Happy birthday, little brother!

This is an updated version of a post I wrote on my former blog a few years back.

 
I was 11 years old when he was born, and our family was changed forever. He was the cutest baby I’d ever encountered — until my own were born years later — and he grew into a hilarious, wonderful toddler and young child. His mission in life seemed to be making sure that things never got boring in our household. Stories about his various escapades are legendary in our extended family. (One cousin, when she and my younger brother were children, ended almost every Steph story with, “And we were so embarrassed!” Well, everyone but Steph, apparently!)

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Steph seemed so different from our older brother and me. We were shy, awkward and nerdy, while our younger brother charmed the little old ladies in the church, traded kisses for dimes and quarters, purposefully got lost in stores just for the drama of having us all paged, and turned the kindergarten portion of the school Christmas program into “Stephan and his back-up choir”.

We were too shy to ask for directions and information, while Stephan thrived on talking to everyone everywhere.

I’ve never met a child like my younger brother. He was, in some ways, a bundle of contradictions as a little guy. He could be an annoying pest and prankster at times, and yet he could also be a classy little charmer. Most three year old boys, for example, make a mess of eating an ice cream cone and couldn’t be trusted drinking out of expensive, fragile stem-wear. Not Steph — his table manners were extraordinary, and he could be such a delightful little gentleman.

Stephan brought an exciting new vitality to our family when he was born. I’ll never forget “kidnapping” him out of his crib and trying to hide him in my bed. (His giggles always gave him away when my mother would come searching for him.) He taught me not to take myself so dreadfully seriously during my teenage years. He put up with my awful experimental cooking and pretended that he actually enjoyed the meals I forced upon him. (That, of course, prompted my theory that children don’t have taste buds.) He was deluded enough to think that I was beautiful, even during my most awkward adolescent moments. Steph loved my silliest stories, inspired me to create ridiculous games, made me laugh, and alternated between amusing and horrifying me with his creative ability to turn mundane events into fascinating tall tales that he would then spread far and wide. (No, I never threw up on the Thanksgiving turkey, contrary to what Steph told his entire school.)

As Steph grew older, I discovered how much he added to the adventures I had been enjoying for years. Ah, what I wouldn’t give to turn back the clock, just for a day or two, and relive some of the weekends spent together…

But it wasn’t just in his childhood and teens that Steph proved himself to be the best little brother in the world. His crowning achievement is that he has given me some of the most adorable, wonderful, beautiful, delightful nieces and nephews in the world — and he has made sure there are lots of them!

Steph has so many traits that I admire (and lack). He is generously hospitable; I’m convinced that I could drop in unannounced with my entire family in tow, and Steph would joyously feed us all and put us up, without the slightest hint that we might be inconveniencing him. I am so proud of his people skills, and of how he uses his talents and abilities to work diligently in providing for his family. But what touches my heart the most, and fills it with a mixture of joy and sisterly pride, is that Stephan has become a student of my father and of the Word, and that he and my father are now sharing the pulpit at the church my father pastors. I enjoy his unique, fresh perspective and his commitment to remain true to the Biblical text. Impossible as it would have been for me to believe when we were younger, not once has anything he has preached made me want to cringe, hide my face, or throw something at him. Proof that even little brothers eventually grow up!


My baby brother has grown into a loving husband, a devoted father, a wonderful man. But, as a big sister, I’ll never forget the excitement I felt 45 years ago today, when he made his way into our lives and hearts, and how cute he looked when I first got to see him. I was full of dreams then for what we would all do together, but I had no idea how wonderful that little baby would turn out to be.

Struggling with Church | Faith Friday

We are supposed to be the Body of Christ, His hands, His feet…why is church such an ongoing struggle for me? Sometimes I feel as if I’m going around in circles.

It’s been over seven years since I wrote the post on my old blog, pouring out my grief-filled thoughts about church:

Sunday, January 14, 2007
Changes

We’re less than halfway through January, and 2007 is already promising to be a year that is rather…well, interesting.

