Iron Mountain ski jump

Iron Mountain ski jump

Friday, March 6, 2026

COFFEE WITH HELEN AND GOD [3-6-26]

CHRIST IN WINTER: The Irrelevant Coffee Talk of An Old Man—COFFEE WITH HELEN AND GOD [3-6-26]

 


Helen and I have “coffee with” together each morning at ten. “Coffee with” is an old Amish saying, that we picked up while living in Amish territory. It means simply that our coffee is accompanied by a muffin or scone, usually something Helen has baked, sometimes a gift from a friend’s oven or a delivery ordered by a daughter.

Our “coffee with” is an hour, maybe two, depending on how much we have to talk about.

You’d think we’d have everything already talked out by now. After all, we’ve been married almost 67 years. And we spend 24 hours per day with each other, with only occasional interludes that include other people, either in person or on the phone or via Zoom.

For two people together in a small house, every day is an endless string of talking. “Have you seen my glasses?” “What did Millie say when she called?” “I don’t know why I’m so tired.” “It’s because you’re old.” “I need to change the decorations on the mantle.” “We have a mantle?” Etc.

But “coffee with” time is different. Oh, yes, we do some calendaring. That’s necessary hour by hour. “Did you…?” “No, I forgot; I’ll do it tomorrow…” “What’s a tommrow?”

The real substance, though, of “coffee with,” is remembrance…children and grandchildren when they were little…friends now gone…jobs rejoiced and regretted…days of stove pipes and rug beaters…times of advocacy for social justice…children and grandchildren all grown up…and the constant amazement that we found each other at all…

All this comes up today because it’s Helen’s birthday. Maybe “coffee with” will be a little fancier, but the talk won’t be much different from usual.

Except today we’ll talk especially about folks we know who must do their “coffee with” alone. The “with” of “coffee with” is really about the memories, not the muffins.

We know so many folks who are “alone” now. Some never had a “coffee with” partner. Some are widowed or divorced. Except as we talk about them, and pray for them, we know that they are not alone. Lonely, yes. Alone, no. Because of the Presence of God.

 


Yes, I’ve said it often, but I don’t apologize for saying it again. The most important quality of God is not action or answers, but Presence. We don’t understand the actions or inactions of God, the responses or non-responses to prayer, etc. but on the final day, and on any lonely day, they are all irrelevant. Underneath are the everlasting arms. We are never abandoned, never alone. Have a cup of “coffee with” God.

John Robert McFarland

 

 

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

NOT A LENTEN THEME, BUT IT SEEMS TIMELY [W, 3-4-26]

BEYOND WINTER: The Irrelevant Musings of A Christian Nationalist—NOT A LENTEN THEME, BUT IT SEEMS TIMELY [W, 3-4-26]

 


I am a Christian nationalist.

I think it is quite clear that this nation, The United States of America, was founded on Christian principles. That does not mean, though, that the writers of the Constitution intended to create a Christian nation.

When Moses Seixas wrote to George Washington and asked if the First Amendment meant Jews would be tolerated in the new nation, Washington replied, No. Jews would not be tolerated. Tolerance meant that a majority group would put up with a minority group. The First Amendment meant not that Jews would be tolerated, but that they would be free, in the same way any other citizen was free. Any citizen of any religion, or none, had the same rights as any other. [1]

That is a Christian principle. All people have total worth in the eyes of God, and each person is to be treated as a child of God. “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”

The fact that the US is founded on Christian principles does not mean that we are “a Christian nation.” It means the exact opposite. Being a Christian nation, as currently defined in political rhetoric, means either that all citizens must be Christian, or that Christians are the majority group and may, or may not, put up with non-Christians.

Proponents of current Christian Nationalism often use a false definition of equality to justify their exclusion of others. They say there can’t be equality because we don’t all have the same physical characteristics, mental acuity, etc. In other words, we can’t all play in WNBA.

That, of course, is not what American, democratic equality is. We are equal before the law. We have equal opportunities. One person, one vote. There is not a different law or different justice for rich and poor, black and white, male and female, gay and straight.

