Spread Hilaritas

As a child I would sometimes dust the house to get money for the swimming pool. The worst part was dusting off all the carvings my Dad had started and not finished. Dust stuck to the bare wood. I especially remember a roughed out carving of St. Francis in Tennessee cedar. Dad never finished the saint; he often joked that the making of a saint was never done. My garage still holds several boxes of his unfinished carvings.

Teckla’s mom did ceramics. After Ella died, we had to figure out what to do with all the green-ware— fragile ceramics that not been finished or fired. She lived a long and full life, but death still seemed abrupt and life unfinished. Although I have always felt the fragmentary and broken nature of our lives, I never thought deeply about this until reading Charles Marsh’s biography of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Strange Glory.

When arrested and imprisoned, Dietrich Bonhoeffer had already seen many of his students arrested and executed by the Gestapo. Although amazingly productive in the months before his own execution, Bonhoeffer came face to face with the incompleteness of his Christian life. He had witnessed the promising careers and dreams of his students crushed and broken by the Nazi persecution of the Confessing Church. He now faced his own execution and the reality of how much would remain undone. Bonhoeffer wrote from prison, “Precisely that which is fragmentary may point to a higher fulfillment which can no longer be achieved by human effort.” Charles Marsh eloquently comments, “With that deliverance in mind, he opened himself to the inevitable incompleteness of things, accepting even the upheavals and intrusions with disarming gratefulness.”

It is not just in the turmoil and crisis of persecution that our lives in Christ are incomplete and broken-off. Many genuine Christians experience a life of fragments. In the summer before my father died of cancer, we sat around the kitchen table talking about holiness and revival. Dad, who had pastored a half dozen small churches, said he wished he had at least once been part of a real revival—a genuine move of the Holy Spirit that swept people into a relationship with Christ.

He died without seeing revival. He also has a number of grandchildren and great-grandchildren he has never met. None of the churches he pastored were easy or marked with extraordinary growth despite his gifts as a preacher and pastor. Some places were full of pain and disappointment. So much was incomplete.

I too have given myself to the vision of a church restored to New Testament power and purity, but thus far have not seen much. And even beyond the church, we all have visions for our own lives and the lives of our children, but often here too the story is one of missed opportunities, thwarted plans, and brokenness. Even those who appear to have a long and fruitful life will, if pressed, pull out their list of dreams unrealized, prayers unanswered, and projects unfinished.

It is important to embrace the incompleteness and brokenness of our lives. If we can’t open ourselves to “the inevitable incompleteness of things,” we grow angry and bitter. We seek someone responsible for thwarting our vision. Perhaps we blame the lukewarm church or the corruption of our culture. Often we simply blame ourselves for a lack of faith, courage, or spirituality. We sink into resignation and despair. Too easily we become sad or mean.

The faith Bonhoeffer had is that heaven completed all that in this life is unfinished and broken. Marsh says, “Bonhoeffer turned to the small and sometimes broken things—not with resignation but with compassion.” Faith that heaven completes earth frees us to sow seed with wild joy and do it without anger at the unproductive soil. In prison he faced his broken dreams and outlined books that would never be written. It is here that Bonhoeffer wrote most eloquently about joy (hilaritas).

This joy in the face of the brokenness of our lives is no small thing. We should not underestimate the evil that comes from a refusal to accept the partial-ness of all goodness in this world. Even on the global scale, the demand for absolute equality or justice has sometimes led to absolute tyranny. There is a reason that most utopias require a dictator. Bonhoeffer saw how Nazi Germany’s quest for its dream justified incredible cruelty and unthinkable evil.

On the personal level, the refusal to accept the incompleteness of relationships is deadly. In marriage the quest for absolute intimacy and unity can be destructive. We can easily seek in one another the kind of completion that comes only from God. When a spouse doesn’t really “complete us”, we are easily deceived into thinking someone else will. Or we stew in unhappiness and resentment. Acceptance of life’s incompleteness should make us tender with our spouses as fellow followers of Jesus, the one who will complete us when we see Him face to face.

Instead of resulting in spiritual lethargy and apathy, Bonhoeffer’s acceptance of his incompleteness, produced joy.  He saw that only God can bring closure to the ragged ends of our lives. In the days before his execution Bonhoeffer encouraged fellow prisoners by scribbling notes that exhorted them to “Spread Hilaritas.”

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Great Commission or Great Guilt Trip?

