Eradicating Distance

Being that this is a crazy week, todays post is actually a repost of an article (slighly modified) that appeared on Faith On Campus last week titled “Honing Our Chops”.

[I recently finished Life by Keith Richards, lead guitarist for the Rolling Stones. When most people think of the Stones they probably think of Mick Jagger first (no thanks to Keisha and Maroon 5). But Keith has really been the leader, glue, and engine for the band that turns 50 this year. I found a lot of what Keith writes about in Life to speak into my vocation as a Campus Minister. These are my reflections on Keith’s insights.]

“Friendship is a diminishing of distance between people.” from Life p. 312

In my work with students, the two refrains I hear again and again go like this:

  1. I want more friends
  2. Community is hard

Who doesn’t want more friends? Certainly a major reason students attend school is to find connection, meet new people, and develop long lasting friendships.

But, community is hard. Most of the students I work with attend Boston University, which presents a unique environment. The school is embedded into Boston, stretching across two miles of the city, while running parallel to the Charles River.

30,000 students swirled into the urban milieu creates an intimidating environment, niceh cultures, and a lack of campus identity. All of which presents a fascinating paradox: tons of people to meet, but there’s an inability to connect.

This is not just a Boston University thing either. I hear the same refrains from other large schools (Northeastern University), smaller schools (MIT), and public/commuter schools (UMASS-Boston). And as I talk with colleagues around the country I am finding students echo this refrain everywhere.

In a sense, this is simply a surface level issue, solved fairly simply: just say hello to someone! 

But there is a deeper issue, one that MIT professor Sherry Turkle speaks of in her book, Alone Together. She writes: “Today our machine dream is to be never alone but always in control.”

And therein lies the ultimate difficulty students (and really all of us) have with community. You cannot be friends with someone and control them.

Keith Richards is quite brilliant when he talks about decreasing distance between people. There is a physical distance that must be overcome to make friends. But when we want to control someone another kind of distance is created.

Two people might spend hours and hours together, but that physical proximity is a space where a war for control takes place.

Letting go of control over others is the open door we must walk through to make friends. And so many students I talk with are caught in between, not wanting to let go of control (over people, over their image, over their protection against being hurt), and yet desperately searching and seeking for friendship.

Often times they end up coming to our ministry having burned their way through various relationships. 

A large aspect of campus ministry then is creating open, non-controlling environments for friendships to blossom. And it starts with us: are we (campus ministers) controlling, inadvertently creating distance between us and students? Do we model healthy friendships that our students can see? Do we maintain healthy boundaries while providing the space for students to let their guards down and have authentic encounters with others?

One of the best compliments we get about our community is that it feels like family, or a home away from home. When students tell us this, they mean family in the best sense of the word. They mean care, freedom, proximity, closeness, distances erased.

Creating this kind of culture, these sorts of environments is an art, a discipline, a practice. It requires chops. The chops of distance eradication.

International Campus Ministry and Baby Showers

This week should be crazy, fun, and inspiring with our friends from Globalscope in for their annual Celebration celebration. Globalscopes does international campus ministry and I have been able to learn about them during my times in Dallas over the past year for our Leadership Network University Ministry Learning Community. Several of their teams are in places (like Spain, England, and Germany) that are even more post-christian than Boson. I’m eager to learn from them!

Saturday afternoon some of our lovely friends (and family) threw Amy a baby shower. We are blessed to know so many great people and feel taken care of and loved on in so many ways!

2 Months To Go…

I’m not the one who is pregnant so it feels a bit rude to say this, but pregnancy is long. I’m getting antsy. I want to meet this kid! Not too early of course, but every day it just gets a little more real.

Last Saturday we went to birth class, which was highly informative (especially for me). Tomorrow is a baby shower for Amy. On either ends of those events are doctors visits.

I have some more time off coming up in a few weeks during which time I will complete the transformation of the upstairs of our home: a new room for mom and dad and nursery for baby.

There is mounting evidence all around: we are going to be parents!

Brian Eno

Brian is a weird dude. But he says some interesting things. Here are a few examples:

“Luck is being ready.”

“For the world to be interesting, you have to be manipulating it all the time.”

“It’s not the destination that matters. It’s the change of scene.”

Call Me, Maybe and Some Thoughts on Minimalism

There’s a popular pop song at the moment titled “Call Me, Maybe” (if you want to see an incredible version of the song, CLICK HERE). When it comes on the car I don’t change the channel (it is rather catchy), but my curmudgeonly (soon to be a dad) self gets all riled up. I yell at the male character in the song: “Don’t call maybe, DO IT. Let your yes be yes, and your no be no!”

I actually used this very point in my teaching this past Sunday (you can listen here).

We live in a “maybe” culture, and the result is cluttered, careless words. Rabbi Joseph Telushkin says: “We choose our clothes more carefully than we choose our words.”

Which, of course, leads to some thoughts on minimalism. For Amy and I this has become our new obsession. We began to have some talks about simplifying our life when  our good friend Ryan alerted me to this blog, which sent me over the edge.

Now, we are adding a child to our family and with such an addition comes stuff. And yet our goal is to simplify, minimize our stuff, and have a more orderly home. Or at least a less cluttered home.

Talking about words this week at REUNION made me think about the beauty of “yes” and “no”. When Jesus speaks about words, speech, and commitments in Matthew 5, I find many connection to minimalism…this is minimalist speech. Doesn’t mean we don’t talk or that we have nothing to say.

But our speech is simple, careful, uncluttered.

This is a goal for all of life, perhaps Jesus was on to something by beginning with how we use our words.

Un-Trust

Sarah posted the other day about trust and I liked what she had to say a lot. Ironic because I’ve been thinking a lot about this myself.

We live with a great deal of uncertainty: when will the baby come…will amy have to work after the baby gets here…how will we balance work and ministry and parenting…will our funding come through (which will help us answer some of these questions)…and there’s several other questions there as well.

I pray a lot when I run, and the prayer I keep coming back to is essentially a paraphrase of Mark 9:24: “I trust, help me with my un-trust.”

One of the thing that strikes me from this passage is that they guy who is asking for help with his unbelief is a dad. The scene in question revolves around his child.

I can relate to that. I know belief and trust and closely related, but it has been incredibly helpful for me to meditate on this father’s cry for help as a plea for the ability to trust. I believe it, but do I really trust it?

And so my prayer these days is help me with my un-trust!