Almost Hit by a Truck [Plus Some Thoughts on Justice and How the Little Things Matter]

It happened so suddenly.

My spouse, Kae, and I had just enjoyed a meaningful silly, much-need date night. We walked down the street to Taco Borracho where I had an amazing Puerto Rican steak sandwich. Kae enjoyed vegan tacos which, by the way, were surprisingly good, muy sabroso.

On the way there, we talked about how aggressive drivers have seemed to become in the past few years. Perhaps it’s coupled with larger shifts in American and global cultures, maybe pent-up feelings that folks take out on their vehicles. On the ground level, it just seems as if there’s more rage in the air than 8 or 10 years ago.

I joked that not only do we need to be defensive drivers, but defensive walkers as well [this is called foreshadowing].

On the way home, I was feeling even more defensive as the sun had mostly set. As we walked north toward our home, we had to cross the exit ramp from I-196. Vehicles were waiting to turn right on our street, College Avenue, to head south. Bye bye red hand and hello little glowing guy walking. I never trust those signs.

We looked at each individual driver as we gingerly crossed the road, hoping for eye contact. There were three or four vehicles idling, waiting for a break in traffic.

I was almost across when I heard the pickup’s engine roar.

Because I’m a polite Midwesterner, “WHOA WHOA WHOA” were the only words I could form. I felt the Silverado’s headlight on my left palm, and pushed against it while simultaneously jumping forward and out of the truck’s path. I had been clipped, as they say. The driver must have heard me yell, and stopped after only making it a few feet.

the road where it happened

By that time, everyone in the intersection is staring at us. He was staring at me staring back at him in equally potent though different shades of shock. He avoided manslaughter, I survived another day. Who was more relieved may be an applicable question.

I had the traffic sign, and I was being vigilant. And I still got clipped. Had he punched the gas two seconds earlier, he would have driven directly into me. And wouldn’t that be awkward to have an unexpected passenger!

Perhaps he checked more thoroughly for the next few days minutes.

As my adrenaline slowly receded, I shared [vigorously] with Kae about the injustice of it all. It’s unjust to be constantly on one’s guard when simply walking. And this isn’t my first rodeo. I’ve had other experiences of being ignored, threatened, and injured by vehicles. Drivers in Grand Rapids routinely hit 40, 50, even 60 miles per hour in 25-30 mph zones. Some corridors are worse than others: Fuller north of Fulton, Michigan, Burton, certain stretches of College on the north side.

Kae heard me out. But they shared a perspective: consider the injustice everywhere! At the moment, the deadly October, 2023 Hamas attacks in Gaza have been answered with an even-more-deadly war. Children are without their parents. Families are being destroyed. Lives are being upended.

Outright violence rages in 110 distinct locales around the world, from Syria to Sudan, from Ukraine to Cameroon, according to the Geneva Academy.

There is also violence enacted toward the natural world. Creation seems to groan under the weight of it all. We read it in the news. I can smell it in the air: diesel fumes, factory exhaust, wildfire smoke.

Dr. King said injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. Indeed, the smoke that affected much of the United States was from Canada, our neighbors to the north. We share one large global ocean. Air is universal. People are interdependent. We pass along justice – or injustice.

There’s an old revival song that goes like this:

***

It only takes a spark to get a fire going, and soon all those around can warm up in its glowing

That’s how it is with God’s Love: once you’ve experienced it

Your spread the love to everyone; you want to pass it on

***

As a practicing Christian, the song rings true. Unfortunately, the passing-on phenomenon happens conversely: once you’ve experienced trauma, it can be hard not to pass it on. Once you’ve experienced violence toward your mind, body, or identity, it can be hard not to pass on violence to others. Love and hate alike are passed on. Only when trauma and pain is processed and metabolized can it be kept from endangering others.

Injustice, too, is passed on. During the 1930s, Hitler’s regime took ample notes on American racism. In particular, the Nazis found Jim Crow laws to be particularly inspiring. Read more on that here or here.

When a gardener plants seeds, they grow. This, the unstoppable way of all creation. As a tree grows in one place, so grows a thorn elsewhere. As a loving exchange transpires in some relationship, so does a traumatic, rageful belittling in another.

The biblical author and apostle, Paul, writes this in his letter to the Galatians:

Remember this: Whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows generously will also reap generously.

