Friday, August 31, 2012

Untitled War Story I


I wrote this story based on one of the few stories my grandfather would tell about WWII. He was in Germany at the very end of the war, so I tried to add a bit of German. It comes straight from Google Translate so I can't vouch for its accuracy (and would go so far as to say, it's probably wrong). If you actually know German, and what I have written sounds stupid, please feel free to correct it.

Untitled War Story I

They approached the farm house from the west and knocked on the door. John shielded his eyes from the rays of sunlight piercing into his eyes and inhaled as they waited. The odor that had tickled their noses on the walk up the mountain had grown stronger. “What is that smell?” he wandered to himself.

A moment later the door opened. “Ja?” a short, stout woman answered. Her faded red shirt and patched skirt were dappled with dust, broadcasting they had caught her during morning chores. Pieces of gray-brown escaped from the yellow cloth which encased the bulk of her hair. Her eyes darted between the men suspiciously. She held a broom tightly in her hand, and John fought the urge to step back out of its reach.  

“Um, ehem,” the translator fumbled for words, “Grüße Fräuline, wir sind mit der U.S. Army. Wir müssen ihrem haus nach waffen zu suchen.”

The woman looked consternated. John’s confidence in the translator began to waiver. The translator repeated himself. Finally with narrowed eyes, she snipped, “Ja, aber nicht mit a käse durcheinander.”

The translator cocked an eyebrow. John stifled his annoyance, “What did she say?” The translator turned and said, “She says not to disturb her cheese, sir.”

“What?”

“She says…”

“Yes, yes, I heard what she said. What does she mean?”

“I don’t know, sir.”

John faced the woman, who still blocked the doorway, but spoke to his translator. “Tell her we need to come in now.” The translator spoke; the woman continued to stare, unmoving. John was unsure if she had understood the translator until finally, the woman acquiesced and shuffled out of the doorway.

John stepped inside and halted. He felt a thud and was thrust forward slightly as his men ran into each other behind him. He had never seen such a sight. He now knew the origin of the strange smell and the meaning behind the woman’s enigmatic statement.

Cheese. It was everywhere. White cakes buried chairs and Limberger bricks created barriers around the bed. Only a small corner of the table remained free from the dairy imprisoning the rest of the surface. John glanced up and saw the rafters decorated with blocks of cheese.

“Uh, sir?” an incredulous voice come from behind John, “what do you want us to do?”

John swallowed his emotions, not taking the time to determine if it was laughter or tears he was suppressing. “Search for weapons,” he kept his voice as level as he could.

“Yes, sir. How, sir?”

“Move the cheese.”

“All of it, sir?”

“Yes. The whole house.”

John saw the man’s jaw clench as he struggled to keep his composure. The mounds of cheese were a daunting sight and would at least triple the amount of time they must spend at the house.

The woman stood in the corner and scrutinized the men as they moved to the fortress on the adjacent side. They hefted the first wheels of cheese.

“Nein, nein, nein!” The woman began yelling.  

They stopped moving, confused by her sudden torrent of refusal. “She did say not to disturb her cheese” the translator proffered an explanation for her behavior.

“Well, we have to move the cheese. We’ve got to search the house.” John was terse. “She can move it herself if she wants, but we’re staying until the search is done.”

The translator relayed the message to the woman. Her face contorted with anger, fear, and annoyance. John was grateful looks don’t kill because he and his men would have been dead three times over. Finally the parade of emotions on the woman’s face ended with a look of grim resignation, and she grudgingly said, “Feine, können sie helfen.”

“She says we can help,” the translator reported.

“Good,” John replied, “let’s get started. I don’t want to be here all night.”

They began dismantling the walls of cheese. The woman riveted her eyes on them, making certain they did not damage any of her goods. The day grew hotter as they moved around the house, carefully lifting each slab, checking every nook and cranny for weapons. After they examined each crevice of the dwelling, they restacked the hunks, rebuilding the edible fort that guarded the woman’s possessions. 

Orange, fuchsia and purple streaked across the sky as they walked back down the mountain.
The smell of her house still clinging to their clothes, John wondered if he would ever be able to face another piece of cheese and hoped the laundry woman could make his uniform smell normal again. 

