Back Home from Pat Conroy’s Lowcountry:
I sent Jeremiah his prize from Beaufort, South
Carolina: A Lowcountry Heart. It’s a
book of reflections by Pat Conroy and others collected after his death in 2016.
Jeremiah won the prize by properly identifying that Beaufort picture I sent you,
as the house in The Great Santini.
Towards the end of A
Lowcountry Heart we read “A Letter to My Grandson on Sportsmanship and
Basketball.” It’s basketball that connects
Jeremiah to Conroy from The Great Santini
to My Losing Season. “The Citadel,”
Conroy says addressing the graduating class of 2001, “gave me one of the greatest
gifts of my life—it allowed me to be a college basketball player, to represent
my college from the hills of West Virginia to the banks of the Mississippi to
the night lights of New Orleans.” That’s pretty much our road trip with the
Sjodahls.
Conroy’s kind of sentimentalism is expressed in the
title “A Lowcountry Heart”. He has a big heart for the lowcountry and for its
people. During our road trip we viewed the tidal marshes of South Carolina that
filled him with wonder, awe and love—love for the land and love for the many
sorted people he engaged there. That’s the stuff of great stories—especially bible
stories like the story of Judah and Tamar: “It happened at that time that Judah
went down from his brothers and settled near a certain Adulamite whose name was
Hirah.” The “it” that “happened” when Judah “settled” in a certain place, is
deeply tangled, troubled and problematic. It ends with a surprise: “She is more
righteous than I.” Conroy’s stories are like that. All good stories are like
that.
Yet, the Gospel Story is more than sentiment. It’s the
story about God’s big troubling yet glorious decision about us. It’s the story
about what happened when “Jesus set his face to go to Jerusalem” (Lk
9:51).
Calvary moves us to love people—to have a big heart towards people and places.
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