J-Walking

May 2008 Archives

Tuesday May 20, 2008

Categories: Faith, Politics, Science

Sen. Kennedy's tumor... and mine

This is not a time to get weepy or maudlin about Sen. Kennedy. He really has just begun to fight. I know what I'm talking about.

Five years ago, in the earliest hours of Palm Sunday morning, a doctor informed me that I had a malignant brain tumor. When I asked him how much time I had he said maybe weeks or months... with luck and drugs, maybe longer.

Yesterday I bought a Trek bike and rode it to and from my office. And in the five years since, I've had two children, spent time on the professional bass fishing tour, wrote a book, and am now helping start a company.

I have also gone through 18 rounds of chemo, adjusted to a life with occasional very mild seizures - I even had one once while testifying before a congressional committee and no one noticed - and been forced to live with the reality of my mortality knowing that things could change very quickly.

Our cases are obviously different. I'm younger, I'm taller, I'm half Asian, I'm a descendent of Jefferson Davis, I'm a sushi lover, I'm a lemon meringue pie eater. Perhaps one of those things makes the remnant tumor in my head less likely to occur. Perhaps not. The point is that each of our cases is unique. We know very, very little about gliomas, very little about the brain in fact. But we do know that Senator Kennedy has just begun this fight and what he needs are our prayers and great medical resources. We know that he has the latter - though I hope that one of the resources is Howard Fine, head of neuro-oncology at the National Institutes of Health - and we must give him the former as well.


Tuesday May 13, 2008

Categories: Faith

Peter Ahlstrom


And now there is our friend Peter Ahlstrom:


I’ve read your blog daily for about a year, and occasionally commented. Tempting Faith got me started. You caught my interest with your stand on helping the poor, and on fasting from politics to rediscover what’s really important.

My background? I grew up outside church, and was an atheist for a while. Then a friend nagged me till I visited his church. There I saw so much that was "real," loving, and joyful, that I turned around 180 degrees.

But, though I now believed in God, it took years to begin learning to love him. And, in theory, I believed in "loving my neighbors," but firmly drew the line at helping the poor. To me, that was doing them no favors.

That strongly conservative thinking continued through a 20-year career as college, public, and finally technical librarian, through four years of work in the Space Shuttle program (half in the Launch Control Center at Kennedy Space Center), and then through most of a second career as an aerospace/defense "master planner."

But God kept "clubbing me over the head" (through a lot of experiences) until he got me curious enough to "dig" to see what the Bible itself meant by "love your neighbors." That search changed my thinking radically, helped by experiences like living in a tent trailer for six years with my wife and children after most of us defense workers were laid off during government budget cuts. (The plant where I worked went from 17,000 workers to below 4,000.)

Should I write a book on all that? Actually, I have - a study on "loving our neighbors" that tells many of the experiences we went through and cites over 3,000 Bible verses. Any of you who’d like to see it are welcome to, at our family’s web site, www.sparkleofnature.com.

Best wishes to all of you, with all your varied views. David, my family’s very curious to see what direction God takes you in after your Uganda experience (knowing that it may take time). All four of us pray for you daily.


Tuesday May 13, 2008

Categories: Faith

Aquaman


I remember watching the Superfriends on Saturday mornings - back when Saturday mornings were good TV. Aquaman was always my favorite... still is... here is our own Aquaman, Matt:

I’m a 34-year old corporate lawyer, married to my college sweetheart (an amazing woman) and the proud father of two beautiful children-- a 5-year old girl and a 2-year old boy.

My parents, both Catholic, gave me a strong upbringing in the faith, but I was one of those people who (to paraphrase Lenny Bruce) had to leave the church to go back to God. I’m grateful God led me to that realization eight years ago; some people spend their entire lives letting the flaws of human institutions stand between them and Jesus. Thankfully, I have since been led to a vibrant, Protestant church community that embraces my family and nourishes my faith.

I don’t care for labels, but the label “progressive Christian” fits me as well as any. I believe Jesus was God Incarnate, died for my sins, and rose on the third day. I accept the authority of the Bible. I look forward to Christ’s triumphant return, when he will place the powers of this world under his feet. I’m also a registered Democrat who falls somewhere between Ted Kennedy and Noam Chomsky on the political spectrum. I’m bemused that so many people see a contradiction here; it seems so natural to me.

My faith was greatly tested 3 years ago when my daughter was diagnosed with a rare, degenerative disease. The typical life expectancy for a child with her illness is 10-12 years. We’re optimistic she’ll do better than that, thanks to some innovative treatments, but assuming I’m blessed with decent health and luck, I know I’ll bury her someday.

