Acting Sergeant Carter to the Rescue!

I had a very interesting dream last night. A dream that on the surface is very disturbing, but when I looked at it thoughtfully, clarity struck me in the gut. Let me explain my dream:

I was a recruit in the military, and selected to be the acting platoon sergeant as we traveled to a combat zone. There were several wiseguys who thought one of them should have been chosen, and they decided to be total disrupters. This may have been my remembering a scene from the movie To Hell and Back, when this happened in real life to Audie Murphy. Only in my case, I decided to defend myself and get these few in line immediately; unfortunately, I chose fists to accomplish this, but that only created more problems.

I awoke this morning with a screaming headache, my dream fresh in my thoughts. My wife continually asked if I was all right. My response was that everything was perfect . . . except my dream kept intruding in my reading the news, another distressing thing in the mornings.

In finally dawned on me after reading the daily inspiration from the Henri Nouwen Society, “When someone hurts us, offends us, ignores us, or rejects us, a deep inner protest emerges.” And, “It is precisely here that we have to dig deep into our spiritual resources and find the center within us.”

My inner voice is telling me that I have to face reality. I wake up each morning reading and hearing about the murders in Washington D. C. then I read about some inane thing that a congressman says about female senators. My natural instinct is to ignore this and get on with my day, my life. Maybe God is telling me something else. Spiritually, I am an activist; in the real world, I a m a strong participant in church and local social issues, but not in politics. I cannot believe that God wants me to get politically active. We will have to talk about this, and this should be a very interesting conversation. “Oh God, what . . .

In Order to Listen, We Need to Keep Silence.

listen

How active are you in your conversations? Are you preparing your answer to something someone said; or, are you planning a humorous retort, if you are uncomfortable? One final question: Is this listening?

All too often, I am guilty of all of the above practices. Guilty as charged!!!

I am too busy preparing my own responses, because I sometimes want others to see how deep a thinker I am; I want to show off my education. When I do this, I am a lousy conversationalist. However, when I am listening, truly listening, I am not preparing my answers. I am hearing what the others are saying, learning their ideas, their feelings, and what they think about a subject. When I do this, my first response is usually a question, a question to clarify what someone has said, or to gain more insight into his position. The result of this is a fantastic conversation; it is an unforgettable experience when two or more people are actively engaged in listening.

 Recently, I participated in a small talk-back session after our church service. The Gospel reading dealt with reaping the harvest, separating the tares (weeds) from the wheat. If you want to read it, it is the last half of Matthew 13. Being the educator that I am, I took notes during the service; my memory is not as it used to be. So, I showed up to the talk back with my notes clutched in my hand, and never looked at them. Yes, they were lying in front of me, but the conversation was very engaging. I was listening to what others were saying, getting more out of the service, because I was hearing what others, besides myself, thought about it.

 I am involved in a Lectio Divina group a church. We read short passages from the Gospels, meditate on them, then speak about what our views are and how these views control or influence our lives. Or, what influence this may have had in our pasts. We are not allowed to ask questions or to interrupt those speaking. We can refer to what someone has said when presenting our own experience or thinking, but only as a reference, not a critique. We are forced to actively listen. This is a great learning experience and great practice for me as an educator; it has aided me in my conversations in my literature classes, because I am not judging the student on his or her answer; I am listening to what my students are saying about the readings and asking questions to help them clarify their thinking, which helps them, when writing their essays.

 One final thought; each night, I meditate before going to bed. This meditation is another form of listening,listening to God. By the end of each day, enough has happened that I need to clear my mind of any negativity that may have crept into my mind. It is a fifteen to twenty-minute time of listening for God’s words. Sometimes, I am given answers to questions and problems I didn’t know I had. Other times, God has given me an idea for a prayer or a complete poem that I write down immediately. (Remember my bad member!) Most of the time, though, I am too revved up to really listen, and I just sit there, fretting over my day. This is helpful, also, because during this quiet time, when Linda has retired, I can let the day drain from my mind and then go to bed and sleep, rather than fret.

 Each day when I wake, I pledge to myself to listen!!!

A Paroxysmal Moment:

prayer

 I get several emails each day that are designed to keep my 74-year-old mind active. In one day, I received three that really made me think. The good thing about these is that they allowed me to compose this entry in my mind, while driving to New Jersey for the funeral of a dear friend.

 The first was a tweet about the opening of the Episcopal Council and the words of the Presiding Bishop, Michael Curry. He spoke of the Jesus Movement. In simple terms, if we think back to the 1950s or 1970s, we remember that the Jesus Movement was begun due to the realization that the youth will not come to church on their own; the church must go out to get them.  I think we have forgotten to do this. In our rush to create a better mission for our churches, which includes outreach to those in need, we have allowed our youth and young adults to slip between the cracks.

