Thank you, Songs of Ascent friends

This past Sunday I finished my travels with the Songs of Ascent tour.

We did a little less than 40 Psalm 103 concerts, plus the various vespers and chapel services at academies. We did something in Iowa, Nebraska, Michigan, Indiana, Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, Florida, South Carolina, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. There was a lot of driving and a lot of amazing experiences. Check out Eric and Monique's blog for their summary report.

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Here, though, on my blog I want to thank Matt and Josie Minikus for inviting me to be a part of their tour way back in May. At that point, it was not going to be an official Songs of Ascent tour, just Matt Minikus and Friends. (Joke) They took a chance on me and offered me an opportunity to exercise spiritual gifts, learn under them and invited me into intimate friendship with them. Both Matt and Josie have significantly impressed the way I perceive Christianity and Adventism, how I think of relationships, and how to mentor. I thank them so much for giving me the privilege to ride around in the back seat of their Lexus, walled in by the front seat, luggage and equipment and the door. I endearingly called it my cubicle.

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Moreover, I want to thank Eric and Monique as well. I simply loved getting to know them better and developing a friendship with them. I appreciated their music already before I knew them and it was awesome to get to spend time with them. Since I struggle with being tense and overtly melancholy, it was great to have a couple of mellow Australians on the team. We had plenty of adventures, we had plenty of laughs, Eric and I got into Vine together, and I had sweet time guessing when Monique wanted steamed vegetables or Vegennaise. You two have also impressed how I see relationships and showed me a boldness in the way you have committed to your calling that has left me inspired and wanting to give more of myself to Christ.

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Lastly, I want to thank the countless people along our journey who showered us with blessings via their generosity, hospitality, and affection. To those who gave us lunches and dinners, who gave me a couch to sleep in, who took us out somewhere, who made us scrambled tofu, and who arranged for me to meet Clifford Goldstein, thank you so much. I am indebted to you. May you all be rewarded in a double portion of what you gave us.

This tour exceeded all my expectations and they were pretty high to begin with. My life really is changed and I can already tell how I am embarking on a markedly different course because of it. I thank God for allowing me to be a part of it. If you took the chance to read this obituary, I encourage you to find mentorship and to do a project that challenges you and is geared to helping others.

You won't regret it.

Happy International Women's Day

Author's Note: I hope nobody thinks I am trying to imply a woman only finds value in being in a marital relationship because of the two quotes I've selected. I believe the principals I am trying to emphasize are useful regardless of whether or not you're married.

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Today is International Women's Day. While this has different and various meanings across the globe, it is generally thought of as a day to celebrate and appreciate the woman.

Depending on your school of thought, this is done in different ways. My appreciation will focus around two simple ideas, two quotes from writings that I have personally found to be meaningful. I hope that whether female or male, you appreciate this short piece.

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"My vineyard, which is mine, is before me." (Song of Solomon 8:12 KJV) "My vineyard belongs to me and is at my disposal." (Song of Solomon 8:12 ISV)

The first quote is from the Song of Solomon found in the Scriptures. The Song of Solomon is one of my favorite books in the Scriptures that I refuse to study in depth because it is too intense for me. May be when I'm engaged, I will start to sink my teeth into it, but for now, a cursory reading is good enough. However, this is one of those texts which in my readings has become very meaningful to me. The Shulamite woman here is responding to her lover who earlier claimed her as his vineyard. Now, in case you did not, vineyard is a poetic Hebraism alluding to the woman's sexuality, her sexual vigor and fruit. This quote though, I don't think is necessarily limited to sex though, because I believe human sexuality goes beyond what a man and a woman can do on a bed. I believe our sexuality includes all the relational desires, the affections, the desires for understanding and communication which makes people feel and know they are loved and held and in community. So, yes this poetic line is about a woman saying her body's sexual pleasures are hers and hers to give, but I believe the principle can also refer more generally, to the woman's female identity, to what makes her woman. The Shulamite knows she is her own and she can choose how to give her womanhood and to whom to give it to.

