Category Archives: Uncategorized
2012 in review
The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2012 annual report for this blog.
Here’s an excerpt:
600 people reached the top of Mt. Everest in 2012. This blog got about 7,500 views in 2012. If every person who reached the top of Mt. Everest viewed this blog, it would have taken 13 years to get that many views.
Frontline and Jesus
I generally like PBS’s Frontline but I found myself amazed and disconcerted by the portion of their show on Jesus that aired this week. The show appeared to give exclusive weight to the idea that Jesus’ deity was a myth created ex post facto to cope with the power of the Roman empire.
I understand why they would want to find excuses for Jesus not being God, not being divine, not being resurrected. It just seemed like finding a single bone in the sand and telling everyone it was a chicken bone not a dragon’s tail. Of course, it might be a chicken’s bone, but what if the dragon was real? What if archeology and historically faulty human empiricism is not enough?
Frontline could not find a couple of believers with credible Phds? If they couldn’t then I would not trust them to unearth the full scoop on that guy on the cross…
That Guy on the Cross
Funny about him. The title of the show was From Jesus to Christ
Jesus is the name Yeshua which means God saves and Christ means Anointed King
God saves is enough. Jesus is enough. That He is also the Anointed One is the icing on the cake.
A very important cake.
Too good to miss
Cold swim
I know I need to swim because I dream about it. My mind offers creative solutions like living room cascade pools or in the garden coy pond swimming pools. Or it mourns and I dream about pools where the water is gone, seeping out, gushing out or just inexplicably closed to me.
So I push the limits and swim late at night. The water is cool now, in the fifties, not Arctic fanatic cold, but cold enough that I swim gingerly to avoid getting my head wet. I know my skull will ache if I do.
I swim to feel alive and quiet in the world. The stars and stillness are a gift. I usually have to talk myself into the water.
Once I am in I remember why. There is such a grace in water anyway. But in winter the added challenge of cold feels like an unexpected gift.
I like it because it is not pleasant, easy or comfortable–instead it is valuable and bracing.
For a moment I wonder if heaven will be like swimming in cold water–not for everyone’s taste but more alive and challenging than before.
There has been a lot of talk about what is wrong with us–our dying empire, our violent young men. But I know the simplest answer is mostly unspoken because it is so difficult to face–
Perhaps a man would think twice before shooting children or ramming planes into buildings if he believed in eternal justice. A split second after your heart stops beating–wham!
I admit most of these concepts are borrowings from CS Lewis. Everyone should read The Great Divorce. And then blink hard as they look around for signs of these eternal places in the way we each live our lives or not.
Homesick Christmas
So. Being an army brat; homesickness was a big issue. Nothing in the routine ordering of life’s calendar evokes greater nostalgia, more intense pathos than the hoopla of American Christmas.
It can make us feel homesick.
But none of it is real. All the flashy lights, saccharine music, bubbly party dresses in the world cannot begin to fill the void of the solitary manger.
We need that baby.
We need Him because He is hope. He is the inexplicable star in an inky dark sky. He is our Ransom.
And all we do to “celebrate Christmas” can make us feel that much more shipwrecked if we don’t cut through all the noise and plastic.
And push toward the quiet winter manger. What God in His right mind puts His Son in the arms of a girl in the smelly dark of a stable?
Jesus was born homeless
Because He is our home
And we are sick without him
Blog confusion
Christmas Stories
I truly believe Christmas is the hardest season of the year. It is a characteristic of humans–our ability to make the most joyful event in human history into a frenetic, stressful, lonely race for the trappings of glee without the core of joy.
So this month I am giving myself the gift of stories.
My favorite storyteller was my paternal grandfather whom we called Papaw. My favorite thing about Christmas was his stories, his kitchen. For a nomadic military brat, his house, his kitchen was home.
Flawed, aging, ordinary home. But something about the combination of warm food aromas–coffee, pinto beans, brisket, pies–still comes back to me through all these years.
Home. The very place Jesus left to save us.
Buy Me
Human Value, eternal value
I went to a very nice garage sale–antiques, baroque paintings, wool rugs, impressive.
I found several sets of nesting dolls. I had a nesting doll when I was a kid. I had a very limited collection of toys so the Russian doll and her brood were always major players.
One set of dolls yesterday at the sale was a vividly painted set of irregularly shaped dolls-wider spherical base, smaller head.
Really amazing find at 5 dollars.
Then a lady came up to me and told me she really wanted the doll.
As a God-follower I knew I needed to assert her value over the doll, so I handed it over (a little ruefully).
When I still spoke in church I played a warm-up game sometimes. I would tell people to get out their change and either ask each other for the change or actively try to give their coins away.
In one version of the game you want the most stuff, in the other you want to give it all away.
I know which set of rules applies in the value of life–both.
Collect the treasure of love as much as possible.
Give away the things that won’t last.
Jesus says to hoard the treasure of heaven.
What does God treasure?
Love and us.
The New America
It has been over a week since the election and I continue to be shocked by the animosity in our political dialogue.
I recently read about a man who had told his four year old that people from the opposing party were brain damaged. I was not sure what shocked me more–that she was so young or that he was using brain damage as an epithet.
Other egregious examples: any racial insinuations, wrangling about birth certificates, and in general personal attacks against people who you disagree with on public issues.
Something terrible has happened to our political discourse. We treat opposing political viewpoints like mascots for football teams and then we elevate those teams to a status they have neither earned nor deserve. Then we vilify the opposing team.
This hurts us all, but no one more than our children. We justify bullying and prejudice in the name of political parties which have done nothing to earn our allegiance and we begin to view our neighbors as enemies?
Dangerous. We all need to work together–somehow.
To quote a beloved Carson McCuller’s title–the life you save may be your own.
