Revisiting My Mentors: #4 Joe Mitchell

As I revisit this about a year and a half after I wrote it I think Joe and I have emailed once or twice since then.  My life doesn’t seem much different.  My relationship with him probably prepared me – as much as anyone – for this kind of contingency 🙂

I put in a picture of a blob because Joe and I once crawled into one together to pull out (and then clean) the bladder.  Very hot, very sticky experience.

Joe is an old friend and came alongside me at a rough time in my life.  Almost no part of our relationship reflected the rough patch, but I was thankful for his steadiness.

I learned about hard work power-spraying two tennis courts and a 100 yard track with Joe in the Summer of 1999.

Here is what I remember about Joe (who is, I think, 1 or 2 years old than me). When we worked together he would typically say, “It’ll be alright.” To new ideas mostly. Meaning, ‘I’m tired, let’s think of a better and more efficient way of doing this… and if we don’t I will have rested for five minutes on my rock rake.’ Joe’s answer, “It’ll be alright.” Means: we have man-power behind us, let’s just finish the job. Sometimes he would say, “It’ll probably be alright.” If you ever hear me say this, what I have actually just said is, “the process is actually fine and I think we just need to finish it.” What I learned from Joe here was to just keep working. I still don’t always do this, I wasn’t exactly mentored in a ‘roll up your sleeves’ kind of house; but I am a lot better since working with Joe.

Joe and I aren’t similar. But, for a few years we would talk in March about basketball, and if I called him now and asked about the Lakers (his team), we would have a nice talk. He would then indulge me in regards to the Celtics (my team).

Joe played a bit of point guard when we had some time for bball at camp. We liked playing together. Once, I stepped back and missed a 3 and he said, “You were trying to step back like Reggie (Miller).” A few years later I did it successfully against a league team, and thought of what he said. He is a good player, uses the backboard well and tends to forget that he can score pretty well.

What I remember from playing basketball with him was that if I did something dumb or missed a layup he would get on my case, but not in the irritating way. I knew he just wanted to win, he knew I didn’t want to miss, but he provided that strange kind of man-encouragement that sounds discouraging, but is really just us understanding language backwards or something. Kind of like when I was studying for my ordination exams and Rick kept telling me he would kick my ass if I didn’t pass them. It was encouraging.

But, under Joe I learned about hard work, enjoyed some basketball, and forever adopted a phrase that helps me to keep working at stuff, “probably be alright…”

Revisiting My Mentors #3.5: Steve Patton and 405 Kentucky

I got a tweet from an old friend who was chagrined because he wasn’t listed as one of my mentors.  Fixed.  Since this is the revision of an old series I will give him the designation 3.5

My first memory was of Steve and Tim Merello listening to a CD of potential serenade songs for Sig Eps (My fraternity).  I won’t try to recreate the moment, if he doesn’t remember it and I ‘do’ there might be an argument that I would lose.

I think often of my years living in the Sig Ep House (3.5 years).  I roomed with 4 different guys, 4 different rooms.  I didn’t drink or smoke while I was there.  If I could go back I would smoke a lot.  And drink some.  As a 19 year old fraternity guy I didn’t drink.  As a 34 year old pastor I probably love beer above all beverages not named coffee.  What in the world?

How did living with those men mentor me?  I will probably have to think about this for awhile, but I love (d) being a Sig Ep, loved living there, was prideful when Christians thought it was weird, and maybe even more so when professors did.

Frankly, I just don’t know who I would be if I hadn’t lived there.  Weak right?  I hope I learned to be less judgmental (in the bad way: ontologically).  I know I had fun and that it was good for me socially and academically.  I feel like I hung out a medium amount.  If I could do it over again I would hang out more.  That’s about all I know for sure.

There is the time I wore an Elvis costume for a skit (from Honeymoon in Vegas)…

There were all the times I was at the Diner after 2:00 AM eating a Stretch…

There was almost unanimous unconditional respect for my lifestyle choices…

There was certainly grace for the many many stupid things I did while in college…

There were the times that I had 8 other people in my 2 door MX-6…  It was a 5 speed…  Shifting was sometimes a challenge.

I know I loved it.

 

Revisiting My Mentors #3: Andre Dubus

“Meditations from a Movable Chair” is my favorite book and the first book I would take with me to the infamous desert isle of icebreaking games. It is a book of essays by Andre Dubus.

Some of his short stories have been made into movies. Namely: “In the Bedroom” (Story is called “The Killings”), and “We don’t live here anymore” (book is good, but the 2 companion novellas make it fantastic).  Quick Note: his works are very sexual; I recommend them, I just recommend them with that caveat.

