Monday, March 26, 2012

Brother Jed, Sister Cindy, and Me

They reappeared on campus each year, returning faithfully as did spring robins, blooming daffodils, and budding trees. As warm weather coaxed students to linger outside classroom buildings, street preacher Jed Smock and his faithful sidekick Sister Cindy drew crowds on the walkways between Sackett and Willard on the Penn State campus. They shouted and preached, proclaimed and condemned; emboldened, it seemed, by every act of ridicule and insult tossed in their direction.

I remember discussions, among members of my campus fellowship group, about how best to respond to the spectacle of Brother Jed and Sister Cindy. We couldn’t pretend we simply hadn’t noticed them. It was hard to ignore the wild-eyed recovering disco queen wearing a floppy hat while shaking a tambourine and stomping on the devil.

Some thought this pair and their brand of street theater created an opportunity to engage students in thoughtful conversation about what the gospel really said. A few brave souls attempted to out-preach Jed and Cindy, setting themselves up across the quad in a kind of battle-of-the-street-evangelists.Several thought we should embrace these two as members of the family, distant and perhaps crazy, but family members nonetheless.

Frankly, they embarrassed the living daylights me. I just wanted Jed and Cindy to shut up and go away.

I hadn’t thought about these two for years, until I read on Sunday about David, Israel’s king, and his bold proclamation of love for God. Near the end of his life, he sang a song of praise to God, describing His mighty acts of deliverance. In the words of Psalm 40, David said:
I have told the glad news of deliverance
    in the great congregation;
behold, I have not restrained my lips,
     as you know, O Lord.
 I have not hidden your deliverance within my heart;
    I have spoken of your faithfulness and your salvation;
I have not concealed your steadfast love and your faithfulness
    from the great congregation.
(Psalm 40:9, 10 ESV)

David was not embarrassed to speak up and tell others about God’s faithfulness and deliverance. He did not restrain himself from speaking up about God.

I think when I hear the word proclaim, I get a mental image of Jed and Sister Cindy on the steps of that Penn State classroom building and I think, “I don’t want any part of that.” I’ll probably never take to the streets and preach. Nor am I wild about knocking on doors to ask strangers if they want to hear about Jesus.

But here, in this space, I tell my stories of God’s faithfulness and deliverance. I aim to do so with compassion and humor. Since reading David’s words yesterday, I’ve been wondering about how bold I am in proclaiming the glad news of God’s deliverance here, where I have the opportunity to do so.

So here goes.

In general, I would say the historic words of The Apostles’ Creed summarize what I believe. But in my own words, in an attempt to proclaim boldly the story of God’s deliverance:

I believe that in the beginning there was God and that He made everything and it was good. This is a free country, and many people believe there is a different story which explains how everything that is came to be. But I believe that, ultimately, only one of two possible explanations makes sense: either something came from nothing, or Something always was.

I believe that Something always was; and He is God, and He is good.

As I walk this earth and look around, I see evidence that things are no longer good. Something went wrong. Everywhere I see echoes and whispers of God’s goodness, but I also see sickness and suffering and pain which cry out, “This is not the way things are supposed to be.”

I believe that sin entered the world through one man’s rebellion, and all the grief in this world flowed as a consequence of that original sin.

Sin separated man from a holy God and, though we try, we cannot attain His standard of perfection. Not only man, but everything in creation groans under the consequences of man’s rebellion against God. Creation itself cries out for deliverance.

But because God is rich in mercy, He sent His Son as a sacrifice as the only means of reconciling sinful man to himself. If there were any other way for God’s wrath against sin to be satisfied, then Christ’s death on the cross was both unnecessary and cruel.

By grace through faith in Christ’s death and resurrection, I have been reconciled to God; not because of anything I have done. And Christ offers this same forgiveness and the promise of eternal life to anyone who desires it.

Not only have I experienced forgiveness, but I have also known God’s provision and protection throughout many seasons of life. He walked with me through years of treatment for infertility and led me to the adoption of my children. He sustained me through the grief of my father’s death. He has taught me to extend forgiveness and receive it from others. I see ongoing evidence of God at work healing, repairing, and restoring brokenness in my life and in the world around me.

Because the gospel is about more than restoration of my personal relationship to Christ. It is about all things being reconciled to God. Christ came not only to forgive sinners, but also to establish His kingdom. He came to make all things new.

And he invites me to participate in His work.

So here I tell my stories, attempting to bear witness to God’s acts of faithfulness and His work of deliverance in my life. I’ve never had anyone disagree with me here, trying to shout me down on the internet, having taken issue with something I’ve said. Perhaps someday someone will.

