Winter is coming

“James, I have got bad news and not so bad news. Which one do you want first?”

Dr Tope and I go way back. We ran around the yards shirtless and in shorts during the hot summers of our youth. Went to different universities but always kept in touch since our parents lived across the street from each other and never left the old neighborhood. So on holidays, we still hung around together trying not to get into any trouble that may vaguely turn into a felony. He became a doctor and I became an engineer. 

So his direct approach is to be expected. He wasn’t my primary care physician (PCP) or GP as it’s known in the UK. But after a lot of tests requested by my PCP came back with nothing and I still felt something was wrong, I reached out to him. 

Me (James): “Bad news first”.

Tope: “Your cancer is terminal. You are going to die, but so is everyone – it’s just a matter of time.”

I can assure you Dr Tope has top notch bedside manner with his patients, but since he’s basically my brother (from another mother), he knows I prefer the direct approach. 

Me: “And the not so bad news?”

Tope: “With the right combination of therapies, we could get you another couple of years – maybe even 4 at the extreme”

The room was dead silent for a minute. 

For some reason I found myself not looking at him, it was almost as if I was in the room by myself. I hyper focused on the painting on the wall behind him. I had seen that painting possibly a hundred times. It was abstract. Yet every time I see it, I try to find some hidden message from the artist. No such luck. No eureka moment. I stared at it so intently I basically forgot where I was. 

“Are you ok?” He asked 

That brought me back to the present. 

I am 52. Never married. No kids. No girlfriend that might turn into something more. I love my job – correction, I loved my job. But recently the higher ups decided the role is evolving. I am not a sales guy, but now I have to sell add-on services as part of my technical role. So I play the lottery doggedly to the point I probably need an intervention now. I am not an entrepreneur: as an introvert that was never going to be my path. But I need a way off the hamster wheel that’s the American dream. The odds are against me I know. Some of the games have odds in the billion, but yet I play them and dream. Since it’s truly a game of chance and luck, I am just as likely or unlikely as the next person to win. But if you don’t play, your odds are zero. …

Tope: “Say something”. 

Me: “I Don’t know where to start. It seems like I have wasted my life chasing the wrong things. I haven’t spent my high school and university days having multiple girlfriends. I haven’t even bought a new car once, the closest was a 2-year old car with 20k miles on it. I don’t even have enough money to will to anyone or retire.”

He didn’t say anything. But he has a pensive and introspective look on his face.

I continued. 

“About the only relationship I have ever had lasted less than 6 months before she ran, and rightly so, because I was proud – proud and old.”

He interjected “interesting. Guess I don’t know the lady. What’s her name?”

Me: “Let’s call her H – that’s really the first letter of her name”

Tope: “So H, she ran. Why?”

Me: “Complicated. But Yes she did. She ran so fast the door didn’t hit her backside on the way out” I tried to make light of the situation. “And talking about running, I ran once myself. Let me tell you the story.”

“some 7 or so years after I had left the university, a close family friend – we actually grew up together since our mums are besties – reached out to me from the UK where she had relocated to and said a lady I must have attended some classes with during my university days asked for my number when somehow I came up during some conversation. Now she was barely more than an acquaintance to this other lady. I said yes. Over the next few months I talked on the phone pretty regularly with the lady. The conversation wasn’t forced and was pleasant.  So my vacation came up and I planned to spend it in the UK so I agreed to visit her. Note that I have never seen this lady and had no idea what she looked like outside the favorable description given to me by my friend. Turns out she lived very far from London. My journey started on the tube (London underground), switched trains a couple of times then got on a surface train to get to her town. 

Met up with her and we had lunch, saw a movie, and then a quick stop at the house she shared with two or three other ladies. Each had their own room but the living area was shared. Well some undergarments were hanging on the heater. She pointedly told me they belonged to one of her housemates and I could tell it was a sore point. Late in the evening, she dropped me off at the train station for my return journey to London. Now I have strong opinions on some issues which has softened a little with time. The lady was maybe one and a half my size – I may be exaggerating a little. Not sure how exercise came up, but she did mention she had slacked off and needed to get back into the gym. Now my opinion was that if a single lady is unable to manage her weight – after all no one gets fat from drinking water – it’s a one way slippery slope – what’s going to happen after one or two kids. So by the time I got to London I saw no future in it. As the saying goes, “I just couldn’t deal”. (My friend later said she hadn’t seen her physically in maybe a year or more so she likely let herself go.). She was supposed to pay me a return visit at my brother’s place before I returned to Nigeria, but when she called to set it up, I said no. My excuse was the distance was too much for a relationship (Nigeria to UK), as well as that I was also talking to a lady in Nigeria – not true but there was indeed a lady I daydreamed – ok – fantasized about at my place of work. She desperately wanted the return visit and sounded so distraught. I felt so guilty after the call. If I had to do it again, I would have let her visit me, returned to Nigeria and gradually stopped talking to her on the phone. 

