Sunday, September 27, 2009

Language

The following message has been proofread and approved by my husband. I tell you that because this post includes a personal conversation we recently had.
My heart was sad for a bit because Ryan told me he didn’t know me spiritually. From that comment until the re-do conversation, we were unaware that we were stuck in miscommunication land. I heard what he said, not what he meant. This happens doesn’t it? For any conversation, the gap between what is heard and what is intended is a deep, jagged gorge that can either become a scar or grow the relationship.
First, honesty and grace are crucial. This was cleared up because I asked him about it again after spending some time in thought. He quickly reassured me of my misunderstanding and re-interpreted. He wants to know me better spiritually; deeper. By comparison, these two comments are night and day to me and unmistakably, the second draws me to his heart. I’m so glad I brought this back up even though it was difficult.
Second, I cannot think about this interaction with my husband- how simply I might misunderstand the person I am closest to- and not wonder- just how often does this happen and never become known? Added to our communication possibilities is the entire human race trying to understand and be understood. I am thankful that God looks at the heart. If God only listened to what we said and not what we meant, one might wonder why God ever speaks to us in the first place. The Lord’s grace transcends the gap of reality and intention- even when we do not return the same gracious understanding. We are so quick to assume God should have stopped or changed a situation simply because he could have.
Third, I cannot think about this potential interaction with God and not wonder just how often does this gap occur when I am supposedly speaking to others on God’s behalf. What must it be like for God to watch people be led astray- either intentionally or unintentionally- by other people proclaiming to know God and to know his will? What if they say something that can be misunderstood?
Broken relationships based on misunderstandings break my heart because it didn’t have to be that way. The only suggestion I can plead for on behalf of the misunderstood is honesty and grace. People must be willing to face the one they have been confused or hurt by even though they may find it was intentional. This is scary for those of us that retreat in the face of confrontation, but the alternative of brokenness is much worse. On the other hand, if we are the “confusor”, we must be approachable. How else can a broken spirit have the courage to come to us and beg for re-interpretation?
I thank the Lord that amidst all the confusion and gaps that exist in human interaction, he is constant and approachable even though he need not explain himself to us.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Pray for C

Waco ISD 7th grade students are at home tonight feverishly preparing their backpacks and school supplies, laying out their outfits, and finishing their summer novels they have been reading for enjoyment- stoked about the first day of school tomorrow. Ok that may be more than a little optimistic but it's my dream world so I can pretend whatever I want. This time last year, I felt like a cat who just found out it had been forced to join the swim team. One year later, first-day-of-school eve is almost an exciting feeling. I am looking forward to applying everything I learned through trial and error last year. I feel ahead of the game instead of desperately trying to catch up. What a wonderful difference!

All that said, I am still faced with the same nervous jitters my students will probably be feeling the weight of as they primp in front of the mirror tomorrow morning. The unknown is so intimidating. However, sometimes the known can be equally intimidating. We (the teachers) received our class schedules last Thursday and there are already names of students jumping off the page at me because they will be returning to my classroom this year. As can probably be assumed, my repeat offenders on my list were not my kindest, most scholastic students last year. The thought of spending another year with them must be approached as a mere challenge set before me and presented as a goal: I didn't get you the first time around, but I have another chance. One student stands out in particular. (For the sake of confidentiality and professionalism, he will be affectionately referred to as "C".)

C is a hard person to love. He turned 16 last year and he is still in the 7th grade. He was a constant disrespectful distraction in my classroom. He cussed me out more than once, tore up a test and threw it in my face, walked out of class, and displayed a disregard for human kind in general. He is the kind of person you want to write off completely. At times I wanted to throw my hands up in the air and announce that I am finished. "If you don't care, then neither do I."
I have been told that many first year teachers cry often. I don't think I am any tougher than these, but I only cried once last year- thinking about C. I was thinking about how this is his life. This is not his practice round; he really is growing up this way and it is so sad.
After my many encounters with C, I realized that he had taught me more about Jesus than any Sunday school class or Bible study I have ever been a part of. If there was ever a student who needed my help, it's him. I am willing to give it. He has hurt me many times, but I still want to help him- if only he would accept it. My hand is open but his heart is closed. What I have to offer him (education) can make his life better, but he can't see that and he is choosing a more difficult and less fulfilling life without it.

C will be back in my classroom this year. I have high hopes for him backed up by anguished prayers. This 7th grader with a parole officer desperately needs some support. I hope he sees this year that I am not against him, but rather fighting for him. More than that, I hope someday he sees Jesus in how I love him and realizes how small my support and love for him are in comparison to what Jesus has to offer him. Needless to say, please pray for C. Please pray for me.

