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Month: February 2026

The Subversive Nature of Love

There’s a lot of controversy going around right now about the two Super Bowl halftime acts last night. Bad Bunny performed at the actual Super Bowl and drew 135 million viewers, while the ministry/political organization Turning Point USA had an alternative halftime show that featured Kid Rock and drew 6.1 million viewers.

Rather than continuing the back and forth on why people chose what they chose, I thought I would share something that I was thinking about throughout the day.

Yesterday morning I read a New York Times article by David French called “A Movie about America Broke My Heart.” (Note that you may or may not be able to read the article with a free account). The movie he watched was called The Testament of Ann Lee, and it’s about the founder of the American Shakers.

French’s takeaway from his experience watching the film was that our country has always fought against those who were different from us or whom we simply didn’t understand. It doesn’t sound like that surprised him. What surprised him was the response that the Shaker community, and Ann Lee in particular, had towards this fear, hatred and persecution.

She called on people to love. She believed that love for neighbor was the highest call.

French then references the “Already and not yet” aspects of the Kingdom of God. This is a teaching that has played a prominent role in my life. All around us we see ways that the kingdom is breaking through. It’s already. We can be grateful for that and continue to play our role in pointing it out. But it’s also not yet. This is why Jesus taught us to pray, “Let your kingdom come on earth as it is in heaven.” This is what fuels our love…if we will allow it.

French then mentions Micah 4:4, which says, “Everyone will sit under their own vine and under their own fig tree, and no one will make them afraid.” I don’t know when I first heard this verse, but it became prominent for a lot of us when we heard the song “One Last Time”, sung by George Washington in the musical Hamilton. This verse must have been very important to George Washington, because French points out that he referenced the verse close to 50 times in his correspondence.

Go here if you’d like to read all of Micah 4. That was where I headed next. It’s such a beautiful chapter.

A short time after reading this article I was at church, and Jamin Carter gave a great sermon called Covenant as a Subversive Act of Love. So much of it carried this same theme. Towards the end of the sermon he made a statement that stuck with me. He said, “The whole task of Scripture is us learning how to love one another as God has loved us.” The word “whole” is a big word. This is everything. God wants to transform our hearts so that we would be capable of love. I’m also drawn to the word “learning”. Yes, it’s transformation, but transformation does not mean overnight. It takes learning. It takes effort.

So much in our lives is working against us becoming the kinds of people who can love others as God has loved us, but it’s possible. That’s where subversion comes in. I like that.

French ends his article by referencing one of the times George Washington referenced Micah 4:4. It was a letter to the Hebrew Congregation of Newport, R.I. Washington said, “May the Children of the Stock of Abraham, who dwell in this land, continue to merit and enjoy the good will of the other Inhabitants; while every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and fig tree, and there shall be none to make him afraid.”

Here’s what French says about it…

What a beautiful expression of American pluralism and religious tolerance. Our nation is not a place – it never will be a place – where we all agree with one another, much less look like one another, or even come from a common culture. But we can live together as neighbors so long as we recognize one another’s inherent dignity and worth.

Choosing the tangible act of love through word and deed is the only way that this will happen.

20 Years in Memphis

Today is a special day for Mandy and I. We have now been Memphians for 20 years. For the past few weeks I’ve been reflecting on our time here. We moved here when Adam was six months old. We had a dream of planting our lives and at some point a church, as well as a desire to be closer to family. 

We wanted stability. We wanted to raise a family. And we wanted the opportunity to buy a home. That was much more of a reality in Memphis than it was in the SF Bay Area, where we had lived for the previous six years. 

Our first six months were spent reconnecting with family after being away for so many years. After a couple of months renting a townhouse across the street from Overton Park, we bought a house in Cooper-Young.

After moving we slowly but surely began getting involved in the neighborhood. We started attending events put on by the Cooper-Young Community Association, and we began meeting neighbors, especially those with little ones. It’s funny how you’re just drawn to one another when you’re at stage of life and parenting. 

We quickly saw that over the past few decades people had moved out of the urban core of Memphis, but now people were moving back. When we moved into Cooper-Young there were not a lot of teenagers. But boy were there a lot of babies and toddlers. 

Mandy came to the conclusion that one of the things that she should be engaged in was education advocacy. The question that was on the forefront of minds was, “Where are we going to send our kids for school?” 

Mandy started the Cooper-Young Parents Network when Adam was two, and as he got closer to kindergarten we began gathering others together to explore attending our neighborhood school together. And that’s what we did.

We spent several years investing in Peabody Elementary School. We raised money through Chili Cookoffs and Support Drives. We received a grant from Kaboom for a new playground. The dads took turns in the mornings as Watchdogs getting kids from their cars into the building. Classmates played rec league soccer and basketball. Our kids were close. And so were the parents.

And through this we started a church. I remember when we were toying around with the name Neighborhood Church, a friend pointed out that the mission was in the name. That was it.

There were ups and downs throughout it all. There was a lot of activism and life change. And definitely a lot of fun. There was also relational loss and disappointment. I’m grateful for the work that God did during those years, and I’m grateful for the relationships that have lasted through the years.

Mandy has invested years of her time as both an educator in the classroom and a volunteer parent leader. When Adam was a second grader, she organized midtown parents around the campaign to start a new middle school. After a lot of sweat equity, Maxine Smith STEAM Academy was started and Mandy continued to serve as PTO President while Adam attended. Then during his middle school years, she served on the XQ team that eventually created Crosstown High, which is where Micah is now a junior. The public education landscape has greatly changed in these last two decades, and we are grateful for all of the initiatives and investment that has brought improvements. 

These 20 years in Memphis have been the season of raising a family. As I write this our boys are 20 and 17. One of the sweetest experiences we’ve had in Memphis is seeing these boys create lifelong friendships, something Mandy and I did not have growing up. We threw a toddler Halloween party in 2006 to meet other young families in Cooper Young, and the Spicklers came with their little cow, Walt. Adam was a duck. They hit it off and hardly ever missed another Halloween together. They are still best friends. And the little brothers who came along a few years later call each other their Day 1’s and hang out or play soccer daily. Their circle of bros has widened as they’ve gotten older, and we are proud of the way they show up for their friends. We’ve spent countless hours watching them play soccer and basketball. I even coached basketball for many rec league seasons! The boys’ fan club rolled deep with all the grandparents, aunts and uncles we have in Shelby County. We never took that for granted. 

Our family has been a part of two churches during our time in Memphis. I was the founding pastor of Neighborhood Church for that first decade or so. After I retired from vocational ministry we settled our family at Christ City Church. It was a nice time of recovery and rest. But a few years later, in quite the surprise, Mandy was offered the job of Executive Pastor. She has been in that role for the last four and a half years, and she does her job so well. Her latest initiative was helping to lead our transition from renters to owners, as Central Christian Church gifted their building to Christ City Church.

In August I marked 16 years as a licensed realtor. In that time I’ve had almost $40 million in real estate transactions and helped over 100 families buy or sell their home. I’ve also flipped over 30 homes. Breathing life into classic midtown homes was not always easy, but it was always rewarding. And in the last year I’ve had the privilege of mentoring Adam in the business after he decided to get his real estate license. 

Mandy and I met in college choir as music majors, so singing together is a fun hobby for us.  We are so fortunate to be involved in Memphis Choral Arts. I joined the Men’s Chorale in 2012 and Mandy was a founding member of the Women’s Chorale in 2014. She even served as Executive Director from 2022-2025. One of our favorite Memphis experiences is singing in the annual Christmas concert at St. Peter Catholic Church downtown. And one of the sweetest memories was when Micah had the boy soprano solo in one of our Christmas songs when he was a founding member of the Memphis Children’s Chorale. 

The boys had amazing musical experiences growing up in Memphis. Their school music programs were outstanding, including Micah learning in Mandy’s music classroom for six years. They took private piano lessons from Dr. Patricia Gray for seven years, with precious recitals at the Beethoven Club. Micah played keys for his school pop ensembles for several years. And during Covid, Adam taught himself electric guitar. And we all still play or sing in the church worship band. Growing up in Memphis meant countless shows at the Orpheum and Levitt Shell.

After our 8 year stint living in Cooper Young, we moved to the Annesdale-Snowden neighborhood for 12 years. It was a beautiful place to raise a family, and our block had so many kids to play with our guys. We rescued Bella after she was found by a friend in the parking lot of Stax. And a few years ago, we welcomed 9 pound Sophie to the mix.  And now, for the first time since I left for college, I live in a more rural area. You can read more about that here.

I think it’s fitting that I place the final touches on this article as I sit at Otherlands with Micah, enjoying a cup of coffee and a bagel. I remember the first time I stepped foot into Otherlands. It was a year or so before we moved. I was in Memphis visiting family, and my dad, brother and I went to Otherlands. As I looked at the bulletin boards I felt like I was in San Francisco. It was in that moment that I began to imagine myself living in Memphis. Before that, I didn’t think I would ever fit back in the Bible Belt. Discovering Midtown through that visit to Otherlands opened me up to new possibilities, and I’m grateful for that.

I am who I am because of our 20 years in Memphis. There’s something really good about navigating the good and the hard of a place. About discovering blessing in places you least expected. About changing in ways you definitely never expected. And about being open to the things of God all around you. I’m proud of the work we’ve done and the lives that we’ve lived, and I’m grateful for the ways that we’ve been shaped.

And now, I’ll leave you with a gallery. Twenty photos to mark twenty years in Memphis. Enjoy!