Saturday, July 9, 2011

Bob Ingram's Funeral Meditation

Bob Ingram Funeral
July 9, 2011


You never really get to full picture of a person’s life from just a few months of having known them.  We meet people at various seasons of their life and often miss out on childhood or adolescence or other formative seasons of a person’s life.  And so we evaluate often based on the very short snapshot that we’re given never really knowing all the love and joy, all the hurt and pain that a person has gone through – all of which contributed to who and what a person has become.

It makes us hesitant to evaluate or sum up at all.

But in some instances and in some lives we are given glimpses of a depth of character and vision that transcend our day to day encounter with them.  We hear a story or get an insight into someone’s life experiences that reveals something hidden from view.  And then we see, there is much, much more here than meets the eye. 

In the time that I knew Bob Ingram, he was already deep into his descent into full blown Alzheimers and with each week it was becoming progressively worse.   He and I sat a table with Leigh in the fellowship hall several months ago and he told stories of some of his experiences as a father and as a pastor.  The stories for him were still present to his mind even if the words were not.  Leigh helped Bob with names and places as Bob would look at her and ask, “Who is that guy again?”  Leigh would fill in the blanks and Bob would continue relating the memory.

As I listened, I began to realize that these were not just pastor’s memories.  These were the memories of a pastor who was exceptionally brilliant, educated, compassionate and in a word - iconoclastic.   Herman Norton, the dean of the Disciples Divinity House at Vanderbilt once observed that Bob was one of the most brilliant students who had passed through that school.  High praise!  He finished seminary and began pastoring during one of the most conflicted seasons of our country’s recent history – the 1960’s. 

As a seminary student in the early 90’s, I arrived on the scene after many of the significant cultural battles this country had been fought and to a large degree decided. Bob Ingram arrived on the scene just as opening shots on the issues of race, war and violence, peace and justice were being fired.   He wasn’t one to gauge the direction of the prevailing winds and play it safe.  Bob had a clear and distinct picture in his mind of what Jesus would bring to the hard questions being asked and in the either/or of “this is the way we’ve always done it” versus “Jesus is calling us to a new spirit-led way of life” – Bob chose Jesus.

Mark and I had a conversation about the time we both encountered Bob that centered on many of the justice and compassion issues we saw facing Crockett County.  We were concerned still with some of the racial divide but our focus had shifted to how sustained poverty and addiction impacted the lives of family and especially the children.  As we got to know Bob, we realized that this too had been a concern of his, here in this community, thirty years ago.  Our discussion turned to Bob.  Mark had been talking with  Bob about Bob’s vision for ministry and Bob had shown Mark some of things he’d written reflecting on his time and experience as a pastor.  What we began to recognize and appreciate was that he had been a forerunner, identifying these issues and teaching and preaching into them long before us.  And now were reaping some of the harvest – thirty years later – of seed that was sown by Bob Ingram.

Bob was an iconoclast.  What others around him believed and did wasn’t near as important as the vision of life he’d been given by God.  If others were bigoted and prejudicial, Bob would call people to inclusivity and fraternity.  If others chose to be provincial and self-satisfied, Bob would call people to a larger vision of life that saw God’s activity and beauty and purpose taking shape in ways often very different from our own.   Our God is a big God and isn’t the least bit limited to our perceptions and imperfect beliefs about Him.

In short, for Bob Ingram, there was no greater guide to life and heaven than the very life of Jesus himself.  Opinions about Jesus, theology about Jesus, dogma about Jesus could never replace what one actually encountered inside of the life of Jesus – and it was that life that releases one from the shortcomings of oneself and into a grand and encompassing and eternal life with the Father.

No one is perfect, not even a minister.  Paul said in Romans that “All have sinned and fall short of God’s glory.”  And I think that those who possess incredible vision for life in Christ perhaps struggle the most.  They’ve been given a gift for seeing into the kingdom of God and the blessing of life together as believers but then had to provide also for their family and establish some measure of security and comfort for those who didn’t have the option of choosing full-time ministry.  It’s often a tight-rope act.

 In living this tension there grace and forgiveness is sought – grace and forgiveness from God…  and from others.  As they do their best to balance calling and home life, a minister remains someone whom God has called to proclaim a vision of heaven to people hurting and lost here on earth.  And if our lives struggle to keep up with the words we speak, that doesn’t diminish the power of the words.  The vision of life in Jesus is real.  Ministers point to and speak of that life.  And pastors like their brothers and sisters who serve alongside them daily have to choose to die to self and live in Christ.   We haven’t been made exempt from the spiritual challenges faced by the people to whom we proclaim the word.  The vision Bob was given was real and powerful and transforming.  And it moved him to incredible compassion for hurting people.  He had encountered Jesus.  And his life, like all of us, was lived  - again in the words of Paul in Philippians 2:12 – working out his salvation with fear and trembling.

Bob’s life and ministry stand really as a marker to the idea that every community of faithful believers exists as a prophetic and proclaiming witness to the real presence of Jesus inside of that community and inside of the lives of the people who make up that community.  If someone were to ask the question, where is Jesus, I am certain that Bob would point to the church and say, if you have eyes to see and ears to hear you will encounter him there.

In a manner of speaking, Bob Ingram has left the world of the “now, but not yet” and entered the world that he knew and preached about and longed for.  And it’s God who gets the glory for the amazing grace that allows Bob Ingram .. and us… to live with him eternally.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Silence

I can't remember who exactly it was who said that when we appreciate poetry we assume silence as the starting place and then ask ourselves the question why and with what has the silence been broken?

