Wise words

Today in church we read the story of the Wedding in Cana. It’s a fun and surprising story: Jesus, in his first miracle, turns water to wine for people already deep into their party.

I’ve often been moved by Mary’s role in this story. We don’t have many of her words written down, but here she says two things:

  1. To Jesus: “They have no more wine.”
  2. To the servants: “Do whatever he says.”

I’m not part of a tradition that venerates saints, so I don’t have any special connection to Mary as a saint.

But I like the simplicity of her words: she sees a problem, and she tells someone about it, someone she believes can help. Then she tells others that they should follow his lead.

It’s not boisterous or bold or brash. It’s just a clear statement of the problem, followed by a clear directive about how to solve the problem.

And then she gets out of the way. No protests, no explanations, no demand for recognition. Just a few simple words.

And it’s all so that the party won’t end too soon.

What a marvelously simple approach to being a leader.

When credentials matter more than knowledge and wisdom

I recently met a biologist who is one of the world’s experts in his subject area. I found him to be a brilliant resource and a good teacher, and he is in charge of an important resource at a major university. But he doesn’t have tenure, because he never finished his Ph.D.

Academia is often a place of smart people with some dumb policies.

I wrote a little more about my lack of credentials, and why it doesn’t bother me here.

Morning reading.

A copy of Aristotle’s Constitution of Athens being held open on the reader’s lap while a black dog places its head on top of the book and looks up at the reader.

If you still read physical books, let me recommend this book weight — and the St John’s College bookstore where I bought it. My favorite college bookstore in the world.

Brown leather book weight - like an elongated bow tie - on top of an open book, which happens to be Immersion: The Science and Mystery of Freshwater Mussels. The book lies open under the weight and on top of a brown wooden desk.

Really enjoying micro.blog. Thanks to @jthingelstad for getting me started, and to @manton for building and keeping the machine oiled!

Working on learning Markdown, and having fun with it. Just tweaked this post, and I welcome feedback on how it looks. (And on content, of course!)

I Still Believe

In an earlier post I wrote about this question people often ask me: “Why are you still here?"
And I mentioned that there are three main ways that question usually gets asked:

  • Why I am still a Christian when the church is in decline and religion has let so many people down?
  • Why I am still a professor when academia is expensive, in decline, and falling into disrepute? And
  • Why I am still working towards sustainability when the money is plainly elsewhere?

In this post, I’m going to talk about the first of those questions. I will write more about the others in later posts, and you can find some of my other writing about those topics elsewhere on my blog.

“I Still Believe”

Years ago a band called The Call had a song called “I Still Believe.” Michael Been sang of still believing through and despite wars, lies, storms, and a sense of being lost at sea.

I don’t know what inspired his song or what he believed in, but the song speaks of a kind of moral courage in the face of calamity, betrayal, and loss. 

He lived long enough to see a spectrum of moral and natural evils; what would it mean to cling to belief in such times? 

Been’s song will have to speak for itself. (I’ll recommend along with it his song “Become America," by the way.)

For me, belief is not about thinking I have chosen the right party. It is about reminding myself that I am not God.

Sentences like that are fraught, and I can imagine the sputtering objections from orthodox theists and from anti-religionists alike. Let them have their moment to speak. Each probably has something good to say, after all.

Rather than trying to convince others to join my view, I will simply do what people in my tradition have done for a long time: I’ll tell my story. You decide whether any of it resonates with you.

Practices Of A Community That Does Not Believe It Is God

Years ago, when I was working as a campus minister, a friend gave me a book by Eugene Peterson entitled Working The Angles. It was about the way that scripture, prayer, and preaching fit together. 

One of Peterson’s main points is that those three practices are interdependent.

  • Preaching without scripture and prayer is simply offering an opinion, and it’s dangerous both for the preacher and the listeners. Both of them might mistake it for immutable truth, for example.

  • Praying without commentary (commentary is another way to think about preaching) and scripture means praying without community, which can lead to loneliness and solipsistic despair. 

  • Reading scripture without commentary and without prayer reduces scripture to an academic exercise, separating the scripture from the life of the community. Scriptures ought to have something nourishing to say about our life together.

The Divine Is Not My Tool, But Liturgy Can Be

Peterson was writing for pastors and lay ministers like me, but his idea is relevant for all of us.

Whether formally or informally, we all form opinions about the divine, community, inherited traditions, and our mutual obligations. That part is unavoidable. 

The big question is what will help us to form healthy opinions about these things?