I grew up in churches where God called people to only two possible vocations: pastor or missionary. Sometimes people were asked to come to the altar for prayer if they felt “the call”. Often the call to be a missionary was presented as a response to what some call the Great Commission in Matthew 28:19: “Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.”

I was okay with this approach because no matter how much I loved the snake stories of missionaries, I felt no call to be a missionary. I was off the hook. But soon the church growth movement exploded and there was this idea that we are called to go—even if that just meant going next door or across the street. All kinds of programs were designed to get evangelicals evangelizing, but most faded without startling results.

Yet the idea church folks should be leading others to Christ stuck around. In some denominations pastors had to report how many people were “won to Christ” each year. We were urged to get out of pews and into the world. Some obliged by not coming back to church. Others just got used to feeling guilty for not “winning souls”.

Church boards and pastors still rack their brains to think of new strategies to reach unbelievers. Churches embrace servant evangelism to try to draw people into the church and give evidence of God’s love for the community. These efforts are almost always 99% service and 1% evangelism. Service is always good; it is not, however, evangelism.

Others seek to be relevant and hip by referencing pop culture. To get beyond the walls, some meet in coffee houses and restaurants. Others are seeker-friendly with rock-n-roll worship and espresso bars in the foyer. Some may attract new Christians, but often people who are already Christians simply shift from one church to another according to their taste in worship and leadership style.

I attend a church that prays often for more effective ways to reach the broken and hurting in Myrtle Point. Tonight we will have the Wednesday night Soup and Sandwiches for the community. It is a great thing—but in the many years we have been feeding folks, it has not resulted in anyone becoming a Christian. The same may be true of Vacation Bible School even though some of the little kids did say a prayer to become a Christian. We usually don’t see any of those kids growing or progressing as Christians. Most disappear after the VBS.

Like many Christians, we take comfort and refuge in the possibility that we have planted a seed—some awareness of God’s love. But our sense of failure to reach others for Christ is palpable. It hangs over our prayer-meetings. After twenty years of praying for effective outreach and having tried a variety of strategies, one has to ask whether we are rightly understanding the Great Commission. Why has it become this great guilt trip that for so many churches and believers?

First, we must ask whether these verses are spoken to every believer or should be applied to just the apostles to whom Jesus was speaking. I believe they primarily apply to the apostles because they are clearly the ones who heard firsthand everything Jesus had commanded. Yet, the apostles and their commission are foundational to the ongoing mission of the church, so the Great Commission does not end with the deaths of the first generation of apostles. Their commission is the mission of the whole church, but not a command given to every believer.

The church equips and trains apostles and evangelists to go to those who have not yet heard the gospel. The church finances their going. Through extravagant generosity toward the persecuted and impoverished, the Church testifies to the love of God in our midst. This love for one another among new Christians draws even more believers to Christ in places new churches have been planted. In all these ways individuals participate in the command to go into the world.

I do not believe, however, that every individual believer is commanded to go or to teach. We see in Acts that the church in Antioch sent some out as missionaries. And Paul is clear that God gives apostles, evangelists, and teachers to the church for the equipping of the saints, so it seems unreasonable to expect all Christians to teach and evangelize. Yet, through prayer, prophecy, and giving, every church can support those who God calls to go.

All believers, however, are called to be salt and light in the world. Salt seasons and preserves the world and light attracts people to Christ—but neither requires going. We are also all called to be prepared “to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope you have” (I Peter 3:15). In other words, the Church is to be such a miracle of love and unity that the world will say, “Whatzzup?” And we will then have an open door to explain what God has done in our lives.

Being shiny and salty is hard enough without feeling guilty that we are not fulfilling the Great Commission. Helping the Church be a miracle of love rather than tragedy of division is a full-time job. And we must also remember how much of the Great Commission is about teaching people to follow Jesus. All who teach others to be disciples are helping the Church fulfill the Great Commission.

It is interesting how seldom Paul, perhaps the Church’s greatest evangelist, exhorts the believers to evangelize their communities. More often, he is concerned that we be “blameless and innocent, children of God above reproach in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation, among whom you appear as lights” (Phil. 2:15). In I Thessalonians 4:11 Paul urges believers to “make it your ambition to lead a quiet life and attend to your own business and work with your hands, just as we commanded you.”

