9/11 Reflections

WTC

This is a revised repost of my 2004 post about my reflections on 9/11. Read and reflect.

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Like It Was Yesterday

With today being 9.11, I thought it would be an appropriate time to chronicle my experience on that dreadful day. I’ve talked about it before, but I’ve never written it down with words. And, honestly, I don’t want to forget.

The earliest memory I have of that day is fighting with my now-wife-but-at-that-time girlfriend (Theresa). We both don’t remember what we fought about, but we both remember her going to work in Brooklyn in a sour mood. I was set to leave the house in the morning to go meet Carol Chun to go engagement ring shopping. As I was leaving the house (I already had my shoes on), I woke my computer from sleep to see if I had any AIM messages waiting for me. Usually at that time, I don’t. And usually, I don’t check. However, that day, I did have a message. It was from Jonathan McCurley.

“Is it true? What’s happening?”

Of course, I had no idea what he was talking about. After I asked him, he told me that a plane had flown into the World Trade Center. I turned the TV on and saw the burning buildings. It was after 9:00am.

I had a few friends that worked on “Wall Street.” I tried to get in touch with them, but couldn’t because “all circuits are busy”. I couldn’t get in touch with Theresa either. With her commute going through Manhattan to Brooklyn, I was concerned about her. Through my AIM, I was able to talk to Jeannie An, whose calls to Theresa were going through. We communicated through Jeannie for most of the day. Eventually, I called Gene at Columbia. This was probably around 2pm. He told me that all Bethany Wall Streeters were accounted for except for Andy. (9/11 is also Gene’s Birthday)

At this point, I did not consider death an option for Andy. Partly because of naïve faith and partly because I knew that the damage was central to the WTC. Then, the call from Michele came.

It was during that conversation that she told me that Andy didn’t work around the WTC, he worked in the WTC. I knew he had recently taken a new job, but I hadn’t realized yet that his office was in the North Tower.* Naivete and ignorance were quickly replaced with panic and dread.

*Andy didn’t need to get into work until 9am. The first plane that hit the North Tower hit at 8:46am. I always thought how ‘fortunate’ it was that the plane didn’t hit after 9am, because the amount of people in the building would have been significantly more. But, why, you wonder, was Andy in the building at 8:46? Because the week prior, he decided to start going into work early in order to work out.

At the time, I wouldn’t say Andy was my best friend, but he was my closest. I spoke with Andy over IM or on the phone almost every day. He was there on my blind date with Theresa. He gave me computer advice, worship advice, relationship advice. And now he was missing.

Later that evening, around 7:00pm, I had an A-team (Administrative Team) meeting at my apartment to plan for the Intown Open House that Saturday. We spent the next 3-4 hours planning our Open House for the college students. I was fully engaged in our conversations and honestly, quite impressed at my poise and composure when one of my best friends was still missing.

However, at around 10pm, we were discussing trivia questions for the Open House. I was sitting at the computer and looking at the TV with the scenes of the plane running into the tower over and over. [You remember how many times that happened that day? Some said that it was the most photographed event in history.] From where I was sitting, in order to focus on the events on the TV, I had to gaze past the table where we were discussing our Open House. Poetically, I realized that summed up what I was feeling in my heart. I could no longer focus on the things down here. I had to focus on what was going on up there. I could not stay in Atlanta. I had to be up to NJ.

The meeting ended and I was finally able to reach Theresa by phone. I didn’t trust my decision making myself anymore, because I knew I wasn’t thinking straight. She said that if I need to come up, then I need to come.

The next morning, Wednesday, I packed up my car to head up to NJ. It was about 11am when I turned the key to my ignition. My battery was dead. I knew I had about at least a 12 hour drive to NJ (Google Maps has it at 15hours). I was starting to feel anxiety if my drive got pushed back too late. I called my friend, Fuhlim drive me to the shop, where I got a new battery. As I was about to leave, Fuhlim offered to drive me up to NJ in his car. Perhaps he didn’t trust the way I looked or didn’t trust me driving in my car. Either way, we left around 2pm and didn’t arrive until probably after 5am Thursday morning (we got rerouted through West Virginia around the DC area).