After much prayer, study, soul-searching, discussion with friends and advisers, sleepless hours, and uncountable hours of analyzing things from every angle we could, my husband and I have made the painful decision to leave our church. Today was our first Sunday to go elsewhere. The church we visited was friendly and warm, and we knew several people there. The worship seemed fresh and real. The man who filled in for the pastor had a powerful testimony, and his message seemed to speak to an issue that I’m currently living out in my life.

But it wasn’t home.

I have often wondered if church is forever ruined for me. Part of it is, of course, being raised as a P.K. (Guys, that meant “Preacher’s Kid” long before it meant Promise Keeper.) No pastor can fill my father’s shoes. Besides, I’ve seen the dark underbelly of the church, and it has wounded me forever.

But there is more…I’ve also seen, as Michael Spencer writes so eloquently, “When I discovered the voice and practices of the ancient church, and the language of the ecumenical church, I resonated deeply. All of the church was my home, but no single room within it made me so comfortable I wanted to stay there and there only.”

No church is ever enough for me. It seems that I always long for more, for something different, for some part of my heart and mind to be touched in a way that no one church has ever been able to touch. I want expository preaching and deeply heartfelt worship and beautiful architecture and pipe organs and liturgy and spontaneity and unadorned simplicity and lay pastors and ordained clergy and formality and informality and ancientness and newness — and there is no church crazy enough and contradictory enough to give me all of that, to feed all those parts of my soul.

I want a church that follows a glorious historical tradition…and a church that also offers, at times, a worship experience that is the spiritual equivalent of “partying down at the frat house.” (The last time we were looking for a church, a pastor friend of mine told me that I would never be happy in a church that didn’t encourage me to be a serious student of the Word. But he also told me that I would probably need to go elsewhere on occasion for a more exuberant expression of worship. “After all,” he said, “there is nothing wrong with partying down at the frat house.”)

Most of all, I want a church that is, as another friend of mine said, a safe place to land. I want a church that will not, yet again, add to my woundedness. I want a church that will instead minister healing.

The truth is that I’m not always sure what I want. I’ve found bits and pieces of my “church home” here and there but, in every church since I was a teenager, I’ve felt like a sojourner or, at best, a member of the extended family. I am already weary at the idea of searching for a new church, because I doubt that I will ever, this side of Heaven, find what I’m longing to find.

I want to see Jesus. Just show me Jesus.

What has happened since then?

In a nutshell, after re-examining and questioning everything I believed about “church”, after much reading and discussion, my husband and I have spent the last 5 or so years in a small home fellowship. It has been mostly wonderful. Unlike some “house church” people, especially those who use the term “organic church”, I have not become opposed to the institutional church. Yes, there is much within the American church that I consider problematic and disturbing. Yes, I have found it wonderfully restorative and freeing to “do church” without all the unnecessary trappings, the programs, fads, committee meetings, infighting, jockeying for influence and control, majoring on minors, etc., etc.

But sometimes I need my “churchy fix”: beautiful architecture, a sense of awe and reverence, the exuberance of a large congregation rejoicing in singing…

At the same time, I have found “church” in unlikely places. It’s not so much what we do in a meeting. It’s who we are.

I wrote this three years ago:

Saturday, July 23, 2011
Remembering and reflecting: where I’ve been

It’s been quite a while since I blogged semi-regularly….

…A lot has happened in my life and in the life of my family since those days. Life and death stuff, or I should say, near-death stuff. Crises. Heartbreak the likes of which no one should ever have to suffer. Anguish. Dark nights of the soul. But also incredible joy in the midst of that sorrow.

In other words, real life. Real nitty, gritty life.

When life gets that in-your-face overwhelmingly real, despite all the chaos and confusion that might ensue for a season, some things become really clear. You re-examine a lot when you’re treading through deep waters. You begin to realize what and whom — and Whom — you can grab onto for safety and what and whom will only pull you down further. You realize who you can go to with your burdens…those who will weep with you and rejoice with you…those who will hold your darkest secret heartaches as sacred trusts…those who will walk with you through the darkest valleys.

