So, just in case you were all excited about my move to the WordPress address and format that I mentioned in my last post, I have decided to put that off for a while.
It turns out that it is difficult for folks to get notices that I have posted. I am also not familiar enough with the mechanics of the pages to have it work the way I would like it to. I have to ask a colleague to help with background and other issues.
In other words, for now, I am remaining here so any of you who follow (I know there are a few) can continue to get notices when I write. I do plan to put up two recent posts in the next day or two.
Thanks for hanging in there with me as I explore other options. For now, the more familiar is better for me. If I change my mind again, I will let you know :)
Tulips

Friday, November 11, 2016
Wednesday, October 19, 2016
Moving Domains
Dear Friends,
You may have noticed over the past year that I have not posted as regularly to this blog as I once did. I have struggled with finding the time to keep this up with my other responsibilities. After discussing this with several of my colleagues, I have decided to try again rather than give up. To that end, my technical support person at Calvin Seminary has advised that I move this blog to a different format. I anticipate making that move within the next week and to begin writing regularly again.
I hope to not only comment on various theological topics that seem timely, but also to begin to include a few more personal anecdotes and stories (some of which I have done in the past), and maybe even some practical ideas related to life in general, as the title suggests.
Thank you for reading this over the past number of years. I do hope you will sign up to continue to read my thoughts, comment on what I am sharing, and wonder together with me about Life, God, and Other Mysteries.
My new site (which is in the final stages of construction) is lifegodmysteries.com.
Thanks again!
Mary
You may have noticed over the past year that I have not posted as regularly to this blog as I once did. I have struggled with finding the time to keep this up with my other responsibilities. After discussing this with several of my colleagues, I have decided to try again rather than give up. To that end, my technical support person at Calvin Seminary has advised that I move this blog to a different format. I anticipate making that move within the next week and to begin writing regularly again.
I hope to not only comment on various theological topics that seem timely, but also to begin to include a few more personal anecdotes and stories (some of which I have done in the past), and maybe even some practical ideas related to life in general, as the title suggests.
Thank you for reading this over the past number of years. I do hope you will sign up to continue to read my thoughts, comment on what I am sharing, and wonder together with me about Life, God, and Other Mysteries.
My new site (which is in the final stages of construction) is lifegodmysteries.com.
Thanks again!
Mary
Monday, March 21, 2016
Let Everything Praise the Lord

As the movie
began in this museum that celebrates human curiosity and achievement, I quickly
recognized the instrumental music as Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah. As scenes of parks like the Grand Canyon, Yellowstone,
and Yosemite swept by in this gigantic domed theater, my emotions overwhelmed
me. It was as if I was witnessing the words of Psalm 148, a psalm that calls
the entire creation to praise the LORD.
And this is as
it should be. In a setting where it was likely that if they knew the word at
all the majority of persons considered ‘hallelujah’ as merely an expression of
joy, the creation itself seemed to pick up what those made in the image of the
Creator were unable to do saying “praise the LORD.”
On this Palm Sunday weekend, it was as
if the very rocks were crying out.
Sunday, February 21, 2016
Cloudy Days
Living in the
Northern part of the United States near the west shore of a Great Lake can be
rather depressing this time of year. Those inland seas, as they have been
called, affect our weather yielding a disproportionate number of cloudy days.
Add to that the fact that we are on the west edge of the Eastern time zone, and
sometimes it feels like somewhere around early December we descend into
darkness until sometime close to May.
My sister’s
family lives in Colorado; my brother’s in California. They rarely experience
cloudy days. And in the darkness of January and February I often envy them. I
don’t envy the weather, mind you. I love four distinct seasons where each moves
relatively smoothly from one to the next. But I do envy their sunshine.
The past two
days have been those rare but delightful days where the sky was blue and the
temperature was spring-like. The first of this two-day run I s delighted. Ah…..sunshine!
Yesterday I was nearly giddy. But as I anticipate the cold and clouds returning
I couldn’t help remembering spending two weeks in the southwest some years ago.
We were
camping, enjoying the vistas that an arid and mountainous climate offer. But
sometime after the first week, I found myself getting up in the morning and
wishing for clouds. The monotony of the piercingly hot sun, cloudless blue sky,
dry dirt, and coniferous trees was beginning to wear on me. As I think back, in
some ways the monotony of the dry, hot sun was as bad as the monotony of
clouds.
I was reading
about Julian of Norwich yesterday in a fascinating new book called Christological Anthropology by Marc
Cortez, a theologian at Wheaton College. I have not read her myself but Cortez
does a fabulous job outlining her ideas.
One thing
that Julian apparently speculates about is the origin of sin. She wonders why
God would allow his first creatures to sin and the pristine world to devolve
into its current state of misery. She doesn’t really come to a firm answer.

