Monday, February 22, 2010

Our Integrity for Seven Pizzas

In worship yesterday, I told of a recent email I received from a stranger. He was angered by a situation he watched unfold before him at a Pizza Hut. From his vantage point in the pick-up line, he watched a young clerk deal with an United Methodist youth minister from a corridor area church. As the Pizza hut employee placed the seven Mamma Mia pies on the counter, the man watched as the youth director handed the check to the clerk. The youth director quickly picked up the pizzas and pointed to a sign that said "if we don't show you our pizza, it's free." The youth director snatched the check out of the hands and left. I called Pizza Hut to confirm the story. The story was true. The employee said, "He didn't give me a chance to show the pizzas. He (the youth minister) just picked them up off the shelf." The story made the rounds through the restaurant.

I don't tell the story to skewer the youth director from another church. Failings happen. The stranger's email was forwarded to the church. I hope he does the right thing. The reason I told the story was to remind us how our actions speak louder than any sermon ever preached. It is easy to sell our integrity, our beliefs, our Christ for seven pizza pies. When we fail to understand our critical role as ministers in whatever situation we find ourselves in today, then we have great potential to wreak havoc with our witness.

You have taken Jesus to work today, to the gym, to school. What's your integrity going for these days? It's something I am pondering.

As we are in Lent, I leave you with this prayer of confession from the book, The Awkward Season by Pamela Hawkins.
Sometimes, O God, my thirst for you
is pushed aside, ignored,
or simply quenched by something other--something more reasonable,
something more popular than you.
But you never go away,
never stop,
never leave the depths of me.
Like an underground spring,
you are fresh and free,
breaking through.
Help me prepare a place for you in the caverns of my soul.
Amen.
By the way... the bill to Pizza Hut (if it has not already been paid) will be taken care of by this church today, along with a generous tip thanks to several of you.
On the journey,
Alecia

2 comments:

  1. I have been reminded several times lately that we do witness every day in our interactions with others. The question is whether we are presenting a good witness to our faith. Does God's light shine through our actions?

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  2. As my former boss use to say "you can't un-ring the bell". How many kind acts will it take to erase the memory of one unkind act or one injustice. There may be more to the story but Christ offers grace for the offender. The clerk may not. We do wittness even when we are not mindfull that we are wittnessing.

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