Friday, August 21, 2009

A Time To Speak

It was mid-December, 1949. I had joined a significant number of my college colleagues in the on-campus women’s dorm lounge. In fact, the place was packed. We were jammed into every square foot of sofas, chairs, floor space. The place was aglow, not only from the warmth of the fireplace, but also from the ad hoc harmony of Christmas carols. It was our pre-holiday all-school Christmas party and everything felt just right. The snow was glistening. Home for Christmas was just days away. Engagement rings were anticipated by some and homemade Christmas cookies, candies, eggnog by many others.

We had moved through “Jingle Bells” to “Let It Snow” to “O Little Town of Bethlehem.” Then it was my turn to speak. I was the president of the student body and so was invited to give the devotion/homily/speech, whatever one wants to call it.

So I spoke on “Let us go to Bethlehem.” We were going home and that was great. We were going to be among those who loved us and that was wonderful. I suggested that all of this was part of going to Bethlehem, to the crèche, to the place where we meet anew the infant Jesus, to the place where angels assure us that this is where acceptance, hope and love abound.

The speech worked. Since all in that room were preparing for public ministry with the Lutheran church, most were touched at a deep spiritual level of the meaning of their life.

It was a great time to speak.

Since then I have spoken to a hundred (maybe more than a thousand) different audiences in settings as varied as convention centers in New York City to the tiny chapel of the Baptistery of Lydia in Greece. Every once in a while it all worked.

The crowded low-ceilinged meeting room was in a Colorado Springs hotel. It was the 60’s and Lutheran schools shared in the upheaval. Young and old were questioning institutions, even schooling itself. I spoke to some 300 teachers in the schools of the “4-corners” area. My theme was “The Church That meets in Your Classroom.” I reminded those teachers that their classroom met all the criteria of church: the Gospel was shared, faith united the community, and the demons of ignorance, racism, and sexism were being exorcised. Miracles like learning to read and write were happening every day. And each teacher was the minister in that classroom that God used to make it all possible. The addressed worked. It was a time to speak.

Every once in a while the magic occurred. Speaker and audience reacted in unison. Thoughts were stimulated. Emotions were evoked. Hope and promise seemed real.

Of course, sometimes it just didn’t work. (See “A Time To Keep Silent). Sometimes it was just another speech. But when it all came together it reassured me that even in the age of multi-media there are still occasions when the best communication occurs because “It is the time to speak

A Time To Keep Silent

We are in a staff meeting checking calendars. Mine lists lots of speaking engagements. My colleague comments, “Mel will speak on any subject, anywhere.” I still don’t quite know what Don meant by that remark. I took it as much more of a put-down than as a vote of confidence.

In later years I realized that I should have taken it as a warning. Sometimes I have made speeches when I really should have chosen silence.

A rather fundamentalist congregation was sponsoring a weeklong revival. I was asked to speak on “the Battleground for the Gospel”. I knew what they wanted: Warnings against secular humanism in public schools, The shame of removing posters of the Ten Commandments in southern courtrooms, The threat of radical feminism, free condom or drug needles distribution. I chose another route.

I suggested that the real “Battleground for the Gospel” lay deep within the heart of each one of us. Our struggles between knowing the good, but not doing it. The continuing wish to earn God’s favor in place of freely accepting grace. The constant seeing of the speck in my neighbor’s eye, ignoring the beam in my own.

As I spoke, the usual “Amens” were very sparse. “Tell us brother” was not to be heard. At the end of the day I decided that I should have suggested a different speaker while I remained silent.

The event was a national conference of construction workers and spouses. It was in a very fancy Hollywood Hotel. I was scheduled to speak at a 3:30 p.m. sectional on effective parenting. Attendees there were hoping to forget their children for a few days. Vender hospitality suites next door were stocking their bars. My audience had one goal: Get out of here. Let the good times roll. Effective parenting - well, I’ll think about that when I get home. I should have chosen silence.

Not just a lecture, but a whole course. I was asked to teach General Psychology to a class in a seminary. Two problems: I was to teach it in Cantonese (even after 6 years in Hong Kong, teaching a psychology course in Chinese was not to be recommended.) the second problem: The only psychology texts available in Chinese were translations from Russian behaviorists, hardly the best grounding for future Lutheran pastors. The students (at least outwardly) were marvelously patient. I was terrible. I should have remained silent.

