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March 31, 2008

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 52

Treeonmtarbellr And I'm an olive tree, growing green in God's house. Psalm 52:8a (TM)

A big limb from our Oak tree fell on the roof Saturday afternoon. It scared us half-to-death. The limb must have been damaged in our Winter ice storms and the Spring winds finally snapped it off. Our old Oak tree has seen many Winters, but it's nothing like an Olive tree. Olive trees live for a long time. They live thousands of years, in fact. It's a bit mind blowing to wander the Garden of Gethsemane and touch trees that Jesus may have touched, as well.

When David sings that he is an olive tree, the message is clear. He's well established in God's presence and he's not going anywhere. People may say what they will. His enemies may conspire against him. He may have plenty of people plotting his destruction - but his trust is in God. David is the "blessed" one in Psalm 1.

Am I an Olive tree established in God's house, or am I an old Oak cracking and falling apart in a light Spring wind?

March 28, 2008

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 51

Shattered God, make a fresh start in me, shape a Genesis week from the chaos of my life. Psalm 51:10 (TM)

Interesting that Asaph's Psalm about his reaction to David's affair with Bathsheba is followed immediately by David's psalm of repentence after his affair with Bathsheba.

God is a God of new beginnings. He specializes in shaping chaos (even man-made chaos) into new creation. He takes the shattered and fractured pieces of our life and makes something completely new out of them which honor Him.

In David and Bathsheba's case, his name was Solomon and became one of the greatest kings in history and author of three books of the Bible.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and Mc Morr

March 27, 2008

On the Road Again...

Business_travelI'm in Texas this week (which is a lot warmer than Iowa has been). It's been an interesting trip because I've got two young group members along who are learning the ropes of call coaching this client. It's their first serious business trip and it is bringing back a lot of memories of my first experiences on the road 14 years ago (man, I've been doing this a long time!).

When I started in this business my boss spent a lot of time with me on the road. I learned a lot and there was a benefit to both listening to him and watching him as he interacted with clients. That all stopped about 8-10 years ago for a combinations of reasons. For the past eight years or so I've been doing a lot of this on my own.

It struck me as I was driving to the airport this week how the seasons of life change with time. I was the protege', then I became the haymaker, now I find myself the mentor.

I pray I do it well.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and ThinkPanama.

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 50

Dead_sea_scrolls "Time's up for playing fast and loose with me." Psalm 50:22a (TM)

The Psalms are lyrics to ancient songs. When the Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered back in 1947, these ancient, handwritten copies of the Old Testament revealed that the Psalms originally had liner notes which had been lost through the centuries. In most updated versions of the Bible, the liner notes are now included at top of the Psalm.

If you're like me, you tend to ignore all the footnotes, headers and ancillary "stuff" in the Bible, but sometimes you're missing "good stuff".The liner note to Asaph's psalm today says that it was written by Asaph at the time David's adultery with Bathsheba. Asaph, like most of Israel, were stunned and angry with David's actions. Asaph, like all true musicians, picked up his harp and poured out his thoughts and emotions in a song - this song.

Asaph takes up what he believes to be God's thoughts on the matter. David was playing "fast and loose" with Him, treating His word "like garbage." But even Asaph understands God's grace, finishing the song with the hope of salavation if David will simply "set foot on The Way."

Maybe you should read the psalm again and think of Asaph's anger, disappointment and disillusionment at his King's affair.

The lyrics take on new meaning when you know the context. Liner notes are a good thing.

Photo of Dead Sea Scroll courtesy of Flickr and Southworth Sailor.

March 26, 2008

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 49

Heath So don't be impressed with those who get rich
      and pile up fame and fortune.
   They can't take it with them;
      fame and fortune all get left behind.
   Just when they think they've arrived
      and folks praise them because they've made good,
   They enter the family burial plot
      where they'll never see sunshine again
. Psalm 49:16-19 (TM)

We aren't guaranteed a tomorrow. There's no promise of another day, another hour, another breath.

Choose well.

Creative Common photo courtesy of Flickr and Howie Berlin.

March 25, 2008

Easter 2008

Easter morning greeted us with a blanket of new snow this past Sunday. Ugh.

Despite the cold and snow, it was a cheerful day as we celebrated the resurrection. Wendy and I served during the 9:30 and 11:00 services at church, and the girls went to the late service with their mom. We then took the girls to the Vander Hart get-together here in Pella where we got to see our newest niece, Sophia. She's gotten so big since Christmas. What an absolute doll.

Then it was off to Des Moines to have a late Easter dinner with Grandpa Dean and Grandma Jeanne. Jody, Scott and the kids were there so the cousins got to hang out together for a bit. It was a nice afternoon with plenty of great food - like Grandma's cinnamon rolls and marble fudge cake. Mmmmm.

We finally headed home stuffed and tired in the early evening. It was as Easter should be. God, family, food, and laughter.