As a nationalist, I uphold our constitutional democracy, equality of law and opportunity, because as a Christian, I know that there is a final equality. We finally all stand before God as children of equal worth. So, I am a Christian nationalist.

Strangely, people who champion the Christian nation idea refer to themselves often as “strict Constitutional constructionists” who believe in “the original intent of the Constitution writers.” They seem to think that they know the intent of the Constitution writers better than George Washington did.

There are two kinds of Christian nationalism. One uses the Way of Jesus to include all citizens equally. One uses language about Jesus to include only the privileged.

I am a Christian nationalist. The original intent type. The original intent of Christian nationalists was to include everyone.

John Robert McFarland

1] From Sarah Vowell, LAFAYETTE N THE SOMEWHAT UNITED STATES, p. 266 in the LP edition.

And you might like to look at daughter Katie Kennedy’s new book, THE DECLARATION DECODED. [Workman Press]

 

Monday, March 2, 2026

THE PROBLEM WITH BEING HUMAN [M. 3-2-26]

 CHRIST IN WINTER: Reflections on Faith & Life for the Years of Winter—THE PROBLEM WITH BEING HUMAN [M. 3-2-26]

 


There are 3 problems with this column: It is too long. It’s mostly personal history. It has no solution to the problem of human nature. So, read at your own risk.

When I was a young preacher, a couple came to me for marriage counseling. I’ll call them Don and Nan. I had known both of them casually when we were college students, before they married. We weren’t close friends during college, just acquaintances, really, but I was fairly well known in certain circles, because I was the only full-time [1] preacher in the ranks of adolescent college students.

So, after college, when they were married, and living in a town close to where I was preaching while going to seminary, they decided I should be their marriage counselor.

Actually, it was Nan who decided it. Because Don wasn’t being exactly faithful. In fact, he was failing rather spectacularly. Except he didn’t he didn’t see it as a failure.

I had learned in pastoral counseling class to begin marriage counseling with individual appointments, so Don felt comfortable, too much so, in explaining why he was unfaithful in marriage. “These women reach out to me with their eyes. They are so needy. I am simply trying to fulfill their needs.” In his mind, he was the messiah of sex.

Yes, I know that the eyes are the windows to the soul [Mt 6:22-24], but I’ve always been amazed at what some folks think they get from eyes. Don was definitely no George Clooney. Maybe Rainn Wilson [“The Office”]. It was hard to believe that all those girls [2] were beseeching him for sexual sustenance with their eyes. I have always suspected that we see in the eyes of others what is actually in our own eyes.

I told Nan that she didn’t have a marriage problem. She had a human nature problem, because Don was a delusional, egotistical, narcissistic, lustful nymphomaniac. [In seminary, you learn a lot of new words and want to use them.]

 


It’s time to use a basketball reference, because it’s “March Madness” month. [And you probably thought it’s Lent.] When Coach K [I dare not try to spell Krzyzewski] of Duke basketball retired, he said that his greatest opponent was always human nature. Basketball players are human. They want to take the easy way. They want to do all the scoring instead of doing what’s best for the team. They want the rewards without the work.

Human nature is always the biggest problem for a counselor, too. You can help folks understand the origins of their problems, and all sorts of good stuff, but you can’t change human nature.

I think it was Grok, the cave man, who often appears in “The Far Side,” who first said, “Human nature? I think we were better off as Neanderthals. This human nature is a bitch.” [Don’t blame me; I’m just quoting.]

 


Come to think of it, human nature isn’t just the biggest problem for basketball coaches and counselors. It’s the biggest problem for you and for me. So, if you want to do anything about it, take it up with the creator of human nature…

John Robert McFarland

1] “Full-time” is relative. I preached in one or more of my 3 churches every Sunday morning and evening, but I was a full-time college student throughout the week. I was, however, the only pastor those churches had. Whenever there was some pastoral need, I had to fulfill it. They weren’t frequent, but I did weddings and funerals, and special services, like Christmas Eve and Easter sunrise, and I made hospital visits and calls on shut-ins and newcomers.

