Friends

I wish everybody could know my friends.

Laura reads every week’s blog post. Sometimes she comments, but always she reads them. Because they are great literature? Of course! Because she always learns something new from them? Naturally. But also—because she’s a friend. A dear friend, one of my dearest.

And there’s Ellen. She looks out for Laura—otherwise: disaster.

Bill, I have known for more than half my long life. He is a man of principle, a man of compassion—most of all, one of God’s most faithful representatives among the messy daily business of human life. Bill is as good a man as I could ever wish to be—but between you and me, I’ll never make it. That doesn’t matter to Bill. He loves me anyway.

I have a friend named Colleen. I knew her father, Bob, who was a great man. Colleen has many of Bob’s best qualities and wonderful ones of her own, including musicianship. She gives of herself and her talents unstintingly. She treats me almost as a spare father, because I was a younger colleague of Bob, who died too young. Colleen is special to me. 

Mike is another friend, one with whom we have traveled to England, the Netherlands, South Africa, and darkest Michigan. He is thoughtful, always well-spoken and well-informed. He is a talented organizer, a deeply committed Christian who often leads groups of young people in meaningful service projects that help out folks in difficult circunstances.

Let me tell you about my friend Greg, and my other friend Peter. They are middle-aged men, probably in their 50s, and lead healthy and vital New England churches. Wonderful guys.

I was talking with my friend Cynthia the other day and learned something I had not known—that years ago she was a military wife, stationed in Panama with her husband, Victor. That was back during the days of Operation Just Cause, when the U.S. was rounding up the dictator Noriega. Very exciting days. Thank God Victor and Cynthia didn’t get in the way of any lethal force. But that was years ago, and they’re in Christian ministry now. 

My friend Laura runs a very successful school for young students in Tijuana, Mexico. Her mother, Juana, was the previous head of the school. This dynamic young woman prepares hundreds of otherwise at-risk young people from poor neighborhoods for meaningful employment in the business arena and the arts. 

I wish you could know Beth. She is in her nineties now—recently remarried!—and gets around well for a woman her age. I’ve known her for years, known how generous she is for causes she believes in. But it was only last year I learned that in former days, she was one of the first woman pilots for Pan American World Airways. What a wonderful world!

Another friend, Ron, preached a sermon yesterday that would knock your socks off.

I could go on and on. These are only a fraction of the folks I encounter about once a year, occasionally more often, occasionally less often, by attending the meetings of the National Association of Congregational Christian Churches—most of which, in the last forty years or so, my wife and I have attended. 

It’s a pretty good place to find friends who are not only good friends but good people. I am indebted to my faith tradition for giving me this richness of associations. I can only wish the same for you, Gentle Reader.

Perhaps you have noticed—no photos in this week’s blog. That’s because it never occurs to me to snap photos of my friends. I guess I know them well enough that I don’t need a physical image to see them. They’re in my head anytime I want them.

Blessings,

Larry F. Sommers

Your New Favorite Writer

Publication Day

THE BOOK IS HERE!

Screen grab from video taken when my ship came in.

Today—August 23, 2022—is the official publication date of my historical novel, Price of Passage: A Tale of Immigration and Liberation, from DX Varos Publishing.

I say “official” because many friends who pre-ordered the book have already received their copies, several days before the official date. I know this is so. They send me emails or Facebook comments, rejoicing that their book has arrived. Some even attach a photo of the book cover—as if to offer proof!

This, in turn, makes me rejoice. They are doing this because they are my friends. 

Friends, Not Subjects

They don’t see me as a Big Deal Author, seated on some Olympian cloud bank, cultivating grandeur while a personal assistant screens all messages. 

My friends don’t see me as a remote, magisterial figure, because I’m not. They understand how fallible I am, and they love me anyway.

My friends are real friends. I know them and they know me. 

It thrills me that they invest themselves in my literary success just because it’s something I have set out to do. It’s important to me, so naturally it’s important to them. They become willing co-conspirators in this challenge of entertaining readers with an enlarged historical perspective. 

God bless them all. Everybody should have such friends.

