October 11, 2015 - I attended worship at David
Lutheran Church
in Canal Winchester
last Sunday. I sat directly behind an older man. The back of his head
captivated me. I couldn’t think who might be on the other side of that head,
but that head posterior sure looked familiar. When he turned around during the
passing of the peace, I instantly recognized him: “Hap!” Yes, it WAS a head I’d
seen before: Pastor Hap Hasenhauer. I hadn’t seen him in over a decade, and
that was when he served in Bucyrus and I in Galion, but once you’ve seen the
back of a head, I guess it sticks with you. It reminded me of this Parson
Ponders that I wrote in 2002.
I was sitting in my pew at a clergy conference. We were at worship. My thoughts were directed towards the
goodness of God’s love and mercy. But
then I saw the back of that head. It was 3 or 4 rows ahead of me. I said, “I’ve seen the back of that head
before. It looks like the head of that
pastor who I used to know but haven’t seen for probably 20 years.” I kept studying the back of the head of that
pastor. I’ll call him Pastor “Long-ago.”
I kept wondering. I
said, “I don’t ever remember studying the back of Pastor Long-ago’s head, but
when I see it, I instantly know, or think I know that it is him, even though I
haven’t seen him for two decades. How
very strange.”
A little later in the service, it was time for the passing
of the peace. I saw him turn around to
pass the peace with those around him. I
saw his face. “Nope,” I said, “I was
wrong. It’s not Pastor Long-ago. It doesn’t look like him.”
Still when he sat down again, and I was again confronted
with the back of that head, I was struck anew by its familiarity. It wasn’t until we got done with worship and
got to our coffee and cookies that the riddle was answered. As I strolled along munching a chocolate chip
delight, a voice called out, “Well, it’s Tim Keeler!” You guessed it. It was Pastor Long-ago. A face can change quite a lot in 20 years, I
discovered. But the back of the head,
that’s another story.
We often say, “I know this or that like the back of my
hand,” but it must also be true that we know people like the back of their
head. I've been studying the backs of heads ever since. I find that I know lots of people by the back
of their head.
There are some important faith things we know that we often
don't realize we know. When Jesus told
the disciples that he was going to prepare a place for them, and that he would
come back and take them to that place, he ended with these words: "And you know the way to the place where
I am going." (John 14:4) Thomas
didn't know that he knew the way to where Jesus was going. He questioned: "Lord, we do not know
where you are going. How can we know the way?"
Jesus said to him, "I am the way, and the truth, and
the life. No one comes to the Father except through me."
I have a feeling that just like we know more about the backs
of people's heads than we think we know, all of us know more about faith than
we think we know. We trip ourselves up.
We forget that we know about these things. We get bogged down with trivial questions
that block us from seeing the important truth that we already know.
Jesus said to him, "I am the way, and the truth, and
the life. No one comes to the Father except through me." We know that.
We may not know every single answer to every extraneous question, but we
know that Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life. We know that our hope lies not in what we
know but whom we know.
Take a look at the back of a few heads this week. I'll bet you'll be surprised at how many
times you will be able to identify folks by the back of their head. You know more about them than you think you
know.
And I'll bet you know more about your savior than you think
you know. Whatever you don't know about
him, you know that he is the way, the truth and the life.
Thanks for visiting David Lutheran. It was great to see your whole family out there in the pew!
ReplyDelete