Author Archive for Mike

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Two days ago we still had a pre-teen in our house. But no longer. With our boys now 23 and 13, we’re very thankful for all the people God has brought into their lives who have encouraged and nurtured them. And I can’t help but say this (again): after the wreck in January, we’re so thankful that our son has lived to see his 13th birthday.

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One thing I loved about Costa Rica and Alaska was that neither got very hot. We had a high each day of about 75 in San Jose, CR, and it got up to about 65-70 in Alaska. That’s my idea of summer weather!

Friday it was 101 in Abilene! One of God’s greatest inventions was AC.

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I’m reading Grisham’s newest novel, THE BROKER. Much of it is about the difficulty a middle-aged man is having trying to learn a new language. Hmmm.

Dude, Where’s My Son?

For other middle school parents:

DUDE, WHERE’S MY SON?
By Jackie Papandrew
www.JackiePapandrew.com

My son recently turned 13, and the last traces of that sweet little boy who thought I hung the moon seem to have vanished. In his place is a strange, slouching creature with a pencil-thin mustache and adolescent angst oozing from every pore. This extraterrestrial I once called flesh and blood, whose mood swings dwarf the Grand Canyon, seems intent on bungee jumping from that rickety bridge connecting a child with adulthood. And I think he plans on dragging his rapidly aging mother along for the ride.

A drastic language change was the first indication of alien infestation in my once cherished offspring. The rosy-cheeked cherub who used to run to me, eyes shining with adoration and shouting “Mommy!” began to address me (and everyone else) as “Dude.” At 13 months, he was a sponge, joyfully soaking up new words, becoming more communicative every day. At 13 years, the hormones surging through his body have cut a swath through the speech center in his brain; his mouth, when it speaks at all, produces mere shrunken shreds of complete sentences apparently understood only by other members of his species.

“S’up” is a perfectly acceptable, all-purpose phrase in an adolescent’s world. “Mom, I love you,” on the other hand, would burn his monosyllabic lips like acid and permanently corrupt his coolness. Communication with this high-tech yet illiterate generation is fraught with frustration. My son, who can’t seem to utter two intelligible sentences to me, airs his gripes through text messaging. Just the other day, a message flashed on my cell phone in fractured syntax designed to torture my English major soul.

“i no u h8 me. i try so hard 2 b good. y r u mad @ me?”

Cave men scribbling on walls were more eloquent.

Then there’s the alteration in appearance. While I’m desperately trying to avoid bags and sags, this long-haired Neanderthal living in my house embraces them as fashion. Wearing gravity-defying pants slung low across his scrawny backside, he looks just like a baby with an overly full diaper. When I helpfully pointed this out, I got another overwrought, electronic missive that ended with several lines of the text message equivalent of a scream. This modern means of communication does keep the house quiet.

Adolescent males seem to lose all capacity for living like civilized human beings. This means that my boy constantly raids the refrigerator but can’t manage to close a door, that he can take 30-minute showers but never hang up a wet towel, that he stuffs freshly laundered clothes back into his hamper rather than putting them away. I find sticky cereal bowls in his closet because he was too lazy to return them to the kitchen, and the lunchbox he claimed he lost growing whole colonies of bacteria under his bed. I now understand why some animals eat their young.

The child who begged me to read to him daily now rolls his eyes in disgust when I suggest we turn off the video games and pick up a book. The angel who proudly showed me off to his kindergarten classmates now pretends not to know the deranged woman waving to him in the middle school hallway. My fall from grace, seemingly overnight, has left me depressed, bewildered and prone to emotional excess.

“You could cut the apron strings without slicing through my heart, you know,” I whimper in one of my calmer moments.

“Mom,” he mumbles in that teenage tone of voice, “why can’t you just act normal?”

Normal is, of course, a relative term. In about 10 years, I will magically return to normalcy as my pubescent boy turns into an adult. At least I hope I do. In the meantime, I’m going to hang on to those severed apron strings. I may need them to strangle him.

Copyright 2005 Jackie Papandrew; http://www.JackiePapandrew.com. Permission is granted to send this to others, with attribution, but not for commercial purposes.

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Tulsa, Stream in the Desert, and Pepperdine are now all in the rearview mirror. I loved each one, but I also love the sense of pressure being over. They all came in the wake of such an intense experience following the wreck. I am emotionally and spiritually drained.

I won’t be home for Sunday morning, but Highland people will be blessed by my absence! Probably the best lecture given here this year was by Randy Harris. He’s going to preach that message again Sunday morning at his home church (Highland). Once again it felt like God allowed the two of us to team up. He preached on Peter’s denial (John 18), and I spoke on his restoration (John 21).

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I have many answers to my question from yesterday. But here’s one of my answers: my mom. If I opened my eyes after incredible failure, I’d want to see her.

I’ve been nurtured for the 48 years of my life by an amazing woman. Articulate. Bright. Compassionate. Deep faith. And strong. Very, very strong.

I remember as a boy — maybe 12ish — hearing an older girl who lived next door say, “Your mom is the most beautiful woman I know.” I said, “Huh?” I’d never thought about that. She was a MOM, for crying out loud. But I later realized that she was right.

