As I'm writing this, storm clouds are brewing, the wind is whipping, and my weather radar is showing a broad band of thunderstorms racing across the state. It reminded me of one of my favorite stories in the bible. In Matthew chapter eight, and verse 25, Jesus had finished teaching, and needed to get away. What better place than to hop in a boat, and cast off. The rocking of the waves, the warm sun, and suddenly your asleep. While the Son of God slept within the fragile bowels of a tiny boat, a fierce storm comes up, and before you know it, the boat is about to sink. I love the reaction of the disciples, "Master, Master, we perish." Jesus slams them for their lack of faith, and calms the storm. End of story, Jesus is God, rules the sea, and commands the winds. What I love about the story is the unsaid dialogue.
Jesus never invited, nor demanded the disciples to get in the boat with Him, they followed Him. We who follow Christ, seek always to be in His presence, that is why we FOLLOW Him. I love the Presence of God. He is everything I long for. What we often don't take into consideration is the price of following Him.
I've heard many sermons on this passage, most dealing with the issue of faith. That would be my logical choice for teaching about faith. I've heard it taught, He was rebuking them for not rebuking the storm themselves. I've heard it taught, He was rebuking them for waking Him. I've heard it taught, He was rebuking them for not having faith in Him.
It's hard for us from our vantage point to see the unsaid language that was happening.
Jesus got in the boat to be alone, to get away.
The storm arose while He was sleeping.
HE WAS IN THE SAME BOAT, THEY WERE IN!!!!!!!!
He was sleeping through the storm, but it was such a fierce storm, seasoned fishermen feared for their lives.
They had to wake HIM in order to save themselves.
In the midst of our storms, there is a tendency to forget that Jesus is in our tiny ship. He is inside of us. The storms that buffet us, buffet Him. Still, the overriding point is; Jesus is in the midst of the storm with us. We are going to be in storms in our lives. These mortal frames, temporary tents, tiny ships, are subject to the storms around us. Still, in the midst of them, we can have the peace of God. Why? Because, we have the Presence of God, His precious Spirit abiding in us. It is our natural tendency to find a reason for the things that happen in our lives. As Christians we especially want to make our trials, and tribulations have some kind of purpose. We'll evaluate the storm, look at what came out of it, and then proclaim the lesson we learned.
LIFE ISN'T ALWAYS ABOUT LESSONS! Sometimes it's jumping in a boat, and following this guy named Jesus even when it takes us to the point of physical death. We miss the entire point of the voyage, we wanted to be with Jesus, so we followed Him. Death is death, financial ruin is financial ruin, illness is illness, life is life. The only difference between how a Christian goes through it, is that Christians have Jesus in the boat. What you do with that knowledge is what determines what your life will feel like.
The Presence of God is all that I long for, so I would jump in the boat with him, I'd probably be just like the disciples when the storm came, except hind sight being 20/20, I'd have at least stood upon the prow of the ship, raised one arm toward the storm, pointed toward the bowels of the ship with the other, and yelled out: "Hey, shut up you silly storm, don't you know the Master is trying to sleep."
The wistful place in God's presence where men were forbidden to go, but sparrows live.
Sunday, April 27, 2014
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
TOO MUCH DRAMA
This rant
came about from a statement made by a good friend of mine. I love this man with all of my heart. He is good, a giver, and has helped me in
many circumstances that he has no idea of.
However, yesterday after someone broke into one of his businesses, he
declared how hard Satan was working against him. It made me cringe, because I knew the person
who was feeding him the lie. This person
loves drama. Actually, they seem to thrive on drama, which isn’t unusual in
this day, and age. Drama, disaster, doom, and despair seem to be all the rage
in today’s world. If something terrible
isn’t happening directly to us, we’ll search for it in the newsfeeds, the
television, or the newspaper. As an
American, my generation, hasn’t known a day without some cataclysmic event that
didn’t threaten to destroy life as we know it.
I went to elementary school during the Cold War, and sat huddled,
frightened, and unsure of what was happening to me during the Cuban Missile
Crisis. I can still remember the unending
images of the carnage of the Vietnam War being the staple of the evening news
shows. The days of my adolescence were
marked with unspeakable acts of violence committed by men to enslave, destroy,
or subjugate one another. I could make an unending list of conflicts,
disasters, and continuing sagas that fill my days.
Still, as
Solomon would say, there is nothing new under the sun.