I trust the same is true of our speech in worship. We could gather and a la Quaker worship, say nothing.  In the silence we would wait on God to move us to speech and break the silence only when there was fresh revelation from the Holy Spirit.

What we do instead is come with intentional speech.  We pray, we sing, we speak the word, we challenge, we praise, we hope and expect, we speak healing.  Being silent is something we could do alone.  But speaking is something that requires a hearer.  God hears our speech.  But it isn't only to God we are speaking.  Why our gathering is so important is that we have opportunity to speak INTO the lives of others who have drawn near to the person of Jesus.

Some (probably most) of the people speak the same language that we do.  But occasionally, and surprisingly, someone shows up to the place where the body meets who speaks a slightly different language.  Sometimes, different nouns describe the entities that populate their universe and so we try to translate and understand what parallels exist between our language and theirs.  Sometimes, we use the same nouns, but different verbs and the joy becomes trying to appreciate the other's experience of  life and the ways they have come to apprehend life's process and flow on terms other than the one we're accustomed to.  As challenging as this is at times, it doesn't negate the absolute value of speaking intentionally together and in our web of language pressing each other forward to a greater and deeper appreciation of God's movement in our world and in ourselves.

It's when we cease the conversation that we make the subtle declaration that our language has triumphed and there is nothing more of value to learn.  And what a small world that would be.

The Words You Speak...

...create atmosphere! I know it's difficult because the world seems to wire us otherwise, but try to think of the growth and maturity that happens naturally when we face challenge rather than focusing on "why is this happening to me." Every interaction with someone, every conversation, every Facebook post or comment, every bill you pay, every interruption of your schedule is an opportunity to model Jesus-like love and grow in grace. It's inside of that place of grace that we have our capacity increased to live and enjoy LIFE!

So, taking a cue from Paul in Colossians 4:6, "Let your conversation be always full of grace."

Monday, June 20, 2011

Freedom!

Reading through Romans 6 today and listening to Paul's thoughts about being free from the law. Freedom isn't living without boundaries and constraints. A life without any parameters wouldn't be life at all; it would be chaos! Real freedom through Christ is about being given through grace a new "end point" to life. We all have end points. An end point is that light at the end of the tunnel that guides our movement forward. In Christ, we have the "end point" of enjoying life close to the Father, living as we were created by Him to live, experiencing blessing, having things we are thankful for, and celebrating with others the thousand joys the Father has scattered wonderfully along our path. The end point for someone without faith is oneself. Without Christ, one is left to become the measure of their own life - which means all of those fears, doubts, insecurities, inadequacies, and failures loom large in our view. When we're our own end point we wonder how we could ever transcend ourselves - which we can never do... on our own.

That's why life in Jesus is freedom. It means I'm not God and God is. And that's good news.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Father's Day

It's impossible to be the best father one can be without a relationship with THE Father. It's out of our recognition of His unconditional love for us that we are able to love unconditionally, with no strings attached, no agenda to be fulfilled. He loved us while we were still in sin, self-deception, and selfishness - pouring life and love into us even when we were in rebellion against the way He created things to be.

Because He fathers us, we father others. As my good friend (now deceased), M.A. Thomas, once remarked to me, "Why wouldn't we want to share with those we love the most the relationship that matters the most." Our encounter with God isn't ours to horde. God changes us as part of His larger mission to change the universe. What a blessing that He considers us worthy of being a part of that mission.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Why church?

Because we always run the risk of personalizing our faith to suit our preferences. It's only in the company of others that we have our egos checked and our idol-making tendencies challenged.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Worship

Powerful worship today at both churches! Interesting what a little rest can do for your perspective and passion. Without either, you are grinding away just for the sake of grinding. The good news is that Jesus has released is in freedom for so much more! Love those times we encounter he manifest presence of Christ in community and worship. These times serve as signposts to what is always available to those with "eyes to see and ears to hear."



- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Location:Rolling Hills Dr,Jackson,United States

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Another day in Paradise

Fun week so far hanging out with the family - soaking up the sun, squeezing some sand between the toes, and letting my mind drift away with the current. It's a different life from keeping pace with the rhythms of ministry. The interruption breaks the pattern and invites one into not just a different life but into seeing the pace of life differently. Some activities in our day to day routines (prayer, meditation, exercise, reading the Bible) actually create increased capacity for living, feeding you, increasing energy, and providing greater focus. Others seem to diminish you - drawing you into what seems like and never ending cycle of striving. We really only recognize the latter through the lens of the former. Hence, the necessity for embedding in "normal life" consistent "Capacity-increasing" activities. As we wrap up our week on "vacation" this appears more non-negotiable than ever.


YouTube Video


Location:Shipyard Dr,Hilton Head Island,United States

Friday, March 18, 2011

Celebrating Life

It could be said that the passing of time is marked and given tempo by the occurrence of special occasions. In church life, time is kept in seasons like Advent, Christmas, Lent, and Easter. In one's personal life, time is measured and celebrated as we observe birthdays and anniversaries, baptisms and weddings, victories and achievements. The life lived well seems to be full of such moments - each one a looking back to a seminal event in which a special grace was experienced and looking forward anticipating the life sustaining presence and work of God. Without this anticipation, how could we ever really have live in hope?

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Susan's birthday!




- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone