I think it would depend on who it was from but in generally, he’d probably go with the money – and if it was tucked inside a horribly cheesy bday card all the better. lol The simpler the better as he didn’t want anyone to make a big fuss about his birthday. Then again, getting cash or a visa gift card is generally what teenage dudes like these days.
Category: Uncategorized
when do you think Dylan walking down the stairs was filmed? He had longer hair, so maybe late ’98, early ’99? :)
Isn’t it great how you can use Dylan’s hair length as a time period ‘circa’ guide? 😉
And with the creation of my ‘De Evolution of Dylan’s Hair’ post, we can use it as a gauge for passage of time in relation to his hair style/length. After all, in Sue’s book, she did recount his getting ready for prom and that she used her own hair tie band for his pony tail. She went on to mention that she and Tom spent the the better part of the year (you could roughly say April ‘98 – April ‘99) ragging on Dylan to go get a hair cut. haha.
There are interesting things about this clip though that I ponder.
1. These steps can’t be the staircase near the southwest entrance of Columbine. There are clues such as the siding work on this building which looks completely different than the stone finish on the side of CHS. It appears to be aluminum siding layers like one would see on the side of a house – or some other public building.
2. There are also shrub-like trees near by. The surrounding area of the steps at CHS doesn’t have trees like that nearby it – at least not kitty corner to the southwest staircase. Although, the grass color does look about the same as how it looked April ‘99. But the light straw-like, patchy grass color could easily be dried out grass from late summer.time
3. This can’t be winter because of the trees and how Dylan is clothed with no coat on. So, it looks warm out. Given his hair length too, I’d place it around August/September 98 (maybe a few weeks after Dylan has his senior photos taken near the red rocks and right before/at the start of Senior year. But it could also be an unusually warm autumn circa October/November ‘98. The length looks to fit how long it was in the Frankenstein Roast clip. It could also be springtime of ‘99 in March possibly. I tend to think not because Dylan looked much, much thinner in March ‘99 especially you recall how he was swimming in his baggy jeans in Radioactive Clothing. Here, he physically looks more substantial and his jeans fit him well. He also has his t-shirt tucked in at the top.
Based on Dylan’s fairly long hair length, I’m going to say roughly Oct-Nov ‘98 when he was working on the Frankenstein play.
Sure would be nice to have more information on this tiny clip….
where does that photos from your “Dylan in Motion” post came from? thankss
Stills from this snippet. The documentary or media segment that this originated from is still unknown other than copy of this same clip has the People + Arts logo on it. You’re welcome. 🙂

Hi, I remember reading a text that once related that Dylan and Eric were in the library and some girls came to bother about when they were getting married … is this true? I do not remember where I read it
The source of this alleged happening was from the National Enquirer which is a gossipy, flashy, often over exaggerated news rag sold at grocery stores in the US so take the story with a grain of salt:
Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold unleashed the full fury of their murderous rage after a group of girls accused them of being gay lovers.
Pushed to the edge by school athletes who shoved them around and called them faggots, the two outsiders finally snapped from this final humiliation.
The girls taunted Eric and Dylan in the school library – the exact area where the two enraged gunmen returned to mow down most of their victims.
“There was an incident a year ago that set Eric and Dylan off on their murderous course,” a fellow student divulged to The ENQUIRER.
“They were sitting in the library wearing their ridiculous heavy black coats on a warm spring day last April. A group of girls was sniggering at the table next to them, and Eric finally asked what they were laughing at.
“One of them told him, ’You guys look alike, talk alike and are always together. We just want to know when you’re getting married!’
“A look of rage came over Eric’s face and he made a fist at the girl. ‘Shut up!’ he shouted.
“Dylan got up and screamed, ‘You’re all so stupid! Everyone in this school is stupid! You better watch it!’
“They both stormed out of the library, kicking chairs as they went.
"The girls were stunned – they were only teasing the guys. It was no big deal to them.
"The boys vowed the school was going to pay for the humiliation they put them through. And when the bloodbath happened, we wondered if they attacked people in the library with special ferocity because of the humiliation they had suffered there.”