2] Yes, we were still girls and boys, not yet men and women. We were married, and college grads, and definitely thought that we were all grown-up, but we were under 25, the age when the frontal lobe decision-making part of the brain is fully developed. If we made good decisions, it was only by luck.

Saturday, February 28, 2026

THE POWER OF OUR IMAGES:THERE IS ENOUGH [Sat, 2-28-26]

 

BEYOND WINTER: The Irrelevant Musings of An Old Man—THE POWER OF OUR IMAGES:THERE IS ENOUGH [Sat, 2-28-26]

 


Tomorrow is the first Sunday of the month. That means communion for lots of churches, so…

Two different neighbors told us two different bird stories. The first neighbor said he had seen a baby robin fall from a nest. It wasn’t a hatchling, but it wasn’t able to fly yet. He saw the shadow of a larger bird come toward it and was relieved that the mother robin was coming. But it was not the mother robin. It was a blue jay. Our neighbor said, “That blue jay swooped down and pecked that little robin to death. I mean, it was so fast, before I could do anything. And then it flew away. That little robin hadn’t done anything to it. It wasn’t any threat…”

“That’s where you’re wrong,” I said. “The jay was protecting its food supply. That robin would grow up and compete for food. It was a primitive sort of intelligence, encoded into its little bird brain—there isn’t enough food to go around, so I have to eliminate the competition, even before it’s competition.”

Then Paul and Gerri Shook told us another bird story. “We’ve been watching a nest. We don’t know which birds made the nest, but we saw a cowbird lay eggs in it. Cowbirds are famous for laying their eggs in the nests of other birds so they won’t have to raise the little ones themselves. But when those eggs hatched, the nest birds abandoned them. Then this little sparrow came along and began to feed them. This morning, she went up to this bright red male cardinal and just gave him the dickens. He tried to ignore her, but she wouldn’t leave him alone. Finally he flew off. But then he came back with a worm and gave it to the little birds in the nest. Apparently she had shamed him into helping her feed those birds. Darndest thing we ever saw a bird do.”

The blue jay believed there was not enough for everyone. The sparrow thought there was, but it took some work from unlikely partners.

The real struggle among humans is those who believe there is enough and those who believe there is not.

Our primitive bird brain compulsion is to be sure we have enough. We do that by making sure we have MORE than enough, regardless of what happens to anyone else.

Humans have supposedly evolved to the point that we don’t have primitive bird brains any more. We have rational human brains. We can make decisions based on facts and compassion.

We leave people out when we are afraid there won’t be enough to go around. People who want to exclude others use Garrett Hardin’s image of the earth as a lifeboat. If you’re in the lifeboat, and there are folks out there in the water, even if they’re about to drown, you can’t pull them in or the boat will sink and all will perish instead of just a few.

I have heard many people reference that image as though it is a given, that the world is a lifeboat. The world is NOT a lifeboat; that is an image!

 


The images we use are powerful, aren’t they? Consider if you use a different image, that of a castle on the hill. [Not original with me, but I can’t remember where I heard this.] When folks outside the castle are in danger, they come in for refuge. After they are refreshed, they are sent back out to find food and to find others in need, to bring them in. It’s not a perfect image, but neither is the lifeboat.

The image we use isn’t given by God or by nature. We choose which image we’ll use. That choice is powerful.

The image for Christians is that of Jesus feeding the multitude, often called the miracle of the loaves and fishes. It is an image that says that if we share, there is enough for everyone.

You take what you have, give thanks for what you do have instead of fretting over what you don’t have, share what you have, and there is not only enough to go around, but some left over. [Mt 14:21-31]

Every time we take communion, we are reminded that there is enough.

John Robert McFarland

“The greatest of evils and the worst of crimes is poverty.” George Bernard Shaw

 

 

Thursday, February 26, 2026

FAKING IT {R, 2-26-26]

CHRIST IN WINTER: The Irrelevant Confessions of An Old Faker—FAKING IT {R, 2-26-26]

 


Len’s son had been murdered. He blamed himself. Joel’s mother, Len’s ex-wife, had asked for an extra day on her weekend to have Joel. Len thought about all the weekends when Julie had custody, how she never granted him even an extra minute. He wanted to repay her in kind. But he knew that Joel loved his mother, so he agreed to the extra day. It was on that day Joel had been murdered. Ten years old.

