School Shooting

The last time I was at a school in Marshall County, Kentucky, it was to watch one of my sons play against them in a middle school football game. That was over twenty years ago, on a beautiful autumn night. Yesterday, a fifteen-year-old student walked into the high school with a handgun and turned twisted imagination into a most perverse reality.

I cannot pretend to know what it’s like for the teenagers involved in a school shooting. I imagine it is terrifying beyond belief to have someone you thought you knew walk into your classroom, cafeteria, library, or gym and start shooting at you or your friends. Likely enough, seconds seem like eternity and sounds either flare into deafening volume or shrink into numbing deafness. The searing wounds, the screams, the panic, the blood and moans must all meld into horror itself.

For parents, relatives, friends and other loved ones, the fear triggered at the first reports must be instant agony—the not knowing, the inability to immediately find out whether your child, nephew, buddy, neighbor or church member is among the dead, one of those with life-threatening injuries, wounded, or safe but scared and scarred by the experience. How long those moments of wondering must be! For some, there will be the amazing relief of finding them still alive and healthy; for others, unspeakable pain and sorrow.

For teachers, cooks, custodians, coaches, maintenance workers, grounds keepers, office workers and administrators, the unspeakable and unimaginable has become reality. The place they tried to make safe is not, the students to whom they had dedicated their best efforts and most genuine talents have been targeted, torn and some have been taken. I have little idea how they even begin to comprehend the tragedy and its implications.

For first responders, especially in small communities, the scene must be primal in its terribleness. These bleeding and dying are not nameless strangers; these are youngsters that you know, teachers that you had, neighbors, relatives, friends. In spite of the trauma and the complete possibility that shots are still being fired, they rush in to protect, to rescue, to defend, to do whatever can be done to prevent greater harm and to try and save lives and limbs.

The small towns that once believed this could never come to them, who had watched the news of other places, now face the fact that this truly can happen anywhere. There is no place beyond the touch of anger, hatred, malice, malevolence and violence. If it can happen in Benton, Kentucky, it can happen in Winfield, Kansas.

I know this, I force its awareness upon my thinking and I also force myself to remember this: even in these places of senseless tragedy, people respond with courage and caring. People of different faiths embrace one another and others. The artificial barriers of color and code, culture and cause, pride and prejudice, all disappear for a while and help is offered, received and appreciated. People weep with one another, endure the shock together and turn toward survival and recovery, even when they doubt the possibility. In spite of their anger, rage and agony, people will seek the welfare of others.

Even as I grieve at the horror, I am moved once again by the way that we seek to do good even in the most horrible circumstances. We are indeed, both wretched and wonderful creatures, formed from dirt yet fashioned into the image of God.

H. Arnett
1/24/18

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In the Face of Disturbing News

In between the thinking and knowing
there is time and space for the sowing—
seeds of doubt can sprout and grow,
a choking that dims the light
and leaves us fighting to find
the sublime silver lining
fringing these bruising clouds.

But this is also a space
where faith can flourish,
a stubborn believing of the better,
that good will yet come,
growing, even, out of the pain
and the empty aching,
a making anchored in both past and promise—
even conquerors bear their healing wounds
yet know that in all things
God is at work for the good
of those who love him
and are called according to his purpose.

And in that calling find a light
that even though sometimes dimmed by our own sight
still leads through the long night
and will find us yet held and loved
when all of darkness fades away
and we rise up in the never-fading brightness
of a never-ending day,

when all of sickness, pain, grieving and leaving
will be done away.

H. Arnett
1/23/18

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Something Stronger than Blankets

In the aching darkness of this cold night
I drive through the long slopes of winter
in the Flint Hills.

A wind-anchored chill
locks ice and snow along the shoulder
from El Dorado northward.

The flickering reds of traffic miles ahead
trace trails moving through the curves
and along the road,

Paralleled by opposite lines of headlights
drifting off into the night
on their outward bends.

Steady at the limit
and with them five miles slower,
I pass truck after truck after truck.

Halfway to Topeka,
a low flatbed stacked high with propane tanks
banks by me on a downhill run.

We leapfrog up and down
the next few humps
until the last long slant before Emporia.

From there he pulls away bit by bit,
all the steep slopes behind him,
making his way against the wind and darkness,

Running eighty miles-an-hour
toward wherever it is
that stands between him and home.

I hope that something
stronger than blankets
will keep him warm tonight.