When we grow
weary of glorifying our ability to be cruel beyond any monster ever imagined in
Hollywood, we turn to the news media so we can become enraptured with our
ability to destroy our environment, waste our earth, and ignore the delicate
balance of our eco-system. The media
loves to propagate fear, but rarely offers solutions to the source of those
fears. Our fascination with gloom, doom, disaster, and mayhem is as old as we
are. Some of the oldest surviving communications from our history, consist
mostly of calamity.
We love our
fears, because they make us feel alive.
Over the
last few months, I’ve been thrust into a ‘drama’ infused environment that
caused me to dread doing my job. I
didn’t realize how bad it was, until I had a chance to step out of it for a
couple of weeks. It took me about 2 or 3
days to ‘detox’ from the opiate of the drama, but once I was clean, and sober,
I could see I’d allowed myself to become addicted to it. The primary source of
the drama has an uncanny ability to make their cataclysm yours.
Once I began
to de-tox, I realized how difficult it was to enjoy the presence of God during
this time of drama. I WON’T HAVE
THAT!!!!!! Jesus suffered, and gave up
so much to restore my relationship with the Father, I won’t dishonor Him by
allowing fear, drama, and despair to rule my life. Those are the very things Jesus overcame. He never promised us we wouldn’t go through
things that tested our faith, or challenged our commitment. He did promise He would be with us in them. In
that promise, is another unspoken promise; our drama doesn’t have to be someone
else’s drama. Unless, of course, you’re one of those people who just have to
share your drama.
Hello, Facebook.
Through this
time, I’ve learned one valuable thing; we are the source of all drama on this
earth. It doesn’t matter whether the
conflict is with nature, or with other men, you will always find a human being
somewhere in the drama. Without humans,
the cycle of life goes as it always has.
Our obsession with ourselves becomes comical when we place it in the
context of eternity. Only humans can put themselves into a state of terror over
the stupidity of how we look, talk, or behave.
Without us, those things that seem so disastrous, and devastating on TV
would simply be the machinations of a planet in its course through the
universe. All great drama has a conflict, and we are that conflict. With all of our knowledge, we still haven’t
observed the course of life around us.
Life comes, life goes, the sun rises, the sun sets, we are born, we die,
we either add to the good of others around us, or we take everything we can
take. It is my desire to have left this
earth, or just my small part of it, a better place for having consumed so much
good.
To the
sparrow, the sparrow’s perch is a place of safety, regardless of the storms of
life. Within the shelter of the Creator,
the sparrow knows that it has all it needs because of the creator. If all that it needs should be taken away,
the Creator remains. This is insulting
to most people, who want to believe everything is about them. They are like little toddlers who believe all
things happen for, and to them. Actually,
I’ve come to realize that all our drama is the glorification of ourselves over
the love of Jesus our savior. As a Christian, I’m blown away when a Child of
God will advertise how the ‘Devil’ (I hate even typing it) is working against
them. We give the enemy of our souls the credit for things he had no power to
do, and fail to see the evil we inflict upon one another in our search for
drama.
We wallow in self-importance by
assuming that ‘Satan’ personally orchestrates every evil or tragedy inflicted
upon us.
If you want
to feel self-important, remove your corn-fed butt (Yes, I said butt) from its
throne of self-indulgence, and make a difference in the plight of those less
fortunate around you. I personally know
of five or six places on this earth (yes, there a thousands more) where $1 a
day can feed a family that is really suffering.
I can show you abject poverty on a scale even the homeless in America
can’t begin to attain to. If you want
drama, real drama, drama that challenges you, something that will make you feel
powerful instead of powerless, find a church that is really feeding the poor,
sending doctors to the backwaters of the globe, rescuing orphans in the midst
of man’s inhumanity to man, and begin giving to them. Even better yet, join them on their next ‘love
mission,’ and go see what real drama looks like. You don’t even have to leave the United
States. Donate to “Operation Christmas
Child” and send a shoebox to a child who has never seen a toy in their
life. Give $20 dollars, and buy a goat
for a family in Africa. A goat can be an
endless supply of milk. Donate to the numerous
Presbyterian charities that are putting in water wells in the most remote
places on earth. Our nation’s economic
downturn is a warning of what happens when we forsake the calling to greatness
our Creator has called us to. Our vast
wealth, resources, and uncanny ingenuity were meant to bless mankind. If we waste it on us four and no more, we’ve
done nothing.
Don’t get me
wrong, I enjoy the Sparrow’s Perch, the comfort of my office, the familiar blue
glow of my monitor, heat in the winter, air in the summer. At the same time, I
can’t even begin to tell you how much I enjoy the pleasure of ministering the
love of Jesus to those who face true drama.