Liturgies - the things we do together, regularly, as practices of faith - help me a lot. 1

Too often we have seen politicians use the divine as a tool. I often cringe when politicians end their speeches with “God bless America,” as though it were punctuation or a rubric to let us know to applaud. 

Is it a priestly benediction? Or is it perhaps a public prayer? (Sometimes I hear “May God bless America,” and I prefer that one slightly because it feels more like an expression of hope.) Or is it, as I suspect, a kind of virtue signaling? 

It has become part of the political liturgy, although I think it has become detached from anything that would give it substance. 

It’s a sign that has lost most of its significance. 

Through Thick And Thin

Liturgies can become thin over time, like clothes that have been worn too long.

Political liturgies, which are often tools in the hands of those who wish to wield power, are even more susceptible to wearing thin. Unfortunately, like metal that has worn thin, they can still cut us and make us bleed, but they don’t do much to heal our wounds. 

Peterson’s triad of scripture, prayer, and commentary has a parallel in another text I read around the same time that urged pastors to engage in three liturgical practices that no one else would see: resting, tithing, and fasting. 

I admit I am not a natural fan of these three things. Each one involves giving up something I want for myself. 

But each one of them is good for me. 

Each one reminds me that I am not God, and they remind me of my place in the community. 

Each one is a thick practice, not a thin one. 

And each one promotes health for both the individual and the community.

  • Tithing and almsgiving is a regular reminder that we are worth more than money can ever measure
  • Fasting is a reminder that appetites should serve us, not the other way around
  • Resting is a reminder that our life is not our job or our career or our productivity 

One of the reasons I’m “still here,” then, is that my practices of religion remind me that I am not God.

And as simple and silly as that might sound, I have found it to be a huge help throughout my life. 

Don’t get me wrong: when I was a kid I got a newspaper delivery route as soon as I could so I could be out the door on Sunday morning before my family went to church. They couldn’t ever find me, and when I was done delivering papers I had the house to myself until they got home. 

Nowadays I’d still rather wake up early on Sunday and go stand in a river casting a fly rod, or go mountain biking or hiking. In other words, I don’t attend services because I think they’re nice; I attend because doing so is good for me, and I think it’s good for others when we show up together.

And it’s good for me in the way breathing is good for me. It’s not enough to take a very deep breath and hold it for a few weeks; it’s far better to breathe in and out regularly, all the time.

The Calendar And The Rhythms Of Life

The church calendar offers me seasons of feasting and fasting, jubilation and lamentation, quiet waiting and loud celebration.

As Byung-Chul Han has pointed out in several recent books, the alternative of life without ritual and without seasonality is life in which every day has the weight of all eternity on it. He calls this “the hell of the same.”

The church calendar is the opposite of that. It’s like a sampling of the heaven of differences. Just as the calendar offers seasonality, every service is a short walk through the history of the long community of faith, considering the scriptures together, offering commentary, and praying together. 

Every service includes lamentation and confession, and every service includes a renewal of the bonds of community in a meal taken together.And every time we get together we sing together, we speak together, we listen together, and we affirm one another’s forgiveness together.In other words, whenever we gather we are reminded that we are not God, that we are all on the same level, that we need one another, and that we hope together that there is more than the best we have been able to offer. 

Together we consider what we have done and what we have not done, and we ask ourselves: what then should we do to share the good things we have received?

As I wrote in a blog post a few years ago, prayer orients me and prepares me to live as I think I ought to live. And given my propensity for not doing what I ought to do, prayer allows for constant course correction.

I know from many conversations with friends and students that all of this sounds fine for me, but there are a many good reasons for others not to believe in a God. Fair enough! If that works for you, I’m glad.

Believing A Little In Order To Avoid Believing Myself Too Much

But before we move too fast, let me offer Cicero’s account of the Stoic philosopher Chrysippus, and his reason for choosing to believe, and what that has meant for me.

Chrysippus worried that he didn’t choose to believe in some god greater than himself, then by default he would believe in himself as the ultimate arbiter, since his own mind was the greatest mind with which he had intimate familiarity. Some have said that we are indeed condemned to believe in ourselves, finding ourselves thrown into the world without a compass or guide.

Chrysippus seems to suggest that we can choose to imagine a world that is charged with wonder, one where things happen beyond our understanding, one that invites us to inquire, one that has glimpses of beauty that transcends what our eyes can see. 

Consider the Manatee

This world really is charged with grandeur. The more I examine our fellow creatures across the kingdoms of life, the more I wonder about the world. 

