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Friday, December 13, 2019

Volcanic Burrito!


I opened my lunch box and peered inside it.  "What do you have?"  One of the nursing staff asked me.

"An apple, a cutie, some nuts, two cookies, and something else," I said, lifting up a green Tupperware container that would have fit beautifully in a kitchen with a 1970s décor.  I opened the container as the suspense built in the lunch room.  "Looks like a frozen burrito," I said.

I took the oblong item and stuck it in the microwave for a couple of minutes.  When the microwave indicated that my food was done, I took it out and touched it gingerly with my finger.  It seemed to be warm all the way through.

I brought it back to the table, lifted my fork, and cut away the end of the Mexican delicacy.  I blew on it briefly and then popped the bite in my mouth.  Immediately, I discovered a whole world of pain.

The burrito did not contain, as I had anticipated a mixture of beans and meat.  Rather, it was filled with liquid, scalding magma!  I had unknowingly bitten into a volcanic burrito and was rapidly losing the skin inside my mouth as a result.

Of course, the problem was not with the burrito.  I suppose I could have cut thirty seconds off its cook time and I wouldn't have suffered quite as much, but the bigger problem is that I lack the patience necessary to eat one comfortably.  Two more minutes of letting my burrito cool would probably have been sufficient to allow me to keep my mouth and tongue safe.

Patience is a virtue worth having.  It makes the lives of those around us more enjoyable as we won't get upset as easily with little speed bumps within our days.  It will give us peace in some of the stressful situations that each day is bound to contain.

It can even protect a hungry doctor from a volcanic burrito.

Friday, November 22, 2019

It's the Mennonites' fault!



"So how are you doing?"  I asked the older gentleman who was seated in the exam room.

"Oh, I'm doing pretty well," he answered.  "Just here for my check up."

"Very good," I said, as I placed my computer on the counter top.  "Anything in particular you want to take care of today?"

He had a couple of things before I moved on to my routine questions.  As I was wrapping up, I mentioned to him "I'd like to get a cholesterol panel and a couple of other blood tests while you're here."

"Now, Doc," he told me.  "I just need you to know that if my cholesterol is up, it's the Mennonites' fault!"

I was taken aback, because I am a Mennonite and I don't recall in any of our secret meetings discussing plans to raise the cholesterol levels of Brookneal.  But maybe I missed that one...

"What?"  I asked.  Not the smartest sounding question, but I guess one that expressed my confusion.

"It's the Mennonites' fault," he repeated.  "See, they had their Fall Festival and my wife came home with three dozen donuts, a pie, and three pumpkin rolls -- and maybe something else.  Anyway, three days later it was all gone and we didn't throw any of it away.  So now you understand."

"Oh," I nodded.  "I'll keep that in mind when I get your results back."

Of course, if his cholesterol was up, it wasn't truly the Fall Festival's fault.  He was the one who had eaten the donuts and pie and he was the one who would deal with the consequences of that.

It is human nature to blame others for our wrong doings.  Ever since in the Garden of Eden, Adam blamed Eve and Eve blamed the snake, people have been trying to shift responsibility away from themselves.  Sure, I did something bad, but it wasn't really my fault because someone else encouraged me to do it.

The reality is that blaming others for the things I do is never helpful.  I am in control of the decisions I make and will suffer the consequences for them.  Hopefully as I realize that and by God's grace decide to make better choices in the future, I can have victory.

Even if the Menonites keep selling tasty baked goods at their Fall Festival.


Friday, November 15, 2019

Eviction Day?!


"Tomorrow's the day!"  Elaine said firmly.  After nine of months of carrying our fifth child, it was time for our daughter's "eviction."  Because of Elaine's blood pressure, her doctor thought it best to induce her before it really started to climb.

We went to sleep with this firm knowledge of the future.

Things change the next morning when Elaine called the hospital labor and delivery department.  "I'm sorry," the nurse told her.  "It has been really crazy up here.  We can't do an induction now, but you can check back around noon to see if things have calmed down a little."

At lunch time the message was the same.  "I just don't honestly know how we can do your induction today," the nurse said apologetically.

So we went to bed on the day our little girl was to arrive just the same as we began that day -- an expectant mother and a waiting father.

It wasn't until the afternoon of the next day that they called us to come in for the induction.  As always, I asked myself what was to be learned from this delay.  Maybe an extra thirty-six hours of further lung development were just what our little baby needed to be healthy.  Or maybe God was simply teaching my wife and me a lesson in patience.