The reason I brought it up was that possibly 10 plus years after the event and with the only short-lived relationship I have ever had ended, my mum’s bestie found this pastor or prophet or whatever who seemed to have the “gift”. Anyway a call was arranged. He prayed for a short while and asked if I had ever slept with a lady and ghosted her – nope. Have I ever promised a lady marriage only to disappear – nope. He kept insisting that there was a lady I needed to get right with. I concluded he was just “fishing”. Some time after the call, the UK lady came to my mind for the first time in years. I know I didn’t make any promises but then the only way I could interpret the pastor’s position was maybe she placed a hex on me. Now my position on hexes has changed widely over the years. At some times I believed hexes are hoaxes; they are not real. At other times I believed if you wronged someone, and they place a hex on you, you deserved it, and it will have an effect. Then at other times I believed they were real whether or not you did something to deserve it. Even if I discount all the witchcraft and related stories I heard growing up, there’s the story of prophet Balaam In the Bible. He was hired to put a curse on the Israelites. He must have had a track record of delivering the “goods” so his reputation must have preceded him. 

Well I couldn’t even remember the lady’s name. I called my friend who introduced us and as hard as I tried, not only did she not remember the lady. She didn’t even remember the context. My plan was to get hold of the lady and apologize. Well, that was a burst.”

I drew a few breathes and was silent for a minute. 

“Now that the real possibility of death is staring me in the face, I find I am totally unprepared. Totally not ready. But at the same time I have always thought those who knew when they will die have an advantage – to set their house in order. I know you are not religious, but I have always thought about the Jewish king Hezekiah. He got 15 extra years by petitioning God. Fifteen years to do all he needed to do.”

“I have always wondered at the need to procreate.  It always seems to me that’s it’s our ego. The need to be remembered when we are dust. And here I am thinking of the fact that I have no kids.”

“On the other hand, I have just enough time to make sure I make that heaven you don’t believe in”. 

“So how much pain should I expect?”. I guess I have a morbid fascination with crime and to a lesser extent death as an expected end to all life. Quora, google, IG, and YouTube have made me knowledgeable enough to scare the bejeezus out of myself. In every situations the hypotheticals are running through my mind. 

Tope: “We can make it so that there’s as little pain as possible. But that also generally comes with the side effect of loss of clarity. But don’t let’s dwell on that yet, breakthroughs are being made daily and there are lots of trial treatments and research going on. Hey, you play the lottery. So you should know there’s always the chance a drug may be discovered tomorrow that cures your cancer or all cancers. Albeit the chances are vanishingly small.”

Me: “I have never smoked, not slept around, been almost a good churchgoing choirboy and yet here we are. On the other hand, that’s kept me from a host of possible unwanted outcomes – no babies out there that I don’t know of; never had an STD; not addicted to any drugs …”

I trailed off. I know I sounded like I am trying to convince myself that I haven’t wasted my life. 

The tick tock of the clock was almost deafening. Time matches on. I think of the cancer cells running wild in my body and having a Diddy-style freak-off. Even as I sat in that room I was dying faster than the average healthy person. 

Me: “On the positive side, I won’t leave behind a widow or fatherless children. That’s something I have always thought of in hypothetical terms. Whenever I read a story of someone that died young who had a partner and or kids, I always ask myself the question. Would they have got married or had kids if they knew they would die young?”

“The answer is not as simple as one would expect. Otherwise you won’t read of people hurrying to getting married when one of the couple has been diagnosed with a terminal illness. But I have always wondered if that’s not a selfish act. “

I know I am rambling but I couldn’t help myself. I suspect he is letting me go on as a way to let me process the “news”. He hasn’t once looked at his watch, and his receptionist hasn’t called his line or knocked on the door. I suspect he might have cleared his calendar for me knowing the enormity of the news. 