The women in my life who have inspired and blessed me have been those whom I saw were in command of themselves. They, like this Shulamite woman, assert themselves in the midst of less than favorable societal values and expectations and proclaim that they are their own. These women choose who and what to give themselves to and not even Solomon with his 10,000 shekels could shake them.

"Do not sell yourself at a cheap market." (Letters to Young Lovers 76.2)

I love this quote and it ties in perfectly to the previous one. In a letter to a young woman who had been too loose with her affections and interests, Sister White said that she grieved for her soul and admonished her with this remark. Do not sell yourself at a cheap market.

You are your own and you are free to give yourself as you wish. To give your womanhood to whichever career, person, dream, goal, philosophy, religion, etc. that you so desire.

However, before you give yourself, ask if this isn't giving yourself over cheaply. What will that career return to you? What about a certain individual? Or job? What will you reap from that religion or the pursuit of this dream? Will it be worth you? Because you can be certain that life is demanding and once we give ourselves over to something it will begin to consume us.

The women who have inspired me and blessed me not only knew they were their own to give, but gave themselves over to things worthy of them. They wouldn't put up with abusive partners. Their goals and dreams they pursue are honorable and dignified. Moreover, the ones who are Christian doubly realize they have been bought by the precious blood of Christ and would never think to conduct themselves in a way that doesn't bear witness of that fact.

These women not only choose who and what to give themselves to, but they have a filter and a strong sense of worth ingrained in them. They're worth is tied to the blood of Jesus which does not rust nor corrupt nor age, therefore they can have certainty they are of value and be strengthened to make choices which are not below market.

Today, I celebrate these women.

Live your life, she said

This poem is dedicated to Daniel Alcantara and Kessia Reyne Bennett.

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Live your life, she said [10.24.12]

Sometimes, I find my voice wanders to conversations I did not seek. Running quick, like predators are on the chase, I soon realize it was a trap.

G.K. Chesterton said mad men do not need reason, do not need an argument or clever rhetoric. They need to gasp fresh air into their shriveled lungs and mind.

Who is this writer anyways? To what goal does he aim? Who gave him authority to put ink to paper, and scribble something about love and spirituality?

It is in these moments, I think of you. The way you would run your hand through your hair, thick and black, proceed to utter a sentence beginning with, “Basically...”

And I ask myself, what will it come to? The fluorescent light casts shadows upon my bed creating a theatre from books and pens. Creating a make believe world I can turn off at any moment.

But that is not how this works, I am never one to wait, anyways. My mind returns to the scripture about fruit in season. “He doesn’t abandon, she added.

A letter from Daniel Alcantara

 Editor's note: The following piece is a contribution by my friend Daniel Alcantara. He is one of my closest friends and someone whom I once shared the faith's labor with. He left Seventh-day Adventism over a year ago, but has not left the spiritual pursuit. Neither I, nor he as you will read, endorse everything done in this story. However, the details are important to his experience and so here they are. To the Christian, may you be encouraged at the thought the Spirit does not abandon. To the uncertain, may you be drawn to the search for the Mystery and Unknowable.

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Not sure how the doubt began.

I had just moved to Minneapolis from a northern suburb due to a job I hated and the perception of a stepfather who classified me as less of a man. The move to the city came from a desire to pursue something meaningful while I was young rather than beginning a retirement fund. The meaningful thing was to share the perspective of Christ, at least the perspective I had at that moment in time.

The sadness I noticed take root in my original nine to five answering phones before I moved lingered with me in Minneapolis. Despite the move, despite the absence of my stepfather, and despite my perseverance in prayer, I saw myself in tears and sleepless wandering through Lake Street. Friends I had made in California kept encouraging the practice of something I began labeling as useless. The suggested answers began to lose their validity: that my faith was perhaps weak or that the sorrow was a trial given to me for learning started began to sound look like cop outs not really addressing what was wrong with me.

Deep sadness makes a person want to die. For what benefit is received out of the aloneness felt even with company? That’s what I thought.

As the depression worsened, my mind could not escape the unfavorable Old Testament verses I encountered months before all this began to take place.