She has twice watched her sons grieve. People don’t often realize how great the grief of grandparents is. But they get hit twice: they suffer the loss of a grandchild and then they have to watch their own child hurt. Mom’s been through this twice.

Since retiring as a newspaper editor, she has been active in mission work, going several times for extended stays in the Ukraine. Now she’s back in the classroom, taking Spanish at the local college.

One of the greatest blessings of my life is that I am my mother’s son.

Happy Mother’s Day.

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Tonight I preach on John 21.

Let me ask you this. If you had just done the unthinkable, if you had just come to your senses and realized what a mess you’d made of your life . . . and if you were lying on your back, eyes closed in anguish wishing it were only a dream . . . and then if you opened your eyes . . . whose face would you like to see?

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Happy 05-05-05. We only get a dozen of these (triple dates) per century, so enjoy!

I’m here in Malibu, trying to be quiet at 4:00 in the morning West Coast time. Others are sleeping — either that or they are in their rooms trying to be quiet so they don’t wake others up.

Many things to look forward to today, but I’m especially glad to be able to go to dinner with my parents. They came here two years ago for the first time. The Pepperdine lectureship is like the old Lay’s potato chips commercial: “Bet you can’t attend just once.”

Have a great Cinco de Mayo. Que la gracia del Senor sea con ustedes para siempre.

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Here’s an article I wrote in the Christian Standard about Megan. (Also, go read the 16th comment to yesterday’s blog. After you read Courtney’s note, go hug your kids!)

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Fifteen days until “Revenge of the Sith.” May the Fourth be with you.

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Off to Malibu. Sweet! (Weather permitting, of course. Thankfullly, we’re having lots of rain in Abilene right now.)

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Yesterday was a big day at our house: Chris was able to go to school for the first time since the wreck (Jan. 16) without a wheelchair.

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Years ago when we were trying to produce a good, welcoming brochure to Highland, the ministers met around a table to go through as many from other churches as we could. I looked through one from Louisville, went through several more, and then came to one in Little Rock. I said, “Can someone hand me that one from Louisville again?”

We held them side-by-side. Both had the exact same family on the front. A beautiful, smiling, Hallmark-card kind of white family who looked like they stepped right out of a Dillard’s catalog.

They were models! They didn’t belong to either church, I’m sure. Probably the man and the woman weren’t married, and the kids weren’t theirs.

But they were the kind of “family” the churches wanted to portray on their brochures.

“When you give a luncheon or dinner, do not invite your friends, your brothers, or relatives, or your rich neighbors; if you do, they may invite you back and so you will be repaid. But when you give a banquet, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind, and you will be blessed.” (Luke 14:12-13)

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A few websites I’ve mentioned lately at Highland:

Eternal Threads (the ministry of a woman from Highland to help women in poverty in India)

International Justice Mission

Compassion International

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This is Pepperdine week. It’s a tough gig: staying at the Mallmann House with Darryl and Anne; looking out to the mountains, the Pacific, and the islands; eating at John’s Gardens for lunch; my daily journey to walk the Stations of the Cross at the Serra Retreat Center; and hanging out with some of my best friends in the world (including a quick retreat at the end with Darryl and Leonard).

Once again I’ll be doing the class with Zoe in the afternoon and then the Friday night keynote (John 21).

I started teaching at the Pepperdine lectureship in 1986, so this is my 20th straight year. Jerry Rushford asked me to do my first keynote there on a Wednesday night in 1987 (Acts), and then the opening (Tuesday) night in 1989 (Exodus).

Through the years, it’s been a source of great renewal. I love the mountains, the ocean (especially when it isn’t HOT), the salty breeze, and the incredible colors of the flowers and trees.

So really, it’s two things: it’s being with great friends, and it’s a bit of creation theology.

To say nothing of the seafood. (But on the other hand, I haven’t found a place there with decent guacamole.)

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Good morning from Nashville. I’m listening to the local news. The anchors keep cutting away to the Music City marathon, and more than once they’ve pointed out “it’s going well.” Ha! As I recall from the marathons I’ve run, “it’s going well” is a perspective from the anchor booth, not from the pavement.

Jack and Jill will be drawing in our assembly tomorrow. I’ll be finishing the two-week message on “Lunchables That Change the World” (on justice).

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Last night I spoke at the graduation ceremony for FaithWorks, a Highland ministry that started three or four years ago. It may be one of my favorite speaking gigs of the year.

Nine women, having finished the 13-week program, got to receive their diplomas. These are women whose lives have been challenging. But they entered the program, bonded together, and completed the work.

Three of them spoke briefly at the graduation ceremony. One talked about being told that she had cancer in an advanced stage. She had two choices: she could accept her likely fate, try to stay as free of pain as possible, and die quickly or she could fight a painful battle with all she had in her. She looked around at her nine children, and decided it was time to fight. I looked in amazement at this strong woman of faith as she received her diploma.

Sunday morning at second service we’ll recognize these incredible graduates.