Morning Thanks

Garrison Keillor once said we'd all be better off if we all started the day by giving thanks for just one thing. I'll try.

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Morning Thanks--the old Rehoboth church


I feel a little embarrassed about admitting it because it's such a "retired guy" thing to do, thumb through a shoebox of old pictures. But there I was a couple of days ago, digging through scads of blurry photos in search of a snapshot or two of my sister.

That's her, along the sidewalk. You can barely make her out, and I wouldn't have known who it was if my mother hadn't written her name and mine on the back. That's me on the other side of the church steps. I'm ten. Feel free to doubt. I could blow it up on our flat screen TV and still not identify either of us.

But I know I was there, and I remember a trip to California when we stopped at Rehoboth, our mission in New Mexico, emphasis on our, a gospel mission among the Navajo people that my father was sure belonged to us, members of the Christian Reformed Church. It was summer. No throng of kids were around, but I have blurry memories of stopping there--of the high desert landscape, of round bread ovens at Zuni, of a boxy dining hall just across the compound from this old church. 

Still, finding this picture was pure joy, a revelation. There I am, close to sixty years ago.

Just a half-dozen years ago I tramped around that very region on assignment, writing a book about families--Native and Anglo--who, for generations, had been connected, one way or another, with Rehoboth mission, a pointedly "Reformed" idea that had its origins in what we used to call "covenant theology."

But the book wasn't supposed to be about theology. My assignment was to interview people, to ask them about their lives and their feelings about this very church and the whole concept of missions and mission schools. Let people tell their stories. Listen to them. Record. Help us remember.

That assignment changed my life, altered its course, simply but certainly brought me into a world I'd known very little about. All those hefty phrases are accurate, even though they feel heavier than they might seem. I didn't come away from New Mexico any more sinless than I ever was, but listening to all those people made me look out the world around me, around us, in a different way.

A couple decades earlier, and probably twenty years after this family picture was taken, I was seated in a pew at a worship service in that church in the old picture. I was listening to a preacher named James Lont hold forth on a hearty Reformed theme--the providence of God. He was speaking to kids, high school kids, the kids from my suburban Phoenix church among 'em. 

I'll grant you that his topic sounds like a heavy load for high school kids, but it wasn't. Lont told them that although God's designs include mysteries none of us are quick or smart enough to determine, they are there. "You may not believe this, he said, but there's a reason you're here in this chapel today." That's faith.

I can't speak for any of the kids we took along for the retreat all those years ago, but Lont was on the money when it came to me. 

I've spun a thousand stories in my life, most of them as real as this one. What I've come to understand is that one of the characteristics we love about good stories, even if and when we don't take the time to chart them out or think them through, is a strange, boomerang quality: stories often return to the place they came from--or at least we like them to. They are somehow pleasing if they carry some rough-hewn unity, if they double-back on themselves, if they return to places they touched early on. 

We like those stories because we like to believe there's reason and cause and unity amidst the chaos of our lives. We like to believe things have shape and meaning. Like most Native folks, we like our stories to come in circles. Like this one: that's me in the picture, almost 60 years ago. 

Just so happens the church is gone now. Went down just last week. It had to go. People at Rehoboth tried to keep it alive for years already, but for the last decade or so it was on life support. Out came the wrecking ball, and the old Rehoboth church is no more.

I'm a long way from New Mexico this morning, way up here in cold Iowa at the far end of a winter that just won't end. But a couple of nights ago I stumbled across this fuzzy photograph no one else could possibly value. 

No one but me, but then I'm the kid beside the steps of the Rehoboth church. Even though I'm nowhere close to that old creaky place and spent most all of my life elsewhere, I never really left. That's the circle. That's the story.

And for that circle of meaning, good Lord, I couldn't be more thankful this cold morning.

3 comments:

-dk said...

Jim,
Thanks for this post. A couple weeks ago I was at Rehoboth doing some volunteer work. Indeed the old church is gone, but I had the privilege of worshiping in the new building, working in a mid school classroom and watching basketball in the brand new high school. Perhaps my ‘circle’ there is just beginning. Thanks for helping me relive some really good times.
-dk

Ron Polinder said...

Sorry, Jim, I am a few days behind in reading this post. So much can be said—was so pleased to be with you in creating the book, and setting up the interviews. To your everlasting credit, you did listen to these terrific people, and wrote well about them. I will never forget the evening be passed out the books to the family’s who’s stories were included—such a warm and wholesome couple of hours. Nobody wanted to go home. Reminds me of the song “In this very room, there’s quite enough love......”. Given the cross-cultural character of those present and the joy of it all, you said something to the effect that this was as close to heaven and you had ever experienced. And as you claimed, it changed your life. Wow, those are not cheap statements.

Now to the Rehoboth the church, I posted elsewhere: This “comment on the mix of emotions that many boarding students may have. Ed Carlisle often talked about Rev Poel and the reading of the 10 commandments and how that helped him in law school. He warmly spoke of the moral compass that provided him for his life and profession. Others would testify to the legalisms that colored their view of the Christian faith—marching to and from church twice a Sunday, and the discipline rendered if they misbehaved. Like so much of our church’s effort, it was a mix bag, Yet, I would claim the the Word does not return empty, and thus I am thankful for that church and most of what it represents.” I had the privilege of sitting at the feet of Rev. Rolf Veenstra for 7 or 8 years, which changed my life.

Thanks for writing about this, Jim. We are headed to Rehoboth in a couple of weeks, and the absence of that visual memory of the church that nurtured so many, the marriages and funerals and professions of faith, and the faithful preaching of the Word will cause me great sadness, yet I will stand in awe on the holy ground of the old Rehoboth church, and give thanks. My daughter Stacia will be there also, who was.part of that church her first 10 years of life,and maybe we will together sing the doxology. Why don’t you come down, we would love to have you join us!

Ron Polinder

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