The class is only two weeks long and the Bible has 66 books contained between its covers. We move fast. Today we made our way through modern-day Turkey, Greece, back to Jerusalem and finally to Rome with Acts and Paul’s letters. Paul wrote a lot of letters. Letters to churches and letters to specific people. Letter of joy, of Christ’s love, and letters in the midst of conflict. Letters filled with emotion. [For I wrote out of much distress, and anguish of heart and with many tears, not to cause you pain, but to let you know the abundant love I have for you. 2 Corinthians 2:4] Letters were how Paul connected with those he could not immediately see.letters.
13 JanOne of the classes I’m taking this January is a two week course, ending tomorrow afternoon, called Genesis to Revelation. The course is as it says – each afternoon for three hours, we go through the Bible. The whole thing. Complete canon. Genesis to Revelation.
It’s a great course, the ultimate goal being to make your own study Bible. The professor lectures, sings and screams in animated fashion as we make our way through the Biblical narrative and it’s our job as students to mark the heck out of our Bibles. Make notes. Underline. Highlight. Make connections.
That’s been the best part of the class for me – the connections. The connections between people, between places, between me and the Biblical story. Think about it. Where does John the Baptist do his ministry? At the Jordan, where we last saw the prophet Elijah. Jesus raises a widow’s son at Nain, just as Elijah and Elisha did years before. King David had ran across the Mount of Olives, away from Jerusalem, running from his enemies. Hundreds of years later, we read that Jesus – a different kind of king – crosses the Mount of Olives en route to Jerusalem to confront his enemies and ultimate death.
The class is only two weeks long and the Bible has 66 books contained between its covers. We move fast. Today we made our way through modern-day Turkey, Greece, back to Jerusalem and finally to Rome with Acts and Paul’s letters. Paul wrote a lot of letters. Letters to churches and letters to specific people. Letter of joy, of Christ’s love, and letters in the midst of conflict. Letters filled with emotion. [For I wrote out of much distress, and anguish of heart and with many tears, not to cause you pain, but to let you know the abundant love I have for you. 2 Corinthians 2:4] Letters were how Paul connected with those he could not immediately see.There is something to be said about a letter. In our time when communication is so immediate, letters are a lost art. In Paul’s time, it was all he had to communicate with those distant churches and friends. Letters are lasting. They’re not lost in cell phone waves or cyber space. We still read Paul’s letters nearly two thousand years later and in his words we feel the connection he had to other Christians and we feel our connection to Christ’s love.
Letters remain. I received a handwritten letter from my dad while at college the Friday that preceded the Sunday of his death. He was never one for computers or email but he was so wonderful at writing letters in his perfect printing. For the letters to include $20 and conclude with “Buy your friends pizza” was pretty standard. That letter was the last communication I had with him, and I’m glad I have those words in print, to reread and to remember.
I have a terrible time getting rid of any letter I receive. Knowing the time, the thought, and the energy that went into its writing, its creation and the motive behind its sending, I hold onto it. It comes to the point where they fill a shoebox here, a wire basket there. But I can’t throw them out.
Letters connect us. I wrote two letters tonight. [You’ll see my modern church history study guide hiding underneath the letters. Guess where my priority was … um, not with defining fundamentalism and reform Judaism. The test isn’t until Tuesday; I have time.] One long overdue letter is to my Dawson penpal, C. Another I wrote to someone I’ve never met. I follow this blog. Gussy. She’s younger than I but a complete inspiration in her sewing creativity and the way she has built her business. She’s lives in Minneapolis and I secretly want to meet her for coffee. I think we would be the best of friends. But for now, she invited blog readers to write to her. So I did. A connection.
Letters connect us.
one year ago –
12 JanThe earthquake in Haiti.
The Luther Seminary community paused at 3:45 this afternoon for a brief time of song, prayer, and to hear the bells toll for 35 seconds, reminding us of those who died and the rebuilding still happening.
I remember talking about it at work that day last year. The following day, as we were continually swallowed by news reports on the devastation and climbing death toll, I recall the stewardship board allotting immediate funds to go towards the relief effort. I remember driving to the Cities to attend a prayer service organized by Ben Larson’s friends and classmates from Luther. I came back to Dawson to write a sermon. I remember preaching, praying, and hugging that Sunday.
Today I’m remembering and I’m praying.
I’m hoping you’ll do the same.
I resolve –
10 JanTo turn off my computer and do something.
This January term I’m taking two classes which make for a full day of listening, history, and occasional singing. I return to my apartment at the supper hour with homework, aspirations of sewing, and an exercise schedule to follow. All with dreams of an eleven o’clock bedtime. Most nights, many of those things don’t happen.
Because my macbook hinders my evenings. I sit and write emails. Talk to friends on iChat. Stalk people on facebook. Even when I’m away from my computer, it seems I constantly come back to check for anything new. I love my macbook but I fear we need some space and time apart.
Therefore, I will turn off my computer these weeknight evenings and do something already.
survived.
9 JanI spent my weekend – 48 hours – in charge of a five year old and I live to tell the tale.
To those of you who are mothers, this is no large feat. But I’m new to this 24/7 care of a child and the child is not mine or a family member’s. Things are different when it’s someone else’s kid … and you’re not mom or dad.
M. is by no means a stranger to me nor I to her; I first babysat for her when she was just a few months old. But this was the first overnight. And it was TWO nights. M. never hesitated to tell me that she missed Mom and Dad and she wished they were there. Me being different threw off her routine, the normalcy, and I’m sure it was tough for her. (Plus, I’m just different, apparently. In the mornings, after she would wake me up at 7-0-0, she would tell me, “You don’t look like Lindsay” as my glasses were on and hair in no proper condition. After I showered/dressed/contacts in, she would say, “Now you look like Lindsay.”)