The octopus and the squid seem to see as we see - with binocular vision - but their sight developed convergently and independently from ours. Do they see what we see, and as we see it? Could it be that their whole chromatophore-dappled body is a visual organ and not just the eyes? 

Or consider the stingray, which is a vertebrate like us. Does it see as we do? One funny thing about the stingray is that its eyes are on top of its body and its mouth is on the bottom of its body, so it likely never sees its food, but senses it (maybe thereby seeing it far more vividly) with electro-sensing ampullae than with its eyes. 

Or consider the manatee. Its vision developed along with ours as our mammalian relative, but its eyes are on the sides of its head. It might be that it uses its whiskers for finding its food far more than it uses its eyes. Manatees are slow, lumpy foragers just doing what they can to get by each day. Which is to say they’re a bit like us.

I could go on. Scallops have many eyes but no brain. Most bivalves seem responsive to light, but don’t even have eyes. A scorpion seems to know when its body is covered under leaf litter even though there is no sunlight and it cannot see its whole body. How does it know these things? Is its whole body an organ of perception? 

The world is full of creatures who perceive the world differently from how we perceive it. Ours is not a wholly divine point of view; it’s just one that sort of works for us.

What do we fail to perceive because we think too highly of a few of our own organs of perception? What do we miss when we think too highly of our own opinions?

Hold Good Things In Your Heart And Mind

Blaise Pascal wrote about just that. Opinions abound, and for most of them we can find some justification. We can find reasons to believe and we can find reasons not to believe. Sometimes we must choose where we will commit our time and energy and love. This ain’t easy.

In another and better known passage, Pascal suggests that we can simply weigh the consequences and choose to act like we believe. This has been much criticized but I think he is not altogether wrong. The critique usually runs along the lines of: Which god should we believe in? And if there are infinite possible gods, we cannot choose.

I like to compare Pascal’s choosing to believe to the choice of how we orients ourselves to our beloved. If we choose to think of them as the author of the last thing that they did that offended us, that resentment and rancor will grow and become their image. If on the other hand we choose to think of their best qualities, those things will grow and become their image in our hearts and minds.

In other words, we don’t change them or make them into something they are not, but we do wind up changing ourselves, and the way we give our love.

We cannot control other people, but we have some control over our own ruminations. And I cannot tell you what God is like. But I can tell you that when I contemplate the best things I imagine in God, I find myself growing in love, glad to be considering such things. 

As Paul of Tarsus urged, whatever is true, noble, right, good, lovely, admirable, praiseworthy - think about such things. I find that doing so makes me eager to imitate them in my interactions with others. No, this does not make me perfect or holy. But it does remind me that I can do better, and it prods me into trying to do better.

In other words, I’m not sure I can tell you which god you must believe in. But I’m with Chrysippus and Pascal in thinking that there are some things that I know I don’t have enough of, like wisdom and love.

As much as I can I’m going to worship the God I hope to be the God of wisdom and love. And I find that as I do so, if nothing else, I am more attuned to my own need to be wise, and to love more than I do.

Hope That Is New Every Morning

Because I constantly mess up when it comes to things like wisdom and love. I find I need grace. I need new beginnings. 

Years ago when someone asked me why I believe, I told her about the solace I found in faith, and about how I found models of familial love in some people of faith I knew, and how I found healing from some things I had suffered. 

Oh, she said, you came from a broken home, so you need religion to provide a family. I come from a healthy family, she added, so I don’t need religion. And that was the end of the conversation. 

Maybe she was right, but I wanted to tell her that I was describing only the symptoms of something bigger. I still find I need new beginnings each day, and, as the passage in Lamentations says, when life has been hard, God’s love never ceases, God’s mercies are new every morning. 

It’s comforting to imagine that I cannot exhaust the possibility of having new beginnings every day. Could that be abused? Of course. Does that empty it of power and meaning? Not at all. Any good thing can be abused; it is up to us to try to make good use of good things, and to help others to do the same.

Religious organizations and religious people will screw this up repeatedly. That doesn’t empty the religion of value, any more than those who abuse painkillers empty painkillers of their value. If you’re in pain, allow someone who has access to safe and well-dosed painkillers to treat you, and to diagnose and treat the cause of the pain. 

Several famous figures – Marx, Freud, and Nietzsche all come to mind2 have described religion as an opiate or as a medicine that provides compensation for what we have lost. They’re not entirely wrong. But religion is more than a painkiller; it offers a diagnosis of our condition, and it offers a community of healing.