Through that evening and till the afternoon of the next day we continued to wait until our beautiful little girl showed herself for the first time.  With her cries, I realized that more than anything I learned again that I wasn't in control, nor the doctors who were charged with my wife and daughter's care. 

God is in control of all of the stops and the starts and even the pauses of our lives.  With all the wonders of technology, He is still in charge.

His timing is perfect and while we may not have wanted to wait, our baby girl was just perfect.  For, even when God seems to be a day late, He is right on time.

Friday, August 23, 2019

A Lizard Named Lazarus


"What do you have there?" I asked my eight year old son as he bent over a little wooden box.

"It's treasure!"  He said dramatically.

"Really," I said.  "If it's enough treasure maybe it could help put you through college."

"Actually, Dad, it's some rocks I picked up and one other thing," Elliot proceeded to open the lid and a terrible odor emanated from the treasure box.

"That is the worst smelling treasure I've ever smelled!"  I said.

"That's because there's a lizard in there that I found,"  Elliot told me.

"Is it alive?"  I asked curiously, already knowing the answer.

"No, he's dead,"  Elliot said.  "It's way too hard to catch a live one."

"Maybe you should name him Lazarus," I said.  "All he needs is a resurrection to be as good as new."

In need of a resurrection.

Just a little thing and just the sort of thing that is beyond human knowledge and ability.  It is exactly the same thing that each one of us needs from a spiritual standpoint.

Without Jesus, we are "dead in trespasses and sins," as the Apostle Paul so aptly put it.  We are worthless and even worse, we stink to the One who made us.

The only solution is for us to invite the Savior to the opening of our tomb.  For only He can bring life in a place of death.  Only He can say in the place of death, "Lazarus, Come Forth!"

Friday, August 16, 2019

Alligator or Crocodile?


"Look, Dad, it's an alligator!"  Victoria told me.

"Are you sure that it isn't a crocodile?"  I asked.

"No, Dad, it's an alligator," my four year old daughter assured me emphatically.

I looked closely at the reptile.  I usually can identify the difference between the two similar (but different) species based on the signs on the zoo exhibits, but I know that there are differences other than the signs.  Unfortunately, it is really hard to tell the difference with animal crackers.

Of course, animal crackers seem to inspire a whole lot of questions for me.  Sure, it's a penguin, but which species of penguin is it (truly identifying the genus can be challenging, even for trained zoologists)?  Are there certain varieties of animal crackers that are endangered (and how can we protect them)?  And most of all, can vegans eat animal crackers (insert slippery slope argument here)?

None of this detracts from my ability to enjoy animal crackers or helps me to enjoy them better.  Which is too bad, because I really don't derive much pleasure from a package of animal crackers.

Quite simply, joy is learning to get pleasure from the smallest blessings in our lives.

It is a blessing if your spirit can lift with the tiny things of this life.  It seems as though as humans age it takes more and more to give them the same enjoyment that they once received from something as simple as an ice cream cone or a box of animal crackers.

So it is that I pray, not for bigger blessings or more thrills, but a child like sense of joy.  I want to feel happiness when I open a box of animal crackers, whether it contains alligators, crocodiles, or neither.

Friday, August 9, 2019

Peach Harvest


Our kitchen smells of peaches (which is a good smell).

That's not surprising because peach harvest is here.  We have one peach tree and when we get peaches from it, we got a lot of peaches.

What would be nice is if some reasonable number of peaches would ripen every week -- maybe 20 or 30 and we could eat them over a couple of month's time.  Instead, we got home from spending time with my family to find that we had three bushels of peaches that needed to be "taken care of."

With this in mind, Elaine has been peeling and slicing peaches to make a variety of things, including peach pie, peach bread, peach spinach salad, and peach muffins.  On the canning side she has canned peach jam, peach salsa, peach butter, and peach pie filling.

Somehow being in the middle of peach season makes me think about other seasons.  Life is about seasons.  Elaine is expecting our fifth child.  We are soon going to be moving from one season of our life to another.

The writer of Ecclesiastes said, many years ago, "For everything there is a season."

We are going to be moving from a season of diapers and bottles, into a season of driver's permits and college entrance exams.

The reality is that when you are going through a particular season of your life it is hard to enjoy the good parts and much easier to focus on the aspects where it feels overwhelming.  More often than not we feel more like an entrant into a hot dog eating competition than an attendee at a cook out.