It’s a little
like living in a sunny climate, I think. If you never experience ongoing clouds
and darkness, do you really appreciate the sun?
Saturday, January 30, 2016
Mystery

In fact, if you hang around folks like me long
enough you could easily come to the conclusion that there is no greater sin
than a refusal or inability to think. A well-reasoned blasphemy may well be
more respected than a poorly reasoned statement of faith. After all, aren’t we
to love God with our minds?
My own
Reformed tradition is perhaps especially plagued by this reasoned snobbery.
When Mark Noll published his book, The
Scandal of the Evangelical Mind, with the conclusion that the scandal was
that there was no evangelical mind, many in my circles chortled with laughter,
winking and nodding in the agreement that of course, this was something they
had known all along and was clearly unfortunate.
Unfortunately,
these same people never stopped to consider whether their own emphasis on
intellect and reason wasn’t equally problematic. Tim Keller says that an idol
is a good thing that has become an ultimate thing. I wonder if that is what has
happened in my profession – that we have taken a good thing and made it an
ultimate thing.
One of my
favorite authors when I was a child and even today is Madeleine L’Engle. She
has a wonderful way of pondering, asking questions, and imagining that goes
beyond reason. She appreciates mystery and paradox. She isn’t afraid of
unanswered questions.
I wonder if
L’Engle is closer to the vision of Christian scholarship than most of us
involved in it. I wonder if being a Christian scholar isn’t really something
like an invitation to study what’s in front of us, whether biology or theology,
in a context where mystery and paradox and humility are central categories, not
fall-back positions.
In a brief
verse about the season of Advent and the incarnation L’Engle writes:
This is the irrational season
When love blooms bright and wild.
Had Mary been filled with reason
There’d have been no room for the
child.
Indeed.
Wednesday, January 13, 2016
Sermon in a Department Store
Last week my
daughter and I were standing at the cosmetic counter at a major department
store in the greater Chicago area. The person helping us brought me my mascara
and I handed him a coupon that I had received in the mail for a free product.
He apologized that he could not accept the coupon because it had expired. No
big deal, I told him, as I laughed at myself for not seeing the date.
He then told
me, pointing to the huge poster behind him, that the next promotion would be of
their new anti-aging product. Was I interested, he wanted to know? It was “guaranteed”
to reduce wrinkles. I told him I had actually received a coupon for that
product in the mail as well but really was not interested. Given my age, it was
a little late to prevent wrinkles, I said, and I really don’t mind looking my
age. Besides, I went on, it wasn’t worth the approximately $75 per month it
would take to keep up with the stuff once the free sample was gone. No, I said,
I would pass.
He smiled
kindly at me, and then my daughter spoke.
“We shouldn’t try to defy age,” she
said, “we should celebrate it.” The young man paused. I’m guessing he was
surprised. You see, my daughter is a beautiful young woman who tends to catch
the eye of any young man within 50 yards of her.
A statement like that coming from someone like her was not what he expected.
She went on. “Age
is a gift,” she said. “Not everyone receives that gift. If I am given the gift
of age, I want to celebrate it not hide it. The lines around my mouth and the
wrinkles by my eyes will remind me of the many times I smiled or laughed at a
good joke with friends or family, or of my laughter at the antics of someone I
loved, maybe a child.
My frown lines will remind me of those times I worried
about my husband getting home safely or a child’s difficulty in school, or my own struggles in grad school or with
friends. The wrinkles on my forehead will remind me of the surprises in my
life.”
Like the
young man, I was captivated.
As she
continued I heard wisdom. Wisdom that many of us don’t figure out until much
later in life. Wisdom that marketers ignore and try to override in their
youth-driven advertising.
The young man
nodded and voiced his agreement. My guess is that in his fairly short life, he
had never heard someone suggest that the processes of aging are good. Frankly,
I have not heard that message much either. But my daughter is right. Age is
a gift. Let’s start celebrating!
Wednesday, January 6, 2016
Christmas Memories
Today is
Epiphany. Advent is officially over and the church moves into the season of
Epiphany (or ordinary time depending on who you ask).
Although I
have not begun to take down my Christmas decorations yet, it will be, as it is
every year, something of a ritual. I will begin with the tree, then the mantel,
etc. Somewhere near the end of my yearly practice I will pack up the Christmas
cards we received. People used to send them every year but recently, with the
coming of FaceBook and other such things, I find that the total cards received
continues to diminish.
I miss those
real paper hold-in-your-hand cards. I know posting a greeting on Facebook is
faster and more efficient, but it also isn’t quite the same as the card and
yearly updates we used to receive from most of our friends. They were generally
more honest and more comprehensive as well.

I also save
our Christmas cards from one year to the next. As I prepare to send out my own
cards for the year, I look through the cards from the previous year. Sometimes,
the card I hold is the last card I received from that person because in the
intervening year, that person went to be with the Lord. Those cards are the
most special to me and I keep them, remembering the person that sent the card
each year. I suppose I will keep them for as long as I continue this tradition.
So I have the
last Christmas card I received from a good friend, from my sister, from a
beloved aunt, to name a few. Facebook greetings just can’t replace that.
In addition,
as I put each card into the box where I save them until the next year, I say a
prayer for the person once more. I pray that the coming year will indeed be
happy for them and their loved ones.
I’m sure it
is possible to adapt my practices to social media in some way. But I don’t know
how. And maybe this old dog just doesn’t want to learn that new trick. Maybe I
will just keep sending old fashioned Christmas cards, made of paper, sent with a
stamp. And maybe some folks will keep sending them to me as well.
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