Monthly Archives: February 2012
Piano Moving 101
I was recently retained to move two old antique pianos from our church building and relocate them to the local dump. We had been trying to move them out for about two years, putting ads in the Star-Telegram and on Craig’s List. Apparently, you just can’t give good junk away. Anyway, I was recently approached by one of our deacons and he asked if I could enlist some help and move the two pianos. One from the basement and the other from the second floor. I have had experience moving pianos before, and although they are a pain, they usually are not insurmountable.
We arrived at the church and promptly went to the basement, thinking this piano would be the hardest, so we wanted to get it out of the way first. I have moved pianos before with only one other person and while that is pretty taxing, it can be done. My trusted helper Mark and his brother David grabbed one end and I picked up the other—just to get a feel of how heavy this lead-laden beast was going to be. While we managed to get the thing off the floor, we couldn’t even take a step. This was absolutely the heaviest thing I have ever been privileged to rupture a muscle over.
Even though we were all straining so hard that we were unable to speak, we managed to communicate with our eyes and agreed to drop the thing in unison. Attempting to get a second, better grip and having our fourth helper Kirk join in resulted in nothing better than the first attempt. I quickly processed the following: We are supposed to take this thing to the dump. The dump will have a large machine roll over the piano numerous times, reducing it to toothpicks and thus depriving us of the opportunity to utterly destroy the thing ourselves.
After about two hours, it occurred to me that mother had been wrong when she told me to be careful with our neighbor’s piano because I might break it. This thing wasn’t gonna come apart with a mortar blast. We unscrewed every screw and unbolted every bolt. And yet this thing was still in one solid piece. It was like magic. It was like they had used some sort of industrial strength glue or something.
With everything unscrewed or unbolted, we then grabbed a ten-pound sledge hammer and begin to give it “the ol’ college try!” One hard swing and then another. We barely scratched this hundred year piano. I was beginning to think that it was actually a recycled World War I bunker. But finally, the large, flat board on one side of the piano flew off with amazing force. Then the rest of the piano fell over backwards and nearly killed Kirk.
It’s amazing how loud a piano is when every string is struck at the same time.
In any event, we finished disassembling the piano and carried it up the stairs in manageable pieces. The string board by itself was actually heavier than most pianos I have moved. We got the thing loaded on the trailer and called it a day.
The following day, we reluctantly returned to grab the second piano. We stared down the menacing beast for a few moments and then I gave the command to lift. Surprisingly, it came loose from the floor with a modicum of ease. It was still very heavy, but after our battle the day before, we felt buoyed to victory. We felt like we could do this.
We quickly moved a couple of items and marched the doomed piano out of the cell that had held it until this moment. This was going to be easy. Then we arrived at the door. Just outside the door was a stairway that ran along the outside of the building. We had measured it and to our surprise, it was plenty wide for the piano. Not for us, but for the piano.
After some mild trouble making the corner, we decided to launch the piano down the stairs and pick it up at the bottom. It didn’t launch. At best, we could, with great effort, hanging from the outside part of the stairwell, get this thing to roll and tumble uncontrollably down one, sometimes two steps before one of us would lose our grip and fall off the side of the stair well.
Amazingly, the piano was still in one piece—aside from a couple of removable parts that we had removed. Finally, at the bottom of the stairs, this thing seemed to have gained weight. We could no longer easily pick it up. We were exhausted and Kirk kept whining about one of his feet that was pointing in the wrong direction. In spite of all this, we finally got it into the trailer and loaded up.
After driving about a half mile through a backwoods residential area that is truly off the beaten path, I navigated a corner and pulled over so we could reload the piano. Picking it up out of the ditch proved to be a bit of challenge since there was nothing level to balance the piano on. After some wrestling, we managed to get the piano back into the trailer. I noticed that the base of the piano or the floor of the trailer (I couldn’t tell which) seemed to be a bit wobbly. I thought about tying it down this time, but all I had with me was my good rope and I didn’t want to hurt it.
I took off slowly and crept my way down the street trying to ignore the faces in the windows of the homes we passed. After driving about a half a block, the piano committed suicide. I realized at that moment that this piano was not put together like the first one. It completely shattered the second time it hit the pavement. It was a sad end to a condemned life. Its last several years had been in spent in storage. And now, it lay in assorted pieces strewn along the roadway between two houses. In unison, we all jumped into the air, giving a fist pump and a primal scream of approval. Well, everyone except Kirk who was still whining about feigned injuries sustained back at the stairwell.
After picking up the pieces . . . . and Kirk, we retired to my house for lunch and a rousing game of Halo. After a bit of debriefing, we decided to add a line to our services—Piano moving! But so far, no one has called.
How Do We Stack Up?
Everyone needs to stop and evaluate their life every now and then. Have you set goals? Do you have dreams? Did you make any resolutions back on New Year’s Eve? One of the ways we work toward our goals/dreams/resolutions is to keep track of where we are in relation to where we want to be. Even Jesus did that with His earthly ministry. Look at this:
13 When Jesus came to the region of Caesarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, “Who do people say the Son of Man is?”
14 They replied, “Some say John the Baptist; others say Elijah; and still others, Jeremiah or one of the prophets.”
15 “But what about you?” he asked. “Who do you say I am?”
16 Simon Peter answered, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.”
17 Jesus replied, “Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah, for this was not revealed to you by man, but by my Father in heaven. 18 And I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it.”