I understand that this exhortation to lead a quiet life doesn’t resonate with young people today—especially adrenaline junkies. We are a little hesitant to suggest that radical obedience to Jesus might mean (wait for it). . . . . . living a quiet life and faithfully loving God and your neighbor. But I believe by extending the apostolic call to every individual believer—instead of to the church corporately, we turn the Great Commission into the Great Guilt Trip

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The Church Invisible

If criticizing the church in America were an Olympic event, I would have multiple gold medals. I’ve trained for years. In the 70’s I was a bored church kid slapped up the side of the head by the Jesus Movement—God’s Spirit making an end-run around the church. The joy of hippies who had found Jesus contrasted with the solemn and often dour faces of the folks in the pews. The courage of “Jesus Freaks” to take Jesus to the streets made traditional religiosity look gutless.

In college and graduate school, my critical skills were honed to a razor’s edge. I had a one-two punch. I could quickly lay out a sociological critique of the church as an institution that served only the needs of the rich or powerful. I could follow that up with the accusation that the American church was hopelessly shallow and unwilling to pay the cost of discipleship.

Out of college I joined those who sought, like many Protestant movements, to recover the power, purity, and mission of the New Testament church. I can still rattle off a dozen ways traditional churches fail to be New Testament.

It’s sad. I have real skills, but no longer have the heart to use them. For I have seen the church invisible. Traditionally, the term “church invisible” has been used to distinguish between those who claim to be Christians from those who only God sees as the church. I mean something different.

When I was growing up in Myrtle Point, I never saw much when I looked at the church. I attended one church and had little idea what went on in the others. It seemed not much was happening. The church seemed to have no visible impact on the city.

For the last twenty-two years in Myrtle Point, Teckla and I have done something that has ruined me as critic of the church: we loved it. Teckla has attended and led non-denominational Bible Studies and has sung in community choirs. We have faithfully attended inter-church events and gotten to know believers from many churches. I have preached in the Presbyterian Church several times and attend a men’s Bible study with guys from different denominational backgrounds.

I hate it when facts get in the way of an opinion, but the more I knew of the Church in Myrtle Point, the more I saw all the ways it was being salt and light. I saw the poor who were being fed, the clothes given to the poor, the housing provided to the homeless.

Why was so much of this invisible? Well, often folks did it right—they didn’t blow a trumpet before they gave to the poor. One couple let people in financial crisis stay in a house they owned, and then they quietly cleaned up after the people moved out. Others are quietly helping neighbors, praying for their families, and doing good in the community.

Sometimes the work of the church was invisible because it was just part of their daily lives as Christians who worked as farmers, doctors, teachers, and businessmen. In my zeal to see apostolic ministry in the church, I overlooked that Paul said to make it our “ambition to lead a quiet life, to mind your own business and to work with your hands.”

Yes, I know this does not resonate with our attempts to present a radical and extreme Christianity, but in this age of over-exposure and social media, living a quiet life and doing good without announcing it on Facebook [please share this blog] is radically counter-cultural. As someone who works in the secular world, I am keenly aware of the bad image Christianity has. I desperately want the good that Christians do to grab more headlines than our positions on social and moral issues. I want us to be salt and light, but I want bright light, or perhaps blocks of salt to throw at the world. I am impatient with soft light and even more impatient with salt that disappears into the world it is seasoning and preserving. When used rightly salt becomes invisible.

When I began mentally subtracting all the good done by these Christians and the little churches they attended, I saw clearly how much darker and crueler this town would be without them. Before I really became a part of this community, I didn’t see the work of the Church clearly enough to do this subtraction. I now see the church that was invisible to me when I loved it less.

I have had pastors, who like me, haven’t seen this invisible church and so got busy scolding their congregation for not working hard enough or having enough of an impact on the community. I couldn’t believe it; I found myself, a skilled critic of the church, actually defending it. I wanted to take pastors aside and gently draw their attention to what believer after believer was doing to walk out their faith.

Not that any of the criticisms aren’t true. We can always love God and our neighbor more. We can always grow in faith and obedience. I still have strong convictions about the New Testament providing the model of what the church should be.

But criticism often isn’t what these quiet warriors of God need. They need encouragement, strength, and healing. They need those with eyes to see and hearts to love the Church Invisible.

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Mira and the Prophetic Spirit

IMG_0337 (2)I had every intention of leaving our Doberman, Mira, at home. Where I was going hiking was on the edge of a wilderness and had some steep and dangerous cliffs. But her eyes were on me. She watched as I laced up my hiking boots. Her eyes brightened and ears lifted when she saw me stuff water into my daypack. I hadn’t said a word to her. I was, in fact, ignoring her.

