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SPECIAL FEATUREMarch 18, 2012
 
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An Open Letter from Abba to His Family
by: Joe Klock, Sr.
 
Issue:
13.01
 
Important dates

This Month...

Editor's Comment
Michael looks at:
Farewell, Shalom and Adieu

Being Jewish Magazine


see a .pdf copy of the current issue

Eddy's Recipe List
Victoria Sponge

Book Review
Unstrung Heroes

The Outspeaker
Encouraging violence is never correct

Batya
Good times and bad times with Batya

Nathan Weissler
What my friendship with Michael Hanna-Fein meant to me


Marjorie Wolfe
An Interview with Paul Reiser

BC's Backlot
The Last Shalom

This And That
My Treasure Chest

Three Symbols of Passover

Stress

Lynn Ruth Miller
How we all became part of a bigger story

Mel Yahre
A few words for my friend

Eddy's Thoughts
Don't let life flutter by

The Bear Facts
How I found Michael

 

Many of you on that small planet I created a few eons ago think of me as God; but, for reasons that make more sense to you than to me, some call me by other names.

Lots of you don't call me at all, which is regrettable, but I left that choice to you, under the Free Will policy I instituted with Adam and Eve.

There are also some person-made complexities as to my nature, my prescribed rules for your behavior and the relationship between me and 'thee.' (That example of archaic language is one thing I could do without, by the way.)

These differences among you only bother me, though, when you kids get into squabbles, such as when subgroups among you claim to be superior to others. In my house, there are many rooms, so there's no need to fight over whose space is whose.

Anyway, this isn't about that heavy stuff.

I started you off down there with a few simple rules - such as caring about each other - and I often wish you hadn't gummed things up with false pride, excessive greed, power struggles, sheer meanness, and quibbling about how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. (I've never given that question much thought, by the way).

This letter is about the "Father" business.

I happen to like that title best of all, because it means someone who is not only respected and loved, but, more importantly, someone who cares enough about his children to support and guide them through the problems they encounter in life.

That's the job I like best, that's the stuff I most like to hear from you about, and that IS the subject matter at hand. (Sorry it took me so long to get around to it, but you must allow for the fact that I'm working through an aging and wordy intermediary).

If you think of me as your Father (and please do!), for heaven's sake, talk to me as you would to a human Dad. Okay, I'm a few cuts above that in the pecking order, but I'm still basically a Dad in my heart of hearts.

So, instead of always "praying" to me in stilted language, why not just talk to me as though you were sitting on my knee? (Never mind that I don't actually have one; that's the sort of irrelevant diversion that keeps us apart.)

My most famous son referred to me as Abba in that nice piece of work I helped Mark to write (14.36, if you want to look it up). Technically, the word means God, but at the time he used it, in the Garden of Gethsemane, he was hurting a lot, and I interpreted "Abba" as meaning the same as "Daddy" in your language.

In times like that, he and I never stood on ceremony, and we didn't use stuffy words.

When he needed me, he always knew I was there for him. You can know (as in "believe") the same.

I'm not your Father on an "if" or "when" basis. I love you, regardless of who you are or what you've done. You're my kid, even when you've screwed things up - never forget that!

Remember, too, that I can and will forgive your screw-ups (read trespasses or debts, if you'd prefer), and my forgiveness is unconditional. That's one godly talent I pretty much reserve to myself, but it wouldn't hurt you to try emulating it.

In return, I only ask that you love (i.e., care about) your neighbor, even those miserable so-and-sos whose guts you hate with a passion.

The opposite of love, you see, is not hate, but indifference.

Please don't stand on ceremony with me. You want something, and you want it big-time? Tell me so. I may not always give it to you, but I'll always listen, and I'll always understand your feelings; that's what Dads do, even when they can't turn every dream into reality.

If you're unhappy with me, say so, and tell me why; that's what kids do, even when they're dead wrong. (If you're a parent, you already know that, don't you?).

When you think I've helped you, be sure to say "thanks," and when you think I've come up short, keep on nagging me; that's how children wear down their parents, and I'm no exception to that weakness.

So, what's on your mind, kid?

Love,
Abba (a.k.a. Dad)




Freelance wordworker Joe Klock, Sr. "The Goy Wonder" (joeklock@aol.com) winters in Key Largo and Coral Gables, Florida and summers in New Hampshire. More of his "Klockwork" can be found at www.joeklock.com.

 
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