CBC Happenings

What's happening at Collinsville Baptist Church and in our community.

Saturday, May 20, 2006

CBC Happenings

CBC Happenings

Saturday, May20 New Haven, Connecticut

Matthew, one of our sons, is getting his Masters here this weekend. We arranged our flights to stop here for the graduation. It seems strange to be back home but not all the way home.

After the last article, it was 1:30 Friday morning. Just as I sent that article, my wife came downstairs to the computer room at the hotel. She and I had finished packing, and we decided to walk back to the Western Wall (the Jewish place of worship that is by the wall of the Temple Mount). We thought that everything would be deserted, but we followed several Hasidic Jews down the market lanes of the Old City to the Wall.

The Wall is beautifully lit at night. There was a nice breeze and the temperature was about 55. There at the Wall were at least a hundred people praying. The men, dressed all in black, were bobbing up and down as they read from the Torah and prayed.

The area is divided between men and women. My wife walked over to pray with the women. She carried a small piece of paper with a special prayer concern. As she prayed, she put the paper in a crack in the wall, a custom used by people for many years.

Israel is different from anywhere else we have ever been. I think that it is different from anywhere else in the world. The Jewish worshippers are so devout, as are the Muslims and Christians. So many people worshipping so hard in such a small place. There is an atmosphere of spirituality all around.

The day before we had walked through the markets shopping just as the Muslim time of prayer began. From loud speakers all around, Muslim leaders were calling people to prayer. The shoppers and owners mostly completed ignored the call to prayer. But not all. As we passed one shop, there was the owner, kneeling on his prayer rug, praying as if it was only he and Allah in the market.

I am a Christian. I know that all over the city there were Christians gathered at shrines and holy places praying. For me, and a lot of other people, Jerusalem seems like being at home, being in the presence of God and feeling a peace unlike anywhere else in this world. I think a taste of the feeling we will have in the world to come. "Jerusalem, My Happy Home" the Gospel song says.

As we left Jerusalem, there were some disappointments. I wrote in my first article about wanting to see my friend Muhammed. I did not. The people at the hotel would say only that he is very sick. There were also places I had hoped to visit that we did not see. And I left wanting more. More of being home in Jerusalem.

But home in Alabama called, so we left. And tonight most of the rest of my family will be here to help us celebrate the graduation. Being with them will be home, too.

I will miss many people we met. The four men who were grilling on small charcoal pits by the Dead Sea. As I waited for the rest of our group to come back from the shower house, I talked with them some. One spoke a little English. They gave me a plate with kebobs and another grilled meat, humus, tomatoes, charcoaled onions, pita bread. Wonderful. Maybe the best meal of the trip. They were from Nazareth, and I will probably never see them again, but I will never forget the smell of the charcoal, the sun glinting off the Dead Sea, the taste of the food, and their generosity. They gave me two more plates of food to share with the other six in our group.

Sister Anne, from Ireland. I met her while on my daily run, just outside the walls of the Old City. Running in the grass of Mount Zion. She and a friend had gotten lost. We talked just a few moments and realized we were brother and sister in Christ. Enough. I gave them directions and watched them walk up the path to Zion Gate.

Mr. Dejani, the hotel proprieter, who is trying desperately to keep the Imperial Hotel open. Gloria and I sat in his office Thursday and listened to him talk about Palestine, America and the world. He and his hotel are caught in the middle of a land fight between Israelis and Palestinians. We hope that he will be there next time, but we do not know. My wife and I both hugged him good by in Arabic fashion, once on each side, my wife with kisses on each cheek, then hand over heart to show peace and love.

The two girls in Nazareth. They were in their school uniforms on the way home from school. Probably about thirteen years old. They held hands and led us to the place that we were hunting. Beautiful smiles, very little English, just wanting to help us.

And especially Mauchmud, the baker. His family has owned a bakery in the Old City for two hundred years. Gloria and I stopped to get some pastries about half way through the trip. It was near nine at night, past closing time. He invited us to come in and sit down. We found ourselves sitting on small plastic stools as he made us fresh mint tea on the small burner in the second room. He warmed our breads in the oven.

