First Words
Feasting on the unexpected
A missed flight, a cheap motel, and a mushy apple
Need thy neighbor
As I drive past boarded-up churches, I am more convinced than ever that many congregations could afford to revisit their neighbor ethic.
Rights or gifts?
In America, we cherish the inalienable right to have things our way.
Winning an empty game
The cross is anything but a success story. Failure and disappointment are at the heart of Christianity.
Pastoral sabotage
Those of us who sought to change the congregation's communion practice met with indifference. So late one Saturday I took matters into my own hands.
Real people’s mistakes
My friend the public defense attorney doesn't teach her clients to evade error. She helps them acknowledge it—and stop pretending.
The secret of authority
What the people see in Jesus is more than raw power.
The true eccentric
An eccentric existence is one where God forms the center of life, becoming the axle of our self-understanding.
Grading our work
After sharing laudatory remarks about Nai-Wang Kwok, the YDS dean invited him to respond. I have thought a lot about the three sentences Kwok said before he sat down again.
Read and left unread
A tall stack of books on the floor of my bedroom greets me each morning. Its very presence is exhausting.
Tourist and traveler
The traveler eats whatever food is placed before her; she aims to learn as much of the language as possible. A tourist sacrifices less.
Grave digging
I keep a 36-inch utility shovel in my church office. I use it to dig the graves that hold the cremains of our congregation's saints.
Overstuffed barns
A poor person looking up at my residence could mistake it for one of the barns belonging to the rich man Jesus talked about—the one who didn't know his soul was buried beneath all that corn and sorghum.
Who matters to us?
Moral concern usually begins when one person makes an effort to become, in some measure, one with the other. Privilege impedes this.
Point of reference
Like Adam, we may end up treating God as if God were at the periphery. But where there is no center—or where we become the center—the circumference of life disappears.