Tuesday, December 18, 2018

The Irony of the Christmas Blues

Charlie Brown voices emotions most all of us have felt at one time or another when at the beginning of A Charlie Brown Christmas he says, “Christmas is coming, but I’m not happy.  I don’t feel the way I am supposed to feel.  I like Christmas, but I am still not happy.  I always end up feeling depressed.”

The Christmas Blues are real, powerful, painful and ironic.  Several years ago, I was ministering in a town that was highly transitory.  Almost no one was from there and very few planned to stay there.  A lot of people were a long way from home.  Just after Christmas I went on a community message board and asked people to anonymously share their experiences with depression at Christmas time.  The response was remarkable.  I received message after message from people who were depressed at Christmas.  Some were depressive by disposition and Christmas made it worse.  Others were only depressed at Christmas.  To deal with their depression some worked through Christmas, some volunteered, some stayed in bed all Christmas day, some drank, and some pretended everything was fine.  One woman wrote me a lengthy email and began to mildly stalk me, even showing up at church services just to ‘check me out’.  My secretary found her creepy. 

There is one common denominator to all the cases of Christmas Blues I have witnessed and experienced: FOMO.  If you are not familiar with the term, FOMO stands for Fear of Missing Out.  It happens to us when we feel that something wonderful is going to happen and we are going to miss out.  That fear of missing out on the great experience will cause us to 1) go to great links to be a part or 2) be depressed if we believe we have missed the opportunity. 

Because of the greatest marketing campaign in human history Christmas has become the apex of all warm, sentiment, emotional experiences.  Lucy may have been on to something when she tells Charlie Brown that Christmas “…is run by a big Eastern syndicate”.  We are told we can have a warm, heart-felt, happy feeling that will last us all year long if we have the right experience at Christmas.  With the right combination of sentimental images, expensive gift giving, quiet reverent meditation, or raucous, office, Christmas parties, elegant decorations and quality family time we can have the ultimate Christmas experience.  We are worked into such a state so that we will be susceptible to spend money or, better yet, indulge in credit.  Already there are radio ads about how to pay off Christmas, credit card debt.  We can never live up to the expectations that are placed on us (or we place on ourselves) for the perfect Christmas.  We live with the haunting fear that we are missing out.  When we fear that we are missing out we predictably become depressed.  Christmas Blues are upon us. 

I began by saying that the, “Christmas Blues are real, powerful, painful and ironic.”  How are the blues so ironic?  How is the fear of missing out incongruous with Christmas?  In the passage beautifully quoted by Linus we have these words,  “And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people.”   Let’s add some emphasis, “Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people.”  The message of Christmas is that no one need miss out.  The Fear of Missing Out is the exact opposite of the message of Christmas.

The difference between expectation and experience is either disappointment or delight.  If experience is less than expectation, we will be disappointed.  If experience is greater than expectation, we have delight.  Christ always exceeds our expectation; He is always delightful.  May God bless you with the delight of Christ this Christmas.


Post Script:  There will be no blog next week.  I will be with family celebrating the birth of the Messiah in feasting and worship. 


Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Just because you are sincere doesn’t mean that you are not terrible.

I was recently consulting with a church about their stagnation.  They had a leadership problem.  Other leaders in the church were aware that there was a problem. To cut to the chase of it all they had a problem person in a key leadership position.  Everyone knew he was the key factor that was keeping the church from making progress.  But when his behaviors became the subject of the conversation there was a unanimous chorus of what a “great guy” he was, how nice, hard working and willing to help, he was gifted, capable, and the first one to show up for work-in a word-he was sincere. My professional and personal experience tends to cause me to doubt the purity of his character and motives, but for this essay we will assume he was as sincere as the wind-driven snow is pure.  In all honesty, there are some cases where sincerity doesn’t mean jack!

Doña Cecilia Giménez is an 80-year-old amateur artist who is very sincere and devoted.  She was distressed that a picture of Christ in a local church was beginning to flake and fade.  So, she took it upon herself to restore the fresco to its former glory.  The result was less than she hoped.  In fact, when her work was first discovered it was believed to be an act of vandalism.   The picture has been described as a “crayon sketch of a very hairy monkey in an ill-fitting tunic"; prompting the name “Ecce Mono” -Behold the Monkey- a pun based on “Ecce Homo” the work’s original title.  All the sincerity in the world could never compensate for a genuine lack of skill, talent and training.  Compared to Ms. Giménez, Adolf Hitler was an artistic genius.  Somehow we must find the balance between a good heart while at the same time insisting on competence and not allowing sincerity to be an excuse for poor quality.