I go to work with the joy of knowing that some of what I’m earning is
going to lift someone out of hunger, or even better yet, give them the love of
Christ. Find a way to love beyond
yourself, your family, and those who can repay you. Don’t let your right hand know what your left
hand is doing. A joyous life will
replace your dramatic one.
Monday, December 23, 2013
Regaining My Childhood Love Of Christmas
This Christmas season, I've suffered
from a severe case of nostalgia. Most of it has to do with the fact
that I will be spending Christmas morning alone. My wife has to work
Christmas morning, and my children are all spending Christmas
somewhere else. It's been a long time since I've left Harrison,
Arkansas to go share Christmas with any of my family, so I don't have
any room to complain. My children have all moved on to bigger, and
busier cities where they could find employment or to live near their
spouse's family. Being a self-employed handyman, it is extremely
difficult to break away at this time of year because business is
extremely slow, money is tight, and it is all we can do to buy gifts.
Needless to say, I'd been in a little bit of a funk.
Actually, I have everything to be
thankful for. At 58 years-old, I'm in good health, my strength is
good, and my mind is reasonably sharp. I have a home, good vehicles,
and all the toys I can play with. My wife is a joy, and her love for
me is more precious than anything on earth. I attend a wonderful
faith fellowship, have a fantastic pastor, and have fellowship with
some of the most amazing men I've ever known. I am blessed to be
gainfully employed by a prince of a man who treats me with the
respect, and honor I've always longed for. My days are spent working
with a young man who loves Christ with all his heart, and who helps
to keep me young. I am grateful to God for all I have, and the
people who surround my life. Still, knowing that Christmas morning I
would be alone had kind of tinted my enthusiasm.
It was in this mood, that I had a
profound moment of being tenderly touched by the Holy Spirit. It was
in the middle of the last snow storm we had, and I'd headed into town
early so I could use my computer at the church. It was about 5 in
the morning, the roads were slick with ice, and the 10 inches of snow
hadn't even begun to melt. I'd already passed a few homes decked out
in lights, and had thought to myself how much I used to enjoy taking
our children to see the lights when they were young. As I stopped at
the four-way in our town square, I began to weep uncontrollably. I
was so overcome, I had to pull over. Somehow, the Christmas decorations in
our courthouse square took me back to my childhood. I suddenly felt
the awe, and wonder of Christmas once again. All around me the
lights glistened off the icy road, off of store fronts, and lit up
the massive snow drifts with a wash of color. Suddenly I was a kid
again enraptured with the Christmas lights.
I found myself remembering going through
Enid, Oklahoma as a young boy of seven or eight. My Mom, and Dad
were on their way home to Ponca City for Christmas, long before I-35 had ever been built. I was laying in the back seat
of the car looking out the rear window at the lights strung from
light post to light post. At one point I remember it being like a
tunnel of lights as we drove through downtown. They formed swirls of
light on the frosty rear window and through the side windows. Then
the most gi-normous Christmas tree I'd ever seen made me sit up. It
was so tall, I couldn't see the top of it. The ornaments were like
three times the size of any I'd ever seen. I remember feeling that
Enid had to be the best place to live. To make the moment even
better, it began to snow. Not little bitty flakes, but giant
enormous flakes that seemed to be amplified in the cars headlights.
We drove from Enid to Ponca City through this amazing snow storm that
wouldn't stop. I was too young to know that my Mom, and Dad were
scared witless. All I remember is driving up to my grandma's house,
and her leaning out the front door with a brightly lit aluminum
Christmas tree behind her. I'd never seen one before, and I dashed
into the house completely ignoring my grandma's advance for a hug.
That image of her leaning out her front door framed by the glow of
the porch light, and Christmas tree lights is one of my favorite
memories. I'm sure she'd been worried sick about us, but when you're
seven years old, you don't know these things.
Christmas time for me is always about
lights. I remember the childhood trips to downtown El Paso, Texas
where the huge Christmas tree stood in the fountain in San Jacinto
plaza. Lights were draped in elegant strands from buildings down to
the plaza and from street light to street light, making the square
appear to be a canopy of lights. The backdrop to this amazing
display of lights was the Mariachi Bands doing Christmas music beside
the tree. Let me tell you, there are many times I miss hearing Feliz
Navidad, and the traditional exchanging of tamales.
