Out of Sloth
In his magisterial Magic Mountain, German novelist Thomas Mann observes that boringly empty periods of life seem to take forever to live through, but in retrospect appear quite short, even empty. Conversely, he muses, other seasons are so full you don’t know how you can possibly keep up; on hindsight, though, they look longer than they actually were.
I’ve just been through one of the latter. I feel like I’ve lived ten years in the last month.
Inexplicably, I woke up the day after being wondrously delivered from a potentially eternity-ushering-in auto accident with a listlessness that went to the core of my being. The switch was “Off” and I didn’t know how to get it back “On.” Truth is, I didn’t want to get it back “On.”
I soon recognized mine to be a condition similar to one that had set in on my father when he was forced to retire from teaching before he was ready. Dad tried to write, but when he found publishers disinterested, he sank into his recliner, put the Braves on TV, and pretty much went away.
Likewise, and to my surprise, after the accident I discovered I too wanted just “to sit and watch a while.”
Mercifully, my life is too full of commitments, my wife too determined that I live, and my memory too full of what I’ve learned from Josef Pieper, Os Guinness, and Carla Waterman about the fourth of the seven deadly sins, sloth.
Often confused with mere laziness, sloth is more a shrinking of the spirit than an indulging of the flesh. What makes sloth sloth is not the nap, but the fact that the nap is the response to the report that there is a lion in the street (Prov 26:13-14). Sloth’s nap has been a constant temptation my entire conscious life, but at no time more oppressively so than in these past few weeks. I’ve come to understand acutely the majority report: “There are giants in the land — if we follow Caleb and Joshua’s counsel, we will perish.”
A month later, and I’m back — but not without an unlookedfor journey into a dark place. Others, too, I suppose, teeter on the balance point between “Further up and further in” and “Whatever … What’s on SportsCenter?” So I thought I would chronicle a few of the tipping points that seem to have brought me back from the edge of the abyss.
Getting Perspective on Greg Davis’s Death. The day before my accident, I had blogged the way the Newsboys’ Peter Furler’s line, “If indeed Christ rose from the dead, everything matters,” was helping me gain altitude on the death of my friend and co-worker Greg Davis. Little did I know how much those words would become my own do-or-die mantra: “Everything does matter. Everything does matter. Because of Christ, everything does matter.”
Ironically, the Greeks’ term for sloth was akeideia = “indifference.” We’re not the first to discover despair of the soul. Praise be, there was One who was not indifferent to our state.
The Sale of the Mustang. I knew the day after the accident that the biggest casualty of the event was going to be my beloved 1965 performance Mustang — I was going to need to sell it to help replace the totaled minivan. As fun as the ‘Stang was for me, she needed the kind of attention either an owner-mechanic or a wealthy dilettante could lavish on her. As much as I loved her, she wasn’t loving me back enough.
That’s what I knew on days when the switch was “On.” The other days, it was somebody else’s fault.
The day I resolved that it was my decision and not somebody else’s, and that the decision was going to be made out of gratitude for the joy the Mustang has brought instead of regret over the fun that was no longer to be, I called the friend from whom I had acquired her, and I offered her back. My friend had rebuilt the car with his father and had entrusted her to me only to raise money for a life-event that, well, eventually turned sour. The loss of the car was part of that pain. The Mustang’s return was as much a part of his healing as it was of mine.

Two Car Deals. I parse Greek verbs, but break lawn tools. I married a financial planner who carries household tools in her purse. I married amazingly smart. This week I got to watch Mrs. Kidd in full glory: walking us away from one car dealer over a $40 insult fee, and closing two car deals at another dealer. I’m sorry to see her give up the big family camping van that she’d grown about as affectionate of as I had the Mustang. But she’s right: we’ve got to be thinking about life-at-$5-per gallon. So, for now we’re driving his and hers Scion xBs: I’m in “Lucille,” she’s in the “Brave Little Toaster” (until our 16-year old learns to drive).