“I should not have let her keep him that extra day,” Len said to me. “No, you should not have,” I replied. “Oh, thank you! Everyone else keeps saying it’s not my fault. But he’s not my son unless I own this.”

What I did, more by the grace of God than by having a plan, I faked it. I faked wisdom. I faked honesty. I faked competence.

That’s important, in a time of chaos or confusion, to have someone who can fake it. That gives everyone else time to catch up, and once we are all together, we can muddle forward, and that’s when a solution appears. If not a solution, an acceptance.

 


Rabbi Ed Friedman calls that “…being a non-anxious presemce.” If there is one person in the midst of the chaos, one person whose presence is non-anxious, that gives others an oasis in which they can calm down and gather their wits. [1]

When I did not know how to deal with a situation, I faked it. When Joel was murdered, I was distraught. Len was like a son to us. In some ways, Joel was our first grandchild. I was overwhelmed with sadness and grief. My presence was plenty anxious on the inside, but I knew that for Len and everyone else who loved Joel, I needed to be that non-anxious presence.

I blame my fakery on God. It was God who called me to be a preacher, and one of the main roles of a preacher is faking it.

Occasionally I would be silent. Silence is often mistaken for wisdom. Usually, though, if I were silent, it was because the moment was beyond all words. I was not silent because I thought it was best. I was silent because I had nothing to say. Most folks considered that wisdom.

Silence did not come naturally to me, though, even in moments of great stress, when it might have been best. In those situations when I was the parson, which means the “person,” I tried to live up to that expectation. But all I knew to say was the truth, as best I could find it. I faked wisdom.

Okay, I’m not playing quite fair with the word “fake.” I was never duplicitous. I did not lie. I did not tell falsehoods. I did not tell a dying person, “Oh, you’ll be okay.” I did not do the shallow “God is good all the time” routine.

I acted like I knew something when I did not. It was not intentional fakery. I was not trying to claim knowlege when I had none. I faked wisdom, not knowledge. Wisdom and knowledge are not at all the same.

[Are you confused yet?]

I was sure, though, that with the grace of God, we could make it through. I was sure that “underneath are the everlasting arms.” That’s hard to convey in words, though. Sometimes the only way to do it is to act like you know what you’re doing when you don’t.

John Robert McFarland

1] Rabbi Friedman was a working rabbi. That is, he was the leader of a synagogue. He was also a noted family systems therapist, and applied his knowledge of family systems to the family of a church or synagogue. All that is in his book, Generation to Generation. It’s an important read for anyone who is or ever has been a member of a family. [Among other things, you’ll find out why your family did not celebrate your birthday correctly]

When I was president of The Academy of Parish Clergy, I arranged for Ed to be the plenary speaker at our annual conference. In our publicity, I referred to Generation to Generation as “The most important book for preachers since the Bible.” When he came to the APC Conference, the publicist for his publisher came with him. That worthy individual asked me what farmous individual had called Ed’s book the most important since the Bible. When I told him I was quoting myself, he went away sorrowful. I’m sure he had been hoping that it was a quote from Marcus Borg or N.T. Wright that he could use in his own publicity.

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

SEEING THE STORY [T, 2-24-26]

BEYOND WINTER: The Irrelevant Musings of An Old Storyteller—SEEING THE STORY [T, 2-24-26]

 


In his book, Ward 402, Ronald Glasser tells the story of four-year-old Kerry. Kerry was hysterically blind, meaning that there was nothing wrong with his eyes, but he couldn’t see. He wouldn’t see.

The doctors and nurses had done so many painful things to him that he had to close his eyes to them. Literally.

The painful things were done for good reasons, of course, but a child doesn’t understand that. All a child experiences is pain and discomfort.

Kerry ate with his eyes closed. He played with his eyes closed. He fumbled around on his bed for a toy or a piece of candy, just like a blind child. He simply would not open his eyes.

