April 2007


Culture and Faith and Friends and Missional30 Apr 2007 04:01 pm

I have received a great deal of encouragement these past few days from a wide range of people through phone calls, emails and the like. This weekend I got a kind email from fellow blogger, Jamie Arpin-Ricci sharing his concern for me and my family and offering us some encouragement. I wrote him back and added my concern for his well-being right now as his urban community is reeling in the face of a shooting that just took place right outside his home. Jamie has the most generous spirit, and that is especially remarkable considering the range of challenges he faces living and loving in an urban context.

In his last email, he commented about the blood stain from the shooting and he made the point that for communities like ours, its gruesome presence is somehow “ok” or “understandable” whereas in other kinds of communities it would be the cause for great outrage and would demand a response. I can so relate to what he is wrestling with. I think one of the things that causes me the deepest grief on a day to day basis is the lack of outrage I see in the general population over the violence and suffering that is the norm in places like South Central.

I remember when Doug and I watched the movie “Ghandi” together this past year, I was struck by the power of the kind of non-violent resistance that Ghandi promoted, and I wondered, what would a movement like that look like in our world today?

I think that Jamie, and others like him, are the answer to that question: people who don’t have to live with blood-soaked sidewalks but who choose to for the sake of doing justice and loving mercy in those places. And because they are in places where they don’t “have to” be, there is the opportunity for inviting some outrage that would otherwise be missing. Because honestly, we are going to get more worked up over that shooting because it affects Jamie and his family than we would if we simply heard it on the news (which we likely wouldn’t because urban violence is not even newsworthy anymore).

Doug is asking really good questions about suffering right now as a result of his Job and Human Suffering class at Fuller, and he is considering how our theology of suffering and justice and injustice determine our response to those in pain around us. I will be excited to hear his thoughts develop further on this, because I think he is on to something. As horrible as it is to suggest, I think that there are some people we either consciously or unconsciously decide deserve their suffering and that is why we cease to show compassion; that is why we show no outrage. And it is not until someone who doesn’t “deserve” it suffers alongside those others that we pay it some attention.

Quotation of the Week28 Apr 2007 10:38 am

“One day as I stood in my office, looking out over the courtyard, I cried out to God, ‘I can’t do it,’ and God replied, ‘You’ll just have to.’ That sounds hard, but in a strange way it came as reassurance.”

From Walk On by John Goldingay

Family and Los Angeles and Misc.27 Apr 2007 04:10 pm

We went to see our OB this morning, and we were once again reassured that everything looks fine with our baby. I am less sore and a bit more functional today, and we received the wonderful surprise last night of Doug’s mom coming from Oregon to spend a few days with us to help out. Phone calls, emails and of course the kind comments here have given me some much needed encouragement as well.

This morning at our doctor’s appointment, the OB we saw had not heard the news about the car accident and she was of course totally horrified. What was funny and a bit ironic was that she had already planned to ask us if we would be one of seven couples from their practice to participate in the filming of a show for the Discovery Channel. She was quite diplomatic about it (and of course quick to tell us that we could say no) as she described that they were looking for a diverse set of women/couples that would represent the range of things that can happen during a pregnancy. I guess we are kind of the ideal candidates. Someone already commented that if they used us they might only need one or two other couples because we cover so much!

I don’t know if we will choose to participate, but it made us laugh and say as we do in such moments: “Because we live in L.A….”

Faith and Family and Friends and Misc.26 Apr 2007 10:22 am

After a wonderful long weekend with Doug in downtown Chicago and a delightful (very full!) day on North Park’s campus, I was exhausted but joyful as I headed out the door of a nearby coffee shop with a young woman I had just met (thanks to this blog) the hour before. It was raining and dark, and she was heading to the bus stop across the street to return home to Humboldt Park. I needed to walk the few blocks back to my host home, and we were laughing and chatting about being ill-prepared for the rain. As we stepped into the crosswalk, with the light, I saw a white taxi cab heading North on Kimball begin to turn in our direction. I assumed he planned to stop before he got to us but that was not the case. Claiming later that he did not see us, he struck me first, throwing me to the ground, and then hitting Rebecca.