I spent the next two days traveling to NY and NJ hospitals exploring any feasible option that Andy made it out of there alive, there simply weren’t many unidentified bodies. Sadly, there weren’t many remains that were found.

That Saturday, I ended up leading a practice of a praise team that Andy was leading. It wasn’t until that morning that I turned the corner and came to grips that I wasn’t going to see Andy alive ever again. I’ve always said that the hardest thing about his death was that it wasn’t a sudden realization, but it was a slowly diminishing hope. Basically, I had to make my own personal decision that Andy was dead. Some decided before me and some decided after me. But when I decided, I decided alone.

The next day, Sunday, I was asked to lead praise in Andy’s stead for Bethany EWM. It was the hardest worship service I’ve ever experienced in my life. Earlier that morning, in front of 250 youth group students (for whom Andy was a teacher), I tried to explain the unexplainable, to comfort the uncomfortable and encourage the faith of the unencourageable.

This is the gist of what I said:

During this past week, I prayed and prayed that the numerous rescue workers spending countless hours sifting through the rubble would find Andy. I prayed that Andy would be saved and rescued and found alive. And that’s when I realized that Andy was found. He was found underneath a heap of rubble that crushed him to the point of death. But, this rubble was far more widespread than the WTC. You see, Andy was crushed underneath the weight of the heap of his sin. But, God, the tireless rescue worker did not sleep, nor tire in his pursuit of Andy. And God saved him and rescued him and made him alive. We are under a heap of sin as well. Do you believe that God can rescue you from the weight of your sin?

In times like this we are tempted to find the tallest building still standing and climb to the top and shake our fist at God and curse God. After all, I can’t comprehend how a good God would allow this to happen. How can a just God allow such injustice? In fact, these questions cause many to doubt God’s goodness and justice. What we are essentially saying is that because it doesn’t make sense to me, I can’t believe it. In other words, God must make sense to me. However, the biggest injustice in the history of the world is Christ dying a sinner’s death–my death–when he was himself sinless. If we can readily accept the grace that is so incomprehensible to us, we cannot in the same breath reject the seeming injustice that we don’t understand.

These are lessons that still teach me today and every year on this day, I am reminded of them.

Do you know what the real tragedy is?

Not Andy. Not Andy at all.

When I was driving to hospitals near Bayonne, I remember seeing the great billow of smoke rising from Downtown NY. Crossing over that bridge, I said that I hope that the rescue workers save all the non-Christians first. Pull them out first even if the Christians have to die, even if Andy has to die. Why? Because the Christians have a hope of glory. The real tragedy is all the people that rejected Christ that died in that building that day that never got another chance.

What DOES a Pastor Do During the Week?

CalendarIf someone were to take a survey of all the people in your field and how much time you spend on each of the activities in your life… what would the results look like?

Now, what if they expanded that survey to include not only your professional life, but your family and home life. And your leisure and your spiritual life.

Well that’s exactly what LifeWay Research has tried to do with my profession: pastor.

I’m always a bit tickled that so many people seem interested curious about “What does a pastor do during the week?” Well, here you may have your answer.

I can’t say that I’m too surprised by the responses that were given. I would say that my answers would fall pretty much in line with most of the answers given, although I probably spend more than 20 hours with my family (which includes all day Saturday, usually) and more than 12 hours in sermon preparation (which by the way, is what most of us do during the week! =D).

For those interested curious:

Full article here.

And here are two graphical breakdowns of some of the results. Anything surprise you? What’s your reaction?

mediantimeworktime

[h/t: Ben Dubow, www.faithautopsy.com]

Stick Figure Jesus

An e2d916_crucifix121520098-year-old boy was suspended from school and sent for a psychological evaluation after his 2nd-grade teacher took a look at one of his drawings. What was the drawing of? A violent death of a classmate? Inappropriate situations for minors? Drugs? Alcohol? No, no, no and nope.

The assignment was to draw a picture of what they did over Thanksgiving break. And the boy drew a picture of a Christmas display at a Catholic church. And the picture was a stick figure of Jesus on a cross… or in other (catholic) circles: a crucifix.