There aren’t many of those sorts of people.

Years ago, back in the day, I remember an online discussion of homeschooling mothers during which one brave soul dared mention a minor issue she was having with her teenage daughter. This girl was no longer content to play “Little House on the Prairie” and read Elsie Dinsmore for the 20th time; she wanted more out of life; she longed to do something that made a difference and was exciting at the same time. A number of the other moms, who only had young children, tore into this mother and her daughter. You would have thought this girl had announced, “I want to be a harlot” and that the mother had answered, “Whatever you want, dear, is fine with me; let me buy you some harlot clothes” — that’s how these other moms carried on. They gave advice that this girl’s “rebellious spirit” needed to be rebuked and punished, that the mother shouldn’t listen to her nonsense, that both were in sin, etc., etc.

Needless to say, these are not the sort of people you turn to in a crisis.

A few years went by, but it was still back in the day, when the son of a homeschooling family died under unfortunate and disturbing circumstances. The parents decided to alert other families to what had happened, so that others might be spared their tragedy. I was horrified at the lack of empathy, at the other callousness, in which some in the online world responded. There was much holier-than-thou shooting of the wounded.

Needless to say, these are not the sort of people you turn to in a crisis.

More than one mother, way back in my days of writing about my concerns regarding the Ezzos’ teachings, insisted that they had the whole parenting thing down and would never have to deal with any problems because their one-year-old was already “characterized by first-time obedience”.

Needless to say, these are not the sort of people you turn to in a crisis.

Also, back in the day, there were certain online teachers, some of them leaders in their own churches, who thrived on controversy, who loved to declare their authority over anyone who commented on their blogs, who sounded convinced that they held a special corner on doctrinal correctness, and who loved to argue until they didn’t have the upper hand, in which case they banned people from their blogs.

Needless to say, these are not the sort of people you turn to in a crisis.

In May of this year, I went to a retreat. It was my second year going. I wouldn’t have missed it for the world. When my mother heard of my plans, she asked with some trepidation, “Is this the same retreat you went to last year? the one with the…troubled people?”

It’s always after the fact that I think of what I should have said. In this case, I should have said, “Yes, that one…because I am one of those troubled people.”

Jesus said, “In this world, you will have trouble…” Some people are just more honest and open about their trouble than others. Some people know what it is like to be broken, wounded, and lost. Some people know what it means to find joy after sorrow. Some people aren’t afraid of messes. Some people will let you grieve in ways that wouldn’t look pretty in a movie, and they will sit with you in your pain, without condemnation. Some people know the joy of finding hope after despair, and they share it with you. Some people will walk with you as you try to find your way out of the darkness, out of the deep waters, and they will carry you when you are tired. Some people are like beacons in the night. Some people will give you permission to fall apart if need be. Some people will let you be real, as real as real can be, without any pretense, without any self-protection, and their complete and total loving acceptance of you will be like a healing balm to your soul. Some people will love you so much and so obviously that they earn the right to speak painful truth into your life, and they will do it with tears in their eyes. Some people will, with a hug and some whispered words, give you hope to sustain and encourage you for another year.

There aren’t very many of those people, but I’ve been blessed beyond words to have found some.

Needless to say, those are the sort of people you turn to in a crisis.

And they are also the sort of people you turn to during times of joy and laughter, because they will celebrate with you like no one else will. They totally get the “rejoice with those who rejoice” part because they already have the weeping part down.

When I grow up, I want to be that sort of person.

And that’s what the church should be. Yes, doctrine is important, but not as important as being the living, breathing body of Christ, His Hands, His feet, His shoulder to cry on. One would think those who claim to have the corner on theological correctness would try to outdo everyone else in love, but I’ve found that not to be the case. Sometimes, when I’ve needed Him most, the image-bearer He sent to demonstrate His love didn’t even believe in Him.

