Thursday’s Random Thoughts

1. Saw a Lego Star Wars Advent Calendar at Target. That is all.

2. Read about a new Bob Dylan tribute album. Isn’t every album one of those?

3. Wait, weren’t the OWS protestors against Nazis? At least before they were allied with them?

4. All I’ve wanted to listen to for more than a week is Springsteen. And Billie Holiday, I always want to listen to Lady Day.

5. Did you hear about all those wild animals being released in Ohio? Just another OWS protest, I assume.

6. I think facebook needs more sentimental posts.

7. You know I actually sympathize with some of those protestors. I’d be mad if someone stole my Macbook Pro also.

8. Actually, I’ve wanted to listen to bacon sizzle as well as Springsteen.

9. I’m tired of hippies, the lack of bacon in this world and Old Spice commercials. There, I said it.

10. 40th Birthday coming up. Visions of iPads are dancing in my head.

Bonus Thoughts:

11. Dear Guy from Maroon 5 who profanely called Fox News evil,
                       
      Allow me to introduce you to the Dixie Chicks.

      Lovingly, Matt

12. I don’t understand facebook anymore.

13. I’m looking forward to that day when I can walk into work and know what I’m doing. So until 2013, I’ll just keep learning.

14. The word “iPad” is not in my mac’s dictionary. Evil plot orchestrated by Google Chrome?

15. Waiting for a presidential candidate who will promise jet-packs and rocket-launchers for every man woman and child.

Thursday’s Random Thoughts

1. I have had no bacon this week. Feelin’ it too.

2. Breaking news: Auburn once again proven to have not violated recruiting policy. In I’m sure totally unrelated news, a few thousand Bama fans wearing 1976 national championship trucker hats simultaneously got indigestion.

3. Helped a customer by myself finally. Thinkin’ about askin’ for a promotion.

4. If I thought even just a small fraction of the OWS protesters cared about the “Fast and Furious” investigation I would think about taking them seriously.

5. Thought I was getting used to shaving every morning and then realized that’ll never happen.

6. Dreamed about banking regulations last night. You?

7. When I was a little kid this girl I knew wore an annoying shirt that said, “Anything a boy can do, a girl can do better.” As I approach 40 most of my favorite authors and singers are women. And my favorite person is too. Maybe she was right after all.

8. I would like to start a new trend of serving Buffalo wings for dessert.

9.  If you’ve never listened to “Backstreets” by Springsteen as loud as you can while driving through the Birmingham night air, you are missing out.

10. Sign at gas station in my neighborhood: “Boiled Peanuts and Fine Wines.” I love this place called home.

A Pastor Goes Looking for Humiliation

I couldn’t even get a job a Target.

Back about six months ago when Bethany and I started talking about me looking for a job outside of pastoral ministry, I was optimistic. After all, I had a master’s degree. I have some facility with about five languages outside of English. I have a book deal. I have prior experience in a number of fields. My learning had depth and breadth. So I was optimistic about the job search. Turns out, unduly so.

The only responses I got from my inquiries and submitted resumés were rejections. Over and over and over. Often just silence.  My over-confidence was careening against the stone-cold immovable reality of a stagnant economy having little use for what I knew and had done.

Every now and again there were reasons for optimism. A lead here. A promised good word there. But the positive feelings would wane faster than they waxed. And I would be back on job sites broadening my search again.

About four and half months in and up to my chin in rising despair, I got an email from Target telling me I had not been chosen for a job. I was sure I would be miserable but knew the pay would feed us. I thought that with a little luck, I might get to oversee the music and books section or frozen foods. I was obviously more desperate than they were. Don’t get me wrong, there is nothing inherently wrong with such a job. I just knew I would be miserable. But I also knew I needed something.

I didn’t tell Bethany about this. You see, the plan was to wait till the end of August and then panic and send my resumé to retail places like Target. Just to do what we have to do. But I got that email about 10 days before the deadline.

A few days before I was at a concert and ran into an old friend. We had worked together before I went to Seminary and had even graduated from Bible College. He and his wife were part of Bethany and I’s history. Anyway, as we talked before the show I told him about my job search, he offered to help me out. He had the kind of job that might actually make something happen.

I think it was just a couple of days later that I sent his wife a message on facebook and asked for his email. Within a few hours we had planned lunch in a couple of days. That lunch was one part interview and one part reunion. Fifteen minutes after lunch, I was interviewing with someone else. An hour later I was communicating with HR.

I had a job a week later.