 We are so involved in assuring that our children get a good college education, designed so that they can get a well-paying job, that we forgot to introduce our children to things that matter most. My thought is not to diminish this effort for success, but to supplement it. We have not introduced a strong faith to our children. Jesus commissioned his disciples to go into the world to bring the good news to all of the people, to go into the word to share the Good News of God and Jesus Christ. We are too enveloped in the desire to be money rich that we forget the truly important goals in our lives. We also were trained to succeed, sometimes disregarding the spiritual costs.

 The second thought-provoker of the day was the email offering the Bible passage of the day to assist in my meditation. From Psalms 105 “Sing to God; sing praises to the Lord; dwell on all his wondrous works!” I wondered what the message from God was for me this day. Two thoughts with identical messages were blaring at me from my computer. I am not one to stand on a corner and shout out my religion to the world; nor, am I one to proselytize every chance I get.

 When I was a senior in high school in New Jersey, my Sunday School teacher asked the four boys in my class to select a passage from the Bible and adopt is as a code to live by. After much agony, and a great deal of procrastination, I selected the passage after the Sermon on The Mount in Matthew 5: You are the light of the world. A city on top of a hill can’t be hidden. Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a basket. Instead, they put it on top of a lampstand, and it shines on all who are in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before people, so they can see the good things you do and praise your Father who is in heaven.” The final verse is the one of most importance to me. I have always tried to treat people as my closest brothers and sisters:

 I believe that my second career in education is perfect for me to perform this promise. With the two emails of the day and my adherence to Matthew 5:16, I know that God was telling me to increase my efforts to do good things for people. And so, I attended the funeral, met people I have not seen in years, met new people, and doubled-down on my efforts to treat them as close family. Jesus reminds us that the second greatest commandment it to love people as we love ourselves. That is quite a mission for a life. That is a very difficult mission in life. Instead of swearing at the driver who cut us off on the highway, we have to accept him as a child of god. The same for the person pushing her shopping cart filled with her life, wearing a heavy parka on a 90-degree day. She is a child a God in need, yet we pass her by shaking our heads.

 So, what about the third email: this came from Dictionary.com. I subscribe to their word of the day. That word was paroxysm: an episode of acute awareness. My paroxysmal moment occurred in the sanctuary several weeks ago, when I was engulfed in a euphoric aura of chills and perspiration at the same time. I felt a three-decades long burden of grief, anger, and severe back pain lift from my body, allowing me to stand up straight for the first time in several months. The almost permanent slope to my shoulders virtually disappeared. The next morning when I awoke, I no longer felt the need to walk with the canes that had been by permanent companions for years.

 Wondrous is the word I use to describe the mental progress I investigated while driving to the funeral in New Jersey. Refreshing! Meditative! Perplexing! I don’t pretend to understand my paroxysmal moment. It will take a while. This paroxysmal moment has been several months in length; but that is less than a split second of God’s time.

 Tell me your paroxysmal moment. I would love to hear from you.

 Russ Carter, July 21, 2017

 

 

Communion and Community

Community

Brother James Koester of the Society of St. John the Evangelist says: ”One of the great struggles of contemporary North America is the decay of community. We see it in our inner cities, and we see it in our suburban neighborhoods. People have stopped taking responsibility for one another because we no longer know each other. We no longer belong to one another. We no longer live in communion with one another.

I recently wrote about the heart and compassion. What brother James says above is one of the cancers on our society. When I was a young lad growing in Newark and East Orange New Jersey, I lived in a neighborhood that was death to us young boys, who ran around getting in trouble. I remember a day that four of us were walking home from the local playground, and we passed a storefront with apartments upstairs; the building was being razed to make room for a mini-shopping center that would eventually cover the entire block. Most of the second floor was already demolished. This being a Sunday afternoon, there was nobody working on the building; there were many, and I mean many, broken bricks lying about.

What were we to do; this is obviously one of those instances when reason goes jet-propelled out of the window. We all took turns throwing bricks through the still mostly intact plate-glass windows of the defunct drug store. For the next ten minutes, all you heard was the impact of the bricks and the shattering of the glass. It was the most enlightening afternoon for the four of us. That is . . . until we heard sirens in the distance.

Well, the police were not as attuned to all the hiding places and escape routes in our neighborhood; needless to say, not one of us was caught by the local dragnet. That is . . . Until we got home.

By the time I walked in the back door of our third-floor apartment, my mother was standing there with her wooden spoon. If you were raised in the 1950s, you knew what the wooden spoon was for. My mother had the biggest, non-breakable wooden spoon on planet Earth.

