A Day of Study

Today I’ll be working on a paper for my doctoral class this semester.

My “mobile office” will be parked at the Illinois Wesleyan University Ames Library today. It’s the statue library, you’ll see 2 of them below. I enjoy working on the fourth floor, it provides the best view (not that I get to enjoy it much).

The Mobile Library

The mobile office.

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Statue 1

The statue that’s sometimes dressed with interesting pieces of clothing.

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Statue 2

The main rotunda with yet another statue.

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Elevator Up

Up to the fourth floor.

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The study room

The view from the study room.

New Phone

I got a new phone (long story) and now I have one of those obnoxious cameras. Here’s what happened today:

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Erin shows up for early morning chapel rehearsal @ 6:45 AM. She’s still sleeping.

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Kenyon is sleeping with his eyes open at the same rehearsal.

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Tom and Adam are wide awake at the rehearsal (after much coffee, I suspect).

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Jeff is not amused by the new phone.

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The Webhound investigates said phone.

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Jacob stops by for a Senseo.

A Hymn to Life

A hymn to Christ,
All Hope come true,
Who paid with love
His brother’s due.
And last of all,
Who’ll rout the foe,
And best of all,
Whose God we know.

A hymn to God,
Whose breath we’ve breathed,
Whose voice we’ve heard
And ways perceived;
Who asks our best,
But loved us first
And loves us still,
Despite our worst.

A hymn to love,
A hymn to life:
The love of child,
The love of wife.
No higher gift,
Save God alone,
Than these whom life
Has named our own.

A hymn to friends,
Life’s long surprise
Of opened doors
And widened eyes.
‘Round laughing fires
Of wit and art,
We dance a while,
Then weep to part.

A hymn to church,
Our waking place
To early calls
And gifts of grace,
Where simple hearts
Learn thoughtful ways,
And searching minds
Are led to praise.

A hymn to earth,
The bountiful,
In wonder still
More beautiful.
Our priestly part
Of this great whole:
To sound its praise,
To shape its soul.

Depart my soul;
Depart in peace.
Run swiftly to
A Higher Feast:
God’s Joy, for wine,
God’s Light, for bread.
Feast long my heart;
His table’s spread!

- by Robert Stamps

Caffeine Dreams Building

I’m in a great coffee house in Omaha, NE called Caffeine Dreams. I’ve avoided (for the day) most of the in-laws. Actually, Krista’s mom and Grandma are sick, so the usual flurry of activity is not as heavy as usual.

My sister-in-law is graduating with her Doctorate in Occupational Therapy from Creighton University this weekend; we are all jammed into her small, upstairs 1 bedroom apartment and various hotel rooms.

In other news: The truck is officially totaled. Christmas is still canceled in some places.

Catching up

We leave for Nebraska today. We will stop in Kewanee tonight to drop off the dog and shave a bit off the travel time. I’m still a little skittish when I drive; the accident (black ice on an interstate overpass, 50-55 mph head on crash with a concrete guard rail) has made me more timid than I thought it would. When the truck was spinning out of control on the bridge, all I could think was “I do NOT want to die like this.” I heard a lecture by Stanley Hauerwas about a year ago and he was talking about how people today want quick and painless deaths as opposed to people who lived during the Middle Ages and the Reformation. Those people wanted to have long deaths, so they could get their lives “in order,” so to speak. I think I would rather endure a long and painful illness than to be pulled from my family and friends so quickly. [Interjection: I'm at Starbucks and I hear two soccer moms using the Bible to justify why they should be distant to some relatives they don't like, because "the Bible says: a friend is closer than a brother." Yes, it's right next to the part about "the consumer inheriting the earth." End Interjection.] I really did think it was all over; icy bridge, 55 mph, heading for the rail. But somehow I am still here. When I get a free mental moment, I still get absorbed in my own mortality and the mortality of those around me and the idea that this is not the way it was in the beginning (or will be in the end, for that matter). And again I am stuck in the present-ness of our fallen reality rubbing up against the restored reality that God will completely usher in someday.

In other news: I begin my Doctorate in Worship Studies at Robert Weber’s Institute for Worship Studies in a few weeks. This is the best I’ve felt about starting any kind of educational endeavor; it just seems like a good fit.

I’ve gone through 3 ½ bags of Senseo coffee over the last 2 weeks. I love the machine. It probably rates about a 7 out of 10 for coffee taste, but it makes up for its small deficiencies by brewing my cup in 19.5 seconds, super fresh every time. Is it as good as a properly pulled shot of espresso? No, but it handles the middle ground well (pun intended and apologized for).

All the talk this week in private and public conversations has been about whether or not to have worship services on Christmas Day. Maybe I wasn’t listening close enough, but I don’t remember having this kind of conversation in the past, although I can’t remember the last time Christmas was on a Sunday. More later.

Almost here

I’m on my way tonight to pick up tickets (hopefully) for the midnight showing of The Goblet of Fire on Thursday. Krista and I will be fighting sleep and strange people dressed in costume. More reports to come.

UPDATE: The tickets have been secured. I will now pick up my half moon spectacles from Pete (who has been hoarding them since the release of Book 6).

Happy Birthday Hannah

In 4 days Hannah turns one year old. Birthday parties for one year olds are for the adults, not the one-year-old. She will remember nothing about it, but here are a few things I remember about past birthday and birthday parties:

  • I remember having a Superman party when I was 5 or so. We all had capes. The cake was shaped like superman and yes, It was weird slicing him up; he wasn’t the man of steel that day.

  • I remember having a cake one year in the shape of R2D2 of Star Wars fame. I remember being afraid of the black icing, but quickly conquering my fear.

  • Of course, there was at least one McDonald’s party that was either for me or someone else, I can’t remember. It was McDonald’s; something in the food is placed there to make you forget about it, otherwise, why would you go back?

  • I remember going to an acquaintance’s party when I was about 10. I say acquaintance because I didn’t know him well, but we were in the same class and lived somewhat near each other. He invited most of the guys in the class. I remember going to the store with my mom to find him a gift, thinking all the time, “I don’t know this kid well, I really don’t want to go.” When I showed up, I was the only one who came. I’m glad I went, and even a selfish 10 year old learns that kind of a lesson quickly.

  • Hannah, I hope you find the joy of celebrating with others, no matter who or what the occasion. We need it. We pass it up too often. We have other things to do or other people to do things with, but don’t pass up the opportunity to celebrate with those who need celebration.

    Here’s to a happy 1st year and many more to come!

    Goodbye Summer

    Today is the last day of summer. It always makes me second guess all the times I stayed inside and should have been outside. Each year I depress Krista at the end of the summer by saying “there goes another summer, I only have 46 or so of them left now.”

    When I was a kid, I used to like fall the best. We didn’t turn on the air conditioning much and the dog turned our backyard into a dusty land-mine field. But now I enjoy summer the most. I’m sure some of it has to do with the fact that I’m off for two months. But now it’s more about no shoes and daylight.

    Goodbye summer. When it’s January and I don’t even want to walk outside, I’ll think of you and how all those old people are smart for going to Arizona or Florida or southern California. We weren’t built for this kind of cold weather. This must be a result of the fall. Sin=January north of the Equator.