“I do have life insurance. I can collect up to 60% of it while alive to use for anything I like from throwing a party, running through my bucket list to of course treatment. I have no intention of doing any of that. Why waste the money when the ending is inevitable?  I might as well leave that to my siblings and mum.”

Tope: “You know my views on religion”

Me: “Yes. That it is a crutch to help us handle the fact that we are nothing, actually less than nothing in the grand scheme of things, so we created gods.

But the only answer I have always given you is what Paul said, “now we know in part but then we will know in full”. To which you have always said that is a get out of jail free card. So I guess as usual we agree to disagree and accept we are at an impasse on that topic. So once again we set it aside. But know that while I draw breath, I will continue to take you to task on the subject since I care about your soul – though how many times I will be able to do that is questionable given my current prognosis.”

Tope: “Didn’t the same Bible say the dead are aware of nothing? Yeah, I know you are going to repeat the “we know in part”. But that’s why some people claim there are contradictions in the “good” book, and that’s just one of them. 

Me: “Frankly there are questions I myself have, but that’s why faith comes into play …”

Tope: “A second crutch …”

Me: “My first inclination and I suspect same for many others is to go on the defensive, but I won’t do that for two reasons. One, as James Luther Adam said “A faith worth having is faith worth discussing and testing.”, so as a Christian I should welcome honest debates about Christianity, and second, maybe if I read the Bible as diligently, studiously, and regularly as I ought to, I would have an answer for you. So on this occasion, I concede this round on account of more pressing issues.”

Silence …

Tope: “Ok, let’s get back to discussing a plan for your treatment.”

I was less than enthusiastic, and the only thought that came to my mind at that moment was the fact that Jesus prayed to be spared his fate, even though he knew that was not in the books, because he said “Behold, I have come; in the scroll of the book it is written of me: I delight to do your will, O my God; your law is within my heart.”

So then, what are my chances … I must accept my fate, roll with the punches, and make the best of what is coming.

References/Bible verses:
1. 1 Corinthians 13:12: “For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face; now I know in part, but then I will know fully, just as I also have been fully known”
2. Numbers 22: Balak, king of Moab asks Balaam the prophet to put a curse on the Israelites.
3. Psalms 40:7 (and Hebrews 10:7): Then said I, Lo, I come (in the volume of the book it is written of me,) to do thy will, O God.
4. Ecclesiastes 9:5: “For the living know that they shall die, but the dead know nothing at all, neither have they any more a reward, for the memory of them is forgotten.”

5/25/2025

Bend

Bend

“Mr latecomer, as usual, you don’t disappoint” he said waving. I stood up straight from my crouching position, stretched my back and waved back politely. I wondered again why I had chosen to return to school for a master’s degree after so long (12 years after my bachelors) and even stranger, why I had chosen this elective in theology which had nothing to do with my course of study. The truth is that I was “searching”. After recent events in my life.
I had tried to sneak into the class, but I think by now, he had made up his mind to always look out for my less than dignified entrances to his class. I don’t know why I still bother.
A hundred pairs of eyes turned my way, and as it has come to be expected, I smile and waved at the class. To which there was a corresponding wave back.

“So as I was saying, sometimes we have to bend for peace.”

We do it everyday. If done right, no one comes away feeling exploited or disgruntled or chafing at the bits, itching for revenge. It’s all a matter of degrees and extent. If you take it too far, it becomes a compromise. Compromises are in no way negative. Depending again on the degree. You can come off looking like a wuss or a peacemaker. It all depends. Back in the early days of Christianity, our forerunners compromised. Rather than fight the push-back from the pagan Romans for example, they found it easier around 4 C.E., to incorporate some of their festivities into our own. December 25th was no where even close to when Jesus was born, which was probably during the summer or maybe closer to the middle of the year if you go by that most Roman of devices – the Julian calendar. Given to us in self worship by the Roman emperor Julius Caesar. December 25th was the concluding day of the Roman week long celebration of depravity. That was known as the Saturnalia. Unfortunately that didn’t quite work out as planned. We held on to the last day though and to all intent and purposes there’s no link to the Roman’s pagan celebration anymore. The only point here that the JW got right is the origin of the date. I have nothing against them. In fact if not for a couple of other believes or non-believes of theirs, I would probably be a card-carrying member. But that is a subject for another class. Where I disagree with them on that issue is that the celebration is now symbolic and should be taken as such. It’s better to remember a monumental event on a supposedly wrong day if it contributes positively to the spread of the gospel of Christ than not at all. After all, it is not the day that matters but the event. We shall leave that there so we don’t digress too much.”