There is one whole class of speaking opportunities that has no equal. Give a lecture, conduct a workshop or lead a seminar. Do it for a faculty that is required to attend. Speak at the close of the school day on a Friday afternoon in any (especially urban) school in America. Forget about it. Stay silent.

The ancient writer had it so right, “There is a time to speak and a time to remain silent.” Why is that silent part so hard to put into practice?

Pharaohs Who Know Not Joseph

The Bible tells us that at some point Egypt got a “new Pharaoh who did not know Joseph”. He forgot the history of how Joseph had saved the Egyptians from starvation. So…

This forgetful Pharaoh made the Jews his slaves and in the end he lost them all and even lost his own son. All because he failed to remember Joseph.

The story is repeated straight up to this morning. It is called "loss of institutional memory". Others call it forgetting one’s roots. Still others find it demeaning to admit that they stand on another’s shoulders. Some talk blithely about that was then, this is now and it is time to move on - now!

I just returned from my annual family reunion. My niece and her family orchestrated it wonderfully. She was determined to be a female Pharaoh who remembered Joseph and Joseph’s queen and so our parents were recalled in gratitude and appreciation.

On the other hand, I have seen schools and congregations currently led by Pharaohs who do not remember anyone named Joseph. There is no acknowledgment of those who have gone before. That is why (even before I was in my 80”s) I believed in celebrating the anniversaries of institutions. The early Josephs and their female counterparts not only deserve to be remembered but also they are forgotten at the peril of the current power wielders.

Citizens can all too easily enjoy the freedoms, life style and opportunities of the present while all too off-handedly dismissing those who whose efforts, sacrifice and even life blood makes it possible for them to have the blessings currently enjoyed. Of course I read Kibrahn’s “The Prophet” and agree with him that “life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday”. However, I cringe at the all too true joke that the most commonly passed resolution at the annual meeting of the congregation at which I grew up was the one that ended with “therefore be it resolved that we stick with the old!” Of course we move on. But we also remember Joseph and if he is around we consult with him and his sisters, we stand on those shoulders and then see new vistas and dream new dreams and even celebrate new paradigms.

Now I must run and have a long talk with an elderly friend names Joseph!

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Energy

I am screaming my lungs out, all caught up in the frenzy of the crowd. I’m at Shea Stadium. It’s the bottom of the tenth in the 1986 World Series. The slow grounder off the bat of Mookie Wilson has just gone through the legs of Red Sox first baseman Allan Buchner and we win! Mets win! Mets win! We don’t want to leave the stadium. We are all friends. We are all exultant. It doesn’t get any better than this.

I am walking as fast as I can, being jostled, pushed, propelled out of the mouth of the tunnel from the subway. I am being carried on the motion of the crowd of thousands right into the heart of Tian An Men Square in Beijing, China. It is June 4, 1989. Everyone is hopeful, ecstatic, that reform is coming to Communist China. People talk to me in Mandarin whether I understand them or not. Music blares. Flags fly. Arms hug. Youths exult. Elderly contemplate. I am part of a sea, the crest of a wave, moving in concert with a sea of humanity toward the shore of freedom.

The city swoops me up into her arms and carries me from midtown to downtown. It’s the Centennial Celebration of the Statue of Liberty and we are all celebrating it in the pulsating heart of Manhattan. People are everywhere. They are eating, singing, brake-dancing. There is reggae and salsa and military marches. Kids wear Statue of Liberty head decorations. Adults wave American flags. Even dogs are attired in red, white and blue. The people sweep me along, all the way across from Manhattan to Brooklyn on the Brooklyn Bridge. Later in the darkness sirens howl, spectacular fireworks explode, laser beams shoot up into the sky. There is massive motion and no violence. There is brotherhood and sisterhood among people of every color, multiple dress styles, uncountable different languages. All are celebrating and I am part of it. This is the celebration of the open arms of America, land that I love!

