BEYOND WINTER: The
Irrelevant Musings of An Old Man—I DON’T KNOW, AND I DON’T CARE [Sat, 10-25-25]
The responsive reading to
start tomorrow’s worship service:
Leader: I don’t know and I
don’t care
People: I don’t know and I
don’t care
Leader: If the devil wears
fireproof underwear
People: If the devil wears
fireproof underwear
Leader: Amen!
People: Amen!
Leader: Hallelujah!
People: Hallelujah!
All: Matthew, Mark, Luke,
John… Matthew Mark, Luke! John!
Wouldn’t that be a great
responsive reading to start a worship service?
It’s October. Yes, it
means colored leaves and such to me, as it does to everybody else, but to me it
also means marching in ROTC. That was one of the cadence counts in ROTC
marching when I was in college. I have changed the words a little from the
original, which was…
Leader: I don’t know and I
don’t care
People: I don’t know and I
don’t care
Leader: If the general wears
dirty underwear
People: If the general wears
dirty underwear
Leader: Sound off!
People: Sound off
Leader: Cadence count
People: Cadence count
All: One, two, three,
four… one, two, Three! Four! [1]
One of the great things
about being old is that you no longer have to know anything. Or care about it. You
can say, “I don’t know, and I don’t care.” It’s very relieving, to have that
responsibility off your shoulders, that responsibility for knowing things, and
for caring about what other people know or don’t know, caring about who’s right.
Even if old people do know
things, young people don’t want to hear about it.
Uncle Johnny Pond was in his
early 20s when he started building Francisco Hardware and Lumber, right beside
his oldest brother’s general store. Ted Ellis was 20 years older than John
Hubert. He knew a lot about stores and shared his knowledge freely. But, Uncle
Johnny told me, “I want to make my own mistakes.”
I have talked before about
Harry, the older man in one of my churches, who was so disappointed that “the
younger men in the church don’t ask for my advice.”
You’ll be disappointed
almost all the time if you wait for that.
Please don’t misunderstand
me. I’m well aware that “those who do not study history are doomed to repeat
it.” And who better than old people to provide history? After all, we’ve lived
it.
People don’t need our
advice all that much. They need our support, a prop up on their leaning side, a
push back onto the path.
“I don’t care” doesn’t
mean I don’t care about people. It means that I don’t care whether I understand,
understand the politics or the religion or the falderal of what’s going on.
So many of use our lack of understanding as an excuse for not acting. We don’t
have to care to care.
As Kris Kristofferson
wrote, “I don’t care who’s right or wrong. I don’t try to understand. Let the
devil take tomorrow, Lord, tonight I need a friend. Yesterday is dead and gone,
and tomorrow’s out of sight. And it’s sad to be alone, help me make it through
the night.”
That’s why I’ll be joining
folks from all over the Midwest at the Miami
Correctional Facility [ten
miles north of Kokomo, IN] at 2:00 pm, EDT, Monday, Oct. 27, to pray together
for the migrant detainees, and their families, being held there. This is
neither a protest nor a demonstration. It is a witness, to say to those who are
held there, and to those who put them there, “We see you. We are with you.” I
can’t be there in person, of course, but I shall be praying along with those
who are, and I invite you to do so, too.
If someone says to me,
“Did I get it right?” I say…
I don’t know,
and I don’t care.
I’ll still be with you,
in hope and prayer.
John Robert McFarland
1] I suppose in the ROTC cadence
count above, I should have put “Sgt.” where I have “Leader,” and “Marchers” or
“Soldiers” where I have “People,” but I have been writing litanies for churches
for so long that I automatically used “Leader” and “People.”