God’s Orchestra

God’s Orchestra

Keith, just wanted to ask you what you think about making New Year’s resolutions.  I have tried to live up to the Christian standard, but I never can.  So I’m not too optimistic about making any big resolutions for 2011.  What’s the point?

Where has this idea come from that there is just one image we should imitate in order to live the Christian life?  This question occurred to me after realizing that for a long time, I had not felt free and natural in my Christian living because I was always trying to be something I was not so that I could be “like a child of God” (like those other children of God around me).

But  a while back I realized that God has given each of us our own individual “sound”, our own lives.  For years I have been a piccolo trying to play in the tuba section, because some men I admire greatly play the spiritual “deep notes.”  Can you imagine anything more pitiful than a piccolo trying to play in the tuba section?  Yet this had been the story of much of my life.  It seemed to me that if it were true that each of us was to find the particular creative form of our own obedience, then it was all right for me to be a piccolo.  I did not have to pretend that I was a tuba.  What a relief!

I had once heard a friend say that he had taken the most outstanding characteristic or ability of each of the greatest Christians he had known and built for himself a composite picture of a Christian—and then tried to live up to the whole thing.  And now as I remembered hearing him say that, I realized I had done the same thing.  I had drawn up my image of how I was to live from C. S. Lewis’s ability with the written word in English, Elton Trueblood’s discipline, Gert Behanna’s sheer emotional power as a person on the platform, Sam Shoemaker’s ability in helping people individually to find a handle to the doorway into the kingdom—all these and many more.  Unconsciously, I was trying to be all of these things, and, needless to say, I wasn’t making it and had felt discouraged.  But now I was discovering that I could just be me, for Christ’s sake.  As a matter of fact, that is the only way I can play my true part in God’s orchestra.  When I really believed this, I set out to try to live a life-sized life.

But I didn’t have the slightest notion of how to be my real self.  And as I’ve continued to search for the “natural me,” it has taken years to begin to discover what that is for me.  So when New Year’s eve rolls around and I think about any resolutions I might make, I try to think in terms of asking God to help me continue to find my true place in his orchestra, and to begin again to learn how to use my God-given natural characteristics, abilities and dreams to love God and the people who are already in my life, which Jesus said was the underlying principle beneath the ten commandments.

Lord, thank you that it’s all right just to be me.  In fact, it’s not only “all right,” but it is what I am supposed to be.  Help me to surrender my whole life to you and let go of what is not me.  Show me how to bring your love into the world I already live in wherever I go in 2011—using the traits and abilities you instilled in me when I was created.  In Jesus’ name, Amen.

So here’s what I want you to do, God helping you: Take your everyday, ordinary life—your sleeping, eating, going-to-work, and walking-around life—and place it before God as an offering. Embracing what God does for you is the best thing you can do for him.

Romans 12:1-2, The Message

Jesus said, “‘Love the Lord your God with all your passion and prayer and intelligence.’ This is the most important, the first on any list. But there is a second to set alongside it: ‘Love others as well as you love yourself.’ These two commands are pegs; everything in God’s Law and the Prophets hangs from them.”

Mt. 22:37, The Message

2010 Christmas Message

2010 Christmas Message

Merry Christmas!

Wishes for a blessed Christmas come with this note!  I tried to write a blog for this week, but couldn’t.  Here’s what happened instead.

Andrea and I were all set for a quiet Christmas in Austin together since we had been with kids and grandkids for Thanksgiving.  One night earlier this month, after watching a Spurs basketball game, I began to feel a sharp pain in my stomach, and I began to wretch with the dry heaves from this very sharp pain.

Because I couldn’t stop, and the pain grew very intense, Andrea called 911.  They arrived very quickly and took me to the emergency room at Seton NW hospital.

After X-rays and an ultra-sound, the ER doctor said I’d had a gall bladder attack and I should see my doctor to talk about having my gall bladder removed.  A few days later we sat together in the office of a surgeon, listening to his explanation of where the gall bladder is and what it does…and how it is removed.  He suggested that I sign up for the nearest Monday and have mine out.

Since Andrea and I have been trying to complete the writing of a four-year book project, I was reluctant to undergo general anesthesia for the third time this year.  The first two had set me back mentally so much that I was afraid I’d “lose” my train of thought about the book.  So I was determined to put my surgery off until we completed the first draft—which I estimated would be about mid-January.  I figured I could tough it out until then.

The surgeon said it was a “reasonable risk.”  But he added, shaking his head, that if I had any more attacks I’d need to go into surgery ASAP!

