Monthly Archives: January 2026

Unexpected Smiles in Unfriendly Weather

One of my sisters moved from Arkansas to Canada in the 1980s, and I recall being astounded by tales of winter weather in the North, particularly that schools never canceled and that children still went outside for recess. We in Arkansas, on the other hand, built snow days into the annual calendar!

That was forty years ago, and I have lived in Wisconsin long enough now to hear from all sides that winters were far worse then. But I have not lived in Wisconsin long enough to know very much, so I watched with interest when the forecast for yesterday featured wind chill lows in the negative thirties, numbers that had not been experienced here in several years. Our workplace chose not to cancel classes in spite of the forecast; however, in response to an idea proposed by the student government, we did assemble several faculty and staff members to drive students between upper and lower campus throughout the day. So I spent the first few hours of my Friday driving my SUV and offering rides. I loved it.

Many students turned me down, I assume by some because they weren’t intimidated by the bitter cold, others possibly because they found it as creepy as it felt for me for an old dude to lower his window and offer a ride! But many said yes and were grateful and fun, and it was great spending unanticipated time with such wonderful students.

My favorite story may have been Rocco, a fantastic young man who is student teaching this semester. I saw him bundled up and walking alone on the far side of a set of residence halls, and he jumped at the offer of a ride even though he was only headed to the other side of the set of residence halls. It didn’t take long to drive to his front door, and I joked that I could keep driving in circles if he wanted to warm up more. He instantly took me up on the offer, so I drove slowly in circles and got caught up on his student teaching this semester and shared stories of mine from forever ago.

What an unexpected gift.

This brought back a specific set of Mississippi memories.

The Mississippi Gulf Coast sees a lot of rain. Not steady, Seattle rain. Occasional, torrential downpours. I was asked to lead a church on the Mississippi Gulf Coast at the turn of the century and had the honor of doing so for a decade. Our church’s building had an awning on its back side, but at the time that area was used for storage and inaccessible by car. So on stormy Sunday mornings, churchgoers were simply going to get wet. I don’t remember who suggested it, probably my hero, Gene, but someone suggested that we purchase a nice set of golf umbrellas for those bad weather days. I have such lovely memories of gloomy, yucky days out in the driving rain with good people like Gene, Herman, and Joel, standing at the car door of elderly widows or families with children, joking and laughing as we escorted them into the safety of the building.

I do not like driving rain, and I know that spending those precious minutes before conducting a worship service in the driving rain with an umbrella is not recommended. But I know that somehow, miraculously, those turned out to be my favorite Sundays.

All this has me thinking today as an actual winter storm sweeps across the nation and all sorts of metaphorical storms terrorize our world: When rough weather arrives in your neighborhood, whether literally or otherwise, I suggest that you lean into it and look around for how to give someone a hand. It might not affect the weather, but in my experience it has produced unexpected smiles along with a special and unforgettable feeling that is beyond my capacity to describe

Peace and Love (more than a tie-dyed t-shirt)

“Sooner or later all the people of the world will have to discover a way to live together in peace . . . If this is to be achieved, [humanity] must evolve for all human conflict a method which rejects revenge, aggression and retaliation. The foundation of such a method is love.” – Martin Luther King (Acceptance Speech, on the occasion of the award of the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, December 10, 1964)

On the eve of the 2024 presidential election, I referred to a comment stating that the outcome of the election would say more about the American people than the campaigns themselves, and I believe that turned out to be accurate. The year since the subsequent inauguration has exposed disturbing collective values. I do not in any way believe that this administration invented revenge, aggression, and retaliation, but it has unapologetically modeled those human inclinations (e.g., Comey; Greenland; flipping off an autoworker; respectively).

The strange recent peace prize headlines serve as a poignant case study on this eve of the holiday that honors Dr. King.

In late 1964, King traveled to Norway to accept the Nobel Peace Prize. He opened his speech by making it clear that he accepted the award on behalf of the Civil Rights Movement, not himself, and then wondered why the award was given “to a movement which is beleaguered and committed to unrelenting struggle; to a movement which has not won the very peace and brotherhood which is the essence of the Nobel Prize.”1 His conclusion was that the award was, in fact, “a profound recognition that nonviolence is the answer to the crucial political and moral question of our time – the need for man to overcome oppression and violence without resorting to violence and oppression.”

Later in King’s acceptance speech, in a passage that I feature at the beginning of this essay, he predicts that the world will eventually be forced to discover a way to live in peace, and that this elusive state will require a method of conflict resolution that “rejects revenge, aggression, and retaliation” — three popular methods that you spot easily simply by watching the daily news. Creative nonviolence is King’s answer, of course, and if you find that intriguing, don’t miss his next line: “The foundation of such a method is love.”

I know that peace and love is a tie-dyed t-shirt, but here is what I also know: Revenge has not proven to be a reliable pathway to true peace. Neither has aggression. Nor has retaliation. And I know it is a Beatles song, but I truly believe that not only is love our deepest need, but it is also the foundation for any desire we have for a world where peace and justice exist.

I always try and regularly fail to look at politics objectively. I began my professional life over thirty years ago teaching courses like history and civics, which then morphed into full-time ministry where I wrestled with theological approaches to complicated issues. My meandering life later wandered through law school, which added new layers to my way of thinking. Eventually I assembled my own framework for interpreting the world, and although that framework remains malleable, once assembled it has more or less hovered in the same general neighborhood.

All that to say, the annual Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday means more to me than a day off work (for some!) and a day to trot out one of his famous quotes. Instead, I identify with his fateful decision to adopt and promote creative nonviolence as the path to justice, and I arrived there through my admiration of Jesus, too.

It is incredibly difficult to love enemies. It is an outright radical concept, and it is practically impossible even to catch a glimpse of it on the national stage right now. And it does not surprise me that most find the concept ridiculous, if not repulsive. I just happen to believe, like Reverend King, that it is the secret sauce. More than a tie-dyed t-shirt, it is messy, painful, and can get a person killed. But, I believe, the secret sauce nonetheless.

So beyond the bizarre peace prize stories in recent headlines, for tomorrow’s holiday I look back to 1964 and say establish your own deeply-held interpretive framework for navigating this old world, but here’s a word for the framework espoused in Oslo by Reverend King that believes in the foundation of love for all people, even enemies. I have discovered that any love-inspired action that I achieve feels like a step in the right direction, and noticing even hints of that in our nation’s political discourse right now is a long shot.

  1. This posture, of course, is antithetical to an American president that said earlier this month, “I can’t think of anybody in history that should get the Nobel Prize more than me.” ↩︎