I remember the Christmas we went to
Aztec, New Mexico. The small towns in the four corners area were
alive with Christmas decorations. As we drove nearer to Aztec, the
snow began to fall, and there was a light dusting of snow over the
red sandstone boulders that lined the road.
Now that I'm older, I understand the
meaning of Christmas lights. Still for me, the lights are the myriad
of angels in joyous song exclaiming God's love for man through the
birth of Jesus. Christmas will always be a time of light, joyous
music, and delightful food, but it is so much more. It is a magical
(yes, magical) time when we light up our daily routine with the gift
of light, love and laughter.
As I wiped the last of my tears from my
eyes, I wondered what had brought me to tears. Our town's seasonal
decorations aren't Christian oriented, and there wasn't mariachi
music in the square. Strands of lights didn't form a tunnel of light
to drive through, and my mind wasn't focused on any of it. The tears
had come from something I'd lost, and was given back to me. . . . A
childlike love of the season.
So, I'll leave you with this thought;
There is nothing offensive in the lights of Christmas, there is
nothing wrong with celebrating the birth of a man who came to rescue
us. Whether you are Jew, Gentile, Muslim, Buddhist, Atheist or just
don't care, what harm is there in remembering a little baby who
brought so much hope to the world. Have we become so cynical we
can't even enjoy that much? Are we so politically correct we can't
recognize that a little child needs to believe in something more than
themselves. A jolly old elf can't harm anyone. What's the big deal
if some fighter pilot gets the joy of strapping on his fighter jet
and escorts Santa across the nation? I guarantee you, that pilot wants to
fly that jet and is willing to let Santa go to the White House.
I'm thankful I got my childhood back,
I'll wake up Wednesday morning, eagerly await the phone calls from my
dispersed children, I'll call my lovely wife, my brothers, as well as my Mom and Dad. Once I've talked my head off, I'll put
Miracle on 34th street in the DVD
player. I may even do the Grinch, simply because I love the
music, and wait for Glenda to come home.
Merry Christmas everyone.
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Of Skunks, Shields, and Beatrice Bandersnatch
Have I mentioned yet, I hate skunks. I know, I’ll probably get nasty terse
comments from those of you who have had your pet skunk neutralized, sanitized,
and , made house compatible, but it won’t change my opinion one bit. I live out in rural northwest Arkansas,
amidst cow pastures, deer runs, squirrels, armadillos, roadrunners, ground
hogs, and other wildlife. I enjoy them
all, except for the skunks.
When we first moved here in 1995, I didn’t know how
prolific, nor did I have a clue as to how determined the little creatures are
to take up residence underneath your home.
After about the twelfth ‘skunking’ in less than a year, I finally
succeeded in securing my home from their attacks. These attacks usually came on Saturday nights
just before church, so I began calling them the skunks from hell. Every once in a while, I’ll let down my
defenses, and one of the little buggers will slip in through some impossible
hole. This has gone on for nearly
eighteen years now, until Beatrice Bandersnatch came along.
Beatrice Bandersnatch is a jet black miniature . . .
.something. We were told she is a ‘pidoodle’
but I don’t know what that is. All I do
know is that when she first came to our home as a small puppy, she left her
pidoodle puddles everywhere. This
tendency forced me to put her out on our enclosed patio on the back of our
home. We put her out at night, and leave
her there during the day while we are at work.
One of the unintended benefits of her being on the patio is a rapid
decline in skunk attacks. “Bea”, as we
call her, is a yapper. Her sense of
smell is terrible, but she can hear birds in the back yard, squirrels in the
pecan tree, and . . . other dogs barking everywhere. SHE IS TERRITORIAL! She loves people, but can’t stand critters,
especially birds. (This is one of the
reasons I go to the Church office to enjoy the sparrows.) Did I mention that Bea is not my dog? She belongs to my wife, but that is another
story.
Anyway, for the last four years, we’ve enjoyed relative
freedom from skunks, until two nights ago. After four years of potty training,
and battling with her to keep her off of our bed, I finally relented to
allowing Bea into the house on cold nights.
The first two nights went remarkably good, she slept in her bed, didn’t
yap, and she didn’t leave any surprises.
Sunday night, the temperature was surprisingly warm for December, so Bea
wanted to stay out on the patio. Out she
went.
Then it happened.
I have a few questions for the Lord when we get to heaven,
and one of them will be about skunks.
The unmistakable aroma of skunk began to waft through our bedroom, and
Glenda moaned “There’s skunks under the house.”
