Saturday, July 4, 2026

2026 Baby Got Stacks Reading Challenge: 01

Title:  Jesus and the Disinherited

Author:  Howard Thurman

Info: Copyright 1949. Beacon Press.

Rating (on a scale of 1-4 stars): 

Category (ies) - This book was a  rrecommended read from my pastor.

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What does it look like to walk in the shoes of the disinherited:  the excluded, the marginalized, the underprivileged?  Is it possible for such persons to escape fear, hatred, and hypocrisy (what the author calls the three "hounds of hell"), or are they doomed to perpetuate it while being victimized by it?   Theologian and Civil Rights leader Howard Thurman attempts to answer those questions.  In answer to Vladimir Simkhovitch's treatise Toward the Understanding of Jesus, Thurman expounds on his thesis that Jesus not only ministered to the disinherited, but as a working-class Jew in a Roman-occupied Israel, he experienced their plight first hand.  Thurman explores Jesus' response to the governmental and religious sanctioned dehumanization of the people of his time and His instructions to the disinherited of both Thurman's time and ours.

I approached this work with much trepidation, and nearly stopped reading before I had even gotten to the first chapter.  In the introduction to the 2022 edition of this book, Dr. Kelly Brown Douglas states:

For some, Thurman’s book perhaps represents one mystic’s attempt to capture the inner spiritual strivings of Jesus. For others, it may exemplify theological liberalism’s overemphasis on the historical Jesus as a great exemplar and role model for humans to follow. And for still others, Thurman’s book is a precursor to twentieth-century Black theologians’ declaration that Jesus was Black. (p. ix).

Now you see why I almost didn't bother reading the rest.  However, I did complete the volume and would like to address Dr. Douglas' points.

First, Thurman's words vividly capture the spiritual strivings of Jesus, if by that Douglas is referring to not only how Jesus worked in His earthly ministry to relieve the burdens of the oppressed (see Luke 4:18-19), but also how Christ's ultimate sacrifice purchased those same freedoms for all who call Him Savior and Lord (see Psalm 34:19).  He says (first quoting Simkhovitch):

Jesus had to resent deeply the loss of Jewish national independence and the aggression of Rome…. Natural humiliation was hurting and burning. The balm for that burning humiliation was humility. For humility cannot be humiliated…. Thus he asked his people to learn from him, “For I am meek and lowly in heart; and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light." (p. 17)

Then he goes on to say:

He [Jesus] recognized with authentic realism that anyone who permits another to determine the quality of his inner life gives into the hands of the other the keys to his destiny. If a man knows precisely what he can do to you or what epithet he can hurl against you in order to make you lose your temper, your equilibrium, then he can always keep you under subjection. It is a man’s reaction to things that determines their ability to exercise power over him. It seems clear that Jesus understood the anatomy of the relationship between his people and the Romans, and he interpreted that relationship against the background of the profoundest ethical insight of his own religious faith as he had found it in the heart of the prophets of Israel. (pp. 17-18) 

Douglas' second point about seeing Christ as a mere exemplar portrays Him a one-dimensional character and Thurman does not present Him in that manner.  Jesus is no simple template from which we can extract the favorable parts, dispose of the unfavorable parts, and add our own spin on.  He is not a generic essay or a Mad Libs story we can fill in as we please.  Jesus Christ is the story already begun and finished.  Our job is to find our place in the narrative and live it through to the end.  Or as the Apostle Paul said in 2 Corinthians 3:2-3 (English Standard Version), "You yourselves are our letter of recommendation, written on our hearts, to be known and read by all. And you show that you are a letter from Christ delivered by us, written not with ink but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of human hearts."  He writes upon our hearts and we dare not try to change the story.

Her third statement was a complete turn off that nearly had me press the "return early" button on my Libby app. If you've read my previous book review, you know how much I loathe those who use Scripture and/or God for race baiting. Admittedly, I also struggle with how to successfully study theology through the lens of different cultures without that lens magnifying the culture (the created) over the Creator (see Romans 1:18-25).  Also, how would anyone who gave the work a serious read ever come to Douglas' conclusion?  Thurman himself puts that notion to rest at the close of the book by saying:

For such his answer becomes humanity’s answer and his life the common claim. In him the miracle of the working paper is writ large, for what he did all men may do. Thus interpreted, he belongs to no age, no race, no creed. When men look into his face, they see etched the glory of their own possibilities, and their hearts whisper, “Thank you and thank God!” (pp. 101-102). 

It reminds me of the Joan Osborne song from the mid-90s that laments "What if God was one of us?"  Well, He was.  Was Jesus "us" as it relates to race, gender, or other demographics?  Only if "us" is a Jewish male.  But was He "us" in the more universally recognized aspects of being human?  Absolutely.  Hebrews 4:15 (New International Version) says, "For we do not have a high priest who is unable to empathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are—yet he did not sin."  Even if Jesus did not look on the outside like whatever our "us" is, He experienced and completely understood all of the "us" that is on the inside.

