Enough said……
Lenten photo-a-day challenge
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Evil
Matthew 10:34, "Do not think I came to bring peace to the earth! I came not to bring peace, but a sword!"
Monday, February 18, 2013
World
An American
psychologist named Timothy Leary made famous a term now taught in every college
psychology class. Leary once a Harvard
University Professor, also convicted felon, and once described by President
Richard Nixon as one of the most dangerous men in America, coined the phrase, “perception
IS reality.”
This is
a profound statement that has more truth than, I think, we can even
understand. Perception is reality. Our world is as big or as small as we choose
for it to be. Meditate on that! You choose who you let in and who you keep
out. You choose to pursue greatness or
do as little as possible just to get by.
You choose whether to focus on your problems, or the problems of the
world.
Sunday, February 17, 2013
Settle
Okay, so
anyone who knows my wife and I know that the word settle does not mean much to
us. We are constantly pursuing
something, we are always moving, and although we make mistakes, (Okay I make
mistakes) we are always trying to better ourselves. If I were to settle with the cards I was
dealt I would most likely be behind bars or dead, it’s a fact!
The word
settle has many meanings; in fact, Merriam-Webster lists 8 definitions for the
transitive verb settle, and 6 for the intransitive verb! Most people do not know the word settle is
also a noun. Today is the first photo I
have posted that I did not take myself.
It is a picture of an 18th century settle. Some of you know
that one of my many hobbies is refurbishing antique furniture. I don’t know a lot about the settle but I do
know they were typically handed down in families. Today they are often found in entry ways,
which was actually the original purpose for them.
In the
18th century almost all career paths lead to physical labor. There is almost no better feeling than coming
home after working a 16 or 18 hour shift of physical labor, being completely
physically spent, and sitting down to take your boots off. I think that is where the original
significance of these pieces came from.
The man of the house would sit down there to take his boots off after an
exhausting day of work. If you know the feeling I’m talking about, it’s a moment
of clarity. It’s the first moment of the
day that you can just be still. You sit,
and you feel, and you rest, and you live the moment.
That
moment is something I need to focus on.
Although I don’t miss working like that anymore, there is a sick longing
for that feeling. Psalm 46 verse 10 has
probably been one of the most impactful scriptures to me in my walk of faith. It simply states to, “Be still and know that
I am God.”
Another
definition of the word settle, one we are all more familiar with is to “come to
rest.” There is so much significance to
this. From Biblical significance of the Sabbath,
to God’s creation of the world, to sitting down as a father and telling my wife
and kids that I love them. I think that it’s
time finally, in my life, to settle down…
Saturday, February 16, 2013
Injustice
My pantry
before I go grocery shopping for the week, because we don't have any food.
|
God is good! I do not understand why I am so blessed when others are
not. I am encouraged by the trend of
corporate social responsibility in our country. Please browse the links I have
attached to see how you can help.
Stop Hunger Now30 Hour Famine
FEED
TOMS
The Water Project
Friday, February 15, 2013
See
In order for a human to see there must be light. Light enters the cornea, then the pupil. Depending on the amount of light the pupil
will either dilate or contract. Still
with me?
Facts
about light:
-1905 all physicists knew without a doubt that Light
originates at a source, spreads out evenly and continuously through all spaces
accessible to it.
-Light travels 670,000,000 miles per hour.
-When Light hits something it either; bounces off, passes
through, or is soaked up
-The speed of Light is affected by the medium through which
it travels.
-When Light hits a mirror it reflects Light in exactly the
same pattern in which it arrived.
In
school we were taught a Newtonian understanding of the universe. Huh? Cause and effect. Oh yea! Isaac Newton proved that the universe is
governed by a set of rules…. Or is it?
For instance, if you are running 5 mph and are being chased by a dog who
is running 10 mph the dog is gaining on you at 5 mph. This is Newtonian physics. So if you are driving in your car and a
photon of light is following you at 650,000,000 mph and you are driving 100 mph
how fast is the light gaining on you?
How about if you were driving 1000 mph?
How about 10,000 mph? (Don’t try to answer this it is a trick question.)