My girlfriend at the time wanted to end our relationship. It makes sense. I don’t blame her. I was very crippled by the constant aloneness I felt, and it formed an irritation along with an absent trust toward people. How would anyone want to maintain a relationship with someone like that? Yet, I kept walking in the words of peace spoken by that strange Galilean man.

I was still invited to give sermons at churches and presentations at Christian schools. I performed them faithfully. Sharing hope nurtured the very little I had.

The same Old Testament verses were now audible in my morning routine of forming the outline of prayer. My mind was not going to escape them.

My girlfriend, at that moment, stayed with me after my begging.

Not much was accomplished during my stay in Minneapolis. The basement I was sleeping in began to appear like a grey scale rather than a living space. I never really followed through on my ministry ideas for the cities. I then decided to attend college in western Minnesota.

The only ones giving me encouragement throughout my trial were hundreds of miles away, and it was through email. Members of my church preferred to critique my broken Spanish rather than encourage the message. So I was glad to leave for school. Yet, I encountered even more difficult religious dilemmas in my philosophy classes. Once the confusion of what time was and whether humans practiced liberty in the midst of divine omniscience came, I stopped praying. I stopped reading Scripture. I started smoking pot and found a group of people who were very open to experience and ignorance. The group was so refreshing to encounter after the experiences I had with church members who worried more about doing things correctly than learning from error. I broke up with my girlfriend, the one whom I begged earlier to stay with me. And soon after she left her faith behind, an action that put into question the sincerity of her baptism, but I don’t blame her, nor do I judge her. I will never understand what she felt.

The doubts grew stronger after my second semester. I took a class on Free Will and even did a presentation on Human Liberty and Divine Foreknowledge. I got an A on the presentation, and was the only one to face little to any opposition from the instructor. But I was still unhappy and found myself accepting the sadness from Minneapolis to be a permanent one. Antidepressant after antidepressant, sleepless night after sleepless night, and cigarette after cigarette, I kept going even when my mind told me death would ease the struggle. A part of me longed for suicide. I thought God’s slumber was very deep.

When I began to notice my mother crippled by the same sadness, my brokenness encountered new depths as I began to taste whiskey to the point of black outs.

While being back in Minneapolis after I was told my mother was moving out of state to pursue something better than what was in the Midwest, I transferred to a different campus of the same school. My sleepless nights eased with heavy marijuana consumption, which though it helped, I do not endorse doing. What a skyline the city had around midnight, though. I found comfort in staring at those buildings late at night, the concrete jungle of carelessness.

Near the end of the first semester, a youth I knew drank himself to death. And a close friend, a friend I love and shared so much in common with, had something similar to a schizophrenic break down. I wish him the best. He is on my mind and I wish to call him soon.

With the news all happening within the same week, the voice suggesting death danced with sense, what a frightening dance it was. It was scary to want to join its dance. And I found myself being told I was a hazard to myself by psychologists. Not knowing what to do, I dropped out of school because I found few benefits in a degree. It would all be taken from me at the grave anyway.

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Now, what I’m about to tell, I suggest no one to reenact. I tell it to simply be thorough and honest about what happened. I respect the beliefs of Bryant, a long standing friend who has been nothing but comfort for me, and who was with me throughout my mental difficulties, and that of his church, a family I once belonged to.

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One night, I was smoking a joint and I thought to myself, there has to be other plants like this. And there are. I started to consume Calamus and Galangal either orally or through smoke. Then after more reading and research, I got a hold of some mushrooms and Caapi vine. Once I took the proper dietary precautions before the consumption of these plants, I took them in hopes of betterment and enlightenment. Sounds weird, right?

I hit the streets of the city once I consumed the plants. I audibly asked for guidance, not sure to what or whom, though.

The snow blanketed the path I walked. Isaiah came to mind, white as snow. Harmaline and the other alkaloids in the Caapi made the shimmer in cold powder appear so beautiful, a beauty I hadn’t admitted in a while, hadn’t allowed myself to perceive. I walked with the curiosity of child through the streets catching a bus to West Bank and the light rail to Hiawatha Ave. I was wandering. I was searching. I was hoping.