Blessings,

Larry F. Sommers, Your New Favorite Writer

Price of Passage

Norwegian Farmers and Fugitive Slaves in Pre-Civil War Illinois

(History is not what you thought!)

What’s So Good About It?

We show up for choir rehearsal fifty minutes before the Good Friday evening service, ready to do our time-hallowed chore.

Our pastor, with a smile, points out something new. In the entry hall, on exactly the corner of wall where your eye would naturally expect it: 

It is astounding. Our Strategic Planning Team has installed signs to assist first-time visitors. They give just the information that visitors have  been needing ever since the church opened its doors!

This sudden case of our old congregation Doing Something Right For a Change, and with only six months’ prior discussion, lifts a corner of my spirits, unexpectedly. Our church has been shrinking for at least thirty years; I have lost hope for its survival beyond the next crisis. But now, this new lettering stands against my creeping despair, stuck boldly on the wall, staking a claim on the Kingdom yet to come. 

When the shock of it subsides, we go ahead and rehearse our music. 

At seven o’clock the service begins. We are thirty-one souls, counting the pastor, the music director, the guest musician, the ten choir members, and two small children. The twenty-nine adults are mostly grayhairs, but there are also a few middle-aged stalwarts and even a college student home for the weekend.

Good Friday Worship

Good Friday is the most somber day in the Christian year. We’ve been remembering the death of Jesus on the cross for two thousand years. There is nothing light or hopeful in it. But we mull it over with God in worship once a year. It’s always pretty much the same.

Albrecht Dürer, Praying Hands.

Our church’s usual Good Friday evening service is a modified “Tenebrae” service. Candles will be extinguished, one by one, amid scripture readings and music. When all the light has been snuffed out, we will go our ways in silence, to wait for Resurrection morning.

This year’s Good Friday music includes five hymns for all to sing: “When I Survey the Wondrous Cross,” “Beneath the Cross of Jesus,” “What Wondrous Love Is This?”, “Ah, Holy Jesus,” and “Were You There When They Crucified My Lord?”  There are two piano solos from our music director, Robert Eversman; and oboe and English horn solos by Claire Workinger.

About the middle of the service, we regulars in the choir sing “Worthy Is the Lamb.” Accompanied expertly by Robert on piano and Claire on oboe, our anthem reaches a solemn grandeur two steps above the potential of our imperfect voices. 

Church members stand in the pulpit and read scripture—familiar words from Matthew, Luke, Isaiah, and John, telling of Jesus’ sacrifice for our sake. The pitches, the tempoes, the accents and articulations of their voices are all different, but their seriousness of purpose is all the same. Terry’s old voice wavers and weaves its way through the text, suggesting more truth and light yet to break forth from ancient verses; Becky’s young voice is clear and declarative, grounded in the present, looking forward. 

When Jesus has once again been crucified and prepared for burial, we turn out the remaining lights and go home. 

Visible Saints

From my seat in the choir I have watched and listened to my friends in faith. Most are people I have known for years or decades, in holy covenant with the Lord. Two or three are more recent friends, but as a general thing I have many years’ accumulated exposure to the diverse outlooks of our members. 

Their approaches to religion—the private religion deep in one’s heart—are quite varied. Some are conventionally pious, all the way through (yes, that really is who they are). Some are imbued with a secular outlook that largely conceals the “religion” or “spirituality” living in their souls. There are many blends of the sacred and the profane. Some members may be just confused; others, awestruck observers of life. 

What strikes me tonight is their steadiness in attending to the task of worship. Liturgy is said to be “the work of the people” in worshiping God. And so it has been on this night. Each member of this tired, dwindling, cranky, much-loved church—from the freshest/tenderest to the oldest/most battle-hardened—came here to voice a shared agenda of ancient worship, right smack in the midst of all the uncertainty and mayhem of life. Just to do what we have always done, because that’s what we do  . . . because God matters to us.

Thank you, Lord, I hear myself pray—thank you for these people, my friends, who come at your call to worship even in the darkest times. 

However few in number, however poor in spirit, there is something real, authentic, and perpetual—not duplicated elsewhere in our lives—when we gather for worship.

World without end, Amen.

Blessings,

Larry F. Sommers

Your New Favorite Writer