Church As Hospital, Not Church As Country Club

To put it differently, communities of faith aren’t country clubs for those who have already made it (most of them are faking it anyway) but they are sick houses where the sick care for one another. 

If you’re worried that a church might be full of hypocrites, sinners, and unbelievers, you’re right: every single one is full of nothing but hypocrites, sinners, and unbelievers. That’s why the church is there.

Thing is, the church is one of those few places where you can say so out loud without violating the principles of the place. In fact, every service we all confess our sins aloud, together.

In my church we say it like this:

“Most merciful God,
we confess that we have sinned against you  in thought, word, and deed,  by what we have done,  and by what we have left undone.
We have not loved you with our whole heart;
We have not loved our neighbors as ourselves.
We are truly sorry and we humbly repent.” 3

The aim is to cover all the bases, and not to leave anything out.

We confess both our actions and our thoughts, and even our words, because words matter.

We confess both the things we did and the things we ought to have done.

We think back to what Jesus said about the two greatest commandments, and we confess that even when it’s boiled down to something so simple as that, we still have not kept either one. 

We are all on the same level, no one has it sorted out, no one gets to walk away and say well, I sure didn’t do anything wrong. 

There are no gradations of purity here, and no one gets to say yeah, I did this one little thing wrong but thankfully I’m not as bad as that jerk over there. 

We frame our errors against the goodness of God, and recognize that if we are quibbling over whose errors are greater or lesser, we are missing the point and failing to help one another strive towards doing better, towards loving God and neighbor as we should.

I feel like I ought to say more about this idea of loving God, but for right now I won’t. Well, I’ll say a little. Remember what I said earlier about not knowing who or what God is? I do have an inkling, and I try to better understand that inkling. I try to know God better, not in an academic way, but in a whole-life way. Whatever else love means, if love doesn’t involve caring attention, it’s probably not love. So I am trying to pay attention to God, and to do so with care.

And as I said about confession, I need help with this, because I’d always rather pay attention to my own interests. I’d rather sleep in than go to church. I’d rather hoard my money than give it to the poor and the needy. I’d rather gorge myself daily than fast and allow myself to remember the hungry and our common lot.

One of my grad school professors once said that she was opposed to the idea of purity. At the time, I thought of purity through the lens of my faith, and thought of it as something to strive for. Over the years I’ve come to see (I think) more of what she meant and I have come to agree with her. 

It’s too easy for us to imagine that we have somehow come up with the ideal version of purity, and then to enforce that on others. Too often we do this through shame, or through writing laws against the alleged impurities of others. Which is a way of saying we don’t all stand on the same ground.

Religious people are not immune to this temptation. Far from it! Thankfully, any religion that has even a glimpse of what Chrysippus was talking about has a reason to doubt their own notion of purity. 

We are not the final arbiters, and we are not the ones who have the clear vision of the world. The best we can claim to have is hope that someday we might see more clearly together. And religion (wisely, I think) puts off that someday for a very long time, lest anyone think we finally got there. 

Recently someone advised me (not for the first time, and probably not for the last time) that religion divides us and so we would be better off making culture without religion. 

I am very doubtful about this, and purity is one of the reasons why. Even as religious service attendance has declined in my country, calls for purity have not. And they come from all sides. I’ve heard well educated liberals and conservatives alike saying that people on the other side of a debate cannot be good people. Too often I’ve even heard folks calling for the death of their opponents. While I don’t think every opinion should get a warm reception or even a public platform, I am reluctant to say that there is any person who is so wrong that they fail the purity test that allows them to continue to live. 

If I need grace, others probably do too. If I need more love and wisdom, I imagine others might feel the same as well. And I hope to God that I’m not the highest standard of grace and love and wisdom out there. 

Listen To The Stories Others Tell

I hope you can see that what I’ve said here about my own story has parallels in other religions. That is, I’m not writing this to try to get you to convert to my party so we can team up in laughing at other religions. You are of course welcome to join me at services if you wish. But I know folks in other traditions trying to continue to practice a belief because they think their tradition offers a good counterpoint to the temptation of thinking we have our lives sorted out.

My point here has been to tell some of my own story. Part of my story is a belief that it is worth listening to others' stories as well. I’m writing this to tell a story, and stories aren’t competitors in a zero-sum game. Stories accumulate the way words in a dictionary do, slowly gathering each other and shaping each other in a community that grows and shifts over time. Stories are ways of bearing witness to what we have seen - and to what we guess that we don’t yet have eyes to see.

