Iron Mountain ski jump

Iron Mountain ski jump

Friday, January 9, 2026

FOLLOWING THE KIDS’ TIME STAR [F, 1-9-26]

CHRIST IN WINTER: Reflections on Faith & Life for the Years of Winter—FOLLOWING THE KIDS’ TIME STAR [F, 1-9-26]

 


It’s Epiphany season, and well, we understand the mother who said, “If three strangers showed up with spices and said that my child is tender and mild, I’d be worried.” Even more, I’m sure, if the strangers were trying to smoke a rubber cigar.

But I digress…Epiphany is in great part about that star. And kids time in worship. [Yes, there’s a connection. Look at the last paragraph.] To do kids’ time in worship well, you don’t follow an outline; you follow the star.

Not long ago, I was in a group of people who have discovered livestream worship, not just in their own local churches, but all over the nation, even the world. Some of them “go” to worship in several different places each week. Not surprisingly, they do a lot of “compare and contrast.”

The subject of our conversation turned to the now-mandatory kids’ time in those worship services, and the way different preachers/leaders do it.

The main complaint I hear, about the people who lead kids’ time, is this: they are too well prepared.

That sounds counter-intuitive, but I understand. Some of the best times I had with children’s time in worship was when I was appointed to a new church and inherited the “what’s in the bag” method.

Each Sunday a different child would take home the cloth bag we used for kids’ time. They would bring it back the next Sunday with some object in it. I had no idea what it was until the kids were seated around me and I was handed the bag. Then I did a children’s homily based on whatever was in the bag—a thermometer or light bulb or salt shaker or toilet paper… [Yes, there are attempts to create chaos for the preacher, which I suspect the adults of a household are involved in. That’s a good thing, kids and adults at home thinking about church together.]

It’s a lot of fun and much easier than it sounds. You don’t “preach” about the spoon or Pokémon card or dog biscuit. It’s just the starting point for a mental and spiritual journey. All such journeys lead to God. Everybody in the congregation enjoys seeing how the preacher finally gets to God from that unexpected starting place.

The main point: the preacher has to improvise. No idea ahead of time what the starting place will be, and only the star in the East to lead the way.

Most preachers are prepared for children’s time, on the same theme that is later being laid on “the big kids.” A kids time should never have more than one point, but preachers feel naked with only one point. So they have lots of points, that have to be in correct succession, so the preachers have to ignore or put off questions that get the points out of sequence. They use a bunch of words that kids don’t understand, and then end with a lame joke that is really directed at the adults present.

The preacher interacts primarily with his/her subject and its correct presentation, and with the adults, but not with the children. Regardless of how squirrely they get, how many raised hands are not acknowledged, the preacher plows on to the finish, because that is what she/he is prepared to do.

If you’re not prepared, you have to pay attention to the kids, and how they are responding. You go where the kids lead you, and you end not because you are finished with what you prepared, but because the kids are through listening.

When those kids came up for children’s time with Jesus [Matthew 19:14], the ushers tried to keep them back because they knew Jesus hadn’t prepared for kids’ time. But Jesus said, “Let them come.” A good preacher is always prepared to pay attention to the children, especially when not prepared.

 


We don’t enter the kingdom of heaven except as little children, Jesus said. [Mt. 18:3] Children are not prepared; they follow the star.

John Robert McFarland

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

ASHES TO ASHES [1-7-25]

CHRIST IN WINTER: A Final Reflection on Faith & Life for the Years of Winter—ASHES TO ASHES [1-7-25]

 


My sister-in-law has begun to scatter the cremains of my late brother, Jim, in the places important to him. That will include here in Bloomington, Indiana, when she comes for a memorial service for him. That has started me to thinking about where my ashes will go.

Yes, cremains is a good word, but I prefer ashes. You know, “ashes to ashes and dust to dust.” When I was a boy, I shook down the ashes in our Franklin Stove and carried them out back and scattered them on our garden. Yes, I prefer to think of my cremains as ashes.

That’s the main point of ashes-scattering, I think. Not what is actually done with them. That won’t matter to me then. But I think the deceased should get to enjoy thinking about where their ashes will go when they are dead.