It is hard to enjoy peaches when they are coming out your ears, but a ripe peach is hard to beat and I still enjoy eating them.  In December I know I will think fondly of the tasty fruit we had on our tree, even though we have felt a bit overwhelmed this week.

It is important to try to spend time enjoying whatever season we are in now.  Later on, all we will have are the memories of it that we make today.

Friday, July 26, 2019

The Message of the Pepper




"Wow, Dad, that's a lot of stuff on your hamburger," Elliot said to me.

I looked up, a bit surprised from the construction site on my plate.  On my bun was a burger, followed by a thick slice of pepper jack cheese, followed by lettuce, two tomato slices, pickles and a mixture of southwest spicy mustard and ketchup.  It was definitely the sort of edifice to make the designers of the pyramids jealous.

"It's almost done," I said.  From a plate I took four slices of jalapeno pepper and placed them on top of my sandwich.  Now, I usually don't put jalapenos on my sandwiches, but my beautiful wife had decided to get a few jalapeno pepper plants for our garden and no one else in my family would eat them.  Being a good steward, I didn't want to see them go to waste.

I placed the top part of the bun on top and looked my creation in the eye.  Then I took a large bite. 

For a moment, everything tasted great with all of the normal tastes mixing around my taste buds and then it was all overwhelmed with a strong flavor of jalapeno.  The capsaicin was kicking in.

I know that there are many peppers that are a lot hotter than jalapenos, but honestly, the whole time I was eating the sandwich all I could taste was the spicy peppers and even an hour later, my tongue was still tingling from the experience.

I thought that next time I might just go a bit lighter on the peppers -- or maybe leave them off entirely.

It made me think about the impact that each one of us has on others.  Obviously there are many different parts of our personalities and character that strike people when we meet them, but often there is something about us that stands out and sticks with people. 

It might be our kindness, generosity, or it could just as easily be our selfishness and unwillingness to listen.  There is one thing that people will carry away from their time with us.

Jesus told His followers "By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another."

This then is the way to let those around know who we are following and to leave an impression that lasts far longer than a spicy pepper does on a protesting tongue.

Friday, July 19, 2019

Another Birthday


"Today is your birthday?"  The lady asked.  She sounded surprised, as though it was unusual for doctors to work on their birthday.  "So what are you doing for it?"

I thought for a bit.  "Well," I said.  "I guess I'm going to go to the nursing home tonight."  I could she see she was taken aback.  "Oh, not to stay," I reassured her.   "I have a couple more years till then.  Our church sings at a nursing home in Lynchburg on some Wednesday evenings."

"That sounds interesting," she said.

"And then I thought for the rest of the day I would try to treat my patients with a lot of compassion.  The way Jesus would treat them," I finished with a flourish.  "But no, I'm not doing anything extra special today otherwise."

Birthdays roll around every year whether we want them to or not.  They are typically days when I hear my children singing Happy Birthday and my Facebook account blows up with Happy Birthday wishes.  They are days too of feeling a bit older and not so much wiser.

To me, though, birthdays feel like a time to take stock of my situation, not necessarily asking the question "What am I doing?"  (Although that is a good question).  But, "How am I doing what I am doing?"

I am taking care of people who are dealing with pain and illness and I have done that for many years.  It is easy over that time to lose a sense of compassion and to become a little cynical about people and their motivations.  Cynical doctors can still get through their days just as easily as non-cynical doctors, but I'm afraid they don't tend to leave their patients with as much hope and joy.

As I launch out into another year, I pray it would be full, not only of taking care of the needs of my patients, but of doing so in a compassionate way.   If I can treat people as Jesus would treat them, I believe I can make a difference -- not because of me but because of His power working in me.

That's my birthday wish for this coming year.

Friday, July 5, 2019

Altered Words


"I just figured out the words to Amazing Grace, Dad," Elliot told me, a little proudly.

"Really, which part were you struggling with?"  I asked, mentally scanning the lines.  Maybe, 'I once was blond but now I see?' was the one.

"I thought for the longest time that it said, 'To save a wrench like me.'  Now I know it's saying the word wretch,"  Elliot said.

I laughed.  "Yes, the word is wretch and not wrench."

My children aren't always good with the words of songs by memory and when they don't know a word, they often substitute something that sounds similar.

I suppose they take after their dad there...

