Going Postal on a Plane

Jet Blue’s red-faced ex-employee;
A Requiem to the Murdered Aid Workers in Afghanistan

Going Postal on a Plane
Jet Blue’s red-faced ex-employee

That flight attendant for Jet Blue
is really in an awful stew.
White-knuckled as he faces jail,
he is a bit red-faced.

When Stephen Slater lost his cool,
he acted like a mindless fool.
The guy went postal on a plane
parked at the waiting gate.

He grabbed the PA system mike
and swore before he took a hike.
With beer in hand, he chuted down
the ‘vacuation slide.

And yet in spite of Steven’s rage,
there is a special Facebook page
devoted to this employee
who’d finally had enough.

He is a kind of patron saint
to those who feel they’re peeling paint
who do their job with little thanks
and then get criticized.

Me thinks there is a lesson here.
If Steven’s actions prompt a cheer,
more people than we realize
must want a chance to vent.

They want to tell their critics off
suggesting where they can get off
or take control by losing it
though that might cost their job.

A Requiem to the Murdered Aid Workers in Afghanistan
Compassion was their only crime

It was humanitarian relief
based on a deeply-held belief
that those in need throughout the world
deserve the chance to thrive.

They didn’t force faith down their throats
but helped those hurting Afghans cope.
Compassion was the only crime
those ten were guilty of.

Not true of those called “Taliban”
who terrorize Afghanistan,
who shed the blood of innocents
and arrogantly boast.

The Kabul stone streets stained in red
(from both the wounded and the dead)
bear witness to the reason why
our troops are needed still.

The evil that yet stalks a land
of mountain caves and blowing sand
must be decried and fought against
or those ten died in vain.

Lord, comfort loved ones who now grieve.
Please validate what they believe.
Convince them You’ve a plan for good
to rid the world of bad.

When Gay Rights Are Wrong!

Judging the judge’s decision;
Lessons I Learned in High School

When Gay Rights Are Wrong
Judging the judge’s decision

Of the people, for the people.
That’s our way of life.
But when the people’s voice is stilled,
the outcome leads to strife.

You’ve heard about the judge out west
who overturned the law
believing California’s view
on marriage had a flaw.

“How dare you think that God’s intent
was what your grandpa said?”
“Don’t be old-fashioned,” said the judge. 

“Embrace new ways instead.”

But, Judge, who says that what is new
is better than before?
One can be rich in tolerance,
but morally be poor.”

“How can you say that marriage
is between a guy and gal,
when passion flames and lifelong plans
are dreamed between two pals?”

Don’t get me wrong, your Honor, sir.
I’m all for equal rights.
But marriage is to be defined
as ‘tween a man and wife.

If you start redefining truth,
God knows where it will end.
And you’ll be held responsible
for causing us to sin.

Lessons I Learned in High School
Reunion reflections and somber afterthoughts

Whoever said ‘you can never go home again’
must not have known the power of the human mind.
I find that memories indelibly traced there
transport me instantly to where it all began.
To those sacred places where, with youthful passion,
I learned to embrace life.
I know you can go home,
for I’ve returned often.
Like a panther pursuing his prey.
To a high school campus
where those who prepared me for my journey
gave me a compass for my trek,
camouflaged as lectures, labs, term papers,
projects, grades and tests.
To classrooms and hallways
where I learned the ways of the world,
and where I was praised for what I could do.
(And where, with humility,
I learned to accept the things I couldn’t).
To ballgames and dances and concerts and plays
where textbooks gave way
to what’s learned other ways.
Where losing hurt more
than winning felt good
and friends rallied ’round you
as only friends could.
Should it surprise you,
my panther-like prowl of the past?
I think not!
These trips that I take
to the days of my youth
remind me of what really lasts.

* While attending my 40 year high school reunion last weekend, I visited with Bob Watson, a classmate I hadn’t seen since our 30 year reunion. Bobby was quick to thank me for a poem I had read at that event and distributed to those in attendance. It was called “Lessons I Learned in High School.” “I keep it in my desk drawer at work,” he said. “It speaks to me every time I read it.”

Because I was privileged to serve as the emcee of this year’s reunion, it was my solemn job to read a list of twenty-eight names signifying those from our class who have died.

Amid the gasps of surprise, I invited the group to observe an extended period of silence as a way of remembering our friends and honoring their lives. At the conclusion of the silence, I encouraged the group to make the most of the remainder of the evening and visit with as many former classmates as possible. After all, I said somberly, we don’t know who of us will be added to “the list” when it is read at our next reunion.

I had no idea how timely my advice would be. Thirty hours later, Bob Watson would die in his sleep. When I heard the sad news, I remembered handing Bobby the microphone the night before and hearing him say how great it was to be together and how much he loved everyone.

I dedicate this poem “Lessons I Learned in High School” (previously unpublished) to Bob Watson and his widow Dottie. Oh, by the way. The mascot for Wenatchee High School is the Panther!