True to their word, Eric and Dylan began plotting their strategy for the attack after being embarrassed by the girls. It took them a year to prepare and build their arsenal.
Taken from this post.
i love your music choices, they enhance my workouts! and ILY2, of course :)
Glad to hear it. Same goes for my workout playlist. haha ❤ you too. 🙂
when you typed eric and dylan before using the myers-briggs test, did you type them by functions or by letters? because i would place eric as an ENTP and dylan as an INFJ, not an INTJ and INFP. they just don’t seem to fit those functions.
Dylan
INFJ as described here
versus…
INFP as described here
More detailed videos on INFP here. Similar to the INFJ, as both internalize and are prone to difficulty processing feelings and are prone to depression.
Eric
ENTP described here
versus..
INTJ as described here
More detailed INTJ videos: here , here and nutshell vid of characteristics
101 Things INTJ’s hate lol
Some of which are contradictory like a certain someone himself. 😉



Halcyon On and On
On Orbital’s second eponymous 1993 album the track “Halcyon + on + on” appears, a slightly more upbeat and melodic remix of the original song. In contrast to the original, the remix is far more widely known, and has been featured on several movie soundtracks (most notably Mortal Kombat, Hackers, CKY2K and Mean Girls).
Eric mentions liking “Orbital” pg(26189) and purchased from Angelo’s Records both the “Orbital” (’92) and “Snivilisation” (’’94) cds pg (26187)
There are numerous references to “Halcyon” by Dylan pg (26406), (26412) and (26414) and given that Orbital is “Techno and Trance” style music, it is quite likely he was familiar with the song from their recent albums and began adopting the term in his writings and putting his own spin on it as a kind of “heaven” or “paradise” state of mind/existence that awaited him, and his True Love, upon leaving this life. I would bet that the two went to see the Mortal Kombat movie and heard this featured song. We know Dylan had played Mortal Kombat as a kid with Brooks Brown.
Sad to say, Eric and Dylan would not have seen Orbital in concert. Oddly, Orbital had a fairly limited US tour in the nineties even though techno and raves were a pretty big thing. The bulk of their touring was in the UK and other Euro-International locations. Apparently, Orbital only visited Denver at the Ogden Theatre in ‘93 and the last time in 2001. ‘93 would’ve put the boys in Jr. HS and it’s doubtfully they had gotten into this type of music at this point in time let alone been allowed to go to a concert at that age. In any case, there is no mentioning that they ever saw Orbital live.
The live video I selected above is from ‘94 in Glastonbury England.
Halcyon – Hal-see-uh
Various definitions:
1. calm; peaceful; tranquil:halcyon weather.
2.rich; wealthy; prosperous:halcyon times of peace.
3.happy; joyful; carefree:halcyon days of youth.
4.of or relating to the halcyon or kingfisher.noun
5.a mythical bird, usually identified with the kingfisher, said to breed about the time of the winter solstice in a nest floating on the sea, andt o have the power of charming winds and waves into calmness.6.any of various kingfishers, especially of the genus Halcyon.
The actual song “
Halcyon" was written and performed by Orbital, dedicated to the Phil Hartnoll’s mother, who was addicted to the tranquilizer Halcion (spelled differently) (Triazolam) for many years.
“The everything, the halcyon, the happiness is ours” – DBK
A little side note: Orbital happens to be a fav of mine. 😉
I made a video to commemorate the Columbine tragedy. If you’re a columbiner, I hope you appreciate this! (P.S. please don’t steal, I worked really hard on this)
🖤
Dylan in Motion
in his favorite ‘Dig Your Own Hole’ Chemical Brothers t-shirt and wearing the shirt tucked into his jeans for once. He also has his ginormous, black backpack slung around each of his shoulders. Btw, that does not look like the side of the school in the backdrop.
(More on this t-shirt in a separate post 😉 )
Happy weekend! 🙂
Did Devon or Zack ever know that Dylan was jealous of their relationship before his deat?
