Thursday’s Random Thoughts

1. I can’t wait till winter.

2. I don’t appreciate all these churches doing VBS on the same week. Who is going to watch our kids on the mornings when there are no VBS’s going?

3. When I enter my calories into my Lose It! app, I immediately get hungry.

4. Me amo mojitos.

5. Wait, someone needs to tell me again why I’m not supposed to like Palin? I can never remember.

6. I’m not sure why, but my pride swelled for Birmingham when I read the story about a wild black bear being found in town.

7. Remember the good ole days, when we had rain?

8. I only drink free range mojitos.

9. I can’t believe Oprah quit doing the whole book club thing right before the release of my book. The luck, huh?

10. If I ever own a professional ball club here in Birmingham, I’m calling ’em the freaking “Wild Black Bears.”

If Math Is Language



Those of you who know me will laugh at my writing about the subject which dogged me throughout my education. But a math teacher on Twitter challenged me to write something very quickly she could read to her students. This is the best I could do.


Mathematics is the language in which God has written the universe. – Galileo

If this is true, then at the very least the Universe is itself speaking. It is saying something about all of reality.

It is saying something about all you see, whether mighty towering oaks or iPads. Roaring waves and tanned skin. It is saying something about all you see, whether the sound of traffic or the voice of a favorite singer.

Behind it all is a language the whole Universe whispers to those who will listen. Sometimes in whispers, sometimes in screams.

In the midst of what seems like chaos, the numbers and signs of this language remind us there is order and meaning. And this is as true for those in the midst of the war-like shelling in Libya as it would be for the fight over cancer in a small town in Louisiana.

The word problems and equations students frustratingly hover over at desks are but postcards carefully scribed from the center of all that has been made. And here is the mystery for those who will think deeply – the very language we labor to understand speaks of what and who we are. if we ignore this language as if it were spoken by a tribe in the darkness of distant jungles, we cannot know ourselves. We will only play at the edge of knowing ourselves like those who only step for a moment in the weak edge of the surf.

Dad’s Love for Mom

(This is the fourth post in a series honoring my father: One, Two and Three.)

No effort is required to picture the love between my parents. The pictures and scenes were constant companions as I grew into manhood. And continue still. Hands held, kisses given, kind words and the acts to back them up were plentiful.

An example. Christmas mornings were genuine magic in the life of my family. But the presents are not the memories I return to. (Though I remember handing out packages from my dad to my mom with tags saying “To my lover.” I wasn’t ever grossed out. Par for the course.)

After the presents were opened, every year my mom would invariably tell my dad he had done too much. Then he would take his hand, scratch at the white stubble on his chin, grin, look around and get up before saying something was missing. Mom would feign surprise. He would hand it to her and she would place it in the lap of her robe. Now her hands are moving slowly to carefully open the package. Her eyes get misty. She then throws her head back with a gasp. Looks longingly at my dad and then puts her hands to her face – one on each cheek. Almost always it was something she pointed out six months earlier, he had remembered and she had forgotten. Dad Just sits there and smirks enjoying her being loved.

As a young man still trying to fit into the clothes of manhood, all these scenes became focused like a laser on my dad. Watching his ways with mom. Taking them in as some kind of relational vitamin hoping for the very health I beheld.

I have no memory of my father being unkind to my mother. I’ve flipped back through the tattered pages of memory and have come up empty. Nothing is there. This is probably hard for some to believe. And I’ve navigated the rough seas of this culture enough to doubt my memory. Surely, he would laugh at such an idea. No question, my dad is not perfect. At some point in the long line of points they have shared, he most likely was unkind to my mom. But is it not amazing, I remember nothing? The tenor of their relationship has the consistent ring of kindness throughout.

What really struck me early on was how much they liked to be together. By the time I was old enough to notice, they were on into their fifties. And they wanted to go places without me. Just them. They still dated and went on vacations to the beach without the kids. They sat close always angling to be with the other. This lovingkindness has never waned. They still love to be together.

Whatever failures of mine as a man towards my own wife can be traced to my ignoring my father’s example. Whatever kindness, any goodness and dignifying treatment I’ve shown can be traced with a straight line back into their love story.

