Category Archives: church

Christmas Blessing

Hello to all my Napkin Kin!  Here is my final Christmas Card of 2011 (well, it’s really a napkin but it plays a card on the internet)

Christmas Blessing

The final words at the end of each All Souls Unitarian Church service in Tulsa is this, “Go then – be blessed and be a blessing.”  I always love hearing that because it puts in 8 words what life is all about. We aren’t told to deny ourselves – it’s ok to allow yourself to be blessed, whether by God, universe or human, via a Christmas present or a cosmic blessing. But we are also told that it is not a one way street. We are to be a blessing as well. We don’t have to change the world, we just need to give the gift we can give. It might be our presence, it might be a new car or it might be a drum solo like the little drummer boy gave.  Whatever it is, you are capable of blessing someone.

I hope both for you this Christmas and holiday season.

Blessings,

Marty Coleman, The Napkin Dad

Sketchbook History Tour, 2006 – Two Upper-Class Women in Church

I had an online conversation with an old high school chum this week about church. In essence, he hates the church and thinks it’s evil.  He sees church-goers as being of one mind, one thought, one idea, one personality, one belief.  He wasn’t discriminating between congregations, theology, creeds, or purposes. It seemed to me to be one broad condemnation of all who go to church.

I actually agree with him in many theological and social areas. BUT, One of the reasons I love drawing people in church is that it really help me to pay attention. Not just to the sermon, which I do, but to the person I am drawing. I notice details, real small details that help me to see them as completely unique people, not just another person in the pew. I see they sit a certain way, that tells me they are worried or stressed about something. I see another who is showing way more leg and cleavage than one might expect in church. I see another who still has his coat on even though it’s hot in the sanctuary.  I see a young boy touching his father but never his mother.  I see a really, really old lady who has the brightest, funnest, most smile-inducing hat and shoes on you can imagine.

In other words, I see individuals.  

The upper class woman with the bra strap showing and a tag as well listening to the simple sermon by the Methodist who looks like that character actor who later did infomercials whose voice is coming to her as a flying turtle translating it into what she wants to hear so she can live the life she wants as do we all.

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The beautifully coiffed mother sitting very still while her down syndrome child fidgeted and touched everything around him including his father but he never touched her once and she has a tired strong face that speaks to her pain and vanity and dreams deferred and love she goes to church to find and tries and tries and tries and tries and tries and tries and tries and tries and tries and tries and tries and
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Drawings by Marty Coleman of The Napkin Dad Daily

>Sketchbook History Tour, 2000 – Religion, Other and Otherwise

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Two women with headscarves at Barnes and Noble, 2000
Religion, Other and Otherwise

In 2000 I had an argument via letter with Pastor Tom Harrison of Asbury United Methodist Church, in Tulsa, OK.  I had been thinking and reading about other religions, and realized that one of the big shortcomings of the church was that they were trying to talk to (and yes, convert) people they didn’t understand or know.  

The church was then promoting something they called ‘friendship evangelism’ which meant getting to know the person, befriending them, before attempting to explain what you believe and how or why they might want to consider it themselves.  We talked about this in our small group and I put forth the question, what if your neighbor you are trying to befriend is a Buddhist, or a Muslim?  Do you get to know what they believe, and understand it, find it’s value, it’s reasons as well as find out what sort of sports their kids like and what sort of novels they read?  

There was some discussion about that,  some saying yes, some saying no.  It was obvious to me that it was important to treat any friend’s religion with respect, not dismissing it by thinking it’s so unimportant that you don’t have to know the basics of it. 

Beyond that we were now living in a very interconnected world.  Often, in business, some of the congregation were having to travel all over the world, or have to negotiate and do business from home with people of very different cultures and beliefs.

I suggested to my small group leadership that I would like to do a series on other religions.  They said maybe I could do a one day presentation, that would probably suffice.  I declined the offer since I knew I couldn’t do any of the religions justice in the 10 minutes or so I could dedicate to them in a 1 hour stretch.

I sent a letter to Pastor Harrison with the idea that maybe he could do a series on other religions from the pulpit. Not in detail, but just in general overview, to help people see that the leader of their church was open and willing to understand other groups, religions, cultures, etc.  I thought it was needed because I had heard a lot of very ignorant and judgmental opinions put forth in the discussions I had had.  I thought he needed to take the lead and guide others to be educated and open, not ignorant and reactionary.

He responded angrily saying it was not his place to talk about other religions, that enough of our culture was talking about them, that he was there to talk about our own religion. That for him to bring up other religions in that way would be tantamount to giving them all equal weight.  He told me he worried about my soul and where I might go if I continued to think the way I was thinking.

To say I was stunned was an understatement.  While I can certainly understand a Pastor politely declining a sermon series idea for all sort of reasons, I did expect him to be considerate and thoughtful about the idea.  Instead he was angry, defensive and abused his power by putting out a spiritual threat.

Due to this and a few other reasons, I decided to leave Asbury and go to another church.  Not many months later September 11th happened.  The idea of understanding what others believe and why all of a sudden didn’t seem like such a bad idea.

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Drawing and story by Marty Coleman of The Napkin Dad Daily



>sketchbook History Tour, 1999 – 3 People Thinking in Church

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When I started having trouble in my marriage, a Pastor gave me a bible.  I drew in it when I went to church.  I would often look at people and wonder what they were thinking.  Here are three drawings that includes what I imagined they might have been pondering.

Drawings by Marty Coleman of The Napkin Dad Daily

>Sketchbook History Tour, 1997 – Three View of Women

>We started in 1972 (6 months ago) and now are at the 25 year mark in my sketchbook history tour. 

Church and Details
We went to Asbury United Methodist Church in Tulsa for many years. I spent many hours drawing in this church.  I spent an extra long amount of time on this one after the service where I did the original sketch.  
Woman being enlightened by the Accordion Bug
Who’s to say where we will get our inspiration.  Some from world leaders of peace, some from Accordion Bugs.
Woman Considering Fire in a Female Landscape
It’s a fun challenge to make something look like something else.  I drew the profile first, then had a very large space to fill.  I am not sure if the landscape idea came first, probably it did. But eventually it was an attempt to create a body landscape that wasn’t immediately obvious.  

Drawings by Marty Coleman of the Napkin Dad Daily
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