Given how good Dylan was at concealing his inner feelings, I’d say no..neither Devon or Zack knew that Dylan was upset about their gf/bf relationship. Like most of his (secret) emotional world, Dylan just kept it all to himself. Outwardly, Dylan seemed like his usual chill, laid-back self all smiles and laughs. Mr. No Problemo. He didn’t want to impose on people by letting them know how he really felt or took issue with anything which ran the risk of upsetting them. Perhaps he felt he might lose them if they knew how pissed he was. Best to not rock the boat, just swallow it all and suffer in silence..
if the girl Dylan liked corresponded his feelings, how long do you think it would take for them to have a “serious” relationship? i feel like months
Yeah. A few months.
I know you may not want to.. but I really wanna nother pic of you 👀
whyyy….

I just love how you call Reb, “Rebby”. ☺️


“When he got to be an adolescent, and he got out of the gifted
program, junior high started. He was really excruciatingly painfully
shy. I remember him being so uncomfortable. I remember once dropping him
off in front of school and he didn’t see me, I was trying to pick him
up and I yelled out his name… out the window… and as soon as he got
in the car he said, “Mom, don’t ever say my name in front of everybody.”That’s just who he was. He didn’t really have the ability to laugh
at himself or to lighten up. He took things very seriously. But he was
also playful, and liked to do things with the family, and he liked
different kinds of foods. We’d go out for dinner and he always wanted to
try the most unusual things to eat. And he loved baseball and he had a
good sense of humor, and he was always sending goofy emails to his dad, or sound files that would startle him when he turned on the computer.”— Sue Klebold on her son Dylan.
(Source)
“The other thing… he wanted to be invisible, I mean, when he went to junior high… and he’d been in the gifted program… and he was just sort of slacking off, and they had asked him, “Do you want to go to the high school for algebra?” And he was just terrified of that. He said, “No, no, no, I don’t want to do that!” So we said ok well, hang out here in junior high and take geometry, take other classes, and he just didn’t want to be the focus of attention. He was just very uncomfortable with that.”
“ I mean, one of the things he told us when he was in junior high, when we were saying, “What’s going on? You did such a great job in elementary school, why don’t you want to keep it up?” We were encouraging him to try to stay with the smart people and he said, “It’s not cool to be smart.” He didn’t want to be identified as someone who was different or singled out, and by the end of his 6th grade year when he was still in the gifted program, he was beginning to feel very self-conscious about being in that classroom, like he was some kind of a freak.”
Hi, he thinks Eric and Dylan were one of those guys who liked to shout compliments to the girls on the street
Rebby style of flirting: “Heya!” *chucks a french fry at a cute girl he knows*
Dylan: ☺️ *drags on his cigarette and cracks an embarassed grin*
Real smooth, Reb.yeeeeup.

hi miss e-c! i hope you’re having a spectacular day <3
Not too bad, thanks 👌🏻🙂 Same^^💓

Dylan
The famous Klebold prominent chins
and prominent ears too. 🙂
(Byron and Dylan)
Lament in the Ministry: Public, Pastoral, Personal – Let’s Talk
Lament in the Ministry: Public, Pastoral, Personal
JUNE 8, 2016
BY DONALD MARXHAUSEN (The Klebold’s Lutheran pastor)
“Thee, thee and thee, but not me,” Dr. Kubler-Ross used to say about death and dying.It happens to everyone else but not to me. So it is with tragedy and lament in the ministry. Things happen in other communities, but not here; things happen to other pastors but not to me. And then it happens. …
Most Americans are not practiced at lament. We don’t know what to do when faced with communal damage like an Oklahoma City bombing or natural disaster. Most pastors are acquainted with grief in others and grief as part of the natural cycle of life. We are “word givers” and“happening persons” and in control. And then it happens.
I was late for an appointment with my family physician, a member of the congregationI was serving in Littleton, Colorado, on April 20, 1999. We took monthly walks around a lake next toColumbine High School. On the fateful Columbine day I was driving in front ofthe school when I noticed a police car. Then I noticed hundreds of teenagers jumping a fence across from the high school. By the time I reached the doctor at the local library on the other side of Clement Park, which lies in between,ambulances and other sirens were picking up in volume. It was about 11:35 a.m.
