Thursday, December 31, 2009

A Pledge for A New Year

I will remember that no lost hope and no jaded attitude can erase all the good that we do.

I will endeavor to embrace the size of my thighs.

I will spend less time worrying about how I look and more time focusing on how I make others feel.

I will challenge myself and others to make a difference in the lives of those who have the least.

I will spend less time channel surfing, but not feel guilty about watching television that really does make me feel good.

I will find a place to put my keys where I will always be able to find them. (this one is a stretch)

I will go see more movies in the theater.

I will throw out, give away or otherwise recycle about one-quarter of the stuff that is taking up room in my home.

I will pray and play more. Sometimes I might even do both at the same time.

I will continue to take seriously the call to share the word of God with those who enter the doors of the First Presbyterian Church of NLR, while never taking myself too seriously in the process.

All of these things I sincerely pledge for the year 2010

Monday, December 28, 2009

A House Like No Other

My sister-in-law Beth was trying to think of something my 8-year-old (who have traveled the world) hasn't seen, and she certainly scored. Just up the road from their home, in the next town of Torrington is a Christmas House you really have to see to believe.

The Christmas House

The house is open free of charge to the public. They take donations, but do not charge a fee. The paint on the house is peeling and the owner is missing several teeth, yet there is no telling what the collection is worth. It is indescribable. From case after case of Coca Cola Santa merchandise to a railroad Christmas village that fills a space as big as my dining room to a gi-normous collection of moving dolls holding candles. If you're in CT next year around Christmas, fit this in to your schedule!

Also, for those of you heading to the movies over the Christmas break and wondering if you can make it through the whole film without a bathroom break, check out www.runpee.com. You can look up the movie you're going to see and it will tell you the best time to go without missing much. Who has WAY too much time on their hands? Or have they stumbled upon a brilliant service that will attract enough advertisers to allow them to spend the rest of their lives at the movies?

Thursday, December 24, 2009

A Christmas Eve Message

If you're planning to be at the First Presbyterian Church in NLR Argenta tonight, you might want to hold off on reading this. But if not, read on. Merry Christmas!

Nine weeks ago when I started at this church, we were meeting in the Fellowship Hall because our heating system in the sanctuary was broken. We just assumed that we would be in Fellowship Hall for Christmas Eve. We didn’t know that people would begin to come out of the woodwork to help. Volunteering to play music. Coming out on a moment’s notice to mend leaky roofs and prop up rotting walls. Replacing light bulbs and working on wiring. Buying a new heating system for the church because we’ve been out of our sanctuary long enough. We knew that God was at work here. We just didn’t know God was going to work so fast through so many people.

Because we didn’t know we would be here, you’ll notice that our service has no traditional Christmas pageant. So tonight, as it is with most things around here, everyone will have to pitch in. We’ll all have to play all the parts.

Tonight, we are all the shepherd, startled to hear the good news of the angels, but eager to go and see for ourselves.

We are Mary, aware that somehow God is using us to accomplish things too big to imagine.

We are Joseph, not understanding fully that which God calls us to do, but following as faithfully as we can.

We are the innkeeper, busy and frazzled, but making some room, somehow, for God to be born.

We are the Wisemen, on a journey of discovery, bearing our gifts to be given to glorify God.

And yes, we are the angel, proclaiming in our own lives, the glorious good news that God has come into the world, and we shall never be the same.

But perhaps you’re thinking that you don’t feel like taking on any role tonight—much less all of them. Because you’ve had a hard year. Maybe this year has just about knocked you flat. And maybe the Christmas season has only served to intensify your pain, to shine a light on your brokenness, to magnify your loneliness.

If you’re just too sad or too angry or in too much pain, then you don’t get a part. You are going to have to direct. You are in charge of the whole thing. It is you who must lead this Christmas. If you are feeling too resentful or too disappointed or simply too exhausted for Christmas this year, then it is you who must sing the loudest. You are the one who should fling the tinsel on the tree, and call everyone in from off of the street to come and celebrate.