After the two day suspension and psych evaluation the psychiatrist determined that he was fit to return to school. Shocker.

“(The boy) does not appear to be a threat to himself or others at this time. Therefore, I recommend that he return to school as soon as possible,”

[full article]

Have we really become a society where a religious drawing raises a red flag and sends an 8-year-old to a 2-day psych eval? Goodness.

At least they got one thing right. And that is, that what was depicted was a violent act. We shouldn’t allow the commonness of the cross dilute the savage nature of a crucifixion. And Jesus predicted it, agonized over it and still went through with it.

Mark 8:31 – “He then began to teach them that the Son of Man must suffer many things and be rejected by the elders, chief priests and teachers of the law, and that he must be killed and after three days rise again.”

Luke 22:42-44 – “Father, if you are willing, take this cup from me; yet not my will, but yours be done.” An angel from heaven appeared to him and strengthened him. And being in anguish, he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat was like drops of blood falling to the ground.

Good thing God didn’t have a 2nd-grade teacher…

Barack Obama Wins Nobel Peace Prize

As you may have heard already, President Barack Obama has won the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize. That may have been a surprise to you and I think it was a surprise to him.

In large part, it seems, that the Prize was awarded to Obama because of what he represents to the citizens of Earth. Listen to what the Committee stated:

Only very rarely has a person to the same extent as Obama captured the world’s attention and given its people hope for a better future

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The critics of the choice (myself included) believe that the track record of Obama, a mere 8 months into his presidency, has not been established enough to award him with such an honor.

It seems clear to me that this award was given to him not because of achievements but because of hope. It seems Obama agrees with me. He stated in his acceptance speech:

I do not view it as a recognition of my own accomplishments. But rather as an affirmation of American leadership. … I will accept this award as a call to action.

Much of the world was captivated by his election and his promises of diplomacy. In fact, the nominations for the award had to be postmarked by February 1st — a mere 12 days into his presidency.  In many ways, the hope of many people lie in this one man. So, whether you agree with the choice or not, I think it is a testament to Obama’s unique place in timeline of history.

It also made me think of the hope that the Jews must have had in Jesus when he arrived on the scene. Here was this guy who was going to make all things right. Here was their promised Messiah. I mean, just look what they did in John 6:14-15:

After the people saw the miraculous sign that Jesus did, they began to say, “Surely this is the Prophet who is to come into the world.”  Jesus, knowing that they intended to come and make him king by force, withdrew again to a mountain by himself.

The hope that people felt for Jesus to bring salvation (at least their version of it…) probably outweighed the hope that people feel in Obama. Maybe Jesus wouldn’t have won any Nobel Peace Prizes in his day.

But either way, the hope they place in someone can misplaced. Sometimes it’s in the wrong person and sometimes it’s the wrong hope. In other words, sometimes we desire the wrong things… and sometimes we desire the right things in the wrong people. But when we turn to Jesus for our hope, we hope in the right person. And when we receive from him what he has for us, we hope for the right things.

I’ll conclude with a quote from I Peter 1:3:

Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In his great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.

The Authentic Wall of China

Back The Authentic Wall of China in 1996, I went to a Missions trip to Shanghai, China. During our debrief period, we took an 18 hour train ride (that took 24 hours) to Beijing.

We did a bunch of sightseeing including Tiananmen Square (somber), Temple of Heaven (ornate), Summer Palace (huge), and Maidonglao (McDonald’s).

But the place that I was looking forward to the most was the Great Wall of China. We had an opportunity to choose which Great Wall we wanted to visit: the restored Great Wall or the original Great Wall. Luckily, we were persuaded (by me) to visit the Original.

There was something profound and ponderous about sitting on a wall that had been built millenia before me. It took longer to drive to. We had to climb through shrubs to get to it. The steps were ridiculously steep. It wasn’t as pretty (and certainly more dangerous) as the rebuilt wall. But it was the authenticity of the Wall that made it profound. It was the knowledge that these stones were carried and laid here by people that had long since passed on that led to it’s impact. Rather than a reconstructed version that was better suited to sell souvenirs and keepsakes. There was something undeniably real about this wall.