“The evolutionists would have us believe we all originated from some primordial soup, then via the sea and unto land. And then some creatures such as certain turtles and mammalian sea dwellers for example, thought better of it and returned to the water.”

“Does anyone have a bible? “ all eyes swiveled round the room. There were no takers.

“I didn’t expect to find one. But no issues. technology never ceases to amaze right? Here in the palm of my hands, I have a smart phone with several versions of the bible in it. something that used to be the prerogatives of only the few way back in history, when only kings and clergy could have it without been burnt at the stake for heresy. When it took years to make a copy. Hmmn.”

“So I intend to support the creationist for once. Not all the way, mind you.”

“In Genesis, if you follow the sequence by which all things were made, the sea was populated first, then followed by the land, then finally people – you and I, and all those living and dead. Here, let me read a few verses.”

He read several verses from the first chapter of Genesis.

“So you see, even if we do not agree that things crawled out of the sea and became land animals, we can agree that sea creatures came before land creatures.

Of course another major area we diverge is in how long the earth and all that’s therein have been around. But again that’s additional bullsh*t for another class. Excuse my French.”

There was some low laughter in the hall.

“So we bend a little to accommodate our learned colleagues. If hopefully by doing so, we may bring them to the knowledge of Christ and the acceptance of creationism or vice versa”

Some laughter in the hall.

“I appreciate your lightheartedness but of course you know this is serious business.

To be realistic, that amount of bending doesn’t do anything for our colleagues. But as we are not wusses, we will bend but not break.”
“And if it comes down to the wire, we will go by that age old saying, “to your tents, O Israel!”

And in case that’s not clear, it means we won’t compromise on the core tenets of our believes”
“And there goes the bell! See you next class. If your busy partying schedule allows it, slot a quick look at Genesis chapter one in there, would you? Mr Latecomer, kindly stay behind for a minute or two. Thank you. And happy shopping on Black Friday but avoid the crush if you can! Don’t read anything extra into the name. Be grateful for the opportunity to give thanks in good health on thanksgiving.”
I walked down the aisle to the front of the room where he was putting away his notes and books into his bag. I didn’t know what to expect.

“Ah. Mr Latecomer. I still have hopes of you. You and I are on a journey as long as this class is in session. The journey may be only a a few months long, but we shall make it interesting. I have three questions for you sir”

I raised an eyebrow slightly.

“Do you think we can compel God?”

“No.” I said.

“Do you think God rules in the affairs of men?”

“Yes” I responded.

“Do you believe in destiny?”

“No.”

“Ah. Be careful how you answer. I think you may have contemplated the first two questions before, but that last one I think you answered a little too glibly. Think on it a little sir. And we shall return to it – say – after the next class.”

And with that he was gone before I could say another word.
I stood there alone in that classroom. Looking up at the seats that made up the amphitheater.

I had the strange feeling he knew more about me than he was letting on and that my “search” wasn’t going to end easily or anytime soon.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

How big is your faith?

How big is your faith?

If as Jesus said (Luke 17:6 paraphrased, Matthew 17:20), you only need to have faith as small as a mustard seed to command mountains to move (should apply to healing as well), then there is real trouble!
Most pastors/churches just want you to worship in their churches or attend some event they are holding and “hope” you will get “your” healing. That’s leaving it completely to chance. (And if a couple of people out of several thousands do get healed, going by the way it is celebrated, it would have required an all-week party in Jesus’ time to celebrate the several people that got healed during similar gatherings. Unfortunately, even the few Pastors who seem to actively cause people to receive their healing have so much controversy surrounding them, it’s probably wise to keep a reasonable distance. There were no controversies surrounding the healing Jesus and the apostles performed – they were “self-evident”.)

Whereas in fact, during the time of Jesus and the Apostles, it was an “active ministry” – Jesus (and the Apostles) went out to actively heal people or people who approached them got healed.

So does it mean just as the rest of us, our pastors’ faith are not even as big as a small mustard seed?