So, why is this book still relevant more than 75 years after its publication?  To me its relevance lies both in its history and theology.  Today, government-backed segregation and slavery have been abolished as part of the laws of the United States.  However, the mindset that perpetuates oppression has not.  Yes, ignorance will always exist and along with it hatred and vitriol.  If those individuals reject truth and refuse to change, God help them as they rot in their own ignorance. But what of the hatred, fear, and hypocrisy experienced  by those of the disinherited class?  Since this is no longer a legislated preloaded lot in life, why do so many still live back there as if it was?  I'm not talking about those who remember history (they should--we all should) but those who remember and repeat it as a given.  Why do so many of us in the black community perpetuate our own oppression by refusing to educate ourselves and work so hard to oppress and ostracize others who choose education and job training over the status quo?  Why do we still have so many homes where children are raised without a father because of poor choices or apathy on the part of both parents?  Why are the privileges for which many marched, fought, and died (like education, the right to vote, freedom of religion, and the chance at upward mobility) relegated to "white only."  Why are we creating our own version of Jim Crow?  Thurman laments this very point:

The implications of such a view are simply fantastic in the intensity of their tragedy. Doomed on earth to a fixed and unremitting status of inferiority, of which segregation is symbolic, and at the same time cut off from the hope that the Creator intended it otherwise, those who are thus victimized are stripped of all social protection. It is vicious and thoroughly despicable to rationalize this position, the product of a fear that is as sordid as it is unscrupulous, into acceptance. Under such circumstances there is but a step from being despised to despising oneself.  (p. 33)

Thurman's understanding that Jesus is not just an example of the answer, but is THE answer to hatred, fear, and hypocrisy is another reason why this book is still relevant.  His words cut to the quick of any person's oppression regardless of race, creed, or gender.  For example, he says, "There are few things more devastating than to have it burned into you that you do not count and that no provisions are made for the literal protection of your person." (p. 29)  Statements like those go straight to the heart of anyone's pain.  He comforts with the words in Luke 4:18-21 where Jesus both acknowledges and presents Himself as the embodiment of freedom and comfort for the oppressed and hurting.

Another big part of the book's power is that unlike much of the literature of this type I have attempted to read, Thurman's book does not incite one to hatred.  Yes, he talks about what "they" did to "us," but more importantly, he addresses what "we" did (and still do) to "us."  His goal is to teach us to receive God's love so that we can truly love Him, love others, and love ourselves.  That is the love that disempowers fear, hatred, and hypocrisy and breaks the chains of oppression.

This book impacted me so deeply that I purchased a copy of it and intend to add it to my rotation of books that I reread on a regular basis.  I'm sure I could add more, but I recommend reading Thurman's words that most powerfully speak for themselves.

Friday, May 22, 2026

26 for 2026

Welcome to year three of participating in Gretchen Rubin's yearly challenge. To learn more about the 26 for 2026 challenge, please see the Happier podcast here.

To see how I did on my 25 for 2025 list, please click here.

Yes, I know it's May and the list was supposed to be published in January.  Hear me out. 

This year, finding items was hard.  I didn't want too many repeats from previous years (especially the items I've failed to complete year after year) and I didn't want to include things that might be outside my budget.  Chris Hogan said, “[A big goal] is one of those that you know you’re going to have to work hard to get to, but you don’t have to find a unicorn to achieve it.”   I wanted fun stretch goals, not "unicorn" goals.

Quite frankly, until now my heart just wasn't in it.  As you can see, I have been working on a few of the items, but for some reason, this year has started on slow drag and I haven't had the mental or emotional bandwidth to nail down much of anything.  This is supposed to be fun, but in Auntie fashion, I've turned it into work.

Let's get 'er done! 

I have compiled the following list.  As I complete each item, I will mark it as complete.  If it is blog worthy, I'll post it as a link, or where applicable, include a photo, Pinterest pin, or Instagram post.  NOTE:  List is subject to change without notice and some items may overlap.