... and now, on to a new school year.

Friday, August 7, 2009

who are they?

I'm in Norman, Oklahoma at the New Baptist Covenant. While I am still trying to figure out what the New Baptist Covenant really is, I have enjoyed the discussion about race, religion, and the oppressed. Last night we were privileged to hear testimony from two contemporaries: Hanna Massad, a Palestinian Christian who lives in a "prison without bars" - the Gaza Strip, and Wilford Brown, a Tawakoni Native American who experiences the hidden American life. While I listened to these two men speak about life and expereince, I wrote a small poem baised on thier story.

Who are the oppressed?
They are the invisible;
those who hide from view,
those who hide from hearing.
These are the people living among
people who are hurting,
without voice - without advocacy;
people we see but never notice.
The Palestinian people,
who have been displaced by policy.
The American Indian,
whose lot is with endangered nature.
The victims of domestic violence,
whose shame keeps the blinds drawn.
The working poor,
whose labor makes our luxury possible.
"Whatever you did for the least of these
brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me."

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Burn Notice

There is an irony in going through times in life where individuals or situations "burn"; through the confusion and pain we learn about God and ourselves.

I like to watch the TV show, "Burn Notice". In the show Michael Westen is burned by the CIA and through trying to get his job back he learns of his love for an ex-girlfriend, loyalty of a life long friend, and constant care of a wounded mother. If you've ever seen the show, you'll agree, it's mostly entertaining and not very deep; however the simple plot speaks to the reality of our lives.

I have friends who have been burned by the church - how sad: to be hurt, trampled on, and stabbed by fellow Christians. The only comfort comes in the truth of Psalm 53: "God looks down from heaven on the human race to see if there are any who understand, any who seeks God. Everyone has turned away, all have become corrupt; there is no one who does good, not even one."

But it's the previous Psalm that teaches me today. In Psalm 52 we find words of trust in spite of evil acts committed against us. The faithful are like a luxuriant, productive olive tree; they trust in God's unfailing love (verse 8). In contrast, the evil doors, those who trust in their own wealth, strength, and deceit will be uprooted, made a vagabond, and destroyed like a building (verse 5). Much like Psalm 49, here in 52:7 we find the righteous learn a lesson from the judgments of God. One commentator states: "Those who live and act independently of God, trust in themselves, and better themselves at the expense of others will be brought down … when their riches, houses, and power, are taken away, their lives fall apart."

When Bishop Nikolai Velimirovich spoke courageously against Nazism, he found himself in a concentration camp. It is there he wrote this beautiful hymn:

Bless my enemies, O Lord. Even I bless them and do not curse them.
Enemies have driven me into your embrace more than friends have.
Friends have bound me to earth, enemies have loosed me from earth and have demolished all my aspirations in the world.
Enemies have made me a stranger in worldly realms and an extraneous inhabitant of the world. Just as a hunted animal finds safer shelter than an unhunted animal does, so have I, persecuted by enemies, found the safest sanctuary, having ensconced myself beneath your tabernacle, where neither friends nor enemies can slay my soul.
Bless my enemies, O Lord. Even I bless them and do not curse them.
They, rather than I, have confessed my sins before the world.
They have punished me, whenever I have hesitated to punish myself.
They have tormented me, whenever I have tried to flee torments.
They have scolded me, whenever I have flattered myself.
They have spat upon me, whenever I have filled myself with arrogance.
Bless my enemies, O Lord, Even I bless them and do not curse them.
Whenever I have made myself wise, they have called me foolish.
Whenever I have made myself mighty, they have mocked me as though I were a dwarf.
Whenever I have wanted to lead people, they have shoved me into the background.
Whenever I have rushed to enrich myself, they have prevented me with an iron hand.
Whenever I thought that I would sleep peacefully, they have wakened me from sleep.
Whenever I have tried to build a home for a long and tranquil life, they have demolished it and driven me out.
Truly, enemies have cut me loose from the world and have stretched out my hands to the hem of your garment.
Bless my enemies, O Lord. Even I bless them and do not curse them.
Bless them and multiply them; multiply them and make them even more bitterly against me:
so that my fleeing to You may have no return;
so that all hope in men may be scattered like cobwebs;
so that absolute serenity may begin to reign in my soul;
so that my heart may become the grave of my two evil twins, arrogance and anger;
so that I might amass all my treasure in heaven;
ah, so that I may for once be freed from self-deception, which has entangled me in the dreadful web of illusory life.
Enemies have taught me to know what hardly anyone knows, that a person has no enemies in the world except himself.
One hates his enemies only when he fails to realize that they are not enemies, but cruel friends.
It is truly difficult for me to say who has done me more good and who has done me more evil in the world: friends or enemies.
Therefore bless, O Lord, both my friends and enemies.
A slave curses enemies, for he does not understand. But a son blesses them, for he understands.
For a son knows that his enemies cannot touch his life.
Therefore he freely steps among them and prays to God for them.