I suggestedthat we find out what was happening at the school, as the doctor had a son inattendance. My son and daughter had both graduated from Columbine. He was adoctor; I was wearing clerics; I thought we could be of some use. When asked,one young lady said, “a person dressed like you is shooting people.”
As we approached we found the principal, some coaches, and office personnel running from the school. “Back, back,” they yelled. “The police want a wider perimeter.” Being German and not too bright I said, “I know a back way in.”There we saw a policeman, gun in hand, put a young man down in the spread-eagle position. I suggested that we not go any further. The doctor’s feelings were frozen. We went back to the car, called our church about a mile away, and learned that his son had run there and was safe.
That afternoon several pastors from the community were present at the library where children first gathered who could not make it home. Another pastor and I wound up at Leawood Elementary School where parents and their children were reunited.Later the school system had an army of counselors brought in to be with parents.
Some families were not reunited until late in the afternoon, as the children were locked in closets and classrooms in the high school while water sprinklers went off, bells rang and their imaginations went wild. The drama of Coach Sanders dying while looking at pictures of his children was played out. Students holding compresses against his bullet holes were forced to leave by the SWAT teams who brought no paramedics with them. Those courageous teenagers later felt guilty that they had abandoned the popular coach to die.
APresbyterian pastor said, “Don, we have to go and be with the bodies.” “Why?” Iasked. The answer, “Because the parents would want us to be.” So we made ourway to Columbine High.
We met a huge policeman from my congregation who said that no one was going into the school because there were bombs. He was angry that SWAT teams stayed outside the school for four or five hours before going in. He had sons at Columbine. Why were they holding back? As it turned out, Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris had killed themselves almost five hours before. Police departments did not have a common radio frequency and coordination was difficult.
The Presbyterian pastor said, “Don, we better go back to our churches. People will be coming tonight.”
How many dead? Ten? Twenty? Thirty? How many wounded? The sheriff was not a professional and information was confusing, exaggerated and often wrong for the next few days.
At my church all the pews were gone for refinishing, as we were at the end of a 1.7 million dollar building program for a new sanctuary and narthex. The hallways,rooms and fellowship hall were filled with ten or twenty thousand items of children’s clothing and furniture for our annual children’s clothing sale.Where do we go? What do we do? What am I to say?
I knew we had to have the Eucharist available … bread for the journey. We had to have something tangible, comforting, familiar. I recalled a book on my shelf with Holocaust prayers and liturgies. I found one liturgy that was useful with minor changes, and asked my secretary to reproduce it quickly. Folding chairs were set up in the sanctuary.
I was setting up the altar, thinking of hymns, and trying to figure out what to say when an interesting young man whom I had confirmed a couple of years before called me over. The friend with him had purple spiked hair. “Pastor, I want to tell you what happened here today. Day after day, week after week, month after month you are picked on, then you finally go over the edge. I don’t condone what happened here today, but that is what happened.” And he walked away. He was about 80-85% right.
I don’t remember what we sang. I don’t remember what I said. I served the Eucharist, “the body of Christ for you.”
A project engineer in my congregation kept saying “Klebold” to me. He lived next door to the Klebolds and saw police and reporters at the house. Finally I recognized the name and said, “If they need me, have them call.” The Klebolds had attended the church for about five or six months several years before, and we saw them at a parishioner’s home each Christmas. Tom Klebold was raisedLutheran in Ohio and attended Wittenberg College. He is a geophysicist and gifted as an artist. Sue Klebold is Jewish, from a leading family in Ohio. She is gracious, warm and very caring.
The next day everyone was invited to Light of the World Catholic Church, where President Clinton later met with the victims’ families. The priest and I were friends. The Presbyterian pastor and I were asked to speak. Members of the county school board, the principal, and the overwhelmed superintendent also spoke. Faculty, parents, students, reporters,and police filled the large church with others outside. I was last to speak. I said something like the following:
The weeks and months, maybe even years ahead will be painful. Lawyers will keep this alive far beyond a point of healing. There will be a search for a target to blame. That may not happen. But I do know this, God raises up and God will raise up this community.That is a promise.
Among the many different kinds of T-shirts that appeared, on some was the message“God will raise us up.”
Clement Park, next to the high school, filled up with satellite trucks and reporters’ tents. There were photos, mourners, and enough flowers to rival Princess Diana’s funeral. Crisis junkies from all over the country showed up. Counselors, legitimate and not so legitimate, were present. Evangelicals preyed on mourning students, telling them to trust Jesus and they would feel better.The county sheriff issued bizarre and erroneous statements. It took a few days before body counts of the dead were accurate.
A policewoman from my congregation had to crawl through bloody water to help find expended shells. Bombs were discovered and destroyed. One large bomb, if detonated, would have killed hundreds of students hiding in a room above it.Fortunately the timer was defective. Lights in the school stayed on all night for months because it was a crime scene. A window with a bullet hole in it and blood running down was visible from the street for weeks.
On the Thursday two days after the shooting I conducted the funeral for a 19-year-old young woman who had died of copper poisoning. The pressure of scores of young people grieving for their friend, combined with the Klebold funeral on Saturday, added to my eventual numbness.
On Thursday, April 22, Tom Klebold called and asked for help. Would I do a funeral for his son? It was to be a private, secret affair, with a few trusted friends.The media circus had begun, and Tom, on the best of days, is a private person.
Almost seventeen years before I had been asked to do a funeral for a (non-member)thirty-year-old who died gay, alcoholic, drug addicted, stabbed and left in a gutter in a city far away. I had thought the parents would be relieved at his death. How wrong! The father’s grief was almost overwhelming. For that funeralI had used II Samuel 18:33, relating King David’s love for Absalom despite his dividing the kingdom and causing many deaths. That would be my text for this funeral as well.
I sent my wife with another Lutheran pastor to the funeral on a circuitous route.I wanted them there as a reality check. I was becoming overloaded emotionally.I went with a Denver policeman in case I ran into reporters.
Upon arrival at the funeral home I met Tom Klebold and his other son Byron. We were formal with each other, but he was grateful for my presence. In a room where Dylan’s body was in a coffin, I met his mother, Sue. She came into my arms and sobbed and shook. I held her, but could feel nothing, as I was numb with overload. Dylan lay in the casket surrounded with Beanie Babies.
A family lawyer came. Long-time friends arrived; one couple was from my church.Tom’s sister and brother-in-law were the only other family members. As I walked into the incredibly tension-filled room, I knew that the service I had prepared was not appropriate. I said, “Let’s just sit and talk for a while. Who wants to begin?”
One family jumped in and talked about how much they loved Dylan. Another said what great parents the Klebolds were. The family from my church related how great it was to have Dylan at their house and how he wrestled with their son. Nothing made sense. Then Dylan’s father Tom said, “Who the hell gave a gun to my son?All we have in the house is a BB gun to shoot the woodpeckers. We are against guns.” Susan said, “How could he be anti-Semitic? He is half Jewish as I am all Jewish.” So it went for a half an hour or more. Finally it was time to do liturgy, read scripture, offer prayers and give a brief sermon about parents’ love, which is as faithful as God’s love.
On the way out I asked the lawyer how should I respond to the media. He said,“Tell them what you saw here today. Tell them about these good people.”
For the next two days I did just that, and then I had to stop because being a celebrity becomes an ego trip at the expense of other things. There were Sunday sermons, meetings, Lutheran Social Services trying to be of help, the chaos of the building program, phone calls, hundreds of letters (Klebolds got over 4000 letters of support, and many were sent via the church or my home). People called or wrote whom I had not heard from since high school. There was tension in the church, fear, students doubled up at another high school, chaos in the news and of course the funerals. One Lutheran was seriously wounded and within a few months her mother committed suicide in a gun shop. Crisis teams came into the community again.
One student reportedly confessed her faith before she was shot. The stepfather of another student victim milked the situation for all it was worth. A couple of my student members had been next to students that were killed, but were not harmed themselves.
The best basketball player in the state was a member of my congregation; he hanged himself a year later because of the trauma. We borrowed the Catholic church to hold an ecumenical funeral service for the whole community, and twenty-five hundred attended.
