7.25.2012

The Great Sell-Out

Blogs, periodicals, and individuals that habitually speak to matters of fundraising are customarily disappointing to me.  It seems there can never be an interest in anything more personal than the ledger lines.  How droll, then, that I should find myself composing a blog which is about nothing so much as fundraising.  God's sense of humor prevails.  Therefore, I humbly invite you to come root through the Whipple esoterica and other sundry treasures in a Fabulous Yard* Sale in Which You Never Know What You'll Find (*The actual yard is not for sale).  Join us in Halls, at 4710 Cabbage Lane, on the morn of Saturday, July 28th.  Any items sold from Sinclair's Eve (my house) will benefit both The Attic and Nightclub Outreach in Dundee, Scotland.



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I've been to Dundee thrice now, and loved it each time.  My wanderlust overcomes me more than a sense of obedience to the Lord.  Adventure is my temptress.  The little snatches of neo-Gothic architecture, the different constitution of old sidewalk concrete, the spiderweb of hidden garden paths - all these perplexities which go without saying for the natives are matters of excitement and curiosity for me.  So, to bring you up to speed on the course of this journey, we shall delve into the archives.


                The conductor for the shuttle bus pointed all in the direction of a tiny inlet of asphalt.  He rattled off instructions in a high Glasgow tongue and several of us disembarked, stepping uncertainly in the way that he indicated.  The small cul-de-sac was actually a car park for cabs, several of which idled there on Woodside Way like oversized bees waiting for passengers.  Above them stood a white portico with the words “Queen Street” emblazoned on the side of the grimy overhang.  My luggage rattled behind me on the bricked sidewalk as I walked through the automatic sliding doors, which would have closed had their efforts not been punctuated by a steady stream of people rolling out onto the street.
                Hiding its bulk behind shops and tiny stone inlets, a cathedral of transportation arched its back above the seven sets of tracks.  The sun shone through the frosted glass skin of the station.  People sat quietly in bunches or drank coffee or paced or plowed forward with bits of luggage in hand.  The spindly ticking of bicycle wheels and the snuffling of dogs mingled with a river of human voices.  My nagging loneliness from the long journey was lost in sheer amazement at this grand business of moving people.  Men and women of Indian descent stood about pressing the crowds to buy cell phones.  A group of German accents congregated jovially and walked through the gate to board a train.  The marquee on the wall flashed its heraldic scheduling as the trains all left on time – that is to say, within fifteen seconds of the clock changing to their scheduled minute of departure.  It was an impressive showing of punctuality.
                I found an automated ticket machine in the breezeway outside the grandeur of the terminal.  After retrieving my ticket, I decided that it was high time to get the sound of native speech in my ears again.  I walked back and forth down Georges Square looking for a local dive before deciding on the pub right outside the train station.  Two women who might have been mother and daughter squeezed out the thin red door under the sign advertising “The Junction Bar.”  A tall, well-built young fellow with long dark hair who could have passed for an American manned the bar.  A couple of old men stood at a high table working their way through several pints and laughing over business.  The quickest reminder of the many tasks and problems at hand was lopsidedly planted two tables down from me.  A man whose age had been furthered by drink sat and preached a stream of incoherent cursing at the invisible person in front of him, who, judging by the man’s conversation, was waffling between occasional acquiescence and outright denial.  The vibe in the pub seemed to indicate that the drunken man was something of an embarrassment.  He was by far the loudest representative of the clientele.  I pulled my luggage up beside me at the table and glanced over the menu trying to remember the song and dance of ordering food in a foreign country.  After no one came over for a while and I remembered that it is customary, in a pub, to order one’s food in person at the bar, I walked up and asked for the haggis and a pint of whatever local stout was on tap.  It is always a puzzling sensation to thank God for beer.  My conscience which tells me that I should pray thus also suffers from the erratic spasms and hissing fissures of legalism.  But I was glad to have arrived and to eat, and sitting back with a plate of local fare and listening to conversations, I let the sense of the place – what the French call terroir – wash over me.
                Taking pictures inside a public train station in a country that is beset by terrorism is not the healthiest of endeavors, but not to be deterred, I forewent dessert at the pub in lieu of finding the right shot.  A man in a uniform came up to me and politely informed me that I should not take photos of the station.  Understanding his concerns as a representative of the government, I left my post outside the front doors and went to take more covert photos inside the station proper where so many good shots were hidden amongst all that Euclidian architecture and steel framework.  Trying to get a finger on the pulse of the country, I picked up a free independent weekly and flipped through the articles, landing on one about a British musician that had moved to Montana to find writing time away from the frenzy of recording and shows.  Still, peace eluded me.  Often, the Peace of Christ is something I try to find by seeking out instead of resting in.  This anxiety causes me to avoid my iPod or anything else that could be entertaining in order to keep from being what Neil Postman called “amused to death.”  But, finally, when I got on the train myself and discovered that, unlike in the airliners, I would be alone at my table, I acknowledged the fact that God made me a musician – and that music, to me, is much like a lubricant to the wheels of prayer.  I turned up Rich Mullins in my ears and Glasgow rolled away as we entered darkness beneath her streets.  The distance and movement was measured only by my body telling me that we were rocketing onward.  My face stared back at me from the darkened window until, without warning, we emerged far from the crowds in golden fields of oilseed rape beneath a cobalt sky.
                                                                                                Glasgow, 2009

