Archive for April, 2008

Funerals and Meetings

Posted in Uncategorized on April 30, 2008 by downtownpastor

Yesterday, I went to the memorial service of the father of one of my best buddies.  His dad was a WWII vet, a genuine, blazing fighter pilot like the kind you only see in the old movies now.  But, like most of his generation, he came home from the unspeakable/unspoken horrors, failures, and necessities of war and simply settled down into being a loving, fanstasic husband, father, neighbor, Christian, etc.  If at my memorial service people say a minute fraction of the genuine, gracious things said about him, I will have lived the life I hope to live, and will have left behind in the souls of those I love the things I hope they carry inside them in relation to my life.  Our world loses more from that generation every day–I’ve gone to two services for such vets in the last couple of months.  It made me think of the generation that is now in battle in the Middle East, and that perhaps I should pray for them (ya think!?), more than I perplex-ulate and pontificate about the politics of the war they’re in.  The real battle goes on and on, long after the bullets and IED’s are rusty and dead, as the souls of each generation goes on beyond its graves…

Which leads me to the reason for the title today…. “Funerals and Meetings.”  Last evening I had a meeting with the two women who coordinate the music worship in our church.  The meeting  was (as usual with these wonderful, mature disciples) a piece of cake, administratively speaking.  They always treat me like such a professional peer, even though I can only play the beginning to Stairway to Heaven, and parts of some other riffs from the 70’s.  It was a meeting about things like “direction…vision…”where we’re going/who we are”…, etc. etc.  I think my mind and spirit was put in the right place because of the memorial service I’d been to earlier in the day.  Acknowledging the things that don’t change (character qualities, love of God and people, etc.), and the eternal significance of such things made it so much clearer in my mind what we’re trying to do each week when we “open our hymnals to such-and-such a hymn.”  This needs to be taken the right way, of course, but I wonder if we only held our meetings after attending funerals if we might save a lot of time, and build better, longer lasting ministries that help to create more men like my friend’s dad.

May my gracious, loving King grant His mercy, compassion, and tender regard on the great man’s wife, family, and my friend, esp. this week, and forever.  I’ll see him on that Day.

Theodidaktos = “God Taught”