“There can’t be.” I
replied while desperately hoping it was all a bad dream. Then I heard Bea barking her head off. I got up, turned on the porch light, and
looked out the back door. The door to the patio was closed, I opened the
door just a crack , and was assaulted by the most violent odor on earth. In all my time on this earth, I’ve never
smelled such a high concentration of skunk smell. I quickly closed the door, and retreated into
our ‘stinky’ house. Bea continued to do
her territorial bark for nearly two hours, while I tossed and turned in the pit
of skunk hell.
Discovering what happened would have to wait till that
afternoon, as my wife, and I both leave before daybreak for work.
When I got home yesterday evening, I began my walk around
the usual places where the skunks have gone in before. Everything was good. Then I came around the backyard. Needless to say, it was not good. The smell was deadly to say the least. There, at the bottom of the glass door leading
to our patio was this dinner plate sized greasy splotch of skunk spray. The picture of what happened, became clear to me in an instant. Bea, who’d been in the house for the last few
days, had ‘surprised’ a skunk as it made its way around our home. In terror at the sight of this ferocious
black creature barking at it, the skunk let go.
SPLAT all over the glass.
I began to laugh as I realized how remarkably funny this
must have been. If it hadn’t been for
the glass door, Bea would be a stinky ball of fur in a kitchen sink being
washed with tomato juice. She had a
shield, but she didn’t know it. For her,
the glass is a boundary to her freedom.
It keeps her from running the yard as she likes to do. (She has never run away in the four years we’ve
owned her.) We actually keep her in the
patio to protect her from the many coyotes that infest the area. She isn’t afraid of anything except for my
brother’s white Labrador that passed away just recently. Without fear, we knew she was no match for
the pack of coyotes that roam the area. Therefore,
she is in her glass cage, free to bark, free to live, but not free to run at
night. It was at this moment that I had
a Spiritual insight.
Christ is our shield.
He is there, transparent, but strong.
From the outside, to those looking in, it may appear as if Christians
are imprisoned within a glass cage of silly rules that have no apparent purpose. Beyond our transparent shield, there are so
many harmless pleasures that can be enjoyed.
Outside of the confines of the ‘patio’ is a world just waiting to be
discovered. To outsiders, the patio of
our faith must appear to be a cruel, rigid prison. The glass ‘rules’ of kindness, compassion,
love, and forgiveness, are not conducive to success in this modern world. The posts of prayer and bible study are a waste
of time to those who’ve never experienced the strength they provide in times of
trial. The shield of faith goes unseen,
until the enemy comes at us. Then we
realize how valuable it is. Those things
that would destroy us, splatter harmlessly against it, while we continue to yap
at the enemy from the other side. We
find shelter in the Lord of Hosts. We
still see the evil around us, but it doesn’t come nigh our tent. Does the stench of sin still waft all around
us? Yes, but we are untouched by
it. Does the enemy still prowl around at
night seeking to devour? Yes, but he is
repelled by the power of Christ’s love for us.
As my days on this earth become fewer, I’ve learned to trust
the shield of faith. Psalm 91 has become
a mantra for me. I’m like the little
sparrow that nests within the framework of the tabernacle, my shield, my fortress,
my residence is within the presence of God.
I only keep my eyes open to see the surprise on the face of the wicked
when their best efforts splatter against the shield of faith. I meditate upon the transparent glass of
faith, able to see out, but not desiring to ‘be’ out. That is the new creation I’ve become in
Christ Jesus.
It cost me a night of sleep, but it was a good lesson.
Monday, November 11, 2013
The Warrior in Me
Veteran’s
Day is always a mixed bag for me. Having
served fifteen years in the United States Air Force, from 1980 to 1995, I am
always honored when people recognize my service to the country. Having served through the Cold War, Panama,
and Desert Storm, I’ve seen the value of having a strong defense
firsthand. At the same time, as a
Christian I’ve often wrestled with the warrior in me. Don’t get me wrong, I would love to believe
in a utopian ideal of mutual tolerance, respect, honor, and love for one
another. These things are a part of my
Christian ethos. Sadly, at this late
stage of my life, I am not naïve enough to believe we will ever see it this
side of the Lord’s return.
I’m weary of
our ability as a species to find horrendous ways to kill one another. With one accidental slip of a test tube, we
could unleash monstrous viral diseases that know no boundaries. Radical, and fearful peoples are now able to
construct nuclear weapons without concern for what they are unleashing upon
themselves. We’ve created chemical
weapons so toxic, one drop could poison thousands. The reasons for creating
these weapons are lost on me. There is
no justification. With each new weapon,
there is a new defense, with each new defense, there is a greater weapon, the
cycle goes on and on. Within our
military, there are brave men and women who’ve decided to be at the front lines
of defending us from these horrific weapons.
