Tuesday, February 13, 2018

2212 revisited

















An old saying tells us “you can never go home again,” and some of us don’t want to.  There was a reason why we left, and never looked back, except to see how things are going in the old neighborhood.  We look back, but don’t want to go back, there is a difference.  Talking with my Mother last weekend, she still lives in the house they bought in 1959 and I grew up in.  He neighbor, Mabel, passed away at 97, leaving her the only person left in the neighborhood I grew up in.  No more Coleman’s down the street, no Nering’s, Aldinger’s,  or Del Nero’s.  All names and families of my past, gone.  The houses are still there, but those who inhabited them are long gone.  The new neighbors never knowing of all the kickball games played in the streets, the hide and seek games at Scottie’s, of sleeping out in Joey’s back yard, or building snow forts.  Mention “Frank is bald” and you get blank stares, Bruce and Barry and who are they?  Try to explain to them how we used to play in the woods where their house now stands, or how New York Avenue wasn’t paved until 1970.  We used to walk over the viaduct to Crestwood Cubbard for candy, or The Sweet Shop for MAD magazines.  Walking the half mile, or riding our bikes.  No more Snuffy Jr.’s for a burger, kids don’t walk to school any more, and we can remember a pre-McGinn school woods, the Land of the Jinks we used to call it, where it was all sticker bushes and no one escaped unscathed.  Tell of sleigh riding down hills in the woods, now a neighborhood, and tree forts where trees used to stand.  Some feigning interest, some just don’t care, some too busy with life.  My Mother the last remaining neighbor in my old neighborhood at 2212 Algonquin Drive......and how it all has changed.
But just a generation before my parents, their lot was woods also.  The house next door didn’t exist, it was a repair shop for heavy equipment, with a block and tackle, and a concrete slab.  Their house was the newest on our end of the street, with only a few homes built in the early 1950’s.  Algonquin Village, across Hetfield didn’t exist yet, bringing real suburbia to Scotch Plains, with cobblestone curbs, and a planned neighborhood, unheard of just a few years before.  Sewers, a big thing, street lights, but yet no sidewalks, the streets were still safe to walk on.  Gravel covered many of the roads, kids stayed out after dark to play, and no one locked their doors or had to.  They knew the police by name, didn’t have so many cars they had to park on the street, and knew each other.  Halloween night we all came home late with our pillow cases full with candy, the same 5 cent bars we used to buy, now free.  We shoveled snow for our neighbors, raked their leaves, and everyone waved to each other.  Looking back, it scares me to look ahead.  Maybe it is true you can never go home again, and if you did, the same home will not be there.  But you will have changed too.
Imagine a young Jesus growing up.  Joe and Mary’s kid, just another kid in just another neighborhood.  Then at age 30, after working with his Dad as a finishing carpenter, goes into ministry his heavenly father  ordained for him.  What did the old neighbors think when they heard of his exploits?  “Jesus, isn’t that Joe and Mary’s kid?  Did some work for me once, pretty good carpenter.  But what is this religion thing he is into?”  And they would talk of how they remembered him.  Scripture tells us how a prophet is not recognized in his own town, too many knew him when, not as he was now.  A trip through his old neighborhood would reveal many things, I am sure his take on his neighborhood much different then as compared to now.  They would claim he changed, but it is really us who need to, and it is him who changes us.  Picture his high school reunion of ten years, “what are  you doing Jesus?” Working with hid Dad, but just five years later, “What are you doing Jesus?” would bring the same, but a different answer, “working with my Father.”  Going about God’s business, he was now ready for ministry, age 30, the age to be a Jewish priest, and all without seminary.  That had to upset his old neighborhood, maybe raise a few eyebrows here and there.  How would you remember Jesus, or is he new to your neighborhood?  Have you changed,and has he changed you?
Many Christians are tourists each year to Israel to see where he walked.  Visiting the Bible references, seeing his tomb.  But how many are more concerned about where he walked more than your walk with him?  Do you walk with Jesus, or is he a photo op on a vacation?  When Jesus left earth, he was resurrected, returning home to heaven, his old neighborhood.  How did it change?  Maybe by all those who believe in him being there now.  A new neighborhood springing up in heaven, where those who are forgiven live and rejoice.  You see, in Jesus we can all go home again, we can go back to a pre-sin time where all was perfect in the world, and Adam and Eve walked with God.  A place where everyone knows your name, and all worship the same God.  Where we all know Jesus, no matter what generation you are from, or when you got there.  The people in heaven will change, but we will already be changed in Jesus.  He promises us “on earth as it is in heaven,” do we desire heaven on earth like he promises?  Or is it back to the same old neighborhood, where nobody knows your name.
No one would know me back where I grew up, I have changed.  Not the same old kid, a different kid, a child of God.  But my memories still intact of how it was and who I was.  Sadly my Mother is house bound, and the new neighbors will never know her.  Never see the meticulous yard my Dad had, or the stream of my friends coming and going.  It is the house with an old woman who they never see, and wonder about.  Until some day she too will be gone, and no one will remember.  2212 will be remembered much different than I do, I only hope the new inhabitants have such a great time there.  The past is a fine place to visit, but in Christ I have a great future, a great right now.  Take a trip back in Jesus today, to that first time you met him, rekindle old memories.  Let him remind you of how far he has taken you, and how much farther we have to go.  Houses aren’t homes until someone moves in, we aren’t Christians until Jesus moves into our lives.  Home is where the heart is, I am glad I gave my heart to Jesus.  My address will change, but he never will.  Somehow the old neighborhood will never look the same....
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com