Do not get weary | Move it Monday

I posted this on my previous blog on 2/21/2008:

Do not get weary…

Many mornings, as I force myself to get out of bed and head off for my morning exercise, it is a huge struggle. Huge. I am weary. I am lazy. I want my bed. I want a life of easiness, indulgence, sloth…

So I remind myself of the healthy weight range for someone of my size and bone structure: 114-127 pounds. I’m not there. Yes, I could make all sorts of excuses. Those are just numbers on a scale! I’m athletic, and muscles weigh more. All the women in my family have thyroid problems (two have had to have thyroid surgery) and I’m sure my thyroid is probably out of whack, so who can blame me for extra pounds?

But the truth is right in front of me…and right behind me. I’ve indulged myself too much this past year in food and in laziness. The extra weight is there for a reason — my gluttony and my sloth put it there.

I remind myself of my tiny bird bones and of how I don’t want to end up with a broken hip in a few years. I can still add to my bone density, but it will take work. Hard work. But, at my age, should I really risk doing less than what it takes?

I remind myself of diabetes. I’m a ticking time bomb. I know what I need to do to make myself healthier and less at risk.

I remind myself of my children. None of them are married yet. Some are still quite young. I don’t want to be one of those grandmas who is too feeble from years of unhealthy living to play an active role in the lives of my future grandchildren. I don’t want to continue setting a bad example for my children. If I am someday dependent on them for care due to my own physical limitations, I don’t want it to be for diseases and health conditions that I brought upon myself.

I remind myself of my husband. Yes, his example in this area is not one to follow. No, he doesn’t support and encourage me in exercising good stewardship over the body God has given me. In his perfect world, I could be as gluttonous as the day is long and, without doing a thing, somehow be transformed into a delightful person who is fit and trim and movie-star-gorgeous. I know it will not happen. I also know, realistically, that at my age and with my looks, it is really not good for my marriage for me not to be in the best possible shape that I can. I can’t be movie star gorgeous, even if I went to the best plastic surgeons of the bunch. Then there is my age — I’m turning 50 next month. The best I can do is to age well and the best way that I can do that is to be healthy and fit. And that takes work. Constant work. But how can I do anything less for a husband who does so much for me and overlooks so many of my faults?

I remind myself of God. He made me. He gave me this body. Yes, he looks at my inward heart, and I don’t think the numbers on the scale matter as much to Him as they do to me. But…if He looks at the inward heart…that means He sees my laziness, my gluttony, my desire to indulge my appetites, the way I’ve used food to avoid turning to Him…that is so much uglier than any amount of fat my body could possibly carry.

So I drag myself out of bed. I force myself to exercise. I pray for God’s help in overcoming temptation. I keep track of what I eat. I do it so that I will be healthy and more energetic. I do it for the children I teach, so that I may lead by example. I do it for my own children. I do it for my husband. I do it for God.

But I still have to do it.

It’s discouraging how I’ve ended up back in a very similar state! However, some things have changed, besides my age. I now have two granddaughters as motivation. My husband has become more concerned about his own health and fitness, as have several of my kids. In fact, the youngest recently joined a gym, where he is being whipped into shape by one of his older brothers.

So I have less excuse.

I needed this reminder. I also need to remember that I succeeded last time, and can succeed again. It may be more difficult, but that just means I need to work harder.

And now it’s time to get ready for the gym.

Kerckhoff Rats

An oldie but goodie…


Don’t worry; this story isn’t about rats. It’s really about friendship and about how coming to faith in Christ impacts relationships…and it’s about grace. Even though I wrote it some years back, I felt a sudden urge to share it with my readers. Grab a cup of coffee…let me know what you think.


Kerckhoff Rats

Kerckhoff Rats, Drew called us. The phrase sometimes still pops into my mind unexpectedly, and suddenly it’s as if I catch a glimpse of us then. The memories vary. Sometimes it’s Kweku drumming his fingers on the table and bobbing his head to the music, urging me, “See, you can do this, too—you can dance!” Or maybe it’s Drew reading some ancient German tome and chuckling to himself the way other college boys did while reading comic books. Or maybe it’s the way Mindy would walk in…it seemed almost choreographed. “She never stops dancing,” Kweku would say.