–Matthew 13:13-18, NIV, ‘84
- Jesus was evaluating His ministry.
- Jesus was concerned about whether or not His message was getting out.
What about us? How effectively is our message getting out. How many people do you see on a daily or weekly basis that know about your church? Have you told them? Have you shared Christ with them? How do you expect them to know if you don’t tell them?
What about your youth group, Bible study class or church? How well is it doing?
We tend to coast too much. We just take life as it hits us. One of the things I used to hate in athletics was when they did benchmark tests. We had to see how high we could jump, how fast we could run, how much we could lift, etc. It was torture for me to do all of that. But it was important so that later, we could see if I was improving in the areas the coach wanted me to improve in. Evaluating one self is rarely fun–whether it be in athletics or spiritual in nature. And as important as it is evaluate ourselves to see how we line up with what we think we should be doing, it is even more important to get God’s opinion! Look at what King David wrote:
23 Search me, O God, and know my heart; 
test me and know my anxious thoughts.
24 See if there is any offensive way in me,
and lead me in the way everlasting.
–Psalm 139:23-24, NIV, ‘84
- David was not content to evaluate himself.
- David asked God to evaluate him.
The Bible tells us that God knows everything there is to know about us. He knows what we are thinking. He knows what we are doing in our most secretive, private moments. Knowing this, David was bold enough to ask God to evaluate him. If you were to ask God to evaluate yourself, what do you think He would say? Do you pray enough? Do you witness enough? Are you submissive to God? Are you committed enough? Are there things in your life that you need to cut out or drastically adjust?
If you had to change one thing about your spiritual life to get closer to where God wants you to be, what would it be?
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If your church was dependent on people who were only as dedicated and committed as you are, what kind of ministry would it be?
If your church was as committed to worshipping Christ in their daily lives as you are, how closely would they be following God?
We do not dare to classify or compare ourselves with some who commend themselves. When they measure themselves by themselves and compare themselves with themselves, they are not wise.
–2 Corinthians 10:12, NIV, ‘84
Don’t worry about what everyone else is doing. Become the leader God wants you to be today!
This Gospel Must Be Preached to All Creatures
Exhausted is what I was. Mentally, physically, spiritually. I was tired. It had been a long week and it was only Wednesday. I went to the church early, hoping to have some quiet time before we were inundated with unruly youth. Just after getting to the church, a couple of Junior High girls showed up and asked me if I could take them to go get Heather.
Heather was a young girl that we had been inviting to church for a number of weeks, but every time we went by to pick her up, she had a different excuse for not being able to come that day. Because of my time constraints with work, I picked up kids on Sundays, but did not do so on Wednesdays, and did not want to start–especially not on this day. Did I mention I was tired?
Finally, I became convinced that these girls would not stop bugging me until I finally relented my unrestful state of rest and got up to make a useless trip to Heather’s house, convinced that I was going to hear one more of a long litany of excuses. A few minutes later, when we arrived at Heather’s, she was waiting on the front porch wearing a new dress. She was actually overdressed for our youth group, but she came running to the car, jumped in and back to the church we went.
By the time we arrived, kids were starting to trickle in in increasing numbers and I was not going to get any peace or rest. We started a harried worship service, I taught the lesson, and in front of a large number of kids, Heather came up to the stage at the end of the program to announce that her heart had been touched and she was accepting Jesus as her Savior.
I never got my rest or peace, and yet I went home very refreshed and very peaceful that night! How does that happen? Let’s look at some Scripture:
22Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says. 23Anyone who listens to the word but does not do what it says is like a man who looks at his face in a mirror 24and, after looking at himself, goes away and immediately forgets what he looks like. 25But the man who looks intently into the perfect law that gives freedom, and continues to do this, not forgetting what he has heard, but doing it—he will be blessed in what he does.
–James 1:22-25, NIV
To summarize:
- Don’t just learn about the Bible, but figure out how to apply what it says daily!
- It does no good to listen or learn about the Bible and not do what it says.
- It also does no good to listen and then forget.
- We must learn, remember and do!
If we were to take a poll from the youth group to the oldest Sunday School class and everyone in between, and ask them what is the main reason behind why we are supposed to come to church, do you know what the main answer would be? Overwhelmingly, most people say they come to church to learn about God. The second most common answer is to worship. But when asked about “doing the Word,” these same Bible students tend to get a bit fuzzy. They talk about the importance of “being good” and “living in a way that would make Christ proud,” but what does that mean? What does it truly mean to be a “doer of the Word?”
Let’s look at a couple of keys:
37Jesus replied: ” ‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’38This is the first and greatest commandment. 39And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’40All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.”
–Jesus, (Matthew 22:37-40, NIV)
18Then Jesus came to them and said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in[a] the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”
–Jesus, (Matthew 28:18-20, NIV)
- We are commanded to love everybody!
- We are commissioned to reach as many people as possible with the gospel of Jesus and lead them to become disciples of Jesus.
So, we all know that we are supposed to do these things as individuals. And somehow, my experience has been that when we are obedient to Scripture, there is a sense of accomplishment–a pat on the back if you will. Real rest and peace results, but if we really want to see our church/class/Bible study groups grow, we must find ways to demonstrate these actions corporately. How do you suggest we as a class, proceed?
Our choices: do nothing and die. . . . or we could . . .