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

What I do when work is slow

I.
Golden specks aloft
Float on the air, in the light
A beautiful dance

II.
A rainbow slithers
Side to side, blue tail shimmers
On four legs it goes

III.
I push the button
White sheet come one by one
It jams. Annoying


Friday, August 24, 2012

By the Sea

I amble down to the edge of the water. My long sleeved shirt is just enough to keep away the cold from the air that blow loose hairs around my face. My companion races ahead of me. His hungry yips brake the stillness, and I pause as the black fluff comes back to nip my ankles. “I don’t have food for you,” my voice an unwelcome disturbance against the lapping waves. We reach the lake, and he plops down, ignoring the broken food dispenser. My eyes sweep over the rippling mirror. Small waves rush up the sand and slide back to the sea. The stars begin to hide. Orange and pink start to streak the purple-blue sky. A yellow arch peeks over a hill. My thoughts dance through the pages of the Bible. These waters were not always so placid.

Storms overcome those who follow Christ’s voice and step onto the water. I sank in the fear that washed over me when human strength was weak and faith began to waiver. A wall of icy water crashed against my head with a surgery gone awry. A fatal car crash, a weight I couldn’t shake dragged me down to the bottom. I tried to cling to something solid, but it crumbled with a rejection, and the opportunity slipped through my fingers. I bumped against the goodbye I couldn’t say, a barrier between me and the sky.

Something warm and rough grabbed my hand. I clung to the carpenter’s calloused fingers. He lifted me up. I breathed again. Relief was sweet in my lungs. Beneath his feet, the waves became a peaceful pathway. He walked easily, though I slumped against him, and I knew he carried the weight of two. Hands lifted me back aboard. I relaxed against the hewn wood sides of the boat of my former life. It looked the same, but I am not. I have been through the storm; I am changed. I cannot stay here. My Lord’s voice calls from the waves. I must step out again.

A short bark crashes through my thoughts and douses me with reality. The golden orb has overcome her shyness and climbed above the hilltops. I tear my eyes away from Tiberius and peel off my extra layer. “I suppose it’s time for breakfast.” I give voice to dog’s morning reverie.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Web


Web

It glistens in the porch light 
Her masterpiece
Gossamer threads intertwine
A pattern stretching three feet wide

It sparkles with dew
And glimmers as he leaves
We duck
So not to disturb her artwork

We pause for a while
Admiring
Discussing
Enjoying a moment of friendship

Friday, August 17, 2012

Saint and Sinner

I wrote this hymn this afternoon (31 July - I've been using the schedule feature on blogger so you'll be reading this in the future) as a reflection on our dual nature as saints and sinners. It's a hard subject to tackle in prose, let alone hymnity. I don't like the first line; it doesn't capture the depravity of man. While the rest of the hymn does a better job of emphasizing that any good in our lives comes from God, the first line on its own leaves room for the idea that humanity has some innate goodness. What do you think? How theologically sound should hymns be? Any suggestion for an alternative first line?

Tune "Christ Be My Leader" Lutheran Service Book 861

Two natures in me, one good and one dark
What God had made perfect is breaking His heart
Death had claim ov'r us, our goodness was gone
God sent forth Jesus, bought us back with His Son

I have done nothing to gain my new life
Christ did it all, He was the sacrifice
Everything good that I have is from Him
Without His guidance I do nothing but sin

Christ is within me and that is by grace
He came to save us, the whole human race
We're clothed in his righteousness; He set us free
Now we can join Him in eternity.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

I passed by


I passed by

I saw her once,
Outside my door,
Digging through trash
For recyclables to sell
To make ends meet.
But I was stressed,
My work permit woes
Clouding my attention
From what is truly important

I saw him once
On the road to church
Sitting on the rock
On the side of the road
His earthly possessions
Bundled under the cardboard
My heart hurt
But I was on the bus
What could I do?
It’s not like I could have stopped

My excuses mirror the Levite’s and the Priest’s

Is there a Samaritan wondering the streets of Ha Noi?

I will never know.
 
It wasn’t me. 



Friday, August 10, 2012

Her Gift was Greater

A couple weeks ago I attended a Faith and Writing Workshop at Concordia Seminary in St. Louis. Our first writing exercise was to dabble in (what I assume was greatly simplified) midrash, a sort of filling in gaps in the Biblical narrative. Here's my first attempt at what I hope becomes a regular writing exercise.

