Sunday, March 21, 2010

Who are you?

Have you heard a good story recently? Have you told anyone your story? Do you even have a story? Have you ever taken the time to review your life and think how you would tell your story to another person?

Some years ago I worked in a number of Pacific-Asian coutnries among predominantly rural and tribal peoples. In every case I was an outsider to their culture and to their language. Many were curious to know who I was. What did I do? What about my family? Did I have a wife and children? What about my parents and grandparents? They wanted to know who I was. This would allow them to know how to relate to me. And I soon learned that I needed to know their stories to know how to relate to them. So we began to swap stories.

One thing I learned was to think about how to select events in my life they could relate to. I was a city boy who had visited my grandparents farm many times in younger years. It was the farm where my mother lived as a girl. I soon found that farm stories stood me in good stead with people who farmed. My dad and I enjoyed fishing in south Louisiana but I had to be careful about some of our fishing stories. For one thing, when the fish we caught were too small, we threw them back. That would be very difficult for people to understand who ate everything they caught! But they liked the idea that I knew how to fish and liked to eat fish. I didn't tell them that I preferred fish with fewer bones. One of my gracious hosts informed me that the more bones in a fish, the sweeter the meat.

Some of my stories happened unintentionally. Once when I was visiting in a coffee and tea plantation of South India my host in one of the homes invited me to join the family for coffee. In that place where they grew coffee (and I might add good coffee) the custom was to pour about half and inch in a cup, then add a generous amount of milk and sugar. When my host only poured a small amount of coffee in my cup and was about to add milk, I stopped her and asked for more coffee. She added a small amount and stopped again. More I insisted. Again only a tiny bit. I finally coaxed her up to about half a cup and she would not go any higher. Again she attempted to add milk and I declined. then she wanted to add sugar and again I declined. She was clearly puzzled by my strange attitude. After a moment she asked me, "You aren't going to drink pure decoction, are you?" "Yes," I replied. "Watch me." And to the amazement of the family and neighbors I drank the pure black coffee. It was rich and hearty and very good. "There," I said, "that is how we drink coffee in my home place in America." Then I decided to have a bit of fun with the family. So I added, "In my place we don't give milk to babies. Instead we give them black coffee--pure decoction as you call it!" My host's eyes were wide with amazement. Then with a grin I added, "Actually, I'm just kidding about babies. But I have been drinking black coffee for a long time. You see, I learned to drink coffee while living with my father's mother. Every morning she would burn two pieces of toast, then scrape some of the burnt part off, add butter and jelly, and then eat while drinking a cup of black coffee. I thought that is what adults did, and I leanred to like coffee that way." Our conversation finally moved on to other topics and I ended my visit.

Some months later I was again visiting another plantation in that area and the family gathered on the veranda for coffee. The woman of the house was about to pour my decoction when she paused and said, "Say, aren't you that chap that drinks pure decoction?" "That's me," I replied. "Watch me and you will see me do it again. By the way, you grow excellent coffee in this place. You should try it sometime." So my fame or story spread.

I enjoyed their stories about weddings and some of their rituals and celebrations. I'm sorry that I did not have more time to visit more families and learn more of their stories.

Now, back to where I began, how you taken some time to reflect on your stories? Who are you? What have you done? Who are the poeple you know and have worked with? Could it be that your story or at least some parts of it will help or encourage another person? I would never want to use any part of my story to lord it over another person or to put them down in any way.

One of the wonderful outcomes of this story swapping is that over time many people owned one of my stories and in exchange had given me one of their stories. The joke was always on me when I visited in those places again, they remembered my stories and sometimes would retell them to me. Then they asked if I remembered their story. Sometimes I did and sometimes I didn't. So I had to learn to make some quick notes and then brush up on the peoples' stories before visiting them again.

The last thing my mother did before she died at 95 was to lay in bed and all night long retell the stories of her childhood, the long-dead relatives, how she met and married by father. When she had finished all her stories, she died.

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Thursday, August 24, 2006

Thanks for the Day

Dear Lord, I thank You for this day. I thank You for my being able to see and to hear this morning. I'm blessed because You are a forgiving God and an understanding God. You have done so much for me and You keep on blessing me. Forgive me this day for everything I have done, said or thought that was not pleasing to you.

I ask now for Your forgiveness. Please keep me safe from all danger and harm. Help me to start this day with a new attitude and plenty of gratitude. Let me make the best of each and every day to clear my mind so that I can hear from You.

Please broaden my mind that I can accept all things. Let me not whine and whimper over things I have no control over. And sometime it's the best response when I'm pushed beyond my limits.

I know that when I can't pray, You listen to my heart. Continue to use me to do Your will. Continue to bless me that I may be a blessing to others. Keep me strong that I may help the weak. Keep me uplifted that I may have words of encouragement for others.

I pray for those that are lost and can't find their way. I pray for those that are misjudged and misunderstood. I pray for those who don't know You intimately. I pray for those that will delete this without sharing it with others. I pray for those that don't believe but I thank you that I believe.

I believe that God changes people and God changes things. I pray for all my sisters and brothers. For each and every family member in their households. I pray for peace, love and joy in their homes that they are out of debt and all their needs are met. I pray that every eye that reads this knows there is no problem, circumstance, or situation greater than God. Every battle is in Your hands for You to fight.

I pray that these words be received into the hearts of every eye that sees it. May you have a happy and thankful day.

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

The Good Book

The Bible is getting a lot of press these days--some of it good, some of it not so good. It seems that some folks are more likely to believe something about the Bible, rather than to believe the Bible. The Prophet Isaiah said that God's Word is not like the grass or leaves that fade and fall, instead it will stand forever. so we'll see.

One good thing that is happening right now is a recovery of the Bible as "story." Actually the Bible is a continuing story that is composed of perhaps more than 500 component stories if you count individual episodes of the longer stories like that of Joseph, or those stories of Jesus. One of the terms being used is "Bible Storying" which simply means telling the Bible stories as stories, not preaching them or attempting to explain them, just telling them. Discussion of the stories is fine as long as it is a dialogue and not a monologue where the listener is told what to believe.

Beyond the stories which are interesting in themselves as they are about real people who lived and interacted with God in their day, there is much to notice in the stories if you take the time and look closely.

Some of the stories take on a new significance when paired with other stories that help to introduce the main story or to establish some relationship or circumstances in which the main story takes place. More on this later.

But perahps the most interesting aspect is that the Bible, the Good Book, speaks to anyone who takes the time to read it. It is best read in whole passages or chapters or in some cases even a whole book if it is a short one. But then again, many find precious promises like jewels hiding right there waiting to be found.

We've heard a lot about the DaVinci Code and several years ago about The Passion of the Christ. The book is better than the talk and the film. There is really no need to defend the Bible. A famous preacher once said: No need to defend the Bible. It is like a lion. Turn it loose!

A growing concern that many Christians have today is for all people, whether literate or not, whether then have a written Bible in their spoken language or not, to have access to the Bible. One way this is happening is sharing the key stories and other passages as narratives which oral learners can more easily understand and remember. Most of us have Bibles and are literate. How much of the Bible have we read? How much of the Bible could we tell as story?
--storyguy--