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Category Archives: General

A Golden Thread

For every beginning, there is an ending and for every ending there is a new beginning. That seems to be the way things go in Ecclesiastes, the Godly Play lesson “The Circle of the Church Year” and, well, life. The golden thread of time seems to be spiraled around and around, much more than time in a line.

The girls are just counting the days until school ends and vacation begins. Here in Texas, spring has clearly ended and the heat of summer has begun. As May comes to an end, so too will my time as Child & Family Minister at St. Martin’s, and I will start a new beginning.

Today, in the last Godly Play session with the 4-year-old preschoolers, one asked, “So is this the last story ever?” Honestly and happily, I could reply, “No.” I went on to say, “Now this circle of people won’t be together again in this place to hear stories. But, God’s story simply doesn’t end. It goes on forever. And we are a part that hasn’t been written yet. But that is another story…”

The story for preschoolers this week is the Parable of the Deep Well. It is a Godly Play lesson with its roots in the Midrash Rabbah tradition. The parable tells of a very deep well in the middle of the desert. Most passer-bys have forgotten how to draw water from it altogether. One person comes along and takes his time. He looks around and sees the golden ropes strewn about and an old bucket. He ties them altogether and slowly draws out the life-giving water. When I wondered who this person might be, the children replied “God”, “Jesus”, “Mary.” I don’t know. Someone who takes time.

So heeding this lesson, this summer I will take a little time to slow down and get ready. In June, I will attend my final classes working toward a Certificate in the Spiritual Guidance of Children from General Theological Seminary. In September, I will begin working toward a Master of Divinity degree from Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary while on a hope-filled path to become a pastor in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (yes, you did see three denominations in two sentences).

A couple of weeks ago, I was gathered with a group of children near the altar in the middle of worship at children’s story time. In the middle of my story, a 2nd grade boy said out-loud, “You are becoming a pastor!” Now granted, the news had just been announced, so his mom probably told him. But the way he said it, gave me goosebumps. I wish it was that clear and obvious, that process of “becoming”!

So thus ends the newest beginning, the first post in my new blog site! Bookmark me. I promise to write down the part that is not yet written.

Turn! Turn! on YouTube

 
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Posted by on May 25, 2011 in From a Godly Play circle, General

 

Differences, Sesame Street and I think I was abducted by space aliens….

An alien abduction is about the only explanation I can muster regarding our recent family trip to Chicago.

We had it planned for awhile, but we didn’t fully work out the details until the last week or really when we got there. The purpose of our trip was to visit our friends, Carmen, Mike, Jesse and Elan, who have recently moved to Chicago from Austin, so Carmen could finish seminary. They live on Sesame Street. Not really, but they might as well. They only need a giant prehistoric furry elephant lumbering down the alley and a monster in the trashcan. The rest is the same. The stoop, the courtyard filled with people, the school just down the street with a US map on the concrete basketball court. It was really like falling into the Sesame Street set–and these kids from the wide-open Texas loved it.

The word “differences” was ringing in my ears. Sometimes a bit of a Godly Play story just hangs with me. Even if I’ve heard it before, I’ll latch onto to some new favorite part. This time it was from the “Falling Apart” lesson-recognizable to most as the Adam and Eve story. The lingering text is:

The differences also did something wonderful. Now Adam and Eve could take things apart and put them back together again. They could be creators, almost like God. They couldn’t make something out of nothing, but they could make something out of differences.

How liberating and beautiful it is to see differences as our raw material for our own creations. It was a wonderful thing to have ringing in my ears in Chicago–it embodies diversity AND it is one fertile, creative place.

We walked or took the train most everywhere-that was a huge difference, right off the bat from Austin. But, that was great because not only did we lighten our carbon footprint and exercise–but we could see people. As you passed, you’d look in their eyes and nod or say hello. You could appreciate the beautiful saxophone music under the bridge and notice how stylish comfortable shoes could be. I felt connected to be in the web of the city. We went to the most breathtaking monuments to creativity and differences: the Art Institute, the Field Museum and the Robie House–the details of which could be an entire post on its own. I’ve now added museums right there with nature as those contemplative places that you must be fully present in the now and might get a glimpse of God. We went to two worships, both the Blessing of the Animals, St. James Episcopal Cathedral and the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago’s Monday chapel. A well-placed bark is always a blessed juxtaposition to liturgy.

I know you’re curious about the space aliens. I don’t really remember the actual aliens, but still I argue that is the only explanation. It happened on Friday night. You see, our friend Carmen, not known for her singing or musical ability (I didn’t say bad–just not known) has joined a Gospel Choir. At this point insert the image of a spaceship dropping me, Carmen and Duke in the middle of a South Chicago Church Revival. Oh yes, it was cool. Different–absolutely. Creative–totally. It was an old Lutheran church, and probably many of the old folks had been baptized there as babies. Just about every part of it was different from the worship I am accustom to, and that made the things that were the same stick out. The hymnal in the pews were the same, and I knew all the words by heart to one of the songs–although I’ve not ever sung it so soulfully. The old folks were at the front and the youth at the back. The chicken and bundt cake at the pot luck was made with the same care. The only difference between my grandmother’s hand and one of their’s was the shade of the skin. It was a happy abduction.

For me, this trip became how I played with the story ringing in my ears, and it was a wonderful place to play. Chicago (or I wonder if any place that is not our home) can highlight our differences as points of creativity and growth. I wonder if differences ARE the parts of humanity that connect the many ways we are created in God’s image? I wonder if we are more like God because of our differences, than because of our likenesses?

 
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Posted by on October 10, 2009 in General, Uncategorized

 

The Last Time I was in New Orleans…

Today is one of those family anniversaries that go by with little fanfare. Yet we quietly remember this day as the day our understanding of HOPE changed. I wish all we needed to do to keep our children safe, was to hold them close. Parenting is as much (or more) about letting them go, then holding them tight.

