Sunday, August 30, 2020

Remembering John Welter--Monument Man





Some of the last words  of the great English architect Sir Christopher Wren were: “If you would see my monuments look around you.” He designed at least 53 churches in London alone. Including the great  St. Paul’s Cathedral.  John Welter would never have used those words about himself. He never called attention to himself. But we can and we do. Look around this church and this community and everywhere we see his monuments. Even though John’s friends cannot be with us today—his name is carved on our hearts.


Monuments. First—his family. His wives and kids. Helen and Molly. And his companion in crime, Mary Dean. And his children and Molly’s kids that became his. Steven and Lynn and Karen and Johnsie  and Hank and Chris and Mary Fran. And 15 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.


We first planned for all the kids to tell Daddy stories about how they loved their Papa. But guess what? This service would have lasted all day and the internet would probably have cut us off. And John in that slow wonderful Southern drawl would have said:”Why did you all say all that stuff?”


Monuments. When our church built the first Habitat house in Pickens County I don’t think we would have pulled it off with John. And he got hooked and kept working on Habitat houses and then houses for Salt and Light. Steven has already told us about John’s church and community work. Bible schools and soup kitchens PTA and PTA and PTA.  He cooked a zillion barbecue chickens for all kinds of causes. But probably of all his helping work he loved his mission trips to Honduras those 20 years.


Monuments. Church and church and church. His fingerprints are all over this place still. I can see him sitting down there on that second row with his kids Sunday after Sunday. Nancy Prichard, a huge John fan told me one day that after Helen died John would come to church with Steven who was 18… Lynn who was 16…Karen who was 14…Johnsie who was11…and Hank who was 7. And Nancy said she would look down that row of John and his kids with no Mama and it would break her heart. But then she added but he got up and did what he had to do. 


The church honored him as a Life Deacon for all his good work and his faithfulness and that tribute made him very proud. He went up to Boone for 20 years in December to haul back a 15-20 foot Christmas tree for this sanctuary.  And just recently the church honored him with an Angel topper on the top of the tree. We could go on and on and talk about all he did. Which was a lot.


Years ago there was a great Editor of The New Yorker Magazine. And after so many years of faithful service somebody wrote of the man: “He just kept going like a bullet-torn battle flag and nobody captured his colors and nobody silenced his drums.” Sounds familiar doesn’t it.  He did what he had to do. 


Steven called me one day and said we’ve been going through Dad’s papers and we found this letter you wrote John after Molly died. I was living in Birmingham and was not able to come to Molly’s service. But I wrote John this letter. I began by saying: “When my Mother died quite suddenly in 1988 I heard the doorbell ring at my parent’s house in Columbus Georgia. And there stood John Welter and Henry Perkins and with them was Tom Hall who would have my Mother’s service. They had come all the way from Clemson and Americus to stand with me and my family. I have never forgotten that morning.”


I also added: “John, I remember when you and Molly ran off and got married. I loved it. You ran off like two teenagers and you didn’t want to make a fuss—you just wanted to get married. And you did and I remember how very happy you all were for those 26 years.” That too was a monument. 


I told Steven we couldn’t have a long service even though we could be here all day telling John Welter stories. And here I am talking too long.


But I would close by reminding you that the things that kept John going was his incredible faith. Never bragged or pious. Never boisterous. He just did it. And friends, this is one of the enormous gifts he has left for his family sitting here and all of us. So remember where his family sits in this church he loved—with this cross always as our centerpiece. Reminding them and us Sunday after Sunday that Jesus promised, “I will be with you always.” Reminding them and us that in the end our hearts need not be troubled because he is always with us all. Reminding them and us that as the Apostle said: “Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Will hardship, or distress, off persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?…No, in all these things—listen—in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, not angels, nor rulers, northing  present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.”


We have looked around today at some of John Welter’s monuments and we thank God even in our sadness for this good man who touched us all. 


I love that stanza of “For All the Saints.”


“And when the strife is fierce, the warfare long,

Steals on the ear the distant triumph song,

And hearts are brave again and faith grows strong. 

Alleluia! Alleluia!”


“And now may the peace that passes all understanding and the love that will not let us go…rest and abide with us forever.”


(John Welter died March 23, 2020. The family was waiting until the Coronavirus subsided to have his funeral. The pandemic continues to this day. So family only met at the church he loved, First Baptist Clemson on August 29, 2020.The community could tap in to his service at the web site of the First Baptist, Clemson. It is still available. John was 89 years old when he died. The Pastor Rusty Brock and I had his service.)