Because it is unto you that a Savior is born this night. Jesus came for the heartbroken and the hopeless, for the downtrodden and the depressed, for the busted and the broken, for the fearful and the faithless.

So if you don’t feel like being Mary or Joseph or the shepherd or the angel, you must draw the rest of us in. So that everyone will know that God sends light into the dark corners of our lives. That in lonely and cold moments, God bursts forth with a message of good news.

I believe in Christmas. I believe in the power of the love of God come down to earth. It is a story in which we all must participate. A miracle we cannot afford to miss.



This message was inspired by the prayers of Ann Weems and Peter K. Perry

Monday, December 21, 2009

Is Christmas the Key?

Dr. David Lipschitz is a nationally-known expert on geriatrics, and he's right here in Arkansas. His column that ran today in our paper is one of the best I have ever read on why we should all embrace the true meaning of Christmas. How great is God to use a Jewish expert on aging to remind people of all ages why the values and virtues we claim to embrace at Christmas time are what will make us healthy and whole? Pretty cool.

Prolong Your Life with the True Message of Christmas


And, as a side note, today in my in-box, I had messages from Amazon.com, Amazon.de, and Amazon.co.uk that today is the last day to order for guaranteed Christmas delivery. Christmas consumer messages from three different countries.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Sanctuary Ready to Go


After about 25 people gathered for about 3 hours yesterday morning and another 15 stayed after worship today to help move things back in to the sanctuary (like the communion table, baptismal font, Advent wreath), I think we are ready for Christmas Eve.

It will be the first worship service in the sanctuary in almost two years. The long-time members of the church are just positively giddy! Although, several are a little worn out as they have been working hard to get the church spruced up for its debut.

On December 26, we will be feature in the religion section of the Arkansas Dem-Gaz. Good things just keep happening. Hope we can keep up with it all. My brain is positively frazzled. Am hoping to re-group after Christmas Eve.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Running Through Advent

I didn't mean to do it. I really didn't. I thought I had it all under control. Ready for a slow, peaceful, holy kind of Advent. But somehow it all swarmed on me. It swarmed with almost entirely good things, but it swarmed nonetheless.

The late-breaking news that we will be in our sanctuary for Christmas Eve, requiring a whole different take on the service with only two weeks to make those changes, which include finding musicians, liturgists and piano tuners.

The Christmas cards that I don't really have an updated address list for.

The baking requirements for my daughter's class and other events in addition to the annual baking of the German stollen.

The family we adopted (and had SO much fun shopping for) whose gifts I still have to wrap

It's all been good, but I am 10 sleeps away from Christmas Day and absolutely exhausted. So I'm already giving some thought to how to do things differently next year.

1. Though handmade gifts are very special, often cost less and show that you took the time to create something unique for the recipient, if I go this route next year, I will begin in July, not November.

2. I'm taking a cue from colleague in ministry Robert Lowery and not buying anything during Advent next year. Gift buying and creating will have to be done in the weeks and months prior. Though, Robert doesn't have any kids, and my kid might throw a kink into that plan.

3. Because I insist on sending Christmas cards and love the chance to remember and pray for all the people on my list, I will get that list together and updated well before Halloween.

4. I will block off time on my calendar for baking and not try to cram one of my favorite parts of the holidays into short slots of time.

5. Next year I will not host any parties. I will not host any parties. I will not host any parties. Is that Scroogey? Because I still want people to invite me to theirs.

6. The one thing I have gotten right this Advent is plenty of exercise, and I hope to continue that commitment into next year all the way through to Advent 2010.

I'm going to use the excuse of still getting settled back in the US and taking on a new job as to why I've let it all get out of hand this year. Next year, I want to do better. I want to have time to soak up the holy and marinate in the wonder of it all.

