Saturday, September 27, 2008

Human Being

What a wonderful night! Up at a winery in the Santa Cruz mountains, unexpectedly entertained by a fellow conference goer who brought along a guitar, his raspy voice, and a poet's soul. He is a Canadian. Next to me is a Norwegian diplomat. We are totally on the same wavelength, like we've known each other for years. Along comes a woman from North Carolina who sings in a gospel choir that tours the world to build bridges of understanding through song. I tell her "Oh Happy Day" is my favorite gospel song and she says it's the favorite in Belgium too and they taught her to sing it in Flemish last year. Dan is singing about darkness not having a claim on him, and being free in the light. Terje tells me his wife might like to join this healthy marriage business and his eyes are glowing. The stars are shining. The temperature is perfect. The wine is easy on the palate. The music is soul stirring. We are together.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Integrity

This is not my original work, but I thought it was so good I would post it for the rest of y'all to enjoy (whoever that may be). This is a reflection from http://www.coachingcompass.com/.

Stepping Into Integrity
by Will Craig

Have you ever found yourself admiring someone for what they believed in even though you may not have agreed with them? Right or wrong you have to respect someone who takes a position and stands by it.

Innately, this is what we all want from others. How often have we said to ourselves, "You know, I'm not crazy about so-and-so but, at least, I know where I stand with them." The tough thing about taking a stand is that we're not going to please everyone and we'll probably alienate a few others in the process.

News flash... Isn't that what happens in our lives anyway? Often times we're so focused on doing and saying the right thing we become bland and uninteresting. Ask a newspaper editor, book publisher, talk radio host or television show producer what they're looking for and they will ALL say, "Someone with a point of view." That's what's interesting. That's what sells. And, bottom line, that's what we all want from the people in our lives.

There is more than one way to take a stand.

1. Stand up for what you believe in.
2. Stand down from a position where you feel compromised.
3. Stand back from a situation that doesn't feel right.

Take a stand today and, without moving a muscle, you'll also be stepping into integrity. You'll be more interesting, more respected, and maybe even admired.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Happy Marriage Secrets

Sometimes my job just has to bleed over into daily life. I thought this article was a great reminder of the upsides of being a couple. Sometimes we can get too focused on what's wrong with our life, marriage, spouse, kids, etc. It's healthy to step back and consider all the things that are right with them.

In the case of marriage, I firmly believe that the time for rose-colored glasses is after you say I Do. The time for hard, realistic appraisal is before. So here's a great article on WebMD, called "5 Things Super Happy Couples Do Every Day". Read and enjoy. http://www.webmd.com/sex-relationships/features/5-things-super-happy-couples-every-day

So 'fess up! What do you do? One thing we do is give each other massages. Well, okay, I'm more the lucky recipient than the giver, but still. I was scratching and rubbing Bob's head this morning. He rubs my feet and my back practically every day. I gave him a foot rub yesterday. There's a sense of wellbeing and relaxation that we give each other through those little acts of service that transcend any "relationship work", but that help make the relationship work.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Winter Conspiracy

I know you'll all find this very difficult to believe, but you have to believe me. If we don't band together and do something we're all doomed to winter forever and no Christmas. Although the press is in a blackout and can't report it, what's actually happened is that the White Witch from Narnia has taken over the White House, and she's making this winter last indefinitely. She's sworn to send 7" of snow every other day for the next 100 years unless we all renounce our faith. You've got to believe me! Does anyone out there believe me?

Friday, September 28, 2007

Picnic

We sat beside the maple tree
In the warm October sun
basking in its brief blaze of glory.
The apples we bit into
were bright and crisp, like the air.
We rolled the red Italian wine around in our mouths
and let it loosen our tongues.
"It's funny," I said.
"This tree's brightest hour is just before the dark,"
and sliced another sliver of cheese.
He laughed and looked around at the scenery.
"Spring always comes again," he said.
We sat in the drowsy, sun-soaked silence
and I noticed a pair of apple trees.
They had grown up in the margins of the field
where the plow blades never reach.
They were right next to each other
so their branches only grew on one side.
They looked like a single tree
if you didn't notice their trunks.
"Look at that!", I pointed.
"How do you suppose that happened?"
One tree bore hundreds of shiny red apples
but its twin had none.
We wondered together -
was one nipped by frost while flowering
and the other escaped;
did the bees only come to visit
one side of the pair;
did they somehow commune and share responsibilities,
giving the bearing of fruit to the one most able?

As I closed my eyes that night
the afternoon's scene returned to me.
I saw again the crimson maple leaves
framed against the bright azure sky;
the flock of wild turkeys that emerged warily from the woods
to forage among the cut corn stalks
poking out of the rich brown earth;
the red-checked tablecloth we spread ourselves out on;
and the barren apple tree
next to the flourishing one.
"One was prob'ly protecting the other,"
I mumbled to myself.
"I'll bet it was doing the best it could."
But he was already asleep.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Letter to a Graduate

May 12, 2007
Green Bay, WI

Dear Colin,

Congratulations on achieving this momentous milestone of graduating from college cum laude! You have worked hard and been diligent. As a result you have something that not many people in this world do - the benefit of a fine education. The process you've been through to arrive at this graduation day will benefit you for the rest of your life.

Every writer needs a journal to record their thoughts and feelings, so I have chosen to write the traditional family letter in the beginning of this one. (Editor's note: this was written to my son, Colin, in the pages of a Christian prayer journal.) The blank pages that follow this letter are yours to fill in and make them your own.

If I were simply choosing a blank journal for you, I would not have chosen one with such a strong, Christian character, lest you should feel as though I am trying to coerce you into my way of living. However, this letter is a gift from my heart to yours, and so this journal reflects who I am. Who you choose to become over the course of your life is something that I look forward to watching - cheering you on in good times and bad - so that you always know how deeply I love you and believe in you.

So my first piece of advice to you is to understand that a human life is, above all, a spiritual journey. Every choice in every day is one of Becoming. A single choice can have either tremendous or negligible consequences depending on how it affects your Becoming. A string of consistent choices makes a habit, and habits make the man.

Many people attempt to fool themselves much of the time regarding this point. They tell themselves that because they have plans to make different choices in the future, it's as though they have already made them. Or they tell themselves that their choices don't reflect their true, inner selves. This kind of Becoming does not lead to the flourishing of the human being. We cannot practice self-deception and still arrive at the clear noonday of the soul.

So what have I learned about Becoming? After all, I am still on the journey myself. First of all, I have learned that true answers are only to be found in two places: in the vast reaches of the Absolute, and in the depths of your own heart. We need both as human beings. It is neither sensible nor logical to deny that there is Absolute Truth. To say that there is none is to make a categorical statement of absolute truth. This is logically absurd. And more importantly, the universe is monstrous without it. If, in fact, Love and Truth and Goodness and Beauty are not at the heart of reality, then we must all despair. But I know beyond explaining that this is the case. I feel the reality of the Divine at the center of all things, and I know in my heart that Pride, Falseness, Evil and Ugliness do not have existential reality themselves, but are simply a nullification of the Ultimate Reality.

Now about the depths of the heart, I first want to say that your heart reflects the Absolute. That is to say, your heart recognizes that its true home is Love, Truth, Goodness, Beauty, and all the spiritual qualities that mankind has recognized throughout recorded history as being of enduring value. But living in a state of Becoming that tends toward these things is in many ways a daily battle. And every person faces their battles with Fear, Pain, Discouragement and all the other temptations that try to lead us out of the light at the center of reality and into the shadowlands at the far edges. So Courage is a very important quality to nurture within yourself.

It takes courage to speak the truth when a lie would avoid conflict, hurt feelings or recriminations. It takes courage to share your true feelings when they are not the pretty, garden variety. It takes courage to dream big dreams and set out to accomplish them. It especially takes courage to continue that pursuit when all the signs around you seem to point toward futility, suffering or impossibility.

But your heart has the power to guide you when you stop to deeply listen. It will point out to you the difference between a compromise that creates Beauty, and a compromise that makes you feel embarrassed or ashamed. It will teach you the difference between a Passive choice (You Win), an Aggressive choice (I Win), and an Assertive choice (Win-Win). Your heart is not, finally, subject to self-deception. You can only deny your true, soul needs for so long before your heart rises in rebellion against a Becoming that leads to falseness. On the other hand, your heart will also lead you toward deeper and truer Becoming. For example, you may journey for a while in a place that does not allow you to be Faithful to something that is important to you. But when you listen deeply and find that your heart is leading you to become Faithful, then you begin to make different choices. At first you may find it takes some effort to be Faithful, and you have to stop and listen often to regather your strength. At some point, being Faithful will no longer be an effort, and then you will find as you listen, that your heart will begin to speak to you about becoming Faithfulness. This is the still, small voice of God.