Dubus writes everyday life as a sacrament.  He treats the mundane as though it were Holy.  He did this before his accident and after

There are sub-themes in hiswork: running, sex, masculinity, marriage, raising children, coming-of-age, etc. But, I think the two things I ‘learned’ from Andre Dubus were to enjoy literature again; just in and of itself to enjoy reading.

Dubus is the first author I read after having Cancer in 2009. He is who I pick up if my only goal is relaxation.

A sacrament is simply a grace or gift in this context. Running, having a beer, a smoke, a conversation, sex, a good book, music – these are good gifts.  Peter Devries says it this way, “The greatest gift known to man is the recovery of the commonplace: coffee in the morning and whiskey in the evening without fear.”

Andre recovered my love of reading, and reminds me that there are good gifts everywhere.

Revisiting my Mentors #2: How to Mow the Grass by My Neighbors

I am revisiting this Blog Series I did about a year and a half ago because I liked doing it.  I am not just re-posting, I am re-reading, revising, and hopefully – re learning how the LORD pursued me through other people.

When I first moved to STL I rented a little house, and it had a nice corner lot. As the Spring rolled around I let the grass get a bit long and was instructed by my landlord to mow it. So, I mowed, didn’t bag, and shot a lot of the grass into the street.

Across the street from me lived two older men – both retired, Dave and Dale. They came over.  They began firm, and then were gentle – I have no idea if I had anything to do with this, or if is just ‘how they are’. Dave and Dale explained that it was unacceptable to have grass in the street: ‘This is not how you mow, keep up your yard, or be a neighbor’. But, if I wanted to borrow Dave’s blower to put the grass back in my yard I was welcome to it. Dave was clear that he was not offering to move it for me (Dave was probably 70)! They seemed to figure out that I did not understand lawns and neighbors – either instinctively or through previous mentoring.

I remember being annoyed. I had better things to do, I was trying to build a youth ministry, etc. But, I also remember using his blower. Then, going over to borrow some clamps for a table I was making; then having a Nat Light with him in his yard one day (Dave drank Nat Light). I only lived there for about a year and a half, but I still see Dave’s old work van tooling around sometimes.

It was a good, light lesson – on being a man, taking care of one’s yard, listening to older men, and general neighborliness.

 

Revisiting My Mentors: #1 – Kris Cooper

Over a year ago I wrote a series of blog posts: and the first one I wrote was about Kris Cooper (not the actor, or singer, the one that works for Kanakuk).

I am revisiting it for myself, but also enjoyed blogging about it.

Kris Cooper is my answer to the question of ‘who is your hero?’.

I attended Kanakuk Kamps from 1985-1991, and then I worked for him from 1996-2001 as a Counselor.

In 1996 I turned in my application at least 2 months late, without references. I was accepted – this is grace; especially if you know how difficult it is to work for Kanakuk.

I was a total smart ass that first summer and therefore had the unenviable job of ‘runner’ t the track meet. You run 2 sprints for every race there is (once there, once back). There are 9 50′s and 9 100′s. It was a good work out. Coops told me I would be the runner, made sure I understood it was kind of voted on, but he didn’t say it with animosity or even joking in his voice and the amount of respect he commands dictated that the other men were sort of humbled by his announcing it to me – they wanted it, but he could have vetoed it at any point. Men have to deal with men, we have to learn lessons, etc. He served me well in that moment: gracious, but without pretense.

Next year and the year after I was not challenged or humbled by life or my assignments at camp. In 1999 all of that changed – I was asked to be an ‘Uncle’ which means you show up for about 10 days, get paid 120 bucks, and work very hard. I was convicted of some sin at the time and felt I should tell him about it – grace was his response.  In retrospect I think the fact that I was so upset is most of that equation.  I learned about hard work. I repeatedly lost at a game centered around work gloves and not losing them. When I say repeatedly I mean: I lost my gloves five times. Every time you lose them you have to draw a penalty from the hat (someone steals them really… mine even were taken by another camp about a mile away, that is how bad I was at the glove game).

It did not occur to me to attempt to renege on my penalties.  I had to wear a Cape for 10 days.  I had to sleep in a pup tent one evening. Very few know this, but at 6:00 AM the next morning I took my pillow up to a Chapel and got exactly 1 hour of non-dew sleep. I wore 8 Russian Dancing outfits in one day.  And, I had to wear a climbing harness all of another day.

Apparently, it meant a lot that I did my best to keep the penalties.