Once I looked like myself and we had the treat of special cereal for breakfast, we had fun. I played the part of a sports nanny, toting M. off to both swimming and ice skating lessons. I was asked if I was her mother a few times. (I used to be offended or even question how people could even think that! But then I realize I am 27 years old and it’s completely possible to have a 5 year old without scandal involved …) We went out for lunch at M.’s favorite Indian buffet, where the waiter knew her by name and gave her a free mango smoothie. I brought crafting supplies and my Barbies (the ones that have collected dust in the basement of my home of origin for many, many years) along to play so we kept busy when we were at home too.
Today, after skating, we stopped for ice cream. Her parents were now home and just waiting for us to return from the lesson and our snack. M. contemplatively ate her swirl cone (which was not as giant as she had requested) and said, “I’m glad Mom and Dad are home but it also makes me sad that you’re leaving.”
For cute. We did have a lot of fun. She’s one polite and hilarious girl.
L: Would you like some water?
M: Yes, please. That would make me very happy.
L: Happy as a clam?
M: No. Happy as a bicycle.
I’m sure it won’t be too terribly long until M. and I have another chance to play. Crafts, paper chains, turkey curry (her favorite), Barbies, and all sorts of fun will come again.
new look?
8 JanPlease allow for further fidgeting but I thought it was time to make the blog a bit more user/print-friendly and simply time for an update in general. Bring on bigger photos, new title font, and a few more changes to suit the rest.
Likey?
cupcakes.
7 JanCheck this out.
Seriously.
Go there now.
And drool.
If you ever need a fancy cupcake while hosting friends or to take to a fancy occasion, look no further.
I’m going to refrain from baking them. Tony Horton – with whom I spend at least an hour of each evening – would disagree with their beauty. (That’s right. Week four of P90X. Bring it. I got lazy about walking to the gym. So now I get my butt kicked in my living room. literally. butt. kicked.)
But if I had to pick one? 24. or 23. or 19.
kevin.
7 JanI have a friend at school. (Actually, I have a few.) We’ll call this one Kevin. That’s not his actual name, but that’s what I call him. And he calls me Penelope on occasion (my ‘fake’ name since college). He’s in my morning January class this year – modern church history. We give each other air fist bumps.
Kevin is crazy. In such a wonderful way. We’ve been friends since our first year when we were in a discipleship group together. We had to tell our faith story in this group and Kevin – a white man in his early thirties with glasses – rapped his. From that point on, I was intrigued.
And continue to be. I can’t figure this guy out. For example – yesterday –
(My roommate and I made fortune cookies; we brought them to class.)
Penelope: Want a fortune cookie?
Kevin: YES. (starts to eat) These are good.
Penelope: They have almond extract in them that gives them a lot of flavor.
Kevin: You know, I’m allergic to almonds. (takes another bite)
Later in the day –
Penelope: Hey Kevin, what are you thinking about?
Kevin: How to build a climbing wall in Northwestern.
(NW is a building of offices and classrooms on campus.)
(NW is a building of offices and classrooms on campus.)
Penelope: Do you like to rock climb?
Kevin: No.
Or today.
Our professor mentioned this polar air front that’s supposed coming our way in a couple weeks. Kevin turns around. “Where’s Katy Perry when you need her?” What. “You know, she’s always singing about California.”
I do wonder what Kevin’s wife thinks.
I can only imagine she laughs a lot.
I can only imagine she laughs a lot.
no-buy January.
3 JanHey! Happy New Year!
… … (awkward side glance) … … (other side) … …
Moving on …
I spent a lot of money over Christmas break. Over my life. Lots of money on essentially unnecessary things. There needs to be a no-buy January.
No new cardigans.
No new wire baskets.
No new nothing.
No-buy January.
The exceptions to the purchasing power of my debit card will be groceries/shampoo-ish items. (And, if I may, add a Joann Fabrics clause? I plan on quilting this January and will be doing my best to use what I have but new thread or a yard or two may be needed. And a long-underwear clause. I need some when I walk to campus on this chilly days. Beyond that – no-buy January.) In addition, I’m starting a box to gather 100 things I can remove from my life. A move to simplify. One hundred things to give away or donate by the end of the month. I was reminded again as I packed the car to come back to St.Paul yesterday: I just have too much stuff.
Moderate expense on social activities/maintenance is permitted. (Birthday gifts/postage expense/etc.) But no more than $20/week.
Starting tomorrow.
Because tonight I went to the Minnesota Wild hockey game and that ticket was $35. It was a last-minute game as my roomie stumbled upon a few tickets from a friend of hers. I had never been to a Wild game and all I know about hockey I learned from The Mighty Ducks, but it was a blast – they won in overtime. And I am in awe of anyone who can skate – RUN – on ice. My favorite part? The sound the players made when they pushed others with their complete weight and effort into the wall. I giggled every time. And the fight. For fun.
new blog.
2 JanMy friend, Cassie, has a blog.
Here’s Cassie.
She’s a senior at seminary. Like me. We bonded while on safari and shopping the markets in Tanzania two years ago. We shared a ‘luxury tent.’ (No joke. The best accommodations I’ve ever had and they were on the plains of Africa. In a tent. With a rather large lizard-thing and scorpion in the shower. But let’s not talk about that.)
Did I mention she has a blog? Did I mention that she mentioned me?!
You should visit.