All went well until last Friday morning at about 5:00 a.m.  I had another bad attack, and I had misplaced the emergency gall bladder medicine I had gotten.  I felt like Ray Milland in the 1945 movie The Lost Weekend about an alcoholic on a four-day binge, looking frantically all over his house for a bottle of bourbon he’d hidden from his family.  Finally we located the pills and in about an hour the pain subsided.  As soon as the doctor’s office opened, I called and was scheduled for the first opportunity available, which was the following Monday. So I had to wait all day Saturday and Sunday for surgery on Monday morning, just hoping that there would not be another attack.

Looking back, I can’t believe how arrogant I was.  The phrase, “I am older, though “wiser” is not something I can relate to today.  But I have learned once more that the philosopher was right on when he said “Advice we may listen to, but pain we obey!”

I tried to write a blog about Christmas for you today, but it’s a little difficult to be spiritual when one has made a complete fool out of himself—at least it is for me!  So instead, I’ll offer this newly acquired wisdom for the coming holidays:  Pay attention to your stomach while you’re over-eating at Christmas.  Cut down on greasy food, and drink plenty of water.”

I am very grateful that the surgery was successful, but am ashamed about my arrogance in thinking my work was more important than the gift of health God had offered me in my 83rd year.  I think the Lord may be speaking to me, telling me to provide food and medical attention for other people who are more willing to be more obedient and not so cocky about their ability to control their lives.

Andrea and I wish you and your family a blessed Christmas!

Lord, thank you that you continue—again and again—to give us new chances to grow up and become the people you made us to be.  And thank you for giving Andrea the patience to stay the course when I stand up and rock the boat.  In Jesus’ name, amen.

“Calling the crowd to join his disciples, he said, “Anyone who intends to come with me has to let me lead. You’re not in the driver’s seat; I am. Don’t run from suffering; embrace it. Follow me and I’ll show you how. Self-help is no help at all. Self-sacrifice is the way, my way, to saving yourself, your true self. What good would it do to get everything you want and lose you, the real you?”

Mark 34-37, The Message

God’s Orchestra

An Almost Perfect Gift

Keith, people make me so angry and frustrated when they don’t do what they say they’re going to do.  I don’t know what to do when I have these feelings.  I can’t seem to let things go without judging and shaming the people I love most—just to prove they’re wrong.  Any ideas?

That’s a hard question—but a good one.

The first part of your question mentions people making you angry.  When I get angry at family members (or just about anyone else) my experience has been that the anger is all about me—virtually always.  A friend named Lane explained this by telling how a mentor once asked him, “What do you get if you squeeze an orange hard enough?”  He’d reply, “Orange Juice.”  The mentor said, “Yes, and the juice came out of the orange, not the person doing the squeezing.”  Lane was saying when someone squeezes me hard enough, my angry response is made up of something inside me.

Pia Mellody puts it another way[1].  She says that people don’t “make” us mad.  What happens is that when they say or do something, we have a thought about what they said or did—and that thought creates the anger.

So I learned that when I’m with someone whose actions have triggered anger in me, I can ask myself, “What thoughts am I thinking about what just happened (or didn’t happen)?”

When my wife doesn’t keep her word about something very important to me, before I know it I am living with anger, usually because I feel rejected and discounted.  How can I deal with this?  Somehow, just knowing that my anger is coming from my thoughts about her forgetting something she promised to do doesn’t make the anger go away.

The other night that happened to me.  Andrea and I had spent a couple of days Christmas shopping and I thought we really needed a break.  So I suggested, “Honey, let’s quit early this evening and get ready for bed and read together for a while.”

She said, “Great!  I’ll wrap some Christmas gifts that have to be mailed to our family, then come up stairs around 9:00.”

So I did a few things, then got ready for bed at about 8:45 and started reading a book I wanted to read.  A few minutes later I looked up and it was 9:15.  I was a little put out but realized there were quite a few packages to wrap for mailing, so I kept reading.  But when I looked at the clock and it was a quarter to ten, I was suddenly angry and decided I’d just wait and see how long it would take before she remembered her “promise” to me.

She came in around 10:30 and said, “Honey, I’m sorry, but I realized I can’t read with you tonight.  I have got to get all of these things wrapped and mailed before it’s so late we have to pay extra postage to make it on time.  I just now noticed the time, and I came up to tell you what happened.”  Then she left to go back downstairs to wrap some more gifts.

But even with her explanation and brief apology I was still furious.  I began remembering all the things I’d done recently that she wanted me to do.  And then as it got to be midnight I was still very, very angry and couldn’t go to sleep.  But then I remembered that the anger was all about me and my not getting what I wanted when I wanted it.  And I realized that those presents she was wrapping were from both of us, and I am a very bad wrapper.