When I joined the Marines in 1963, my drill instructor asked us why we joined the toughest military branch. When it was my turn, I said it was to avoid my mother and her wooden spoon. My drill instructor got nose-to-nose with me, much like the scene in Full Metal Jacket, and yelled, (as if I couldn’t hear him, standing this close), “Are you trying to tell me that your mother is tougher than the Marines? Me? Your drill instructor and father for the next fourteen weeks?” Not wanting to lie to him, I of course said, “Yes, Sir!” at the top pf my lungs. That was my first corporal correction in the Corps. Fourteen weeks later, while getting on the bus for Camp LeJeune, he pulled me out of line and asked, again nose to nose, but not as loud, “Private First-Class Carter, do you still think your mother is tougher than me?” I, of course, said, again at the top of my voice, “Yes, Sargent.” He booted me in the hind quarters and told me to get on the bus.

Well, my mother greeted me with the wooden spoon clutched firmly in both hands and started swinging.

If you grew up in the inner city in the 1940s or 1959s, you will understand that we had what I refer to as a front stoop neighborhood. Without air conditioning, everyone got out of their hot, stuffy apartments sitting on their front stoops. Everybody knew everybody’s business. It was a very close-knit, family-oriented community, one in which everyone looked out for everyone’s benefit. This unfortunately included any type of trouble that the young boys caused. Most days, our misdeeds were known to our families before we got home.

Ultimately, we all were driven to the local police department, where we confessed our crimes, and were given a sharp slap on our wrists and told to never do this again. Thinking back, all of the policemen were trying to conceal smiles. I am sure they were thinking of their own days on the streets as early teenagers; and, they also noticed that all four of us were rubbing our very sore rear cheeks.

Brother James is correct; we have isolated our lives behind closed doors in very comfortable air conditioning. This has reduced the vitality of our neighborhoods and created a sense of abject fear within us . . .all. We never locked our doors in the 1950s; now we have two locks on all doors and even alarm systems to protect our belongings.

What we have not protected is the closeness we have lost with our neighbors, other than a quick wave hello as we hop in our SUVs and head to our air-conditioned offices.

Recently, an Australian woman, having emigrated to the United States to marry, was shot by the police after calling 911 on what she thought was a woman being raped. A young woman trying to be caring towards another, and she is killed by the police. This will encourage people all over the country to stay inside their fortress homes and ignore what is happening to others on the streets of our cities.

I yearn and cry for the community we have lost in this country. I also grieve because I know that it may never return.

God help us, Brother James. Our communion is lost . . . forever?

 

You can’t Force the Heart to Love

hearts

You can’t force the heart to love, or for that matter, even to care about others. It is a wonder how often we try, how often our friends are critical when we seem complacent or worse, to ignore, those around us. Unfortunately, for us, compassion is something that we must learn.

What a terrible way to begin a blog, or a thought, especially one that others will read. Let me explain. Linda and I are sitting watching old reruns of the original HBO special Sex and the City. Funny! Shocking at times! Open!

We cannot force ourselves to fall in love. I remember when dating, there were times I thought I was in love, only to have misjudged not only me, but my date. Don’t get me wrong: I only proposed to one woman, and she accepted. That was over 50 years ago, and we are still living a life of true love.

Let me tell you a true story. We dated for a while back in high school, but it was not successful. While still in college, Linda was dating my best friend, Tom. Tom and Linda introduced me to a friend of hers in college, Nancy. Nancy and I were both fun lovers who dated, but never really hit it off; it was just one fun date after another, full of laughs. On one double date, I was arguing with Nancy, and Tom was arguing with Linda. Someone (I think it was Tom) suggested that we switch, just for that evening. It seemed like a great solution for the problems of that evening. To make a long story, short, I married Linda, and Tom and Nancy also married a year later. That was 50 years ago. We have given our hearts to our soul mates, forever.

But what about compassion. I said that we must learn compassion. I first wrote, but changed it: Compassion is something that we must earn. That sounded so right . . . originally. We don’t have to earn compassion; it is given to us freely by God. We just have to learn how to accept it, and how to feel it. We learn how to accept this gift from God, by giving it away. When we meet a person, or a family, who is going through hard times, we must be able to offer something, even if something is just understanding and consideration. We also can pray for those who are in desperate need for God’s love. We must learn to do automatically. Without thinking! This must be an immediate response.

We do, however, have to open our souls to allow God to enter our very beings to accept His compassion and learn to give it away. This is not as easy as it seems. Learning compassion is a slow process that we absorb almost like osmosis. It must seep into our very nature and develop it voice, the voice of God, within us. It has to become a core part of our being. If it is not, it will seem dishonest, and the people who need it will see the falseness behind our words and actions.

