Accidental Preacher
Accidental Preacher
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Summary: A memoir about a man who became a pastor because of calling.
My story is a comedy, as opposed to a tragedy, not because my life is funny but because my life is having a happy ending due to God's gracious choice to be God for us and choosing even the likes of me to be for God.
You can tell that Kathleen Norris is a Christian. As she wrote her memoir, she repeatedly reminded herself, “You're not that big of a deal. The call is the big deal.” If my memoir makes me my life's chief protagonist, me, the big deal, I'm the most miserable of writers. More interesting than my life are the hijinks of a vocative God who explains my life.
“What a beautiful group!” exclaimed Dr. Herbert. “I have one request before we go out and take our place on the church steps. Boys, please, no ties on a Thursday. Only I can wear a tie in church on a weekday. Such are the rules of our Connection. You may wear them if you must on Sunday. Please remove your ties. Let's take that picture.” God is like Dr. Herbert, without the Plymouth.
Jesus's directives seem extreme for most church squabbles. I've found that when someone offends, if I count to ten and seethe for a year or two, I usually get over it. If, on the other hand, I offend them and they refuse to suppress their anger at me, I dismiss them as touchy, overly sensitive. I would like you to think that I'm such a nice person that I would never obey Jesus and confront you. Truth is, Jesus has a considerably higher view of friendship than that practiced in most churches, which amounts to: I promise never to hold you accountable if you'll do the same for me. Church as a gentile conspiracy of niceness, as a civil compatibility club rather than a community of truth.