We certainly were there a lot, to the point that people could expect to find us at our usual table at the usual times, drinking our usual. Mine was almost always the whipped cream topped Cappuccino Royale, while Kweku and Drew preferred the strongest and blackest of coffees (“Make it like me,” Kweku would say) and Mindy’s choice was herbal tea. We had met there in the coffee house on campus. We were an odd assortment of unlikely friends, but we had become campus fixtures.

There was a certain ritual to much of what we did and how we interacted with each other as well as with our favorite campus haunt. Soon the Kerckhoff employees became part of that ritual. When Kweku would enter the coffee house, for example, one of them would inevitably put on a Stevie Wonder album. For Mindy, it would be Joni Mitchell. I would get a questioning look, to which I ritually replied, “I dunno. Ask Drew.” Drew had eclectic tastes which varied according to mood.

Once in awhile someone would wonder why the album playing would be cut off mid-song and replaced with another. Sometimes there were even protests, which would be met with the simple response, as if it explained everything, “Kweku is here.” Oh. Whatever…

It got so that the other regulars would know not to sit at “our table” in the afternoons. If someone wasn’t familiar with the unwritten reserved status of our table, an employee would let them know. “That’s Kweku’s table. You’ll have to get up when he or his friends get here.” We even called it Kweku’s table. It was by the window and offered the best view of the inside of the coffee house as well as a panorama of that part of the campus. It was also right in the line of sight of the door, so we could spot and flag down friends.

Some of my other friends would find me there and would end up puzzled. Were we two couples? And, if so, who was with whom? It struck the four of us as funny. Early on, Mindy had drawn me aside and warned, “Don’t get involved with Kweku. He loves us both now, but he turns on every woman he becomes romantically involved with.” Sometimes we met those women. Kweku never introduced us. We hated the way he treated them. To us, he was…well, he was Kweku.

Drew was a dreamer. At times Mindy and I felt motherly towards him, as if he still needed tending. To a certain extent, he did. There was a brief time when Drew and I looked at each other differently, as if we’d just had our eyes opened. We even went out on a pseudo-date and kissed good night at the end. It became awkward and we pretended as if the whole thing hadn’t happened. We never dared mention it to Mindy or Kweku but always suspected that they knew and were secretly amused.

Mostly, when we weren’t reading or studying, we talked. Endlessly long philosophical discussions…or almost mindless chatter. After a year, we could finish each other’s stories. I would look at Kweku, fling out my arms like he did, and say in his excited, beckoning voice, “Come with me to Ghana—in the springtime!” His imitation of me was almost as good. None of us were ever graceful enough to imitate Mindy. And Drew—simply burying our noses in some dusty Germanic book no one had ever heard about was imitation enough.

Finals. I don’t think I would have survived without my three friends. We would spend evenings in the coffee house, downing double espressos and encouraging each other to keep on studying. Kweku and Mindy had a lighter load academically, so they would often help drill me on something I found difficult. I’ll never forget the time Kweku was struggling with a paper that simply wouldn’t get written. Suddenly he leaned back in his chair, flung his fist up in the air, and yelled, “Stevie! I need Stevie! Somebody play ‘Saturn’!”

The song started. It was Kweku’s favorite. He always sang along with it, usually so quietly that we could barely hear him. But that night he sang. Soon all of us joined him, full voice, hands drumming the table, completely swept away. When the song was over, the few other students in the coffee house applauded. One girl jumped up and cheered and screamed as if Kweku really was Stevie Wonder. Kweku leaned over to me, pulled my head towards him, and kissed me on the forehead. He whispered in my ear, “That song is really about Ghana, you know. You were beautiful. Come with me…I’ll show you…Ghana in the springtime. It will make you dance. That’s what the song is about. It’s about Ghana.” He kissed my forehead one last time and then we all returned to our books.

Kweku got an “A” on his paper. I passed all my finals. We kept on meeting at Kerckhoff, studying and reading and talking.