So when we find ourselves "burned" like Michael Westen - let us not retaliate in political maneuvers, let us find love for our "enemies", and let us learn from the hurt and confusion.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

"The Church"

A reason I've heard for people justifying their disconnection with and repulsion of "the Church" and not wanting to be a part of it is: "I've been burned by 'the Church'."
Unfortunately, I think these victims have been mislead in what "the Church" actually is and my hope to all these lonely souls is that they would realize "the Church" not only is the body of Christ consisting of human believers but also sinful by nature, therefore flawed and bound to screw up. Enter Grace and Forgiveness. (Now would be a good time to read Ray Miller's blog post on said topics inspired by Rachel Getting Married.)
I do not blame anyone who has used this line and must say I identify with you often if this is you. Why be a part of something if this is the representation? (I will refrain from offering examples as I feel this would be unnecessary and hypocritical.) Instead of offering blame; I issue a challenge to both parties and include myself as I find myself on both sides.

Challenge to "the Burned": We all mess up. We all have weak moments, no matter the strength of the weakness. Let us pray that God would remind us of our own weak moments when we are prepared to judge someone else's that we may be humbled enough to forgive their idiocies as they will very soon be forgiving ours. Let us be gracious to each other and quick to offer embrace.

Challenge to "the Church": We are "the Church". We are the representation. It is our responsibility to bring heaven to earth. We do that by loving orphans and widows (James 1:27) and offering our coat when someone asks for our shirt (Matthew 6:40). Heaven happens because we have become less and God becomes greater (John 3:30) through action and thought. These things take choices- mind you, I'm not referring to self deprecation; that is a whole other issue. As "the Church" let us be honest with ourselves and each other that we may see ourselves, each other and God for who we all truly are. Let us be gracious to each other and quick to offer embrace.

In closing, the picture below was taken on my walk this morning and is actually the inspiration for this post. It is a humorous reminder to "the Church" to be honest and reminder to everyone else that "the Church" is made up of humans.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

wilderness spirituality

Two weeks ago I had the wonderful experience of spending five days at the Monastery of Christ in the Desert. These are my thoughts:

Silence – “as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be.”

Experience
It is 2:00pm, Thursday, May 28, 2009 and I attempt to take my preemptive nap that I sometimes like to squeeze in before reporting to work. As I lay down, my mind yells from within about all the things I must finish in the next few days – “I have to go to work tonight.” “Should I try to pick up a shift, for extra money, tomorrow?” “Sunday’s sermon is little more than a vague outline in my head.” “I have to finish those two book responses before Tuesday, when I start my Summer 1 class.” Not to forget, “I wonder when I’ll feel like writing the response paper for the whole wilderness experience.” As these thoughts invade the silence, my phone begins to rings. Normally I am overjoyed that this little contraption reads “Kristyn” (my wife) on the display screen, but when the familiar tone begins my attempted silence is further interrupted. It was not a long conversation, and sadly I should have talked longer, but the minutes were ticking away before I would have to report to Ninfa’s, and I am still wanting just a few minutes of silence before work.
Now it is 2:20pm, less than forty minutes left before my alarm will go off. The above distractions are over, and now I am able to find that comfortable place within the folds of the couch. Ahh… silence. At the brink of sleep comes the unmistakable sound of the neighbors yard crew. Oh, they do a wonderful job; while our yard is kept up by a busy seminary student, the neighbor’s thick Saint Augustine grass is as green as a Ponderosa Pine in early spring; it is the pride of the neighborhood. Normally I welcome the sound of the professional yard crew, even hoping to learn from their years of experience, but “why now?” Silence, had just been reached, why now must it be interrupted for the sake of ascetics.
2:35pm. “Here’s the plan, I will use the hum of the weed eater to mask the anxious thoughts within my head, gaining silence through noise.” Yet, that same divine device that will awake me in twenty-five minutes, the same device that allows me to talk to my bride anytime, anywhere, is now heralding me with a number I do not recognize. My precious silence is interrupted again.
2:45pm. I give up, no nap today, now I must run off to work. Silence has failed, noise has come.
This little scenario plays out in my life more often than not. The thing that I found so easy to add to my life while at the Monastery of Christ in the Desert is the same little thing that evades my grasp in ordinary living. Silence. I loose out moments of identity and knowledge because I either do not hold on hard enough, like the out of shape climber who attempts a 5.11 move his first time on the rock in two years, or I hold on to silence as much as I can only to have it striped from me by metaphorical linebackers.
Most often my life reflects the words of Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel:

