Traveling and Lessons Learned

Recently we returned from a six-thousand-mile journey, more or less. We were gone for exactly thirty days which qualifies it for the longest vacation I have ever taken. Well, it ties it. But those two vacations could not be more different.

A couple of years ago I decided to take my full vacation all at once. As a priest, I signed a letter of agreement with each of the congregations I served. It is an accepted policy by most congregations to grant a thirty-day vacation annually for a rector, which is the head of the congregation in an Episcopal Church. I never seemed to be able to take that much time, since there always seemed to be something going on that needed my presence. I decided that I would finally take what the congregation had agreed upon and planned to be away for thirty days. Then I unplugged. I deleted my email app on my phone and told the staff to not call me. What I did not know came back to bite me.

The congregation I was serving had recently replaced a long-term staff member with a person who had many gifts but was uniquely different from the person replaced. There had been several issues related to the new staff member before I left on vacation but it exploded during my absence. I had met with several key members who were influencers in the area of ministry of this staff member and assured them that I would fully address the issue after my return. It was two days before my vacation and I was too busy getting ready to leave to attend to it before I left.

As I look back on that time, I cannot remember where we went on vacation. That memory is shrouded by the range fire that was burning when I got back on the grid. In my twenty-seven years of ministry I had never seen such a situation go from fairly quiet to a full out frontal assault. I will not get into the specifics here but I do share this extensively in a book I am writing. Suffice it to say, there was poor leadership involved in both the staff member, key influencers and a particular board member. I have changed names to protect the innocent but it stands as one of the most peculiar lessons on leadership I have ever encountered.

The vacation provided rest but over the next year, I felt like I had burned my candle at both ends and needed those thirty days of vacation. Perhaps I should have taken them but even though the situation in the congregation was much different, I did not. There were many lessons in that but I will save those for the book as well.

This vacation was much different. There were challenges, particularly my truck having mechanical issues but when we returned home there were no emails that needed answered, no phone calls I needed to return and no one acting out. Clearly I preferred this vacation to the other.

Of course I am not leading a congregation any longer so I do not have to face issues related to that. But as I look back, I know there were many things that I could have done to have kept the conflict from exploding. But as I sit here now, I know that thirty day vacations needed to have been the norm not the exception. I cannot undo the past but I can certainly share the lessons learned.

Until next time,

DP

I Am Sorry Sancho

I just dropped off our little Cavalier King Charles Spaniel at the Vet. Today is a big day for him because he is getting “fixed.” Who came up with that word? I know it is better than “castrated” and too many people get neutered and spayed confused. So “fix” is an easy alternative.

Whatever you call it, it still makes me wince. Admit it, you shuddered when you read the first paragraph, didn’t you! Is this something that needs to be discussed, especially in polite company? Just get it done. It’s better for him. It’s also better for us, as I hope it will stop his wanderlust before it begins. Even so, I wish there were a better way.

But there isn’t. I trust our Vet because I have known her for almost twenty years. She says it’s not only good for him, it is the socially responsible thing to do. So why do I feel I need to apologize to Sancho?

While not many of us have had to face Sancho’s trial, if you live long enough you will face pain, suffering, and loss. Yesterday I mentioned to Julie how someone we just met has had a lot of loss in his life. I then quickly added, “just like the rest of the world.” Have you ever wondered what God thinks and feels about how difficult life is?

Through my journey of grief, I have a clearer view of the presence of God in the midst of my suffering. While there is much yet to learn, I do know that he is not disinterested or immune from our pain. God feels. God deeply grieves when we face the pain, suffering and loss. Even when sometimes such experiences can be redemptive, God suffers with us. Even when those losses are seemingly random, without purpose, God suffers.

We live in midst of a mystery called life. Many have tried to explain why suffering exists. How can a good and loving God allow such pain? I used to be pretty confident of my theology of suffering, called theodicy. Then I experienced the greatest loss of my life and my theology let me down. Now all I know is that it is a deep, ineffable mystery but that doesn’t mean God is absent from our pain. God is present. Fully, deeply and intimately. We may never know why we face all of the pain of this life. But we can know and experience a love that transcends the loss and upholds us in the midst of it.