Then it all changed.

It was after the spring quarter break. Mindy walked into the coffee house and we, all three of us, stopped and almost stared. She was different. We knew that instantly, yet I couldn’t put my finger on what it was that was different. Kweku whispered, “It’s a different dance.”

She sat down with us. We waited expectantly. Joni Mitchell started singing. None of us spoke.

“Uh, you guys…” Mindy began.

The conversation that followed was tortured. It made no sense. It stunned me. When Mindy left after three long hours, I turned to Drew and said, “Is this a dream? A nightmare? Or did Mindy just tell us that she’s become some sort of religious fanatic?”

Kweku said, “I used to be Catholic, you know.” We stared at him. He shrugged and got up. “I’m going to talk to Mindy and get to the bottom of this.”

Drew and I watched him gather up his books. Neither of us knew what to say.

It got worse.

Mindy avoided us for over a week. Kweku still saw her but could tell us little. Then there was the horrible day that she dropped the bombshell.

“I’m not going to dance anymore,” she announced.

“Not dance?” Kweku looked stunned. “Everyone dances. How can you not dance? You always dance. Even when you walk, you dance. You live to dance.”

Mindy sighed. “I talked to my pastor. He doesn’t think studying dance is right for me any more. It’s so…” she was clearly searching for a word, but eventually gave up.

“I danced when I was a Catholic,” Kweku said.

Drew frowned. “It seems like this whole religious thing is changing you too fast and too much. How can you just give up everything you’ve worked for?”

I asked the question we were all afraid to ask. “So what does this mean? What will you study instead? Or will you…study anything?”

“I’m leaving,” Mindy said softly, wistfully. “I’m going back to Chicago. My pastor knows a good church there and they’ve even found an apartment for me, with a Christian roommate.”

We were stunned into silence. It was as if Mindy’s body had been taken over by aliens. A week later, we said good bye. I never heard from her again.

So this was Christianity, I would sometimes think bitterly, a destroyer of friendships.

Drew was next. Our dreamer admitted one day that he had been reading the Bible and had started attending church. He then confessed that he had thrown out his dope and his collection of bongs, as well as half his books.

“So,” asked Kweku, “are you going to drop out also?”

“Oh, no,” said Drew. “I’m just going to change my emphasis. There are all these German theologians I can read. I think I’ll do my thesis on Luther.”

Our philosophical discussions certainly changed after that.

So did Drew.

He was still dreamy and preoccupied, but there was a new intensity to him. At the same time, he seemed softer, gentler. But there was also a subtle but growing tension between Kweku and him. One afternoon, things got heated. I arrived in the middle of a serious conversation.

“I was once Catholic, you know,” Kweku said.

“And now you’re a good little Buddhist,” I said lightly, trying to diffuse the intensity.

Kweku stroked my arm with his fingers. “And you swung from the trees in your last life, my little monkey-arms. If you came with me to Ghana, you’d see that when I’m back there, I worship my tribal gods. All this really doesn’t matter as much as Drew says it does.”

“But it does,” replied Drew. “You’re talking about religion, as if it’s interchangeable, as if truth doesn’t matter.”

“Sure it matters,” I said. “It’s all the same. Living a good life. What Jesus said about the golden rule. That’s basic to all religions. Which rules you follow to get there may vary, but the bottom line is doing the right thing and how you treat other people.”

Drew said softly, “It’s not about rules. Other religions might be, but Christianity isn’t.”

“Oh, man,” argued Kweku, “it’s all about rules. Christianity has more rules than anything else. That’s what I couldn’t take—all the rules. All the constant confession stuff and penance.”

“Listen,” said Drew, “I’ve been reading Martin Luther. I used to think this was all about rules too. But it’s not. It’s about relationship. It’s about knowing God. It’s about this incredible thing called grace that I’m just beginning to understand.” He bent down, pulled a book out of his book bag, and put it on the table.

