Year: 2015 (Page 4 of 25)

Tell Me About Those Balls (#redcup version)

In honor of RedCupGate 2015, I’ll offer an oldie-but-goodie, (and one of my cousin’s favorite blog titles). Obvi, since the whole #redcup thing revolves around noisy Christians, there could be even more commentary. Like, how first we want businesses to have the right  to refuse to make wedding cakes for people we don’t love because of “values” – yet we want businesses we don’t own to uphold all of our values. (Thanks to my Smart Friend Craig who pointed that one out. He is really smart. And sarcastic. Pretty much my favorite kind of people. Read his brilliant writing about an unrelated topic.)

However, just in case any of my friends have panties all bunched up over this – if you really want someone to know how you feel… stop giving them money. (I, however, will not say no to the PSL. Jesus is in my heart, not on my cup.)


 

(Originally published September, 2011)

It’s quite evident that I love a good boycott. Give me a cause (Walmart… short skirts… chips in the ice cream… Times New Roman…) and a platform and I shall wave my banner high. However, I’d like to give my fellow boycotters a few lessons in Banning Behavior.

Apparently there are close to a million moms (or, at least an organization of them) who dislike Ben & Jerry’s new flavor. That’s fine, I tend to show preference to Chubby Hubby (who can resist pretzels + peanut butter + fudge?! Such salty/sweet goodness). However, a letter-writing campaign has ensued, trying to force the flavor off the market, taking away the right of the consumer to purchase a batch of Schweddy Balls as s/he would like.

So, my Million friends that are Moms, I say: It’s fine to dislike a product. Put your money where your mouth is and DON’T BUY IT. Purchase Breyers. Or Edy’s. Or give Columbus Cincinnati a little love and go for Graeter’s. If you don’t want to explain to little Frank why the balls are Schweddy, then don’t point them out to your kiddos. Surely you’re not narrating the entire aisle of ice creams and frozen food novelties?

And while we’re this close to the topic, a word on marketing to children… because I read again about the perils of McDonalds and cereals and every other red dye #5-filled food on the market and the regulations regarding such propaganda: it wouldn’t work if parents would simply say NO. Again, don’t buy it. If they don’t have profits, they can’t make the expensive flashy commercials that have your kids whining about the unfairness of life, why they’re so deprived and how you’re the worst mother ever.

Folks, sometimes there’s power in the pen, but always there’s power in the pocketbook.

The questions I now ask

11986365_10156047380010531_8296303192905535807_nRelease day is coming tomorrow for a beautiful piece of work, Out of Sorts by Sarah Bessey – a favorite author of mine for several years now. I mentioned my appreciation for feeling in good company as I have also “sorted” through my faith over the course of several years. It put words to my own evolution of faith.

By far, my biggest change in the past 5-10 years comes in the way I read my Bible. I’m still a Bible nerd – I read nearly daily, even the “boring” parts. I spent the good part of 6 months marching through Deuteronomy because of my fascination. (If you’ve never read Deuteronomy, it contains a few stories and about a million commands, things like when to eat fruit from trees, how to take women prisoner and other exhilarating details).

I’m not alone when I say that I can reread passages and walk away with a new understanding – many longtime Bible lovers do this. My notable change came in the way I approach scripture. I agree with Rob Bell when he says that referring to the Bible as a User’s Manual for Life is the most terrible thing you can do to the book. Who reads the user manuals? No one – at least, not until they get into trouble. And user manuals give directions, they don’t change people. I’ve never read a review of my toaster’s manual and felt inspired. I don’t keep the washing machine directions in my purse or car for emergency reading. Manuals like this tend to be dry, confusing and induce frustration. That’s not the Bible I know.

The Bible wasn’t just written by and for judges and priests, but also by storytellers. Especially the Gospels, the stories of Jesus. It’s not a laundry list of sayings or a cliff’s notes version of his life – the people who took the time to etch these words did so with purpose and intention. When you read it as a manual, looking for step A and part C, you miss the story. And any good book lover will tell you that stories change you.

So what’s the Bible about? It’s the story of God and his people. It’s a rendering of the many ways people have sought after God – sometimes failing, sometimes victorious, sometimes missing the point completely. But always, always, it does something: it reveals the nature and character of God. That’s how we know someone, yes? In the interactions – in the comings and goings, in the good times and bad. And not just with one person, but with many. Through the pages of scripture we see how God deals with the religious and the outsiders, the upstanding and the shunned, the forgotten and the righteous.

I’ve begun a practice of reading to seek out an understanding of God’s character. I agree with Sarah – Does this interpretation move us further into understanding the nature and character of God, toward compassion, love, justice, reconciliation and above all, resurrection and redemption? When I finish a passage of the Bible, I ask myself, “well, what did that just tell me about who God is?”