The last time I was in New Orleans was also the last time the Evanagelical Lutheran Church in America youth gathered there. Seems like a weird place to send 50,000 high school youth. We have had a lot of water under the bridge since the River of Hope in July of 1997. It was before 911 and before Katrina. The River of Hope marked the very beginning of a chapter in my own life, too. As youth prepare to gather in New Orleans once again, I can’t help but feel a sense of joy and anticipation at what new hope will be found there in that city once again.

My husband, Duke and I were accompanying seventeen young people from our church, Trinity in Fort Worth. We had spent a lot of time with these people as their volunteer youth sponsors when they were in middle school. They were so different as high school youth—grown-up. We felt so lucky to get to be with them on this trip. We joked with our third chaperone, Cameron Brown, on the bus-ride south “We’re taking seventeen youth down there, we just need to bring seventeen back.” It was a joke, because we knew only good things were in store for us.

New Orleans is hot and humid in July. The easiest way to get around was to walk–close to 50,000 of us—walking. We walked from our hotel, near the water, up to the Super Dome and back again, morning and evening. We always walked behind and in front of someone wearing a River of Hope t-shirt—always hope, always walking. In the middle of the day, we walked around New Orleans, going on service treks or devo’s especially designed to let us see sights or serve the city. We ate great food.

Did I mention I was seven months pregnant? We were expecting our second daughter soon. We felt a little buoyant and invincible, at least that is how we felt when we signed up to go. But, even in July in New Orleans, I felt pretty buoyant. There is something wonderful about the second baby—we KNEW the immeasurable joy in store for us.

The only dilemma weighing on our mind in New Orleans was what to name this new baby. We picked a very unique name for our first daughter, Navy. The problem with such a perfectly wonderful and unique name for the first baby, is WHAT could we possibly name the second daughter? Somehow the Gathering highlighted this problem. 50,000 names out there, surely we would like one.

We had some rules, like we couldn’t pick a name from our own youth group—that would look like favoritism. It couldn’t start with “B.” (Duke could make up new rules on the fly.) It also seemed like the importance of names were constantly pointed out—many youth were baptized there in the Super Dome—claiming their new name, “child of God.” Walter Wangerin, Jr. was the preacher the last night. It was a story of Jesus on the cross calling out our name. 50,000 people yelled out their name and then silence. 50,000 youth silent. But no new name rang in our ears.

We kept walking beside, behind and ahead of all these youth, with River of Hope emblazoned on their backs. We wanted her to grow-up like them, all 50,000. They were invincible and brave, like youth should be, yet kind. Taxi cab drivers were amazed by them. Old blues-musicians in Preservation Hall had tears in their eyes as the 50,000 begged for multiple encores of “When the Saints Come Marching In.” They danced and sang to Lost and Found’s music. Why couldn’t we name her after them? All of them. And with the songs ringing in our ears, it all made sense. Her name was Hope.

We brought seventeen youth safely back to Fort Worth. Our seventeen went on to go into the Coast Guard, go to college, become Miss Texas, get married, become a pastor and many other wonderfully hopeful paths.

Hope was an easy baby. While still in the hospital, a nurse said “There is that baby with gold in her hair.” She was baptized on the first Sunday in Advent. She loved animals and Sunday School. She had a smile that could melt the coldest heart. She exuded Hope.

On Maundy Thursday, in the year 2000, Hope was sick. We skipped an out-of-town Easter trip. Finally, on Tuesday we took her in to the doctor, and (of course) she appeared well in his office. The doctor was old and wise, and did a CBC “just to be on the safe side.” He came back in the room and said, “I would get down on my knees and pray for this to not be true, but Hope has leukemia.”

Those words were like a hurricane bearing down on the coast, blowing sheet metal and nails. So our understanding of what it meant to hope, shifted.

The book Crazy Talk defines “Hope” as “the promise of a future worth the trouble it takes to get out of bed in the morning.” We knew Hope’s future—it was to grow up to be one of the 50,000. It was what got us up in the morning. It was what made us rewire our brain to understand pediatric oncology. It was what let us receive help, instead of give it.

One week before Thanksgiving, I woke up to hear my name yelled from a cross, or hell, or some terrible place. It was my husband yelling my name from Hope’s bedside. She died during the night. We woke up without Hope.

I think they came to the memorial service and sent cards–the seventeen we brought back from New Orleans. When I looked at them, somehow I could still recognize a thing called hope, even when it seemed the gravity that held Hope to the earth had failed.

Our world kept spinning. The cold of shock, thaws to the pain of grief. It is hard to salvage much from that time, except the air God created continued to fill our lungs. Then our shared world changed. The whole country was brought to its knees and shared grief that had become our “new normal” on September 11, 2001. Four days later our family welcomed a new daughter, Summer Grace.

As the storm surge of a hurricane flooded New Orleans, I cried. The Super Dome had been a sacred place for the 50,000, how could the hope have left even that place, too? They had scattered everywhere around the country, the 50,000. Could they not re-claim that holy ground and reach out to that broken community? Does the call for justice and kindness in youth, fade in adulthood?

Our world (mine and yours) has changed since the last time I was in New Orleans. But it is not a world of despair. To quote Johann von Staupitz speaking to Martin Luther, “Don’t you know that God commands you to hope?”

A new 50,000 (give or take) will gather in New Orleans in July 2009, and the new stories of hope will abound. New Orleans is a little step of independance–the kind of which leads young people beyond their status quo understanding and small home towns. They will change the city, help rebuild, bring tears to the eyes of tired, old men, sing, dance and walk. People will look to them and see hope.

 
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Posted by on April 25, 2009 in General