Soon after my daughter’s diagnosis, I realized that nurturing my anger toward God was a luxury I couldn’t afford-- as angry as I was, I needed God more than ever. That’s not to say my faith is the same; like every other part of my life, it has changed.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer famously wrote that “when Christ calls a man, he bids him come and die.” I’m slowly grasping the truth of those words. I used to think walking with Jesus was something like a leisurely walk along the beach with a dear friend. That’s part of it, but walking with Jesus also means walking alongside him as he carries the Cross to Calvary.

I’m drawn to this blog because I sense that David’s understanding of “J-Walking” is very similar to mine. Compared to that common ground, our political differences are trivial (though they make for lively discussion).


Tuesday May 13, 2008

Categories: Faith

Thoughts on suffering, pt. 2


Tonight my father called a cousin in Chengdu who, we discovered with relief, is fine. His reports about the incredible destruction at the earthquake's epicenter were anything but comforting. So mangled are the roads that getting there with any help is next to impossible.

I've been in Chengdu, I've been in the mountainous outskirts where the quake was centered. And as the son of a geophysicist who, among other thing, specializes in earthquakes and has done work in Chengdu, this strikes close to home.

I don't have much to add to all the words being penned right now about China or Myanmar but I have one thing to add. This blog from a Harvard law professor dealing with his own awful cancer. They all relate me thinks:

I don’t have any previous experience with this sort of thing, but judging from what I hear and read, I’m supposed to be asking why all this is happening, and why it’s happening to me. Honestly, those questions are about the farthest thing from my mind.

Partly, that’s because they aren’t hard questions. Why does our world have gravity? Why does the sun rise in the East? There are technical answers, but the metaphysical answer is simple: that’s how reality works. So too here. Only in the richest parts of the rich world of the twenty-first century could anyone entertain the thought that we should expect long, pain-free lives. Suffering and premature death (an odd phrase: what does it mean to call death “premature”?) are constant presences in the lives of most of the peoples of the Earth, and were routine parts of life for generations of our predecessors in this country—as they still are today, for those with their eyes open. Stage 4 cancers happen to middle-aged men and women, seemingly out of the blue, because that’s how reality works.

As for why this is happening to me in particular, the implicit point of the question is an argument: I deserve better than this. There are two responses. First, I don’t—I have no greater moral claim to be free from unwanted pain and loss than anyone else. Plenty of people more virtuous than I am suffer worse than I have, and some who don’t seem virtuous at all skate through life with surprising ease. Welcome to the world. Once again, it seems to me that this claim arises from the incredibly unusual experience of a small class of wealthy professionals in the wealthiest parts of the world today. We think we live in a world governed by merit and moral desert. It isn’t so. Luck, fortune, fate, providence—call it what you will, but whatever your preferred label, it has far more to do with the successes of the successful than what any of us deserves. Aristocracies of the past awarded wealth and position based on the accident of birth. Today’s meritocracies award wealth and position based on the accident of being in the right place at the right time. The difference is smaller than we tend to think. Once you understand that, it’s hard to maintain a sense of grievance in the face of even the ugliest medical news. I’ve won more than my share of life’s lotteries. It would seem churlish to rail at the unfairness of losing this one—if indeed I do lose it: which I may not.

The second response is simpler; it comes from the movie “Unforgiven.” Gene Hackman is dying, and says to Clint Eastwood: “I don’t deserve this. To die like this. I was building a house.” Eastwood responds: “Deserve’s got nothing to do with it.”

That gets it right, I think. It’s a messed-up world, upside-down as often as it’s rightside up. Bad things happen; future plans (that house Hackman was building) come to naught. Deserve’s got nothing to do with it.

Why, then, are we so prone to think otherwise? This is one of the biggest reasons I believe my faith is true: something deep within us expects, even demands moral order—in a world that shouts from the rooftops that no such order exists. Any good metaphysical theory must explain both of those phenomena: both the expectation and the lack of supporting evidence for the thing expected. The only persuasive way to get there, I think, is to begin with a world made good that was twisted, corrupted, bent. Buried deep in our hearts are hints of the way things ought to be; the ugliest reality can’t snuff them out. Still, that reality exists; it can’t be denied. Christianity sees that reality, recognizes it for what it is—but also sees the expectation, and recognizes where it comes from.

Bottom line: I don’t need anyone to tell me why I’m in the situation I’m in, and I certainly don’t think I merit an exemption from the rottenness to which the rest of the world is subject.