Posted in ministry with tags on April 27, 2008 by downtownpastor
  So this is how it works on most Saturday mornings.  I stay downtown on Friday and Saturday nights.  The church is located downtown, close to PSU campus, was built about 100 years ago, and has a wonderful, Victorian-style parsonage next to it. No pastor has lived in the parsonage for over 50 years.  All I’ve been able to learn is that the last pastor who lived here “had a really, really big German Shepherd,” because (I think…) even at that time the surrounding neighborhood was, how should I say it…a bit rough around the edges.  As a result, to even call it a parsonage would draw puzzled looks from most people–esp. in this neighborhood.  A few would recognize what I was talking about if I said we were spending weekends in the “Hafner House” (Pastor Hafner, who ministered here from 1897 to 1943 was the senior/only pastor here when the house was built), but most would know what I was talking about if I simply said, “The house next door to the church on the corner.”  Anyway, I woke up this morning and did what I really like to do on mornings down here:  I sat on the front porch and had a cup of coffee.  I should have prayed first, should have prepared myself for the day, for whatever the day would bring, because the first thing that they day brought did not bring out the best side of the downtown pastor.  Actually, it called forth the downtown-putz.  Here’s what went down…  I’m enjoying my coffee, looking out at the day unfold before me.  The sun’s out, it’s going to be a gem of a day.  I’ve got some touch up work to do on my sermon tomorrow, and a teaching on the book of Luke to do, and other than that… it’s coffee, urban-love-the-people stuff, and all is good.  Then, this dude walks down the street.  He doesn’t see me–my porch is a bit higher then the street level.  The dude has a dog, excuse me, it is a Dog; a broad shouldered, massive headed, brutish-looking junkyard rover that walks down the sidewalk like the cement was poured just for him.  No problem, lot’s of big dogs down here; I’ve got my own little dog, Scout, curled up next to Mama in the bedroom, with no intention of uncurling anytime soon.  So, Brutus-dog stops in front of the porch, squats, and procedes to do his bigger business of the day–right in the flower bed that two dear sisters had worked on, in the rain, planting-weeding, barkdusting, etc.  There he is, master obediently paused, laying it down right in front of me.  Now, here’s the thing a downtown resident looks for….did the owner reach into a back pocket to retrieve a plastic baggy to pick-up and put the poo in?  It’s what you’ve gotta do down here, otherwise, well, with all the dogs, you know how things would be…  But, nope, no baggy in site.  The dude starts to walk away.
“Hi,” says I.  “How’s it going?”
“Great,” he says…and keeps on walking. 
“Whoa,” I said.  “What about your dog’s mess there?”
He looks at me like I’ve just asked him to recite a Bible verse or something, then, the sneer creeps in. 
“Yeah, right.  I’ll come back for it later, dude.”
Now I’m standing, and not feeling very Saturday mellow anymore.  I’m also not feeling very–pastoral either. I’m not liking this dude very much, either.   Like I said, I should have prayed…
“No, at least kick it into the gutter.’  I sense that he does not appreciate an old dude sitting on the porch giving out orders.
“What, do you own this dirt?”
“Yeah, as a matter of fact I do own it, and I fixed it up, and I clean it when people let their dogs crap in it.  What don’t you be a good owner, and take care of your dog’s mess.”
Now, he’s mad at me.  I think by the fact that I’m sitting on the porch drinking coffee in my socks may make him at least wonder if I’m the pastor, or some sort of official somebody here, so maybe he shouldn’t just haul off and deck me.  Then again, I’m bigger than him, for all he knows I might be crazy (this is downtown), and (I figure) he doesn’t know that I’m actually feeling a bit rummy from the cancer treatment on Wednesday.  All in all, it’s worth a bluff, so I continue.
“C’mon, guy, it’s just what everyone has to do…”
“Hey,” he says, “it’s natural, good for the earth, just let it go.”
“Oh,” I say, “You’re actually doing a good thing for the planet by leaving your dog poo in front of my house.  Wow, thank you!  What’s your address?  Maybe I’ll return the favor, just for the good of Mother Earth.”
You can guess what he told me to do after that.
Like Robert E. Lee at Gettysburg, my blood was up, I was in for a fight.  “No, dude, why don’t YOU man-up here, and take care of your own business, instead of making other people take care of it for you?  What are you, a little boy or a man?”  (I think I have a definite left-over tinge of Promise Keeper ethos floating around in my brain that pops out at moments like these.  Why else would I say stuff like that?)
He walked away, (I think he flipped me off…). I watched him leave.  His last shot:  “Take a picture; it’ll last longer…”  Not original, but I get the point.
I turned to the couple of teenagers standing by outside the door of the homeless-teen-resource-center, which is next door to the Hafner House/Parsonage/Church Office.  They’re having a smoke, and pretending that they aren’t listening.  Actually, they looked a little scared of me, Pastor Ken. 
“Wow, I guess I kind of got him mad, huh?”  (Ya think?!)
“Uh…yeah.  Looks that way, man.”
Well, that was the worst of it, thank the Lord.  The rest of the morning I got to meet with some good friends, pray with a couple on the street, help a couple of them out, and belly ache to Jim, an older, wiser man who lives down here.
I told him the story, and told him I’d acted like an ass over a pile of dog poo.  It’s the way people act when they really, really care about their lawns.  I freaked out over a patch of bark dust.
Jim said it was cool, he didn’t trust pastors who acted like they batted a thousand, anyway.   I guess I wouldn’t either, but man, it’s a drag to whiff out in the first inning of the game.  Glad there’s a tomorrow around here!
I got my own little baggy, asked God to a) forgive me, and b) not let the dude or his growledigenious beast attack me if I saw him, and finally c) give me the grace to ask him to forgive me for  making it a drag to make a mistake on a beautiful Saturday morning.  He’s not the only person that’s left a few messes for other people to clean up, I figure.
Oh yeah, I was wearing a T-shirt that says, in Greek, theodidaktos, or, “God taught.”  I’m hoping the guy doesn’t know Greek.