I have no interest in creating a spectacle or of drawing a crowd like Brother Jed and Sister Cindy. I hope my words are not an embarrassment to the cause of Christ. But I also, like David, don’t want to restrain my lips.

I want to proclaim publicly that God is good.

Joining with Michelle @ Graceful:



With Jen and the sisterhood @ Finding Heaven:

And shared with the Write It, Girl Community:






39 comments:

Laura Boggess said...

This is so good...shall I call you Sister Nancy? :) You can preach it, girl. You choose the corner and I"ll bring my tambourine. We'll shout it from the mountain tops.

Simply Darlene said...

You know miss Nancy, I've wondered about how we "preach to the choir" with our heart-felt, redemption-proving blog posts inside our Christian cocoon-communities. For the most part, we already have the Good News, and the Salvation too, but what of those who don't even know? I reckon that's when we all need a bit more Jed-n-Cindy in us... I wonder how many seeds they planted?

Thank you for this post. It's obvious that a lot of time, effort, and Spirit went into it.

Blessings.

amy@tolove said...

oh, i believe that Something always was... i LOVE this. keep proclaiming. you proclaim it well.

Jen Ferguson said...

What an amazing thing - this proclamation that not only lets the world know who you are and where you stand, but probably seeks to embolden and uplift your own soul as well. Lovely!

Nancy Franson said...

I think about that, too, Darlene; whether or not I'm just preaching to the choir. But I also figure that if I'm putting stuff out on the internet, who knows who might trip over it? So I just keep telling my stories and figure God will do with them as He pleases.

Nancy Franson said...

Okay. But you keep me honest--let me know when I start embarrassing myself. You know, more than usual. :)

Nancy Franson said...

That sounds like fun, sister!

Jody Collins said...

Nancy, you proclaimed it well! That was the gospel with some 'oomph' to it. well done!

pastordt said...

Beautifully done, Nancy. Thank you. I'm with Laura - preach it, sister.

Lyla Lindquist said...

Nancy, this is a beautiful, powerful proclamation. I love it.

It is not Brother Jed and Sister Cindy. Even in a feather boa, you could not be Brother Jed and Sister Cindy. You don't have it in you.

You know, a spectacle for the sake of the Gospel I can live with. I can even join the commotion. But I do remember these two, and I'm not sure what their spectacle was truly about. (I thought they were a midwestern phenomenon and I'm dismayed to learn they took their circus farther and wider.)

My beef, and it launched many a late night "discussion" with a housemate who delighted in their regular visits to my campus, was that I heard so little Gospel from them. If they preached it, it got lost in the harassment of women in slacks (I remember they chose pejorative words to refer to them that would get a radio talk show sanctioned today) , over the length of one's hair, over consumption of alcohol, over the various and sundry external issues they found offensive or immoral. And I remember wondering if a girl showed up sober and dressed in a skirt and bright moral uprightness, what would they think of next to make that her still not measure up?

I'd have helped them pound in the circus tent stakes if they'd just have preached a Gospel full and free, through the power of the cross instead of through the tying on of heavy and hysterical loads of which they were unwilling to lift a finger.

I'm really glad I got that off my chest. ;) Have I really been carrying it around for 25 years waiting for someone to mention them in a blog post? Go back to the beginning. Because the beautiful proclamation you made here is where I want to leave it.

(It's just that you all but asked for it on Facebook. ;-) Feel free to let this comment self destruct, Mission Impossible style.

Joan said...

Hi Nancy: I've been thinking of late about prclaiming Christ and not hiding our light under a basket. I'm also not like Brother Jed or Sister Cindy, but neither do I want to be ashamed to proclaim His name. I believe that, for many of us, blogging and the internet is the place to share. After all, we can virtually go into all the world... Blessings, Joan

Nancy Franson said...

Come on. Tell me how you really feel! ;)

I'd forgotten all about these two, but I think hearing about unrestrained speech in front of great congregations triggered a powerful memory for me. I think my discomfort with them (and others like them) has made me shrink back, at times, from speaking up about what I believe.

But I've gotten okay, in my old age, with people getting upset with me because of the offense of the gospel.

So, you had late night discussions about them too, huh? Such wrangling and angst. Ah, but we were all so young and had much to learn.

Some of us still do.

Nancy Franson said...

Thanks, Joan. We really do have an amazing opportunity, don't we, to use this technology for good.

Nancy Franson said...

Oomph--I like that!

Lyla Lindquist said...

Some of us still do. What are you saying there, Nancy? Surely you don't mean me? (hee, hee, please, tell me that you do!)

I actually owe a lot to these two. Because I think, during those late night heated arguments (before I married into a nice Swedish family and had to learn to tone it down), I began to formulate the early parts of the understanding I now have of the Gospel and grace and redemption. It seems I do some of my best development in the midst of resistance.