Helen and I have asked our daughters to hold onto us until both of us are ashes, then mingle our ashes together for scattering. They have agreed.

Our original idea was that they would scatter us in the old woods on the Indiana University campus. That’s where we met and married. That’s where we bloomaranged to live out our years.

However, in addition to being illegal, I think--and I don’t want to think about my daughters spending time in jail--that’s not very practical. IU has the largest number of alums of any university, anywhere. If we all got scattered on campus, pretty soon the students would be walking to class ankle-deep in ashes.

I am, however, going to scatter us in those woods now. It’s pleasant to think about being there forever, about new students walking through the woods, hearing a whisper out of the ashes in the rustling leaves, “Go, Hoosiers…”

And I’ll scatter us in the woods behind Bob and Kathy’s house on Thunder Ridge, in Brown County. That was our spiritual home.

And some at Campground Cemetery, on Paradise Lake, near Mattoon, IL, where we once had a little weekend cottage.

And some more at Forsythe Church cemetery, down at Oakland City, on the graves of my parents.

There may be some left, so… there is a cemetery in Bloomington, IL. I don’t know its name, but I had a funeral there once. It was during the 6 years we lived in Normal-Bloomington, when I was campus minister at IL State U. Being a campus minister, I had a lot of weddings, but only one funeral. It was for an anonymous bum.

He was homeless, unknown, no identity, a traveling vagrant. Just happened to be in Bloomington when he died. Since he had no name, no family, no people, no church, the sheriff called the least reputable preacher he could think of to do the code-required, cheapest funeral possible.

I don’t remember what I was expecting, but not what I found. It was a sunny day. Pleasant. I was dressed in my dark suit and white shirt and tie, carrying my Book of Worship. The only other people there were the sheriff, in his uniform, and the undertaker, in his regular suit. The sheriff waved at a newly dug grave and said, “He’s over there.” He went back to his conversation with the undertaker. I wandered over to the grave of the unknown bum, by myself. I opened up my Book of Worship and read the entire liturgy.

I think I’ll just dump the rest of my ashes there.

John Robert McFarland

This seems to be a good column to finish up “reflections on faith and life.” I’m out of stories and ideas on which to reflect. But I need to keep on writing, for my own sanity. And you need to keep on reading, something, but probably not this column, for it will no longer be “reflections on faith and life.” It’s reasonable that you might get something worthwhile for your own life from “reflections.” That will no longer be a reasonable assumption. Now this column will be only the personal reminiscences of the author. [Yes, I know, that's pretty much true already.] I’d be delighted to have you read my reminiscences, but if you get anything worthwhile, it will be by accident, or because you have a special ability to discern wheat in chaff. So I’ll keep on posting, every third day or so. If you’ve decided you’ve had enough, thank you for reading.

 

Saturday, January 3, 2026

IT IS WINTER; I STAY IN MY HOUSE [Sat 1-4-26]

BEYOND WINTER: The Irrelevant Reflections of An Old Man—IT IS WINTER; I STAY IN MY HOUSE [Sat 1-4-26]

 


It is winter. I stay in my house.

Winter makes hermits of us all.

I think of Thoreau beside the pond called Walden. I should get that book out and read it again. I read it first in college, in the spring time of my life. I knew it was a classic. I knew thus that I should appreciate it. I suppose I did, but I cannot remember. I just wanted credit for the class. And a good grade.

Now I am past the point of needing credit, of any kind. 

I do not need a good grade, either. I do not need others to tell me that my life is worth living. Either it is or it is not, regardless of what others think. I do not need their grade. 

Thoreau was a hermit by his choice. I am a hermit by winter’s choice. Winter’s choice has, however, become my choice. I stay in my house.

The winter is outside, in the snow, in the tracks of the deer, in the disappearing tail of the rabbit, in the quick flash of the fox, in the slow snore of the bear, in the bare space in the cold air where the hummingbird used to hover. The winter is in here, too, in my house.

There is the cold air of absence here, but there are also the tracks of memory, the disappearing tale, the quick flash of understanding, the slow snore of acceptance, the question about spring, about when it will come, if it will be early or late, if the bushes will still flower, or if the deer, in the empty gnawing of their winter, will have killed them with desire, desire for one more meal before the boom of the hunter’s gun. 

