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Showing posts with the label sea stories

The Way of the Towel: Greatness, Redefined by Jesus

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by Bart Denny Central text: John 13:12–17 (NIV) Over the years, in church settings, I’ve done a lot of dishes. I’ve raked a lot of leaves. I’ve painted plenty of church walls. I’ve plunged more than a few clogged toilets. I don’t mind getting my hands dirty. But if I’m honest, at this age, with this many years in church, there’s a part of me that wants to say, “I’ve done my time.” I don’t usually say it out loud. I dress it up. I call it wisdom. Focus. Stewarding my time well. But the feeling sneaks up on me. It shows up when another need pops up. When the same few people carry the same load. When I feel tired. It shows up when I think, “Shouldn’t somebody else take a turn now?” And I’ll confess something else: I don’t mind serving. I just want to choose the terms. And if I’m not careful, I start thinking and acting like the low places belong to somebody else. Now let me be even more honest: I don’t struggle with getting my hands dirty. I struggle to keep my ego in check....

My Gomer Pyle

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by Bart Denny I suppose my basic training stories are like anyone else's. But I’ve got a bunch of them—probably because I was a glutton for punishment. I went through Navy boot camp in Orlando, Florida, in 1987. That was the first—but definitely not the last—training pipeline I endured in my Navy career. Someday, maybe I’ll tell all the stories about being screamed at by every variety of Navy and Marine Corps instructor imaginable. But for now, let me introduce you to my first bunkmate in boot camp: Seaman Recruit Flannagan. Well… “Flannagan.” That’s not his real name. And I remember his name vividly. But, given now nearly 40 years to reflect on it, I see no need to humiliate someone who may have simply been in the wrong place at the wrong time. Meet Flannagan More than any red-rope-wearing "company commander"—what the Navy called its version of the drill sergeant back then—Flannagan was the bane of my existence during the opening weeks of recruit training. Shortly after...