When we dropped off Sancho this morning I felt compelled to apologize to him. I cannot explain to him why the pain he will experience will soon be replaced with chasing balls and jumping around like a little bunny but I can hold him, soothe him and let him know that I care. Where did I learn to do that? I learned it from a God that I trust because I have known God most of my life. When I faced great pain, God did not leave me to deal with it alone. God was and continues to be in the middle of the pain, walking with me and calling me to continue to trust God.

Until next time,

DP

The Craft of Writing

Since I began my project of writing a book, I have noticed that there are many people who are trying to do the same. One of my favorite books when I was growing up was called The First Man on the Moon. I read it over and over and dreamed what it would be like when I was the first man on the moon. I read about certain activities that the astronauts would practice, including being on a machine that turned round and round. I thought being an astronaut was in my future, but the problem was I got dizzy on a merry go round. At some level I knew my aspirations fell short of my abilities. I feel that way about writing a book. But aren’t all the cool kids doing it?

Evidently they are. I have noticed that both Google and Facebook have discovered my desire and the ads that fill both have to do with the newest, shiniest online course that claim to “help you become a best-selling author.” I admit that when one of my favorite non-fiction author recommended a seminar, I clicked on the ad.

The temptation to shell out the 25 dollars a month is palpable. It is the magic pill approach. Maybe there is gnostic, hidden approach that will help the neophyte author discover her voice and produce a product people will stand in line to read. Of course, if there were such a secret method, there will soon be thousands of best-selling authors.

Both writing and story-telling have always come easy to me. I like to both. I enjoy either going back to a time when something happened, or sharing a story that emerges in my imagination. I like the challenge of going beyond the details and discover the smells, taste the food and pay attention to the details that surround me as I experience the stories as they unfold. I find two-dimensional writing that simply describes “this happened and then this happened” to be unfulfilling. It’s like the difference between a five course meal and a cheeseburger, French fries and a Coke, even if it’s supersized.

I find it pretentious and empty to seek to become a “best-selling author.” I have no interest in that. That is not why I feel compelled to write, including this blog that you are reading. It is not that I don’t think I have anything to say. I do. But the purpose is not to sell books but to get the stories out of my head, on to paper, and in the process, sleep better at night. If they are helpful to others, then I will be pleased. But there are songs in my head that need expression. I write in order to find peace.

Sometimes songs are happy and bright and other times they are filled with pathos and darkness. My heart connects to both. I can put a song on repeat as it fells my heart with emotions. I do this with books as well. If it made a difference in my life or worldview or faith, I keep it. Pulling it out of my bookshelf and re-reading it in entirety or just small segments, can bring to life the original help that it brought me and sometimes teaches me something it did not the first time. That is my hope. Once written, I will not simply place it on a dusty bookshelf but bring it out on a regular basis to hear the song sung again. That’s why I write. Ultimately it is rather self-serving. I am not trying to sell my story, but simply to tell it.

So I will save my 25 dollars a month and just write. My first book is already finding expression and it feels good to get the song out of my heart and head and sing it.

Until next time,

DP

Waze: Can You Show Me the Ways?

I have an app on my IPhone call Waze. It is intended to rhyme with “ways” but I affectionately call it Waze-eee. It is an amazing little social network GPS app. It will warn you when there is construction ahead, a car stalled on the shoulder and even if there are policeman up ahead. But that is not why I like it.

Because it communicates with other users, when a route is found to be better, it will suggest another path. Driving in Houston, it would often take me off the interstate to travel local streets. It has been so effective that I no longer doubt that Waze will take care of me.