If we do not find that sweet spot, we will end up with poorly led churches that will never fulfill the great commission.  Thankfully, we are all capable of change.  The evil heart can be converted and the unskilled hand can be trained.  But until that happens we must never allow great skill to over shadow an evil heart nor allow sincerity to set loose a clumsy hand. 


Monday, December 3, 2018

What Redneck Wisdom can teach us about discipleship.

Sometimes Redneck sayings can teach us somethings about being a disciple.  In Jesus’ last teaching on Earth (John 16:25-33) we may have such a moment.  This is the last teaching of Jesus. The next chapter is Jesus' Priestly prayer, and then it's to the Garden, the trials, and the cross. In this passage Jesus gets to the core of our struggle in faith. "...For the Father himself loves you...” There is more difficulty with these words than we care to admit, imagine, or accept.   The love of God towards us is the fundamental point of our faith.  “For God so loved the world...” But there is a change in this passage. In John 3:16, Jesus used the word Agape for love. Agape is the self-sacrificing love for the well being of the other. God loves the pedophile and the pimp.  God loves the lust-filled adulteress and the drug lord.  He loves the liar and the thief. He loves them so much that He gives His Son as a sacrifice for them and for us. But the word love here is different. The word here is Philia.  It is the word for the love of a friend. Being a friend of God is different from being the object of His salvation, sacrificial love.

 God wants to be with us, He likes us; our company and doing stuff with us are delightful to Him. This frankly is hard for us to wrap our minds around. We have no trouble seeing God as the holy judge who punishes sin. We have very little trouble seeing God as one who saves us by the cross, motivated by Agape.   But God as a friend who wants to be rolling through life with us?   That's harder for us to comprehend. When we struggle with hardships and frustrations, failures, and questions, we wonder why God doesn't come riding in on a charger and save the day. Perhaps, that is the wrong image, the wrong way for us to think about God.

 Like all analogies this one will break down if pressed too hard. But hear me out. There is a redneck saying that goes, “A good friend will come and bail you out of jail in the middle of the night.  A great friend will be sitting beside you saying, ‘Man, wasn't that great’?” We tend to think of God as a friend who will come and post the bail and sign us out of jail. But He wants to be the one who is in jail with us. Now, only a fool would propose that we should engage in riotous behavior that lands us in jail. But the best times of life are the times of high-risk shared with friends. Close companionship plus difficulty or suffering equals a bond closer than all others. I have read numerous accounts of men who have fought wars together.  They report a bond that is closer than the bond of family.  Sports teams that survive the trials that are the hardest have friendships that last the longest.

Perhaps the struggle with being a friend of God is because we play it too safe. We risk too little so that we will never struggle. Maybe what we need is not more cushions on our pews or better climate control in our sanctuary, or nicer music in our ears.  Maybe what we need is more blood on our knuckles, more sweat in our armpits and more adrenaline in our blood.  In our grasping for security at home, at church, and in life we have removed the very thing that will help us understand God as a friend.  Jesus concluded his teaching on Earth by saying, “In this world you will have tribulation, but take courage I have overcome the world.”  We work really hard at trying to avoid tribulation.  So our friendship with God is bland and inspired.  Maybe we should engage in those Kingdom things where we may get bloodied but we will walk away saying, “Man, was that great or what?”


Tuesday, November 27, 2018

"Merry Christmas" err I mean "Happy Commerce Day"

Long ago in a childhood far away…. I watched a Christmas Special or at least part of one.  It was 1978, Jimmy Carter was President, Bear Bryant was coaching Alabama and I was a teenager.  That Christmas season I watched just a few minutes of A Mac Davis Special: Christmas Odyssey 2010, but lost interest pretty quick.  At the time my musical interest tended toward Boston, Styx, Foreigner, and Heart.  So, this Mac Davis Christmas musical had little appeal.  However, the theme of the special stuck with me.   In the show Mac Davis and Bernadette Peters played a couple preparing for "Commerce Day," the winter holiday which causes people to spend a lot of money on presents.  It was, as I recall, pretty sappy and not very good.  But one of the lines was prophetic:
"Every Commerce Day,
We get lots and lots of stuff,
No matter how much we get,
It never is enough!"
At this time of year, we can all decry the commercialization of Christmas, but there is another and deeper issue. 