The great thing about this journey is that every day is a new day. One reason I chose this journal is because I loved the quotes they chose for the section dividers. A little farther on, you will find a quote from Oswald Chambers. "Leave the broken, irreversible past in God's hands, and step out into the invincible future with Him." Life affords you the opportunity to do so with every sunrise. You will stumble many times. You will make choices that you later regret. But pay no attention to those. Once your realize your mistakes, do an about face, and step back on the road toward your chosen Becoming with a light heart. Waste yourself on the people who choose to accompany you in the good kind of Becoming. Leave behind unapologetically those who cannot or will not support you in it. Lose yourself in the tasks that the journey will require. Celebrate each day as a Gift. Live out and speak out the eternal values to the best of your ability, and leave the rest in God's hands.

And never, never forget that my heart always has room in it for your heart. There is nothing you can ever do, say, live or experience to dim the Faith, Hope and Love in my heart for you.

Love,
Mom

Saturday, March 24, 2007

Understanding Biblical Marriage

Much is said in evangelical and charismatic Protestant churches about marriage. We hear about wives submitting to and respecting their husbands, and husbands loving their wives sacrificially. These are themes taken from the New Testament, found mainly in the Pauline writings. Paul himself, however, was trained as a strict Pharisee under a famous teacher named Gamaliel. Much understanding about biblical marriage has been lost to the Church because we are no longer steeped in Rabbinic tradition. In fact, the teaching of the Church today has much more in common with the ungodly Gentile cultures of Paul’s day than it does with traditional Jewish understanding.
So what exactly is the teaching that Paul would have received about marriage? To understand it we have to go all the way back to the book of Genesis. Here we find the story of the creation of the very first married couple – Adam and Eve. Here is the rabbinic commentary on these verses from the Stone Edition Chumash.
“God knew that Adam needed a companion. Her purpose was not for reproduction, for Adam had been created with that function. Rather, God wanted Adam to have the companionship, support, and challenge that is present in good marriages, and He wanted the children who would be born to Adam and his future mate to be reared by both a father and a mother. The needs for such assets in human life are too obvious to require elaboration. But before creating Adam’s helpmate, God brought all the creatures to him so that he could see for himself that none was suited to his needs, and he would ask for a companion. Then he would appreciate his newly fashioned mate and not take her for granted.”
The commentary goes on to explain the significance of the Hebrew words used when Adam names Eve’s gender. Woman is Ishah, which is spelled with the three letters Aleph-Shin-Heh [אשּׁה] (woman) because she was taken from Ish (man), spelled Aleph-Yod-Shin [אישׁ]. The rabbinic teaching on the meaning of these letters is very illuminating. They taught that Man and Woman both start with Aleph in the same place, so the genders are one-third the same. They went on to observe that both genders have the letter Shin, but in different places. They taught this means that we are one-third similar but opposite. The remaining letter that is unique to each gender, when put together, spells Yah, the name of God. The rabbis taught this meant that God had embedded his own image in the two sexes, which could only be shown when they were joined in union as a married couple. And that is the meaning behind the statement in Genesis 2:24, “Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and cling to his wife and they shall become one flesh.” Interestingly, the rabbis also pointed out that when the name of God is removed from the two gender names, you are left in both cases with "esh" [אשׁ], a consuming, destructive fire.
The Chumash commentary on Genesis 2:18 is even more revealing of traditional Jewish thinking about the roles of the genders in marriage.
“A helper corresponding to him [lit. a helper against him]. If the man is worthy, the woman will be a helper; if he is unworthy she will be against him. Many have noted that the ideal marriage is not necessarily one of total agreement in all matters. Often it is the wife’s responsibility to oppose her husband and prevent him from acting rashly, or to help him achieve a common course by questioning, criticizing, and discussing. Thus, the verse means literally there are times a wife can best be a helper by being against him.”
Just in case there is any lingering doubt about the view of Husbands and Wives, here is the commentary on Genesis 1:22, when Eve is created from Adam’s rib.
“The side…into a woman. Unlike man’s, the woman’s body was not taken from the earth. God built one side of man into woman – so that the single human being became two, thereby demonstrating irrefutably the equality of man and woman.”
Is there any evidence that Paul was familiar with this teaching? After all, it is his writing that is most often quoted to support the leadership of the man over the woman. Actually, there is what appears to be a rather obscure reference to the teaching in Ephesians Chapter 3. These verses are not often quoted, and usually breezed over because we have lacked the traditional rabbinic viewpoint. But after what has been said above, the underlying teaching becomes obvious. In Ephesians 3:14-15 Paul writes, “For this reason I bow my knees before the Father; from whom every family in heaven and on earth derives its name…”
Now we turn to the more thorny issue of understanding in what spirit Paul writes that wives are submit to husbands since a husband is head of the wife as Christ is head of the church. We know that elsewhere he also taught that “in Christ there is neither male nor female”, and yet in Ephesians 5 we find a teaching that seems to say the opposite.