On our trip back from Texas last week, we were headed out of the Hill Country and traveling north to our ultimate destination. Left to my own devices, I would have taken the Interstate. But Waze had a different idea. Instead of going due east and going through Austin and heading north, I was directed to take a two lane road through a series of charming small towns. The beauty of the surrounding countryside was matched by the uniqueness of each town.

Have you ever noticed how difficult it is to tell where you are in the country when you travel on the Interstate? Austin looks like Topeka which looks like Denver. All of the typical chain restaurants, motels and gas stations dot the landscape. While it may be handy to find a familiar chain store to get gas or buy food, it is also rather mundane.

I did not experience that once I followed the directions that Waze suggested. To be sure there were several typical chain stores along the way but there were also many, many “mom and pop” stores. If I had followed my instincts, a fascinating drive would have been lost.

Isn’t that like life? I can get in such a hurry to get from point a to point b that I forget to look around at the beauty of life around me. If I am not mindful, I can miss the really important. Life is supposed to be lived, not rushed through. There is a beauty in the “mom and pop” stores along all of our journeys. The chain stores along the way may get us back on the road in a hurry but consider what may be lost in the urgency to arrive at the destination.

The journey is more important than the destination. Have you ever regretted not taking the time to notice all that is going on around you? Have you been in such a hurry that your focus ahead misses out on the beauty around you? Do you feel that sometime life is just mundane?

Wouldn’t it be great if we had a Waze app that would remind us that the typical route we tend to take can lead us to miss out on the depth and uniqueness of life? I cannot do anything about yesterday and tomorrow is not yet here. I have today. I do not have an app to listen to but I do have my heart, my soul and my life. I will not waste today but will pay attention to all the beauty around me. Perhaps I will do the same tomorrow. What about you?

Coincidence or God Incident?

I chronicled part of our journey to the Hill Country in my post yesterday. As I mentioned, the problems with Big Red and the catastrophes that included both self-inflicted issues and a problem with which I had nothing to do (really!) were not all that happened. If one pays close attention to life many lessons can be learned. I am often amazed how much God can use the normal details of life to reveal God’s love and mercy.

We arrived a day before the Casita Rally that led us to camp in the Hill Country. This was our first Rally and we did not know what to expect. A group of people met us at the campground and helped us register and find an adequate camping space. We jumped on a golf cart as someone showed us the various campsites, some were set aside for one Casita, others for two. There were places that were shaded and others that were not. How does one choose a site?

After driving through the campground, we decided that the first one we had seen seemed to be the best. What did it matter anyway? It was close to where all the action of the Rally would take place so we decided that it would work. Little did we know that God was breaking through the normal details of life to reveal God’s love and mercy.

Each morning a small group would gather to start the day with a short devotional and prayer. There is no better way to start a day than to pray and focus on God, so we showed up. Introductions were made, as each person shared a story about their life. We are not hesitant to share our narrative, especially our experience of grief since the death of Joseph, our son, on March 22, 2017. Indeed, since his death our lives have dramatically changed and we have seen God’s love, mercy and grace throughout the experience. From the beginning we have chosen to share our story since it may be helpful to others.

As stories were shared, we heard one man talk about his daughter who had died only a few months ago. His words were full of emotion as he recalled the suddenness of her death and their struggles of grief since then. The amazing thing to us was that his Casita was parked right next to ours. Over the next several days we had an opportunity to share stories, songs and poetry that had been helpful to them and to us. Was it a coincidence that we camped next to them? No, it was a God incident.

God is active in our lives. Even in the mundane. Getting to know this couple was helpful to us both. When the week came to an end and we were both leaving, we gathered together between our Casitas, held hands and prayed. We continue to hold them in our prayers and know that there was a purpose in what seemed a random occurrence.

God has not removed the pain of grief from us. Yet God has been active in leading us into both situations and new relationships with people who share a similar story. We have never walked alone through our grief. Family, friends and strangers have shared our pain and grief. It has never been a coincidence. It has always been a God incident.

