Saturday, December 31, 2011

Books Read in 2011

Every year I try to read widely. This year has been no different. But, I didn't make my goal of reading 75 books. I did read some rather lengthy works, however. Below is the list of books I've completed in the past 12 months in alpha order.

I have a long list for next year as well, including some daily reading items. Maybe I'll blog about some of them as I go along.


1) 13 Little Blue Envelopes

2) 55 Ways to Meditate

3) A Century Turns

4) A Dog Named Slugger

5) A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

6) AIDS2031

7) Back on Murder

8) Bullying

9) Cannery Row

10) Change the World

11) Change Your Church for Good

12) Civil Disobedience

13) Common Sense

14) Confronting the Challenges of Participatory…Media

15) Dancing in the Lowcountry

16) East of Eden

17) Fireflies in December

18) Five Fruitful Practices

19) Hostile Witness

20) In the Name of Jesus

21) Invisible

22) Les Miserables

23) Life is so Good

24) Love Me If You Must

25) Love Wins

26) On the Run

27) Pure Pleasure

28) Reaching People under 40 While Keeping People over 60

29) Recreating the Church

30) The Bible

31) The Equipping Church

32) The Handbag’s Tale

33) The Pursuit of God

34) The Wounded Healer

35) Up From Slavery

36) Number the Stars

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

When you just don't "feel" the Christmas Spirit...

I'm part of a Facebook group of young clergy women. One of them asked about the "emotions" of Christmas and how we deal with it when we don't "feel it." I can relate. While I have a fairly high Birkman score on the emotional side of things, I am such a control freak that I want to control what emotions I show. I don't tend to be overly dramatic about much of anything without some serious effort. And, Christmas is one season where that is especially so.

I've walked with lots of people in the last few weeks who are experiencing the hard, daunting, painful tasks that life brings. Death. Divorce. Serious illness. Financial crisis. Loss of faith. This year just hasn't seemed joyful and I wasn't quite sure what to do with that. I couldn't force or fake being happy and joyful. And, I'm okay with knowing I don't really have to be.

For this year at least, I have re-framed what Christmas means. I focused on incarnation....the totality of incarnation. Christ came, put on flesh and walked the dusty roads of this broken world in order to live life fully. And, to show us what it means to live life to the fullest. (Seems like John said something about that, too.) Living life fully means Christ experienced heartache, pain, grief, betrayal, hunger, exhaustion and frustration. And yet, we saw how He engaged all of those things. He didn't run from them or try to lessen the effects. He lived fully; He lived faithfully. We see how to walk the journey with trust and hope that one day all will be right.

That day isn't today. And it won't be tomorrow. But, we if we have experienced this world in a more full way (by engaging the good, the bad, the ugly and the beautiful), we can help walk with others who need to be pointed toward the wholeness we find in God's kingdom which is both now and ever-coming.

This reshaping has helped me make more sense of the current situation I find myself in as I think about what the appropriate "emotions" are for this holy season.


Grace and peace.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Barth in 2012

Once again, I am attempting to read through Church Dogmatics in the years 2012 and 2013. Spurred on by one of my seminary professors (Mike Stroope) I am going to take the challenge.

My friend Jerry and I will be starting a blog specifically for our Barth and CD reading some time soon. Hopefully, that will keep me focused and determined to stick it out. And, I really do want to do this. I just get sidetracked with so much other reading and work responsibilities.


Barth may be one of the greatest, if not THE greatest, theologian on the 20th century. I know I may not agree with all he says, but it's important work to wrestle with and think critically about theology. Doing that in conversation with great theologians and good friends help a lot and offers a range of understanding.

More to come as we embark on the journey.

Grace and peace.

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Another Set of Goals...

Every year I set some goals at the onset of the calendar. 2012 will be no different. Below I will list several goals I want to accomplish and then I'll check in periodically and let you know how I'm doing.


1. Work through health issues - 2011 has been the year for wacky, crazy, but non-life-threatening medical issues. A bad abdominal pain that was diagnosed as colon spasms. An eternal (4 month) upper respiratory infection (along with some bronchitis). Bad reaction to meds for my lungs that is causing fairly significant leg pain: hips, knees, feet, tendonitis, cramps, general pain that leads to difficulty in sitting and lying down. Then, a diagnosis of asthma. So, this year, lose weight to help with all that and do what it takes to get back to where I was six months ago.

2. Read - 75 books already on my list. Hope to be much closer in 2012 than in 2011. About 35 books in 2011.

3. Barth Reading - I'm going to be faithful to read through the Dogmatics. I was going to do this in 2011, but quickly gave up. I'm going to push through in 2012 and 2013 to read through the entire work. About 15 pages a day.

4. Engage in intentional community - FCC has some amazing young adults that have started coming. We are meeting once a month to eat and share life and prayer and community. Also, a new group of young adults have started gathering for what we call "Faith on Tap." We meet once a month and talk about faith and how to live out our particular brand of faith in the world. This is good, healthy, life-giving community.