We do not refuse to pray; we abstain from it. We ring the hollow bell of selfishness rather than absorb the stillness that surrounds the world, hovering over all that restlessness and fear of life – the secret stillness that precedes our birth and succeeds our death. Futile self-indulgence brings us out of tune with the gentle song of nature’s waiting, of mankind’s striving for salvation.
Is not listening to the pulse of wonder worth silence and abstinence from self-asserting?
Rushing through the ecstasies of ambition, we only awake when plunged into dread or grief. In darkness, then, we grope for solace, for meaning, for prayer. (Abraham Joshua Heschel. I Asked for Wonder. 21-22)

Even in my frustrated state, before I joined the noise of a busy restaurant and bar, my longing was for silence. Bill Bright asserts that silence is a mark of spiritual maturity; that, “True silence is the rest of the mind; and is to the spirit, what sleep is to the body, nourishment and refreshment.” (Bill Bright. Holy Silence. 35) True Silence, this is what I long for and so often miss in everyday life; it is what I wished to gain before running off to serve my fellow man enchiladas, margaritas, and guacamole.

Wilderness
I grew up going camping more often than watching a movie in the theater. While this experience may be a rarity for my generation, I find it soothing. The wilderness was my place of growth; it is where I learned anything from leadership to love, from team-building to self-limitations. As I got older and able to drive long distances, the mountains became my respite, my classroom. This wilderness formation found solidification with the summer of 2006 being spent within a tent in the great Yosemite Valley. There is simply no other place I feel in my element as I do when sounded by towering peaks, juniper trees, bristle cone pines, and snowmelt streams. If home is where the heart is, then the wilderness is my abode.
While all this is great and matches much of Robert Frost, the question of life and silence must be lifted to the surface. How do I live in the silence when life’s noise caries the melody of the day? How do I find wilderness in the concrete and glass of the city?
While discussing his spiritual journey from Houston to Portland, in Through Painted Deserts, Donald Miller highlights Dallas in such a way that it has become a mirror into my past and present. He states:

Dallas blew in on the wing of a Gulf coast hurricane and rained glass and steel onto a field of bluebonnets. It’s an odd town, though. A big, Republican, evangelical city where you can’t drink, girls wear black dresses for dates on Wednesday, and the goal is to join the local country club like your daddy and his daddy before him. When you build a city near no mountains and no ocean, you get materialism and traditional religion. People have too much time and lack inspiration. (Donald Miller. Through Painted Deserts. 21. Emphasis mine.)

Although my adolescent years in South Dallas / Waxahachie have long been eclipsed by my college experience in Belton, I have never strayed far from I-35 for any length of time. That stretch of interstate has come to epitomize my non-wilderness experience.
I-35 is a long highway that acts as the coronary artery to the bread basket of the United States. It runs from Laredo, TX to Duluth, MN, and while it crosses many rivers, it never dips into the ocean nor skirt any mountains. It is a concrete monstrosity that can get a person from the pains to the boundary waters within a day, but on that journey there will be little fanfare or taste. The scenery will turn from green to brown, then back to green; you may fall into a few hills but nothing that cannot be maneuvered at 75 mph.
This is how I feel in central Texas, with the only wildernesses within the populated bike trails of Cameron Park or day drives to a hand full of small state parks, whose only major attractions are man made lakes. If there is no wilderness, then there is no abode. Thus I must wrestle every day like a fish out of water looking for silence, looking for home.
Bill Bright says, “If we are never silent, then we never have to look at the truth about ourselves.” When I live outside the wilderness, I live in what I consider the “Dallas effect” – with too much time on my hands, a false focus on material stability, and little inspiration. Silence must be sought no matter how difficult. It may be a slow walk to the library taking time to notice the azalea’s or getting up early and going to the bike trails before the army of Swins take over. Through discipline I may learn how to survive or even thrive in Waco, but only as a man in a straight jacket, knowing he can do so much more.