In order to put the scriptures that seem to subordinate women into proper context, we need to understand the household structure of biblical days. In the Roman world there were two classes of people: freeborn and slaves. The freeborn people were, by and large, the moneyed classes. They owned large households that resembled small corporations rather than the nuclear family of today. The business of the corporation was to manage the land holdings and the production of goods for both household consumption and for trade. These large household units contained many slaves, servants, and extended family members. There were a few unlucky freeborn people who did not have access to money. Often times these parents would sell their children into slavery in hopes of giving them a better economic situation, since masters were obligated to feed their households. The servant and slave classes most often lived in something like common dormitories, since none could afford houses and lands of their own.
It is also necessary to understand the family structure of Roman days. Men were the sole owners of all property in that era. Women and children were considered property, as were servants, slaves, animals, goods, land, and other possessions. It was lawful for a man to sell his wife and children into slavery if he so chose, since he owned them in the first place. A male slave, on the other hand, did not own his wife and children, if he had any, since he himself was property. They, like he, belonged to the master, and as with any property, had no rights of their own. A good master would not wear them down with abuse and neglect simply because that is foolish behavior for any property owner, but a bad master could do so and suffer no legal consequences. In fact, leading thinkers of the day were convinced that some classes of human being were inherently designed to be the property of others.
Into this culture comes ringing the words of the New Testament authors. Try to listen to them with the ears of that day.
1 Cor 7:4 “A wife is not the master of her own body, but her husband is; in the same way a husband is not the master of his own body, but his wife is.”
1 Cor 7:40 “[A single woman] will be happier, however, if she stays as she is. That is my opinion and I think that I too have God’s spirit.”
Galations 3:28 “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free man, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus.”
1 Peter 3:7-8 “In the same way you husbands must live with your wives with the proper understanding that they are more delicate than you. Treat them with respect, because they also will receive, together with you, God's gift of life. Do this so that nothing will interfere with your prayers. To conclude: you must all have the same attitude and the same feelings; love one another, and be kind and humble with one another.”
These words were a shocking declaration of the equality and brotherhood of all humankind in the context of Roman culture. But human institutions are resistant to change. It wasn’t until 1800 years had passed that devout Christians, understanding the spirit of the scriptures, put an end to slavery, although not one word of scripture can be found that describes it as an evil.
Since this was a manifesto of equality, why did the apostles tell slaves to obey their masters? The leaders of the early church were not concerned with overturning the social structure of the day. To encourage their followers to engage in open rebellion against the entrenched power structure of the day would have caused untold hardships for them as well as for the early church. Notice, however, that the passages enjoining obedience upon slaves are always right next to passages enjoining submission upon women. The apostles were saying, in other words, “Yes, we all know that there is no difference and you are equal in every way, but since society requires you to take a submissive role, do so without complaint because God’s ways are spiritual, not temporal. Jesus did not lead us in armed rebellion against Rome, and we are not leading you to a violent social rebellion either.”
The sad thing about most of the teaching on husbands and wives in today’s church is that they have twisted the words of the apostles around to mean exactly the opposite of what they were intended to say. Lacking historical understanding or context, proponents of male headship presume the scriptures prescribe submission of wives, when in fact, the original sense was just the opposite.
No doubt there are many who will be alarmed and indignant at what I write here. But what did Jesus say about the great test of ideas? He said that “by their fruits you will know them.” What is the fruit of the church teaching about submission of wives to the leadership of husbands? Does the church have healthy stable marriages, in contrast to the rest of society? No. In fact it has a higher rate of divorce than in the secular culture. The Baptist and non-denominational evangelical churches, which have hit this message the hardest, have the highest divorce rates of all. (Barna, 1999) Sounds like pretty rotten fruit to me. In fact, the Baptists have begun to beat a retreat from that position and encourage “mutual submission”. (Lundy, 2000)
The most grievous part of this wrong-headed teaching of the church is the loss of the incredible potential in marriage. God intended the world to get a glimpse of his own nature in the union of man and woman. The closeness, physical intimacy, mutual reverence, mutual submission, and shared life experience of a devoted married couple was to give us a dim earthly reflection of the life of the triune Godhead. It was God’s great plan to give us a taste of His eternal state of bliss here on earth. The tarnished and grubby thing it becomes when one is made master over the other would be laughable if it wasn’t so depressing.
For more biblical scholarship on this subject, see the website of Christians for Biblical Equality at http://www.cbeinternational.org/new/index.shtml .