  1. Redesign this blog.
  2. Get down to the goal weight set by me and my physician.  (14 pounds to go). 
  3. Move 26 in 2026:  Work out at least three times a week for at least 15 minutes for 26 weeks.  (8 weeks so far).
  4. Walk an average of 8,000 steps per day.
  5. Read 100 children's books.  (78 books read so far) 
  6. Read something by Tolkien. The Hobbit completed 06/02/2026
  7. Read the first book of C. S. Lewis' Space Trilogy. 
  8. Read through John Calvin's Institutes of the Christian Religion.  
  9. Release eight episodes of my podcast. 
  10. Finish and self publish a book.  
  11. Try five new foods/drinks and/or restaurants. (3 so far).
    1. Nutella:  I give it a strong "meh."  It just tasted like very cheap chocolate with no hint of hazelnut.  I would have gotten more flavor from eating a Ferrero Rocher.   NOTE:  I just looked it up:  The Ferrero company owns Nutella and changed the recipe.  Not smart, folks.  Change it back.
    2. Iced coffee.  Tried the Reese's Cup iced coffee at Oo•de•Lally Coffee in Castle Rock.  It was fabulous.  Also tried the Salted Maple iced latte at Amano Plant Cafe in Evergreen.  This one was also quite tasty. Thoroughly enjoyed the toasted coconut cold brew at Starbucks also.
    3. Snarfs - A sandwich shop in Arvada.  Think Quizno's, but better, Subway, but much better and the staff doesn't look like they just got out of jail or rehab.  Would recommend. 
  12. Try five new recipes.  (4 so far).
    1. Blueberry Baked Oatmeal from the cookbook Satisfied by Amy Hannon.  I made this recipe again using canned peaches and it was great. 
    2. Hash Brown and Egg Breakfast Casserole from Allrecipes
    3. Homemade Taco Seasoning here.
    4. Sloppy Joe Cornbread Casserole from Zach Coen's YouTube channel here
  13. Attend or create a spiritual retreat.
  14. Have a themed summer reading focus.  Theme "My Inklings Summer."
  15. Write 5 book reviews on my blog (or elsewhere as the opportunity arises). (2 so far)
  16. Write 10 First line Friday posts. (2 so far)
  17. Blog about my one word theme:  "Care." 
  18. Start a blog series called "Are You Happy Now?" 
  19. Finish the next unit in the Rhema correspondence course I started ages ago.
  20. Finish one course unit from the Dallas Theological Seminary's free courses.
  21. Redecorate my bathroom. (In Progress)
  22. Redecorate my bedroom. (In Progress)
  23. Meet (and hopefully exceed) my savings goal to fully fund my emergency/maintenance fund. 
  24. Get my dream sewing machine.  (Completed 05/05/2026)
  25. Finish the photo project I started from my 50th birthday party. 
  26. Free play!  These are the fun things I want to enjoy throughout the year that didn't make into the top 26.   
  • Items from my 26 for 2026 list on my other blog.
  • Go to some sort of conference--preferable in person. 
  • Buy a new personal laptop. 
  • Make a fairy garden. (Completed 06/01/2026)
  • TBA 

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Government Cheese: The Weekly Hodgepodge

Join the fun! 
Come on over to 
for the Hodgepodge link-up!

Big week in the US of A...do you do your own taxes? What's something you've found 'taxing' lately? 

Absolutely not.  I probably could learn, but this is one of those areas that's best that I trust the professionals and save my self time and consternation.

I'm going to just leave this here... 


I'm feeling a little on the "taxed" side right now.  Though I'm busy all year at my full-time job, spring is my busiest season.  With commencement and all of the end of the school year reports and preparations, I'm ready for a long break.  I've been taking a vacation day here and there and having some long weekends, but I need some extended time away from my desk.  I've already put in for my summer break at the end of May, so that should do the trick.

When it comes to travel are you a last minute packer or a lay it all out a week in advance type? Do you struggle to pack light? Share a packing tip that has worked for you. 

At present I don't travel enough to share any tips, but when I do travel, I mull over what I need to bring while trying to keep it light.  I pack what I can a few days ahead (some things like medicines have to wait until the day of). 

April is National Grilled Cheese Month. Hmmm...who knew it got its own month? Do you like a grilled cheese sandwich? What ingredient do you add to take yours to the next level?

I enjoy the occasional grilled cheese sandwich.  I don't add anything special to it--just Colby-Jack cheese between slices of wheat bread, cooked with either butter or Blue Bonnet spread.  Hey, I'm simple; I grew up eating grilled cheese sandwiches made with "government cheese" and white bread, so my sandwich now is an upgrade.  

What would be the "next level" of a grilled cheese without turning it into a melt or panini?

There's a well known quote that says, "A ship in the harbor is safe, but that's not what ships are built for." - John A. Shedd.  Is constant growth necessary or do you think it's more important to prioritize stability and peace in your life? 

Stability and peace come with growth.  I believe that regular periods of growth are more achievable than  constant growth.  Stagnation leads to undesirable regression. 

Let's wrap this up with a fun spring this or that-

  • daffodils or tulips? Yes.
  • lemonade or iced tea?  Mix them to make an Arnold Palmer.
  • gardening or hiking?  Gardening (of sorts).  I'm looking forward to being able to safely put annuals in my flower pots in front of my apartment.
  • ladybugs or butterflies?  In nature?  Both.  To paint?  Butterflies.
  • umbrella or raincoat?  Stay in the house out of the rain.
  • floral patterns or polka dots?  Floral patterns.

Insert your own random thought here. 

In case you missed it:  

  • My previous Hodgepodge post "Fake Spring 2026" is here.
  • My latest Weekly Digest "Where Have All the Flowers Gone?" is here.
  • My latest First Line Friday post:  #43 - Looking for the King by David Downing is here
  • My latest Five Minute Friday post:  "Lazy" is here
  • My "2026 Baby Got Stacks" reading challenge is here.  (Updated regularly).  
  • My "26 for 2026" challenge is COMING SOON. (Updated regularly)
  • My "26 for 2026" art challenge is COMING SOON.  (Updated regularly).