Around 1 am, I decided I needed to get home because public transit stopped in an hour. The light rail was late around the stop near the Cabooze, a music venue surrounded by bars, so I walked toward the University campus, it was a few blocks and it was better than standing still amidst the negative degree weather.

I had finally walked to the other bus stop by Folwell, a building on campus right off of 15th Avenue. Groups of young people, some drunk, others high, and even fewer sober, I know I wasn’t, walked in laughter and commotion. Friends. Where were mine? After seeing all the inebriated happiness, I felt so alone again. The most alone I’ve ever felt. I felt angry toward my mother and father for the cowardice I inherited. I began to weep in the street and wiped them fast because of the freeze. Number three finally arrived and I boarded my bus. Raymond Avenue was my stop and I started to walk toward my apartment. My key slipped into the lock and I stepped inside for a shower and sleep. In the shower, I was suddenly overcome by a voice, not sure whether it was mine, maybe it was, like I said, I’m not sure. The voice told me I would be well, that I would get better and that my sorrow was induced partly by my disillusion toward people, something I needed to overcome if I wanted to impact lives positively. For some reason, the voice was very persuasive and I believed it. I would be well and I could overcome the damaging flaws I had embraced as permanent.

I woke up in a cold sweat. Strangely, I felt energetic when I woke up. I noticed the state of my apartment and cleaned it. All the beer cans thrown away. All the dishes washed. The carpet got vacuumed. I even organized my bookshelf. My motivation made an appearance again.  I told you so, I felt the voice from last night express to me.

It’s been more than a week since that moment. The two years of depression were so difficult and I wish them upon no one. I feel uplifted and positive and plan on encouraging others to become positive and to not fully disregard the mysteries of life.

You can say what you want. All I know is that I am well, and I dance like the lepers and the rest of the healed.

I’m still unsure whether the Biblical narrative is true and  how worship fits in life, but I am open to exchanges and will continue to be. Our world is being destroyed, and I have a strong urge to bring heaven now. I wish heaven upon everyone.

Stay positive and I hope to have a great conversation with you someday.

Love's disappointment

Think of the wife at home. Making the place habitable and taking care of the household details while the husband is away. Think of the way she might delight in taking over these monotonous chores so her husband might be pleased by an ordered home. Perhaps she does this for five days straight. Setting meals and making conversation. Not minding his energies are a bit drained from his work. She seeks to stay involved in his life by  inquiring about his work and listening attentively. She does this delighted as she plays the role of suitable helpmate. And now think of what would happen if after the the five days the husband's day off came, and the wife couldn't help but get her hopes up. And what if the day came and went and nothing special happened? Would she not feel let down? He didn't even join in on the household duties.

Think of the father with the son. Think of the labor he takes on for the son who will never know the half of it. Providing a home and being the minuteman father the son needs. Watching the way he's developing, foreseeing what might be needed soon, trying to educate the child while giving him space to develop. Perhaps no one can quite put into words the constant taxation which comes when trying to be a parent. Yet he takes on the burden with joy for the sake of his son's eternal well-being.

And now think what would happen if after years of toil, the son turned his back on his father. Perhaps because of a petty complaint or a disagreement ending in dispute. As his son came of age the father got his hopes up. Would he not feel let down? Would there not be some inexplicable grief in the father? The son didn't even think of how indebted he was to his dad.

Think of the God holding the wheeling spheres, holding the cosmos and providing life to the worlds. How at the cross, He provided time and opportunity for salvation. By the blood from His brow, He began a new creation through resurrection. He never sleeps and His eye is ever on the earth trying to providentially guide, protect, teach, and save. Think of all the Great Controversy brings to His plate. Perhaps He does this for thousands of years as the Conflict continues.

And now think of wheat would happen if His children cast aside the time to worship Him. Or the pain and grief the missing faces will cause in the age to come. Would He not feel let down?