I could go on and on about goals, but four seems to be a good number to actually attempt.


Now off to see how much of 2011's goals I can manage to squeeze in before the clock strikes midnight.

Grace and peace.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Goals for 2011

Well, here we are in October of 2011 and I've only checked in on goals once this year!? Of course, I haven't done all that well, so I'm not wanting to update.

1. Get Healthy - I've lost a little weight, but nothing that is intentional. In fact, I've had some pretty crazy medical things going on the last six months. For the last three months I've been fighting a respiratory/sinus infection that keeps trying to move into pneumonia. I have had four, yes FOUR, rounds of antibiotics and it just isn't working. So, I am meeting with my doctor on Monday to talk about seeing a specialist. I can't handle not being able to breathe and running a constant low grade fever much longer. And, I can't handle many more days of this low blood pressure either. Hopefully, better health is coming soon.

2. Read Widely - I've read widely, but I haven't read nearly as much as I intended. I have finished 24 books and am in process with four. One of those is Les Miserables. It's 1200-1400 pages in print depending on which translation you get. I'm reading it on my Kindle app, so I'm 50% through it. I am also reading a book about the future of AIDS, a book about a man who grew up in East Texas during the days of the great depression and segregation, and a book about church transformation.

3. Finances - Well, I'm not as far along as I'd like, but I haven't done anything too outlandish. And, I've received some generous gifts from several house sitting gigs this year. I'm moving out on my own (well, that's a relative phrase) in the next several weeks, so this is becoming a more pressing issue to attend to.

4. Writing - This is very low on my Birkman score and true to that, I haven't written as much as I'd like. I know it is good for me. I need to talk through my ideas and fears and dreams. Writing is one way to "talk" but I prefer talking with my voice rather than a pen. I need to make this a priority.

5. Professional growth - I finished up my Licensed Minister's Training program in April. It was good, helpful to understand what it means to be Disciples. I have done some theological reading and some "fun" reading that I would count in this. And, I spent three months in a professional coaching relationship with True Course Ministries. That too was helpful.

6. Getting a Life - I have found some friends my own age in recent days. They starting coming to the church and we hit it off pretty quickly. We now spend some time during the week talking about life and faith and stuff. In fact, we are trying to meet all together at least once a month for fellowship.

Overall, this is still a work in progress. I'm not going to make some of the goals, but that's okay. It's having goals that move us forward further than no goals at all. I believe I will be able to say that I am better for having set them and at least checked in on them several times a year.

Shalom.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

If you don't slow down....

...your body will do it for you. Or at least, that's what I've learned in the last five months. While I don't want to sound like a broken record and I don't want to complain, it would be healthy for me to articulate where I've been and what I'm feeling about it.

During Holy Week in April I began experiencing severe pain in my lower abdomen. Excruciating, day stopping, stab-me-in-the-eye kind of pain. It didn't matter what I did, it just hurt.

I figured I was due for several different doctor's visits, so I made appointments. I had a sonogram done to check for cysts. Everything came back normal. But, I was still in pain. So, I went to my GP and had a CT done. Again, everything came back relatively normal. (There were a couple of non-important things that came up, but no worries there.)

So, my doctor prescribed me a medicine for colon spasms. While the medicine did help with the severity, but the frequency was worse than before. However, over the course of a couple of weeks, it finally started getting better.

Then, I went in for a follow up for that I was diagnosed with an upper respiratory infection. Got my beloved Z-pack and took it. And, it didn't help. It always works! Always! But not this time. So I went back and got a different antibiotic. I'm almost finished with this round and I'm still having some issues with my respiratory system. Still running a low grade fever several days a week. And, still without any energy at all.

I come home most every day and crash after work. I can run about 4-6 hours before I just flat run out of steam.

I am so frustrated. I really do think my doctor knows what he's doing and I know that all my tests have shown little that is helpful. I'm just tired of feeling bad all the time. It is beginning to wear on my spirit. Ministry is often very draining and in the last few weeks have proven that over and over. Between normal ministry and life drains, this has almost tipped the scales.

Fortunately, I have a wonderful pastor/boss/supervisor who understands and is supportive of me even when I'm so pathetic. She encourages me to rest when I need to and take time off when needed. It is so nice to have that level of understanding as I fight through this. Even in the midst of feeling bad and struggling to get the bare minimums done, I am so grateful for her leadership and support.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Rest...

Lately I've been considering the idea of Sabbath. Rest. Reflection. Rejuvenation. God commanded it and I have been good at ignoring it.

So, I've managed to carve out some time to just be--without much of a plan for doing. I recently house sat for some friends who live out in the country, complete with geese, a lake and wind chimes. A perfect setting for a few personal retreat days.

The first day was rough. I couldn't settle in. I was restless and couldn't stay focused on simply being, I needed to be "doing." By the end of the third day, I was doing better as just sitting and resting. And, what I found out was that I was completely exhausted. I had a list of things to do and had no energy to do them, so I didn't. I just was. And, that's okay.