I stay in my house. I look out the window at winter, and I wonder about the spring.

John Robert McFarland

Thursday, January 1, 2026

IN SYNCH WITH THE UNIVERSE [R, 1-1-26]

CHRIST IN WINTER: Reflections on Faith & Life for the Years of Winter—IN SYNCH WITH THE UNIVERSE  [R, 1-1-26]

 


I recently came across a column that I started for New Year’s Day 12 years ago. I did not finish it, however, so I did not post it. I was only 77 then, so I thought the mentioned Quaker was old. Here is the 2014 column:

I know of a man, a Quaker, 90 years old, who, when he awakes in the morning, lies in bed a while “getting in sync with the universe.” I would like to do that, but when I awake in the morning, I need to get in sync with the bathroom, without waiting for the universe to come around. Maybe that’s the difference between Quakers and Methodists.

I’m not very often in sync with the universe, and it’s usually my body, or some part of my body, that is the cause of my dis-synchronicity.

It is the first morning of the new year, 2014, as I write this. I grew up with the understanding that what happens the first day of the year will be the agenda for the rest of the year. Grandma Pond always served cabbage on New Year’s Day, for that meant one would have money the rest of the year. If gas is money, then she was right; otherwise, not so much.

What I most need to do in this new year of my winter season is to get rid of stuff I don’t need for the future. [And perhaps work on making my sentences less convoluted and obfuscatory.] Maybe that is how one who cannot lie in bed in the morning gets in sync with the universe, by getting rid of stuff the universe doesn’t need.

Since the Salvation Army and the recycling center are not open today to receive my excess t-shirts and newspapers, I am looking through file folders, the kind that hold papers, those things that only old people remember, those thin sheets of stuff on which we wrote great ideas in the days of yore, with a thing called a pen, and putting into the “office paper only” basket those paper sheets on which are written literally thousands of wonderful ideas for stories and books and poems and sermons that will never come to screen, and which now do not look nearly as insightful or necessary to share as they did at the time I wrote them down.



That’s where the 2014 column ended. I recall that I felt slightly sad and nostalgic about discarding all those writing ideas. Now I can only wonder why I hung onto them for so long.

Anyway, now that they’re gone, I’m looking forward to getting into synch with the universe.

John Robert McFarland

“It’s not too late unless you don’t start now.” Barbara Sher

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

DON’T BOTHER POPEYE [T, 12-30-25]

BEYOND WINTER: The Feverish Mutterings of An Old Man—DON’T BOTHER POPEYE [T, 12-30-25]

 


Is it possible to have Christmas without Jesus? Well, sure, most of the world just did.

Is it possible to have Christ without Jesus? I hope so, for I do.

Is it possible to have Jesus without Christ? I hope so, for I do.

Is it possible to have God without Jesus? I hope so, for I do.

Comedienne Kathleen Madigan, Irish Catholic by culture, has a delightful schtick called “Don’t Bother Jesus.” In prayer, you go first to the rosary. Then to the priest. Then to your guardian angel. Then to your personal saint. Then to the BVM [Blessed Virgin Mary]. Only if all those fail to solve your problem is it okay to bother Jesus.

Being a hillbilly Methodist, it has never occurred to me to bother Jesus at all. I’ve always gone right to God.

But, it would be wise to pay no attention to my beliefs. I hold totally opposite views of God. I believe both in Borden Parker Bowne’s Personalist God, and Paul Tillich’s “ground of being” God.

Can they both be God? Well, why not?

I call God “Father” and also agree with Tillich that “…as soon as you’ve said ‘God,’ you’ve lost God.”

We get into a theological pretzel when we get orderly and logical about God. God is nowhere and everywhere. God is beyond pain and feels our grief. God is the lamb of sacrifice and the high priest who makes the sacrifice… or is that Jesus? Or is that Christ? Oh, who knows?! God is Mystery. As Martin Luther cried, “Let God be God!”

Or as God themself/herself/himself said “I am who I am.” [Exodus 3:14]

Or was that Popeye, the Sailor Man? Could they both say that? Well, why not? God can speak through Popeye as easily as any other way.