Her Gift was Greater

It had been nineteen years since her husband had died, and thirteen since the death of her only son. She sighed as she slowly maneuvered her way our of bed, trying to move her body in a way that didn't ache. She had arisen early since she planned to walk to the temple today, and as she had gotten older, the walk had gradually gotten longer and longer as what had been a one hour walk with her husband and new born son forty years ago, now stretched before her as an arduous and painful five hour plod.
She slowly eased around her house, finding her clothes more by feel than by sight. She felt her stomach growling and shuffled over to the table for breakfast. She felt around the table, the wood bare underneath her fingers. In the fogginess of her memory the thought of last night's dinner surfaced. The end of her small loaf of bread.  She sighed again, taking in a deep breath and releasing it slowly, blinking back tears. She knew that meant a trip to the baker, another three hours of waling added to her day.
Where had she put her money, she wondered, trying to recall where she had placed the small reddish-brown clay pot she into which she put her meager number of coins. She finally spotted a small blurry object sitting next to her bed and remembered depositing two small mites into it three days before. "Only two?" Her mind fumbled with the realization. "That's only enough to buy a tiny morsel of bread, and I still have to give an offering at the temple."
She slowly lowered herself onto the bed, trying to decide what to do. Suddenly she saw in her mind a clear picture of her husband talking to their son. "Always put the LORD first, son, and the LORD will take care of you," he would say before scooping him up and swinging him around as they left their home for the temple. She brushed away the tears as she sorted through her emotions, pushing away feelings of loneliness and gathering strength from the faith her husband had always displayed. She dumped the two, tiny coins into her bag and began her long journey to the temple.

Mark 12:41-44, Luke 21:1-4

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

On Missouri's Constitutional Amendment 2


MO Constitutional Amendment 2: A Rant or In Which I Climb on my Soapbox and Vent about Yesterday's Elections 

I am perturbed by the recent passing of Amendment 2 to the Missouri State Constitution and the misrepresentation present in the ballot language. The way the ballot read suggested that the voter is only voting to protect a Missourian’s right to pray (a redundant proposal even if that was the only thing the amendment did. That right is covered in Amendment 1 of the United States Constitution and can’t be undermined at a state level). When one reads the full text of the Amendment which was not available at the polls, it becomes clear that the amendment goes far beyond protecting prayer.

Buried in the middle of the text of this amendment is the provision “that no student shall be compelled to perform or participate in academic assignments or educational presentations that violate his or her religious beliefs.” This has ramifications far beyond what lawmakers and supporters of the amendment seem to have foreseen (though Rob Stitt of Lee’s Summit MO understands and describes in his letter to the Lee’s Summit Tribune’s editor). The ballot may have said that lawmakers “estimated this proposal will result in little or no costs or savings for state and local governmental entities,” but they don’t seem to have factor in the cost schools begin to sort through questions created by this amendment. I will list a few that came to my mind this morning.

1.      How does one define a religious belief? How will teachers determine what is a valid religious belief, and what is a clever child trying to avoid an assignment they don’t want to do?
2.      Are parochial schools bound by this amendment? I would assume yes, which I find amusing, since according to the article by Chris Blank, AP run in the News Tribune the MO bishops urged Catholics to vote for it. This amendment will essentially give non-Catholics attending Catholic schools in Missouri a free pass from homework in religion classes.
3.      To what level of schooling does this amendment apply? Will a Creationist desiring a degree in biology be excused from any course work applying to evolution? Will someone who believes the world is only 6,000 years old be allowed to graduate with no knowledge about carbon dating?

Finally, “protecting” students from things they don’t agree with will be detrimental to the development of their critical thinking skills. Preventing them from learning about how other people think won’t make their faith stronger; it will make it weaker. They won’t learn how to defend their ideas against those who disagree with them, nor will they learn to appreciate differing opinions. Shielding students from other beliefs will make it harder for them to develop into open-minded, tolerant, and well-educated individuals. This amendment does them a gross disservice.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Breakfast

I sit outside on a summer morning enjoying the coolness around me that I know will evaporate as the sun, now providing the perfect amount of heat, claims more and more of the sky. The breeze blows, offsetting any excess heat the sun may try to add during the next few minutes. I soak in the blue, the green, the puffy white, the chirps, the swish, the rustle. My toes curl and I wiggle them, basking in the simple joy of cereal on the porch on clean, clear, lazy morning.