The imagery in the song Amazing Grace stands out.  First, there is a picture of humans without grace -- blind, lost, and wretched.  This is crucial for us to understand so that we can connect with how amazing the grace must be to save us.

Perhaps it is easy to think that it took less grace to save someone like me, because I am a little better person than some others that I know.  Nothing could be further from the truth.

It truly took Amazing Grace and Love Beyond Degree to Save a Wrench Like Me.

Friday, June 28, 2019

Reading and Understanding



"Dad, what's an alibi?"  Elliot asked me.  Actually, he said the word 'Alee-bee' which made it tough to figure out what he was asking.

"An alibi is the place and people you were with at the time when a crime was committed," I said, although if I was a good dad, I would probably have made him go look it up in the dictionary.

"That doesn't make sense," Elliot said.  "In this Encyclopedia Brown book he tells this girl that her alibi is all wet.  But how could you have a wet alibi?  It's not like she was swimming or anything."

Without waiting, he turned back to his book.  A second later he asked, "What does it mean to file something?"

"It means to put it in some sort of an organizing place -- like a filing cabinet,"  I said.

"That doesn't make any sense either,"  Elliot said.  "Oh, I see, there must be a special place that some people put their fingernails instead of a trash can."

I hastened to explain the word file in this context.  At the same time, it was clear to me that Elliot wasn't understanding all of the stories in this book.

It strikes me that many people deal with the Bible in this fashion.  They may understand the words, but the deeper meaning of the verses and stories isn't clear to them.

It is only as we read it with our heavenly Father at our side and listen to His voice that we can have a true understanding of the passages.  It is only then that God's Word will make a difference in our lives.

Friday, June 7, 2019

Seeing Jesus


"Dad," Elliot whispered to me in the middle of church.  "Sp, sp, sp, sp!"

I must confess that I'm not very good at reading lips and I couldn't catch a word my son was saying.  "What?"  I whispered back.

"Sp, sp, sp, sp!"  He repeated.  I still couldn't catch anything that he was trying to say.

"Sure, you can go to the bathroom," I said, taking a stab at what I guessed he was asking for.

"No," he said.  Finally, leaning close to my ear, he said, "I can't see the preacher!"

Unfortunately, I didn't have any easy solution for the situation.  When you are eight, you often find that even relatively short people are tall.  Elliot was just having his line of view blocked by someone who was probably 18 inches too tall (even when they were sitting down).

The passage of Scripture came to me of some nameless Greek Jews who came to the Apostle Philip with a simple request.  "Sir, we would see Jesus."  (John 12:21)  That's all we know about them.  We never even find out if they met Jesus after their request.

"We would like to see Jesus."

It seems that this is an awfully big need in our world.  People just cannot see Jesus from where they are sitting.  This is tragic, because it is the thing that this world needs the most.

At the same time, often the best way for people to see Jesus is to see His face reflected in the lives of His followers.  I pray that others might see Jesus in my life.  I may be the closest thing to Jesus that many may see and I want to reflect His love and goodness in all of the interactions I have with others.

Most of all, I pray that the view of Him would not be obstructed by the very people who should be pointing to Him, His followers.

Friday, May 17, 2019

Pancakes and Chocolate Donuts


"Well," I said.  "It looks as though your diabetes isn't in too bad control.  Your A1C is 6.6 percent which means that your average sugar is around 140."

"That's great," the older lady told me.  "I think to celebrate I'm going to go to the Golden Corral and eat a mess of pancakes!"

"Oh," I said.  "That's really not going to help keep things in line."

"At least I'm not going to Walmart," she said.  "They have donuts there that I love!  They have thick chocolate icing on them that's to die for!"

"Oh," I said, at a loss for words.  Neither pancakes or donuts is on a glucose friendly diet.  I had visions of her next A1C test being 12.

For some reason, human nature seems to lead us to reward ourselves with the very things that we are denying ourselves.  A diabetic who has just gotten her A1C under control rewards herself with chocolate donuts.  A man who has just lost fifty pounds rewards himself with a trip to his favorite buffet.

We allow the enemy we are fighting to set up a camp in an area where we have already won the battle.  The fight begins again.

It is this way with sin as well.  What we need is not control, but a change of our desires and a knowledge that we will not let those desires back in control, even for a single meal.

Otherwise we will end up like a woman with diabetes dreaming of a plate stacked high with pancakes.