The
answer is 650,000,000 miles per hour…. No matter how fast you are going light
will still be gaining on you at 650 million miles per hour. In 1915 Albert Einstein declared that, “Light
simply does not follow the rules?” Are we even talking about light anymore?
The
Bible describes Jesus as the Light….Weird! We know that when Light hits
something it bounces off, passes through, or is soaked up. Huh. It’s kind of like when someone
encounters Jesus. I mean it either bounces off because something in their life,
or some experience has made them just not interested. It is soaked up, because they need Jesus so
bad, but they don’t think they are worthy to share him with anyone else. Or, Light
hits someone like my wife, and it passes through them. Others see the light.
Light is
also affected by the medium in which it passes through. Uh oh!
For instance, people who know me, who know my past, who know my heart,
know that Light does not always show through me. You see, some mediums distort the light. They turn a beautiful light into something
different. They might not mean too, but
their imperfections distort the light. It
happens.
A mirror
reflects Light in the EXACT same pattern in which it arrived. Jesus was a mirror. Jesus and only Jesus showed mankind Light in
the exact same pattern in which it was meant to be seen. People need to know this. Because I or anyone else claims to be a
Christian does not make us free from imperfections. We only try to be accessible to be a medium for Light
to travel.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Return
The Bible is full of
stories about men who have at one point turned away from God. The Old Testament reminds me of a 1980’s horror
movie. The ones that when you are
watching you are like, “No you idiot don’t open the door!” but the whole time
you know they are going to. I mean it’s
obvious what is going to happen. All of
your friends have disappeared, there is a pool of blood seeping in underneath
the door, and yet they still open the door.
This is
the way I live my life… Right down to the creepy music that starts to play
after the first knocks. I know what is
going to happen when I open the door, but I open it anyway. Every time I am left questioning myself. I yell at the screen, “Why you idiot, you
knew what was going to happen! Why did you open that door!” This never seems to resolve anything. Eventually I get past the why. The why is a “sunk cost.” Sunk cost is an accounting term that means
something that cannot be recovered regardless of decisions made after the fact. So now what? I’ve turned from God….again, what
now.
I guess
there are really only two places I can go.
I can attempt to continue in the direction I am going, or, I can
RETURN. Psalm 71:20 says, “Though you
have made me see troubles, many and bitter, you will restore my life
again.” This is a great passage to
reflect on. Troubles many and
bitter. I have experienced some moments
in my life that were almost so bitter I can still taste them today. Some of them were because of decisions that
were made by other people, and some, the very bitter ones, were because of
decisions that I made myself. Sometimes
it’s hard to even get past that part of the verse. If you do get past that part of the verse,
there is Truth. Truth that regardless of your situation or how far you have
gone that Jesus can and will restore your life.
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Who am I?
It’s
funny to me how difficult this question can be to so many. Often when someone is presented with the
question they will pause, they might reply with a description of their career,
talk about their families, or they may not have an answer at all. It’s a pretty easy question to answer. I mean, as humans we have many ways to
identify ourselves. We have names, we know our dates of birth, we have social
security numbers, and we have all types of records. This time of year if you don’t know who you
are I suggest calling the IRS, they can tell you!
Somewhere
down the road the question, “Who am I?” was confused with the question, “What
is my purpose?” This question is much
more difficult. I have decided that for
me it is not a question I should try to answer.
I don’t know that any person can truly answer this question.
Who am
I? The Bible explains creation in a
profound poem known as the book of Genesis.
While there is so much debate about different parts of the Bible,
whether it is literal or figurative, Genesis does not fit the mold of any other
theological argument. The book is beautifully
written in a way that, while it does leave many, many questions, it leaves absolutely
no doubt of Divine intervention. God
created. I believe that Genesis is literal, not in time, not in a way that we
fully understand, but in the way that God created. I believe that we are no more than dust from
the ground exposed to Divine purpose.
What is
my purpose? I don’t know. I can’t answer that question. I do know this, my life is not my own. The Bible tells us very clearly in 1
Corinthians 6:19-20 that “you are not your own; you were bought for a price.” To try and say that I am here for any reason
that I can think of would be selling myself short. I can only know who I am, and seek God’s
purpose for me.
Tomorrow’s theme; Return.
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