Letters from Rev. John Tietjen and former Bishop Chilstrom came loaded with interesting information. Phone calls from rabbis, jail chaplains, and other ministers came to the house. The media tried like crazy to manipulate me to get to the Klebolds. I was used to deaths one at a time, not fifteen plus two more later by suicide.
The new young governor felt that there needed to be a public ceremony of some sort so people could resume some normalcy. About 40,000 people gathered in a theater parking lot across from the park and school. A rabbi made sensitive comments,but an Evangelical Free Church pastor and Franklin Graham made comments that were insensitive and hurtful to any who were not right-wing Christians. As president of the Denver Area Interfaith Clergy Association I had to respond publicly on behalf of non-Christian members. I was quoted in the newspapers assaying “we all got hit over the head with Jesus.” I received much support as well as hate mail for that comment.
Just prior to all of this I had asked an associate pastor to resign. In anger and hurt she wrote a resignation letter accusing me of physical abuse. In the middle of the chaos I planned for the dedication of the new sanctuary. June 6,1999 saw the Lutheran bishop of the Rocky Mountain Synod, an Episcopal priest,a Roman Catholic priest, a UCC pastor and a Presbyterian pastor all distributing communion together. It was to be a table where Jesus was the head,not Luther.
Our family physician and his family left the church for another congregation.Several other parishioners also started to make plans to exit. And the poorest decision I made was to follow through on a sabbatical I had planned for two years and started the day after the new sanctuary was dedicated.
By the time I came back in the fall, quite a few families had left, some stating they had to take sides with their neighbors. Forty-six families in the congregation had children directly affected and wanted help for their trauma. I had left two well-seasoned pastors in charge during the sabbatical, but that was not enough. Upon my return, almost all wanted to be visited. In the meantime three women contracted breast cancer and two men were dying of cancer.
One could divide any room in the community over the matter of fifteen or thirteen crosses. Thirteen was the number of dead not counting Klebold and Harris. A kind carpenter from Illinois planted fifteen crosses on a hill behind Columbine, but a victim’s father took two down. Later when a church youth group planted fifteen trees he cut two of them down.
I approached my bishop and his assistant in the fall and said that the church was no longer mine. They asked if I wanted to move. Yes, I felt, to another church.No, I felt, from our beautiful home and friends. At a Thanksgiving Eve Service I got a standing ovation from 450 people. Christmas was great. But by Maundy Thursday 2000, while I spoke to 3000 people at the one-year anniversary gathering, several people were meeting in secret, plotting to ask for my resignation after Easter. The annual meeting in May became ugly with women saying things like, “He is a good preacher, but a very bad man.”
I had been “reality checking” with my text study group and a therapist each week. However, it was over. Lament had moved into my ministry. I had to grieve a congregation that for the most part liked me and I liked them. Having to sell my house, find another job, discard items intrinsic to our children’s childhood, and move caused great personal lament.
As has been the case for many a pastor, the good people never figure it out until it is too late. Those who have unresolved issues and create unhealthy projections from them are far more active and efficient –and they manage to find each other for support. “Clergy Killers.” “Alligators.”“Christians are the only people who shoot their wounded.”
Having related briefly what happened, let me look at lament in this context.
Public Lament
The street in front of Columbine High school was a main thoroughfare and was sealed off for a long time. People would say, “I want my street back” as a lament for“I want things to go back to normal.”
Very little is taught in seminary or Clinical Pastoral Education about public trauma. We learn how to handle personal trauma, but only since the Oklahoma City bombing has the journey of public trauma been addressed. Numerous lawsuits and the news media act as scab scratchers that prevent public wounds from healing. Some people fall apart immediately; others take several years to have breakdowns. VietNam veterans found their trauma reawakened by their children being under gunfire.
Fundamentalists used the time and especially the anniversary to try and convert others. They tried to make the message “they are with Jesus” a solution to make people feel better rather than taking the long walk with those who were grieving.
Personally,my stance was trying to be a non-anxious presence, although for several years I was full of information that I really did not want to know. But people want fixing in trauma and if they are not fixed, someone has to be blamed. I offered individual and group ministry for families who had suffered trauma; three of the forty-six families responded. With a congregation of over a thousand it was hard to reach everyone. Healthy people come out okay after being tossed around;unhealthy people want “it” to go away or look for someone to blame.