Jesus, speaking earlier, said it this way:

…give, and it will be given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap, for the measure you give will be the measure you get back.” Luke 6:38

This morning I read in the NYT The Morning, which I have read almost-daily since the pandemic days, about the alignment of global powers: Iran, China, Russia, North Korea, and the various groups these countries support [for example, Iran’s support of Houthis, Hamas, and Hezbollah, or China’s support of Russia]. On the other side, it’s the United States, Japan, South Korea, Western Europe, etc.

When countries sow seeds of destruction, we see how Jesus and Paul’s words continue to ring true, but on a much larger scale. Whether it’s small acts of rage and violence or carelessness, the world is duly affected.

And yet, I’m glad the converse is also true:

Every small act of generosity, compassion, and kindness matters. All conversations and words shared in a day matter. Every prayer uttered to God matters. How I treat my fellow humans, how I treat the natural world, it matters. Every little action matters.

I tried to talk to a bongo at the zoo.

It didn’t work but it was worth the time. We seemed to bond.

Whether it’s pausing to notice a pedestrian, thanking your mail carrier or Amazon driver, or sending a little encouraging text, every little action matters. Awareness of this adds complexity and depth to all interactions. Instead of coasting along, carried by the winds of culture and advertising and wherever life has taken us, we can intentionally take control of the small decisions, the little acts that bring about great things.

We can slow down if we choose to drive. We can pause and count to five before we respond in our conversation or hit send on our device. We can slowly learn to see all people, plants, business decisions, and conversational exchanges as sacred.

Because what if, after all, they are sacred?

As I look back, there was something sacred about the interaction on College Avenue when that driver clipped me. For me, I had a new sense of gratefulness for my own life, my family, my friends, my congregation. For him, I’m less sure. Maybe he was just happy not to have flattened me. But maybe, just maybe, it was a moment to slow down and consider that I, just like him, am a fellow human being with needs, aspirations, kids, etc.

It all matters.

The Top 10 Things I Learned in Seminary [#8]

Having graduated from Grand Rapids Theological Seminary early this month, this is the next of my seminary reflections. This marks the third post. They are out of order, except for the last few.

#8

Preaching is as scary as I always thought [but it can also be powerful!].

One of the more intimidating aspects of the pastoral vocation is this: speaking in front of a lot of people. Those people may be judging you, or they may offer great charity. Those people may come interested, or they may come with impatience and plenty of other things to think about at that time. Those people long for a sense of the eternal, of deep purpose for life, of grace and truth; but they may not have gotten enough sleep the night before.

And there they are at church.

Scary, right?

Now, let’s add to that.

I’m not someone who was naturally drawn to speaking in front of people. My college speech class illustrates this perfectly. The goal to was to eradicate ums and uhhs from our speeches, and also to memorize our main points. I couldn’t remember the next point, and I knew I couldn’t say uh or um, so I just stopped. It was probably about 8 or 10 seconds. Yeah.

If you listen to me preach nowadays, don’t be deceived. You may initially think I’m calm and poised, but don’t let that fool you! I am not! Well, at least beforehand. As I move into a message, somehow God’s Spirit seems to slowly calm my nerves, and I allow him to animate me. Somehow, my hands even seem to work with my words as I tread holy ground. Somehow, the people out there who always used to intimidate me have turned into people who simply long for an experience of God.

Just like God used Moses, a guy who stammered and lacked confidence and poise, God can use a guy like me. God can use a guy who wasn’t always a natural with words and with communication. God can use a guy who hated public speaking for the first two decades of his life. For me, this has been evidence of my calling that I have been given grace to do the communication that pastoring requires. That’s not to say I’m killin’ it. But I’m taking steps. The meme below says it all.

onedoesnotsimply.meme

God calls various people in various places to proclaim the hope contained in Scripture and made most evident in the Son, Jesus Christ. This is a serious, scary task. That can [and does] make us young pastors terrified!

But the incredible thing about preaching is this: it sticks. I still remember concepts and illustrations from the sermons my pastor preached growing up. I remember the story about bitterness that featured Eskimo hunters who dipped an icy blade into blood, then planted it in the snow. When a wolf would smell the blood and lick the blade, they became so intoxicated that they failed to realize their numb tongue was being cut open. That’s harsh, but it’s what we do to ourselves when we fail to forgive and harbor bitterness against others. Preaching sticks.

That stuff matters. It’s terrifying, and it matters. A lot.