Sunday, November 27, 2016

Thanksgiving in three acts

1) The grand girls disappear for 30 minutes. "Don't come in our room." They reappear with an 18x24 inch hand-drawn Thanksgiving card for us all, and then ask us to sign it with what we're thankful for. Aww.

2) I see my mother-in-law at Thanksgiving dinner. Because of poor health, she rarely speaks anymore. But she greets me with, "Hi, how the hell are ya?"

3) I make small talk with aforementioned mother-in-law. She asks about my baseball lapel pin. I say, "The Chicago Cubs won the World Series!" No reply; back to distant stare. Some several silent moments later, she's wheeled up to a table of other family members and declares loudly, "The Chicago Cubs won the World Series!"



How, then, shall we live?

Nov. 9, 2016

This morning is the second time in a week I've awakened to a world that has looked different. The last one was just about baseball. This morning, as 44 times previously, we have awakened to a new president-elect.

Whether you got out of bed on the 'left" or the "right" today, I don't have to speak the obvious. You've lived and breathed it in your casual conversations, on television, on Facebook, at your Thanksgiving dinner tables, in your workplaces: We are a profoundly divided people. The conversations I've observed so far this morning convince me that won't change soon.

In a political sense, it's doubtful many are truly inclined to "come together," as is often spoken the day after an election. Yet Jesus calls us to be one.

How do we do that in a remarkably complex world amidst the divisiveness in which we live?

By remembering that when we look at "issues," we're looking at people. It's easy to dehumanize any argument, but whether it's taxes or the 2nd Amendment or streets & sanitation, what matters is how we as humans live together in God's created world.

By remembering that it's highly unlikely Jesus would have sided with one political party. He came to embody the kingdom of God, not partisanship. For the sake of our brothers and sisters in Christ, we do well to know we don't gain the inside track to God's favor by how we vote.

By remembering that in calling us to love and respect one another, Jesus didn't say, "Let's all just get along." Despite how we may think about the "issues" of the day, persons of faith claim these things matter and must be worked through: racism, sexism, poverty, war & peace, and all forms of hate.

Hate isn't just "out there." I have witnessed disparaging public conversations about issues close to home - such as Milton's school referendum - in which neighbors denigrate one another. Hurt and divisiveness will not go away once ballots are counted.

God gave us Jesus in order that we might be reconciled. God gave us the church so that we might be better together than alone. And God gave us the Holy Spirit for a time such as this.

As Christians, this we believe:

"He has told you, O mortal, what is good;
    and what does the Lord require of you
but to do justice, and to love kindness,
    and to walk humbly with your God?"
- Micah 6:8 [NRSV]

Time flies

Monday, Nov. 7, 12:47 p.m.

It's been 108 hours since the Chicago Cubs won a World Series.

There are no words

Nov. 3, 2016, 12:47 a.m. EDT




Perfect weather

Oct. 25, 2016


Montero for president!

Oct. 15, 2016

Miguel Montero’s grand slam to right field in the eighth inning of Saturday’s NLCS Game 1 gave the Cubs a 7–3 lead over the Dodgers. (SI)


Scott family clan

Circa 1985