If you’ve got a story to tell, try writing it down, and thinking through it. That’s commentary.

And as much as possible, do it with a thoughtful community that will critique you and give you a tradition of guidance. Scriptures at their best are attempts to do that across generations.

And if you’re able to eke out even a tentative, modest prayer to a god like the one Chrysippus hopes for and imagines, you might find that helps you remember that you also might not be God.

Consider the manatee.



  1. The word “liturgy” comes from two old Greek words that mean “the work of the people.” It’s the stuff we all do when we are gathered together. In religious services, it’s the work of everyone gathered, and not just of the clergy. I think there are also political liturgies and cultural liturgies, like when we sing our national anthem before baseball games. We have mostly forgotten why we do that, but we all stand, face the flag, and sing or listen to someone sing for us. What has the anthem to do with baseball? It has become a liturgy - work we all do together. And like any liturgy, it bears examination and probably reformation. ↩︎

  2. That link is to a good book by Merold Westphal. He wrote it about some famous people who argue against religion, and he wrote it for religious people, as a Lenten meditation. I recommend it, especially as Lent is approaching. It can be good to listen to stories that differ from our own. ↩︎

  3. That excerpt is from the Book of Common Prayer. The Anglican Communion and its various churches do a good job of gathering well-formed prayers and offering them in published form for free. That can be helpful when you’re struggling for words. ↩︎

Thinking of making a game

I’m thinking of making a game that my students can play over a monthlong course in Spain and Morocco.

They study lots of systems: culture, language, religion, architecture, ecology.

Maybe a game can help them see how all the systems are connected!

Word of the Day: Huachicolero/huachicoleo

Huachicoleo is modern Mexican slang for fuel theft. A huachicolero is a fuel thief.

The words are also related to the making and selling of cheap alcohol.

I stumbled on this word in a news story last year and I was intrigued because it looks like it might be related to a word used in northeastern Guatemala: huechero, which means “tomb raider” or “grave robber.” My Mayan friends there use it when they talk about the people who find the thousands of tombs and temples in the dense forest (this is the downside of lidar maps becoming widely available) and dig into the base in search of pottery to sell.

According to Wikipedia, the origin of the word huachicolero is not clear. Maybe it’s from huachicol or guachicol, which mean cheap and poorly made alcohol.

Another source suggests that those words refer to the tool used to pick fruit from trees (a pole with a basket on one end, like we use for apples in our orchard, to reach the high fruit without breaking branches) and by association a person who uses it.

Most commonly, the word means someone who steals fuel by tapping into pipelines. When a word like that comes into common usage, it tells a story. Well, all words tell stories. But new words tell stories about new things, often using old words in new ways. In this case, it probably tells a story about local economies.

Wikipedia adds one more possible etymology, suggesting that it is from the Mexican slang word guacho, which Wikipedia says is from Mayan waach, which means thief.

That last sentence caught my eye for a few reasons.

First, there is no one Mayan language. Guatemala alone recognizes 21 different Mayan languages, subdivided into different families. Throughout Guatemala and Mexico I think there are thirty or so Mayan languages altogether. They bear some similarities, but they are different enough that a speaker of one Mayan language might not be able to understand a speaker of another.

Second, that word waach looks to me like the word used in some Yucatecan Mayan languages for “armadillo”. In Maya Itzá, that word is hueche or huex. The huecheros or grave robbers get their name from the armadillo, which spends its days rooting around the forest floor looking for food and digging small holes to get what it needs to eat.

Mine is just another speculative etymology, but I would guess that the modern Mexican slang is a new word that tells a story of economic problems, taken from a very old word that tells the story of a part of nature.

What's a Mussel Worth?

During my sabbatical I’ve been studying freshwater mussels.

This is partly because I teach about mollusks like bivalves and cephalopods in my environmental classes.

It’s also because I work to ensure global access to clean water. Here’s an example of some clean water work I did for IBM.

What do these things have to do with one another?

Of course, mussels need clean water.

But they also make clean water. A single mussel can filter gallons of water a day. A healthy population of mussels can filter a whole river.

Unfortunately, native mussels are endangered across the continent, and their populations are in decline.

Often when people hear I study freshwater mussels they ask me “Can you eat them?” (I can’t, no. And most people don’t like the taste, I’m told. Also, many of them are federally or locally protected, so I don’t recommend trying to eat them.)

But instead of asking what they’re worth if we consume them, consider what mussels might be worth if we value them and help them to thrive.