Hang on, little Peggy. Let’s hold hands tightly so we don’t get separated. We are once again a part of that happy company of crowd-loving Chinese going down the ramp of the Star Ferry to cross from Kowloon to Hong Kong Island. The signs warn, “Watch out for pick-pockets” so we are careful, but not so careful as to detract from the pure exhilaration of being a part of the crowd, a connected piece of humanity, a couple of cells in the body of all God’s people.

Crowds can do this to me! They give me energy, synergy, life!

Praying

It was on a quiet hill called Tao Fung Shan (the mountain of the wind of the way). Behind me Hong Kong swarmed with tens of thousands of desperately poor street-dwelling refugees. In front of me lay Mao’s China where as many as 3 million were starving because of his misguided Great Leap Forward. Around me were the young restless teenagers facing a most uncertain future. We sat under a naked white cross inscribed with only two black Chinese characters pronounced, “sing leo” meaning “It is finished.” I prayed for the terrible past to be finished, the unsettling present to be handled, and that the future to be open. The voiced ‘Ah-moon” of us all, the end of the prayer, came from deep within and floated heavenward in doubt, faith and hope.

The auditorium in Disney Land was still tense. Among the 2000 there, some were anxious. Some rejoiced. Others feared. Some threatened. Some cursed. It was the end of an exceedingly stormy session of a large churchwide convention. All day in the name of God people had fought like the devil. I had been asked to lead the closing prayer at the end of the day. So I began, “Dear God, those of your children called the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod have kept you very busy today...”

The other passengers were already off the plane at the Lincoln Nebraska airport. Only my seatmate whom I had met an hour earlier and I remained. She was not sure she had the courage to get off the plane to face her father. She planned to inform him, a Lutheran pastor, that she had filed for divorce. She feared her father would be angry, disown her, damn her to hell; or maybe ... understand, forgive, support. While the flight attendant waited I held her folded hands in mine and we prayed.

Only two of us stood before the simple altar in the chapel at Maxwell Air Force Base where I was conducting a weeklong workshop for military chaplains. The Jewish chaplain and I were the only ones in the room. He had invited me to come with him as he prayed. Yesterday I had been in the much larger Catholic Chapel where the Catholic chaplains had violated official policy and had invited me (a non-Catholic) to share with them the sacred elements of the holy mass. And just two days previous some 20 of us had held hands surrounding the altar of the Protestant Chapel where together we prayed saying, “Our Father in heaven”.

The eyes of all wait upon you, oh Lord.

Church Picnic Softball

Last Sunday my church once again sponsored Sunday Church Picnic in the Park. It was wonderful. Lots of hamburgers, hot dogs, potato salads, homemade cakes and cookies. The fellowship was great. Persons of all ages milled around together enjoying a gorgeous day.

After the meal there was the usual: putting contest, hula hoops, water balloon toss. The works. Then came the announcement,”Time for the softball game. Get you glove, bat and balls and let’s head for the ball field.”

It was at that point that I hesitated. Should I join in? I remembered our last church picnic softball game, now some ten years ago. Of course I was younger then, only 71 and anxious to get into the game. First came the matter of choosing teams. One chooser was a middle aged softballer, the other an eager teen-ager. By turn they made their selection. Almost all had been selected when it hit me. ”Hey, I haven’t been picked “. This was a pretty new experience for me. I used to be always among the first ones picked. I felt a tinge of rejection.

Finally all had been chosen, all except me, that is. Then to add injury to insult the middle aged guy said to the kid, “Why don’t you just take Mel?” The reply, “No, that’s okay. You take him” So I joined my team in the field. Naturally I was assigned short right field.

When it came my turn at bat I was ready. I rejoiced as I belted a single through the infield. I admit it was not a screamer, but I was safely on base. The next batter hit a slow roller. I was not about to be doubled off at second. I took off with every ounce of energy my legs could generate. About half way between first and second it happened. I felt my hamstring snap. I fell to the ground. I was assisted off the field. I watched the rest of the game in silence trying not to show any pain. It was the first time in all of my life that I declared a church picnic a disaster.

That was why I hesitated last Sunday about joining in the game. I made the right decision. I wished my fellow congregants well. I went home and watched the Padres lose on television.