Speaking at Tullian’s Men’s Retreat & in Chapel. Larry Crabb once observed that sometimes all you can do is live as though you know truth is true, until you find yourself believing it. Sort of a sanctified “fake it till you make it” philosophy. Twice during the last month I’ve had speaking engagements in which I’ve simply had to articulate truth that I know to be true despite my internal disengagement from its reality. In the process, it has become more real. Thanks to the men of New City Church of Margate, FL, where my friends Tullian Tchvidjian and Paul Manuel minister, for bearing with me while I reminded myself as much as them that the apostle Paul calls us to “take hold of that for which I have been taken hold”: a life of faith, hope, love, godliness, justice, courage, and temperance. And thanks as well to the faculty, students, and staff at RTS/Orlando for letting me reflect with them on the way Jesus calls us “Out of Sloth and into Hungering and Thirsting for Righteousness.”
Toward Denominational Bonhomie. Right now, my denomination is characterized by some pretty strong distrust. The default drive, I suspect, is for all of us to surround ourselves with people who think just like we do. That’s its own form of sloth.
It has been heartening to hear, of late, how many and what range of folks are saying, “We can do this. It’ll be hard, but we can work at getting to know each other better so we can define better what’s essential and then trust each other on what’s negotiable.”


ALCS Game 5. OK, so how can I briefly say how great it was for ex-assistant Little League Coach Len Hardison to talk me into flying to Cleveland with him to take in Game 5 of the ALCS? I have to let pictures of the (less than prophetic) freebie Tribe towel, my scorebook, and Len & me tell it all.
Beckett was lights out. Otherwise of note: Youkilis’ home run & triple (but what was up with Sizemore’s bad angle on the triple?). And why didn’t Manny slide at home in the first inning or hustle out of the box in the third? Oh yeah, Manny being Manny. Pedroia’s double … I love that Little Leaguer. Even J.D. Drew got a double!?! Holy cow, this was the start of his ALCS & Series breakout! And you gotta love the sweet talk between Beckett & Cool Papa Lofton. How fun to be there for the ALCS turnaround game.
Sword Testing. My 16-year old takes to the samurai sword like a sandspur to socks. I’m still a klutz. It has taken me three years to learn how to do “seiza” — that’s basically a sitting position where your feet wind up under you pointing backwards with the top of the feet flat on the ground and the bottom of your feet up against your rear end. If you’re going, “Ouch!” then you’re probably imagining it about right.
At any rate, this past weekend (on my 38th spiritual birthday, it turns out), I tested for my second rank (“nidan”) in the U.S. federation of our organization — and I freakin’ passed. (Appropriately, I’m still “mudan,” i.e., unranked, in the Japanese association.) Randall didn’t test because they’ve decided they can’t have 16 year olds showing up 56 year olds. Oh, and about a month before the event, I found out I was in charge of registrations — I may ever get this paperwork sorted out!
So, I woke up this past Monday morning and said, “Wow, Lord, I’m back. Thanks.”





I’m so incredibly glad you’re back. You make the world a much nicer place for people like me.
It’s not uncommon for people to get stuck after a traumatic event. I was stuck in a vortex for seven very long years after Jesse’s death. There were times along the way that I thought maybe I was “back”, but I’d quickly find myself back in the land of I Don’t Care. It’s a beautiful thing to feel like yourself again, isn’t it?
Vicki
Comment by Vicki — October 28, 2007 @ 6:20 pm
Reggie, what a blend of insight and comedy- I love how real you are not just in the blogosphere, but in the classroom. Interesting that you brought up Larry Crabb- his book The Silence of Adam is pretty much just focused on this idea of sloth- choosing to live and not just sit back- very much like your chapel message.
Also, love that you named your car Lucille…gotta respect the king!
Comment by Greg — October 29, 2007 @ 8:53 am
“. . . live as though you know truth is true, until you find yourself believing it. Sort of a sanctified ‘fake it till you make it’ philosophy.” While the effort cannot be of my own effort–God is the source and I am in need of Him doing that work through His Spirit–something about speaking the truth to shed light in a dark place does have merit. And some day God will bring from the place where I “. . . simply have to articulate truth that I know to be true despite my internal disengagement from its reality” so that God may bring to the place where I live and walk out that EVERYTHING I do DOES matter in the eyes of my Christ. He engages the disengaged, brings hope to the downtrodden, heals the soul as well as the body, renews my mind, and so much much more.
This was a good word for me, especially applicable to my present circumstances, and though we have not met I feel that I do know you a bit through my sister-in-law, Carla W. She mentioned that your blog might speak to me this day.
Praying your strength . . .
