Thursday, January 29, 2009

Blogging from my phone...

It's been awhile since I've written, so I thought I'd check in.

I'm here in Grand Rapids attending the Calvin Symposium on Worship. I've been listening to Craig Barnes today who is talking about preaching the parables. The worship service this morning was spiritually engaging. The people from my church who came along are excited and enjoying what they are seeing and that is excitng to me.

It's refreshing to be doing some recharging this week. Good for the mind and good for the spirit.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Waterproof...

Today, I feel waterproof.

I've been reading the memoir of Barbara Brown Taylor, "Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith," (HarperSanFrancisco) and I found myself in the final pages of Chapter 9.

Brown narrates her journey from a being a religious seeker, or an "ecclesiastical harlot," as a priest called her, to her ordination as a priest in the Episcopal Church. Brown-Taylor writes elegantly. Having gone to see her speak several times, I think her appearance matches her prose. She is a tall woman, silver hair perfectly matched to her black clerical shirt and stiff white collar.

She doesn't wear the black shirt or the collar anymore, though. After fifteen years of ministry and serving two parishes, she was exhausted, emotionally and spiritually drained. She left the priesthood and she accepted a teaching position at a college close to the church she was serving at the time.

Chapter 9 of her book records her descent into depression and her quick escape from parish ministry. At the end of the chapter, she writes about being invited to a large pool party hosted by one of her former congregants. During the evening, she wanders past the pool where a number of children are splashing and playing. Suddenly, a fully clothed adult lands in the water, voluntarily or involuntarily, we don't know. Soon, chaos. People all around her are being grabbed and thrown into the water.

Brown-Taylor writes, "Several people hunting for victims turned toward me, their faces lit with smiles. When they saw who I was they turned away again so that I felt sad instead of glad. Whatever changes were occurring inside of me, I still looked waterproof to them."

I may have taken a long time to get to the point, but that's how I feel today--waterproof. I can't give too many details, because then I'll have said too much. Suffice it to say, I experienced one of those times in ministry where the people who normally want you to meet them where they are in life, now realize that you're too close and they're embarrassed or maybe angry that you've seen a part of them they didn't what seen. (Am I being too obscure???)

Anyhow, I find myself caught. I'm not caught in a crisis of calling where I am looking to escape my work as a pastor. However, I do mourn the fact that as a pastor, there are many areas of life where people will hold me at arm's length. I am welcome in their homes after a surgery or a time of grief and I am expected to provide that word or expression that gives comfort or hope. Yet in social gatherings, often conversation can be superficial. People don't want their pastor to know too much, or just as frightening, they don't want to know too much about their pastor.

I'm waterproof.

Taylor-Brown found redemption when someone grabbed her from behind and threw her in the pool. She writes, "I looked around at all of those shining people with makeup running down their cheeks, with hair plastered to their heads, and I was so happy to be one of them. If being ordained meant being set apart from them I did not want to be ordained anymore. I wanted to be human. I wanted to spit food and let snot run down my chin. I wanted to confess being as lost and found as anyone else without caring that my underwear showed through my wet clothes."

I'm ordained. With that ordination, I know that as long as I have that "Rev." in front of my name or people call me, "Pastor," I will always be set apart to some degree. Waterproof. I accept that for now. Thankfully, my wife and family are all too aware of my humanity.

I could write more, but I think I'll stop here. Like I wrote earlier, to say more, is to say too much. In the meantime, I'm going to roll up my pants and wade in the shallow end for a while. Scandalous!

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Mountain, shmountain...

I have this relative of mine who lives out west and enjoys the scenery by hiking here, skiing there, and biking everywhere. We love to visit him, his wife, and son (and dog), but just so you know, we've got some of the great outdoors here, too.

I've posted some pictures of my great outdoor adventures, too. Out here in the flatlands, we don't burden God with creating our entertainment, we just wait for a diesel payloader to do it for us.

Lindsey and I had a good time this Sunday afternoon playing around outside. The weather was beautiful. Temperatures hovered around 30 degrees--a veritable heat wave--and we had clear skies--a beautiful blue as you will see from the snapshots.

So, with the panorama of Hull as a backdrop, I bask in the schadenfreude that will come when my Mile High relative looks with envy and longing at the grandeur of yon snowpile.

Enjoy.

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Christmas lights...



O.K., there tree is down, safely packed in a box and hauled down to the basement. (We went from the "real thing" to artificial a few years ago after our cats kept scattering needles all over the house and drinking all the water in the pan underneath the tree.) Ornaments are arranged in their boxes and the inside of the house is in post-Christmas, non-Advent mode.

I still have my Christmas lights on outside. Is there a Miss Manners to tell me when I should take them down? I guess I feel if I go to the work of hanging them, is four weeks really long enough to leave them up? Also, January is such a dreary month. I think leaving my lights up brings a little cheer to the otherwise bleak evenings.

How long can I leave them up and not be called 1)strange, because I have lights up when it's not the Christmas season, or 2) lazy, because it's January, so take them down already.

Granted, my light display is pretty modest. (The picture I posted is not my home. I put that in for effect.) I'm guessing I could have them taken down and put away in a half hour or so, but do I want to?

For the three or four of you who stumble upon this while trying to visit someplace else on the internet, do you have any opinions?

Saturday, January 03, 2009

Airhog!


Airhog 2008 from Todd Z. on Vimeo.

No harm, no foul.

Video of Christmas Eve 2008


Christmas Eve 2008 from Todd Z. on Vimeo.

If this doesn't link to Facebook, you can see the video at www.threeoclockcoffee.blogspot.com

Christmas 2008

Here are some pictures from the past couple weeks. I will upload a couple videos a little later.