Answer: they’ll help us in return.

As Robin Wall Kimmerer and Kathleen Dean Moore have both written, “All flourishing is mutual.”

The mussels can provide us with clean water if we can provide them with slightly less dirty water.

I’ll have more to say about this in the coming months, so for now I’ll leave you with a photo of mussel shells I found while walking the rivers near where I live this month. My hope is that these dead mussels are signs that there are many more that are alive, and just waiting for our help to really flourish.

Auto-generated description: Four freshwater mussel shells are arranged on icy ground next to a person’s hand for scale.

Word of the Day: Stammtisch.

Word of the Day: Stammtisch.

A Stammtisch is a table for regulars at a coffee shop or restaurant. It names not just the table but the idea.

There’s something powerful in having a place where you regularly gather with others, a “third place” besides work and home. A lot happens at the water cooler, at the scuttlebutt, at church coffee hour.

Interestingly, many species of animals around the world have something like family reunions. Regular gatherings that reinforce bonds and serve to pass on knowledge to new generations.

We all benefit from the same thing. I’ve read of epidemics of loneliness; breaking bread with others might not be a cure-all for that, but I doubt it could hurt.

It probably shouldn’t surprise us that so many religions have gatherings around something similar: simple meals taken together as a community. As simple as bread and wine, or three palm dates.


I love learning new words, and hoarding them for my writing. I keep a file of good words, and try to include them in everything from my academic writing to my texts. If you’ve got some good words to share, I’d love to learn them!

Looking forward to a few weeks from now when there are fewer people at the gym.

Eagles and Swans on the Missouri River

We saw a few birds along the Missouri River yesterday. This time of year the bald eagles are abundant below the dams, where they find fish in the open water. Trumpeter swans, scaups, and Canada geese were there in large numbers, too. Cold weather has most of the river covered in ice, but the warm water flowing from under the dam makes places like Gavin’s Point a great spot for winter birdwatching.

Nature journaling with zigzag books

Hahnemüle pocket zig-zag books

Last year I upped my nature-journaling game by doing daily sketches in a Moleskine sketchbook. You can see some of those sketches on my Instagram

Recently I’ve added Hahnemühle ZigZag pocket sketchbooks. . Their small 5cm by 5cm sketchbooks fit into a small pocket easily, and they’re so small I don’t worry about details. I just make a quick sketch and then move on. They’re especially great when I am traveling, since one book will get me through two weeks of one sketch a day.

Sunrise hike along the river this weekend

Sunrise hike along the river this weekend here in Sioux Falls. Too beautiful not to share a couple of images with you.

I went out before sunrise, temps just above zero Fahrenheit. Went with a friend, and we walked for about an hour, just walking, talking quietly, and observing.

I suppose you could say we didn’t see anything, since all we saw was the prairie. And the plants and animals that fill it, each subtly fitting into the tawny landscape.

The pheasant that erupted from the tall grass in front of us. The unionidae mussel shells left by raccoons, mink, and otters. The beaver trails up the banks and the logs they gnawed. Bundles of leaves high in the riverside trees, surrounding families of squirrels huddled together for warmth.

The quiet goodness of friendship.

Leading with Authenticity - My latest appearance on John T Meyer’s Leadmore podcast.

John has a lot of insightful guests on his podcast, which makes it a huge honor to appear now for the fourth time. This was one of our longest and best conversations. I hope you enjoy it, and I’m interested in hearing what you think of it. We cover a lot of ground, especially talking about three different kinds of leaders.

podcasts.apple.com/us/podcas…

Praying for others might be the best change you make in the new year

If you want to change your life in the new year, I suggest taking a moment to pray for someone else who is struggling.

Pray on your terms. But give it a try.

More here: Praying on the Train.

Plough: Schools for Philosopher-Carpenters

A thought-provoking article in Plough Quarterly about schools that teach students how to work with their hands, and also teach the liberal–one could say the liberating–arts.

This is a lot like what I do with my students. As a professor, I teach classical texts, ancient languages, the history of ideas, field ecology, and world religions.

But that’s not all.

I also teach my students how to build things. (That link is to a GIS story map of things my students and I have built on our campus.)

Education should be for the whole person, and for the whole of life. Building even one thing with your hands prepares you to build the next thing, or to fix what has already been built.

Auto-generated description: A group of people are constructing a wooden structure outdoors near a house and greenhouse.

My 4/40 Program Is Still Going

Had breakfast with a dear alum this morning at M.B. Haskett, one of the world’s best third places.

