Hunter Baker, J.D., Ph.D.

Posts Tagged ‘high school’

Encouragement

In Uncategorized on 09/23/2008 at 3:50 am

I didn’t appreciate at the time what an elite group of kids I went to class with in high school.  The coming of Facebook has changed that.  Now, I can see what those kids from the AP classes, where I was an underwhelming underperformer, have done with their lives.  What I’m finding is that many are very successful in life.

A newscaster in Detroit, a surgeon, a talented artist, a commercial musician . . . There are many winners.  What has depressed me is the extent to which these old peers of mine aren’t very much like me.  We could have great conversations, but they would be unlikely to agree with me about religion, politics, and values.  REM was the cutting edge at the time.  One of their songs was “Life and How to Live It.”  That group doesn’t have a lot in common with me on that topic, except perhaps in the sense that we’ve blazed some interesting trails.

But there was one guy in the class I considered to be the best of us.  Even as a teenager, he was brilliant, wise, thoughtful, and caring.  I’ve wondered through the years where he has been and what he’s done.  He has a very common name so googling doesn’t help much.

Today, I got a friend request on Facebook.  It was from him.

He’s in seminary.

It was a good day.

Facebook Conversation with an Old High School Classmate

In Uncategorized on 09/19/2008 at 4:24 am
From John, with whom I’ve not spoken in at least twenty years:
Thanks for reaching out! Looks like things are going super great for you and your family out there in Houston! I’m glad you like the music too! :-)

I read your blog about the reunion and your faith — good read! Yes… reunions… a middle age (pre-middle age?) rite of passage or milestone. One that I don’t mind missing. Though I’m glad it happened. Makes me realize the paradox of how people don’t change and yet how people do change. How’s that for vague, cloudy relativism!?!

Not to start a theological discussion, but you mentioned us probably operating under different philosophies. I suppose on some level we do. Your blog made me think of an inconsequential “e-conversation” I participated in on Facebook several weeks ago. Read it if you’re ever TRULY bored:

http://hitrecordandplay.blogspot.com/2008/09/facebook-conversation-about.html

Hope you’re happy and healthy and in the wheelhouse my friend,

John

September 12 at 4:55pm
I’ll check it out and don’t worry, I pretty much enjoy talking about religion, politics, any of it. You can’t get do much graduate work in those areas if you’re thin-skinned.

I had no idea in high school that you were a musician. It sounds like you’ve actually managed to make a career of it, which I know is a serious accomplishment. I’m a writer and have published many magazine pieces and have a book contract, but I’m still very far from being able to make a living at it.

September 12 at 5:00pm
John, I checked out the conversation. You seem pretty open, which is extremely refreshing. I do tend to embrace the Christian anthropology, the idea that there is something missing, that we are somehow fatally flawed. I feel it in the moments when I have thoughts I’d never admit to another human being except MAYBE my wife. I feel the selfishness, the pettiness inside me. I know I have to struggle to even think of being noble and loving.

But the “you have a God-shaped hole” stuff was never what convinced me. I’m one of these guys who essentially became convinced of the resurrection of Christ. If you think that really happened, then the rest is how you react to that, not what you think of Christian theology. That’s where I am.

September 12 at 5:02pm
Sorry to go on, but I keep thinking of other things. I don’t hold to the faith regardless. I do think Paul was right when he said if this isn’t true, then we are to be pitied. If I stopped believing it, I’d be right out of the game. Goodbye church, hello NY Times.
September 14 at 1:07pm
Thanks for the thoughtful response, Hunter.
September 14 at 4:27pm
Be well, sir. Write any time.

Pensacola, the 1980’s, and Fundamentalism

In Uncategorized on 09/10/2008 at 11:01 pm

My 20th high school reunion was held in Pensacola this summer.  The class of ‘88 from Booker T. Washington high school met to share memories and update each other about their lives.  I wasn’t there.  I agreed to a mini-reunion a few months earlier with some of my best friends.  We went to Chicago, ate expensive steaks, walked the streets, took the train, and watched some sports.  It was a good time.  But if I could go back, I’d go to my reunion instead.

There have been a flood of pictures, facebook connections, and renewed contacts thanks to the group from our class that did make the choice to re-connect.  I realize now that my memories of that group have faded.  I wish I could have heard some of them speak, looked at the receding hairlines, observed the wrinkles, found out who achieved their promise, and who is still looking.  Maybe part of why I wish I had gone is because I am no longer a wanderer.  After obtaining four degrees, including a Ph.D. and a J.D., I have finally settled down at a university and have a book contract.  I would have been able to say something about myself rather than being a bewildered thirtysomething, which I was.

I’m burying the lead (or lede as the journalists say).  One thing that has struck me in looking at facebook pages from my high school peers is that many of them seem to remember Pensacola as a hotbed of fundamentalist Christianity.  More than one seem to define their lives in some degree as a reaction against that.

I’m fascinated.  I wonder whether I was just too caught up in other things to notice at that age.  My parents were from different denominational backgrounds and I just wasn’t interested in Christianity.  Today, Christianity is my passion and massively important to me as a scholar.  But back then, it was noise.  I didn’t hear it.  Not really.  I was more concerned with getting a girlfriend or college football or David Letterman.  I wasn’t leading the examined life in any way.  Just trying to have some fun, go to college somewhere, and not mar my PERMANENT RECORD.  Yes, I was a big believer in that.  Not worried about God so much as a paper file that would follow me throughout my life.

If I had any kind of feeling about Pensacola, it was that it was a Navy town.  I remember the handsome guys with short hair driving up to pick up their girlfriends (our girls!!!) in convertibles.  I remember the Blue Angels and the push for young guys like me to consider Naval employment.  I remember the radio stations.  TK 101.5 and WABB.  The way the cool kids were all listening to U2 just ahead of the curve,  REM a little further ahead of it, and the Smiths and the Cure way ahead of it.

But if I push a little harder, I can recall the street preacher standing at the corner across from Albertson’s where I had a summer job as a bag boy.  I can remember him warning of hell and damnation.  Can remember his emphasis on the need for JEEEEEEEEEE-SSUSSS!  At the time, it just annoyed me.  Just kind of embarrassed me.  I understand why some Christians refer to the scandal of the gospel.  It seemed kind of scandalous.  This guy was telling us that we aren’t good enough and that something is wrong with us.

The strange thing is that I’ve come to agree with him.  The style and tone is different, but I do think we all have the something wrong.  That unresolved something.  And I do believe that a man was born who changed everything with his life, death, and resurrection.  I believe there is evidence for it.  Is it a slam dunk?  Is it an unavoidable belief?  No.  But the great philosopher Alvin Plantinga is right when he says that it is warranted.