a Question for the Day

One of the sites I visit most days is Gratefulness.org.  A nonprofit that encourages persons to find, experience, and share gratitude.  It offers many ways for a person to be intentional in thinking about and even practicing gratitude.  I’ve determined that as often as possible, I will post my answer for the daily question.  To begin, I’m choosing a question that is from last week, but is relevant to my experience of late.

Who has passed from your life and left you more grateful for knowing them?

There is a long list of persons that I could name in answering this question.  You probably have a similar experience.  People pass from this life to the next reality through violent action and in peace hourly.  Some unexpected and sudden.  Others linger and struggle.  Unlike many clergy, I’ve never been a witness to a person’s death.  That moment when the residue of the divine is released, not from a captive state, but from this experience of living however short or long. Released as if abandoning a body that can no longer sustain life back into the essence of creation that cannot be seen, but is trusted to be there.  Believed to be there in some form no matter the religion one practices or philosophy one follows.  And in those moments when life departs it is hard for the living to embrace the promises of God, by whatever name you call God, or be as full of the Force as Yoda, “Death is a natural part of life. Rejoice for those around you who transform into the Force. Mourn them do not. Miss them do not. Attachment leads to jealously. The shadow of greed, that is.”  We mourn and grieve.  The promises of God comfort through the response of those still living with us and around us. But the work of grief is ours alone.

When I was in seminary, Dr. William Baird taught New Testament and Greek.  Though my native language I often struggle with the written form of English.  Grammar was not my best subject prior to college and seminary.  Had I only paid more attention diagraming sentences in junior high or high school, learning to read and translate ancient Greek may have come much easier.  I had the opportunity to study with these two men who loved the text and teaching others to find their own love, or at least respect, for the ancient Greek from which we make and take our translations of the New Testament.  They both had the hardest time telling a student a translation of a word or passage was wrong.  “That’s not quite right Mr. Davison.  Almost.  Try again.  What does that verb form tell you about the sentence?  What does the context of the passage tell you about that word and it’s meaning?  Try again.”  Memory work was important to success and I did enough to do “C” and sometimes “B” work for these masters of ancient Greek.  I appreciated their patience and steady encouragement, but the practice and work was mine to do, daily.

Some years after seminary my companion and I saw Dr. Baird at a conference.  He had retired from active teaching.  Same smile and tone as he greeted us.  In the conversation we asked what he was doing in retirement.  He mentioned projects and books.  “I rise early each morning and spend an hour translating the text.  There is still so much to learn.”  Dr. Baird loved his God.  Dr. Baird loved the Church that invited people into the journey of following Jesus and wrestling with stories about his life and the stories of those who, after the time of Jesus, struggled with Jesus and proclaimed him as Christ.  Dr. Baird loved the ancient text and respected it like it was a living being.  He couldn’t give that love of the text to his students, but he set for us an example.

It’s Monday . . .

It is said that it takes three to five weeks to cement a new routine, but it takes just days to break one.  At least for me.  The weeks that lead up to Christmas and New Year are often filled with activities that alter routines, though I stopped blogging about my Monday reading well before the holiday sprint, Thanksgiving to New Year, arrived.  So, I’m not beginning from the beginning of creating a routine, but close.

It is Monday.  In parts of the world the freedom to alter a routine might mean not eating, or having drinking water, or missing a bus that takes you to a job that you may be grateful to have, but it also takes advantage of your sweat, the unregulated labor laws of your country, and only allows you a bathroom break twice a day.  You might be ten years old or sixty years old or somewhere between, and whatever it is you are making you cannot afford to purchase.

It is Monday.  The earth spins on its axes and is seven days into a new orbit of the star at the center of our solar system.  People I know are grieving for loved ones and friends near and far away.  The hurt is real, shocking, and up close.  Tears are trying to cleanse.  Time provides the pace to living without and the void, well, is.  Many are comforted by their scripture, and their sense of God, and their community.

It is Monday.  There are opportunities to be good news for someone.  A note, smile, a phone call.  Maybe today is the day to give the person panhandling at the corner a dollar?  Maybe a day without snark, cynicism, or being sarcastic.  There is as much beauty as there is danger in the world.  More to community than my clan having the power to legislate what benefits my clan.  Since the turn of the century, our politics are like we are living out the cave anthem of Mel Brook’s 2000 Year Old Man: “Let them all go to hell accept cave 76.” Maybe a day to send my representative an authentic, ‘thank you’, for serving email or tweet or call even if I’m working to vote him or her out of office this year.

It is Monday.

How Would Jesus Drive?
David Brooks, The New York Times (Jan 4, 2018)

Why 2017 Was the Best Year in Human History
Nicholas Kristof, The New York Times (Jan 6, 2018)

Gratitude: A Way of Teaching – An eCourse for Educators, Starting Soon!
Gratefulness.org

The Horror of the Never-Ending Performance
Christine Rosen, Commentary Magazine (Dec 14, 2017)

Researchers Discover Two Major Flaws in the World’s Computers
Cade Metz and Nicole Perlroth, The New York Times (Jan 3, 2018)

Most Personality Quizzes Are Junk Science. I Found One That Isn’t.
Maggie Koerth-Baker, FiveThirtyEight (Jan 2, 2018)

Oprah Calls For Day When No One Has To Say ‘Me Too’ During Golden Globes Speech
Taryn Finley, HuffingtonPost (Jan 7, 2018)