It was a Bible. A big black leather Bible, right on Kweku’s table in Kerckhoff! Kweku and I stared. I almost recoiled from it. Drew lightly, gently, touched his fingertips to the leather cover. He said, in his gentle, dreamy voice, “I used to think this was a rule book. But it’s more than that. It’s the story of God and what He did for me.”

Kweku was clearly disgusted. “So, you going to preach for us now? Drew, I really don’t want to hear this religious garbage any more. I don’t like what it did to Mindy and I don’t like what it’s doing to you. Either you go or I go. I don’t want to see you right now or talk to you.”

I was a bit shocked. Drew quietly gathered up his stuff and left. Kweku and I sat together, saying nothing. Finally I got up to leave and Kweku walked out with me. We still weren’t talking. We walked sort of aimlessly across campus. It was late afternoon and there weren’t many students around. Kweku touched my arm and I turned towards him. He said, “Let’s dump Drew. Let’s…just you and me…let’s run away to Ghana together.” This time he wasn’t smiling. It wasn’t his usual happy invitation. He pulled me towards him, buried his face in my neck, and whispered, “Come back to my apartment with me. We both want it.”

Mindy’s warning came to my mind. I remembered meeting some of Kweku’s girlfriends. I didn’t want to become one, didn’t want him to treat me like that, didn’t want our friendship to end that way. I gently pushed him away and said, “No. Not us.”

“Then go back to Drew,” he said. There was no anger in his voice. He said it pleasantly, as if he thought it was a good idea. He looked at me for a long time and then finally spoke again. “I won’t come back. You can have my table. I can’t be around Drew anymore. He’s a fanatic. He’s gone over the edge. We have nothing left to say to each other. Either come with me or go with him.”

We said good bye.

It was a long, lonely walk back across campus.

Weeks went by before I could bring myself to go back to Kerckhoff in the afternoon. Drew was sitting at Kweku’s table with a skinny, frizzy-haired girl. “Hey,” he said, pulling a chair out for me, “this is Lindy. Lindy, this is Trisha.”

Lindy looked familiar and then I remembered seeing her at the campus theater with some guy I assumed to be her boyfriend. They had made an odd couple, her so skinny and short, and the guy tall and fat.

We greeted each other as I sat down. Drew said, “Lindy and I met at a campus Bible study that her pastor is leading.”

“You should come,” Lindy urged me. “Joe is an excellent teacher.”

“Uh, no thanks. I’m really not into that stuff. Sounds boring, if you want to know.”

“Not the way Joe teaches!” Lindy exclaimed. She and Drew both laughed as if at a private joke. “Drew and I were just talking about the book of Galatians,” Lindy told me. “He’s been reading Luther’s commentary—in German! I am so impressed! It’s really rather amazing to hear how Drew explains Luther’s perspective on the whole thing. It’s sorta different than the way I’d always looked at it before.”

This conversation obviously wasn’t for me. As soon as I could do so politely, I left.

It was over, I realized. The Kerckhoff rats were no more. Mindy had left. Kweku didn’t want to be around, and I couldn’t blame him. Drew was so heavily into this God stuff that I didn’t want to be around him either. I decided then and there that I would have nothing to do with religion. It destroyed friendships. It changed people, and not for the better. It ruined things. It took a good and beautiful thing and completely destroyed it.

* * *
I graduated from college, got married, and had a beautiful baby girl. After a long and torturous labor, I held her in my arms, kissed her incredibly gorgeous fuzzy head, and surprised myself by saying in awe, “It’s true. There really is a God. How could anyone have a baby and not think so.”

My husband laughed. We both laughed about it later and joked about how birth was a cosmic spiritual experience. “Wow,” I would laugh, “I almost thought I saw God.”

Alyssa was amazing. One day in the produce section of the grocery store of all places, I held her in my arms and almost started to cry. A woman with a whole bunch of children came over to me, rested her hand on my shoulder, and said softly, “There’s a saying I really like, about how amazing it is that ‘they so fresh from God’ would love us.”

I sniffled, feeling silly.