I was reminded about the Great Wall of China this week because of a conversation that I had with someone. I was challenging this person to be authentic in their community at church. For too long, they had chosen the safe route and kept people at a distance. Is it any wonder that they had not felt like a part of the church community? They had not connected with anyone in any authentic way. You cannot be part of a community unless you let the community be a part of you. To choose to be real, no matter how hard or risky that may be.

It might take longer to get there… you might have to climb through some pretty thorn thicket to get there… it won’t be as pretty… and it’s certainly more dangerous. But it the authenticity that makes it profound.

So, if you are presented with the choice of being real and authentic in your community or hiding under the safety of public perception and platitudes, then choose Authenticity.

And, if you have a chance to see the Great Wall of China… choose Authenticity.

I Can Only Imagine…

was looking for a song to sing for a coffeehouse. A ‘cool’ song. One that people didn’t really know yet. And so, I knew who to turn to. I chatted with my friend who knew a lot of cool songs before they were ‘mainstream.’ (He had the 1st Jars of Clay album before anyone knew who they were.) He told me about this little known song by a little known band called ‘I Can Only Imagine’ by Mercy Me.

The story of the meaning of this song for me was published in Mercy Me’s book ‘I Can Only Imagine: Stories of Eternal Hope.’ I emailed (at my wife’s behest) Mercy Me about the significance of this song to me. I didn’t hear back from them until April 2004 saying that they would like to use my quote in the book. For the usage of that quote, I received an autographed copy of the book, which I still have in my office today. You’re welcome to stop on in and look through it.

Here is what I wrote:

I was first introduced to “I Can Only Imagine” in February 2001. I was looking for a song to sing for a church coffeehouse when my friend told me about it. He bragged on and on about how awesome the lyrics were. He because famous for his passion for this song and it became “his” song. He would wonder and wonder about what it would be like to go to Heaven and see Christ.

It is that song that has helped me mourn his death.

On the morning of September 11, 200, on the 93rd floor of the North Tower of the World Trade Center, Andy J. Kim stopped wondering. Andy’s death, though tragic and untimely (he was only 27), reminds me of the promise that we have in Christ that we will one day be “surrounded by His glory.”

Richard J Lee

Every 9/11, I think of Andy. Every 9/11, I miss Andy. I hope that is always the case.

I was going through my old videos on my computer and I found this video of Andy playing the guitar and singing. If you knew him, you might want to get some tissues.

Andy, I miss you man.

Andy Kim – I Can Only Imagine from Richard j Lee on Vimeo.

What was your experience? What are you memories of Andy? Post it in the comments.

Heroism in Perspective

You might have heard about the HS football star that disarmed a gun-wielding girl on a school bus just a few days ago.

People will very easily link this to the story of Jesus, seeing how someone put themselves in harm’s way in order to ‘save’ us. However, I would like to remind us all, that this story doesn’t come close to what Jesus did.

What Jesus did would be tantamount to climbing on the bus. And then in saving the 22 people on board, he would be shot. And die.

The football player is heroic, no doubt. But let’s not forget the magnitude of Jesus’ heroism and sacrifice for you.

Video after the jump.

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Anatomy of an Apology

I’m sure you’ve heard by now about Josh Hamilton. He was the guy who bashed 28 Home Runs in the opening round of the 2008 Home Run Derby. There is a blog post about that here

I’m pretty sure you’ve heard his story about how he was the #1 overall pick in the 1999 MLB Draft only to have his career derailed by drugs and alcohol. He then was converted to Christianity and had his life [and baseball career] reborn.

Recently, I’m not so sure, if you’ve heard about his relapse in January 2009. There have been surfaced reports and photos courtesy of DeadSpin.com [not linked on purpose... tread carefully]. 

I know you’re looking at this story and seeing another professional athlete who got involved in drugs/alcohol/steroids/sex and fell from grace. However, upon closer investigation, I think we can see some stark differences between Josh Hamilton and some of the other stories we hear about athletes.

