suffer-  in the vital areas of family, personal health, and material things.  Job is also important to us because he searchingly questioned and boldly protested his suffering.  Indeed, he went “to the top” with his questions.

      It is not suffering as such that troubles us.  It is undeserved suffering. 

      Almost all of us in our years growing up have the experience of disobeying our parents and getting punished for it.  When that discipline was connected with wrongdoing, it had a certain sense of justice to it:  When we do wrong, we get punished.

     One of the surprises as we get older, however, is that we come to see that there is no real correlation between the amount of wrong we commit and the amount of pain we experience.  An even larger surprise is that very often there is something quite the opposite:  We do right and get knocked down.  We do the best we are capable of doing, and just as we are reaching out to receive our reward we are hit from the blind side and sent reeling.

     This is the suffering  that first bewilders and then outrages us.  This is the kind of suffering that bewildered and outraged Job, for Job was doing everything right when suddenly everything went wrong.  And it is this kind of suffering to which Job gives voice when he protests to God.

      Job gives voice to his sufferings so well, so accurately and honestly, that anyone who has ever suffered- which includes every last one of us- can recognize his or her personal pain in the voice of Job.  Job says boldly what some of us are too timid to say.  He makes poetry out of what in many of us is only a tangle of confused whimpers.  He shouts out to God what a lot of us mutter behind our sleeves.  He refuses to accept the role of a defeated victim.

     It is also important to note what Job does not do, lest we expect something from him that he does not intend.  Job does not curse God as his wife suggests he should do….but neither does Job explainsuffering.  He does not instruct us how to live so that we can avoid suffering.  Suffering is a mystery, and Job comes to respect the mystery.

    But there is more to the book of Job than Job.  There are Job’s friends.  The moment we find ourselves in trouble of any kind- sick in the hospital, bereaved by a friend’s death, dismissed from a job or relationship, depressed or bewildered- people start showing up to tell us exactly what is wrong with us and what we must do to get better.  Sufferers attract fixers the way road kills attract vultures.  At first we are impressed that they bother with us and amazed at their facility with answers.  They know so much!  How did they get to be such experts in living?

      More often than not, these people use the Word of God frequently and loosely.  They are full of spiritual diagnosis and prescription.  It all sounds so hopeful.  But then we begin to wonder, “Why  is it that for all their apparent compassion we feel worse instead of better after they’ve said their piece?”

      The book of Job is not only a witness to the dignity of suffering and God’s presence in our suffering but is also our primary biblical protest against religion that has been reduced to explanations or “answers.”  Many of the answers that Job’s so-called friends give him are technically true.  But it is the “technical” part that ruins them.  They are answers without personal relationship, intellect without intimacy.  The answers are slapped onto Job’s ravaged life like labels on a specimen bottle….

      In every generation there are men and women who pretend to be able to instruct us in a way of life that guarantees that we will be “healthy, wealthy, and wise.”  According to the propaganda of these people, anyone who lives intelligently and morally is exempt from suffering.  From their point of view, it is lucky for us that they are now at hand to provide the intelligent and moral answers we need.

     On behalf of all of us who have been misled by the platitudes of the nice people who show up to tell us everything is going to be just all right if we simply think such-and-such and do such- and – such, Job issues an anguished rejoinder.  He rejects the kind of advice and teaching that has God all figured out, that provides glib explanations for every circumstance.  Job’s honest defiance continues to be the best defense against the cliches of positive thinkers and the prattle of religious small talk…..

     In our compassion, we don’t like to see people suffer.  And so our instincts are aimed at preventing and alleviating suffering.  No doubt that is a good impulse.  But if we really want to reach out to others who are suffering, we should be careful not to be like Job’s friends, not to do our “helping” with the presumption that we can fix things, get rid of them or make them “better.”  We may look at our suffering friends and imagine how they could have better marriages, better- behaved children, better mental and emotional health.  But when we rush in to fix suffering, we need to keep in mind several things.

       First, no matter how insightful we may be, we don’t really understand the full nature of our friends’ problems.  Second, our friends may not want our advice.  Third, the ironic fact of the matter is that more often than not, people do not suffer less when they are committed to following God, but more.  When these people go through suffering, their lives are often transformed, deepened, marked with beauty and holiness, in remarkable ways that could never have been anticipated before the suffering.

     So, instead of continuing to focus on preventing suffering- which we simply won’t be very successful at anyway- perhaps we should begin entering the suffering, participating insofar as we are able…. In other words, we need to quit feeling sorry for people who suffer and instead look up to them, learn from them, and – if they will let us- join them in protest and prayer.  Pity can be nearsighted and condescending; shared suffering can be dignifying and life- changing…..

_____________________________________________________

      I (DM)  have a friend who puts me in mind of Job.  16 years ago he became disabled , he was a guard in a maximum security prison  in upstate New York,  got caught in a prison riot.   4 years ago his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer, two mastectomies, and several complications later, she is still in treatment.  He battles chronic depression.    When we are together, he does a lot of talking- I mostly just listen, but will occasionally, rant with him-  I have never given him to the best of my knowledge a “pat” answer.  I  have been known to tease him- quite regularly actually.    He tells me I am a good friend and  encouragement.    If you’ve read this far- I’m impressed.  The end.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 131 other followers