She said, “Loving my babies has helped me realize how much more amazing God’s love is for us. That’s what grace is all about, you know.”

That was it. We went back to shopping, but I kept seeing Drew, with his big huge Bible, saying, “I’ve been reading Martin Luther. I used to think this was all about rules too. But it’s not. It’s about relationship. It’s about knowing God. It’s about this incredible thing called grace that I’m just beginning to understand.” I wondered what ever had happened to Drew and what he was doing now. I wondered about all this grace stuff.

Then something happened to my husband. He went off with a friend of his from work for a weekend fishing trip. He came back talking just like Drew, except for the stuff about reading Luther in German. I kept trying to make him mad, kept making fun of his new beliefs. He would treat all my sarcastic questions as if they were serious and would find out answers for them.

And now…now I don’t know. I look at Alyssa and know that only God could make such a perfect and beautiful little being. I look at the change in my husband and realize that this God stuff isn’t just about destroying relationships. He hasn’t left me. He loves me more than he ever did.

But then there’s the other stuff. I don’t want all the rules and regulations. I remember girls in college who couldn’t wear certain clothes because they were “worldly”. Kids who wouldn’t listen to music I liked. It seemed like a dull and serious and lifeless sort of thing they were doing.

I think of the TV and radio preachers always yelling about stuff. I don’t want to be like them. I don’t want to be marching on Washington and yelling about putting the Ten Commandments in every classroom. I don’t want to be some sort of stupid fanatic who doesn’t make sense.

I don’t want a religion that makes you walk away from your friends and makes your friends walk away from you.

Drew said it wasn’t about rules, but about relationship and this thing called grace. When I think about that, it does something to me. It makes me want to cry with longing. I don’t want Mindy’s religion, where you can’t dance anymore. I want what Drew had, something that made him even more warm and tender and dreamy. I can’t forget the way he touched his Bible. I want what my husband has, something that has turned him into the first man who could love me completely for who I am. Can I have one and not the other? Who was right—Mindy or Drew? Is Christianity two different religions?

March 1999


Author’s note:
An alert reader asked if this story was semi-autobiographical. It was loosely inspired by some people and conversations from my college days; however, I never saw these people come to faith in Christ. Those who knew me back then would no doubt recognize me as Lindy, the skinny frizzy-haired girl from the campus Bible study. Trisha (the narrator) resembles me only slightly…the “monkey arms” for example…and the similar tastes in coffee…

Blogging

I began blogging back in 2004. Without any introduction, prefacing remarks, or words of explanation, I jumped right in with this as my first post:

Save Marriage!! Defend Marriage!!

If I get one more hysterical email about saving marriage, I think I’m going to scream. Mind you, I have nothing against marriage. I have nothing against saving or defending marriage. In fact, I’m all for it. And I’m old-fashioned enough to think that marriage, by definition, is between one man and one woman.

But I’m growing weary of the current hysteria.

I’ll know that the marriage-saving enthusiasts are truly serious about saving actual marriages when they begin to turn their energies to the following real problems that are threatening and destroying real marriages:

1. Pornography. I’m sure I’m not alone in knowing a number of marriages that have been damaged and destroyed by this blight.

2. Spousal abuse. Just recently, yet another aquaintance’s marriage dissolved as a result of ongoing abuse at the hands of her husband. At least she survived. She’s just one among many, many women I know who have tried for years to make an abusive marriage “work”.

3. Lack of good teaching about marriage—more talk about unity, self-sacrifice, friendship, and love, please, and less about the husband ruling the roost.

When I get some emails expressing alarm about the very real issues that I see destroying the marriages around me, then maybe I’ll join one of these campaigns to save and defend marriages.

At the end, it said:

Thus wrote Rebecca at 5/26/2004 07:04:00 PM

I had some idea that I was going to blog semi-anonymous, but that didn’t work for very long.

It’s interesting to revisit this post a decade later, especially since I’m planning some upcoming posts about marriage. I still think much of the Church gets a lot of things wrong about marriage, but I’m encouraged to see progress being made.