I love these people, but at the same time, my heart goes out to
them.
When I was
stationed at Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho, I met a wonderful man of
God who helped me deal with my inner conflict.
One night as my family and I were having dinner with him, he said; “God
creates people to do all kinds of different things. He creates healers, thinkers, tinkerers,
policeman, firefighters, and warriors.
The man who God said was after His own heart, was a warrior king, named
David. David was not a bully, he was not a tyrant, but he knew these people
existed. God makes warriors to defend
those who can’t or won’t defend themselves from the cruel, and wicked.”
The king David
I love, was a shepherd, and a musician before he was a warrior. David didn’t like being a warrior, and that
is why 30 men of valor protected him. They knew he was an honorable man,
anointed by God to defend Israel. Later
in his life, David was weary of fighting, and let his son take the kingdom from
him. It was the worst thing a warrior
could do. An angry son trampled upon the
peace purchased with the blood of his mighty men, and David was powerless to
stop him. When David desired to build a
house of worship for the God he loved, God couldn’t let it happen. There is
always the issue of blood spilled in battle, and in the course of our lives.
We ask our
young men, and women to do terrible things, and we expect them to come back home to us
unchanged. While the weapons of warfare
have changed, the same thing is true from generation to generation, killing
another human being is a frightful thing.
I’ve seen the faraway look in a warrior’s eyes as the memory of his
actions replay over, and over again. These are things I wish upon no one. My
own son-in-law, David, is in the Army Reserves, and he is in an extremely
dangerous job. About a year ago, he was
supposed to go to Afghanistan, and I had to pray that God’s will for his life
would be done. I didn’t fear for his
life, I feared for his soul. I didn’t
want him going there, and coming back with the ghosts of war. A
warrior loves peace, but rarely finds it.
There are too many cruel, and wicked people out there. The things we
have to do to stand up against them leaves men broken, and empty. I can’t say I
wasn’t relieved when they cancelled his deployment. I know he wanted to go, but obviously God
knew better.
So, for
David, and those like him who have a warrior’s heart, I pray for you that you
will live long enough to be weary with war.
I pray that our men and women who have placed their first class citizenship on hold, and become 2nd
class citizens, will find a moment to be proud of being human, more than being
warriors. The warrior in me knows the exhilaration of being part of a vast army, while the Christ/man in me knows the joy of being meek. Still, I know that outside of this bright beacon
of hope, and liberty, are despots, evil minded, and yes, even the mentally ill
in positions of power, which do not hold to my ideal of a Utopian world where
killing, and malice are banished. God has made you warriors to stand against them for us. I
salute you, as once others saluted me. I
wore my uniform with pride, and can point to the successes of my time in
service, but I would rather point to the successes of the savior’s love at work
within me. I would rather go to
Nicaragua, and hand a child a soccer ball than to lob a grenade at a young boy
who only a few years ago would have gladly taken the ball from my hand. I would rather fill a shoebox with trinkets, little
toys, and necessary items and send them off through Operation Christmas Child, than to see one more bomb dropped from
an aircraft.
Therefore, I’ll
pray for all of you who serve, that you come home safe, unchanged, and
whole.
God bless
all of you who are now, who have been, and those who will someday be warriors.
Happy
Veteran’s Day.
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
Awe and Wonder
I can still remember that magical (yes, it was magical)
moment when I experienced awe, and wonder for the first time. It was a mild fall evening in El Paso, Texas,
in 1966. I was lying on the grass
looking at the moon through a 20x telescope I’d received as a gift that
year. For an eleven-year-old boy, that
telescope was the invitation to worlds unknown.
Never mind that it wasn’t any better than a good pair of binoculars, or
that it was almost impossible to hold it still without a tripod. It was my ticket to the stars. On that fateful October evening, my arms grew
tired, forcing me to lay the telescope down to let the blood return to my arms
once more. The moon was just a sliver in
the crisp desert night sky, and there were more stars that night than I’d ever seen
before. As I stared into the depths of
space, I wondered where it all ended?
Where was the end to the vast field of stars that beckoned me? What was beyond the end of the universe?.
I couldn’t imagine an end.