It was a hard summer, in the way that college students think is hard. At the end of the summer I was offered a strange position called ‘trip director’. I told the guy that I would do it if he needed me. That day I learned that people don’t ask for you to do a job they don’t need you to do. Being a trip director was a blast, it was very hard work in some senses.

What does this have to do with Kris Cooper, why he is my hero, and what I learned from him about masculinity? If he doesn’t believe in me I don’t have this job for 6 years.  Over time I learned to follow through, to finish a job, to handle a chain saw – to be a man.

The next year was much harder. My dad and step-mom began divorcing, I was again in a bad relationship, I was very disoriented and lonely. I rode back from a campsite with Coops and talked about where I was.  Again, his response was grace. It was a lonely Summer. I stole a parking sign for reasons that do not concern you – it was VERY funny to my fellow trip men, and I think Coops thought it was funny too. He was often willing to bend the rules a bit, or laugh with us when we bent them. The first day of Uncle Week I got to follow Coops around and drag away trees he cut down with his chain saw. Joe White was cutting too, but I felt like I was following Coops. It was a good day, and not just because it seemed anecdotal :) At the end of the day he asked one of our work crew directors if anyone stood out as a hard worker; the guy told him I was the first one who volunteered to hold re-bar while it was sledged into what would later become a pool. He asked about this because there was an “uncle of the day” thing. We decided to forego the award for that day, but Coops later told me that that was what the guy said. I think what is important here is that he just told me; didn’t try to pat me on the back with extra words or adverbs or something. He just wanted me to know what this man said, and let it stand as encouragement from one man to another. Here is what I heard from a man I respect, “Good work today.”

2001 was my last Summer working at Kanakuk. I remember being sad coming into the Summer – it had been another difficult year, much worse circumstances than the year before in regards to my family. I remember being so tired that the thought of good hard, uncle-week-like-work sounded amazing…  And, it was.

I remember a few things about Coops from this Summer. At the end of ‘Uncle Week’ girls arrive. We have had our guy time, and sometimes think the arrival of the girls is intrusive. Its dumb I know – I mean, I married one of these girls. Anyway, Coops was talking to us about them arriving, encouraging in welcoming them. I don’t know if you have caught on to this, or if I have mentioned it – he isn’t a big talker. He will talk, but isn’t one for speeches. So, he is encouraging us. I think I was the first to dissent, but it doesn’t matter really, we started being 22 year old guys and whining about them ruining our guy time. He gave us a second, and then, without looking up, repeated himself about the importance of encouraging them. Same tone of voice, same words. I have NEVER seen a group of stupid young men quiet down so fast and look so guilt-stricken. We were mortified that our hero and friend had to repeat himself because we were joking around. He commands that kind of respect. I don’t think our guilt lasted either – because we knew he wasn’t mad. We just knew we needed to change the way we were thinking about the girls coming; we changed immediately.

I remember a few other stories from my last summer – of him coming alongside some of the most obnoxious people I knew, of fighting for men’s hearts when they did incredibly dumb things.  The last summer I worked at camp I stopped being a director and went back to being a ‘regular’ counselor. There were a lot of reasons for this, but essentially I wanted to. One night we were playing a very large and elaborate game of Capture the Flag, and about 6 minutes into it I realized my cabin only had defensive capabilities in the game.  As Marco said, “Unnacceptable”.  I decided to use some fire extinguishers I in defense of my 13 year old boys – and because I was tired of these rules that enabled me to get hit by water balloons every four minutes.

I also played “Pour Some Sugar on me” in a skit… that was just dumb, this is a conservative, evangelical camp!

Anyway, back to the extinguishers: the ‘Safety Officer’ wrote me a ticket for taking my cabin up a slide that night (you’re supposed to go down, as we tell Caroline). I asked him about the Extinguishers and he said I would have to talk to Coops. This delighted me because 1 – it was funny, 2 – I knew Coops well enough to have some idea of how this would go. Maybe a week later I asked him if we needed to talk about it. He said, “What do you think that I think?” I said, “I think you would have done something similar in my shoes.” He said, “That’s probably right…” Or something like that.  That was it.  That was our conversation.

It has been a few years since I have seen Kris Cooper. I follow his oldest son on Twitter. I assume word has gotten back to him that I am a pastor, I know some of his staff knew I was sick as few years ago. He has 6 children and I learned from him as a father and a husband. He and his wife have a special whistle if they see each other but are too far away to chat – its awesome. He was on a panel once on marriage, and the only thing I remember him saying when someone forced the mic on him was, “Give… give.. give…” then he handed the mic to the girl next to him. Then, he took it back and said, “And give”.