What did help? Despite the differences between two wings of the Protestant church(Evangelicals and Mainliners) and the Roman Catholics who walked a healthy middle between the two, the churches did for the most part react well. TheMormon community made over 1800 quilts for students. The merchants were generous. People flew students to different experiences for R&R. One young man in my congregation was flown East to sit in professional baseball dugouts and speak to hundreds of students. All this was part of the therapy. The community came together; counselors, funeral homes, police, and firemen were all helpful.
The raw weariness of the community continued to be exploited by the media at every opportunity. Two of the families whose children were murdered continued to want some form of revenge or a truth that did not exist. Others announced forgiveness. Sue Klebold wrote apologies to each of the families and responded to the over 4000 letters of support. A Lutheran pastor,whose son had killed a woman and is in prison forever, called and offered comfort. Public lament was mixed with public and personal grace. It is grace that sustains us until we find a new “normal.”
Professional Lament
Prior to the one-year anniversary my church council had asked that I not make any public comments during Holy Week, which was the week of the anniversary. I received permission to do a presentation at the public service, but I was asked not to say anything to the media.
Several weeks before the anniversary I had been interviewed by the Rocky Mountain Newson the meaning and theology of what happened. Among other things I spoke of aLutheran perspective on life. “Life is work. Love is suffering. Life is love.”However, the article was not printed until Maundy Thursday. My role as pastor and word-giver was challenged and up for grabs. Part of the congregation felt the article was great; some others went ballistic. I was definitely no longer the pastor of the congregation even though I had been there for ten years and sincerely loved most of the members.
One expects that if one is faithful, ethical, and doing the best they can, one will be rewarded for such service. When attacked as a bad pastor while doing one’s best to rise to the occasion, one wonders why God is not so good to his friends. We hope our crosses will be surrounded by lilies and not by disappointment.
Personal Lament
To be fired, as it were; to watch the bishop walk away; to see fellow Lutheran pastors treat you like you have leprosy pales compared to the personal anguish of a family that has to pull up roots, take apart a house, and at age sixty fear unemployment and take what exists in any form of a job. Hundreds of thousands of people go through this each year, but when it is personal, it seems overwhelming.
One becomes used to community and hopes that the church one serves will be there for you. So often it is not. Clergy bashing and scapegoating arise in times of crisis and trauma. Someone has to carry away the tension. Since pastors cannot fight back, they often become the focus for such displacement.
What heals in times of lament?
First of all, the lamenting – giving private and public expression to one’s sorrow and grief and anger and disappointment – is useful in itself.
Secondly, staying close to the Word and finding another community is helpful. For monthsI went to Mass each day and received the Eucharist from Catholic priests who were friends. I would go early, read from my Lutheran devotional and focus on the phrase that the priest says during the Lord’s Prayer, “…and deliver us from all anxiety.”
Third, families come together during such times if they are healthy. Ours were helpfuland hopeful.
Fourth, friends are fantastic. Women from the church came and helped us pack. Others took us out to dinner. Clergy from other denominations were good to us. A priest sent us a hundred dollars to go out to dinner. The interfaith clergy group gave me an award in recognition of service.
Fifth,God raises up. I believe that one has to be open to new forms of service and opportunity. Inconvenience is a part of life.
Sixth, life changes, but love continues to exist.We die many times and we experience many forms of grief, but as St. Paul put it, “Love never fails.” We are on such a journey even now. Lament is not without hope.
Thee, thee and also me … and we … pastor and person and community.
[Source]
Lament in the Ministry: Public, Pastoral, Personal – Let’s Talk
Could you please pass me the link to Sue’s last talk (which was a few weeks ago)? I haven’t been able to watch it and I’d appreciate it. Thanks!!
Unfortunately, I have not been able to find a video an attendee has made from the Pastoral conference May 17-18. If and when I do, I’ll be sure to post it here. 🙂
Dylan had pretty considerable sized ears when his hair was short.