Just as God brings two people together to form a permanent bond of love, He also brings people into our lives who are in need of his Love and Compassion. We share this compassion because we all are his children.

Laying-on-of-Hands Ceremony

hands

Recently, Donald Trump received quite a bit of criticism from the progressives, of which I include myself, because he was shown receiving a laying on of hands by conservative Christians. This criticism is unwanted, even by liberals, as myself.

Laying on of hands is a very serious ceremony, done by people all over the world.

Sue Monk Kidd tells a story about when she was a nurse and entered a dying man’s room; unable to say anything, she just sat with him and laid her hand on his shoulder. He thanked her for that healing touch. He needed human contact at that moment.

I have been the recipient of a laying on of hands twice in my life. When my wife and I moved from New Jersey to Virginia, the minister at our church in Summit called us to the front of the church to recognize our thirty years of service to the church and then asked the entire congregation to engulf us and lay as many hands on us as was physically possible. I have no idea how many hands were on me, but the feeling that entered my body was something I had never felt previously. I was so moved, that tears filled my eyes. And that is not easy to say, me being a former Marine.

The second time came as a surprise also. We were in Virginia and I had signed on with a wonderful woman, who was my physical trainer at our local gym. After working with me for about a year, she planned this with my wife. We joined her at a healing service at a local church. She told my story, and those present surrounded me and prayed over me in a laying-on-of-hands ceremony. I was very moved, but it being a surprise, I really could not relax enough with strangers to realize the full impact of the service.

I am presently a prayer minister at our church in Fredericksburg. During communion, I sit in a secluded corner and any of my fellow parishioners, who need an additional individual prayer, will come and share his or her need with me. After listening carefully, I ask permission to lay my hand on a shoulder and proceed to offer an intercessory prayer, done with my hand placed gently on a shoulder. Having been a recipient of this prayer corner, myself, I know how comforting and reassuring this is.

In all instances, we are only doing what Jesus did in most of the healing stories in the New Testament. He laid his hands on the person, and immediately this ill person was cured. I am not saying that our present ceremonies will heal as Jesus did, but with our prayers, we are offering our care receiver to God with the hope that a healing touch will help healing proceed.

One more example: I am a hugger; I believe that a proper greeting for friends is a hug, regardless of the gender. I hug many men in my life. This human contact establishes a strong relationship between people. I believe that these hugs are replicas of the laying on of hands. Hugs and similar practices reassure people that they are loved for themselves, no matter who they are – – – even Donald Trump.

Living in the Present

We traveled by bus from Lake Louise to Jasper in the Canadian Rockies. The bus ride included stops to see various examples of God’s beautiful creation, the earth we live on. We awoke Saturday morning to rain; looking out, Linda noticed the birds that were in the corners adjacent to our back door. It was one of the most beautiful and serene sights at the Fairmont Park Lodge. I could have spent the whole day just staring at this wonder of nature; knowing I couldn’t, I took many photos as shown above.

One of the nice things about our three weeks in Alaska and Canada was the fact that we stopped thinking about what was happening in Fredericksburg. It took three or four days, but by the time we rode the wilderness bus in Denali National Park, seeing Grizzly Bears, Dall Sheep, Caribou, Elk, Moose, and of course our American Eagles, we were living our vacation. All thoughts of Fredericksburg and our duties at St. George’s Episcopal Church had left our consciousness. We were living our vacation.

Most of us do not take enough time to live in the present time. We are always worrying about what we left undone; and how things are going without our being there to help; and what kind of mess or confusion will we find when we return home.

We learned that things went just fine while we were away. The fact that we were not texting; not emailing; not even thinking about our duties, meant that we were truly living in the present time. Richard Rohr and Eckhart Tolle speaks of this as living in the now.

We do miss a lot by not living in the present. My wife and I try to walk every morning; yes, we talk about what we will do the rest of the day, but we also talk with neighbors, wave to others driving by, notice the eagles and hawks floating in the air. We also see what others are doing in their gardens, or new construction on houses in the neighborhood. We also notice the local swim team training at the community pool. This is living in the now, living in the present.

We just purchased a new patio set; now I can sit in our back yard that was designed to attract birds (and squirrels); we have many feeders and a constantly running fountain, all designed to attract God’s creatures. If all works well, I can sit there reading, or writing, and watch the birds land on each of the feeders, drink from the water, and squabble over the seed on the ground. This worked when I was writing my dissertation on our patio in New Jersey, so I pray that this will repeat.