Continue reading

Bucket Check

Yesterday,bucket through the gracious donation of the registration fee for all who attended by Mosaic Christian Fellowship, I was able to attend Willow Creek’s Leadership Summit. It was a refreshing way for me to sit at the feet of some of the giants in the American Evangelical Church movement.

ByPeter Ahn virtue of being there, I was also able to see a friend and colleague, Peter Ahn, of Metro Community Church, receive the award for Courageous Leadership for 2009, along with 2 other churches, for their fight against Global Poverty, through their Zimele program. It was awesome to see Peter represent!

But the one thing I heard from Bill Hybels particularly struck a chord with me was about a bucket. He used Romans 8:6 to make his point:

For to set the mind on the flesh is death, but to set the mind on the Spirit is life and peace.

A filled bucket is one that overflows with ‘life and peace’. If we are taking care of our minds and our hearts and our spiritual lives by connecting to God and his people, then we will have a filled bucket. If, however, our bucket starts to run low, then we start speaking ‘death’ instead of ‘life and peace’. We start acting ‘death’ instead of ‘life and peace’. We start thinking ‘death’ instead of ‘life and peace’.

So, figure out this day how to live a life filled with God’s presence and fill your bucket with him and not with whatever other distractions you may be surrounded by.

Getting filled with anything other than God’s presence is like filling ourselves up with bread before our steak comes. Don’t do it!

I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you with power through his Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the saints, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge — that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God. ~ Ephesians 3:16-19

Bill Clinton is Jesus! (Sort of…)

In Clinton and Kim Jong Ilcase you hadn’t heard, Laura Ling and Euna Lee have been freed from their detainment in North Korea and pardoned from their sentence of 12 years in a prison work camp for entering the country illegally to conduct a smear campaign.

As soon as the story broke, I tweeted, jokingly, that “Bill takes the lead as the most culturally-relevant Clinton!” While that may be true. I think, at least in one sense, he has got me thinking of an even greater person.

AsLaura Ling greets family I perused some of the images on the internet of Clinton’s trip to North Korea (DPRK – Democratic People’s Republic of Korea — How is this country called Democratic, the People’s or a Republic???), I was struck at some of the similarities of my own experience.

I was once a prisoner, convicted of crimes that my freedom could not pay. And so I was sentenced not just to 12 years of hard labor, but to a life sentence. In fact, we all are given the same sentence.

“For the wages of sin is death” ~ Romans 6:23

Mr. X-President left his place of prestige (and celebrity), traveled to a foreign land, spoke up on behalf of prisoners and mediated their release from their sentence. In the same way, Jesus was one who was willing to leave his rightful place, traveled to earth, spoke up on my behalf and mediated my freedom from my punishment.

“Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death — even death on a cross!” ~ Philippians 2:6-8

However, there are some very distinct differences between Clinton and Christ. [ed note: Shocking, I know!] First of all, it seems that North Korea actually made the plea for some sort of envoy like President Clinton to come and ask for amnesty. But, we didn’t ask God for salvation; God granted it graciously. In fact, I wasn’t even aware of my own need for salvation. Yet, God granted it graciously.

Second, at the end of his humanitarian trip, Bill returned safely on the same plane as the freed prisoners. Jesus did not walk away scot free. Instead, he had the punished that I deserved exacted upon himself in my stead. If Clinton really wanted to model Christ, then he would have worked those 12 years (x2 = 24yrs) in the labor camp in order to free Ling and Lee.

But that would be crazy!

Well, that was the length to which Christ was willing to go, the price which Christ was willing to pay in order to purchase our freedom from our sins. It wasn’t 12 years in a labor camp. It was dying a criminal’s death on a cross, which should have been reserved for each one of us. Instead, we are free because of Christ’s mediating our freedom through his death.

“For there is one God and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus” ~ I Timothy 2:5

To see footage of Laura Ling’s offering of gratitude to her supporters, check out the video. **Warning: Emotions may ensue.** [Oh, and the tall Korean guy standing next to Lisa Ling in the background, Paul Song, used to go to Bethany Church when we were growing up.]
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