Until next time,

DP

It’s Not Vacation, It’s Life

Julie and I just returned from two weeks in Texas. We were not just in Texas, we were in the Hill Country, just west and north of San Antonio. This area is arguably the most beautiful part of Texas, closely rivaling the Ozarks in Arkansas. The rolling hills and thick woods are different than the coastal plains we lived on for a decade. There is a sense of tranquility that is easily experienced in just a few hours while camping there. New experiences, meeting new people and readjusting to being away from one’s typical schedule feels like being on vacation. But I wasn’t. We were just doing life.

This trip had long been planned but we learned before we left that our grandson, who we have been caring for at least eight hours a day since November (Julie has been caring for him since he was three months old) had been accepted into the Montessori school earlier than expected. This news brought conflicting feelings but we realized it was a life-changing event. Our new freedom brought a new schedule. Since we were not expecting this, we had little time to prepare. With a mixture of sadness and joy, we decided to spend a little more time camping than originally planned. So we packed and headed out to the Hill Country.

Heading down the highway pulling our little Casita, I had much time to reflect. At first I could not shake the feeling that we were going on vacation. We had done this many times over the years but it was April not July. The weather was cool not hot. I wasn’t leaving the busy-ness of work, the challenges of the Church, I was not leaving anything. I was simply doing life.

Life is never without its challenges. What is life without a little drama? Over the years I had hoped, year and year that vacations would go smoothly. Rarely did they but I always wanted it to be different than my regular work life. Now as a freshly freed person from the tyranny of the urgent, what I call working a job from 8 to 5, I gradually came to the realization that I was not seeking relief from that. I was just doing life.

The drama did come. First it was Big Red, my truck. For some reason (which I later discovered) if the gas tank dipped below a half a tank, it would simply stop running. So the auto mechanic in me quickly devised a solution: fill up the tank before it got that low. This brilliant solution worked very well until we drove around Dallas. Now despite the amount of gas in the truck, it would inexplicably stop running. I had to pull off the interstate, wait a moment and then attempt to restart it. Fortunately, that worked. But every 90 minutes or so, I would have to do the same. Anxiety is never completely absent from life. Barreling down the highway, concerned about the truck, I could not help but hum an old song with new words: “hello anxiety my old friend, I’ve come to talk to you again.” I was doing life.

We stopped in a campground in Austin and enjoyed the weirdness of that Texas town. We found a quirky little place to knock the dust off our journey but I continued to keep an eye on Big Red. He didn’t disappoint me and the next morning, our trip (or is it our life) continued.

Most of problems I face are self-inflicted but not all of them. As I hooked up the Casita to Big Red I noticed that the hitch was not quite flush. Thinking that it would settle down to the place it needed to as soon as I began to tow, I moved on to other things. Finally, we jumped into Big Red and headed off to our camping destination, just a short two-hour drive away, hoping that the previous days struggles with the truck stalling would not become a bigger problem.

The first thing I noticed was that the engine light was now lit up brightly like an unwanted lamp turned on in the middle of the night. Was this a new level of problems or just more of the same? Whispering a quick “help me” prayer, we continued on through the edges of the Hill Country almost hoping against the odds that we would eventually arrive safely despite a nagging sense of doom.

Then it happened. Big Red was chugging along like the little engine that could, yet I had an uneasy sense that a final adventure awaited. We were four miles from our camp site, sitting comfortably at a street light that had been placed without a purpose in an unlikely location between small towns. I slowed to a stop as I watched the traffic light gradually cycle through yellow and red. Finally, it turned green and I moved my foot from the brake to the accelerator.

Then without warning I heard a loud metallic sound from behind the truck. I bolted out of my seat and ran back toward the commotion to find that the Casita had fallen off the hitch and now rested awkwardly on the asphalt. My inattention to detail had led to the final challenge or our journey. A self-inflicted injury that I now hoped would not lead to further damage.

I am not sure if God sent two angels to help or if they were real flesh and blood people who happened to witness the mishap but I had help almost immediately getting the Casita back to where it belonged. This time I made sure to get the hitch and ball connected securely and we arrived in one piece.