His English is very poor (of course, much better than our Arabic). He has two wives, though we do not know if that means one died and he remarried, or he just has two wives. Several children and grandchildren. His movements in the two small rooms of the bakery were very economical. He sat our tea on a tray on a plastic crate and sat with us. We talked a while. How different. Christian, Jew. American, Palestinian. And yet how similar. He told us to come back the next night.

We arrived, and he invited us in. We showed him our family pictures. "Very nice, very nice", he said. He called me into the side room. He showed me the five trays of cinnamon rolls he had saved to make when we arrived. He fired up the 120-year-old oven. Wonderful. The aroma. Some of the rest of our group came by and stopped.

Gloria, Debra and I went back Thursday night. We had tea, sat on the plastic chairs and tried to talk. We said good by until the next time. "In'shallah", I said (about my only Arabic). In God's will, in God's time. Arabic for the good Lord willing. He smiled and we hugged. He stopped us and gave us a bag of sesame treats, a bread/cookie. "Gift, gift for you", he said, waving his hand to indicate all of us. And we walked out of his bakery, down the market and back to the hotel.

And so here I am in New Haven. In America, but not home in Alabama or home in Jerusalem. An eleven-and-a-half hour plane ride, waiting in customs in two countries,then driving through New York to here. A thirty something hour day.

Gloria and I sat in our car waiting to cross the George Washington Bridge in New York City. "Twenty Minute Wait" the sign said above us. This is, evidently, about average. We were near exhaustion. I glanced at my watch. Exactly twenty four hours earlier we had been walking to the Western Wall.

I reached into the back seat and unzipped my small carry on bag, pulling out a plastic bag. My wife and I shared some of Mauchmod's gift pastries as we waited in the traffic. Sweet. A taste of Jerusalem. Waiting for home with memories and with hopes.

Thursday, May 18, 2006

CBC Happenings

CBC Happenings


Thursday, May 18 Jerusalem

I have a friend named Yacob who owns a tour company. He once told me that if the tour to Israel is over ten days there should be a free day at the end. Today is our last full day in Israel, and it is our free day.

A free day is usually very expensive because you do what all good Americans should do at the end of a trip -- shop. Tonight we all went through the Western Wall Tunnel. Some of our group went to the Israel Museum and the Tower of David, but all of us shopped. There were things that we wanted to buy and things that we were supposed to buy. Time was short and money needed to be spent.

Shopping in the souqs, the markets, is an adventure in itself. Few shops have set prices. Most every purchase involves bartering. And you are bartering with people who are professionals. You work hard to get them down to a price
that means they probably only have a hundred per cent profit.

The seven of us have just finished meeting in the empty ball room of the hotel. Jim, the pastor from Montgomery, his wife Pearleen, Joey and Terri from Houston, and Debra, Gloria, my wife, and myself from Collinsville. We talked about the trip -- the goods, the bads, the funny little things that will always bond us together. Jim sang a song about the Christian life. We
talked about the things we will go home to face and promised to pray for each other. Gloria sang "I Walk Today Where Jesus Walked" (we could sing it everyday). Then we held hands and prayed and sang "We Are Standing on Holy Ground". Holy Ground.

For Christians, the holiest ground in the world is Holy Sepulchre, the church which covers the site where Jesus was crucified and where he was buried (and all Christians believe was resurrected).

Last night my wife and I went to the church. It was near closing time. The crowds of earlier in the day were gone. We were able to kneel under the altar together and place our hands on the rock where Jesus was crucified. Then we
were able to go into the tomb and spend several minutes there with just the two of us. Touching the place where Jesus lay. Holding hands and praying with each other and for each other. Alone in the tomb except for each other and Jesus. We put our arms around each other and held tight.

Tonight we went back and Debra came with us. I thought the emotions had to be drained from us, but that was wrong. We all three placed our hands on the stone of the burial place. An aura, a feeling of power flowing into us. My wife and Debra held each other and prayed and cried. Then they came out of the tomb and cried some more and hugged some more. When we get back home, we will have much more than souveniers with us. Precious memories.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

CBC Happenings

CBC Happenings


Wednesday, May 17 The Medditeranean Coast

Today we traveled from the Sea of Galilee to the Medditeranean Coast. Driving in Israel is not like driving here. The main insturment on an Israeli car is the horn. Our rental van has a very nice horn, but I am a novice at its use compared to the other drivers.