Just don’t bother Popeye until you’ve tried Jesus.

John Robert McFarland

 

 

 

  

Saturday, December 27, 2025

CHRISTMAS IS NEVER OVER [Sat, 12-27-25]

CHRIST IN WINTER: Reflections on Faith & Life for the Years of Winter—CHRISTMAS IS NEVER OVER [Sat, 12-27-25]

 

There is nothing as NOT over as Christmas.

That, of course, contradicts what the world’s best mother-in-law, Georgia Karr, always said, about 2 pm on Dec. 25th. Georgia would slump into an easy chair and say, “There’s nothing as over as Christmas.”

Any mother or wife, and some fathers, too, understand what she meant. There is such a long leadup to Christmas. Buying and decorating and cooking and wrapping. Then, suddenly, in a flurry of bright colored paper, it’s all over.

But Christmas has a way of coming back. It’s never over. I know people who even start on the afternoon of Dec. 25, making notes about next year, what to cook, how to decorate, what to give as gifts, whether to wrap or not wrap. [1]

Georgia was right, about this Christmas, about Christmas afternoon. But Christmas is never over. It keeps coming back, not because we always forget vow to celebrate less hectically next year, but because it is the genesis of the Christian story. The Christ story starts with Christmas, the advent of the Presence of God in human form, and it never ends.

I used to say that I went into the ministry because I wanted to preach a Christmas sermon. I knew that Christmas contained all the meaning of the universe. I wanted to share that meaning. I spent a career trying to figure out how to do it.

Paul Mallory, our friend and pastor when we lived in Iron Mountain, MI, said, “I know that nothing about our celebration of Christmas is historically or theologically accurate, but I love it all.” Accuracy is not the point. Accuracy and reality are not always the same thing.

Christmas is the central celebration of Christian faith—yes, more than Good Friday or Easter—because it is the recognition and celebration of the Presence of God in the world, that we are not ultimately alone, alone in the universe, alone without meaning, alone without love.

Being alone is the ultimate despair. That is why breaking a relationship is a sin, which needs forgiveness. The ultimate sin, the unforgivable one, Jesus said, is the sin against the Holy Spirit, because breaking the relationship with God leaves us utterly alone, completely in despair.

Loneliness is not necessarily reason for despair. But aloneness is. I don’t mean alone without human relationship. Every human relationship will eventually be broken. Also, humans can be a real nuisance, get in the way of the Presence of God. Breaking the relationship with God leaves us devoid of love.

Once more, I’ll repeat what our granddaughter said when she was four: “Santa and Grandpa are a lot alike. Santa has a bald head, and Grandpa has a bald head. Santa has a white beard, and Grandpa has a white beard. Santa brings toys, and Grandpa brings toys. But Grandpa is better, because he stays and plays.”

God is not some universal Santa, skimming over the top of the world, stopping long enough to throw some goodies down the chimneys. In Jesus, the Christ, in the Holy Spirit, in the Presence, God stays and plays.

Christmas is about the Presence of God, not the presents of God. It is the Presence that makes us at home in the universe. It is the Presence that we need. It is the Presence that makes us real.

John Robert McFarland

1] The issue of rapping or not rapping usually does not occur at Christmas, but what to wrap or not wrap is important. [See, that’s why we should read columns instead of listening to podcasts.] {I loved that kind of word play when I was a young preacher… apparently now that I am an old non-preacher, I still do.}

 

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

THE COMATOSE WARD

 

Another of my Christmas eve sermons. The Christian Century editors entered it in one of those “best of the year” contests by Associated Church Press, and it won, but, being churchly, there was no money or fame connected to the prize. Length warning: 2800 words]

 


THE COMATOSE WARD

John Robert McFarland

 

            He had never seen Jesus like this before. There he was, standing beside the bed, looking very unlike the pictures in the Sunday School papers.

            The Rev. Dr. Jackson Peter Taylor lay flat on his back in what he thought of as “the comatose ward.” It did not surprise him that Jesus had appeared there. Ever since he came across the theory of “the messianic secret” in the Gospel of Mark, during theological school, he realized that Jesus had a fondness for showing up in unexpected places. Jesus especially liked to reveal himself to people who would keep their mouths shut about it. The comatose ward was perfect. Of course, Christmas eve was the perfect time to pull something like this; hardly anyone was around.