Thankfully, a story still being written. And still being read.

The One Problem With Christian Biography

If you go to crosswalk.com and look at the list of 10 Great Christian Biographies by Al Mohler, you will see some great books. And you will see some of the same great books if you look at John Piper’s list. And a few different ones also. They may differ a little but are so similar as to almost be indistinguishable. And they look like almost anyone else’s. Mainly because they all have one thing in common.

Nearly every Christian biography is of a person in vocational ministry. They are either a pastor, missionary or theologian. The one exception is C.S. Lewis. But he preached and taught on faith. He was not a vocational minister but he is famous for much of he would have done if he were one.

So here is the problem: most recommended christian biographies are about vocational pastors and missionaries even though most Christians are not vocational pastors or missionaries.

I’m trying to connect the dots here.

OK, I don’t blame Mohler and Piper or anyone else for that matter for this. It makes sense they would recommend these books. For two reasons: First, those who recommend are pastors. They will read books about pastors. These are the books they know. It’s natural.  Second,  What else is there?

A college student I follow on Twitter asked once about books on christian missionaries. I told her to read about a Christian banker first. I knew I was asking her to find the impossible (and probably being a little too snarky) but I wanted to make a point. She is not training to be a vocational missionary. She is going to be a teacher, I think.

I want young people like her to learn how to live out the Christian life in vocations that are not full-time ministry.

Often we leave people – particularly the young – the impression Christianity is best lived out in the context of full time ministry. Whether we say it or not, we give the impression, if you want to live out the Christian life the straightest path to that goal is through pastoral fields of ministry. Which is really just a short trip to believing that if you were really spiritual, you would be a minister or missionary.

This has not happened because of some nefarious scheme. We just don’t have the imagination to see the spirituality of banking and waiting tables and landscaping. We cannot see the goodness of accounting, food service and mowing. And so we look past it. Probably assuming God is doing the same.

No wonder most Christians can only think of the Christian life in terms of morality, church attendance and evangelism.

So we celebrate the pastors and the theologians who are doing the important work by reading about them and doing our best to be like them while not being like them. Because Christian biography pretty much equals biography of pastor or missionary in our collective minds and hearts.

I wonder if frustration ever sets in.

Actually I’ve heard the frustration in myself. Back when I was sitting in a cubicle, waiting to go to Seminary, I probably said…certainly thought, “I wish I could go ahead and start doing something extraordinary/important/spiritual instead of this 8-5 mundane routine.” I wanted to move on to the spiritual stuff.

I had no vision for living out the Christian life where I was. I had no imgaintion for a spirituality in the midst of the mundane.

The answer of course is not to stop writing or reading Christian biography. But we do need to work to create a context in which the great majority of the church is not left to thinking their work is business-class spirituality, while the pastor and missionary are first-class. Pastors can do this from the pulpit but also they can do it by telling stories of faithfulness in the marketplace – the world where most of their people are week-in and week-out.

(Next week I’ll try to have a list of biographies of Christians who were not vocational pastors or missionaries. Or athletes. Or musicians. If you know of any, let me know.)

Peace In the Midst of Others

This is part 8 of a series of posts: onetwothreefour, five, six, seven.)

Trying to find a peaceful song
To sing when everything goes wrong
Till the peaceful valley calls me home
-“Peaceful Valley,” Ryan Adams

I want a peaceful soul.

But there are others who surround me. I am not alone. And they make it hard to have peace. Not only because of their actions against me. Though some are vengeful. And hurt. Though some do not know the way of peace. Nor care. Wherever I go, they are there. But they are not really the problem so much as my own self in dealing with them.

I know what can be in me in relation to them.

And I am prone to take up arms. Arms like jealousy and envy and self-absorption. Like a child I am absorbed with my own cares and expect the same of them. When they are not absorbed with my cares, violence. I can wield the weapon of selfishness. And flippancy with skill. Arrogance and pride are part of my arsenal.