I remember that he said that not because the words were powerful or because I agree (irrelevant); I remember that he said that because of who he is.

I used to say that Kris Cooper lives the Gospel that the Apostle Paul wrote about. I think that that is still true. But, I think what actually happened is that I grew up and became a man under Kris Cooper’s watch. I can talk about the Bible, funny stories, or how he is with his kids for many more pages (stories keep coming to mind). But, I’m not going to. I’m just going to say one more thing: we aren’t close. We weren’t close when I worked there.  But, I still grew up and became a man under his watch. I doubt he will read this, but if anyone at Kamp does read it – tell him I said thanks.

Strawberry Applesauce

I spoke last week at a College Thing I love doing called the Source.

They are talking about the Great Commission, and I wanted to try to encourage them about the mundane beauty of God’s other commands (which are, incidentally, referenced in the Great Commission.

Right before I left to go speak I went on a very short walk with Caroline and Julia.

It was short for two reasons: one, we started at 7:04PM and their bedtime is around 7:15.  Two, right after Caroline told me the sky looked like Strawberry Applesause (you can judge), Julia ate a leaf and then threw it up.  Then made herself throw up the rest of her popsicle.  Then she was fine.

I desperately need God to save me from death – through his Son Jesus as a propitiation for my sins.  I also need the passion and excitement of the Great Commission – GO!  And, I need a savior who also walks with me moment by moment.  When we eat leaves and actually pay attention to a sunset.

Books

Yesterday I went to the local bookstore and browsed for awhile.

Do I like books or the idea of books?

I found myself talking to the clerk about Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time.  I have been reading that series since 1996 and was excited to hear another one is coming out in October.  A good friend and I were talking about the book/graphic novel I am Legend.  She started being difficult so I threatened to tell her the ending.  🙂  The trippiest thing about reading that book was that I didn’t know it ended (it was in a compilation) so when the doll started stabbing the girl I was so confused.  🙂

On my shelf at work are: Mudhouse Sabbath, 3 Philosophies of Life, Christianity for Modern Pagans, With Christ in the School of Prayer, and Surprised by Hope.  I am in the middle of all of them – literally, more than 100 pages in, more than 100 to go…

On the Kindle App: Abba’s Child (halfway through and read it before), King’s Cross (Halfway – almost exactly).

Next to my bed is Libra

When it comes out I would really like to read John Eldredge’s new book.

Short Stories are my favorite genre and I am reading exactly zero of those right now.  Joyce Carol Oates was recently suggested.

I just purchased Infinite Jest because I want to believe I am smart enough to read David Foster Wallace.  And, I need another book that will take me a long time to get through.  Les Miserables took me two years (while in college), and Underworld (not the vampires…  Delillo again) took about 6 months.  Which would have been 2 years if I had been in school.

I have read everything (literally) by my favorite author, Andre Dubus.  I think I have read all of Raymond Carver‘s stories (although I haven’t seen the W Farell movie yet), and even read the longer versions thanks to my local library.

Just finished The Mystery of Marriage by Mike Mason.  It was amazing, and funny, realistic about marriage but always speaking of it sacramentally.  I am not yet better at being married though.

In my bag is Life Together by Bonhoeffer.  104/120 there – so almost home.

I love books, but I rarely read for over 20-30 minutes at a time.  Jonathan Franzen is an exception there – his books are hard for me to put down.  Haven’t read 27th city yet, but it is on the shelf.

I love books.  But, I might love the idea of them more than the actual books…

Come here and let me fix you (and me)

Psalm 133:1
Behold, how good and pleasant it is
when brothers dwell in unity!
It is like the precious oil on the head,
running down on the beard,
on the beard of Aaron,
running down on the collar of his robes!
It is like the dew of Hermon,
which falls on the mountains of Zion!
For there the LORD has commanded the blessing,
life forevermore.
(Psalm 133 ESV)

“So between the death of Christ and the Last Day it is only by a gracious anticipation of the last things that Christians are privileged to live in visible fellowship with other Christians.”  (Matt. 24:31, John 11:52, Zech. 10:8,9, Deut. 28:25)  (18)

The physical presence of other Christians is a source of incomparable joy and strength to the believer.  (19)  II Tim. 1:4, I Thess. 3:10, II John 12)

It is grace, nothing but grace that we are allowed to live in community with other Christians.  (20)