            The Rev. Taylor liked being in the ward. When the stroke first hit, they put him in a private room. That was a joke. The last person who needed privacy was a paralyzed comatose stroke victim. He assumed it was really to give his family privacy to mourn his approaching demise. But J. P. Taylor knew he was not going to die yet. He still owed God, and he was sure God would make him drop his coins in the turnstile before allowing him into the big-top. That was something most Christians, with their “cheap grace” ideas, would never understand.

Even though it was usually credited to Spider Man, it was this Jesus, who was standing beside his bed now, who had first said it: “Of the one to whom much is given, is much expected.” Jack Taylor wished to high heaven that it really had been Spider Man instead of Jesus. He didn’t owe Spider Man anything. He preferred to go ahead and die and get this over with, but he knew that he had been given far more than he had yet paid the expectations on.

            Once the people in the white coats had realized he was not going to “check out” right away, and the people in the suits had found out that the insurance policy his church had provided him was not as comprehensive as the salesman—a member of the congregation—had claimed, he was moved to the ward. There were six beds, each with a breathing lump of flesh like himself. J.P. thought it was a great arrangement. It was shared privacy, which was better than lonely privacy or forced fellowship. He hoped his ward-mates were getting a good look at Jesus standing beside his bed. It would be a great event for them not to talk about with one another.

            The Rev. Dr. Taylor was sure that it was wonderful irony that the congregation that had “stroked” him so little in all the years he served it had finally given him “a stroke to last a lifetime,” just three months before retirement. The Christmas eve services were to be his last, and this it was four months off around the world with just Molly. The trip was a present from their sons and daughters-in-law. Well, now he would make a trip around the universe, assuming God would ever let him get at it, and Molly would make the trip around the world with her sister.

            In one of those unknowingly prescient moments that seem to come more frequently with age, he had told her that if anything happened to him, he wanted her to take her sister and go ahead and make the trip. “OK,” she had replied, with a shrug. He remembered that shrug now with such pride that his shrinking chest expanded until his sheets quivered. That was their type of love—made of steel. It could take whatever came and go right on without missing a beat. He knew it was the gift of that love that put him in debt to God, even now.

            Good grief! Maybe Jesus had come to collect. It had never before occurred to The Rev. Taylor that Jesus might be God’s bag man. What else would he be doing here? But how could Jesus insist that the beleaguered minister continue to answer “the call” here in the comatose ward?

            “Oh, no,” groaned the parson, silently, of course. “Don’t tell me I have to be a good example! That’s too much to ask of anybody.”

            The Rev. Taylor was always good at doing, but the thought of doing by being is enough to strike terror even in those in whose brain waves “the rough places are made smooth.”

            Seeing Jesus in the flesh, as it were, was a very different experience for the preacher. He had often spoken to others, in pulpit and out, of how God had become in-car-nate, “in the flesh,” in the person of Jesus. He had never really thought, however, that it was supposed to happen more than once. Yet, no doubt about it, here was Jesus, beside his bed. What a fantastic illustration for his Christmas eve sermon… and then he realized… he was not going to get to preach about this at all. He was in the comatose ward.

            “Damn,” he thought. “Every time you get a good illustration, there’s some reason you can’t use it.”

            It was like the other day when his associate pastor had come to serve him communion. That had always been The Rev. Dr. Jackson P. Taylor’s job in the past—to take Advent communion to all the patients and shut-ins. He loved doing it, even more than he loved preaching, and he loved preaching almost as much as chocolate-covered graham crackers. He would sit and chat, letting the other person steer the conversation, listening to their fears, coaxing forth their joys, just being there as the representative of the Body of Christ. In the course of their time together, he pulled the packet of wafers and flask of wine and the little glasses from his pockets. He worked the words of the communion ritual into their conversation naturally as they went along, talking of old times and the problems with children and hopes for the church. Then he broke the wafers and poured the wine. They shared as three friends having lunch together—the person, the parson, and the Christ.

