Sunday, June 15, 2025

 The Bungee Cord. 6-15-25

Hello,
I returned home on Wednesday from my trip to visit my dad in his memory care unit in Davenport, Iowa and my eldest son in Denver. As I have in the past several years, I drove the trip alone (my wife just hatched twelve chickens….so, she was tied down here). 1447 miles and 21.5 hours each way. There was a day when I would tackle such a trip with no stops and still have energy when I reached my destination. But that day is far gone. I broke the trip up in four legs on my way out, and three legs on my way back, and when I finally arrived back home, I was exhausted.
I drive a Mini Cooper Countryman with a 301 horsepower engine, so the drive is fun. You feel the road in my car, and when you need a bit more zip when passing, stepping on the accelerator gives you a thrilling jolt pushing you back into your seat. I have found it helpful to put the car in “Sports Mode” when going through Gary, Indiana to Joliet, Illinois on Interstate 80. If you have ever driven that section of road, you know how adventurous that drive is. Once you get on it, you find yourself bumper to bumper on five to six lanes for as far as you can see. Sometimes the traffic is “flowing” at 80 miles per hour, and then suddenly you find yourself crawling as if the road was covered with a foot of molasses, and then brought to a complete stop with that molasses turning into glue and you sit and sit and sit.
Do you ever feel like your life is a life-long ride from Stahlstown, Pa. to Denver, Co.? Of course, your starting point and destination might be different, but nevertheless a long road trip? Behind the wheel, trying to get somewhere? Advancing in your job, dealing with family issues, obtaining financial stability, gaining a sense of peace, _________ (fill in the blank)? Personally, I think that such road trips are well worth the road time, but that doesn’t make the driving any less exhausting or monotonous.
I don’t know if you have seen it, but there is an often-posted sign on all of our road trips, a sign that says, “Come to me, all you who are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest.” It is spaced out every seven days, and right after that sign there is an exit ramp with an arrow pointing off the road. I know that it is tempting to pass by that sign in order to put more miles underneath us, but I have found it worth the exit…..to get out of my car, stretch my arms and legs in praise, to take my eye off the road and rest in God’s grace, to revive my soul around a table that God has set for me, and discover a deep sense of contentment in just being on this road trip rather than thinking such contentment will only happen when I reach Denver (Didn’t John Denver sing that West Virginia was “almost heaven”?)
I took the exit ramp today, and having done so, I find myself ready to get behind the wheel. There will be another exit ramp in seven days. From one traveler to another, it a great place to find deep rest.
Have a great week.
God’s grace and peace, (ggap)
Pastor Jerry Nuernberger
May be an image of car and road
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Wednesday, June 11, 2025

 The Bungee Cord 6-11-25

Hello,
The reason that I am a couple of days late with the Bungee Cord is that I just got home from a long weekend with my son in Denver. My father, who is living with complete dementia, is in a cognitive care unit in Davenport, Iowa, and so after visiting him, I continued my drive to Denver. Now that I am home from my trip, I have become completely certain that when I did not choose to become an over the road truck driver, I made the right decision.
Distance makes being with my son far too rare, but he has spread his wings, and he is soaring well. While I was with him, we did a bunch of father/son things, of which one of them was to go to an Italian restaurant that he had been wanting to go to. Not knowing the restaurants exclusiveness, I went severely underdressed as I wore an Illinois hoody. No one said anything, although everyone else was clearly more sharply attired. The restaurant was such a hot item, that it was hard to get a reservation , so we got the only reservation we could get: a couple of seats at a common table. I had never done such a thing before, so I didn’t know quite what the appropriate etiquette was.
There were two open seats on one end of the table that sat eight, so we sat ourselves in them. A couple of mid-aged ladies sat on our left, and a young couple sat on our right, which was at the end of the table, so they sort of faced us. Soon after we took our seats, a waitress came and placed a menu that was leather covered in front of us. When I opened it, I saw the price tag for the “sampler” page, $115.00. I snickered as I noted the price to my son, thinking that my credit card was going to be the recipient of the cost.
My snicker must have been audible as the young woman at the end of the table, snickered, too. And with that snicker a two-hour conversation began. My son gave me a tap on my thigh to tell me that I should leave them alone as he sensed they were out for a special meal. And they were. It was their 5th anniversary. We briefly shared our stories, and I figured that that would be the end of it, but not so. Every time that I tried to end our conversation by saying that I didn’t mean to interrupt their celebration, the woman would always say, “Oh no, you aren’t interrupting .”
Being naïve about these sort of things and realizing that I would never see these people again, I kept the conversation going. As it turns out, the young woman’s father grew up in Ligonier (the town that we are nearest to, and the town where my last parish was), and he was very active in the Episcopal church in the neighboring small town. What a small world!
So, on and on we chatted amidst the waitress’ interruptions. She had been to Africa, as had I. Her husband was an attorney that dealt with food safety cases…very interesting. She knew of where my son lived, next to a hospital. She was the head nurse in a NICU unit. It was all very fascinating. She even was hoping to make further plans to meet my son’s wife at a dinner.
After dinner, my son told me how nervous he was about my lack of etiquette when our conversation got started. They were obviously, as far as he could tell, on a significant dinner date. But funny enough, as the conversation got rolling, the significance of their dinner time was swept up in an enjoyable sharing of stories and lives.
When we left the restaurant, we thanked the maître d’. After our thanks, she said to us, “Sounds like you made some friends. I think that couple needed some love.” Of course, we were given no idea of why they “needed some love”. Maybe they had been quite bothered when they were seated? Maybe they had brought with them obvious baggage that they were carrying? Who knows?
Just as Jesus said, you never know when you find yourself in a position to bring life changing love into people’s lives. It would be fun to know what might become of our loving interaction with those two young people, but this I do know, it was a delight to unknowingly put a dent of love in their lives.
A delight that I hope you will one day come to encounter, too.
Have a great week
God’s grace and peace, (ggap)
Pastor Jerry Nuernberger
May be an image of 4 people
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Monday, June 2, 2025