SRK
Comment by Scott — October 29, 2007 @ 2:27 pm
Hi Reggie,
Your post rings so true to me. I remember in class when Carla would talk about sloth, it was as if she was speaking directly to me and to me alone. It’s a daily battle for me to not slip into that place of “it just doesn’t matter.” Thank God for people in my life, like my dear husband, and my crazy schedule, that doesn’t allow me to stay there too long.
amy
Comment by Amy Stewart — October 29, 2007 @ 9:57 pm
Hi Reggie,
I’m so struck by the order of your “tipping points.” You first affirm what is true, even when your world is shouting something else. I hear “if indeed Christ rose from the dead, then everything matters” as a version of “Lift up your hearts,” –that gracious movement of the soul that turns the heart up and out again, away from the imploded loss of perspective that is such a symptom of sloth.
And then, you open your hands (or maybe, in the case of the mustang, unclench your fists). And in the dying to the mustang, the Lord is able to fill your hands with simple gifts that you may not have recognized as such without the prior reorientation of heart and hands. You can love the communities that love you back, and see signs of hope in the midst of a community that you love even as it is struggling. And finally, you go from the paralyzing passivity of sitting in front of SportsCenter (that was your description) to the high-ranking controlled finesse of slicing through a tatami mat. It’s a form of the Lord raising you to life again that I’d never quite considered before…
While I respect the uniqueness of our souls, sins do have signatures. And in your blog I find myself reflecting on the path Jesus has made for us to come back one more time.
Carla
Comment by Carla Waterman — October 31, 2007 @ 9:44 pm
Hey Reggie. Your form cutting the bamboo looks really good to me. I’m a samurai movie fanatic, my favorite is called Zatoichi the Blind Swordsman. Can sword techniques improve a bat swing I wonder? Japanese guys apply the same discipline to their batting practice as swordsplay I think. Result is dudes like Ichiro. Im glad you are ok from the accident. Faking it till you make it is really hard for me. Lately, the antimonies of reformed theology are harder for me to accept than when I first read about them in Packers Evangelism and the Will of God(title correct?) 16 years ago. How does God really feel about the 99% lost Japanese I work with everyday? Does the resurrection matter to all of them or just some? How much can I really do to help them? That is my paralysis…my sloth right now. I hate the fact that I want to be agnostic about double predestination and covenant theology. I have been loved greatly by people on both sides of the fence. I dont want to sit on the fence! How important is it to try to solidify your position on these issues anyway. If I spend all my time and energy trying to teach the basic message of the gospel with japanese and never talk about predestination or covenant signs, my work will never be over. Yet my PCA upbringing has put a set of eyeglasses on my soul that I cannot easily remove. I dont like dissensions or distrust either, we dont have time for those things. This is really stream of consciousness, sorry.
Former RTS student. Faking it to make it Japan.
Comment by Ken — November 1, 2007 @ 10:30 pm
What a great update Reggie. Glad to have you back. Thanks for bringing us along in the journey your on. Missed you in class last week. It is not the same without you.
Comment by Michael Briggs — November 4, 2007 @ 7:30 am
Are you a rarity among your peers? Your honesty along with humor and witty writing style make for some great reading. I’ll bet most who peruse your blogs find themselves connecting with your story and similar events in their lives. Somehow I see a professor at a seminary as being stuck up and full of themselves. Yet you are true. You come to class and mess-up just like the rest of us and you take in stride as “that’s just the way it is.” Everyone in our class, no matter how long in training, has some technique they just can’t quite get. Having all the students, as well as teachers, realize this, makes us all have the same row to hoe. Hopefully as I learn to communicate better I will be able to say something to you that sticks and the little light that goes off in your head will shine! Until then, hang in there. You may not realize how much progress you have made but it really apparent to me. You have come light years compared to the beginning. Bob Elder (oldest student in class)
Comment by bob elder — November 8, 2007 @ 4:29 pm
Sensei,
Every teacher like me needs a sensei like you, one who thinks of himself simply as the “oldest student in class.” Thanks. Reggie
Comment by Administrator — November 8, 2007 @ 5:35 pm
Reggie:
Great to meet you in Atlanta.
Thanks for your honesty here and the story of how God has begun to bring you out. All of it rang true in a very personal way for me.
God’s Peace,
Jeremy
Comment by Jeremy Jones — November 10, 2007 @ 11:50 am