With chocolate donuts on the side.

"Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body so that you obey its evil desires."  Romans 6:12

Friday, May 3, 2019

Cinnamon Rolls and Chili



"I want a Cinnamon Roll!"  Victoria announced in a very clear, firm voice.  Elaine had just finished baking some of those delicacies and they smelled good enough to have caused even the mouth of a graven image to water.

"I'm afraid you haven't finished your chili from supper," I said.  "If you eat that, then you can have one."

"No!"  Came back the answer.  "Chili is soup and I don't like soup!"

It was interesting, as I'd never heard Victoria express this dislike of soup before.  My guess though, was that compared with Cinnamon Rolls, Chili Soup no longer sounded delectable.

"You just have to eat it first," Elaine said.  "Dessert can't be the first thing you eat at your meal."

(I have often violated this rule and often start a meal with a cookie when no one is watching, but we'll leave that for another day).

I suppose it is a testament to what awesome parents Elaine and I are that we didn't cave to our incredibly stubborn four year old.  While Victoria is very vocal in her wishes, she is just expressing a basic human trait -- the desire to skip over the difficult things in life.

There may be times that we can bypass the unenjoyable things to go to those things we like more, but generally, when we do that the bypassed things continue to sit there, just waiting for us to start on them.

So much better just to do things in the order we face them.  Because Chili Soup must precede Cinnamon Rolls.  Always.  Just ask Victoria.

Friday, April 5, 2019

A Trip to the Dentist


I went to the dentist yesterday.

I suppose I should be pretty excited to go there.  After all, I have never had to have a filling or any serious work done in my mouth.  All the same, when the hygienist got her instruments of torture stuck between my molars and started commenting on how tight my teeth were together, I wince more than a little on the inside.

Afterward, as I walked to my truck, a little traumatized, I could hear my mother's voice.  "But did it kill you?"

And of course, it didn't.  Kill me, that is.

In life there are many things that won't kill you, but are still no fun to go through.  A surprisingly high number of them revolve around medical tests and procedures.

There are all sorts of statements about painful situations that I don't believe.  From the silly "No pain, no gain!" to the simply not true "What does not kill me will only make me stronger," these statements are uniformly ridiculous and designed to try to make us feel good about pain.

There are plenty of reasons that we endure suffering.  One of the biggest reasons (and the reason I see the dentist routinely) is hopefully to avoid worse suffering in the future.  I'd rather have my teeth cleaned regularly than end up losing them.

This is the reason that most people go through medical tests.

Christians go through suffering for a different reason.  Paul said in the book of Romans "For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us."  In other words, heaven is worth more than anything we have to go through in this life.

I hope we can keep that glory in mind, even on days when things aren't going so well. 

I don't know that I will ever enjoy suffering, but by God's grace, I can endure anything I face.

Even a trip to the dentist.

Friday, March 29, 2019

I Want to Talk!


Our family was sitting around the table with General Hubbub reigning.  Everyone was in the process of saying something.  Our children were sharing something they'd read, or some odd trivia they'd found on a map of Virginia, or something that had happened to them (and not doing with library voices either).

In the midst of this Victoria's plaintive voice came wailing, "I want to talk!"

We were all silent for a few moments and then I asked her, in the stillness, "What do you want to say, Victoria?"

There was another pause, then she said, "I don't know."

I suppose the thing is not so much that Victoria wanted to talk as she wanted to have someone else listen to her and pay attention to her.

I think that all of our children have had similar moments.  These are times when they feel as though they have not had enough attention from their family and cry out for it in one way or another.

They come by this honestly, because I too have developed some attention seeking behaviors at certain immature moments.  While my job is listening to others, there are more than a few times that I have wanted someone to listen to me.

The blessing is that God is always listening.  He tells us in the book of Isaiah "Before they call I will answer; while they are yet speaking I will hear."

Many times that is all I need.  I don't need someone to solve every problem or part the Red Sea for me.  I just need a Heavenly Father who listen to how my day  was and tell me that He cares and just be there to hear me and love me.

And while my Father in heaven created the Universe, sometimes I think His willingness to listen to me is His most miraculous trait of all.

Friday, March 22, 2019

Tomatoes in Heaven?


"Dad, will there be tomatoes in heaven?"  My eight year old son asked me, as he poked at the garden salad in his plate.

"Probably so," I said, without thinking too much about the question.