There was more to our time in Texas, including finding a very fair and honest truck repair garage in Bandera, but our journey was like life. Sometimes problems come out of nowhere and at other times there are people/events that cause the challenges, including onesself. Anxiety seems to be a natural companion to both. But anxiety does not have to have the last word if you can refocus and know that the only thing that is life and death, is, well, life and death.

So this is life and because it is there are lessons to be learned. My lessons through this journey are that while I cannot eliminate problems I can prepare better, slow down, pray, be expectant that God is always with me and find humor in almost anything. And lastly, I can make sure the hitch is flush.

Until next time,

DP

I am wasn’t born in Texas but I got there as fast as I could

We are headed back to Texas on Sunday! We are presently getting Quixote (our camping travel trailer) all packed and will head out after the weekend. It has been so cold in Kansas, I have been counting down the days when I can once again say, “It’s hot and humid!” As it turns out, it was 82 degrees today so I will have to find another reason to be excited.

Quixote is a sort of traveling office for me since I do a lot of writing while we camp. There is nothing like camping in the wilderness that brings out the inner Faulkner in me. Well I am not writing fiction, but writing non-fiction still demands creativity. I have found that I cannot just sit and write on demand. I have to get my mind and soul to a place where I can go beyond the superficial and connect to an inner voice that demands to be heard.

I share this because I am close to being able to devote myself completely to writing. Many of asked me why I want to do this and what it is that I am writing about. I have even had a few people suggest they are excited to read my first book. I think they just want a free copy.

Having been a very active preacher for twenty-seven years has given me much to write on but that is not what I am going to do first. Joseph was a writer too. In his short life he traveled much more than I ever have and fortunately kept journals. I have those journals and plan on giving his voice an opportunity to be heard. I may have to change my approach depending on what he says but my hope is to stay true to his reflections and respond to what he experienced. Given his love of Ki Akido and my life long vocation in the Church, alternative world views could emerge. My prayer is to not water down his thoughts and no matter how raw they may be, maintain an integrity to them. Also throughout the book I will periodically share the depth of grief that I have experienced in the context of both of our experiences.. I am looking forward to how the project unfolds.

In the meantime, we head back to Texas for two weeks. There is much in which to look forward and just being there will be cathartic. Who knows, the surroundings are likely to spur a lot of writing.

Until next time,

DP

Is the Local Church the Hope of the World?

I have been away from church leadership since November of last year and I have found the time away to be an important time of reconnection, reflection, renewal and re-forming. When I began my sabbatical I was not sure what to expect. I just needed to get away. I needed space to breathe and grieve and pray and think. I needed to reconnect with my heart. I had grown weary with expectations and criticisms and the not always silent commentary about how long it would take before I “got over my grief.” As I look back on the months leading up to the sabbatical, I am pleased that I did not do anything inappropriate to a couple of people who kept pushing and prodding, checking on how many times I mentioned Joseph (my deceased son) in a sermon or how many times I broke down in a class that I taught. To be fair, some of my perceptions were simply that, perceptions. But not all of them. I had grown weary.

Three months away was invigorating and I lost my weariness. Unexpectedly, though, a new perspective about the church and ministry began to emerge. It did not happen immediately but rather slowly, over time. I would see something, read something, hear a conversation or simply sit alone in my thoughts and prayers and something would click inside my heart. This was not anything revolutionary and some of it lead me to confess that if I had been quieter as I led in the church I would have discovered much of this new perspective years ago.

One of my favorite quotes, the kind of thing one puts on social media, for several years is that “the local church is the hope of the world.” There seems to be something profound about seeing the local expression of the Church as the place of mission and the place where lives are changed. Mission does happen and lives are changed, not by the denomination but where the mission ought to happen, at the local level. I still believe that but I know only too well that things get in the way of that happening more often. Let me give you an example.