There is another layer in this story I need to share. With every week of looking I was growing further down into the soft soil of humiliation. There grows wild thoughts and poisonous regrets. But also can be found there fragrant recognitions of need. So I let go. I let go of my resumé and all the attendant demands and beliefs of what is due.

I literally wrote God and said, “I obviously will not get a job on what I have done. Will you help me in the same way you have me so many times before? With mercy?” That was the morning of the concert and the “chance” encounter with an old friend, who would show me extraordinary kindness.

Fast forward to this day – the day I write this. Today was a humiliating day. It was my first day post-training. I had to ask everyone a dozen questions because of how little I know and understand. I had to ask customers over and over to hold on while I got help. The air felt thick with embarrassment and my heart beat to rhythms of humiliation.

But as I’ve sat here thinking about it, I’m ready for it in a way I could never have been before. And to know God has been going before me in this time of humiliation is comforting. Painful, yes. But comforting all the same.

Tuesday’s 10: Thoughts About The Occupy Wall Street Protestors

I have more thoughts than these but well it’s Tuesday, so I am limited to only ten.

1. Free Market Capitalism with lower taxes for everyone is social justice.

2. “People before profits” was most likely the mission statement of Solyndra. And you the people footed the bill.

3. Funny how those who want to redistribute income and not pay their bills are not being accused of greed.

4.  Every really good pizza place cares about profits. Do you need another argument about the goodness of profit?

5. You think capitalism is bad, huh? You got an alternative? Monarchy? Socialism? Communism? Anarchy?

6. I would take seriously the concerns about corporations being in bed with politicians if I wasn’t so concerned the alternative would be for politicians to be enemies of corporations.

7. If my boss is not driven by profit to some degree, I don’t have a job and my family doesn’t eat. I consider my family to be “people” strangely enough.

8. Isn’t universal free healthcare an example of politicians being in bed with corporations?

9. Wait a second…”Free Bacon For All!!!”

10. I don’t like it when people try to turn the church into a business. And vice versa.

Linkage

1. Why Spicy Foods Make Your Nose Run

2. Ten Ways Steve Jobs Changed the World

3. What Do the “Occupy Wall Street” Protestors Want? Affordable Broccoli. 

4. 10 Ways Steve Jobs Changed the World

5. Fran Tarkenton Wonders What the NFL Would Be Like If It Had Teacher’s Rules

6. English Country House Libraries

7. “First We Ought To Kill Them and Eat Them”

8. Reason # 758,395,783,983,729,380,357,308,972 I am not a Democrat and why you shouldn’t either.

9. Steve Jobs’ Model for Business

10. A Lutheran Perspective On the Death of Steve Jobs

Thursday’s Random Thoughts

1. My first generation iPhone still works.

2. Going to see Patty Griffin this Friday. Not sure if you knew that.

3.Ummm, if you think those protestors are right about Wall Street, can I have all the stuff you own because of rich Wall Street bankers? You should probably get rid of your stuff. Thanks.

4. My first ipod had 64 GB. My first computer had about 500 MB and it was only 5 years older.

5. When my wife goes into the kitchen to cook some kind of magic happens and life becomes more awesome.

6. Last night I was retweeted by Dale Murphy, a childhood hero. No big deal, I will never wash my Twitter stream again.

7. Some pastor will will probably tweet something from his iPhone about idol worship and Steve Jobs.

8. I wonder if bacon thinks I’m awesome too.

9. If you would have told me a couple of months ago I would know what I know now about banking and the world of finance, I would have laughed in your face.

10. God, Family, Meat, Country.

Buying 1000 Kisses

(It’s Patty Griffin week. She will be in concert at the Alys Stephens Center this Friday.)

A couple years after purchasing Patty Griffin’s first album, a new one was released.

It was friday night and I had a softball game. We only had one car in Seminary so I picked Bethany up from work and we went to a place called Crazy Bowls and Wraps for the first time. Next to it was a music store local to St. Louis. After eating we went over there to kill some time before I had to turn double plays at Short and then hit home runs.

And that is when I saw 1000 Kisses. We had been listening to lot of peers lately – Emmylou Harris, Lucinda Williams, Alison Krauss, Gilian Welch – so we picked it up, paid for it and got in the car. From the first song – “Rain” – we were hooked.

I can remember sitting in our Honda Accord listening to her sing and being moved by the power of her voice. I can remember being anxious to hear more after the game. And I can remember listening to that album so often we had to make the decision to listen to something else for awhile.

A few months later I acted as the head of her street team to get the word out about her show in St. Louis. She played almost the whole album that night.

It’s a flawless album. Below is the first tune that filled our car on that friday night nine years ago.

