The Upside: 5-30-10
Name Game
âWhat are we doing with your hair today, Orlando?â said the gum-chewing stylist, scissors poised above my head. She thinks my name is Orlando. Probably because I told her my name is Orlando.
I get my hair cut at a big, busy walk-in salon at the mall. Easy-to-please guys like me can usually get in and out in fifteen minutes. Once in awhile I canât be served immediately, which gives me a chance to browse through the stack of high-brow magazines on hand and find out which celebrities are being targeted for showing up at the beach with too much cellulite (Us Weekly had some particularly cruel and unflattering shots of Snuffleupagus in a Speedo on the French Riviera). Soon my name gets called by a desk clerk leaning into a microphone. âOrlando.â
âThatâs me!â I say, standing up. You see, I realized a long time ago that it doesnât matter what my name is at a bustling, quick-turnover hair salon like this. I never seem to get the same stylist twice anyway. So on the occasions I have to wait a little until Iâm summoned, I provide a made-up name. Why not? Itâs kind of fun. In the past six months Iâve also been announced over the microphone as Thor, Ferdinand, Lucifer, and Blitzen.
In reality, Iâm named after a prominent New York City Presbyterian minister from the 1800s, Theodore L. Cuyler (pronounced âKylerâ), whom my father admired. I had mixed feelings about the unusual name Cuyler when I was little. For a brief spell in second grade I told my friends to call me a different name Iâd chosen for myself– a name I thought made me sound much more cool and adventurous. âCall me Skippy,â I said. Sadly, this is true.
In the Bible, God sometimes changed peopleâs names in order to establish for them a new identity. Abram (âexalted fatherâ) became Abraham (âfather of manyâ). Sarai (âprincessâ) became Sarah (âmother of nationsâ). Jacob (âhe deceivesâ) became Israel (âhe struggles with Godâ). And Noa (âhe is blessedâ) became Noah (âhe struggles to breathe inside a sealed-up boat with flatulent hipposâ).
As for the New Testament, Jesus gave his disciple Simon a new name tag: Peter, which means ârockâ. This may have been because Simon was a big, solidly built fisherman. My own theory is that Simon got the name because he was into the rock music of the Rolling Stones, who, judging by recent photos of the band, must have been launching their career around that time.
I wonder if Abram objected to getting his name changedâŚ
âYou are no longer Abram,â God declared. âFrom now on you shall be called Abraham.â
âAbraHAMâ?! You want I should have a pork product in my name?? Thatâs not kosher, Lord!â
âMaybe youâd prefer Skippy.â
âAbraham it is then.â
Here are my top two selections of people in the Bible who probably did pray that God would call them something else (you can look these up):
One guy who was a leader of the Israelites had this majestic name: Bunni.
And I wonder if a certain woman who became an early Christian disciple ever forgave her parents for naming her⌠Dorcas.
Ultimately, it doesnât matter what youâve been called; life is about pursuing what youâve been called to– that unique identity God has prepared especially for you. Seek that identity and youâll live life to the full.
Thatâs the best advice I can offer, or my name isnât Orlando.



