We Need a LOT of Christmas

Recently I read Michael Lewis’ excellent book, The Premonition. In a most engaging way Lewis tells of the very disjointed – and often publicly resisted and opposed – development of our national response to infectious disease and the Covid-19 Pandemic. He also relates, through the careers of several of our nation’s various state-wide, community health officers,…

Do You Need ‘Closure’?

Some weeks ago, my wife, Grace, and I took an afternoon drive to the country cemetery where my father is buried. His body has been interred in that sacred space for 62 years. 62 years. As we stood at my dad’s grave I remembered – as I always have on such visits  – the day I…

The Center for Christian Values. A Modern Horror Show

The Plain Dealer reported today (10/26/21) that the six major Republican candidates running to replace retiring US Senator, Rob Portman, were at a candidates forum near Columbus this past Sunday night. The forum was organized by a group of “socially conservative evangelical voters” belonging to an organization called the Center for Christian Values. What a terrifying collection…

Unfit and Improper Matter

Two and a half years ago, before Covid-19 changed everything, I was invited to give a series of six Sunday sermons at an historic, urban, church in downtown Cleveland. While the church was not of my United Methodist denomination, I had – over my 32 years of pastoral ministry in the city – built valued…

Trusting the High Moments

One of the ways I have chosen to help deal with the past four years of presidential insanity as well as the caustic, turbulent, always spiritually exhausting climate on which MAGA supporters continue to thrive, has been to read of similar disquieting times. I have done this in search of reasons for hope and to…

Without A Compass?

I have been a boater on Lake Erie most of my adult life. While some people remember the cars they have owned, I remember the four boats I have owned and used with my family. While all of my boats have been different in such things as the size of hull, beam, and engine horsepower,…

Picking Up Pignuts

In the backyard of our lake house stands a magnificent, pignut hickory tree. No one knows for sure why the tree is called a pignut hickory other than pig farmers once supposedly used the nuts produced as rooting material for their pigs. But, more about pig nuts in a minute. Regardless of its name, the…

GOT THE T-SHIRT

Thanks to brilliant scientists and the development of Covid-19 vaccines, my wife and I were able to go out to lunch with our 21-year-old grandson for the first time in over a year! While ours is certainly not a unique experience in these re-emerging-from-pandemic-restriction-days, it most certainly is a wonderfully personal affirmation of gratitude for…

Be a Christian Agnostic

One of the concepts authored by a great preacher of the 20th century, Leslie Weatherhead, was the idea of a “Christian Agnostic.” By this term, Weatherhead meant that he was a follower of the life and teachings of Jesus, but in terms of describing the nature of God, Weatherhead recognized – in the most engaging…

More Than a McSparrow

I have never given sparrows much thought. The ubiquitous little birds have always just been, well…around. But this spring I have paid more attention because a pair of them have taken up housekeeping in the bird house on our patio. They have been nest building and having bird sex right before my eyes. The female…