During 
			the course of our conversation I asked him about his grandpa, the 
			one who had been a state senator for 20 years in Lane County, 
			Oregon. His name had been Halver, he'd lived from the 1850s-1940s, 
			and besides being a state senator he'd been a sheep farmer, had 
			married a woman named Eliza Bond (everyone called her Kate), and had 
			had eight children, my great grandfather being the oldest. 
			 
			After my conversation with Grandpa, I became obsessed with looking 
			up our family tree. I got online and traced Eliza's family back to 
			the 1700s. I'm sure there are some good stories from the lives of 
			many of my ancestors. 
			 
			
			
			 
			
			
			 
			 
			For example, Eliza's grandfather, Joseph Bond, died on December 
			31st, 1838, New Year's eve. Did he feel disappointment or relief as 
			he lay on the brink of a New Year, knowing--perhaps--that he 
			wouldn't see another one? Had he ended his own life, or did he have 
			memories of the Christmas celebrations that may have taken place 
			just days before? These are all questions that I may never know the 
			answers to.  
			 
			A few generations up another branch takes us to William Bruce, the 
			father of "Major" William Bruce (who would be born two months and 
			two days after the US declared independence from Britain). All I 
			know so far of William Sr. is that he was born February 14th, 
			Valentine's Day, in either 1744 or 5. I wonder if he lived his life 
			with a lot of love, or if he was part of the revolution. I have no 
			record of his death. In the midst of these lives and dates and 
			personal histories is a larger, younger, country's history.  
 
			
			
			 
			
			
			 
			At first it was exciting tracing back through all these generations, 
			and then I felt like a mountain of people and years had piled up, 
			names and dates that I had never met were getting lost in a very 
			intricate and convoluted web of relations. It was pretty 
			anticlimactic. I realized how "nonspecial" we are, and as generation 
			after generation piled up, I began to get the image that we were one 
			massive, sprawled out, heaving brood. On my mom's and stepmom's side 
			the family tree is a mixture of broken branches and grafts, and on 
			my dad's side it's mostly an uninterrupted branch, as straight, and 
			sometimes as rigid, as an old oak. 
			 
			What I came to realize though was that pedigree doesn't matter. It 
			doesn't matter whether the family line was broken or unbroken, and 
			with most of us it’s usually a mixture of both. The heroes and 
			villains, clerics and cattle thieves, political servants, 
			prostitutes and outlaws, slave liberators and slave holders and 
			indentured servants make up our checkered past. They spring from the 
			same branch. Yet we're all family, we have to live together, and we 
			have to get along.
			
            
            [to top of second column] 
               | 
            
             
            
			  
            I also realized that my 
			place in the world doesn't depend on where I come from. Some of it 
			is shaped by my own actions and what I do with my own life and 
			years, but even more important than that, our value comes from being 
			part of a different family, being part of a bigger history and 
			bigger story: God's. Romans talks about being grafted into his 
			family where, regardless of our past, we can become princes and 
			princesses with an inheritance and belonging. None of the other 
			matters; most of that comes by chance and circumstance anyway.  What 
			matters then is whether or not we are willing to become part of a 
			new family or still see ourselves as the outcast, disinherited 
			wanderers we’ve been. 
			 
			Whether we're born into the home of beggars or kings, we have no say 
			in the matter. It wasn't dependent on anything we could do. The same 
			is true with being part of God's family. The "rights" we now have 
			don't come from anything we've done, but on our adoption, our 
			grafting in, as sons and daughters. 
            
			  
             
			 
			Sometimes when we're born into wealth we think somehow we're better 
			or morally superior to those who live in addiction or poverty, when 
			actually, at least in the beginning, it's all about the luck of the 
			draw and what those who have come before us have done or not done 
			with their own choices and circumstances. For some, they're given 
			rocks and weeds, and yet manage to turn it into something of value, 
			and the space they carve out feeds others and their future family 
			for generations. Others take a well tilled, well managed, well cared 
			for plot and through neglect and mismanagement it quickly 
			deteriorates into wasteland. 
			 
			We have no way of seeing at one point in time where someone is at, 
			whether they are squandering what they have been given or pushing 
			out into uncharted territory. To the person coming out of inner city 
			ghettos and crack houses, staying sober and clean and getting a high 
			school education is a land unimagined or unheard of, while to a 
			Harvard educated son or daughter whose pedigree comes from kings and 
			politicians, this would seem cheap change. Yet to the wealthy and 
			educated, their challenge might be to give it all away, to make a 
			new beginning, not on the shoulders and backs of what they've been 
			given, but through the work and character (and grace) of their own 
			lives. 
			 
			My grandpa has lived a good long life, and is still living it, which 
			is something I'd like to be able to say as well someday. The dash in 
			between two dates is what we've been given, but we've also been 
			given so much more. 
              
              [Cliff Wheeler - LCCS Faculty] 
              
              
				  
              
              
				   |