A kind woman immediately stopped her car and told us that she was calling 911. The cab driver stopped as well, apologizing profusely. I got up right away from the ground but I was very concerned for Rebecca who was still down. She said she was okay, but we both knew that we needed to get checked out. I remembering just standing there, in the rain, saying to whoever was listening: “I’m pregnant. I’m pregnant.”

Very quickly an unmarked car pulled up and two guys stepped out and started barking orders and talking in radios. Suddenly a blue light was flashing inside their car, and they ushered me to their back seat. Now, earlier in the day it had probably come up four or five times that I have my set of fears and suspicions concerning the Chicago Police Department. As I crawled into the back seat of some men who I hoped were Chicago cops, I was struck by the irony.

Fortunately I had my host’s phone number in my bag, and as soon as I told Bob what had happened he said he would be right there. He arrived moments later and stayed by my side for the next two hours as Rebecca and I were transported to Swedish Covenant in an ambulance, and for the duration of my time there. He very gently prayed for me in the ER, as did Rebecca in the back of the ambulance, and I was so grateful for the love shown by these two people. I also managed a phone call home to my sister who was watching our kids while Doug was at his “Job and Human Suffering” class at Fuller. She got a hold of Doug and he called me back in tears. Having just walked through the very dark place of facing the loss of our baby six weeks ago, neither of us had much reserve to handle that prospect once again.

The pains in my stomach were terrifying for me. When the doctor started the ultrasound, I was relieved to see our little one moving, heart beating, and to hear her say that she could not see any damage anywhere. As she concluded the ultrasound, she said to me that she didn’t see any need to do a CT at this point, and she didn’t want to expose the baby to that high level of radiation unless necessary. “You are only at eighteen weeks. If you were a little further along, we would send you upstairs and monitor the baby for an hour or so with the external fetal monitor.” Then she looked at me, and I could see on her face that she was going to say Those Words: “But, since the baby is not yet viable, there would really be no reason to do that since there would be nothing we could do.”

Right after I found out I was pregnant this time, I spoke at Pasadena Covenant Church during their Sunday worship. A family introduced themselves to me afterwards, and I learned that the man was Todd Johnson, a new professor of worship and theology at Fuller who had previously taught at North Park. I had heard such great things about him from some friends, and I was pleased to meet him and his wife and kids. When I told them that Doug and I were expecting our third child, he did something strange: he spoke a blessing over the tiny little baby in my womb. He commented that the church doesn’t do anything to recognize the new life of babies until once they have been born and he said that this can be a great cause of grief for women who lose their babies for whatever reason before they are born. He blessed my little one with words that spoke to what I as the mother already knew to be true: this child is a gift of God; this child is a new creation; this child is beloved. This was before hernias and surgeries and taxi cabs, but how his simple act of offering that blessing has been present to me as we have passed through these dark places.

I am home now, much sorer than I ever would have imagined being as a result of being struck. I can hardly walk and sitting is painful, and we are scheduled to visit our OB tomorrow morning just to check again on our little one. I know that I have much to praise God for in terms of all that he did NOT permit to happen on Tuesday night. But I am feeling a bit down and discouraged nonetheless. As I said to Doug: “This is starting to feel personal.”

I haven’t heard back from my blogging friend, Rebecca, so I am hoping and praying for her wellness, and every time I move with pain I am reminded that she is likely feeling much the same right now. I am thrilled to be back home with my precious kiddos, and I will take the time later today or tomorrow to reflect more on my time at North Park. The day was rich with conversations with students and opportunities to reconnect with people who were dear to me when I lived there, and yes, Scot, I think I did drink close to ten cups of coffee that day!

Misc. and Writing21 Apr 2007 09:06 am

I will be taking a few days off from writing here, so please check back on Wednesday!

Church and Friends21 Apr 2007 08:53 am

Last night our church, Church of the Redeemer, was officially welcomed into the Evangelical Covenant Church at the conference annual meeting in Simi Valley. Doug stayed home with the kids so that I could go out and be a part of this, saying: “you worked really hard and gave a lot to see this day happen.” It was a great evening of celebration, and it was especially fun to see so many old (and newer) friends from within our denominational family. I even got teased by a former Seattle area youth pastor who could still name the boy from his youth group that I would flirt with mercilessly at retreats when I was in the eighth grade.