So I had to face the fact that I was hurt and angry that my wife didn’t do what I wanted her to do.  I asked God for help and guidance about how to diffuse the anger that came from my thoughts about what happened.

The answer I almost always get to this prayer is, “get out of yourself by helping someone else who needs help.”  But it was just the two of us in the house and suddenly Andrea had become “the enemy.”  So I prayed again—and the response that came to me was, “Think about what you could do for Andrea if you weren’t mad at her… and do that.”

I groaned and resisted.  But this approach had helped me get past all kinds of self centered solo-pity-parties in the past.  So I thought about what I could do that would be most helpful to Andrea—if I hadn’t been angry.  And I remember that we’d left the kitchen without washing the dishes and cleaning up after dinner.  And on raw faith I got up, went into the kitchen and cleaned up a fearsome mess.

As I finished up the job, something wonderful happened.  I began realizing how fortunate I was to have such a talented and loving wife who does dozens of things for me and our families—especially at Christmas.

The anger was gone, and I was filled with gratitude.  Because of being surrendered to God and to living the life of self-limiting love Christ lived and lives in us, I had been able to see my anger turn into gratitude, and in the process I’d given my wife a gift that would really please her. And, I added to myself—I didn’t have to tell her about my gift—making it a perfect gift! Then I was able to get some sleep.

As it turned out, Andrea stayed up all night wrapping presents.  And because our assistant brings her baby to work, and the guest room/wrapping room becomes a nursery room during office hours, Andrea had also cleaned up all the wrapping paper scraps and straightened up the jumble of boxes and bows. When I got up early Andrea was just coming to bed.  She smiled and said “I’ll just take a nap. I know I’ve got stuff to type and edit for you today.”

But I heard myself saying, “Honey, don’t worry about that, I’ll ask Jessica to do it.  You just get some rest and sleep as long as you need.”

I was feeling holier by the moment—until I turned and—where this remark came from I have no idea—but I said, “By the way, I cleaned up the kitchen.”

As I closed the bedroom door, I cursed, hit my fist into my palm and shook my head, laughing at myself as I realized “I’m not quite ready for even an hour of selfless sainthood!”

Lord, thank you that you give us ways to love the people around us when we are filled with ourselves and our needs to be right—when we put ourselves in the driver’s seat of our lives.  Help us to remember that only you can get us where we really want to go, which is why you need to be in the driver’s seat.  In Jesus’ name, amen.


“You’re familiar with the old written law, ‘Love your friend,’ and its unwritten companion, ‘Hate your enemy.’ I’m challenging that. I’m telling you to love your enemies. Let them bring out the best in you, not the worst. When someone gives you a hard time, respond with the energies of prayer, for then you are working out of your true selves, your God-created selves. This is what God does. He gives his best—the sun to warm and the rain to nourish—to everyone, regardless: the good and bad, the nice and nasty. If all you do is love the lovable, do you expect a bonus? Anybody can do that. If you simply say hello to those who greet you, do you expect a medal? Any run-of-the-mill sinner does that.

– Matthew 5:43 The Message

“Be especially careful when you are trying to be good so that you don’t make a performance out of it. It might be good theater, but the God who made you won’t be applauding. 2-4“When you do something for someone else, don’t call attention to yourself. You’ve seen them in action, I’m sure—’playactors’ I call them— treating prayer meeting and street corner alike as a stage, acting compassionate as long as someone is watching, playing to the crowds. They get applause, true, but that’s all they get. When you help someone out, don’t think about how it looks. Just do it—quietly and unobtrusively.

– Matthew 6:2-4 The Message

Be not angry that you cannot make others as you wish them to be, since you cannot make yourself as you wish to be.

Thomas à Kempis, The Imitation of Christ


[1] From Facing Codependence

God’s Orchestra

Eternal Life—An Invitation, Not a Reward

Dear Keith, I’m wondering if you could talk about God’s love as you understand it.  If God’s love is “unconditional,” as people often claim it is, why does he need people to accept him?  Isn’t that a ‘condition’?  It seems contradictory to me for Christians to claim that God loves everyone and then that only those who love him back a certain way get a reward.  I’m hoping you have something insightful to say about your own faith that will help me sort through this issue. Thanks, Emily

This is a great question, Emily, one that theologians have wrestled with a lot.  All I can do here in this blog is try to tell you how I’ve come to deal with it in my own faith journey.