But now, as thoughts of Mary and her Magnificat and what I have to say about that on Sunday drift through my head, I'm going to crash until morning.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Fun Things I Have Recently Learned

Did you know that Barnes and Noble has the new service called Pick Me Up? When you find a book you want, you can choose the pick-me-up option to see if the store closest to you has it in stock. Then they will hold it for you and you can pick it up there and save not only shipping charges but a wasted trip to the store if they didn't have it. Cool!

Did you know that you can get podcasts of NPR's This American Life, Wait, Wait Don't Tell Me, Fresh Air and other shows for free and download them to your I-Pod or MP3 player? I never do housework anymore unless I'm plugged in listening to Ira Glass or Carl Castle.

Check out the Painted Prayer Book and The Advent Door, both blogs by artist Jan Richardson. Great stuff!

Good Magazine has a great Web site. This is a magazine my Dad got me a subscription to a couple of years back. But now they have this really fabulous on-line presence with lots of news of every day people who are making the world better and great ideas on what we all can do to make the world better. It's a feel-good site to visit.

In a recent study of couples who had separated, 58 percent of the men said they were happier after the separation. Eighty-five percent of the women said that they were happier. Think twice, men. Your chance of of post-separation bliss is a little iffy.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Watching Our Water Consumption

This is a great little video with some tips on how we can use less water each day. When it comes to the environment, the little things each of us do every day really do add up to make a big difference. I like that. There's something synergistic and collaborative about it.

Friday, December 11, 2009

I Give!

Half the Christmas tree lights have gone out--for the second time. Maddie says not to worry about it. It looks unique. No one else has a Christmas tree like that. I'm going with her assessment.

I had to borrow my parents' vacuum cleaner because ours only makes noise now. It doesn't actually suck up anything. And people are coming to the house tomorrow and the floors have stuff on them that needs to be sucked up.

Spent two hours making cookies with Maddie for an open house we're having tomorrow where Maddie will be selling her own special design of earrings. I am plum wore out.

BUT the First Presbyterian Church of North Little Rock is planning to be back in the sanctuary for Christmas Eve after over an 18-month exile to the fellowship hall. Thanks to a very generous donor who has ordered us our very own working heating unit. You never know who might might turn out to be a Christmas angel. There is a lot of clean up to be done in a very large room that has been shut up for almost two years. We'll be busting out Bessie (our very powerful vacuum), the Murphy's Oil Soap and a case of Swiffer dusters.

I better come up with a really good Christmas Eve message. But then, can one really have a bad Christmas Eve message? I'll think about that more tomorrow. I'm headed to bed.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

What If God really is at work?

That's what I've been telling everyone. That God is doing something at the First Presbyterian Church in North Little Rock. And I thought I really believed that, until events began unfolding that make it clear that God really IS at work there. And it has shocked the daylights out of me!

Sunday, December 6, 2009

A Different Kind of Christmas Carol

Prepare ye the way of the Lord. That’s what her preacher had said. That’s what she was trying to do this Advent season. She desperately wanted to prepare her heart to receive the peace of Christ. God knew she could use some peace.

Carol was a single mom trying to raise two kids. Her husband bailed after the second child was born prematurely and had some developmental problems. The doctors couldn’t guarantee she would turn out to be “normal” and he couldn’t handle it. Ironically, her youngest did turn out to be just fine—a happy 11-year-old with a “B” average and an addiction to instant messaging on the computer.

Carol used to love Christmas. Her father once told her that the Christmas “Carols” were sung just for her, and years after she stopped believing him, she loved pretending it was true. She knew the words to all of them. But this year, she just didn’t feel much like singing.

There was a store that she walked by on the way to work everyday that had a window full of nativity scenes. There was one that she always paused to look at. It was too expensive for her to purchase, and she wondered if it might still be there and go on sale after Christmas. Then she always felt a little guilty waiting for a bargain Jesus. It was the kind that just had Mary and Joseph and the baby Jesus. None of the shepherds or wisemen or barn animals. Just the family. The baby is sleeping and Mary is looking down at him. Her face the picture of calm and peace.

Working full time and trying to raise two precocious girls who were determined to grow up as fast as they could didn’t bring a lot of peace to Carol. She was hoping to find some this Christmas. This year, she was really wanting something more from Christmas. Though her life wasn’t bad, things really hadn’t turned out the way she thought they would. Life seemed a little hollow—as if there was something deep in her core that needed to be filled. She was hoping and praying that Christmas would bring her what she yearned for this year.

She wanted to Prepare the Way for the Lord, but she honestly couldn’t find the time. She got up early enough for a short power walk to help preserve her waistline and her sanity. Then it was always chaos for three females to get ready and out the door by 8 a.m. Her work day sailed with lunch usually being a sandwich at her desk. And then by the time she got home, fixed dinner, helped with homework, got the girls to bed and threw a load of whites in the laundry, all she wanted to do was collapse in a heap. She didn’t even have time to pray. When on earth this the preacher (who didn’t have any children) think she was going to do all this preparation?

But every day when she passed by that store, she paused to look at that nativity scene—it was her very own Christmas story. She imagined that Silent Night when Christ was born. She imagined how miraculous that night must have been and she longed for the peace she saw in Mary’s eyes.

One day as she was passing the store front to look at her nativity scene she was shocked and disappointed to see that it was gone. Guess she wouldn’t be buying it on the after Christmas sales after all. But in its place was a very different kind of scene. This one had the shepherds and the sheep and a donkey and a cow and even the three wisemen. Baby Jesus was not asleep, but his feet and arms were waving in the air and Joseph was leaned over as if speaking to Mary whose head was thrown back like she was laughing.

“What on earth was she laughing about?” thought Carol. Then it hit her. Mary was laughing at the absurdity of it all. Two people, far away from home, birthing their first child—a child that they had on good authority was actually God—birthing him in a barn among the livestock. One would have to either laugh or cry—and this Mary had chosen to laugh.

Then Carol realized that there was nothing “silent” about that night. It was loud and dirty and uncomfortable and painful and, yes…chaotic. Nobody was at all prepared for Jesus that first Christmas, yet he came anyway. He burst onto the scene screaming and messy and hungry. Carol’s hectic schedule seemed like a cake walk compared to what must have gone on in Bethlehem that first Christmas.

If Jesus could enter the world in such an unexpected and unlikely way, surely he could make his way into her wacky world. She had her very own epiphany right in front of the Hallmark store.

So that year, to prepare for Advent, she became the laughing Mary.

When the work package that just absolutely positively had to get there overnight went to Tucson instead of Boston, she ran some damage control and then she tossed back her head and laughed.

When she fell into bitter moods over being left to raise two daughters alone, she smiled because she, and she alone, knew the joy of being a parent to those two wonderful creatures she called daughters.

When the disposal and the dishwasher broke on the same day, she laughed because it couldn’t get worse, and then the next day when the dryer broke, she laughed at her own naivete.

When she heard her two daughters unpacking the Christmas decorations and her youngest cried out—“Mom, Sara hid the baby Jesus. Tell her she can’t have him. Jesus is for all of us.” She laughed, because she knew that truer words had never been spoken.


And then in the midst of all that laughter, a funny thing happened. Not funny, ha ha. But funny, odd. Funny wonderful.

Somehow, the mornings seemed easier. And she didn’t feel exhausted by nightfall. There was not only time to pray, but the prayers seemed to bubble up from inside of her. They came with no effort at all. And there was no part of her body, her soul, or her life that seemed hollow.

Several years ago she had let each of the girls choose their favorite food to have for Christmas dinner. So that Christmas Eve after church when she and the girls sat down to their traditional dinner of pizza and Cheetos, every part of her felt whole.

Her life was loud, messy, uncomfortable, painful and chaotic. She was totally prepared for the coming of the Christ child. After all, her life was just the kind of place where Jesus feels at home.