I am without compassion. So peace is really impossible. Their problems are in the way. I wonder how it is I alone understand the way things should be. So I become angry. My mood is fixed by how things are in my own stratosphere. I grieve for those who grieve if by those you mean me.

How is peace with others possible if those others are pawns to move and problems to be moved out of the way?

They pull in front of me in traffic. They mess up my order. Are loud in the library. They are dirty. Ugly. Uninformed. These others do not like what I like. And dislike what I like. They are loud and quiet. They ask me to feed them and play with them. They ask me to help them. They have problems. Issues. They send me emails wanting me to fix problems.

Worse. I invest in the idea that the removal of the things they do which I do not like will give me the peace I want. Deep down I know this is not the peace I need. In fact this is the peace of a mirage.

What I need is a peace in the midst. I need a peace that will stand between me and the others – a peace taking away my habitual desire for weapons to use against them.

Winter Light by Bruce Ray Smith

Winter Light: A Christian's Search for HumilityWinter Light: A Christian’s Search for Humility by Bruce Ray Smith

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Now Available!

(Full disclosure: I am an author for Kalos Press and received a free copy of this book for review. Update: I just got my physical copy of the book. It looks great. And I do not say that lightly. Of course I look at this product as a foretaste of what my own book will look like.)

“I do not wish to be a parody of him whose name really is I Am.”

When I was asked to write a review for Winter Light, I got nervous. This is the first release from my publisher and I have this ridiculous desire to be honest about what books I like and don’t like.

What if it’s bad?

Thankfully, I loved this book enough to swallow it whole. The whole time I read, my heart beat like a hammer in my chest with conviction and catharsis. I could not stop reading, though it was painful sometimes. Painful, like the way a good novelist describes a broken heart all too well.

It’s a book about one man’s quest for humility. A journal. He call’s it his “winter journal.”

I cannot remember if it was Thomas Merton or Eugene Peterson who I heard talk of the “interior life” for the first time. “So that’s what it’s called.” Bruce Ray Smith gives us a glimpse into his and it worked like a mirror. A mirror reflecting back not only my own lack of concern for my pride but my own need to want humility.

Is it written well? Yes, very. It has the rhythm and style at times of poetry and the best of prose.

This book is not a sermon, lecture or manual. Thankfully. But a confession of oceanic depth of the very thing we all need to plumb but have the fear of doing so. Smith dives into his own pride and need for humility with honesty, intensity and a raw elegance. Without exhibitionism.

I had no reason to be nervous. In fact, I breathed a sigh of relief after about 40 pages in thinking, “these are the kinds of books we need in the Protestant, Evangelical world!”

The only problem? I wanted more. Hopefully there will be.

View all my reviews

Some Writing on Writing

(Update: This post is now also on Writerly Life, a very good blog for writers.)

(On Fridays, I’m going to be writing about this writing and publishing process I’ve been going through. I keep bumping into and talking to people who are interested in writing and being published, etc. Hopefully this will encourage them and entertain others.)

Someone who is writing must inevitably say something about their writing. The way it is done. The feel of it. In the midst of it even. And the more this person is read, the more they will be prone to write about the writing and the reading. There are just too many writers writing about writing to confirm this.

I do not compare myself to these writers unless an ant compares itself to elephants.

But when God stretches out the hand of grace to lend a dream, the most tepid of internal waters will stir in the heart of the lowly even, to speak of it.

Yesterday afternoon I heard from the editor. Thankfully when I opened the email I’d no idea what the contents were, though the subject line should have made it more than obvious. If I had known, I’d have prayed before hand. My mind, had of course gone to the place where the worst of reviews and the best of reviews stood side by side trading places for primary expectation.

The deadliest was, “No one will read this.” With an eye-roll to boot.

The one making my heart soar was, “I love this.” Simply that. Maybe it is not good to tell you that’s what I wanted to hear more than anything. But it is true. So I lodged hope there, tucked it in and waited outside while it slept soundly.

Maybe all this comes from the past. It has roared into the present like a train into station.