Prayer
“May 21, 2009 – 8:30am – Monastery”
A prayer from last night:
Lord, I pray for all the cares, causes, and comforts that draw on me like bungee cords; that I may have the strength to resist leaving the silence.

While away at the Monastery of Christ in the Desert there were many cares that drew me to deeper prayer: Grandparents failing health, the upcoming expansion of our family, Kristyn’s parents, and U.S. foreign policy. Jesus says that whatever we ask for in his name will be giving to us; however, from experience we know that there are unanswered prayers. F.B. Myer wrestles with this inconsistency by saying, “The greatest tragedy in life is not unanswered prayer but unoffered prayer”, and so all the cares that pull us from self-absorption are to be interceded upon with faith.
Causes are the good things that grab our hearts out of silence; things that beckon upon us like lilies to light. The orphans in Sudan, the hungry in Zimbabwe, the oppressed in China, the poor in Haiti, the numb in Europe, the busy in Dallas, and these things draw our heart toward the merciful father who wishes for all his children to find rest within his embrace.
The comforts of life are as difficult as parsing second aorist middle indicative verbs. Sometimes they're as simple as a clean bathroom, but can be as complicated as the computer which I type upon. It is the comforts that pull the hardest; it is the comforts that draw us away from the wilderness, away from silence, away from prayer. The Christian is not called to live a life void of comforts; rather he or she is to be Christ μαρτυρες. (This comes from Jesus' command at Ascension to be “his witnesses” (Acts 1:8). The word μαρτυρος is defined as “the one who testifies in legal matters, witness”; moreover, “the one who witnesses at cost of life, martyr.”) In my experience it is the comforts of life that make it difficult to follow Christ so intently, and this is probably where my romantic vision of the mountains takes root. The mountains calls a person to simple living and in simple living silence is sought.

“May 30, 2009 – 9:20am – Waco”
A Prayer:
Oh Lord, as I now live among comforts, with cares, and for the sake of causes, help me find the silence; help me listen to the pulse of wonder.

Place
The Monastery of Christ in the Desert is a wonderful place. I enjoyed this trip more than most my adventures in the wild. To practice silence and detachment with the convenience of mountain scenery and service of humble monks is a tearful joy. Toward the beginning of the week I debated whether these men had much purpose living so far from society, but now with a week's experience and a week's reflection, I see their service to the Kingdom of Heaven is unmatched by most. Their commitment to live in community with nature and one another is a prophetic testimony for all who live outside the desert. Their devotion to prayer is moving to the spirit and the earth. It is unfathomable to ponder on all the good that come from “Lord hear our prayer” and “Amen”. If I had the prayers of the monks of the Monastery of Christ in the Desert on my behalf I would be the first to volunteer to metaphorically storm the gates of hell.
Now, as I sit on my comfortable couch, I recollect the monastery, my professor, and my fellow students and nothing but sure gratitude wells up from within.

A Prayer:
Oh Lord, as I now live among comforts, with cares, and for the sake of causes, help me find the silence; help me listen to the pulse of wonder.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

the 1st year teacher SURVIVED!

Pre-Christmas break I had "those days" where I would reflect upon my well-thought out decision to become a middle school English teacher and question my sanity and emotional stability. Mostly these reflections ended with "What was I thinking?" and "Am I cut out for this job?" or "Are these kids learning anything?" Back in "those days", the end of the year seemed so far away. I knew it would come eventually; I also knew I was going to get to them, or they were going to get to me. Unfortunately for my students, they have no idea how stubborn I can be. Stubbornness fused with a fierce competitive bone and a love for education is a dangerous combination for a 7th grader who doesn't want to try. I am not a quitter, so giving up was never an option even though I had already figured out the that my hard-learned wisdom would not be fully applicable until my 2nd year with a fresh batch of students. Still, I refused to give up on this years students. Some time around spring break, I think I wore them out and the year ended with my white bored completely covered in 7th grade ebonics lingo about how they loved this class and they would miss me. Some of them even promised they would keep reading! I realize some of them just wanted to write on the bored, but some of those were honest confessions of students I saw specific growth in this year. I think I am actually going to miss them.

I will never again have first-year students and I should thank them for testing me to the MAX to see if I am fit to teach. I have realized how much I love teaching despite the difficulties and demands. I am looking forward to returning next year to a brand new year although I gladly turned down teaching summer school and embraced the summer break!

Here are a few pictures of the kids I truly came to LOVE. (Each class is missing the last-day-of-school skippers but you get to see most of my kids.)





























I was the sponsor for the Step Club and these girls were the heart of soul of it all! They even taught me to step : )