Thursday, May 30, 2013

A Clean, Well Lighted Place


My fifteen year-old son has taken to introducing me as a “retired pastor.” It’s hard to shake loose of that title for me, too. It’s probably because being a pastor is more of an identity than a job, more a personality than a skill set. Still not sure whether I want to shake loose of that title for good, or just for now, I’m stumbling my way forward into this new life on the other side of the pulpit.

These days I’m thinking much more than I’m writing, and in my head I’m sweeping the floor of the café in Hemingway’s short A Clean Well-Lighted Place. Maybe you know the story of an old man who drinks brandy in the café late into the night.  He annoys a younger waiter, but is a valued patron to the experienced waiter.

Perhaps I’ve become the old man who needs the refuge of the café because I don’t regularly haunt the pulpit, one of the last well lighted places in this world where one is expected to probe the deep existential questions of being and nothingness.  But pulpits have become dangerous places, too, for congregants don’t want it to be the place where pastors grapple with hard questions for themselves, but rather a place of moral certainty against all the “issues” against which they are opposed, bumper sticker theology in sound-bytes, and “Ten Steps to Your Best Life Now” sermons. No, the pulpit is not a clean, well-lighted place for a questioning middle-age man to ask his congregation questions neither he nor they can answer.

Or perhaps I’m the waiter who says, “Each night I am reluctant to close up because there may be someone who needs the café.” I spent over twenty years in church work, always trusting that the church was the last, perhaps only, institution in the world that could truly change the world by healing the deep brokenness within each of us. I thought, “Someone might need the church,” so I wanted it to be a community of cleanness and order – a place that helps the lost make sense of their lostness and the lostness of the world. But instead of humble cafes providing for simple needs, the church has become vast halls of Sunday morning theatrics.

Probably, I’m a little of each. What the waiter and the old man hold in common is that they are kept awake at night by the affliction of really big questions. Hemingway labeled this affliction a vague “nothing,” keeping it vague in order to convey that the haunting questions of life were so ponderous and large as to be indescribable. Only the café can offer the space and quiet to grapple with it.

Near the end of the story, just after the older man leaves the café, Hemingway puts the situation thusly, “What did he fear? It was not fear or dread, it was a nothing that he knew too well. It was all a nothing and a man was nothing too. It was only that and light was all it needed and a certain cleanness and order.” Outside the café is a dangerous place for those who dare to ask hard questions of life, of God, of themselves. We need the café. We need the clean, well-lighted place to take refuge from dangerous emptiness.

So, for now, I’m retired. 

Saturday, April 13, 2013

If you hear any other message than this...

I learned today that Brennan Manning died (official obituary here) and I've had an interesting range of emotions in response to the news. Apparently, others are, too.   His facebook page is filling up with comments from people around the world who were touched by his work and his words.  The Naked Pastor drew this great tribute cartoon.  Twitter has blown up with people's favorite quotes.

Why am I grieving the death of someone I met just once?  One reason is now that I'm no longer a pastor with a church to shepherd, his life has become a pattern for how to serve the kingdom of God as a minister without "orders."  But even more, it's that his life bore true witness to the words he wrote.  His books and talks were beloved to people from all walks of faith because they held out the possibility that all of us, no matter how badly we've behaved not only have a shot at God's forgiveness, but at experiencing the fullness of God's love.  In an era of evangelicalism where grace often is preached but not practiced, Manning's ideas were a cool drink of water on a hot day.

And he was fierce about it  

The one time I met him was at the National Pastor's Covention in Nashville, probably about 2004.  It was just after another voice of grace, Mike Yacanelli, had died and those gathered were wondering what to do without Mike telling us it was ok to be spiritually messy.  At that conference, Manning delivered a beautiful sermon that brought me to a new place of understanding about God's deep love for me.  I hadn't even realized how my soul thirsted until then.  Manning's voice rose during the sermon, and he sounded like a crazed man, so obsessed was he with in making sure we got the simple message:  God loves you.

I am God's Beloved

As he closed the sermon, he asked his listeners to meditate while listening to his voice.  He urged us to listen to the inner dialogue and in the stillness he softly spoke, "If you are hearing any message other than God's 'I love you, just as you are,' then you are hearing the voice of the Evil One."  Then with a shout he said, "TUNE IT OUT!  Listen only to the singular message of God's love for you over and over and over and over until it begins to shape your identity into one simple idea.  I am God's beloved."   Over and over and over and over he said, "I am God's beloved."  I started to believe it.

It stuck  

That word has been a companion in my life that comes and go as needed.   It shows up in my preaching and writing with regularity, proving the value of Manning's message for me.  My hope & prayer for you, dear reader, is that if you are hearing any other message than "I love you, just as you are," have the courage to tune it out, confident that you are shunning darkness and pointing your life toward the light of God's grace.  And if you get that message, say a prayer of thanks for that "notorious sinner" Brennan Manning.


“If we maintain the open-mindedness of children, we challenge fixed ideas and established structures, including our own. We listen to people in other denominations and religions. We don't find demons in those with whom we disagree. We don't cozy up to people who mouth our jargon. If we are open, we rarely resort to either-or: either creation or evolution, liberty or law, sacred or secular, Beethoven or Madonna. We focus on both-and, fully aware that God's truth cannot be imprisoned in a small definition." - Brennan Manning, 1934-2013.



Friday, March 22, 2013

Empty

Empty.  We empty the trash, we empty the gas tank on the car, the shampoo bottle is empty, so we go buy another one.  Sometimes we feel empty, sometimes our belly is so empty that we feel like we could eat a horse.  When we live paycheck to paycheck we worry about the bank account being empty.  A cruel person is sometimes called "empty hearted," and our mothers taught us never to go to a party  "empty handed." 

To be empty is to be without something, and that's just the word Paul uses to describe what Jesus did when he divested himself of his godly form in order to become human.  He emptied himself into human form.  His very presence among us was the ultimate display of humility. 

This understanding that God gave up all of His majesty, splendor, and, well, his godliness, in order to be human and dwell among us is quite amazing.  It is also a pattern for our lives as Christians - that we should divest ourselves of ego as much as possible in order to become God's instruments in this life. 

Lent's call to repentance is also a call to humility.  To confess our sin and frailties is to recognize our inability to control our habits, ourselves, our lives.  It is a commendation of God's supreme ability to better guide us in the living of our lives;  it is an emptying of self in honor of God's will.  Indeed, it is an imitation of Jesus.
 
          



Philippians 2. 5-11


2:5 Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus,

2:6 who, though he was in the form of God, did not regard equality with God as something to be exploited,

2:7 but emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, being born in human likeness. And being found in human form,

2:8 he humbled himself and became obedient to the point of death-- even death on a cross.

2:9 Therefore God also highly exalted him and gave him the name that is above every name,

2:10 so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bend, in heaven and on earth and under the earth,

2:11 and every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.

Saturday, February 23, 2013

New things ahead


I'll give more details soon, changes are ahead for the Long family, this blog, and ministry stuff.  I'll be picking this blog back up after a long season of vey little writing.  That will happen after March when I finish up my pastoral ministry at First Baptist of Gaithersburg.

After then, I'll be working with FaithVillage promoting content partnerships and advertising, as well as Common Call  subscription sales.  If you have interest in any of those things, please reach out to me.

In addition, I've started an online venture called Blue Truck Publishing.  It's a site for church resources at great prices, all digital downloads.  If you're interested in selling your curriculum, art, music, etc, click here.  Blue Truck has a blog for church resourcing here and a Facebook page here.

I look forward to writing more soon, and hope to hear from you.

Grace & Peace,
Gary