If this does, I will take the time just to watch and listen to the wonders of God’s creation that we have in our very own back yard.

Life is good!.

 

Happy Birthday USA

It was from the top of Pikes Peak where Katherine Lee Bates wrote the prayer “America” in 1893 that was so loved by Americans that it was put to music by Samuel A. Ward in 1910. The name eventually became America the Beautiful.

I offer this as a tribute to the United States on this 241st birthday.

 AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL

O beautiful for spacious skies,
For amber waves of grain,
For purple mountain majesties
Above the fruited plain!
America!  America!
God shed His grace on thee
And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea to shining sea!

O beautiful for pilgrim feet,
Whose stern, impassioned stress
A thoroughfare for freedom beat
Across the wilderness!
America! America!
God mend thine every flaw,
Confirm thy soul in self-control,
Thy liberty in law!

O beautiful for heroes proved
In liberating strife,
Who more than self their country loved,
And mercy more than life!
America!  America!
May God thy gold refine
Till all success be nobleness,
And every gain divine!

O beautiful for patriot dream
That sees beyond the years
Thine alabaster cities gleam
Undimmed by human tears!
America!  America!
God shed His grace on thee,
And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea to shining sea!

 

New Days to Remember

America                        New Days to Remember

July 2, 2017: a beautiful sunny morning with wispy white clouds floating gently in a serene breeze. Hawks and turkey vultures using the air currents and updrafts to effortlessly search for hidden prey. A new promise in a new day.

We must try to keep this spirit alive in us through this holiday weekend. We must ignore all the negativity on the news channels and in the newspapers. This national holiday celebrates the birth of our nation, the day that representatives from all the former English colonies finally agreed to compromise, swallowing their acute objections to create a new idea with a new nation. This nation was not easy to create; it took much arguing, threatening, and compromise to succeed. Over the course of our history, there have been many contentious times. Arguments billowed over into sometimes physical fights on the floor of congress.

Times are no different today. We are still arguing over whose ideas are best to run the country. We have a love-hate relationship with our elected leaders, which is a healthy place to be. Our leaders and our free press push their ideas down our throats, expecting us to believe everything that is put in front of us.

But, you know what? We succeed. We are successful in driving our nation forward to something that, with compromise, is better for the people. Sometimes this takes years, but it always comes about.

So, when we criticize others, be considerate; things will change.

I know that this is not Veterans Day, or Memorial Day; but it is a time to remember that our independence did not come cheaply. Many men and women have sacrificed their lives to bring us where we are today. These heroes were Republicans, Democrats, Blacks, Whites, Native Americans, Asian Americans, gay, straight, scared, and brave. All types of humans died to bring us where we are.

Those of us who wore our country’s uniforms, or were married to, or raised by these men and women, understand this. Those who did not must allow a little empathy and understanding to enter their thinking to realize that our country is great, because we the people, the former military, the educators, the mine workers, the salesmen, the truck drivers, all Americans make this country great. We work at it; we sweat to bring this about. You are these great Americans.

So, my friends. Let’s think about this as we celebrate with hotdogs and hamburgers, coleslaw and potato salad, and my all-time favorite, corn-on-the-cob, none of which were invented by us, but were brought here by the immigrants whose families have helped make us a great nation.

God, please continue to bless America.

Shooting in an Arkansas Nightclub

arkansas.jpg

With all of the shootings we have had this past week, I am confronted by a stark reality that is discomforting. According to the news, none of the shootings were terrorist shootings, and none of these shooting was done by a Muslim; they were committed by mentally challenged people. It seems that only Muslims can shoot with terrorism in mind. I apologize to my conservative friends, but any shooting that causes loss of life or serious wounding is terror.

I decided to search for Jesus in the Qu’ran. Not being that familiar with this holy book, I examined other literature and found a book written by Zeki Saritoprak, called Islam’s Jesus. According to Saritoprak, Jesus is truthful . . .always. According to Islam, Jesus is one of the most important prophets of God, who was born of the virgin Mary, without a father. Jesus was a healer and a miracle worker, but was not God, nor was he the son of God. Two interesting examples are that Jesus speaks from the cradle and creates a real bird by blowing into a toy, clay model.

So, what does this mean in today’s world? Too many people, not much; but, to some of us, we can accept that our Muslim brothers and sisters recognize the important of Jesus and the effect he has had on society. However, we must listen to our brothers and accept how they also believe in Jesus.

I believe this is so. Therefore, we cannot accept that all shootings done my Muslims are terrorist-driven. And all shootings done by Christians are done by mentally deranged individuals. All shootings create terror, and all shootings that take lives are done by mentally deranged individuals.