                                               --Roger Lovette / rogerlovette.blogspot.com


                                                         

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Words for Such a Time as This

                                                                      photo by Roudoudou Hirous / flikr

                                                                           

I remember the great preacher, Fred Craddock asked a question: "Have you ever lost a word?" We have all lost words--many that mean little or nothing. But sometimes we lose a word that we should have kept. And in this strange time we seem to have lost or at least forgot about them. 

Words like: love or peace or joy or forgiveness or faith or maybe or laughter.  Make your own list of words that you have replaced or scrapped or lost. You might be surprised at your list.

Carl Sandburg was a great poet. He wrote out of his head and heart in a stormy time in our history.  (1878-1967). He lived through the First World War...the pandemic of 1918...the terrible Depression in our country...Second World War...the rise and fall of Hitler...the racial crises and many other things. And out of his heart he wrote these words...I think they are worth cherishing and passing on.


"And the king wanted an inscription

good for a thousand years and after

that to the end of the world?

"Yes, precisely so."

"Something so true and awful that no

 matter what happened it would stand?"

"Yes, exactly that."

"Something no matter who spit on it or

laughed at it there it would stand

and nothing would change it?"

"Yes, that was what the king ordered

his wise men to write."

"And what did they write?"

"Five words: THIS TOO SHALL PASS AWAY."

                         --The People, Yes


                                               --Roger Lovette / rogerlovette.blogspot.com















Saturday, August 1, 2020

What is a Pastor to say in this strange time?


photo by hehaden / flickr

"Remember the faith that took men** from home
At the call of a wandering preacher.
Our age is an age of moderate virtue 
And of moderate vice
When men will not lay doiwn the Cross
Because they will never assume it.
Yet nothing is impossible, nothing 
To men** of faith and conviction."
--T.S. Eliot



Lately I have been thinking: If I was still a Pastor what would I say next Sunday? It is a hard time to be a Preacher. Outside the stained glass windows we’re in the middle of enormous chaos. A Pandemic that seems endless. More than 150,000 of our bothers and sisters dead. Strong opinions about opening or keeping schools shut down. Over 50,000 of our citizens without work. So many knowing they could find themselves homeless because of eviction after eviction. Black folks raising their voices. Strange things like politicizing masks. Refugees scared of everything. Many in the country still at home after all these months. A President that does not help us as our divisions grow wider every day.


What am I to say? Outside and inside the church there the anger and fear that touches us all. We are told that when the Evangelist Billy Sunday preached he placed his manuscript down on that Isaiah passage. “The spirit of the Lord God is upon me, because the Lord has anointed me; he has sent me to bring good news to the oppressed, to bind up the broken hearted, to proclaim liberty to this captives, and release to the prisoners…” This is still every Preacher’s mandate. Jesus took those words in his first sermon and they became an overture for everything he was to do. 


The people out there in the pews are decent people. They come Sunday after Sunday hungry for something to help with their own personal chaos and the tsunami that this country faces. If I talk about the President and his rages and hatred so many of them will leave the church shaking their heads.  So many tell us that we are to stay out of politics. But how can we be silent when there is little good news for the oppressed, when so many broken hearts find little solace, when those captives and the imprisoned by systems hear few words of hope or faith or love? 


What am I to say?. We all must rise up and say no more to the lies and the half-truths in Washington. All those seeking asylum. No more snatching children from their parents and keeping human beings in cages. No more rages from people that disagree. No more tweets about Jesus* with his arms outstretched and the words: We will protect this. No more holding up the Holy Bible for photo ops.


We place our words down beside the whole world which God still has in his hands. We do not turn off the TV—we stay informed. But our lives are to be fashioned by Him who touches us all.


I asked the great preacher George Buttrick, “How do you handle the controversial as Pastor?” He said, “I let the people know what I think and how I feel. I never belabor the point. I just say the words and then move on.”


The words. Not Republicans. Not Democrats or Independents. Not patriotism or nationalism. No protecting Jesus. No flags or monuments.  But the larger words. A  remembrance we can never forget: “We are no longer strangers and aliens but we are citizens with the saints and also members of the household of God.” So I end as I began with those haunting words of Isaiah. We. All, always all.

________________

*Lachlan Markay, columnist for The Daily Beast has pointed to the ads run by Trump campaign. This particular ad shows the iconic statue of Jesus in Rio de Janerio with his hands outstretched. Underneath the picture is Trump's promise: We Will Protect This! The ad with 67 versions ran on Facebook and Instagram and was seen by over 930,000 people before it was removed. Read what Markay says about this: https://www.thedailybeast.com/trump-camp-vows-to-protect-brazils-most-iconic-statue-from-left-wing-mobs

**And women too.

photo by Xavier Donat / Flickr


--Roger Lovette / rogerlovette.blogspot.com