Recently I had a conversation with someone who is a regular church-goer for most of his life. He was expressing his frustration with his local pastor who, every summer, would berate his congregation for being gone for most of the summer. He told me that he liked to go to the lake, loved vacations and felt a deep need to get away. He looked at me and said “what’s wrong with that?” Without thinking, I told him there was nothing wrong with vacations and getting away from the regular pattern of life for much needed vacations (re-creation). But I said something else, without reflecting on it for more than a couple of moments. I then said “do you want to know a deep secret that most pastors won’t admit?” He pulled his chair closer to mine and said “Yes!” I then said “really most pastors don’t care if you are on vacation or not. They are just worried that you will forget your pledge while you are gone.” I could have added “they also hate that you’re gone, not because you won’t do ministry but that it will have an impact on average Sunday attendance.” Ouch.

In the movie Jerry Maguire, the phrase “show me the money” was used by an athlete who was encouraging his agent to execute a better contract with his sports team. That same phrase could be used by those in leadership positions in the church. As I thought about this I felt a catch in my spirit because my criticism was directed toward me. In the church, money should not be the significant concern of the leadership but often it is the sole concern. When one looks back at the Church that emerged from Pentecost, budgets and capital campaigns and salaries and mortgages are never mentioned. Why? Because ministry is not about those things. It should never be “show me the money” but rather, “show me the cross.”

It may seem disingenuous to say such things now that I am not responsible for budgets and salaries and mortgages and so on. Perhaps it is but as these months away from such concerns has gone on, I am surprised and blessed to have been given the opportunity to see the errors in the way in which my time and energy were devoted. Much of my time was spent dealing with the financial issues because that was the hand I was dealt. When mortgage payments are the largest line item on a budget, it is a challenge to not make finances a top priority. The concern of many, shared freely and openly with me, had nothing to do with being an image bearer of Christ.

On this side of the altar, I now see that I wasted that time and energy. Perhaps I would not have lasted as long as I did had I not but what a blessing it would have been to have spent all that energy on living like those first Christians did and place the cross as the sole context of ministry. This caused me to wonder if the effectiveness of ministry is directly related to the energy spent in building buildings instead of people. Is the local church truly the hope of the world? It could be but often is not. Because it is all about the money.

There is a local church a couple of miles from my house that is in the process of finishing a new building. As I was driving by recently I wondered how much the Kingdom of God will make a difference in the world because of the new and shiny structure. I also wondered if the money raised could be funneled into helping the hungry, the thirsty, the naked and those in prison. Have I become naïve? No. I simply have seen the waste. What a tragedy it is.

Ash Wednesday

The season of Lent is almost upon us and will officially begin tomorrow, on Ash Wednesday. “Remember that you are dust and to dust you shall return,” is the phrase that will be used countless times as ashes are place on the penitents’ foreheads. The forty days are a time of self-reflection, prayer, the study of God’s word and coming to terms with how much we get wrong.

Increasingly I have come to terms with where much of what passes for Christianity in our country is missing the mark. Recently a preacher reminded me that nowhere in the Bible is there found a “sinner’s prayer.” That is not only true but most Christians I know would not know that. Christian piety for many is simply getting one’s self right with God so that one can go to heaven. How one lives one’s life is not a as significant as getting the salvation box checked. The implication of such theology is profound.

NT Wright, the great Anglican Biblical scholar, points out that the vocation of a Christian is NOT to be morally superior than others. When that is the object of a Christian life, then it is easy to sit on the sidelines and point out the moral inadequacies of others. Our task isn’t to do “better than others” and thereby earning one’s away into heaven. Carried to a logical end, this attitude leads to a disengagement with the world. Haven’t you seen this in the way that Global Climate change has been summarily dismissed by many evangelicals? Haven’t you seen this in the way that some evangelical Christians claim to be “pro-life” but rail against any social program that would protect the health of children or provide a way out of the systemic cycle of poverty? Pro-life, in my opinion, is both against abortion but also in favor of supporting the most innocent and vulnerable after they arrive from the womb. The logical inconsistency of many makes me scratch my head.