The Mother-of-the-Bride

What lessons can Hillary teach to Chelsea?;
The Missing Kid with Missing Teeth
;
Let’s Hear it for Reunion Name Tags

The Mother of the Bride
What lessons can Hillary teach to Chelsea?

On Chelsea Clinton’s wedding day
I wonder what her mom will say.
Will Hillary be candid
’bout the demons she has faced?

Will she give Chelsea little clues
of what to look for when “I do”s
have been forgotten by her man
before they have been done?

Will she confess what she has learned
when overtures of love are spurned
and you are left to feel the shame
(betrayed and all alone)?

Or will she tell her daughter why
she gave her man another try
because she promised to be true
when what he vowed proved false?

I’m hoping that she does all three
for that is what dear Hillary
has come to know and now can give
as mother-of-the-bride.

The Missing Kid with Missing Teeth
Searching for Kyron (and answers)

The missing kid with missing teeth
(a pint-size victim of some thief)
has found a home within our hearts
though he remains at large.

He’d just completed second grade
with no real cause to feel afraid.
Sweet Kyron loved his Skyline School.
He loved his mom and dad.

That ready toothless childish grin
(his parents long to see again)
has been reduced to photographs
on posters and the news.

Those haunting posters with his face
are more than that. They make a case
for how within a God-blessed land
we’re stalked by evil still.

Dear God, be near this dad and mom
who try their best to stumble on
in search of answers (and the boy)
they loved with all their hearts.

Let’s Hear It for Reunion Nametags!

Reflections at a 40-year high school reunion

So many years have come and gone.
Recall the way we were?
Because we’ve traveled far and wide,
the memories have blurred.

Without your nametag, I’d be lost.
Without it, where’d I be?
In forty years you’ve really changed.
Surprisingly, not me!

I’d recognize me anywhere
(especially in the mirror).
I haven’t changed the way you have.
It’s really kind of weird!

You’ve put on pounds and lost your hair.
What’s left is turning white.
And I’m just like my yearbook pose.
Time hasn’t touched me. Right?

Ok, I lie. No one escapes.
Four decades dings us all.
But, what the heck! Who’s to impress?
Relax and have a ball!

A Capitol Phenomenon

The Covenant Triennial turns heads in D.C.;
Transformed for Service

A Capitol Phenomenon
The Covenant Triennial turns heads in D.C.

Not far from where Michelle Obama
wakes up every day,
eleven hundred women
have converged to sing and pray.

They have gathered from St. Louis,
San Francisco and Tucson
as well as from Seattle
(in the other Washington).

There are women from Chicago,
Dallas, Nashville and Detroit
(not to mention gals from Boston
New York City and Beloit).

They have joined their hearts
to listen to the Word of God proclaimed
and to protest human trafficking
that keeps young girls in chains

It’s a Covenant “camp meeting”
in the middle of D.C.
where the world can hear the heartbeat
of its Women’s Ministries.

Transformed for Service
The “unofficial” Triennial hymn

With unveiled faces they are reflecting
God’s awesome glory for all to see
They are a mirror of grace and goodness
and of the power by which we’re free.

With upraised arms they humbly acknowledge
a transformation from what they were.
God’s endless mercy new every morning
is ever faithful, steadfast and sure.

With outreached hands they join with each other,
sisters united in God’s great cause.
Theirs is His mission birthing potential
in those now victims of broken laws.

With grateful hearts they worship the Savior
who by His Spirit makes us all new.
We are His body remade to serve Him
in what we say and in what we do.

* the above can be sung to the tune for “Morning Has Broken”

** The theme of TXIII is Reflecting God’s Glory and is based on 2 Cor. 3:18 “And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into his likeness with ever increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.”

*** to read more about The Triennial Conference of Women’s Ministries of The Evangelical Covenant Church, go to www.covchurch.org

Possibility Thinking? Think Again!

There are cracks in the Crystal Cathedral

At the Crystal Cathedral
(that temple of glass),
there are panes (quite translucent)
revealing what’s crass.

Possibility thinking?
You kidding? Good God!
There’s godless behavior
between Bob and Bob.

Both Robert (the father)
and Robert (the son)
have quenched God the Spirit.
Their kingdom’s undone.

The palace of Schuller
is one royal mess.
It’s cracking and crumbling
and may I confess…

The Hour of Power’s
become Family Feud
with warring-like factions
un-Christlike and rude.

I’m worried about
how God’s Church is perceived
by those looking on
who (as yet) don’t believe.

What think they of Christians
and sermons on grace
when pastors who preach them
can’t love or embrace?

And so while there’s feuding
in churches of glass,
let’s pray they’ll hang curtains
as long as it lasts.

See the following links…

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2008694351_schuller01.html

http://www.fresnobee.com/2010/07/11/2002862/rev-schuller-retiring-from-crystal.html

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hX3tXWJCI7Qu_ioeUimnAadVOQmAD9GUC1I01