Tuesday’s 10: Some Favorite Songs By Patty Griffin

It’s Patty Griffin Week all week at Echoes and Stars. If you don’t like Patty’s music you might want to come back next week… actually we can’t be friends so don’t come back at all.

Just kidding.

She will be in concert here in the Magic City this Friday at the Alys Stephens Center. But some of you may not know her music. Well, here are 10 songs to get you started. In no particular order…

1. Truth #2. From the unreleased album Silver Bell, it’s perhaps my favorite and one I can listen to over and over and over.

2. Blue Sky. A perfect song for driving fast under cobalt-blue skies with the sunroof open and the windows down. Favorite line? “Be my singing lesson/Be my song.”

3. Stolen Car. A Springsteen cover that may haunt you for days.

4. Every Little Bit. Third song, first album. Patty wails on this one and it’s a heartbreaking tune. The line “It’s funny how a morning turns a love to shame” blew me away the first time I heard it. And when she sings at the top of your lungs, “I am sold by a lie” you will feel down to your soul.

5. When It Don’t Come Easy. One of those slow burners meant to be listened to under the night sky.

6. Be Careful. I could write a whole on this one. With all the female singers now singing tough songs full of revenge, as a father I want more of this. “Be careful how you bend me/Be careful where you send me/ Careful how you end me/Be careful with me.”

7. No Bad News. The similarities between this one and Truth #2 are obvious. And that’s why I love it.

8. Little Fire. One of the few songs she actually wrote on an album full of covers of gospel tinged blues and country. A gorgeous little song.

9. Long Ride Home. A song about just burying the person you shared a bed with for 40 years. I got chills right now just thinking about it.

10. Moses. First song, first album. “Diamonds, Roses/I need Moses/To cross this sea of loneliness/Part this red river of pain.”

Patty Griffin Week: "I Hated Every Day of High School"

I may have already told this story before but it may be worth telling again…

Not long after Bethany and I got married, I was driving home from work one day and stopped by one of local music stores. While looking around I saw a CD called “Live In the X-Lounge.” Our local Progressive music station was called “The X” and this was an album of in studio performances by a number of artists who had come through town. I bought the album without thinking twice.

It was a great album and I wish I still had it. But there was one song that stood out enough for Bethany and I to drive around on a Sunday afternoon a couple of weeks later looking for an album by the artist of that song.

“Tony” by Patty Griffin was one of the most powerful songs I’d ever heard. And it still is. It’s painful too. And I know of more than one person who has trouble listening to it. One look at the lyrics will explain why:

Does anyone remember Tony 
A quiet boy, little overweight 
He had breasts like a girl 
When I wasn’t too busy feeling lonely 
I’d stare over his shoulder 
At a map of the world 


He always finished all his homework 
Raised his hand in homeroom 
He called the morning attendance 
With the pledge allegience to the gloom 


Hey Tony, what’s so good about dying 
I think I might do a little dying today 
He looked in the mirror and saw 
A little faggot starin’ back at him 
Pulled out a gun and blew himself away 


I hated every day of high school 
It’s funny, I guess you did too 
It’s funny how I never knew 
There I was sitting right behind you 


They wrote it in the local rag 
Death comes to the local fag 
I guess you finally stopped believing 
That any hope would ever find you 
Well I know that story, I was sitting right behind you 


Hey Tony, what’s so good about dying 
He said I think I might do a little dying today 
He looked in the mirror and saw 
A little faggot starin’ back at him 
Pulled out a gun and blew himself away 


Hey Tony whats so good about dying, dying 
Hey Tony whats so good about dying, dying 


Hey Tony, what’s so good about dying 
He said I think I might do a little dying today 
He looked in the mirror and saw 
A little faggot starin’ back at him 
Pulled out a gun and blew himself away 
Pulled out a gun and blew himself away 
Pulled out a gun and blew himself away Tony…

I actually did hate every day of High School. And so I was lonely enough to get it. But I also dished it out and probably caused a great deal of loneliness in my insecurity. Like Patty I was so wrapped up in myself I never even noticed the loneliness around me.

It is no exaggeration to say this song had a profound effect on me. Not only have I not stopped listening to her music 12 years later but I’m not sure anything other thing, humanly speaking, had more of an effect on me going to into youth ministry. No matter where I went we, as a youth group, listened to this song and discussed it. In my wake I think I left a wake of not a few fans. And hopefully a little compassion for the lonely too.

Two versions of Tony below. The first is Live from the X-Lounge. The second is the studio version. Enjoy this painful and profound song.