But I do need to know some things. Three, to be precise: first, that I’m not alone; second, that my disease has not made me ugly to those I love and to the God who made me; and third, that somehow, something good can come from this. My faith tells me that the God of the universe suffered everything I suffer and infinitely worse. Death and suffering don’t separate human beings from our Creator—on the contrary: those things unite us with our Creator. The barrier became the bridge: that is the great miracle of the Incarnation, the Cross, and the Resurrection. So I need never suffer alone. Job’s story confirms that, far from rejecting the ugliness of disease and pain, God embraces those who suffer and takes on their suffering. Beauty and ugliness are turned inside-out. Joseph’s story and the gospels alike show a God who delights to use the worst things to produce the best things. That doesn’t make life’s hells less than hellish. But it does make them bearable.


Monday May 12, 2008

Categories: Faith

Canucklehead


Canucklehead sent me his story but given his generally surly attitude I am tempted not to post it. Alas the invitation was for everyone, even... him.

Hi all! I'm Canucklehead (aka Tim). I've spent most of my life in western Canada where I grew up in a fundamentalist Protestant community where we sang songs with really cool theology like "Jesus Wants Me for a Sunbeam," "Climb, Climb Up Sunshine Mountain" and "If You're Saved and You Know It, Rat on a Friend." I went to college/university/seminary in Winnipeg/Toronto/Chicago and currently live in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, in the heart of the Canadian oilpatch. We're a sister city to Houston and have something like 90,000 "oilpatch" Americans who live here. I've been a Baptist pastor for so long now that I long ago embraced the post-tribulation view of the eschaton, believing that I've already been thru the tribulation at least three times. (Hey, that coincides with the number of Baptist churches I've pastored!) I have also taught part-time at a number of colleges over the years. The present church I'm in is pursuing a "build" with Habitat for Humanity which I'm quite pleased about as I'm big into social action/justice. I just gave a major presentation to our church on "why ministry in the 21st century cannot be like ministry in the 20th century" and am excited about some initiatives we're doing related to that. In other lives, I've worked as a journalist for various secular and religious publications and done TV/radio commentary work for various media outlets. I have also served as an editor/advisor/critic to my youngest brother (Phil Callaway) who has published something like 15 books of "Christian" humor with various American publishers such as Multnomah, Harvest House and Bethany. My current project is finishing the last 2 chapters of a PhD dissertation on growing up fundamentalist during which I've been reminded that sports, humor, God's grace, Joyce (the "love" of my life) and good music (see above, also Eagles/Bob Seger/Peter Cetera/Chicago/Ethel Waters) and books like Dave's Tempting Faith are responsible for leaving me with some semblance of sanity intact. I just finished reading Frank Schaeffer's CRAZY FOR GOD which reminded me a lot of my growing up years. I've been a political junkie all my life and really got into American politics during the Jane Byrne/Harold Washington eras as mayors of Chicago. Joyce and I have three twenty-somethings in various stages of studying law (oldest) and psychology (two youngest) so there's hope yet that I can be declared legally insane. I really enjoy the perspectives shared on this site and was greatly moved by Dave's recent trip to Uganda. If God should lead you to support my ministry with an ample donation, please feel obliged.

Tim_A.jpg


We wouldn't be the same without you Canucklehead... now, back to my 30-day...

Saturday May 10, 2008

Categories: Faith

Here's Doug

This is a blast. Here is Doug Pascover's story: From the ages of 10 months old until 7 years, my family lived on the South side of Chicago so the White Sox were my first religion. I became a...

Friday May 9, 2008

Categories: Faith

Meet Thinker

We have all come to love and appreciate Thinker. Now, a bit more about her: Thinker here. I went from nursing to teaching theology....figure. However, I teach in "Catholic" school so the community and administration are one. Not much...

Thursday May 8, 2008

Meet Brian

Brian Horan has been walking with us for a while now. Here's a bit about him and the bonus pic too. Thanks Brian. I am 33 and am changing careers from public school teaching to nursing. The politics of...

Wednesday May 7, 2008

Categories: Politics

Race

I just watched 90 minutes of election coverage on CNN... 90 minutes that can best be summarized as 90 minutes of evidence that Sen. Obama's brilliant race speech needs to revisited. Because for 90 minutes the entire subtext of...

Wednesday May 7, 2008

Categories: Faith

What are our stories?

For the past 18 months or so we've developed this community called J-Walking. The very best part of this for me has been getting to know many of you... even you canuckle. ;-) Everyone has gotten to know a...

Monday May 5, 2008

Categories: Faith

What is faith?

As most of the readers of this blog - and yes, depite the lull in my blogging this is still my blog - know I've been dealing with this tumor-type object in my brain for the past five years....

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