It is honk, honk. Then watch out for that car cutting in. Or the motorcycle going between cars that are traveling at 120 kilometers an hour (you do the math). Best of all may be watching people somehow park three cars in a space
for one while someone else is backing out. All the cars here have their door mirrors hinged so that there can be an extra three inches to squeeze between cars. The drivers just reach out the window, pull their mirror in, squeeze by the other car (usually with a stone wall on the other side), and then snap the mirror back into place.

And so we drove to Megiddo, the town that stood at the head of the Armegeddon Valley for thousands of years. The water tunnel is an amazing engineering feat. It is a place that stands on the edge of much end time prophecy. A place that has seen warfare for centuries.

Then we drove on to the coast to climb to the top of Mount Carmel. On this mountain, Elijah faced several hundred prophets of Baal. His call to the Isrealites there that day was, "How long will you hop from foot to foot?" How long will you worship Baal one day and Jehovah God the next? Foot hopping is still very popular.

We then went down the coast and stopped for long enough for everybody to play in the water a while. Wade. Pick up shells. Enjoy the sun and the blue Medditeranean. Be children again for just a while.

Our last stop was Caeseara, the port city built by Herod the Great. Herod, Pilate and other Roman rulers lived here in oppulence. They had palaces and temples to Roman gods inculding the emperor.

Peter came here to bring the message of Christianity to a Roman soldier named Cornelius. So began the church with those who were not Jews.

Paul sat in the prison here for two years. He was tried by the Roman rulers. We looked at the ruins of Herod's palace, the ruins of the hippodrome, the ruins of the theatre. Ruins everywhere. The message of Peter and Paul remains.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

CBC Happenings

CBC Happenings

Tuesday, May 16 The Jordan River

Late this afternoon I went swimming in the Sea of Galilee, and it was not my best experience of the day in water. Tonight the seven of us ate dinner within sight of the Galilee, and that was not the best experience, either. Even when Jim's wife, Pearleen spilt water all over him (she said by accident), that certainly was not it.

We began the day by making a short stop in Tzfat, a city in northern Israel that is a home of Jewish mysticism. It is a beautiful city on a mountain with synagogues mixed among artists' shops, a place where Judaism celebrates great rabbis and their teaching. There had been a feast last night remembering one of them -- dancing and bonfires all over the Galilee.
Then we went to Cana. We went into the church built to commemorate where Jesus turned water into wine. On the last day of a seven day wedding celebration, the family had run out of wine for their guests. Jesus' mother, Mary, told the servants to ask her son what to do. Jesus promptly changed several jars of water into wine (this was not a Baptist gathering). Water to wine. But not the best thing about water for the day.

Next we went to Nazareth, where Jesus grew up. It is also where Mary was told by an angel that she would bear the Son of God. Her answer -- "let it be unto me as you say," is an amazing statement by what had to be a frightened young woman. It is also a reminder of the need for surrender to God for all of us.

In Nazareth there are several places to remind of Mary and Joseph and Jesus. As a father who deeply loves his four sons (and two daughter-in-laws and one wonderful grandson), I was moved to be in Joseph's carpenter shop, to think about Joseph guiding the young hands of Jesus with a plane as he also taught him Jewish Scripture. Oh, that I could be such a father for my children.

The Church of the Annunciation is built over Mary's house where many think the angel appeared to her. There is another church at the town well. Many think that Mary had gone to draw water when she saw the angel. You can still drink from that well, but that was not the best water of the day, either.

After Nazereth, we drove to the Jordan River. Here three of the women in our group, Debra, Terri and Gloria, wanted to be baptized. All three had been baptized before. All three are deeply committed Christian women. I asked each of them to tell the others there on the river bank why they wanted to be baptized again. Their answers all involved wanting to be in the same water where Jesus was baptized and wanting to recommit themselves to a deeper Christian walk.

Debra came first. I held my hand up and started to say, "I baptize you, my sister, Debra..." and I made the mistake of looking her in the eyes. My voice cracked and I had to stop for a moment. Finally, I finished, "in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit".

Then came Terri. Again I made the mistake. Terri looked back at me and I had to choke back tears.

Last came Gloria, my wife. She is the strongest Christian I have ever known. This time a tear slid down my cheek as I baptized her. Then I asked her to put her hand on my head and baptize me. Husband and wife. Brother and sister in Christ.