As I peered upward, and outward, I experienced awe for the
first time in my life. My heart rate went up, and seemed to suddenly stop. The air left my lungs in a long slow breath
as my infantile, finite mind tried to cope with the infinite. The harder I tried to comprehend the vastness
of the universe, the more awestruck I became.
In that instant, I became fascinated with all things ‘space’. It was a good time for it. The ‘space race’ was at its peak, and it
seemed every day was a new leap forward to the cosmos. I had tons of questions, and an insatiable
curiosity. Even as I became enthralled
with science, astronomy, and rockets, I was also coming to know the creator of
the universe in a much smaller space, my heart.
At first, the two seemed to be worlds apart. It seemed as if science was trying to dispel
the notion of God, while at the same time, religion as I experienced it, was at
odds with science. I wrestled many long
nights with doubt, and disbelief. I knew within my heart, and spirit, that I
was experiencing the presence of God through faith in Christ, but at the same
time I knew what I was learning in the classroom didn’t allow for the idea of
God. The awe, and wonder of that magical
fall evening slipped into a dull ache for the truth. For a few years, I enjoyed the rapture of
science as I became increasingly interested in visiting worlds beyond this rock
we call home. Science Fiction novels
were a daily diet. Scientific American magazines littered my room. My favorite atomic particle was the neutrino,
and a paper I wrote in the 9th grade on it, won me a trip to a
science symposium at the University of New Mexico. This was heady stuff for a wide-eyed
teenager. The tug of war between
science, and faith went back and forth
throughout my school years.
I couldn’t imagine an end to the conflict.
A great sadness
followed me for many years as I wrestled with my faith in God, and my love of
science. After High School, I became
less concerned with science, and followed my faith. When I was amongst Christians, I would never
discuss science for fear of being revealed as a closet scientist. I wouldn’t talk with anyone about the way I’d
come to peace with both aspects of my being.
I didn’t want to be labeled a heretic, or unbeliever, when actually the
opposite was the truth. I’d raged war
with myself, the tough stuff was over, and I was believer in more than a savior. I’d fallen in love with more than a cold,
judgmental God. I’d pushed past the
dogma of both science, and faith, into an
intensely personal relationship with the One I know created the infinite. It didn’t matter what others thought about my
beliefs, I knew I loved the savior of my soul, His creation, and even the people
on both sides who demanded absolute obeisance to their dogma. I could talk with, walk with, touch, and feel
the creator of this physical vale.
I couldn’t imagine an end to this relationship with the
Creator.
Fast forward forty-seven years to a cold October morning
where I came face to face with that same feeling of awe and wonder, and it came
from the strangest of places. I was
reading an article on the internet concerning the Higgs-Boson, and its
implications for the universe. The
article was this vast exploration of the different theories surrounding this
elusive particle. Almost every model
created for studying the existence of the Higgs, ended in a catastrophic end to
the universe. The vast reaches of the
universe had an end to it. The Big Bang
would end in a big entropic collapse.
Bummer! Most particle physicists,
and those who report on them embrace the end of the universe with the same
religious fervor of fundamentalist Christians.
It becomes all they can talk about.
Particle physics becomes like the book of Revelation, a foretelling of
impending doom. Unified theories are
just as elusive as proof of God’s existence.
String theory, superstrings, dark matter, gravity lensing, everything we can think of comes to an
eventual end. Suddenly as I thought of
all the struggle these scientists were facing in dealing with ‘how’ this
universe works, I came face to face with my own struggle once more. The men and women who obsess over what makes
this universe work, and those who obsess over the One who makes it work, all
have bills to pay, families to support, spouses to love, and children to
nurture. This universe goes on as it has
for eons, and will go on for more time than we will live. The profound things of the spiritual, or
scientific are only profound to those who share in its intricacies. At either end of the spectrum of faith, the
zealots will beat their drums, and call for the death of the
non-believers. Somewhere in the middle
of this silly debate, people like me, see the beauty of the Creator written in
a little child’s giggle, or in the dance of sunbeams over orange, and fire
laced clouds. Life is more than what you
can see in an equation, or in a spiritual icon.
This moment, this instant is infinitely more precious than
infinity. Whether you believe in God,
or not, the question isn’t ‘what’ you loved, but ‘who’ you loved. Throughout the world, cemeteries are filled
with heretics, agnostics, fanatics, and scientists. Parked next door to them are evangelists,
pastors, prophets, and lay people of all creeds. These things seem to get lost when the fires
of passion rage among the faithful in either camp. As I sat there considering the forecasted
lifespan of our universe, it happened again, nearly forty-seven years after
that fateful October night, I had another moment where my heart took off like a
rocket, and my lungs emptied themselves in a slow exhale. I know the answer to the problem, but it isn’t
something I can put to numbers. In the
word of God, it says that in the end, God will roll up the universe like a
scroll. The prophets are right, and the
scientists are right. Both sides say it will
all end, someday.
