Disclaimer:
I’m not a Democrat.
I’m not a Republican, either.
In college frat terms I’m a GDI – (PG version: Gosh Darn Independent)
Another Disclaimer:
I believe people have the right to bear arms.
I also believe some people shouldn’t be allowed to bear arms.
I believe all have the right to happiness perhaps through childbearing.
I also believe that some people shouldn’t bear children. Honey Boo Boo? *eye roll*
For the last 15 days I’ve had to reconcile the best laid plans and Murphy’s Law about those same plans. And, admittedly, it sucks. I read an article the other day about a woman who thought having kids was the worst mistake she’d ever made. She said, “Like parasites, they took from me and they didn’t give back”. My inner voice does not resonate with this tackless outburst from this parent. Matter of fact, my love for my little sickling has grown exponentially (geometrically – just for Jeff) over these past two weeks, like I’ve never imagined it could. The feeling I have for my near 19-week old daughter-with-the-feeding-tube-but-getting-better-slowly far outweighs the meaning of a simple faaaantastic.
Yet I am disappointed at missing a good couple weeks of sabbatical leave. Sabbath, a time for intentional rest, isn’t happenin’. But, like I’d like to say to a some people I know, get over it, right? Right. Kind of like when people can’t wait for someone to show up to either finish or remove laundry from a dryer, so they just take it out and leave it an a damp heap on top of the dryer with their stuff running inside. Nice. (I left a note…and the door to the dryer open, too. Just kidding on the latter of the two. An eye for an eye only leaves the world blind.)
I’m wrestling like Jacob with this sabbatical angel who really wants to know my name…who I really am. I’ve begun to say that name, and just like Jacob, I’ll walk away with a little gimpy.
So life doesn’t circle around me as much as it used to. Having a sense of this fact has helped me get a grip on my emotions for cancelled plans – two MLS soccer matches, two RV parks in Washington, one in Montana, and a whole 1,400 mile re-route yet to be finagled. Water under the bridge. Unless you’re in Grand Rapids, Michigan, right now where water flows over the bridges.
In all of life we see similar instances of injustice on the self, only to be awakened to the reality that our own ego doesn’t like what’s happening to us. For example, this whole debate of gun control is out of control. It’s gone from understanding what it means to care for others to preserving the self…out of fear and in the face of all whose lives are fragmented by the devastation lack of gun control has left in its wake. See photo to the left.
Having lived in an area for nearly 6 years which has little control over who buys and has access to guns and having seen, as a Volunteer Police Chaplain, the suicides committed via guns, I’m even more convinced that people are more concerned about being right than being safe. After all, getting what I want, over an above the needs of others that live in this same world, makes sense to me! (Last sentence laden with heavy sarcasm.)
Gun control also bleeds into a form of religious control.
Hypothetical question: “Can I make you angry?”
Now, the italics should give you the correct answer. Truth is this – I can’t make you angry. Having said that, I can sure push your buttons and provoke an answer out of you that would please me if I were that kind of a person. Vise versa you can not make me angry. Something you do or say I may choose to become angry with, but that my choice.
This is where religion loses its relevance. If I’m unhappy with a pastor, I can simply get up without a word and go to a new church, perhaps one that reflects my beliefs and not those of a well-studied, even scholarly minister. After all, my needs are more important than the rest of the world’s and that makes sense to me! (Again…sarcasm)

Sadly, the line that begins, “A deeply religious…” speaks volumes. Even sadder, Grand Rapids, Michigan is my home town. No one should ever have to feel so bound by an errant view of “biblical marriage.”
So what happens if a pastor may have a different opinion? What happens when a preacher goes into a church and, heaven forbid, asks them to act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with (their) God when all they want to do is worship the organ, the hymnals from 1957, the un-padded pews, the memorials most everybody walks by without reading?
They leave.
What happens when a pastor preaches and encourages his/her members to work for justice for the marginalized, even though the sight of these people may make a majority of them squirm?
They leave.
All to easy any given member can get up from the pew, head to the nearest exit, and then bitch (because I can think of no other diplomatic word than the verb to bitch) to everyone in the neighborhood about how their pastor sucks and is a “false man of God,” because they know this for fact and they’ve all been through the rigors of an accredited theological seminary. Oh, the pettiness of the Church.
Of course, I realize it’s horribly difficult to place an accurate meaning on scripture when it’s been so heavily scrutinized under a microscope for eons. Still, Jesus’ prayer in John 17 paints a bigger picture – so that they may all be one. Perhaps the writer of John left out that line filled with righteous indignation. You know, the one that completes the verse with, “…unless you like guns, hate the preacher, dislike gay people…etc.” But then the writer would have had to leave that out three times in the same passage. Highly unlikely.
This two-week and one-day endeavor in hospitals has left me with a foul taste in my mouth. Most of it from the pricey hospital food. The rest of that foul taste is me getting over it. And I will.
There are many things that life tries to teach us if we stayed and listened. In this case, I don’t know what they are yet. I’m not a big fan of the whole God-does-everything-for-a-reason theology. If that’s the case, I think we’d have billions more atheists. (Although, we are working in that direction!)

This face. I LOVE this face.
LOVE WINS.
(being in the UCC, I believe that is the only place a punctuation period should exist.)
Let’s start with love. Love is a good starting point when trying to sift through life’s crap. As Miracle Max said in the Gospel of The Princess Bride, “Sonny, true love is the greatest thing, in the world-except for a nice MLT – mutton, lettuce and tomato sandwich, where the mutton is nice and lean and the tomato is ripe they’re so perky, I love that.”
The Apostle Paul follows that with, “If I speak in the tongues of mortals and of angels, but do not have love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. And if I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing. If I give away all my possessions, and if I hand over my body so that I may boast, but do not have love, I gain nothing. Love is patient; love is kind; love is not envious or boastful or arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.” (Italics and bold are my own.)
Love is patient and kind. And it endures. To endure means you’re in for the long haul. Are you? I am. Because it’s not all about me. There’s another 600 Billion I think about.



























