My father told me this story when I was a teenager. He had a splendid memory, and had probably read it 10-20 years earlier. And now, decades later, I have discovered it on the web, and it is just as he told it to me, and I remembered it. He had the last line word for word. Wow!
Archives for 2010
Joseph Conrad on The Writer’s Task
Circles (vicious and virtuous) and The Parable of Talents
Circles (vicious and virtuous) and the Parable of Talents
Faith as a Dare, a Game of Chicken
Faith is acting upon what you feel God calling you to do with no guarantees as to whether it will work or not.
Walking into the Red Sea. Hoping, believing the waters will part. An act of sheerest insanity. An acting upon what you, or one in whom you put your absolute faith, is absolutely sure is the clearest word of God.
It comes down to that with tithing, for instance. Christ says, Give and you shall receive, full measure, pressed down, flowing over. Will we? We have to try it to see. What’s more, give without telling anyone. Cut off any possibility of any reward except from God.
A Cab at the Door by V.S. Pritchett
For a decade or two, I preferred reading memoirs to fiction. The best are as well-written, and with as much craft. But they are “true”.
V.S. Pritchett’s A Cab at the Door is memorable. His father was a petty tyrant, schemer, dreamer, manipulator. He was inexcusably selfish. He plunged his family into poverty, while indulging himself in petty luxuries–oysters, clothes, lace, pianos.
He perpetually skirted financial disaster, and there was always “A Cab at the Door” as the title says, for yet another move under duress.
There are memorable vignettes. His father lolling in an armchair, legs splayed out, while his mother kneels before him, trying to get off his tight boots. His father eating oysters, while they watched. His father spending lavishly on himself, and niggardly on them.
The marriage, he memorably says, was ” a marriage of the rich and the poor.”
I remember reading that much later, Pritchett discovered that his father had another family, who were provided for in an even more niggardly manner. His half-sister has written a book about her childhood, farmed out to an old woman who would have her massage her nipples for hours at a time!! The Pritchetts had no idea of this family’s existence.
I conclude with an except from Thomas Lask’s New York Times Review, “Through it all, Mr. Pritchett’s mind and spirit grew, though it was squeezed and stifled in an environment hostile to art and learning. Irregularly educated and never in contact either through print or person with anything that could show him the possibilities of a life he desired, he had to live with his undisclosed and inchoate yearning. He did not know where to turn. He describes with painful recollection the humiliation he had to undergo as his father read with scorn a piece of schoolboy writing. He could not live at home, but there was so little independence in the family that he could not break away either. When he left at 20, he did it with subterfuge. He said he was going on a holiday to France, but he knew he would never return.
A novelist, short story writer, author of superb travel books, and also a critic, he has provided an engrossing document and a first-hand look at England in the first two decades of the century. It reads so quickly and is so engaging that the reader finds himself becoming unconsciously partisan, as impatient and restless as the young hero for the great day when he will be on his own.”
And He breathed on them, and said, "Receive the Holy Spirit." Good news!
And He breathed on them, and said, “Receive the Holy Spirit.”
And just like that, they did.
That’s brilliant. For that is why we need. The Holy Spirit to sort out our spirits. To give us wisdom. Self-control. Temperance. Peace. Calm.
And as Jesus says, we receive this gift just by asking for it.
The Gospel is indeed good news.
Many years ago, I was in a Bible study with a large, dramatic lady. When the regular leader was away, she was asked to lead the study.
She enacted the exchange of David and Jonathan with Jonathan giving David everything in this covenant between a prince and a shepherd. It was like the exchange we have going with Christ. I give you my love for what it’s worth, Jesus, and you give me….Everything!
As she enacted it, she broke down and became tearful. I told Roy with some displeasure, “What a loud, overly dramatic woman.”
Roy said, “Maybe as you grow older, you appreciate it more.”
And so indeed one does. The free gift, the free goodness, the free comfort, the sheer generosity of the Gospel is indeed, as its name says, Good News.
Anthony and Cleopatra at Trinity College Gardens, Oxford
Anthony and Cleopatra at Trinity College Gardens, Oxford
Holidays: Restoration, refreshment, rejuvenation, rekindling, renewal
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