"Oh," Elliot said, somewhat crestfallen.  "But I thought there would only be things we like in heaven."

To be clear, Elliot doesn't like tomatoes.  He can eat them, but seemingly only with a healthy dose of ranch dressing added to them.

There was a long pause as my children digested the fact that there might be food they wouldn't like in glory.  "Well, I just won't eat them!"  Elliot said with finality.

"Neither will I!"  Echoed Vince and Victoria.

Of course, I don't actually know about the tomato situation in heaven.  It just isn't mentioned in the Bible -- probably because it isn't particularly important.

At the same time, I think the mistake many (including my children) make is to think that we will want and like the same things in heaven that we do here on earth.  The Apostle John wrote in his first letter "Beloved, we are God's children now, and what we will be has not yet appeared; but we know that when He appears we shall be like Him, because we shall see Him as He is." (I John 3:3)

Just as our tastes and desires change when we become a Christian, they will change again when we see Jesus in that day.  The blessing is that we will be like Him for all eternity.

Possibly that means that people who only like ketchup will like tomatoes too, but that is probably just the tiniest part of what it means to be like Jesus.

Heaven will be wonderful.  Even if there are tomatoes there.

Friday, March 8, 2019

A Box of Packing Peanuts


"Oh, wow!"  My (now eight year old) son, Elliot said. "What are you going to do with those?"

"I'm not sure," I said.  "I suppose just throw them away.  I'm not sure what you can do with packing peanuts if you don't have anything to pack."

I had just opened a box full of greenish colored packing peanuts with one small item wedged somewhere in the middle.  Elliot grabbed a couple out.  Then he popped one in his mouth.

"Elliot,"  I said, a little sharply I'm afraid.  "Don't eat that.  It isn't good for you."

Elliot quickly swallowed the packing peanut.  "But Dad," he said.  "They're so good -- just airy and chewy.  I've eaten them a lot before and they never hurt me."

"That doesn't mean that they are good for you," I said, a little at a loss for words.

I know that people eat food all of the time that has minimal nutritional value, but seldom does it contain quite as little as Styrofoam packing peanuts do.  I have often thought that cheese puffs were probably just fried packing peanuts with artificial cheddar dust sprinkled on them, but I'm not totally sure about that.  Still, I have never had a desire to pop one of those little squeezy items in my mouth either, even if they aren't going to kill me immediately.

I think there is a human tendency to pursue foods that taste good, regardless of their nutritional content.  We really don't much more excuse to eat them other than the simple fact that we enjoy them.

The goal should be to get to the place where we make wiser choices, to think about the food and activities we choose for ourselves with more regard than simply to whether we enjoy them.  God created us with minds that we can use to discern what is good for us.

Eating a box of packing peanuts certainly isn't.

Friday, February 22, 2019

Truth


"I noticed at men's prayer meeting this morning that Mr. Bowman had some blood on his pants," I told me children.  "I asked him about it and he told me that the man who owns the Citgo station at the corner of Gladys Road and Marysville Road buys goats from him."

The children sat up, interested in my story.  "Every so often the Bowmans sell him a sheep and they take it to the gas station and he will pray some prayers over it and then they hold the sheep down and he butchers it.  They did that this morning and Mr. Bowman got some blood on his pants from the sheep."

"You're just joking, Dad," Vince said.

"No, Vince," I replied.  "This really happened."

"Vincent,"  Anna said.  "Don't be so spectacle!"

I laughed.  "I think the word you mean is skeptical, Anna,"  I said.

My children are often skeptical of my stories.  I guess it comes from my tendency to joke with them a lot.  At the same time, it is wise to be careful who we believe. 

The other day, I got a call on my cell phone and computer voice told me that it was calling from "Visa and Mastercard Headquarters" about my account.  While I do have a credit card with one of those esteemed creditors, as far as I know, they do not have a joint headquarters.  I decided to politely hang up and wait for the next robo call.

While there are plenty of voices that I do not listen to, I do find that words from the Bible stand out in a world of deception as speaking truth.  It isn't always easy to hear or to understand.

It speaks to me of the darkness in my heart and my need for a Savior.  It does not speak of my best life now, but rather of a road of cross bearing and suffering.  It speaks of a need to love those who are not worthy of love.  Most of all, it speaks of a Father's love for me.

God's Word is truth.

That's why it has stood the test of time.

That's why I believe it.