But she knew. So off we went into the Siskiyou Mountains to hike the Panther Ridge trail together.

It may be a cause for concern that these days I get more theology from Mira than from pastors and theologians. Nonetheless, I believe Mira has taught me much about the relational foundation of the prophetic spirit.

As mentioned in previous “dog blogs,” Mira has a lot of “go with”. She truly and deeply wants to be wherever I am. Moses, who is called a friend of God, said to God, “If your presence does not go with us, do not send us up from here.” (Exodus 33:11). More than anything, Moses wanted to be with God.

More than she wants to know where I am going, Mira simply wants to be where I am. At the very foundation of all prophetic ministry has to be an abiding desire to be with God–to go where he goes. Relationship must precede revelation.

How did Mira know I was going hiking? She watched. She noticed every move I made. She saw that I had put on my green jacket, not the yellow one I wear when I go biking. She had learned all my hiking ways.

Psalms 123 captures this careful attention to God: “As the eyes of slaves look to the hand of their master, as the eyes of a maid look to the hand of her mistress, so our eyes look to the Lord our God, till he shows us his mercy.” We live in an attention-deficit culture that bombards us with distractions, but this kind of attention to God is what nourishes the spirit of prophecy.

I know that I am not talking about the kind of prophetic ministry where God plops revelation directly into one’s head or mouth. That happens, but I think it is more likely to happen to those who have laid the foundation of devotion to God’s presence and have learned God’s ways. Too often we seek to skip the attentive devotion and go directly to revelation.

In other words, I should notice when God is lacing up his hiking boots. I need to be as attentive to God’s preparations as Mira is to mine. If I keep my eyes on God, he might say, “Okay, Mark, let’s go.”

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Say “Friend” and Enter

I have always been amused and challenged by the passage in Tolkien’s Fellowship of the Rings where Gandalf and his pilgrims are stymied by the door into the mines of Moria. They discovered the door and even the instructions, “Speak, friend, and enter”, but no one can figure out what word opens the door. Gimli, the dwarf, assumes the instructions mean friends will know the secret word that opens the doors.

Gandalf, who is both a scholar and wizard, tries “opening words” and spells in the languages of elves. He tries the words in different orders. He even strikes the door with staff while yelling the word for open in every language he knows. All to no avail.

In frustration Gandalf throws down his staff and silently sits before the door. Suddenly, he jumps and realizes the translation of the instructions should have been, “Say ‘friend’ and enter.” The word “friend” in the instructions over the doorway was the opening word. Gandalf speaks “mellon,” the elvish word for friend, and the doors swing open. Gandalf admits that both he and Gimli had been wrong, and that the hobbit Merry, “of all people, was on the right track.”

Hobbits have no real magic but are loyal friends. In Tolkien’s The Lord of Rings it is power of friendship, not magic, that defeats powers of evil. Relationship matters more than power.

Like Gandalf, I need to learn from hobbits. Although no scholar or lore-master, I speak the languages of a lot of movements in the church: evangelical, holiness, Calvinist, Arminian, Pentecostal, Third Wave, Quaker, Liberation Theology, Catholic, and Orthodox. And I have seen a lot of spiritual fads and trends come and go. I have heard and read a lot of prophetic proclamations of the new direction God is taking the church or the dispensation of grace we are entering.

So when I am trying to open the door to genuine knowledge of God, I have a lot information to draw upon. And like Gandalf, I sometimes think if my voice is commanding enough and loud enough, the door must open. I stand before the door and think if only I believed more, knew more, prayed more, loved more, trusted more, died more—then the door would open.

Sometimes I think someone else has the key.  I hope that the right prophetic word, right anointed pastor, or right book will open the door to spiritual progress and fulfillment.

However, when I read this story by Tolkien, I am challenged to rediscover the beauty, power, and simplicity of devotion to Jesus. Jesus, in John 15:14 told his disciples, “I have called you friends.” In the Old Testament we are told God spoke with Moses and Abraham because they had become His friends.

When exhausted by all my doing and saying, I hear Jesus say to me, “Say ‘friend’ and enter.”