He had no TV, computer, MP3 player, or what we would call basic transportation.  His home would be what we might call third world and compared to most of us his possessions were meager and of poorer quality.  But students of the Bible call him  “the rich young ruler”.   And he walked away from Jesus because his heart was so attached to his possessions.  I am often stunned by how much stuff I have.  I am even more stunned at how attached I have become to the stuff.  Can I walk away from my stuff if the Lord called me to do so?  Would I try to drag it along as I followed?  Would I just let Jesus leave and sit miserably with my stuff?

Why does the Lord make such ridiculous demands of us?  Why did God call for the sacrifice of Isaac rather than Ismael, Hagar, or even Sarah?  Why did Jesus call those who followed him to hate mother and father instead of hating Samaritans and Romans? Why did Jesus call for the abandonment of wealth and security as terms of the rich man’s discipleship?

The reason is simple; Jesus will not allow us to have anything between Him and our heart.  Those things nearest our heart are most apt to sink their roots into our hearts.   Jesus demands that they be extracted.  If the decisions of our discipleship never cause us any distress we may not be making the decision to be a disciple.  To take up the cross and follow Christ is not a decision that is made lightly.

In my own heart, I often try to find the middle way: the path that allows me to hear the comforting words of Jesus without having to be made uncomfortable by following.  We must not imagine that the hurt of following in not real.  It most emphatically is.  But it is a hurt that will give way, perhaps in this life, certainly in the life to come.  As we approach this year’s Commerce Day/Christmas we would do well to ask: “What or who has grown too close to our heart?”  God grant us the pain of faithfully following Jesus our Lord.



Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Finally the secret to peace and serenity

As my Thanksgiving gift to you I offer a chapter that didn't make it into my book "The Adventures of June Bug Johnson."  Please consider purchasing a copy of the book if you haven't done so yet.  They make wonderful Christmas gifts. www.JuneBugJohnson.com  

Not my duck not my bottle.

June Bug had always been able to go to grandpa Lymon with questions, problems and quandaries and get advice.  Grandpa Lymon was always willing to let the boy talk, it seemed that when the Lord was giving out patience Grandpa Lymon got a double blessing, and with June Bug he need it.  The boy could, at times talk like his tongue was tied in the middle and flapping loose on both ends.  Grandpa Lymon once said, “That boy could talk a fish into growing legs and going for a walk, not cause he is so convincing but because the fish would just get tired of listening to him.”

On one occasion it appeared that even the seemingly inexhaustible supply of Grandpa Lymons patience was used up by June Bug.  It happened when June Bug was at that social age of about 14 years old.  One day he comes down to Grandpa Lymons store and starts in with hardly a word of hello.   I will not attempt to retell the whole sad tale but the jest of it was that Terry, one of June Bugs’ friends, liked Cindy, but Cindy really liked Jay.   Jay didn’t care for her because he had a girl friend from another school.  But Terry who had been ‘going out’ with Debbie but wanted to stop liking her so he would be free to like Cindy and was thinking about telling Cindy about Jay liking a girl from another school.  But if he did Vicki, who was Cindy’s best friend, would tell Debbie and Cindy that Terry was planning on dumping Debbie, which would be okay with June Bug except June Bug liked Vicki. 

This is the simple straightforward version unpolluted by the hormones and the ramblings of a teenage boy.  The original version was about 25 minutes of teenage chatter.  Once the whole story was out June bug looked at Grandpa Lymon and said, “What should I tell Terry?”  Grandpa Lymon was exhausted just from the hearing of the story, he also was a bit agitated that he had to spend so much of his time listening to the soap opera of teenage life.  Grandpa Lymon let out a long sigh and paused for effect or perhaps out of sheer exhaustion and said:  “Not my duck not my bottle”.  Turned and went back to keeping the store.

“Grandpa?”,  June Bug was struggling to comprehend what his grand dad had just told him.  “…did you say that I should tell Terry something about a duck and a bottle?”

“Not something son, you should tell him specifically, ‘It is not my duck and not my bottle’”.

June Bug looked at his grand dad as if he were a dog listening to a high-pitched whistle, he had no ideal what was going on. 

“I don’t understand grandpa, what are you talking about?”

“Well let me tell you about Matthaniah Washington.”  It seemed that Grandpa Lymon had a story for any and every occasion.   “Matthaniah was an old man when I was a little boy, and he was perhaps the wisest man I ever met”.