Something moves. I see a lean shape slinking towards me. She pauses, poised to pounce, changes her mind and saunters in for a closer look.

"What is that? Is it tasty? It smells like milk! Let me see." Her head darts with each unspoken question. The black face comes forward, nose first, trailing long dark whiskers, followed by large, inquisitive, yellow-green eyes. I pull the bowl away and answer her most important question. "It must be good or else she would share." 

Tentatively at first, but with growing boldness, my new breakfast companion places her paw on my leg. "Can I see?" Her head is cocked and her eyes look intently at my bowl. She tries to appear innocent, but I know better. I move it higher. All bashfulness forgotten she moves across my lap and around my back, her tail snaking after her as she keeps up with my movements, following the bowl as I try to keep it safe. Stepping into my lap again, she stretches her body out, reaching her paw towards the prize. My spoon is now too far away to reach my mouth, and I realize was have come to the end of our dance. I admit defeat. With one last spoonful, I set the bowl down.

The furry head descends, tongue out and the rhythmic sound of a reverse waterfall adds itself to the morning.  

Friday, August 3, 2012

A Friday Special - On Birth Control and Chicken


On Birth Control and Chicken – (Simplistic and not as well written as I would like, but thinking and writing are both processes. Here’s a glimpse at an early step).

I’ve been thinking a lot about “free” birth control and “homophobic” chicken providers recently. Not exactly sure why, but I think it might be because the blog-a-sphere and my news and twitter feeds are blowing up over the birth control mandate (which took effect on Wednesday) and the Chick-fil-A issue (if you don’t know about that yet, I suggest you stay under your rock for a few more days until it blows over). I’m throwing my two cents in, not because I think I will bring anything new to the conversation, but because it’s a good exercise to put one’s thoughts down on paper (or in a word doc in this case).

First, about the birth control thing. I realize that the Church in America enjoys a special freedom here in the U.S. that it doesn’t get anywhere else, and I understand its desire to protect that. However, I think the Church got too focused on its own freedoms and the Law (Law and Gospel Law, not U.S. law), and missed an opportunity for the Gospel.

From what I saw and read about the Church’s response, it seemed their only response was to refuse to pay to provide birth control to those who work for them. Technically, that’s fair. Because of the first amendment, I don’t think its okay for the government to tell the Church it has to pay for something it finds morally reprehensible. The Church, however, I believe is called to be more than fair. We are, to paraphrase Matt Harrison, called to care about people, to make that our business.

There are ways to be more than fair without compromising the Church’s freedoms. I didn’t hear the Church offer any other solutions to the problems that birth control tries to solve. Like offering free counseling or classes, and materials for Natural Family Planning, or providing resources and support for unexpected and unplanned pregnancies to name a couple. Perhaps wouldn’t make financial sense, but I think standing up for our faith without alienating people who disagree with us is worth a few dollars.

And about the chicken: it makes me sad that people are so worried about what should be a non-issue. (As I type this, I realize the irony behind commenting it). I think everyone is so worried about it because it feeds into our penchant for gossiping. “Oh my gosh, did you hear what that fast food owner said about marriage. I am so not going to his restaurant anymore.” I’m hoping we can move past it soon and start worrying about more important things. 

Lord, We Gather at Your Table

One of our activities at the Faith and Writing workshop I attended last week was writing hymns. This was my first attempt, and I must say turned out better than subsequent endeavors.

Lord, We Gather at Your Table
To the tune of "Hark the Voice of Jesus Crying" Lutheran Service Book 826

Lord, we gather at your table
Here you call us to your feast
Lord, your Holy Spirit guides us
Bringing all, the great and least
Everyone has sinned against you
Everyone has disobeyed
Still you let us join your supper
Taking all our guilt away

Christ died out on Calvary's mountain
So we all might come to heaven
We are joined into his dying
Cup of wine and bread unleaven
Thank you, Christ, for coming to us
We receive your loving grace
Now we all can come before you
And behold your righteous face