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Been There, Haven’t Done That

About ten miles from town and up some logging roads is a mountain meadow called Euphoria Ridge. I have been hiking and botanizing it for 12 years. Today the larkspur, death camas, and fawn lilies were blooming. As much as I value new experiences and seeing new places, I have delighted in knowing Euphoria Ridge intimately. I still discover new wildflowers, butterflies, and mushrooms. I’m not done there.

“Been there, done that” is an expression I distrust and dislike. I am sure it can be used innocently, or even used to express solidarity with someone else’s experience. But too often the words rob another’s experience of its uniqueness. Sometimes “been there, done that” is interjected even before a person is done telling their story, revealing that the person wasn’t really listening.

I may just be cranky, but I object to the very idea of “doing” that. Too much of life is treated like a checklist already. Competitive bird watching, for instance, is an absurd exercise in missing the point. People race to locations to spot as many birds as possible—checking them off as fast as possible.

Bucket lists may have much to commend them for those nearing death, but as a lifestyle they can easily empty our lives of depth. As we move on to sky-diving, we are stalked by the suspicion that our Rome-in-a-day tour wasn’t all it should have been. When our eyes are on our checklist, we easily fail to actually see the world around us.

The “been there, done that” attitude may be the result of a loss of wonder or a habit of mind that robs us of wonder. Either way, it blinds us to the complexity, beauty, and majesty of places. Even more dangerous is the extension of this attitude toward people. It easy to think we have people “pegged” or “pigeon-holed”. But every place is an unexplored continent, every person a mystery.

I want to start identifying some of the native grasses growing on Euphoria Ridge. I have been there—but still haven’t done that.

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The Wrong End of the Rope

I have sometimes explained hell this way. If all your life you play tug-of-war with God, hell is simply God letting go of his end of the rope. Hell is you winning the war. I have also thought about this analogy in the context of church kids who rebel against God.

Because I grew up in church and have taught some at Christian schools, I have seen a lot of church kids join in this tug-of-war with God. Some of these kids actually know God is real and are not having some intellectual crisis about the historicity of Jesus or about the problem of evil. Many are just pissed-off at hypocrites, legalists, and mean Christians they have encountered in the church. So they have grabbed the rope and joined the world in its tug-of-war against God.

But here is the crazy thing—crazy and tragic: they have grabbed the wrong end!

It is the wrong end if it is hypocrisy, meanness, and superficiality they are pulling against. When we read the gospels, we realize how hard Jesus fought against religious people who lacked compassion, who were hypocrites, who were unwilling to leave everything to follow him.

Those who hate hypocrisy should be grabbing God’s end of the rope. He and the Holy Spirit are always straining to pull the church out of hypocrisy and loveless legalism. If we rebel against God because we have been wounded by Christians, we have grabbed the wrong end of the rope.

I don’t know how to do it, but I wish I were better at handing the right end of the rope to some of the ex-Christians I meet. Because they have higher standards for what a Christian should be than some Christians. I want to run into the street, flag them down and say, “Wait, wait! Jesus hates hypocrisy too! Pull on this end!

Or maybe they have grown weary of superficial, over-hyped, shallow spirituality. “Wait! Don’t go! Jesus invites you to embrace a purpose worthy of your highest sacrifice and noble enough to thrill your soul. Pull on His end of the rope. “

When we fight hypocrisy by walking humbly and honestly with God, loving sinners and confronting hypocrites, and abandoning ourselves in wild love for God, we discover we are pulling with God, not against Him.

When we grab the rope, our hands will touch the hands of Jesus who is anchoring the end.

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On “The Voice”

I have watched some of a TV show called “The Voice.” I was surprised by how moved I was by something called the blind auditions. The judges (this year Blake Sheldon, Christina Aguilera, Pharrell Williams, Adam Levine) sit with their backs to the singers. If they like the singer and want to coach the singer, they hit a button that swings their chair around.

Admittedly, some of the contestants have had some minor success as singers, but often there are some who have sung only in church or for loose change on city streets. As they sing, the camera often cuts to show parents or friends off-stage who are anxiously hoping for a chair to turn. For outstanding singers, all four judges might turn.

When four chairs turn, each judge takes a couple minutes to explain why the contestant should choose him or her to be their coach. The coaches tell the singers how talented they, how beautiful their voices are, and how much they want them. They fight to get these undiscovered singers on their team. Silly as it seems, this makes me really happy.