 The Bungee Cord 6-2-25

Hello,
Maybe this has happened to you? I was in the middle of Ohio at a rest stop getting a sandwich at Pinera. As I was ordering, suddenly a feather fluttered in my nose, and I had to sneeze….which I did. I turned from the young man at the computer, placed my forearm over my mouth and sneezed. Achoo! Even before I had a chance to turn around, I heard from the young man, “Bless you.”
Another time, I was in a grocery store hunting for something, and that feather started fluttering in my nose again. I had to sneeze. And I did. Achoo! And not sooner than having finished my “choo”, all the way down from the end of aisle I heard, “Bless you.”
I happen to sneeze often. I am on a blood pressure medicine that causes congestion and thus sneezing. Regularly, my random sneezes are met by the same response, “Bless you.” Perfect strangers. People who I have never seen before. People who have no idea who I am, upon hearing my distress are quick to respond, “Bless you.”
Do they mean it?
I have heard that in times long gone, it was believed that a sneeze was the expulsion of evil spirits blasting into the air, thus the response of protection from those who have just been unleashed into the world. “Bless you.” Actually, “God bless you.”
Seems a bit silly to continue to offer this response to sneezing, “Bless you.” Most of us…all of us…know that sneezes have nothing to do with evil spirits. Maybe a cold. Maybe allergies. Maybe dust in the air. But evil spirits? No. So, in my thinking, I don’t really believe that the bless-or means anything at all of what comes from their lips.
At the end of worship services in the churches at which I preside, I speak a benediction, or a blessing, over the congregation. “The Lord bless you and keep you. The Lord make his face to shine upon you and be gracious to you. The Lord lift up his countenance upon you and give you peace.”….or…. “The blessings of the Father, Son and the Holy Spirit be upon you now and forever.”
Unlike the responders to my sneezing, I know that when I speak the Benediction, I definitely mean what I am saying. I am not one who professes the existence of lurking evil spirits, but I do believe, with all my heart, that the world can be a pretty rough place. Pressures from all sorts of places - work, family, school, finances - bearing down and ready to crush us. Cruel words that have the power to spear us to our hearts. Mistakes that try and shackle us in dungeons of shame. Illnesses and disease that stalk us like a lion. It is a tough world into which people are stepping when they leave worship.
So, before they step out into the world, I pronounce upon them God’s blessings. Blessings that bear the depth of God’s love, so deep that God would give his life for his beloved. Blessings that bear the powerful companionship of God, a companionship so strong that is melted together in the sacrament of Holy Communion. Blessings that bear the promise of God that nothing will be able to snatch God’s beloved from his hand
The world is a tough place, but we do not face it alone. God is with us! So, as you step into the world today, “God bless you!”
Have a great day.
God’s grace and peace, (ggap)
Pastor Jerry Nuernberger
May be a doodle
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