My alum studied “wicked problems” with me almost a decade ago—a class that I designed to help first-year students grapple with complexity in human and ecological systems.

Now she is a fourth-year medical student, planning to be a child psychiatrist. I love seeing her joy in learning, and in studying the importance of kindness in medicine. Medicine is a complex system as well, after all.

When it was time to pay, I told her it’s not her turn yet, and I explained my 4/40 program

Twenty years on and it’s still going strong. My thanks—yet again—to Russell Frank of Penn State.

Why Are You Still Here?

Auto-generated description: A large yellow sign reads NO MAINTENANCE above a smaller sign stating NO TRAVEL ADVISED against a backdrop of barren trees and dry grass.
Should you be here? (I like roads like this one.)

Like my previous post, this one begins with a question others ask me fairly often:

“Why are you still here?”

Thankfully, when I hear this question people generally aren’t asking me to leave. Rather, they’re asking why I stay. And they’re usually asking about one of three things:

  • They want to know why I continue to be a member of a church in an age when fewer and fewer people find themselves connected to traditional houses of worship or faith communities. (I have written about this in a few places, but you might like what I have written about prayer.)
  • They wonder why I am still a professor in a small liberal arts college at a time when students seem disengaged, and when colleges are threatened by political headwinds, rising costs, apparent diminishing returns, and by our own decisions that weaken public opinion against us. (You can see a bit more of what I’ve written about the liberal arts here and here.
  • And they wonder why I continue to work towards environmental sustainability in a place that doesn’t seem to value the environment, and where sustainability is viewed as a harmless hobby at best and a threat to business and freedom at worst. (My work focuses on the environmental humanities, and I’ve done a good deal of work in sustainability with my university, with my city, with our local zoo and aquarium, and internationally with organizations like IBM. You might also like this article I wrote about insects on Medium, but be forewarned that it is paywalled.)

I have answers for each of these, and they’re all important. My faith matters to me. So does my community, and so does the environment my community inhabits. I want my neighbors to thrive, and that means I want them to live in a place that fosters health for the whole person: physical, emotional, mental, spiritual, and economic. And my idea of “neighbor” is fairly expansive, and it includes all those whose lives are connected to my own, including the lives of other species. Jesus once pointed out that not even a sparrow can fall to the ground without God noticing it. If the sparrows matter to God, then I’d like them to matter to me.

In other words, for me, these three questions people ask me are all related to one another.

I think they’re all also related to my vocation, and to my sense of calling. In some way I feel called to and by God; I feel like teaching is my vocation; and I feel called to be a good steward of all Creation.

Those “callings” are different, but they all also feel like “deep calling unto deep.” I can’t explain them, and I don’t mean to say they’re others' callings as well. But they’re part of who I am, as far as I can tell.

One thing all those callings have in common is that they all seem to be growing:

  • When it comes to faith, I often find others' stories more interesting than my own, and I’m glad to meet others who are seeking the way ahead with humble curiosity even if we use different words to talk about what we’re seeking and what we’re finding. So my calling is not to a building, or to a religion; rather, it feels like a consistent calling to love God and to love my neighbor as myself.
  • When it comes to teaching, I have taught every age from pre-schoolers to older graduate students. I love it all. For now, I’m a tenured professor at the highest rank available to me. It took a lot of work to get here, and positions like mine are the envy of graduate students everywhere. I wouldn’t be surprised to see more and more schools eliminate tenure and reduce jobs like mine to some version of the gig economy (these things are already happening steadily around the world.) So if I were to leave this job, I’d be leaving something I probably would never find again. But I don’t feel the calling to comfortable tenure so strongly as I do feel the calling to meaningful teaching that helps others to flourish. So my calling seems always to tug me beyond my faculty office and my assigned classrooms.
  • And when it comes to environmental sustainability, I often find myself scratching my head. Why wouldn’t we want to be not just good neighbors but also good ancestors? Why wouldn’t we want to pursue solutions that help people and the planet to thrive while also making sure we all flourish economically? I get it: so many of the solutions offered by environmentally-minded people threaten to cost us more in taxes, or they threaten particular practices or certain sectors of the economy. If someone came for my job or my hard-earned savings, I’d bristle as well. But it doesn’t have to be that way. We can make good use of the water we have AND we can make sure those who live downstream have clean water too. We can make good use of our soil without depleting it, and we can do it in a way that boosts profits. Etc. Here my callings all seem to come together: I feel called to help my neighbors — all of my neighbors — flourish, and to love them as myself. And to include as neighbors everything that lives, and everyone who might inherit this earth from me. I’d like my great-great-grandchildren whom I will likely never meet to look back on my life with gratitude.