            Now here was this nincompoop Charles Compworth, who had apparently learned absolutely nothing in nine years as his associate. He bustled into the room, The Rev. Mr. Efficiency, himself. He did not even remove his overcoat, a black cape with a fuzzy yellow cross on each lapel. He carried a fitted valise, which he plopped onto the end of the bed, snapped it open, and then proceeded to pull out the most godawful assortment of religious bric-a-brac that Jack Taylor had seen in forty years in ministry.

            There was a plastic cross. Charles snapped it together and set it on the rolling tray table. There was a purple stole with gold scroll work, which he draped around his neck. There was a tray for the wafers and a flagon for the wine and a three-footed stand on which to put them. There were two candles with electric switches on their bases. Jack Taylor was sure Charles Compworth probably even had spare batteries for them. There was a purple banner, with a misspelling of “Hallelujah” worked into it in gold, which The Rev. Compworth hung on the IV pole. There was a bell, which The Rev. Mr. Ridiculous—as Jack Taylor was now calling him in a rage under his totally bland exterior—actually rang before he broke the wafers.

            Charley Compworth grabbed his leather-bound, India-paper ritual book from an inside pocket of his cloak, raced through the communion service, broke a wafer, ate it, and drank the wine.

            “Hey, where’s mine?” yelled Jack Taylor, but of course the offensive right pastor did not hear a thing, did not even realize that J.P. Taylor, who had talked to him every day for nine years, was trying to say a thing to him now.

            “Come on, Charley, you idiot, give me the bread and wine. You can’t do communion by yourself. We wouldn’t call it communion if you could. We’d call it ecclesiastical solitaire. You’re doing it all wrong. Pour some of the blood of Christ down me so I can choke and get the hell out of here.”

            The Rev. Mr. Compworth, of course, simply left. Watching him, J.P. Taylor remembered why he had always insisted on doing communion for the sick himself. He did feel a pang of sympathy for his long-time associate, though. Charley was trying to do the work of both pastors in a church that should have had four anyway. Naturally he was in a hurry. He knew he was next in line for the bed that his old mentor held down now. In Charley’s case it would be a heart attack, of that his senior pastor was sure. No wonder Charley did not even want to look at him. It was too much like peering into the mirror of the future.

            Well, that was Charley’s problem. Now Jackson Peter Taylor had to deal with his own problem, which happened to be standing beside his bed. He wondered briefly if Jesus had simply come to get him, swinging low to swoop up a favorite son and him on home. That would be nice. If was so nice that it was highly unlikely. That only happened to lay people. Ministers were subject to law, not grace. When they answered “the call,” they forfeited all claims to grace, even to salvation, of that J.P. Taylor had been sure for years. Lay people rode to heaven on the backs of ministers who themselves were not allowed through the pearly gates; they were just sent back for another load.

            “And good Lord—pardon the expression, Jesus—they have been coming in here looking for a ride even when my back has been sticking out of this heathen hospital gown. If I can’t go to heaven, can’t you at least send me to hell and get me out of the comatose ward? It’s almost Christmas. Can’t I have just this one little present? I can’t go around the world with Molly, I know, but can’t I at least get out of here? People come in here, and they think I can’t hear a thing, just because I can’t say a thing, and they babble on.

            “So, what do they say?”

            J.P. Taylor was answering before he realized that there was something a bit unusual about having Jesus standing beside his bed and asking questions like that.

            “Well, like the time Charley Compworth was trying to comfort Molly. He said, I don’t know what to say. Molly knows Charley well enough that she doesn’t have to be reminded of how stupid he is. And the other day this cleaning lady was in. she looked at me and said, I understands you used to be a preacher. I wanted to be a preacher once, but they said girls couldn’t do that. Then big tears began to run down her cheeks, and she wiped them on my sheet. Sam Mason, the chairman of the trustees at church, was in. He ought to be chairman of the trusties at the jail. You know what he did? He stood right there, where you are now, and he whispered, Jack, you’re the only person I can tell this to. I’ve been embezzling at the bank. I had to do it to pay the bills for my mistress. She’s twenty-three years younger than I am, and nobody knows about her. Isn’t that a fine howdy-doo?”

            “What did you tell him?”

