Thrum & Scrum

While we’re commanded to set aside a particular day— the Sabbath— to rest just as God did following God’s own work of creation, it’s interesting God doesn’t give us any further specific instructions to follow with respect to any other day of the week. We’re certainly encouraged to pray everyday, to follow high ethical standards, More

Single-Tasking

“This is the case. There are no other cases.” Frank Galvin, The Verdict I regularly listen to a podcast called The Rewatchables which light-heartedly revisits popular movies of the past, focusing on the power they have to entertain us even, perhaps especially, on a second viewing, or third, or even a tenth. The show recently More

Getting Home

To be happy at home is…the end to which every enterprise and labor tends… Dr. Samuel Johnson Not long ago, circumstances conspired such that I found myself sleeping all night on a metal bench in an airport, forsaken by all but the graveyard shift at the usually bustling terminal and a handful of other weary More

Do you give the horse its strength…

Do you give the horse its strength or clothe its neck with a flowing mane? Job, Chapter 39:19 I’m sure there are others, but Angus Fletcher is the only person I’ve ever heard of who holds advanced degrees in both neuroscience and literature. And he utilizes both deftly in his 2021 book, Wonderworks: The Most More

Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio?

“There’s always someone in the stands…who’s seeing me play for the first time, or someone who may be seeing me for the only time or for the last time.” Joe DiMaggio Willie Mays, Bob Gibson, Tom Seaver, Johnny Bench, Hank Aaron, and my all-time favorite, Roberto Clemente—I got to see all of them at the Astrodome growing More

Saints & Poets

The saints and poets maybe— they do some. The Stage Director in Thornton Wilder’s Our Town What if you had died yesterday, but were then today somehow granted life again. Think about it. What if you had passed away last night, but this morning were restored to the very circumstances you find yourself in right More

Banking on Hope

“George Banks and all he stands for will be saved. Maybe not in life, but in imagination. Because that’s what we storytellers do. We restore order with imagination. We instill hope again and again and again.” Saving Mr. Banks I saw Walt Disney’s Mary Poppins as a little kid in an enormous movie house— the More

The Dishes

“Everyone wants to save the Earth; nobody wants to help Mom do the dishes.” P.J. O’Rourke Every so often, while preparing for what I hope will be a well-received lesson at church— perhaps a lesson about humility, patience, presence, or grace— something happens. In deep concentration, I’m briefly diverted by a call from someone with More

Mercy

“Mercy.” Gertie Warren Funderburk One of my lasting memories of my grandmother, Gertie Warren Funderburk, was how she’d respond when I’d done something original— like sink a fish hook in my finger, or carry a bushel of pecans from the yard into her house in my stretched-out t-shirt. She’d trill out a deep breath in More

Renegade Good Will

Of course, none of this is likely, but it’s also not impossible.It just depends on what you want to consider. David Foster Wallace I had a couple of friends back in college who got a kick out of telling semi-credible tall tales about each other to unsuspecting acquaintances at parties. For instance, in conversation, one More

Climbing from Disaster

My favorite genre of entertainment growing up was the disaster movie. The first film I recall being excited to see was The Poseidon Adventure produced by Hollywood’s Master of Disaster, Irwin Allen. I was 8. My brother was equally excited about the movie and we begged our dad to take us even though it was rated PG More

The Best Medicine

Waymon Worsham holds a special place in my heart. A good man. The sort of man who makes the institutions he was embedded in work and thrive and last— his home, his church, the business he was a part of, his neighborhood, his country. He loved the values expressed with clarity in old American Westerns More

Tactics for Racing

I’m an Olympic enthusiast. The competition of the 1972 summer games, the first I’m old enough to remember, captured my imagination, spurring on my love for sports. More importantly, the hostage standoff in Munich’s Olympic Village and the shocking loss of 11 Israeli athletes at the hands of Palestinian terrorists during those games, infused my More

Float

Toward the end of last year, I felt I needed some spiritual focus, so I tried something I’d never tried before— a sensory deprivation tank. I brought my Birdwell bathing suit and went to a place offering an hour in a float tank near my home. I filled out some forms and went into a nicely appointed More

