Under their influence
Time Magazine recently published its list of the 25 most influential
evangelicals in America, a group that included Billy Graham, Focus on
the Family founder James Dobson, “Purpose-Driven Life” author Rick
Warren and Potter’s House pastor T.D. Jakes. Excluding the obvious
figures -- Jesus, Muhammad, Buddha, etc. -- what religious figure has
been most influential in your life?
It is told that Satan once decided to retire and sell all his
diabolical devices. On the day of the sale, all his tools were put on
display, each with a price tag. One rather plain-looking and
much-worn tool was priced considerably higher than the others. The
devil was asked what it was.
“That’s discouragement,” he said. “It is more useful to me than
all the others. It is greatly worn, because it is my favorite tool. I
have used it on everybody, yet few know that it belongs to me.”
According to the fable, the Devil’s price for discouragement was
so high that no one bought it. And he is still using it.
I recall this parable as I think of an inspirational Biblical
figure, Nachshon, Prince of the Tribe of Judah. The Children of
Israel were trapped between the Sea in front of them and Pharoah’s
chariots in hot pursuit from behind. Moses tried to persuade the
people that they would indeed be free on that day, despite the
obstacles that thwarted their forward march. His efforts were in vain
as the people wept and wailed that they were doomed to perish.
The situation was not hopeless; only the people were without hope.
Discouragement had defeated them. Without hope for the future, they
had no power in the present. When they lost hope, they lost heart.
They could not achieve because they did not believe.
The children of Israel stood trembling by the shores of the Red
Sea, paralyzed by discouragement, even though God commanded them to
go forward. The Jewish tradition teaches that one man, Nachshon, did
not hesitate to carry out God’s directive. He sprang forward into the
raging waters, but nothing happened.
Nachshon was not taken aback. He descended deeper into the water,
up to his ankles, knees, stomach, and still the waters did not part.
Nachshon did not flinch and resolutely continued until the water
reached his neck. At that moment, when he was about to take the
ultimate risk to obey God’s command, the miracle of the splitting of
the sea occurred.
The lesson is clear. God demands maximal effort, for it is only
through actual deeds where one’s faith is tested.
Was Nachshon’s faith put to the test when he prayed on the
seashore? No. Even jumping into the stormy waters was not sufficient,
for he still had an opportunity to back out. Only by going all the
way in fulfilling God’s will did he prove he was a true believer.
Nachshon understood that saying “I believe” and then waiting for
salvation is not authentic faith.
God demands of us that we prove our faith by way of our actions,
and not just with our mouths. Only by being willing to fulfill
difficult commands, do we prove our faith is genuine.
We all face our own Red Seas, barriers that seem determined to
hold us back. At such times we would do well to remember Nachshon and
not surrender to discouragement and self-pity. Rather, we must take
the initiative and move forward.
Instead of telling God that we have great problems, we should tell
our problems that we have a great God!
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yam
Newport Beach
There have been very few “big shots” that have influenced my life
significantly.
I have been impacted by Rick Warren in rethinking the basics of
being a Christ-follower. His wife Kay has encouraged my involvement
in HIV/AIDS compassion ministries, both overseas and here in Orange
County.
C.S. Lewis taught me the power of parable and beauty of
imagination as valuable tools of my faith. John Stott taught me about
living a life without excess in commiseration with the poor and
hungry. Stanley Grenz and local seminary professor Ray Anderson
taught me to look outside the box in terms of developing theology.
The Catholic Henri Nouwen taught me about forgiveness in his great
book, “The Return of the Prodigal.” USC professor Dallas Willard
rocked my world in his book and other teachings on spiritual
disciplines.
One of the more profound impacts on my life came while I was a
missionary in Romania. I read the diaries of Jim Elliott, who was
martyred in the late 1950s in Ecuador. He is often quoted as saying,
“He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot
loose.”
He gave his life for God’s kingdom. His story was the cover of the
nation’s newspapers at the time, and is being released in theaters
this month in a movie called “Beyond the Gates of Splendor.”
But as I read the journals of a young man in the jungles of South
America, I related to his battles. The honesty of his life and the
desire to give all I had to God.
His story does not end in his death. Years later, the men who
killed Jim and his team became Christ-followers and pastors, and
baptized the adult children of the men they killed in the river where
they killed them.
Most of those people had a secondary influence on my life. The
most impactful people have been the ones who corrected, challenged or
encouraged me when I needed it.
Growing up in a secular home, I had never celebrated a
Christ-centered Christmas or Easter (Resurrection Day). For us, it
had always been about the toys and the candy. It had never occurred
to me that there was a Biblical way for families to handle arguments
or disagreements. What did real love and sacrifice look like in a
home?
From the time I was in college, very godly people walked in my
life and let me see life from a different angle. Cal and Ruth Steiner
from Wisconsin pulled back the veneer of a pastoral home and let me
see the beauty of how they work and live. Ray and Anne Ortlund have
mentored people around the world, many of them here in Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach. Having been married for more than 57 years, they have
been a great example to my wife and I of faithfulness, fidelity and
passion.