As these stars fight over the contestants, the singers are awakened to their worth as a singer. “If these artists want me, my talent must be real,” they think. Oddly, this reminded me of a line from the Christmas song “O Holy Night” that says when Christ appeared “the soul felt its worth/A thrill of hope—the weary world rejoices.” When the chairs turn, you see the singer light-up with joy. Off-stage the parents are ecstatic to see their child’s talent and years of music lessons rewarded and their hopes vindicated.

And it is so refreshing to see these famous stars begging to be chosen—asking for the privilege of teaching and coaching. Almost washing the feet of . . . And then it dawned on me. I was getting a glimpse of grace. A glimpse of a God who not only turned his chair for me, but his heart, and left his chair for a cross. A God who turned his chair and then taught me to sing.

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The Death of a Salesman and the Joy of Repentance

I recently taught Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman, a modern American tragedy about the ways we lie to ourselves, rationalize our moral failures, and substitute popularity for actual character. Time and consequences eventually catch up to the Loman family and scrape their hearts clean of all their self-deceptions. Willy Loman, unable to bear the truth, commits suicide. The power and emotion of this play always stuns me and leaves me raw. And this time I was startled to find myself thankful.

I was thankful for one of the hard things about my faith in Christ: repentance. Both John the Baptist and Christ announced the kingdom of God with a call to repentance. We may be tempted to think of repentance simply as a call to stop sinning. It is that, but on a deeper level it is a call to be honest about ourselves. It is an invitation to escape the delusions that ensnare our lives and leave us barren. I like that in my evangelical tradition we sang “Just as I Am” when inviting people to follow Jesus.

The sharp knife of truth slices away all our lies, all our rationalizations, and evil fantasies. With “blessed are the meek”, Christ slices away all our delusions about personal ambition being the key to happiness. All our combative, vengeful, and aggressive instincts that masquerade as self-assertion are shattered by “blessed are the peacemakers.”

Of course even the hearts of believers wander, especially into the cultural distortions of Scripture. Willy Loman distorted the American dream into a faith in “being well-liked” and “who you know.” In a similar way, many American Christians transform their faith into positive-thinking that paves the way to personal success.

But in fellowship with one another, in submission to God’s Word, and in openness to the voice of the Holy Spirit, our self-deception is continually challenged. It is no accident that so much of the teaching of Christ exposed religious hypocrisy. Jesus is always calling us to get real and follow him.

Unlike Willy Loman, we have a safe place to shed our lies. We can give up our faith in being well-liked and rest in the truth that, just as we are, we are deeply loved. Even more wonderful is that out of our honesty—our brokenness and repentance—God resurrects hope. When we confess what we are—God insists that is only what we were. This truth sets us free

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Healing Hope in Rivendell

Tolkien tells us that while Bilbo and the dwarves were at Rivendell, “Their clothes were mended as well as their bruises, their tempers, and their hopes.” The longer I live, the more deeply I understand that hope needs mending.

I have come to appreciate all who mend and fix things. My mother, who as I write is sitting by the fire with a book, used to darn socks on evenings like this. But it is even more difficult, I think, to mend hopes.

Our world, awash in cynicism and seduced by despair, erodes hope and sometimes sweeps it away through divorce, betrayal, molestation, and cruelty. Kids give up their natural dream of heroism, only to find they have become the bully. Prince Charming can turn-out to a sadist. Happily (ever-after) turns into crappily. Our “hoper” gets broken.

Those with the elvish skill to mend hopes do it with truth. Truth may seem an odd fix for broken hopes since we often think of the hopeful as naïve, gullible, or oblivious to reality. But despair is just a narrow realism. Hope is mended when our hard realism about our present misery is stretched to include realism about God’s past faithfulness, about God’s immediate presence, and about the promise of future victory. The hopeful possess an expansive realism. A sock is darned from the firm edges of the sock surrounding the hole. Our own emptiness is surrounded by God. Those who mend hopes consistently speak and embody the truth in whom we live, move, and have our being.

I think it is important, however, to listen to the hopes and dreams of people who come to our Rivendell. We refresh the spirit of those we take the time to see and hear. And we can only mend the hopes we have understood. At Rivendell elves (this may have been hard) listened to dwarves before adding wise counsel and restoring dashed hopes

Too often the church has been the place where Christians lost hope after being wounded, scolded, or ignored. We must make church more like Rivendell—but must remember that orcs sneak in. Still as individuals we can answer the call to make our hearts and friendships places where hopes are mended and where plans are made to retake all the dragon has stolen.

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