The poet, Mary Oliver, put it like this in something she
calls, “THE MAN WHO HAS MANY ANSWERS.”
The man who has many answers
is often found
in the theaters of information
where he offers, graciously,
his deep findings.
While the man who has only questions,
to comfort himself, makes music.
In this spirit, let me ask:
+ Why aren’t there any
church songs about the dangers of living without gratitude? My experience is clear: often the people who are most demanding in a
faith community are also the least generous – and the people who complain the
most tend to do the least – and those who might benefit the most by being in
relationship with others usually choose to stay away. What’s up with that? Jesus was clear that we discover his presence
in the least of these my sisters and brothers – so we have a clear calling to
care for the walking wounded among - AND he also told us that sometimes you
just have to shake the dust off your sandals and let people experience the
consequences of their choices – especially those unwilling to return thanks. A lack of gratitude for God’s abiding grace
pollutes the individual heart and keeps a congregation distracted from real
ministry.
+ Why are most of the
people who celebrate the arts in a faith community often the most
compassionate? I’m not saying that
engineers and scientists and lawyers don’t love the arts – clearly they do – and
I don’t mean to imply that they aren’t compassionate – clearly they are. But my experience suggests that those who are
committed to celebrating and creating art are often those whose hearts are
broken by the pain of living and also those who want to help the most. I’ve seen this over and over again: they are tireless and selfless and touched in
ways that elude others. Why do you think
that is true? Or do you think that is
true?
+ Why is it that most
congregations still don’t get the fact that if they want a strong youth program
we must first train the adults? How
many times have I heard it said, “The children are the future of the
church?” Well, this is true only if they
have been nourished and prepared to become disciples – and that doesn’t happen
by accident. And it certainly doesn’t
happen if the adults aren’t living in a consciously faithful way that is
visible and real. Perhaps it is less
demanding to pay somebody else to do a ministry with children, but it is not
effective. No, the only way to raise up
a living crop of compassionate and creative Christian children, is to help moms
and dads grow in faith and commitment.
Everything else is a waste of time and a distraction.
+ Why are the simplest
Church programs often the most satisfying?
Think potlucks and the fellowship and discussions that flow from them. Tonight we had a “potluck harvest dinner” –
this is New England, after all – and about 60 people showed up. After supper, we played bingo and the
children had a ball. No video games. No
high tech nothing. Just adults and children sitting side by side, laughing,
telling stories, enjoying homemade desserts and having fun. An old street evangelist once told me, “Man,
the only thing we have to offer the world that they can’t get any other place
is Jesus.” I have always believed this
was true and being Christ’s people in gentle, simple ways is more attractive
than all the glitz and technology. Most
people don’t believe this, but time and again I’ve seen it to be true.
Well, enough questions: I guess it is time to go listen to
some music… (or actually head to bed.)
No comments:
Post a Comment