I have personal experience with this. Our grandson, Joe, was diagnosed with liver cancer when he was 15 months old. His first day at the doctor’s office, the nurse did something painful to him, so when she left the room, he pushed one of those little child-sized chairs up against the door, so that she could not get back in. That didn’t work.

So Joe shut his eyes to everything but story books. When a bad procedure was coming up, and he had to go without food and water for hours, his mother would read picture books to him, one book after another. I’d sit beside her and have the next book open to the first page and shove it into her hands before she read the last word of the current book. Not a moment for him to be in the world of the hospital. When she became too hoarse to read, I’d take over. Joe lived in a world of stories where pain could not come.

The doctors in Ward 402 did everything they could think of to get Kerry to open his eyes. They even considered prying them open. The resident, though, cautioned against that, for it they did that, then Kerry might be not be able to see with his eyes open.

He brought in a kitten. Without a word, he placed it on Kerry’s bed. The kitten mewed and rolled around. Kerry felt around for it, found it, felt the soft fur. The kitten bit at his fingers. Kerry laughed. At last, it was too much. He just had to open his eyes to see that kitten! His blindness was over.

Yes, I’ve told this story before, and I hope you remember, because it’s a great story. I hope I have told it in a way that allows you to see it, not because of the way I tell it, but because of the way you see it.

Good story telling is not flamboyant. It doesn’t call attention to the teller. If there is drama, or excitement, or pathos, or empathy, it’s not because of the teller, but because of the story.

A good story teller doesn’t tell you what to believe, or how to believe, but tells you the story you need to see, at that point in your life, the story that allows you to find out for yourself not just what you do believe but what you should believe.



That’s why we tell the Christ story. Over and over…

John Robert McFarland

“Tell all the truth, but tell it slant.” Emily Dickinson

 

 

Sunday, February 22, 2026

THE PRESENCE [Sun, 2-22-26-]

CHRIST IN WINTER: The Irrelevant Musings of an Old Man—THE PRESENCE [Sun, 2-22-26-]

 


I was aware of the presence of God even as a child. It wasn’t eerie, or scary. I was also aware of the presence of the devil; that was the scary one.

With God, it was like someone in the room with me, a little behind and to the side, just out of sight, but looking out the window together.

The window changed from time to time, and so did the scenes outside, but God’s non-anxious presence remained.

There were plenty of times I forgot about it, didn’t notice it. Indeed, that was most of the time. I stared out the window alone. But I always knew the presence was present.

That’s the point, I think—knowledge. I did not feel the presence, experience it; I knew it. Not just in a brain way, but a life way, the way people say “I knew it in my bones.”

God’s presence was always there, not as an emotion, but just as… well, presence. Knowledge. That’s why Jesus said we should love God with all our mind as well as all our strength and heart and soul. [Mark 12:30-31.] None of those categories of loving—mind, strength, heard, soul-- are belief; they are being.

That’s why “upheld by the everlasting arms” has always been a powerful image and phrase for me. [Deuteronomy 33:27]

That’s why I never thought of Jesus or Christ, or certainly the BVM or saints, to be necessary mediums to God. If God is just there, here, well, you don’t have to cross some bridge to get to God.

I am not telling you this to suggest that it is the “proper” way to understand and relate to God. Or as some “proof” of God. Or anything else. It’s just my experience.

It’s why I never felt much need for theology, which is a strange thing to say for a man who went to the trouble to earn a doctorate in theology. I did so much study of theology just because I felt it was not legitimate to ignore all the thinking and speaking about God that came before I knew the Presence.

So I never really preached theology, beliefs or doctrines about religion. I never believed in what Marcus Borg called “salvation by syllables.” I tried to explain beliefs from time to time. But mostly I just told the story of how God is present, standing there, looking out the window over our shoulder, seeing the world and its needs, watching Christ at work in that world.

I guess I never did do theology. I just experienced God’s presence and told stories.

It this revisionist history? Well, of course, but if you’ve lived as long as I have, you have a right to understand life from the end. That’s the point of the Resurrection; we understand life only from beyond it. Oops… did I just do theology?

John Robert McFarland

“It is a mistake to assume that God is only, or even chiefly, concerned with religion.” Wm. Temple