Christians believe that baptism is the sign of entry into the Church, the family of God. It is a change within that never ends. Water that shows new life. That's the best water of the day. The best water of any day.

Monday, May 15, 2006

CBC Happenings

CBC Happenings

Sunday, May 14 The Dead Sea

The next time you see me I will be better looking. I know that's so because the young people at the Dead Sea today told me so.

Today we left Jerusalem. We drove down into the Dead Sea Valley, going to over 1,000 feet below sea level. As you make the descent, you enter a different world. It is a world where Bedouin still tend sheep and goats. They sometimes
ride pick ups and sometimes donkeys. We saw both today.

It is a world that Israelis have made green in many places with date and orange orchards -- islands of green in desert wilderness. A place so empty of life that the New Testament says that Satan led Jesus into this area to be tempted. It is not hard to visualize that here.

It is a world with echoes of Jewish life from 2,000 years ago. Qumran, where a separatist sect of Jews, the Essenes, lived in community desiring to draw closer to God and further from the world. It is from their writings that the Dead Sea Scrolls came, discovered 55 years ago by a Bedouin shepherd boy in a cave above the remains of their buildings.

And of Masada, the rock mounain fortress that Herod the Great built here to be impregnable. His palace and fortress were occupied by the Essenes in a revolt against Rome seventy years after Herod and forty years after Jesus. Masada fell to the Romans, but the defenders committed suicide rather than be killed or enslaved by the Romans. Today, in the Israeli army, each person taking the oath of allegience to Israel climbs Masada and swears, "Masada will never fall again."

And it is the world of the Dead Sea, that body of water in the lowest place on earth. Because it has no outlet, the Dead Sea has an extremely high mineral content. The salt content is so high that a person can not sink in the water, but any swimmer soon learns that the salt also hurts on any little scratch and
is painful in the eyes.

The minerals in the water make a mud on the bottom of the Sea that are so rich that they make you beautiful. At least, that's what the people who were rubbing it on themselves told us. So two of us decided to try it out. Terri and I put the black, gooey, sulfur smelling mud on ourselves and waited for it
to dry. Then we got back into the water and washed it off. Voila!! We are beautiful, or at least my wife says so. You can tell me what you think when you see me back in Alabama. For me, I think that I will go take another shower -- the mud smell is still on me. It is not beautiful.

Monday, May 15, Sea of Galilee

In the Galilee, you can finally exhale. That is one way that I explain the difference between Jerusalem and the area around the Sea of Galilee.

In Jerusalem there is so much emotion and so many intense feelings that you often feel as if you are clenching your fists and holding your breath. I do not mean because of the political situation, though I could. I mean because of the spiritual feelings. It is true for Jews and Muslims. And it is true for Christians. How could you pray in the Garden of Gethsemane, touch the rock of Golgotha or enter the tomb of Jesus and not be overwhelmed?

In the Galilee, it is different. There is an atmosphere of peace.Today we walked for a while by the Sea of Galilee. We skipped rocks and picked up shells. We sang. And we expected Jesus to walk around the bend and join us. My wife, Gloria, sang "We Walk Today Where Jesus Walked" to me.

We walked in the remains of the city of Capernaum where Jesus had so much of his ministry. We stood at the chapel remembering the time when Jesus took two fish and five loaves of bread and fed thousands. And we expected to be able to sit down and join the crowd.

It was a glorious day - temperature in the 80's, clear blue sky, light reflecting off of the water. Where were Peter and James and John and Andrew in their fishing boat?

We stood on the side of the hill and read from the Sermon on the Mount and watched it come to life -- the house built on rock that stands-look there is a house on the rocks; a town on a hill that cannot hide itself-like the lights in the little town across the Galilee that glowed at us all last night; the birds that do not worry and the beauty of the flowers-just listen and look at them. And we somehow thought that Jesus might walk through the banana plants below us and smile as he waved at us.

The Galilee is different. A place to calm down and relax. A place to exhale. Gloria, our friend Debra and I walked up on two of our group, Joey and Terri, sitting under the shade and soaking their feet in the headwaters of the Jordan River. The rest of us had been busy walking and exploring the ruins of Ceaseara Phillipi. I think that I know which group Jesus would have joined.

Free Web Counter
Free Counter