Souvenir

I’m generally called upon to lead more memorial services than weddings, but recently I officiated a wedding and was reminded how crucial it is to exuberantly celebrate moments of great import in a memorable way. Extraordinary occasions deserve to be marked with extraordinary measures. Having said this, it’s often the case that big moments in More

Slant

Emily Dickinson didn’t become known much less famous as a poet until well after her death. Dickinson asked her sister Lavinia to burn her papers when she died, but instead, when Emily passed away, Lavinia found her sister’s poems and took them to a publisher. If she had not, we would certainly never have heard More

Runway

Bill Gates says that we typically overestimate the technological advancements that can occur in a single year, but vastly underestimate the advancements that can happen in five. When I was in middle school, we were given an assignment to describe The City of the Future in an essay, draw a picture of it, then present our predictions to the class. Mine More

Joy, a Kind of Strength

Dr. Rev. Kay Towns is a friend. I coached her son, Davis, in little league. Kay’s a licensed professional counselor and a Methodist minister who counsels patients struggling with grief, anxiety, and depression. In a conversation with her recently, she said something so profound that I felt what you feel when you hear something so More

First Things

Amy Herndon passed away a little over two years ago. Amy had a radiant smile, a casual beauty, and unpretentious elegance about her. And, as she battled cancer, she was Joan of Arc brave. Amy held newborns in the church nursery on Sundays and taught ‘Missions’ on Wednesday nights with my wife, Kelly, for many years. Kelly More

Durability

The first significant purchase I ever made with my own money was the baseball glove I’m holding right now. I was thirteen. It’s a Rawlings. Basket web. Wing tip. Heart of the Hide. American-made. Brooks Robinson model. It cost $112 in 1978, which represented a lot of mowed lawns for me back then. It was More

Contenders

The futility of trying to map out our future in too much granular detail is captured in former heavyweight boxing champion, Mike Tyson’s famous adage, “Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth.” Given that this past year has certainly been a real punch in the mouth, maybe it’s a good time to ask, More

Train, Chapter 3

Tate found a window seat toward the rear of the nearly empty train, but held no expectation of privacy in the car. His wife used to remark on his knack for drawing to himself unsolicited the most spirited of fellow travelers on such trips as this. Perhaps he invited it subconsciously. He rightly maintained that More

Cab to Bus: Chapter 2

The white noise of the early morning enveloped the old man as he moved down the street. Starlight etched the tops of the trees in the distance. The cold jet of his breath invigorated him. The cab, waiting a block away consistent with his instructions, chugged a stream of white puffs under the halo of More

Escape: Chapter 1

His clothes were pressed, well-tailored, and he remained elegantly put together though he felt the weight of his eight decades, especially this early in the morning. He cleaned his rimless spectacles with a handkerchief, then set them a quarter of the way down his broad nose, this being their natural resting place. Before putting the More

Scout

There are definitely two camps on this. Some parents like to know the gender of their baby beforehand, some don’t. My wife, Kelly and I liked the idea of finding out right at the moment of birth. That was the plan at least, but about half-way through her first pregnancy, at one of the sonograms, More

Update

My father was born in 1925, a child of the depression. He served in the Navy in World War II, and like many in his generation, he was long on matters related to discipline and short on matters related to spontaneous fun. Then there was my uncle— almost 14 yrs younger than my dad. When More

Peace. Pace. Limits.

I don’t think of myself as a nervous person, but there are moments these days when I feel a tide of anxiety rising inside me. I’ve got a lot of questions about the future. I am sure you do, as well. What tends to release the pressure valve in my psychology is to remind myself More

Equanimity

“The mind is its own place and in itself, can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven.”— John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book I For there is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so.— William Shakespeare, Hamlet, act 2, scene 2 “Shut up, brain, or I’ll stab you with a Q-tip!”— More

Clarity

Twenty years ago, I underwent surgery on my sinuses and the day after the operation, the surgeon called to ask how I was doing. I told him my nose and breathing were just fine, but my left eye was killing me. His reply was that this made sense because, unfortunately during the surgery, he had More