Thursday, February 25, 2010

SPEAKING IN ALL CAPS

Ok, I admit it. That guy you heard screaming unintelligibly in the next aisle? Yeah, that was me. If you’d had the military-like courage to come over and ask me, I’d have told you I was speaking with conviction and furious glory. But really? I’d just lost my cool and published it in the cloud.

Now, following the admission comes the stark reality that you are standing in what could easily pass for a) a (used) minefield, or b) the center ring in a one ring circus, or c) a public area with lots of expensive and colorful items stacked precariously on their cardboard endcaps all at floor level, or, worst-case-scenario d) all of the above.

Fortunately, because the natural color of my hair is a mottled sort of orange, the grays that are surely sprouting from all available pores are well camouflaged, and difficult to discern.

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I was standing at the top of the stairs, on my way to wake up my beautiful Grr when I heard it. Tigger, at the top of his voice, speaking to his (currently) smaller brother with a familiar conviction and furious glory. Mo had (reportedly) dropped beans on the floor (that’s a primary-offense, usually punished by removal of said dried beans for a given period of time), and Tig was simply reprimanding in a fashion that precedence had ruled acceptable.
Whoops.

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I called him up to Grr’s room. Dutifully he arrived. At that point I apologized. I immediately recognized that Tig had simply done what he’d seen and heard his papa doing, and that I owed him and Mo an apology for being a poor example on the matter of “Techniques for the correction and rebuke of minor, yet terribly aggravating offenses.” I made a covenant with myself (albeit a weak accountability partner) in the company of my firstborn son, and heir to my great estate, that I would not raise my voice as casually as I had. That it was not a gracious way. That really, it was selfish, undisciplined, and base. Not who I want to be.
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I’ve already broken treaty with myself. It’ll be a long road to recovery. But I’m going to keep trying. I want lots of things: I want my boys to obey my voice, not my volume. And I DON’T want my boys to be afraid of me. But most importantly, I want them to know that there’s a difference between being disciplined and being hated.
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It’s interesting that I gleaned this little distinction from a man younger than me, unmarried, with NO kids. But he has subjected himself to the authority of his teachers, and learned a great deal much earlier than most of us do because of it. We were discussing the matter of discipline, because my boys were running amuck and amusing their less gentile natures outside. And he said something that was plain but very profound. The punishment follows the breaking of a rule. It isn’t about me being angry, or disappointed, or any of that. And when I yell, I communicate anger, not authority. Discipline brings blessing. Anger causes hurt.

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So: in the matter of the people vs. Mo, we find the defendant guilty as charged. Time served. In the corollary matter of the people vs. His father, guardian and steward, we find the defendant guilty of misguided frustration, misdirected selfishness, and we forgive him his debts as we forgive our debtors. He is henceforth remanded to the agency of the kingdom of the Father, and will from this point forward “go forth and sin no more”. Yeah right. BUT, he will resolve to more righteously use tone and volume as it pertains to bringing well-adjusted and Jesus-loving men into this world which we live in. Amen and thank-you, God, for grace, which issues ever forth for the benefit of fathers, mothers, daughters and sons.

Monday, February 22, 2010

capitalC.10 (the politics of charity) OR "On Meeting my In-Laws"

Forgive me if the details seem made-up. They could be. But there’s an equally good chance that they’re not.

I’m pretty sure my marriage was destined. I met her mom before I met my wife actually. Almost a year earlier. She (the MiL) remembers it- I’m not sure if I remember it or if I’ve just heard the story enough times that I’ve created the memory for myself. I was playing in the chamber orchestra- I must have been playing cello, or she probably wouldn’t have come and spoken to me. My wife played cello then. So I think MiL-ie was scouting or something.

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We met for ourselves the next year. I was an R.A. (I’m not really sure what that was about- it seemed like a good idea at the time- but I was wrong and somebody else noticed before I did- whoops). I was sitting desk in the frosh men’s dorm I think when SugarMomma and MiL-ie came in to visit someone else. Suga’ says she liked my “image.” Weekly showers, long hair, and visible tattoos. Hmm. Not sure what Mil-ie thought, but now you’ve got a picture.

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I was drunk. Or high. Not sure which. Maybe both. I’d gotten a whiff of radical-Jesus. I’d gotten a taste of social-justice-Jesus. I was a born-again, anti-fluff, save-the-poor-people, down-with-the-establishment, disciple of Che-Yeshua. And Karl Marx. Oh man, those were the days. I was of a generation that was gonna subvert the dominant paradigm. We were gonna drag Pat Robertson into the street and shun him publically. We were gonna dismantle the Religious Right, and sneak in through the think-tanks and social action groups. We were green. We were smart. We were young. Tri-fecta.

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I revealed this glimpse of God’s kingdom to my future dad-in-law at the Koffie Boon. It was exciting because he was willing to talk to me, listen to me- and he cared! It was astounding. Now- he’s my dad-in-law for real now, so I can’t say too much more “nice” stuff, or it might go to his head.
But one thing- I couldn’t believe he wasn’t jumping onboard my Christian socialist bandwagon! Dude! Care for the poor! The widow! Eat the Rich! THAT’S WHAT THE SERMON ON THE MOUNT IS ALL ABOUT! RIGHT!??

Ok, so I may have made up that last part. But I’m sure he thought it. Ok, not sure.

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He said something to me that night- well, I’m sure he said lots of things. But one thing he said in particular has stayed with me these 13 ?! years. He asked me “What if the church did all those things you want the government to do?” His suggestion, implicitly was that the Church had abdicated her blessed task and mandate to care for the sick, the elderly, the poor and the widowed- and that now people who needed it were left with no better recourse than a deficit strapped government filled with career politicians.

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This week, the Church is taking back her place, at least here in Des Moines. Five churches are throwing a benefit party for the world. Or, at least for Des Moines. “capitalC.10” is an opportunity for the Church of Jesus Christ in Des Moines, IA to gather together- to worship with every faculty available. And to worship gratefully with human charity. You show up. You’ll see Jesus. He’ll be there, giving and collecting food, socks, towels, crappy couches, soup in crock-pots or gallon-sized zip lock bags, sleeping bags, clothes- He’ll be standing by watching over as we sign ourselves up to put our hands to His work. Organizations already serving in Des Moines will be there to accept your services. To be blessed by Jesus, worshipping God.

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The Church will gather, the Word will be sung, the good news will be spread- the blind will see, the hungry will be hunger no more, and bound will be set free. The kingdom of heaven draws near. Come and see.

Feb 27. 6322 Hickman Road
www.capitalc10.com