So, a couple of weeks later, it's Saturday and the second day I haven't "worked." Sure, I wrote aboard report and need to look at Sunday school material for tomorrow, but I didn't go into the office and haven't spent all my time thinking about work.

In the last 48 hours I've: gone out to breakfast, browsed shelves at the public library (picked up two novels), finished one book and made progress in two others, washed my car and my dad's truck, got a massage, held a precious baby while he slept, slept in, took a nap, read outside, played with the dogs, watched basketball (it is March Madness after all!), washed dishes and did some laundry. -Okay, so a lot of that is work, but it's different work. It's what Barbara Brown Taylor calls "altars in the world"--ways we see God moving and giving us life in the midst of everyday activity.

And, even though I've done a bunch of things, the different pace of life the last two days have been good for me. As I continue to reflect on what it means to sabbath, rest and reflect, I hope to become more intentional about observing this practice.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

No words...

What do you say when the unspeakable happens? What do you say when tragedy strikes? As a minister, I like to have to right words to say, but I rarely find myself in that position.

Thursday night I got word that the unspeakable had happened. A fellow seminary friend and classmate was violently killed in his church in North Texas. His church is just over two hours from the church I currently serve. Everyone is shocked and stunned. His family. His congregation. The Police. Truett Seminary. Ministers around the world. Me.

I'm not sure what to say. I'm not even sure what I feel.

Anger. Outrage. Grief. Pain. Shock. Numb. Questions. Fear. Sadness. That's part of it. But it goes deeper into words I don't have in my vocabulary. All this, and yet I didn't know him as well as so many others.

Even so, God is God. I am not; we are not. And I'm reminded, "Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, your perfect love is casting out fear..."




Lord, have mercy. Christ, have mercy. Lord, have mercy.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Pastoral Care

The past couple of weeks my pastor has been out of town for various reasons. She completed her second week of classroom work for her DMin at Brite Divinity School. And, she welcomed her first grandchild into the world this last Tuesday. Benjamin Thomas Coyle is doing well and is loved beyond what he knows.

So, while she's been learning and loving, I've been holding down the fort at the church. That means lots of pastoral care. We've had several people in the hospital and several more who are recovering from major medical procedures.

I've learned one major thing in this process. Something that I knew (in my head), but hadn't ever really practiced. Sometimes people just need to talk. And, they need someone to listen.

So, slow down and take time to really be present to people. Listen to what they say and what they don't say. Let them tell their story. That is as much pastoral care as praying or sitting with someone at the hospital or comforting someone after the loss of a loved one.

Listen.

Monday, January 17, 2011

And the verdict......

Keeping up with the goals I set for myself has already proved to be a challenge. It's only two and half weeks in, and I've missed some this early in the process!!

1. I've done a decent job of eating at home. I told my dad I was going to forget Sonic runs in the afternoons during 2011 as his birthday present for 2010. Actually, it was about all eating out, unless it was a planned event, like Clergy Girls or a ministry appointment or family dinner. You get the point....I've eaten fast food a couple of times and only been to Sonic once for a Diet Coke since Christmas.

2. I have been so busy with work the last three weeks that I have barely touched reading. I am currently working through Booker T. Washington's autobiography, Up From Slavery. And, I'm slowly making my way through Karl Barth's Church Dogmatics...very, VERY slowly. I should have at least three books finished; my count is zero. It will come.

3. I have paid down a good bit on debt this month, thanks to Christmas cash. Due to the rise in federal withholding taxes this year, I am bringing home less than last year...yes, even with the tax cut. The rise is bigger than the cut for me.....

4. I said I was going to post weekly on here in order to keep up with writing. Well, I haven't posted here, but I have been writing. I wrote a sermon for January 9th along with a communion meditation. Then, at 10:30pm Saturday the 15th, I got a call that our guest preacher was sick. So, I wrote a sermon and delivered it in less than 12 hours! That in addition to another communion meditation. And, I'm the guest speaker at our Disciples Women's Ministry General Meeting tomorrow, so more writing. Lots of writing, just not much posting. You can link to the sermon manuscripts here.

5. I am talking with a good friend and seminary professor at the end of this week to talk about some continuing professional growth opportunities. And, On January 29th, I will be traveling with a group from my church to an all day workshop in the Dallas area. I'm looking forward to it.

6. Ministry has been so busy with programs starting back up, extra responsibilities while Charlotte has been gone for continuing ed (two weeks ago) and vacation this week (to see her first grandchild born, sometime in the next 24 hours!), a funeral, surprise preaching engagements, etc. that life outside of work has been put on hold. However, I did meet my cousin for a cup of really good coffee in Downtown Paris last week. It was good to catch up and just sit for a while. --I might also add that I've had pneumonia for a chunk of this time, and a sinus infection that's flaring up again. Busy, busy, busy.


For now, I'm going to enjoy my mac and cheese, watered down Diet Coke and a good night's sleep.


Shalom.