7.19.2012

Thank God, the Joke's on Me

I pottered down to the Jig and Reel to sit alone and transcribe strings parts.  Not the most exquisite of evenings, I know, but I enjoy the work, even if it's tedious.  I knew a couple friends of mine would be playing, and I planned to pop in on them and listen to a song or two.  Wednesday nights aren't known for being outlandish, so I hunkered in an armchair by the door with my effects spread out around me looking like the semi-mobile office of a mad composer.

About forty-five minutes in - or, refusing to save face, thirty - I felt the mighty need to procrastinate, so I happily hopped up from my seat to answer it.  Tim and Jodi were on stage, wailing away at old folk standards to the delight of a pair of full tables in the room, and in between songs, Tim asked me to come up on stage.  Of course, having no idea what we would play together, I attempted to refuse, but the table full of ladies would none of it.  They hollered me up onto the stage, where Jodi handed me her mandolin and took the bass.  We ended up playing three songs, in between which I shared a small conversation with Tim and Jodi about my friends' work in Dundee and my efforts on their behalf.  I wasn't even sure the dialogue got picked up by the mics.  Heaven knows I didn't try to advertise.  I was just answering Tim's question when he asked, "What are you into?"  Then, after I walked off the stage from someone else's gig, the table full of ladies, who were all from Ohio if that makes a difference, began rooting through their purses and handing me cash for Bruce, Andy, and Sarah and their work in Dundee.

I didn't go to play a show, much less a benefit show, but I ended up playing both.  It is said that the Lord works in mysterious ways.  I might amend that he's also funny.  All the best jokes, like all the best stories, are real.

7.16.2012

The Unmuzzled Ox


Once in a while, my wife and I will look at each other and exclaim, as if for the first time, "We've got kids." We've had kids, in the plural, for over a year now, and it's still wondrous and alarming all in the same breath, like finding out you've stepped through an enchanted wardrobe. We had another encounter of that sort on Saturday night at the Sharehouse. Just down the road from where we live at Sinclair's Eve, a number of friends and strangers gathered for a show benefiting a handful of inner-city Kingdom endeavors in Dundee, Scotland. Two hours and a broken string after we began, Katrina sat down to count the money. It is a task which I purposefully shy away from when I can. People who come to shows, either generous or not, are not nearly as apt to label my worth in dollars as I am. In this case, the money going to something altogether more pressing, more seemed to be at stake. I glanced at my wife's face on occasion as she counted, and counted - and then counted some more. I tried not to think about it and went on talking to my friends. A few minutes later, she came to me and surreptitiously flashed the number to me on her phone calculator. I tell it to you now, because it does not belong to me, and I want to thank those who participated.

$864

Kat and I looked at each other in silent amaze.  Such a number meant that all the work from that point forth, all the fundraising, would go directly to those who needed it most.  We were prepared to continue hammering away at the work before the work, if you take my meaning, but were flabbergasted, relieved, and grateful to find it accomplished in one swift stroke.  Seeing as it was never our work to begin with, I say (with some trepidation) that I should not have been surprised, or at least could have guessed.  The hearts of those present answered the call of compassion, given by the One who cups the sea in his hand.

Our resolve is renewed.  I have a hammer, therefore I shall hammer.

7.14.2012

An Evening at the Sharehouse

Tonight, we gather beneath the roof of the Sharehouse, tucked away in the old neighborhood of Parkridge in Knoxville, Tennessee, for an evening of music and food. All proceeds will go to benefit the Attic Ministry in Dundee. Hope to see you there.

7.09.2012

An Humble Prelude

Welcome, dear reader. Here, I hope to invite you in to learn what you can of Dundee, Scotland, where a number of my dear friends strive to bring life, to bring redemption, to a city which is in need of it. To begin, I will return, God willing, to Dundee in the autumn of this year, in order to assist my friends in continuing their work. It is my hope to take a large sum of money with me and surprise them by giving it as a gift during my visit. Why, you might ask, would I publish on the internet something meant to be a surprise? An insightful question, but I'm afraid that's a chance I'm willing to take in order to keep you up to date on these matters. In addition to all the other information presented here, we will keep track of gifts on this website. Hopefully, we shall raise in excess of $3000. Anything beyond airfare (roughly $1000) will go to Bruce White, who is the director of The Attic Ministries in Dundee. You will find links to the Attic, Nightclub Outreach, and other pertinent items respective to Dundee in the sidebar. I thank you for your generosity. The Lord bless and keep you. Let's get started.