H. Arnett
1/17/18

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Against the Bitter Cold

It’s the kind of cold here today that leads to those “it’s so cold…” jokes. The kind of wind chills that lead public school officials to close schools. When the “feels like” temperatures drop into negative double digits, it changes things. For some people…

Livestock farmers go ahead and feed their cattle. Dairy farmers proceed with milking. Garbage collectors and postal workers continue making their rounds. We still expect grocery stores, gas stations, and fast food places to be open. Mostly…

There’s a degree of relativity, of course. Folks in Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota and other points well north of here pretty much figure it’s just another winter day. “Only in double digits below zero? Well, we’ve seen worse than this. Oh, you betcha.” And most likely, they still went ahead and walked to school anyway, even those it was uphill in both directions.

Regardless of the amount and degree of experience, there are extra precautions. A car breaks down when it’s sixty degrees and it’s an inconvenience. At minus twenty that inconvenience has implications that can result in tissues with permanent damage and make us confront issues of mortality.

And so when I head out through the Flint Hills tonight on my way three hours north, I’ll pack extra clothes and extra covers. Maybe even a bit of food and water. And hope that I don’t need them. I found out some time ago that prayer and preparation are a good combination. Especially when the wind is against you.

H. Arnett
1/16/18

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Just For a Day

What if—just for a day
I decided to lay aside those things
that seem to separate me from certain others?

What if—just for a day
I decided to let mercy
triumph over justice
in my own heart?

What if—just for a day
I decided to believe the best
of those I know?

What if—just for a day
I decided to put a smile
over all my worries
and trust that the One
who feeds the sparrows
and adorns the lilies
would also care for me?

What if—just for a day
I decided that I would expect good
rather than evil?

What if—just for a day
I decided that I would forgive
—from the heart—
every insult and every injury?

What if—just for a day
I decided that I actually would
love my enemies,
bless those who curse me,
return good for evil,
clothe the naked,
feed the hungry,
truly bless the widow and orphan,
care for those who are sick,
visit those who are in prison,
welcome the stranger,
share with others?

What if—just for a day
I truly obeyed
the One to whom I pray?
And quietly lived
my greatest praise?

Maybe then—at least for a day
I could hope (and pray)
that “I” might turn into “we?”

H. Arnett
1/12/18

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Yes, Dorothy, We’re Still in Kansas

In some parts of the world, I suppose, people don’t give much thought to the wind. Unless some sort of storm blows in, there’s not much reason. I’m not really sure where those places are exactly. I am right sure, though, that Kansas isn’t one of those places. Without the benefit of documented knowledge, I’m going to guess that we have fewer than twenty or thirty days a year when there’s not a readily discernible breeze. Probably a couple hundred a year when the wind will top twenty miles an hour and more than enough days when it’ll top thirty.

So, in a place where the wind blows steady enough to make trees lean, a warm day in January without wind is not an ordinary thing. In fact, it’s unusual enough that I seriously considered taking a couple hours of vacation time on Monday afternoon so I could go for a long bike ride.

Duty won out over the beauty of that opportunity, as it often does. It wasn’t an easy choice, though, I’ll tell you that!

With the temperature at fifty-two and the wind speed at two-three miles an hour, I sat at my desk computer, briefly staring out at the parking lot and thinking about the Flint Hills, the bottom lands of the Walnut River and a particular road that leads to both. And stayed at my desk, working at the computer.

Tuesday and Wednesday were warm as well. But with the wind topping twenty miles an hour, there was nothing tempting me in the direction of a long bike ride. I got most of the things done that I needed to get done. That’s the nature of duty and one’s attention to duty can be pretty vital in keeping one gainfully employed. No matter what the weather happens to be.

Today’s high will be half of yesterday’s and there’s a sixty per cent chance of freezing rain and snow. Wind gusts up to forty-one miles an hour. Tonight’s low: twenty degrees below freezing. Not much of a day for a long bike ride.

But, by God’s good grace, we will sleep warm and dry tonight. Tomorrow, by the same good grace, we will rise, safe and rested, to another day’s opportunities. Opportunities to do good work, to share good things, to bring blessing to others and be blessed. And I will remember that doing good to others is always worth doing.

Especially when a cold wind is blowing.

H. Arnett
1/11/18

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A Divine Nourishment

I had lunch with a dear friend yesterday. Nothing elaborate, simple food in a simple place, served by pleasant people. The food was delicious, as it has always been at this particular restaurant. But, of course, it wasn’t the food or the place that made the meal more than a meal.