And back when I first decided to follow Jesus, a group of people
believed in me and sent me off to Bible college in Chicago. They
didn’t have much, but they would send me boxes of candy wrapped in
dollar bills. Their sacrifices for me have always influenced the way
I live.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE PASTOR
RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
Those persons most influential in my religious life are known by
others I love: I have learned from teachers including Don and Polly,
Lee and Elsa, Esther, Harvey, Fred, George and Bill, and friends
including Norris, Steve, Cindy, Tim, Teri, Mary Ann, Susan and
Donnie. I could go on and on about such people of faith and how they
have influenced my life toward good.
As for people of whom many others have heard: I have been
privileged to know Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu -- to listen to
him, share meals with him and even to be his colleague at a winter
conference in the Rockies (because our walkways were icy, and I was
the only person on staff who could carry his luggage) for a week in
1984, only months before he won the Nobel Peace Prize.
From his deep faith in God in Christ Jesus, Archbishop Tutu turned
his, and our, attention to racial issues and concerns with poverty,
hunger, epidemic disease, economic exploitation, militarism and
nationalism. I share his vision of our church being like a headlight
showing the world ways forward, and lament with him that we are much
more often a taillight. Desmond is an extraordinary human being whose
candor, I am sure, brings a smile to the face of God.
Among the truths I have learned from Desmond Tutu are: “The Bible
is the most revolutionary, the most radical, book there is; if a book
has to be banned, then it ought to be the Bible.” “What do we have
that is not [a] gift? Everything that we are, that we have, is a gift
from God,” “Many people believe that they are outside God’s love,
that God may love others but that what they have done has caused God
to stop loving them; but Jesus by his example showed us that God
loves sinners as much as saints,” and “No one, and nothing, is ever
beyond hope! Jesus says love even the people you don’t like.”
I regularly try to remember, “Jesus says, ‘love ... ‘“
VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
Spiritual teachers whom I have known through close regular contact
influenced me, not people in the news or best-selling authors.
Sayings like “Familiarity breeds disrespect,” or “To lose your
faith, become friends with a minister,” are only true if we idealize
spiritual leaders and set them up as perfect beings, far removed from
our own experience. It follows that next, we will be disappointed if
we do get to know them well enough to find that they are, like us,
complex and fragile human beings with shortcomings as well as
virtues.
When we admire someone, it may be a tribute to them, but it also
reveals our own corresponding aspirations and values, however latent.
It should nudge us to take responsibility for developing in ourselves
the characteristics we admire in others, and to express them in our
own lives to the best of our ability and circumstances.
Projections and exaggerations often serve as an excuse rather than
an impetus. People flock to lectures to see Thich Nhat Hanh and the
Dalai Lama, report they are deeply impressed by their words and their
very presence, but how many resolve to practice Zen or Buddhist
awareness in their own lives or to participate with local communities
of practitioners?
A sense that religious figures are far above us may allow us to be
entertained, to applaud in the audience, rather than calling us to
take our own place on the stage, however humble our role may seem. If
we are influenced by a spiritual leader and the teachings of a
tradition, our life should show it.
We read too often about religious leaders who have used their
positions of trust and influence to abuse their congregants,
financially or sexually, with corrupt administrators and naive
communities covering up. We suffer from the extremes of cult devotion
and rock star-like adulation on the one hand, and mistrust and scorn
of all religious leaders on the other. Before allowing a spiritual
leader to have influence, there should be careful consideration of
his or her training, background and lifestyle, with healthy
evaluation and input from the community.
Abraham Maslow, the psychologist famous for his work on optimal
human development, called his teachers his “angels.” For me, this
poetically expresses the appreciation and gratitude I have for the
spiritual teachers who influenced me. One of them, Sr. Virgie
Luchsinger, has been an inspiration throughout my adult life because
of her deep contemplative commitment.
Sr. Virgie’s call to a life of prayer came to her in her earliest
years, while growing up on a dairy farm in Iowa. She entered the
cloistered Roman Catholic Carmelite monastery, leaving the “world” to
devote herself entirely to prayer and asceticism. After 20 years, she
was well able to recognize God in the world, in all things and all
people.
She left the monastery to explore new forms of contemplative life
and became a member of the Sisters For Christian Community, a
pioneering group of Roman Catholic sisters. She became a nurse and
has worked the night shift for 30 years, studying astronomy by
necessity.
While serving as a missionary in Liberia, she managed an entire
hospital at night and was told by the doctors and administrators that
they slept well knowing she was in charge. She taught nurse aides,
and her Liberian students invited her into their homes and were
genuinely saddened when her tour of duty was ended.
She has a master’s degree in theology, and loves study, education,
travel, art and music. As a senior student of Professor Ikka
Nakashima, she is an instructor in the Ikenobo Ikebana School of
flower arranging and of Chanoyu (Tea Ceremony). She has practiced Zen
for more than 15 years and views it as a natural expression of her
Carmelite Catholic heritage.
But more than accomplishments, it is her spacious regard and
acceptance for each person and her attentive care for each task,
which is most joyful and transformative to experience. She has also
influenced me to maintain a commitment to the way of meditation, to
be flexible and creative, to persevere through difficult times and in
periods when there has been little other support. She lives by the
words of St. John of the Cross, “In the evening of life, you will be
judged by love alone.”
REV. DR. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
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