Imagine that.

Thanks for the memories, kid.

Nancy Franson said...

I'm counting on you to keep learning so you can teach me. Cause, merciful heavens--I'm way too dumb to figure it out on my own.

Lyla Lindquist said...

Heavens to Mergatroid (because every time you say merciful heavens that is my knee-jerk mental response).

You are not too dumb for anything. Leastwise not anything I could teach you out of given my own deficiencies. We'll just walk together, how 'bout that?

Nancy Franson said...

Works for me.

Lyla Lindquist said...

Just don't push me off the trail this time.

(Done now, the ribbon is getting to skinny.)

Nancy Franson said...

Thanks, Diana. Preaching? I don't know. Middle aged woman with a computer keyboard? That I can handle. :)

Deidra said...

That right there? It's your legacy - the testament of the Good News, Nancy Owens Franson version. I do believe it rivals The Message, my friend.

There was a team like this at my university, too. They freaked me out. I was so unstable in my faith. I hadn't claimed it, yet. Not in public. And people like that made me want to run for the hills and far from God instead of into his merciful arms. I couldn't see mercy when I looked at them. Just how pitiful I was, how poor my choices were, how awful my Bonne Bell lipgloss must look, shimmering in the sun. And no grace. Not a drop to found anywhere. So, I got the point that I was/am a sinner. I wrapped myself around that and carried it on my shoulders for years, and it weighed me down.

It was years before I could hear about grace.

(I laughed out loud at the recovering disco queen...)

smoothstones said...

Good for you.

Connie@raise your eyes said...

Well done, Sister Nancy. Keep on being faithful to what you know to be true, in this corner of cyberspace that GOD has set you upon.

Glenda Childers said...

Thanks, Nancy, for a thoughtful proclamation.

Michelle Eichner said...

Great proclamation! My church's mission is "Everyone, Everyday, Everywhere." You're doing just what God has called you to do - always being ready to give an answer for the hope that is within you! I like your style better than the disco queen, floppy hat, stompin' image :-) Well done, Nancy!

Stacey29lincoln said...

Oh my word, they were at IU too! It does make you wonder what ever happened to them?

Love your bold statement of faith. Keep shining!

Nancy Franson said...

I had an epiphany one year during a Maundy Thursday service when the pastor said simply, "God is not angry with you." Until he said that, I hadn't connected that God's anger was satisfied on the cross. It rocked my world and opened my heart to grace.

I hope you never recover from being a disco queen. If God's grace doesn't make people want to dance, well then I just don't know what else will.

Shelly Miller said...

And you do proclaim him well Nancy. Loved the story about brother Jed and sister Cindy. We have all probably experienced their kind at some point. God uses everything and anything he wants to use to bring people to Himself. And for that I am grateful.

Pamela said...

This is beautiful, Nancy. My heart still beats a little faster when I read the Apostle's Creed. You ARE proclaiming Christ and His goodness.

Deidra said...

This is so good! Thank you!

Lyli@3dLessons4Life said...

Oh, "Sister Nancy," this is a beautiful proclamation. I would get my tambourine and stand on a corner with you any day to share this : Christ will set you free. -- Your comments about David reminded me of a David Crowder worship song the youth always sang at the Christian School. Can't remember the title, but it used lyrics from II Samuel 6 where David tells Michal that he will be even more "undignified than this" to celebrate before the Lord. Dance on....

Gaby said...

This is awesome, Nancy. So bold, so well-written, and so obedient. You have inspired today. Maybe Brother Jed and Sister Cindy planted a seed long ago :)

Julie Anne said...

I'm so glad I happened upon this today, Nancy - so poignant!

Ruby Buttons said...

Happy to be related. xox

Nancy Franson said...

Yes ma'am! I love this family.

Nancy Franson said...

Well you could Google them, but you might not want to. I did. I was kind of sad afterward.

Nancy Franson said...

You know, I used to worry a lot about people within the church who gave Christianity a bad name. But then I realized, God used the most foolish, horrifying spectacle of all to redeem not only me but all of creation. I think God is powerful enough to overcome those of us who are an embarrassment now and then!

Jean Wise said...

wow nancy this is really great and I will join the other commenters in shouting AMEN, SISTER NANCY!

You know how some blogger create a new page or a button for 'pillar posts" or key posts to remember. This is one for you! I think you should print this one out for your journal or Bible or desk area.

Putting in writing what you believe is powerful and honors God. You made Him smile with your proclamation. Thank you sister!

Rupzip said...

Way to preach it!
Near my work is a man who walks every day with a John 3:16 sign. I always go out of my way to thank him for his boldness.

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