One of the evening’s highlights was receiving a message from the Word from Efrem Smith, Covenant pastor/church-planter in Minneapolis. It was exhilarating.

As I stood up on that stage with a small group of folks from our church and received the welcome of applause from those gathered, I was moved to consider how God has woven together our story as a church with the larger story of the Evangelical Covenant denomination. I know that denominations aren’t considered to be the hippest thing among a lot of folks, but I praise God for the family of “mission friends” that has embraced our little church, and for the ways that same family has embraced and affirmed me over the years. I certainly bear the mark of their love.

Friends20 Apr 2007 03:53 pm

Yesterday we received a cluster of care packages from a dear friend on the other side of the country (a friendship which began as a result of this blog!), and I am reminded of how capable we are of blessing other people, near and far. The boxes that we opened were brilliant expressions of the title “care package”, and there was great joy and cheer in the Haub household as a result. Mercy has stopped wearing her new pink leotard and tutu only long enough to go to sleep at night, and I am not sure which item thrilled Aaron more: the giant dump-truck or the delicious homemade cookies!

God is neither lazy nor deficient in bringing those people into our lives that are in need of exactly the blessing we are capable of giving. Yet the temptation for so many of us is to insulate, withdraw, and look the other way. This same friend passed along a quotation yesterday to me via email, and I will let dear Amy Carmichael say what I think I am trying to…

Then the king commanded Ebed-melech the Ethiopian, saying, “Take from hence
thirty men with thee, and take up Jeremiah the prophet out of the dungeon,
before he die….”  And Ebed-melech the Ethiopian said unto Jeremiah, “Put
now these old cast clouts and rotten rags under thine armholes under the
cords.”  And Jeremiah did so. (Jeremiah 38:10-12)

Amy Carmichael’s commentary:

The dungeon where Jeremiah was kept was one of those horrible pits that were
used in olden times as prisons.  The king told Ebed-melech only to take
thirty men and pull Jeremiah out of the dungeon with ropes, before he died.
But that kind man, whose name means “Servant of the King,” took the trouble
to go and fetch pieces of cast-off clothes and old soft rags.  He told
Jeremiah to put them under his armpits to keep the ropes from hurting him as
they pulled him out.  In Matthew 25:40 we read what the King of Kings must
have said to the Servant of the King, Ebed-melech.  “Inasmuch as ye have
done it to one of the least of these My brethren, ye have done it unto Me.”

Church and Faith and Friends and Missional18 Apr 2007 03:29 pm

There are many today who feel like the Sunday morning service has been overemphasized to the degree that the “show” each week has become what “church” means, as opposed to an actual vision of a transformed life of worship, fellowship and service together. There are many in my generation who have given up the whole Sunday thing completely in favor of smaller gatherings of groups who study and pray and serve together throughout the week. There are many in my generation who are seeking to move away from the church-shopping, consumer mindset that has fed the competition for who can have the biggest “show” in town and embrace smaller, less produced, more local expressions of being a faith community together.

As a worship pastor, my husband has very strong feelings about how we talk about Sunday morning. For someone who invests so much time and thought and prayer into the service, he is the least “production” or “show” minded minister I think I have ever met! One of the many reasons I have to love him :)

Sometimes the issue comes up in our church regarding people’s attendance on Sunday morning. There are of course those of us who make up the very committed core, but there are a number of folks who, while participating in a number of other aspects of church life, fail to show up on Sunday for a host of reasons. This really bothers some people. Others, like my husband, hold more loosely to the Sunday priority (in contrast to those in our church who feel that, if you are not there on Sunday, then you are not a part of our church).

One of our membership covenants, however, is regular participation in our weekly worship service, and as the person who teaches those classes and counsels people regarding our covenant, I have my reasons for why it is important. My biggest reason is that I believe God delights in the offering of corporate worship through singing and prayer and silence and giving and testimony, etc. But there are other reasons as well: if “doing church” happens primarily in my day-to-day relational context of sharing life with others (hanging out, eating meals, talking and praying), my “church” will most likely be those people I enjoy and feel the closest affinity toward. My “church” will not likely include the people in our body who annoy me, who disagree with me, who don’t speak my language, etc.