I believe that God loves all people like a perfect parent would love his or her child, regardless of what the child has done.  For me, God’s unconditional love doesn’t require anyone to accept him.  The greatest gift he has given us (besides his unconditional love) is free will, which allows us to decide whether we will live life with God or without God.  Therefore, because of God’s integrity, he will not take away this free will and coerce us or manipulate us to accept him.  Whichever choice we make, his love continues unconditionally.

I’m assuming that when you say “get a reward” you are referring to eternal life with God in heaven after death.  But I am convinced that this eternal life is not a reward for “loving him back in a certain way;”  it is a relationship with God and other people that we are invited to start now.  So if we choose to live a life with God, what does that mean?  God invites everyone to live Life with him.  Jesus told us before he died that the Spirit or Personality that we saw in him is going to be with us and within us as our tutor and companion in a relationship with God that begins now and never ends.  This life involves learning from God by seeing how Jesus and other Christians on God’s adventure are living that life in a loving way without hesitation or equivocation.

When we make this choice we re-position ourselves to allow God to be in charge of everything in our lives, and to become child-like students who want to know everything about God and his nature, and to learn to live more and more as loving co-creators and healers with God.  The more we can surrender our own wills and let God lead us, teach us, and transform us, the more we learn the freeing power of being loved just as we are, without doing anything to earn this love.  This is living in the creative image of God.  The more that we do this (live the life that Christ modeled) the more that we realize the creative potential that we possess and the more fulfilled we can be.

This transformational process is not generally what is seen in the religious institutions of the world.  This transformation is something that happens to individuals in a family/community that sees itself as part of the transformational family of God that is being actualized now.  This life is based on a continuing and constant prayerful and intimate relationship with God’s Personality (or Spirit) within us and with other Christ followers in a safe and sharing community, helping each other as they are loving hurting people in the ‘worlds’ each inhabit.

Those who do not choose to accept God’s invitation to life with Him, choose separation from God (which is a primary definition of hell.)  And I suspect it makes God very sad when people choose to try to reinvent life in ways destined to separate them from God and other people.

Emily, I hope these thoughts in this limited format will help you sort through this issue.  There is so much more I wanted to say about God’s unconditional love and about how a life with God has been transforming me and other people I have been in community with.  Perhaps I will say more in future blogs.  And if what I’ve said today raises any other questions for you, please let me know.

Jesus, thank you for telling us that your spirit or personality would be with us and within us to teach us and be our companion if we choose to live a life with you.  And thank you for the enormous gift of freedom to make our own choices—and that you can patiently love us just as we are even when we make choices that do not bring fulfillment or the realization of our potential.  Help me to make good choices that are in accordance with what you had in mind when I was born.  In Jesus’ name, Amen.

Jesus, thank you for telling us that your spirit or personality would be with us and within us to teach us and be our companion if we choose to live a life with you.  And thank you for the enormous gift of freedom to make our own choices—and that you can patiently love us just as we are even when we make choices that do not bring fulfillment or the realization of our potential.  Help me to make good choices that are in accordance with what you had in mind when I was created.  In Jesus’ name, Amen.

Jesus said these things.  Then, raising his eyes in prayer, he said:

Father, it’s time.  Display the bright splendor of your Son

So the Son in turn may show your bright splendor.

You put him in charge of everything human

So he might give real and eternal life to all in his charge.

And this is the real and eternal life:

That they know you,

The one and only true God,

And Jesus Christ, whom you sent.

– John 17:1-4, The Message

Peter replied, “Master, to whom would we go?  You have the words of real life, eternal life.  We’ve already committed ourselves, confident that you are the Holy One of God.”

– 1 John 5:21, The Message

And we know that the Son of God came so we could recognize and understand the truth of God—what a gift!—and we are living in the Truth itself, in God’s Son, Jesus Christ.  This Jesus is both True God and Real Life.  Dear children, be on guard against all clever facsimiles.

– 1 John 5:21, The Message

God’s mercy is not merely therapy for a few individuals beset by guilt…God does not dole out mercy like cookies only for good, repentant children.  God’s mercy is not conditioned by our response.  God is mercy.  So, wide is wider than we guess….  Our calling is to live in mercy….  Recalling God’s unmerited mercy … we absolve one another, enacting the good news.  ‘In Jesus Christ,’ we say, ‘we are forgiven.’  So we look into each other’s eyes without illusions; we are sinners all.  Yet we embrace each other in the mercy, the wide, wide, mercy of God.

David Buttrick, The Mystery and the Passion

“If men and women today began by the thousands to experience the depths of Jesus Christ in a transforming way, there would simply be no place for their expression of experience to fit into present-day straitjackets of Christianity.”

Gordon Cosby, Sermon

If any of you are interested in one simple way to accept this invitation from God there is a free download, “How Can I Find God?”, here.

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