I think critically about not only the words used in passage and “what it says to me” but first what it said to the original, intended readers. How did this change their understanding of the world, and their understanding of God?   We live in a monotheistic society – even among those who actively don’t believe in God, they’re not believing in a god, not many gods (yes, I just significantly over-simplified that idea). Yet the Bible was written into a culture where garden variety gods were plentiful. You could pick a god to rectify any given ailment or situation. So, given that this God of the Hebrews – the God of Abraham, Issac and Jacob, the God of Jesus of Nazareth, was one of many available Gods for worship, what does the passage of scripture tell me about why this God is different? Why is this God worthy of commitment and worship?

Nearly always, these questions lead me to greater faith – not because the easy answer readily rises to the top, but because God’s nature shines through.  I cannot say it better than Sarah does:

“I cling more to my Bible now than I used to; I lean more heavily on the stories and the promises, on the visions and the hope. I am challenged and changed in ways I never was when I took every word literally – now that I take them so seriously.” 

 Out of Sorts officially launches on November 3. You can get yours on Amazon or a local bookstore. 

Best Friends

I met my first best friend, Diane, on the first day of kindergarten. She rode with me on bus #5, and she sat with her big sister, Amy. In a foreshadowing of my future life, I sat down in the seat across the row and turned to them and asked their names. I promptly forgot the names, but I stuck with them when we got to the school, down the stairs and into the room on the left.

Later, probably not the next day, but in my mind it sticks together with the bus ride introduction, I sat by Diane as Mrs. Mouser reviewed addresses. She asked us each our zip code. We were both 43345 and we thought this was a sure sign we were destined to be BFF forever. (Nevermind you, the class was divided by town – all Ridgeway kids went in the AM, the Mt. Victory kids in the PM. Which means, every single kid in our class was a 43345. But, whatever man. Destiny.)

I managed to keep her around through my elementary years – even when the 80s fashions were at their height and I wore biker shorts under everything. We were equally book nerdish-enough to not apologize for spending the weekend reading The Babysitter’s Club newest release. We would regularly stay the night at one another’s house and staying at her house on a Saturday was a special big deal for me because that meant I went to church with her on Sunday. Though I often went with my mom to our own little country church, her church was something else. Their sanctuary! It was huge! I returned to that church years later, on Diane’s wedding day, to discover the room seemed so large because I was so small. As a 23-year-old, the sanctuary was quite ordinary.

Diane and I played in the band, rode bikes, and explored the outdoors. I helped her with her chores in the dairy barn. Her dad teased me about anything and remains one of the most hilarious people in my memory. I saw my first living being birthed in their barn – a small calf, which the mother had trouble delivering. John had to help pull it out. Diane’s mom asked questions about our days and our friends and when we were disappointed she would sympathize, saying, “aw, bummer!” She would serve us breakfast of fried doughnuts, made from those biscuits in a can, fried in a fry daddy and tossed in a bag of sugar, with a side of whole milk, straight from the cow. Or Tang.

In our teenage years, we parted ways. It was amicable, mostly a result of interests – I took readily to sports and cheerleading and she enjoyed band and music. We ended up in different classes, only seeing one another in Spanish or Advanced Math. She started dating her boyfriend-now-husband and I flitted around social circles as the seasons changed.

In my more typical teenage raucous years, as rumors piled up, Diane never treated me differently. I think it was one of those things where you love a person at a deeper level – not for how they act in a given day or year, but for the true nature of the person you know them to be. Maybe she did roll her eyes or shake her head – but I never knew. She treated me as a good friend would, and that’s what mattered to me.

A friend once told me Diane’s mom had called my mom with concern about my behavior. I have no idea if it was true or if my friend made it up. I didn’t respond with fear – I felt loved. Someone cared enough to ask. Someone cared enough to call. It was a brave thing that her mom did, if the tale is true. I hope I have that kind of bravery in my soul, that kind of love for another person’s child, to call up a fellow mom and say, “hey, is everything okay?”

JJ told me that a boy in H’s class referred to my son as “his best friend.” This is the first time in his nearly seven years of life that the title has been spoken. I’m thankful another person on this planet appreciates him, and even elevates him to a VIP level. The boys trade Lego love and he’s coming over to play this week. It’s a special time, probably more for me than even him. I’m anticipating many years of sleepovers and pizza nights and baseball games and lego-athons.

There are no guarantees that my kids will develop the kind of relationship that Diane and I shared, one that I revere still today. I realize kids tend to have hot-then-cold patterns to friends and things change over time. I feel it would be a tad bold to ask God to give each of my kids a Diane, though I would be thankful if He did. I do hope my kids each find families full of Bettingers. Good people who hold hands as they pray and work hard and ask us to each pitch in as we visit. People who make you feel loved and accepted and welcomed.

But I can’t control their friends, nor even their choice of friendships. I can’t dictate them to my choice of friends or families and it wouldn’t be fair of me to do so. What I can control is what I offer to the future BFF’s of my children. I can fry the (gf) doughnuts and offer to take them to church. I can listen to their stories from school and create space in my household where they feel safe and free and alive and loved. I can care enough to call in those troubling years – not judge or advise, but to listen and to be present.

I want them to have friendships filled with enjoyment and like interests and special secrets. I want to give them a place to keep that friendship safe, alive and even sacred.

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