Grandpa Lymon pulled out a chair leaned it against the wall and got the look in his eye of someone seeing something a long way off.  It was his turn to talk.

“My grand daddy did business with Mr. Washington, bought pelts from him and resold them.  Matthaniah lived why out on the edge of Bear Creek Swamp.  Had a little cabin off the Greenville Rd.  He lived alone never had a wife or family but was a warm and kindly old hermit sort.  Everyone around these parts respected him as a wise old sage.”

“My grand daddy said he was one of the flew former slaves that knew how to read and write.  Never did say where he learned to read.  At that time not a lot of colored people could read, so many of them would come to him for reading.  No one knew wild animals like he did either.  Many a wealthy white man came to him as sort of a hunting guide too.  His skin was black as coal an his hair was gray, not white but true gray like a winter rainy sky.”

One summer my grand daddy comes to me and tells me that I am going to stay with Mr. Matthaniah for few weeks.  He need some help and my grand daddy told me I would be happy to stay with him and help.  Mr. Matthaniah had been sick and was a little behind on his work and so I went out to stay with him and help out for a few weeks.

Well the first Saturday I was there this city fellow comes ride up in what people used to call a horseless carriage, that was one of the first automobiles I had ever seen.  He come all the way from Montgomery and it must have been a real journey in those days.   You could tell by the way he walked up to the little cabin he though a mighty lot of himself.  He was dressed in a suit the color of cream and matching hat with a thin black tie.  We was sitting on the front porch eating corn pone and greens for lunch when he walked up.

He says, “I am looking for Mr. Matthaniah Washington, would you be him, sir?”  Now for a big shot city lawyer to call a colored man “sir” was something else.

“I am” Mr. Matthaniah said without much tone in his voice.

“I understand that you are the hunting guide for the governor’s advisor on agriculture?” 

Mr. Matthaniah started to warm up a little.  “Yes sir, but it is a while to hunting season, but it you want to plan a hunt we could plan a time.”

“No it not about hunting.  I work with the governor’s advisor and he was telling me that you are man that has found the secret of serenity and inner peace.  Well sir, I am a man in need of that secret, my job, my family obligations, my responsibilities are taxing my nerves.  I feel that I may have a nervous collapse if I don’t discover your secret.” 

Well ole Mr. Matthaniah leans forward and says, “Why don’t you tell me about it, son”

‘Here that man stated telling a tell that sounded a good bit like yours, June Bug.’    Grandpa Lymon looked down at June Bug with a serious look.  ‘He told about all the problems of all the friends, family and co-workers.  He talked about how his brother was having trouble with his wife and they might get divorced, how one of the men in the office was drinking too much and was not getting things done right.  He talked about a lady in the Sunday School class that was flirting with the preacher and how if something happened it would upset the whole church not to mention be the talk of Montgomery.  How he did go on.  After almost and hour of his talking about everybody he knew and all their problems he wasn’t slowing down one bit.   That is when Ole Matthaniah got up and without a word got down off the porch and went around the house.

The big city dude was kinda shocked and just stood there.  He looked at me and said, “Where is he going?”  I just shook my head cause I had no idea.  A couple of minutes later Mr. Matthaniah comes back with a bottle in one had and a duck under the other arm.  He comes up to the man and says, “Mister I got just what you need”. 

The man looks down at the duck real puzzled like.  Mr. Matthaniah went on, “But first I need you to do something for me.” 

“Well whatch need?” the man said, but it sounded more like he was asking another question.

“I need you to put this duck in this wine bottle, you do that for me and I will tell you how to have peace and serenity in the midst of all your troubles.  But there are two rules, first of all you can’t hurt the duck, second you can’t ruin the bottle.  You do that for me and I will tell you the secret I know.” 

Here Mr. Matthaniah handed the duck and the bottle to the man, and went into the house and closed the door.  The man stood there for a minute looking sort of fuddled.  Then he went and got in his car and drove off.  I didn’t ask Mr. Matthaniah about the duck and the bottle cause I expected that he would tell me if he wanted me know.  

Next Saturday just before lunch that same city feller came out the road and stopped.  He got out of the car and comes up to where Mr. Matthaniah and I were working.  He don’t even say ‘Howdy’ he just launches in, “What if I cut the duck up into tiny pieces and stuff it down in the bottle?”  He was looking kind of expectantly, hoping that was the answer.

“Nawsir that would hurt the duck you can’t hurt the duck.”  Mr. Matthaniah said and he went back to work, we were splitting firewood for the winter.  The man just stood there for a second or two, like he was froze to the ground.  The Mr. Matthaniah says, “If you care to lend a hand we would be much obliged.” 

Without a word the man turned and got in his car and drove off.  We just kept splitting and stacking firewood saying nothing except what was needful for the task.  About and hour later we heard the sound of the car coming down the road.  Mr. Matthaniah reasoned it would be a good time to stop for a break cause he figured he was about to have company. 

For a man seeking senernity this fellow seemed to stay hot and bothered an awful lot.  He was in an ill temper but seeing as how the governor’s agriculture advisor put such stock in Mr. Matthaniah he was watching his tongue.  “What if I had a glass cutter cut the bottom off the bottle we could put that duck up in the bottle without even breaking a feather?”

I fetched over the water bucket and the dipper Mr. Matthaniah had sent me after, and he took a long cool drink.  He lowered the dipper wiped his mouth on the back of his hand and said, “Nawsir can’t damage the bottle at all.  No that won’t do.”  Then acting as if there wasn’t anyone else around he looked at me and said, “You stack the rest of this wood I’m going to go pull some corn for supper.”  He walked off toward the garden leaving me with our confused guest. 

He spoke to me, “Boy do you know what the old man wants, if you got a secret I’ll give you two dollars”.   Now this man must have been eat up with curiosity cause back then two dollars was a heap of money.  But I had to tell him, “No sir I don’t know anything about this at all.”   That was not the answer he had wanted, he snorted and mumbled something under his breath and walked back over to get in his car.

That night curiosity got the best of me and I ask, “Mr. Matthaniah, why did you tell that man to put a duck in a bottle?  I mean it is impossible to do all you ask, I mean without hurting the duck or busting the bottle.”

Mr. Matthaniah quietly said, “I asked him to do it to teach him a lesson, the harder he tries to figure it out the better he will learn the lesson.”  That didn’t make much sense to me but I figured that was all I would get out of him so I left that sleeping dog lay.

Well it all came clear the next Saturday.  Not long after breakfast we heard the familiar sound of the car coming up the road.  “He must have left powerful early to get here at this time of the morning.”  I said to Mr. Matthaniah

“Yep maybe he learned the lesson and wants to tell me about it.” Was his only answer.

He was not dressed in his usual suit, and the air of propriety was completely absent.  He got out the car came around and open the passenger door and reached in and got out a cage and the bottle.   He walks over to Mr. Matthaniah and it looks like he may hurt the older man.  He shoved the cage and the bottle into his arms and almost yells, “It is not my duck and its not my bottle.  If you want that stupid duck in the bottle do it yourself.”  He turns and starts to walk away. 

But Mr. Matthaniah says, “Why don’t you come have some coffee since you have learned the secret of peace and serenity”.

He turns and looks at Mr. Matthaniah like he was real angry and he might do something, then he looks a little confused, then he smiled the least little bit and ask, “Why you say that?’

“Well when you come out here two weeks ago looking for peace and serenity you was all hot and bothered by a whole heap of troubles.  Everybody and his brother’s troubles you took on yourself, troubles you couldn’t fix, and then you decided that you would worry over em.   So I just gave you one more trouble you couldn’t fix.  Aint no way to put a duck in a bottle without either hurting the duck or ruining the bottle.’

‘You decided that the duck and the bottle weren’t your trouble and so you weren’t going to be bothered by them.  That is the secret of serenity.   All them things you was fussing about they weren’t yours to worry over, just like the duck and bottle weren’t yours to worry over.’

The man visibly relaxed and kind of laughed to himself.  “Not my duck not my bottle.  I guess I have been trying to get someone else’s duck into their bottles.  But I do feel like I ought to help people who are in trouble.”

Yessur, good Lord wants us to help people, but you aint helping people by worrying and besides if they don’t ask you for help or won’t let you give them real help, they aint asking for help.  They maybe just wanting someone to discuss how to get a duck in the bottle.  You don’t need that.  Now how about some coffee?


Grandpa Lymon turned to June Bug and said, “Son all your yammering on sounded like you was fooling around with somethings that weren’t your duck and your bottle.  You want my advice you stay out of it, and if someone wants to get you in the middle of their mess you just tell em, “Aint my duck aint my bottle.”