So my best answer to this question “Why are you still here?” is this: for now, I feel called to be here.

Of course, like I said, my callings all seem to grow.

It may be that soon I’ll find a better way to answer this triple calling I feel, and if so, I hope I won’t hesitate to leave tenure and comfort and my favorite ideas when I find better ones.

Because I believe we are all in this life together, and, as some of my favorite authors have said, “all flourishing is mutual.”

So, how’s the sabbatical going?

This is the third time in my life that I have taken a sabbatical. On average, I’ve taken one about every eleven years. My first sabbatical was from a position as a campus minister, and I used it to begin graduate school. There was no obligation for me to return to that position afterwards, and I wound up not returning. Instead, I continued with grad school and eventually became a professor. My second sabbatical, which I’ve written about here, was after I first earned promotion and tenure. This current one might be my last.

Sabbaticals are a great idea. I wish everyone could have sabbaticals. Some countries have long service leave, allowing those who stick with a job for a given number of years to take some time of rest and renewal. Etymologically, “sabbatical” is supposed to be a time of rest. In most cases today, I’m not sure it still means that. Some companies offer leave for study and upskilling, which is great, but it’s usually about coming back to work as a more efficient worker. Sabbaticals seem to be more and more about efficiency. The committee that reviewed my sabbatical request sent me a letter letting me know that my sabbatical was approved, and that they expected me to write and publish the things I said I’d like to work on. If memory serves, there was nothing in there like “remember, this is mostly about rest and restoration, so don’t neglect that.”

And I find that my first impulse on sabbatical has been to use time away from the office and the classroom to catch up on all the things that get neglected when I’m working hard at being a teacher. Inbox zero is a tempting goal, even if the only way to achieve it is to mass delete emails. In other words, I am tempted to use time away from the office to catch up on things that I should have done at the office if I weren’t so damn busy.

We impose work on ourselves. Productivity is the watchword. Our discipline has monastic roots. We still wear the robes and still have our cells (offices), but the daily office of readings, the hours of resting and praying are a thing of the past. We dress like monks but we still punch the clock like everyone else. It feels like we’ve lost something big, and we’ve told ourselves the loss was freedom from outdated antiquity. I’m not sure that’s true.

A few years ago I took my students to visit a monastery in Greece. The sisters there told my students about their lives, and about their daily work and prayer. They wake up in the middle of the night and gather in their little chapel to pray, then return to bed for more sleep. When they wake up, they pray together again, and then throughout the day they return to the chapel to pray and read and sing. In between that, they do the things that make their life together possible: they grow food, harvest it, store it, prepare meals, and eat them together. Clothes get washed, floors get swept, and the work of caring for the needy in their community goes on at a steady pace. Not with breakneck urgency, but at a pace that can be maintained—that has been maintained—for centuries.

When my students heard all this, one of them asked with a look of exhaustion, “When do you take a break?” The sister looked at her with some confusion, and replied “Take a break from what? Our lives are lives of leisure.”

For most of us, including teachers at most of our nation’s small colleges, our lives are not so much lives of leisure but of busy-ness and constant work. One of the appeals of teaching used to be the possibility of leisurely conversations with students and colleagues. We spoke in lofty terms of “the life of the mind,” and of a “great conversation” that included both the living and the dead who left their words for us to contemplate. The trade-off was we teachers would accept low pay in exchange for a long tenure that included time to reflect so that we could both model good practices and teach “sound learning, new discovery, and the pursuit of wisdom.” (That line is from theBook of Common Prayer.)

The last decade feels like it has been a decade of increasing urgency at the expense of contemplation, greater push for efficiency at the expense of conversation, the replacement of teaching with instruction, the rise of software to “manage” courses for teachers (and to do homework for students), the gathering of data that will satisfy the professional accreditors.

I have more to say about this, but I’m going to stop here for now because I’m going to go do something else. Or rather, I’m going to take a little while to do very little, intentionally. One of my practices during my sabbatical has been to pay close attention to what is right before me. I do this by sketching and by writing, not with the intention of publishing my essays or of becoming a great artist, but rather in order to be more attentive. I think that’s a good model for my students, and hopefully it helps me to rest and to return as a more attentive and more caring teacher. Because teaching is not (for me, at least) about handing over information but about fostering lives of contemplation, conversation, and commentary.