Friday, February 15, 2019

Breaking Glass


"What are you doing, Elliot?"  I asked my seven-year old son, who was making very odd, high pitched noises, instead of eating his very tasty supper.

"I'm trying to sing a note high enough it breaks my glass,"  Elliot told me.  "I though maybe something happened a little bit ago, but I can't sing high enough all of the time."

"I think it is actually harder to break glass with your voice than it seems,"  I said.  "I've never seen it done and I've lived a lot longer than you.  Beyond which, your cup is made of plastic.  I guarantee that you won't break it with your voice."

I did some research and found out that it is possible to shatter a glass with your voice.  It requires a very delicate glass, the right pitch, and extremely loud volumes -- somewhere around 100 decibels should do it.

While most of us will never break any type of glass with our voices, there is no doubt that they are very powerful.  It isn't their loudness, but what we say with them that impacts others.

James knew this thousands of years ago when he wrote about the tongue, "...but no human being can tame the tongue.  It is a restless evil, full of deadly poison."

I know that far too many times I have used my voice to wound others.  Even though I did no physical harm to them, the hurts are still very real.

Sticks and stones may break my bones, but the scars from hurtful words take far longer to heal...

I need to give control of my words to God and speak with love in all situations.  For when my voice is uncontrolled, glass is the least important of the things that could be broken.

Friday, February 8, 2019

From Velcro to Shoelaces


"Why do I have to learn how to tie my shoes?"  My seven year old son asked in a somewhat disgruntled voice.  "Velcro is lots easier."

"Because only children and old men wear Velcro shoes,"  I said.  "And you are moving out of one group and it will be awhile before you hit the other one.  Beyond which, it is handy to be able to tie a knot that you might someday be able to also untie."


"But Velcro shoes are so much cooler than tie shoes,"  Elliot told me.  "And I'll waste so much time every day tying my shoes when I could just Velcro them on."

It is an odd conversation to have.  I probably have wasted years of my life tying my shoes, at the same time, I can't imagine wanting Velcro shoes before my hands get to arthritic to tie a regular shoe.  And don't get me started on Crocs!

At the same time, I think there is inside of us something that resists learning lessons that we don't think are important.  It isn't just tying shoes, but also things like state capitals, algebra, and all sorts of other things that school children complain are unimportant.

In a sense, God is our teacher as we get older.  Only the lessons He chooses for us aren't very easy and the answers can't be written neatly in a college ruled notebook.  His lessons for us are often titled things like "Faith," "Patience," and "Humility." 

I've not always been good at learning these challenging lessons and all too often I think to myself that I know enough about this one subject.  "God," I have prayed before.  "I know you know best and I think you are trying to teach me something, but could we move on to another lesson please?"

He gently keeps working with me.  His goal is for me to be like Jesus and truthfully that is my goal too, even if sometimes I struggle with what it takes to get there.

Lessons are seldom easy.  Even ones that involve moving from Velcro to shoe laces.

Friday, January 25, 2019

Apple Cider


"Dad, can I have some Apple Cider?"  Elliot asked me.

"I guess so," I said.  "But I didn't think we had any Apple Cider."

"Yes, we do," Elliot said.  "There's a jug of it over there on the counter."

"I don't think you'll like that kind of Apple Cider," I said.

"Oh, I do, I really like Apple Cider," he replied, confidently.

"I'll give you just a little bit," I said, pouring a tiny amount into a cup.

"It smells kin of funny,"  Elliot told me and then he tasted and made an awful face.  "That's terrible," he said.  "It doesn't taste like Apple Cider at all!"

"That's because it's Apple Cider Vinegar," I told him.  "And Vinegar is pretty sour, even if it is made from Apple Cider in the beginning."

Jesus once asked a couple of His disciples if they were able to drink from the cup which He was going to drink, by which He meant were they willing to go endure suffering for His sake.  They answered confidently that they could.  At the same time, we know that they weren't ready at all to drink from that cup.

If I am truthful, I'm not one who enjoys drinking vinegar -- not for health reasons or any other reason.  I would far rather drink Apple Cider and yet, I cannot order my life in such a way as to avoid all hardship.  There are times when the cup I am given has more than its share of sourness in it.

Into this, comes God's promise that He will not leave me.  When I need Him most, He will be there to help me through.

Even when life has given me a cup of Apple Cider Vinegar to drink.

Friday, January 18, 2019

The Fastest Way?