He needs his brother as a bearer and proclaimer of the divine word of salvation.  He needs his brother solely because of Jesus Christ.  The Christ in his own heart is weaker than the Christ in the word of his brother; his own heart is uncertain, his brother’s is sure…  The community of Christians springs from the Biblical message of justification through grace alone – this is the basis of the longing of Christians for one another.  (23)

The more genuine and the deeper our community becomes, the more will everything else between us recede, the more clearly and purely will Jesus Christ and his word become the one and only thing that is vital between us.  We have one another only through Christ, but through Christ we do have one another, wholly, and for all eternity.  That dismisses once and for all every clamorous desire for something more.  One who wants more than wha tChrist has established does not want Christian Brotherhood.  He is looking for some extraordinary social experience which he has not found elsewhere; he is bringing muddled and impure desires into Christian brotherhood.  Just at this point Christian Brotherhood is threatened most often at the very start by the greatest danger of all, the danger of being poisoned at its root, the danger of confusing Christian Brotherhood with some wishful idea of religious fellowship, or confounding the natural desire of the devout heart for community with the spiritual reality of Christian Brotherhood.  In Christian Brotherhood is not an ideal, but a divine reality.  Second, that Christian Brotherhood is a spiritual and not a psychic reality.

Innumerable times a whole Christian Community has broken down because it sprung from a wish dream.  (26)

Only that fellowship which faces such disillusionment, with all its unhappy and ugly aspects, begins to be what it should be in God’s sight, begins to grasp in faith the promise given to it.  The sooner this shock of disillusionment comes to an individual and to a community the better for both.

He who loves his dream of a community more than the Christian community itself becomes a destroyer of the latter, even though his personal intentions may be ever so honest and earnest and sacrificial.  (27)

We thank God for what he has done for us.  We thank God for giving us brethren who live by his call, by his forgiveness and his promise.  We do not complain of what God does and does not give us; we rather thank God for what he does give us daily.  (28)

Fixed?

Fixed. Thanks Diet

Be less entitled.  Okay I will.  🙂  This post was for me and for you…  Most of the Above was written by Dietrich Bonhoeffer (and God: Psalm 133)

Admiral Adama and Boasting

I posted a few days ago and left something out of the blog that was very much in my sermon.

You have skills, gifts, intelligence, and stories that will bless, love, and benefit the world. Growing up I heard this kind of sermon in a weak way – “Don’t Brag…  dummy…  let us pray.”  The solid implication from Paul is: LOVE, and boasting has no part on that love.  But, strength, your gifts, etc.  They need to be expressed, given to your neighbors, offered.

My favorite illustration was the Admiral Adama one from Battlestar Galactica.  He does not brag or boast – if he tells a story or explains himself (which he does not always do when giving orders) it is out of love.  Sometimes that love is tough, sometimes misguided, but it is not boastful.  That doesn’t mean it isn’t strong.  He is a strong man, a strong leader – flawed, with limits and blind spots – but strong.  And the way he loves, and tells stories, and expresses his gifts on behalf of the fleet – it not boastful.  It is a stronger love for that reason.

So say we all?  So say we all.

 

Prepare yourself for the best blog ever

Partial passage for my sermon “Love does not Boast”

I.  Intro: a nice basketball story or two…  one where I “Back up like Reggie”

II.  Why we Boast: as far as I can tell it is a mixture of fear, a desire to be part of something bigger (and greater) than ourselves (i.e. college football), and a desire for applause.  Pride often is near boasting in the Bible, but I think pride is often the presentation and is more like a bridge between those deeper desires and the sin of “vaulting oneself up” (My translation of the Greek).  None of these are sin, but they lead to sin and certainly point out our need for the Gospel.  Also, this is a robust defintion by description of love…  it is not weak.  not boasting implies actual strength.  Here I actually used a Battlestar Gallactica Reference.  So say we all?  SO SAY WE ALL!

III.  How we Boast: Stories, Fixing, Not Listening, Body Language, Eyebrows (let’s be honest, out eyebrows often call people idiots right?).  None of these things are sin by themselves – and those of us who want to be heard better…  Do we listen to the insight of the one giving advice?  Not heeding good advice is a form of boasting. We Boast…

IV.  The Gospel frees us from needing to boast, and into a relationship without fear, a mission greater than any other (as I’m typing I realize I didn’t hit that as hard as I wanted to), and an internal applause that actually delivers.

V.  Pay attention to the way you tell stories, listen, give advice…  then, believe the Gospel of Jesus more deeply and watch your need to boast slow down and go away.  This is the training grace of titus 2.

Thoughts?  Discuss…

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