Instead, the vocation of a Christian is to be an “image bearer of Christ” in the world (whatever community in which you are a part). Matthew 25:31ff makes it clear that Jesus demands that we engage with the physical needs of our world. When we do, we have ministered to him. When we don’t we have refused to minister to him. To be the image bearer of Christ in the world is to take Jesus heart, concern and grief over the suffering all around us, into the very core of such suffering.

I am not sure I always got this. It’s too demanding. But it’s very biblical. The other day I watched a new series on Netflix hosted by David Letterman. The series is called “My Next Guest,” and I watched and listened to Letterman interview George Clooney. Clooney and his wife Amal have been actively involved in humanitarian concerns, even though they don’t need to. Their involvement is more that photo ops and they, whether or not they know it, are living into the vocation where all Christians are called. But I suspect many “evangelical” (I put the word in quotes because there is nothing evangelical about it) Christians would reject them as Hollywood liberals with some sort of secular agenda. For me, I found myself praying for forgiveness that I haven’t engaged the world as I have been called.

So this Ash Wednesday, I will make my confession that I am “dust and to dust I shall return.” But I will also pray that I have been deaf to my call to enter into the suffering of this world as Jesus has called me. It’s challenging but if we listen carefully and pray the solemn collects thoughtfully, we have no other option.

Reflections on a Two Week Retirement

One day I may look back on this blog entry with a twinkle in my eye and a sense of how naïve I once was. I have only been retired since February 1 but I have been surprised by what I miss. There is a long list of what I don’t miss but as I started to list those things/people I decided that might hurt someone’s feelings. So I erased that list and will focus on a couple of things that remain the same and what I miss the most.

Monday mornings will always be Monday mornings, even if there is not a string of meetings to attend. Just getting back into the weekly grind is difficult whether or not one is working for a paycheck. There are always problematic people to deal with, either at work, online, in the neighborhood or even at the grocery store. Those things do not go away. I did not expect them to but at some level I thought it would be a bit different.

As many of you know, Julie and I are watching our Grandson while the calendar marches toward the time he goes to pre-school. Many of our days begin at 8 am, others at 10 am and then the occasional noon start. Since it’s been so cold, we usually stay at our daughter’s house all day, making the day seem so much like going to work. Of course we love him and are happy to be such a big help but one day does seem the same as the past one.

So with these similarities, what is it that I miss? Community is the bearer of Christ’s image in this world. It is in community where we struggle and soar, sometime at the same time. God is not experienced “out-there.” God is found both within, and without. God is in us. This means if I am to have a clear experience of God, I will discover God in the other. This is not only significant and meaningful, it is crucial to understand. Some theological bents will claim a rather gnostic sense of God. God “speaks to me” and tells me about you. God “told me” we should do this or that. I have seen this theological error too many times and find it to be both dangerous and deceiving. God is experienced within community. With all the messiness of people doing life together; in the midst of hurt feelings and agendas; God is there. If you have ever been part of a Church community you know only too well how difficult it can be. Yet it is the very place God is discovered. I suppose that’s the attraction of going it alone and hoping God can just reside in one’s own pocket. It would be cleaner, easier and without challenge. But God is in the challenge.

That is what I miss. I miss the community. I have a new one emerging but I was instrumental in shaping the last one. God only knows we were not perfect. I could go back and start listing the issues but as I mentioned, there is no real purpose in that. Even among the most problematic people and the most outrageously silly concern, God was there. I hated meetings but God was there. I shook my head at lengthy and critical emails, but God was there. Even in budget meetings, God was there.

God is still with me. My community is much smaller now. But my God is not smaller. My task is to remember that because God became flesh, humanity has changed. We all have been created with the Imago Dei. But because of the Incarnation, God becoming flesh, not only do we look around to see the Image of God, but we can now look within and without and find an incarnational community where God loves, shares and calls us all to love others as we are being loved.

What about you? Do you find God in community?