As you well know, it’s the time and the talking. The sharing of stories, the answering of questions, the being together, if only for an hour. Some might say that such times are the flowers in life’s garden. There are aspects of that metaphor that I like: the notion of beauty and fragrance, of color and brightness.

I’m more inclined, though, to believe that such visits are even more organic than that, something of the soil, of nourishment and life. There’s something sustaining and refreshing, maybe more like the gentle rains that come in due season.

Lately, I’m more inclined to think that time spent with friends who hold us up to the Light, who understand our flaws and faults yet still are part of our calling to better life, is a part of God’s own grace. A part of the Divine nurturing, the actualization of his caring. When I consider that time spent with such friends may rather be a key part of God’s own provision, it makes me believe that I should be more deliberate, more proactive about arranging such things.

Especially when I consider that I may also well be a part of God’s caring for my friends, even as they are for me.

H. Arnett
1/10/18

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The First Gifts of Christmas

I would guess that more than a few of us come to Christmas each year with some mix of excitement and at least a slight bit of apprehension. Perhaps I over-externalize but I find myself wondering what reaction there will be to the gifts I give. I try to give in a genuine spirit of love and with a minimum of expectation.

I want these gifts to be liked, appreciated and enjoyed. Even though I do not give with the notion of impressing anyone, I do hope my giving is received as intended: an expression of love and affection. I think that is fitting with the very first “Christmas.”

A careful reading of the gospel accounts, as contrasted to the more modern blending of carols, advertising and un-careful storytelling, shows that it was the shepherds only who came to the stable. (By the time the magi arrived, Jesus was approaching two years of age, hence Herod’s order to kill all the male toddlers in the vicinity.)The shepherds found, as promised by angels, a baby wrapped in swaddling cloths, lying in a manger. They rejoiced and proclaimed their story that this was the promised Messiah, born in Bethlehem as prophesied.

Thus, it was their belief, adoration and proclamation that were the true first gifts. And so, I believe, apart from the costs and appraisals of our modern day exchanges, the real gifts of Christmas are not purchased at stores and wrapped in paper and bows. The true gifts are our faith in family and friends, our exchanges of genuine love and affection, and our time spent together in sharing our stories and in listening to one another.

To me, this is a liberating awareness: even if we are as poor as shepherds and regarded as living among the least of all occupations, we can still give the greatest gifts. No matter how broke we may be, no matter how lean our living, we can still give of ourselves.

H. Arnett
1/9/18

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A Reminder of Hope and Light on a January Morning

In the dry heart of winter,
the cold splinters around us,
shards of light cut through
night’s thinning darkness.

A teasing sun rises to the south
of what we believe is east,
bringing an illusion of heat
to leafless limbs and bare branches.

On other days,
a gray heaviness hovers around us,
hazy shadows shift slowly
in frozen passings.

Even through this mist of clouds,
a touch of Light still moves within,
easing clenched fist into outstretched hand,
whispering hope into a land of doubt:

“You live yet
and God still works within you.”

H. Arnett
1/8/18

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Even Better than the Jelly of the Month Club

It has been less than two weeks since Christmas but I’m guessing that some of those gifts given and received have already started to fade a bit. Batteries need recharging or replacing. Some things have probably broken, pieces are missing from the set or some other mild calamity has befallen. In a world of imperfection and obsolescence by design, it’s only a matter of time. Such is the nature of such things.

It is the rare gift that can sustain the initial level of pleasure and pride. Things made for use have a way of wearing out. Even tools made for rugged service eventually find the end of their usefulness. On the other hand, there are those things that actually improve with use. Things that become more durable and reliable with rugged service.

Things like love and forgiveness. Things like patience and forbearance. Things like mercy, compassion and kindness. Things like integrity, faithfulness and consideration. Things like gentleness, self-control and humility actually gain strength through constant usage. Those who have chosen to embrace these gifts will find themselves blessing others throughout the year, regardless of the time of year. No need for ribbons and bows or fancy paper.

And, by the way, there’s good news: these gifts are appropriate for any season. Even if you forgot one or two of them during the holidays, today is a perfect day to bring them out and pass them around. And for those who know the true Source of such things, there’s no worry about inventory. Plenty more where these things come from!

H. Arnett
1/5/18

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