CHRIST IN WINTER: The
Irrelevant Confessions of An Old Faker—
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.










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