            “Well, nothing! You know I can’t say anything. I’ve had a stroke, for Pete’s sake, no offense intended to St. Peter, of course. I’ve been to his church in Rome and all, you know…”

            J.P. Taylor knew he was getting in deeper all the time, but Jesus did not really seem all that interested in his peccadilloes, not nearly like the people in the church who claimed they were following Jesus all the time. That stuck the Rev. Mr. Taylor as being not a little strange.

            “What did Sam Mason do then?” asked Jesus.

            “Well, he got down beside the bed on his knees. Began to cry and beg my forgiveness. Darndest thing I’ve ever seen. Then he stood up, and he dried his eyes on my sheet, and he took my hand and said that he knew he had done wrong, and he was going to repent and fly right. Walked out like a new man. I wish Charley Compworth was an embezzler; might get a new start for him, too. Well, not meaning that I really would want Charley to sin, you know…”

            This talking to Jesus was tricky business, thought Jack Taylor, but he seems to sort out the wheat from the chaff pretty well… But Jesus was continuing…

            “You still owe, you know,” said Jesus.

            “Well, yes, I was thinking about that when I first saw you standing there. It’s because of Molly, isn’t it?”

            “Yes. No man deserves love like hers, or love like mine, either. Besides, you’re a minister. You have to pay thrice for all your sins.”

            The Rev. Dr. Taylor was almost sure Jesus was hiding a smirk in his beard, but what if he was not? What if he was serious? This pay-back for both blessings and sins was double jeopardy.

            “So you’ve come to collect, huh?”

            “You’ve got it. However, the collection is that I’m not collecting. You have to stay a while longer.”

            “Oh, no,” groaned the weary pastor. “Can’t we work out a deal or something? You know, like when I was little, and I told you I would never do it again, whatever it was.”

            “By your definition of little, you were little up to the age of sixty-three, since that was the last time you made that promise.”

            The Rev. Mr. Taylor knew he’d been had.

            “Okay, give it to me straight. I’m not going to die, right?”

            “Right, but it’s only for a little while. You can die soon, but not quite yet. There are too many people who need you yet.”

            “Need me? Unless you intend to work a miracle, and I’m not saying you can’t, of course, I’m not going to be any good to anyone. I’m stuck here in so much white I feel like I’m in one of those little glass Christmas houses that you shake up and there’s snow all over the place.”

            “Don’t you see, Jack? That’s the point! Would Sam Mason have confessed to you if you could have talked back? He’s been embezzling and womanizing for years while you were his pastor, and he never said anything to you before. Would that cleaning lady have shared her broken dream with you if you’d been bustling down the hall like the elder version of that ass, my servant, Charles Compworth?

            Ouch! That hurt, thought the increasingly less reverend Jackson Peter Taylor.

            “And what about Charley himself? He doesn’t say anything because he doesn’t know what to say. But he’ll eventually figure out what he should say, because for the first time in nine years you won’t be giving him better lines than he can think up on his own. With you silent, maybe he’ll be able to think up what he needs to say, in his own words.”

            “But I was called to preach, not to lie here in the comatose ward!”

            “I was called to preach, not to die on a cross. When I was born in that stable, Jack, was that for crucifixion? I didn’t want the cross any more than you want this bed, but it came with the territory. Do you think you can follow me, Jack, and only have the shepherds and the wise men and gold, frankincense, and myrrh, and not take the cross, too? Sometimes the best preaching is done by listening, Jack. Sometimes the best giving is done just by being quiet and taking.”

            The words were gentle, but they reached deep.

            “Okay, boss,” breathed J.P. Taylor. “You’ve got me as long as you want me. Whenever you want to change the deal, you know where to find me.”

            “Right,” said Jesus. “Don’t do anything I wouldn’t do. Merry Christmas, Rev. Dr. Taylor, and get back to work.”

            Jesus was already gone when the nurse flung the door open and marched in to do bed check on the six occupants of the comatose ward. She came to Jack Taylor’s bed last.

            “What in the world? Who’s been in here, anyway? Some ninny nurse took your poor arms and stretched them straight out and forgot to put them back. Well, Christmas eve, and you can’t get decent help, I can tell you that.”

            Go ahead, tell me, sighed Pastor Taylor, as the nurse pulled up a chair…