Problem is, I still can’t imagine an end. Therefore,
I lean back in my chair, close my eyes, put my hands behind my head, and smile
smugly. I experience the awe, and wonder once more, feeling the familiar presence
of God more than ever before.
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
The Illusion of Power
Let me preface this blog, by saying that I've been studying Psalms 37 for inclusion into our Men's study on Sundays. For over a month, I've been reading it, and rehearsing it. I know it well, because many years ago, (too many) I put it to song as a lullaby for my children. Those many years ago, I didn't know what I know now. Yet, it is nice to have the melody to rehearse the passage.
I hope my Christian friends, and family will take the time to read this blog, and understand where I'm coming from, because in this present day, I sense hopelessness within the Church. I am not speaking to the wicked, because that is the job of the Holy Spirit. I'm not warning the evildoers, for they have already been warned. I want to talk to my Christian brothers, and sisters. We have to be very careful about how we (Christians) carry ourselves in the face of dissent, and even outright aggression. It is too easy to allow the hostility towards all things Christian to be viewed as criticism of ourselves. God's admonishment through the Psalmist David is just as true today, as it was then. Power is an illusion.
The wicked, and the evildoer expend their energy, and resources on those things that will fade upon their deaths. Even if they try to leave an inheritance to their children, it is quickly consumed, or stolen. If we take a stroll through history, we find those who had real power, never took it's mantle upon them. Real power is not measured in what you can take to yourself, but in what you can give away. If at the end of this life you are empty of all that you possessed, you've exercised ultimate power. The promise of Psalms 37 is implied and hidden within the obvious. The wicked, and evildoers are grass, and herbs. They get mowed down and wither. There is another scripture, Isaiah 61:3 that tells us that those who trust in God shall be 'trees of righteousness.' It is a vivid comparison. The wicked may have their day in the sun, the powerful may breathe their hatred for life, but the righteous will endure. Our greatest concern for the wicked, and the powerful should be prayerful concern. Our greatest evil toward them should be to love their souls while they are yet breathing, and able to repent.
Sadly, it is all too easy to become impassioned at the things we see the wicked getting by with. We can be tricked into feeling that God doesn't see the things they do, nor is He just in letting them prosper while we suffer. We can be trapped into breathing out hatred, slander, and innuendo, which have nothing to do with being Christ like at all. Do the powerful do dumb things? YES! Do the wicked live out lives of happiness while here on this earth? YES! Do the evildoers escape temporal judgement? YES!
BUT, they don't escape eternal judgment. Eternity awaits!
King David is remembered far more than the evil kings who surrounded him. He has left an eternal mark upon the history of mankind. Even more, he has left his mark upon the eternal course of life through his Son Jesus.
Psalms 37:3 puts it in the same light as Jesus did Matthew chapter six. All of the sermon on the mount is about trusting God even in the midst of powerlessness. It is about believing and trusting in what God said. Then comes the admonishment: "and do good." It is that simple. Trust God, and do good. Jesus said that we have to 'do the things He said.' If in our moral, or righteous indignation, we begin to hate, we are no better than the powerful who rely on themselves. Our fire, and desire for judgment become a trap. I don't agree with all that is done in government, business, and in society as a whole, but if I wish evil upon those who I perceive as wicked, I become trapped in wickedness myself. I prefer to let God be the judge. I prefer Him, because I know He is more merciful than I could ever be. I prefer God to judge because I know he judged me worthy of His Son, and made a way for me to be redeemed when I was more wicked than any of those I judge.
This last week, our church packed over 900 boxes for Operation Christmas Child, in a small corner of those boxes, in some small way, my heart will be carried to a small child who has never known the love of Christ. I believe in the small things. I believe in the tender touches that have no way to be returned. I believe in doing things for which there is no way for me to realize monetary gain, or to be applauded for what I did. I prefer for my left hand not to know what the right hand is doing, lest my mind begin to be puffed up. Somewhere in this world a little child will open a shoebox filled with love, and I will have realized the greatest power of all, the power to make a child smile. That is the power of love.
Power is an illusion, LOVE is real.
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