But when I come on Sunday to gather with the people of God, I don’t get the privilege of choosing who my brothers and sisters will be. When I come on Sunday I am required to participate in things that are not about my preference and my choice, and I am asked to join with all who are gathered in what becomes our shared experience of life with God. And it is in that place where the body so powerfully witnesses to the new life we receive from the Spirit. These are some of the same reasons why I am such an advocate for parish ministry: when geography not affinity dictates who sits in the chair next to you.

So when my friends defend their right to not show up on Sunday mornings, and tell me that their “church” is this or that group of people within our community, I will gently disagree and invite them to consider what God might want to do in them and through them for the sake of the whole body.

Church and Culture17 Apr 2007 09:18 pm

The Don Imus controversy has again brought issues of race and gender to the forefront of public discussion, and it is interesting to me how quickly we forget that we still live in the midst of deep prejudice and stereotype. Where I live, people wear their disdain pretty openly: gang killings along racial lines; a hip hop culture that spares no offense. And yet people still marvel whenever the PC curtain is raised a bit and someone’s racism or sexism is exposed. On the one hand, I am glad that we are horrified: we should be. On the other hand, I wish people’s horror extended to 30th and Kenwood. But I digress…

Much of the talk has been about the way we speak of and treat women in our society today. Like racism, we like to think that we have essentially moved past the days of treating women badly simply because they are women.

Last night I tried to order a pizza. We had a couple coming over for our final meeting in preparation for their wedding in a couple of weeks, and I had told them that I would provide dinner. My grand vision of cooking something nice left around 3:30pm that day, and so I found myself with the Papa Johns flier in hand as they drove up. After placing my order, I was told that my card had been declined (after they made three attempts). This didn’t make sense as we knew we had money in our bank account, but I decided to just use our other card. When that one was also declined (though it has no outstanding balance), I knew something was up, so I asked the man on the phone: “Can you tell me why my card is being declined?” thinking that maybe their computer gave them an error code of some sorts that would tell me what was going on. “Because you have no money,” he said, and he hung up on me.

I hung up, totally shocked that he had hung up on me as I was about to tell him that I would just pay in cash. Doug looked at me and realized that this was one of those moments where Pregnant Erika was either going to call back and say something she would later regret or she was going to sit down in front of our guests and start to cry, and so he moved to the phone, dialed the number and asked for the manager. Lo and behold, the manager had been the one who had just been speaking to me, and as Doug calmly and coolly informed him that his treatment of me was not appropriate and that we would like our order placed, please, it was clear that as a man, Doug received a level of respect that was refused me.

As insignificant as this one instance is, it served as a reminder that some people will use my sex as a reason to treat me as less.

Next week I have the privilege of speaking in Scot McKnight’s “Women, Mary and Jesus” class at North Park. I have the chance to share with these young women and men a bit of my journey as a woman called to minister in Christ’s church. My story is a positive one, and I am grateful to be in a place to encourage. However, I know that many women in the church have very different, more painful stories to tell. And as much as we don’t like to admit that they are out there, or how common they are, those are stories that we need to hear as well.

Misc. and Writing16 Apr 2007 09:41 am

One of my favorite bloggers, More Than Stone, has honored me with the Thinking Blogger’s Award. Thanks, Jamie!

So, now I am to pass the honor on to 5 blogs that make me think. So here goes…

Jamie-Arpin Ricci

Bill Kinnon

Don Johnson

John Santic

Maurice Broaddus

Your mission (if you are one of the tagged), should you choose to accept it, is to pay it forward as well … the rules are simple and they are three:

1. If, and only if, you get tagged, write a post with links to 5 blogs that make you think
2. Link to this post so that people can easily find the exact origin of the meme
3. Optional: Proudly display the ‘Thinking Blogger Award’ with a link to the post that you wrote (here is the gold version and the silver to better meet your needs for blogolicious decorating).

And enjoy the blogs……

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