All the writing started because Mrs. Derieux pulled me out into the hallway of W.J. Christian School after I told her I did not want to memorize a poem. I can remember the fifth-grade feeling the moment I said it. I might have said it was for girls. So fear. Also because I was shy (a year would cure this) and stuttered (still do) and recitation of something like a poem felt impossible.

Either after the rebuke in he hallway or during the rebuke Silverstein was put in my hands. And like a trout destined for an almond crusting, I was hooked. And forever thankful for it.

From then on, I began to fill notebooks of poems. For a time I would write poems making fun of other students. Then they became ‘serious,’ mimicking songs I heard lulling out of cassettes.

Once in HIgh School, I ignored my classes for them. A teacher found one of these notebooks and I expected him to laugh, but he just looked at me puzzled, which I preferred.

On into college I scribbled them down. Some long and some spread over dozens of pages. All terrible. But I took a creative writing class in which I languished and dreaded each day. I remember nothing but the critiques leveled like breathy daggers and paper bullets. I got a C. And it was most likely deserved. But I’ve written almost no poetry since. And rarely enjoyed writing anything till I finished Seminary.

So when an editor writes back and says more than what I could have hoped for, it felt like it needed to be written about. Not only was the content commended but so was the way it was written. I ruled cloud nine last night.

Not because it makes me anything special – many are writing and are far more competent than I am. Not because it means I’ve achieved anything yet – the book hasn’t even been released. Not because I think I’ll make much money doing this – I’ll still have to work of course. But because it’s the very thing I thought would never happen – and yet is happening.

Random Thoughts for Thursday

1. Last night I slept like a baby. Except I wasn’t in a crib and didn’t wear a diaper. And didn’t go to bed at eight. Or sleep till seven. Or need changing when I woke up.

2. Went to the beach. Ate shrimp about six different ways. Came back.

3. My son wanted to be like Han Solo. So he unbuttoned his shirt.

4.  Most people are not pastors and missionaries. Most recommended Christian biography is of pastors and missionaries. This is a problem.

5. Went to the beach. Ate bacon about six different ways. Came back.

6. Last Friday night I slept for over 11 hours. This will forever go down in Matt Redmond history as The Night of the Great Sleep.

7. Speaking of diapers, my 2 year old can walk around in just that in this heat. I’m jealous.

8. I’m not sure the bikini is for everyone.

9.  We drink Folgers. Take that hipsters.

10. Well, turned in my manuscript. Now what?

None Were Unique

Some memories of my Dad are like mercury. I just can’t seem to get a handle on ’em. Others are like fixed points in my past’s night sky by which life could be sailed back through safely. And then there are those memories which are the coming together of dozens forming one pressing against the walls of my life, forming it. And doing so in ways I could not understand till I had my own kids.

Going to get a chocolate shake at McDonald’s after time at the dentist, Dr. Vines pipe-smoke still in my nose. Handing tools to him while he laid under the car covered in grease, his face making the same one my does when straining against something. Doing my best to stay quiet while he sits rock still in the brown-orange Lay-Z-Boy after a long day as a pastor, while my mom fixes supper in the kitchen. His calm patience while I learned to drive in his Plymouth Reliant. Shooting baskets and throwing baseballs. Grilling.

None of these are one particular memory. Just as a flock of birds is one living flying form, these memories move along together in the past having become one memory flowing together in a stream against the blurry backdrop of the forgotten.

My first thought is to wish I could remember one of these in particular. I can’t. But maybe the reason why is they are so repetitive as to be indistinguishable.  A faithfulness in so many small ways over such a length of time as to only be understood in the aggregate. If one could be remembered it would possibly belie the uniqueness of the “event.” But none were unique.

The taste of the chocolate is embedded in my palate’s memory because it happened often enough for each to spill on into the other. I can feel the greasy tools slide between my fingers still because of the many times this was done. The smell of a ball glove rings true because of 10,000 pitches. I can sit down, close my own eyes just before supper and hear the echo of his own silence and my mother’s stealth movement in the kitchen. As I’ve scratched at these memories, they’ve rubbed off and made indelible marks on my own fatherhood. Hopefully marks of the same breed of faithfulness.