"What's the fastest way from school to the orthodontist's office?"  My son, Vince asked me.

"I don't really know," I answered.  "Mom is usually the one who takes you all.  I suppose you go up 501 to Brown's Mill Road and go up to Lynchburg from there."

"Yes, but that's only part of the way,"  Vince told me, sagely.  "Mom discovered awhile ago that taking Candler's Mountain Road is not the fastest way to get there."

And with this, he launched into a detailed explanation of the correct route.  Sometimes I wonder if my son is part GPS.  Certainly if you ever get lost in Campbell County, Vince is the person you should have on speed dial to set you back on the right track.

Vince is very much focused on the "best" way to get to different places.  By this, he means the fastest way to reach that place.

I have a bit of the same feeling.  When I am on a trip, much like a runner at the Olympics, I am always looking for ways to shave a few seconds of our time to reach our destination.  At the same time, my focus should not only be on the destination, but on the journey to get there.  So much of life is a journey -- a trip made with others at our sides.  Some day, those fellow travelers will not be there and will have moved on to travel their own paths.

A day in which I walk beside my children and make some memories is a good day, even if no great goal is achieved or destination is reached.  My goal is not to get anywhere as fast as possible, but rather to enjoy the journey, seeing the sights and taking time to be with my fellow travelers on the path our heavenly Father has for us.

Friday, January 11, 2019

"Keep Working Till Lunch!"


"I'm hungry, Mom," Vince said.

"Well, maybe you could have some peanut butter crackers while you are waiting for me to get lunch done," Elaine told him.

"But Mom, at school I would be on lunch break now," Vince said.  "It is 12:08 and my break usually starts at 12:00."

Our children had a work at home day, due to a death in our congregation and Vince was trying to keep to his school schedule. 

"Vince, I'm afraid it will be a bit after 12:30 before I will have lunch done,"  Elaine said.  "But we will eat eventually."

"But what am I supposed to do until then?"  Vince asked my beautiful wife.

"Keep doing your school work, Vince,"  Elaine said.  "Wouldn't it be nice to actually be done with it by the time we sit down for lunch?"

Of course, this is a simple question.  Wouldn't it be nice to have your work done?  Unfortunately, the answer is complex.  Most children would like to be done with their school work at the earliest possible time, but they don't necessarily want to focus themselves on their work in the way necessary to produce this early completion time.

God has given us tasks to do.  Jobs, people to minister to, and even, children to prepare lunch for.  I think our tendency is to ask for more breaks.  "I've been working for awhile," we tell Him.  "Can you give me just a bit of time off now?"

His answer is to gently tell us to keep working for a bit longer.  He will give us strength for the moment and just as surely, at the right time, He will give us a break.

Perhaps God's schedule is not what we think it should be.  Maybe we think he should have more built in break time, but in the end, like everything else about Him, His schedule is perfect.

We just have to keep working till lunch time.

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

A New Year


2019 has just arrived.  I guess I'm getting old, because I seldom stay up till midnight any more to see the new year in, I just greet it the next morning when I wake up and so far, each year has  been satisfied with that reception.

Of course, there is only one January 1st each year, but then again, there is only one April 6th and September 20th too -- same as most of us only have one birthday each year (one is plenty).  The point though is not on the year, but on the new aspect of it.  It is a blank sheet of paper, a notebook, as yet with nothing written in it.

Looking forward, the pessimist in me wants to say that there is no reason for optimism.  Surely 2019 will be the same as most years.  It will have good things and bad in it, but surely I will remember the bad more than the good.

I don't think the questions I should be asking are things like,  "How much will other people bless me this year?"  or even "Will 2019 be a good year for me and my family?"  If that's what I'm thinking about, certainly 2019 will be a mixed bag at best.

The real question is "How much can I show love to others this year?"  Because by God's grace, I can be successful there.

There will be times that I find myself discouraged with the behaviors of others.  There will be moments when my children don't behave well or break something that I wish they hadn't broken. There will be times (like last night) when my son gets the stomach flu and clean up duty is in order at 3 am.  All of those things are guaranteed (and a bit depressing).

What is just as guaranteed is that I will have ample opportunity to bless others, just as I will have multiple ways in which I can draw closer to God.

So much of how I feel about the new year will be related to what my expectations are of it going in.  I would rather have those expectations be oriented around my relationship with God and how I can minister to the needs of others and with that, I believe I can expect a wonderful year.