Gas Station Sukkot

One of the largest culture shocks that attended moving to New Jersey was the fact that you don’t pump your own gas here. By the time I was driving regularly, pumping your own gas was a fact of life. I’ve lived in at least half a dozen states and in all of them you pumped your own fuel. Until New Jersey. Now when I visit other states I sometimes sit dumbly waiting for the attendant to come to the window and ask what I want. You get used to being waited on.

Yesterday morning I stopped for gas – I do a lot of driving between my various classes, so this is a sleepy ritual. The attendant came and began the usual refueling when another customer stepped up to the driver’s side window. “Are you Jewish?” he asked. Actually, it is a question I am asked not infrequently. The stranger then wished me happy Sukkot, which was nice; I’ve always enjoyed the Sukkot festivities I’ve attended. He then proceeded to tell me that the country was in a mess, but as long as we held up the name of Jesus everything would be alright in the end. “We just need to hold up the name of Jesus,” he repeated.

I drove away full of gas. I wondered how we’d gotten from Sukkot to Jesus so quickly – the transition usually takes longer than that. Back at Nashotah House, a local Jewish doctor frequently invited me to bring my Hebrew Bible students to Sukkot at his house. A kind of thanksgiving celebrated outdoors, we’d sit in his stylishly decorated booth, eat snacks, and shake the luvav. By the time we returned to seminary for evening prayer, it was back to Jesus. I’ve never been proselytized at the gas pump before. I may have to rethink what the largest culture shocks have been, moving to New Jersey.

4 thoughts on “Gas Station Sukkot

  1. Henk van der Gaast

    Hmm… I only ever got the blood thirsty viking thing. Strange as it seems, vikings are not portrayed by hollywood or hammer as the pointy noses but generally anglic or slavic bemuscled types.

    Neither muscle or fair pointy nose have I, but even a tiny bit of mistaken identity will do. Not that anyone has ever offered me a surprise mead or recently captured maiden.

    I have a natural prosletysing defense, my personality!

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  2. A Muslim store clerk once told me that Christianity is a false religion because the Holy Trinity is completely inconsistent with monotheism. I was there to buy a donut. The donut was good, but I never went back.

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  3. Henk van der Gaast

    There is of course the proselytising and conversion process to consider. My main concern is if the person was doing this and selling products that were inconsistent with his world view.

    I propose this applies full well with Steve’s next post. In saying that I wont elaborate because I have been accused (by a proselytising christian fundamentalist) of being a purveyor of scientism and naturalism. I had to actually look at the new usages of the terms before I responded.

    This was a bit of a drag as I was down at at nude beach resort studying ghost crabs. (Its my excuse, what’s everyone elses?)

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