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 48

Grandma Then you can tell the next generation detail by detail the story of God, Our God forever, who guides us till the end of time. Psalm 48:13-14 (TM)

My life is a testimony of God's faithfulness. Answered prayers and miraculous provision on a journey over mountain tops as well as through dark valleys. How will my children and grandchildren know about how good God was to me if I don't tell them?

In the days of the Old Testament, before writing was common and before television sucked every spare moment from us - family stories were told around the campfire. Grandchildren learned their grandparents stories. Children were told about God's work in their parent's life. Family became a living word picture of God's faithfulness which gave faith and hope to the next generations.

So, what's your story?

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and andycarvin.

March 24, 2008

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 47

KingGod is Lord of godless nations— sovereign, he's King of the mountain. Psalm 47:8 (TM)

I remember playing King of the Mountain as a kid. Of course, when you live in IOWA mountains are kind of scarce. So, the game usually got relegated to winter when the snowplows made mountains of ice and snow on the corner of the school playground.

The thing about King of the Mountain is that you could always be king for a time, but there was always someone bigger and stronger. There was definitely a higher-archy of third graders in my class who could hold the mountain for a time, but when the sixth-graders came out from recess it was all over. No one was going to stand up to those guys.

It's sort of the same way on this playground called Earth. Kingdoms rise and fall. Kings stand on their mountains for the length of their recess. But Scripture promises that God will someday hit the playground. Then all bets are off.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and Underwater Guy.

March 21, 2008

Star Wars According to a 3 Year Old

Email subscribers: If you can't see the video, you can watch it here.

Spring Break 2008

St_louis_022 Both girls returned home last night from their Spring Break trips. We all ended up hanging out in the home office upstairs looking at pictures and hearing their stories as they both unpacked, cleaned up and settled back in at home.

Madison went with her choir to New York City. Three busloads of them sang in several venues, went to a couple of Broadway musicals and saw the sites. Her favorite concert was singing at a mission for the homeless. When the choir sang their selection of gospel songs, she said the homeless began to worship passionately and it was the first time many of the kids in the choir realized what they were actually singing. Ground Zero was another moving visit for Madison, though she was surprised at the lack of reaction from some of her peers. We talked last night about 9-11, where we were, what we remember of that day.

Taylor spent the week in the inner-city of St. Louis where they helped a few families clean up and paint their homes. She ended up getting food poisoning (not sure if it was from the Pakistani restaurant or White Castle) and had to make a trip to the hospital for fluids and meds. Other than that little adventure she really enjoyed getting to know the people, especially a couple of folks from Barundi who told her a lot about their home in Africa and their journey to the U.S.

After my travel woes on the road last week, I was happy to spend Spring Break working at home :)

Photo: Taylor (in pink shirt) and kids from church help paint a home in St. Louis. Taylor said it was a small, one bedroom home in which the elderly woman had raised her four sons.

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 46

Corruption"Step out of the traffic! Take a long, loving look at me, your High God, above politics, above everything." Psalm 46:10 (TM)

I sat in the backyard last night and took a break from raking to have a nice conversation with my neighbor. The subject turned to politics, which was obviously a passionate subject for him. Politically we stood, as in real life, on opposite sides of the fence. But, whether liberal or conservative we both agreed on one thing: Politics is a corrupt business. We discussed some of the shady things we'd seen from local issues here in Pella, to the statehouse to the federal government.

Perhaps that's why the verse today jumped off the page at me. It's nice that God is above politics. He is not given to closed door meetings and Salvation is not something that can be bought with a sizeable "donation" (wink, wink, nudge, nudge, say-no-more) to the local church or a junket to Cancun.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and Larsz

March 20, 2008

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 45

CastleMy heart is stirred by a noble theme as I recite my verses for the king; Psalm 45:1a (TM)

This wedding song is interesting in its "noble theme". It's interesting how some themes seem common to the human experience - no matter the culture or the place in history. The groom is the prince, the knight, the warrior. The bride is the beautiful princess, dressed in a beautiful gown. The outcome is love and offspring.

Not too different from the way we still sing of love and romance today, nor of the way we protray it in movies and stories.

March 19, 2008

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 44

Ok_cityGet up, God! Are you going to sleep all day? Wake up! Don't you care what happens to us? Psalm 44:23 (TM)

Wendy and I saw a play the other week. It was called Camp Angel and it provided Wendy and I a lot of food for thought. In the play's most dramatic scene, a radical Christian who had committed acts of terror here in the United States was being tortured in order to get him to reveal who his accomplices were. He took the torture, crying out his misplaced faith in his god. The prison official then, as the prisoner was tortured, cried out his agonizing doubts and disappointment with a "Where were you, God?" mantra as he recounted scenes like Dachau and Darfur.

One of the most difficult questions we all must grapple with is the tragedy, both personal and corporate, of living in a sinful world where people are given the choice to do evil things. Bad things happen to good people in this world in which evil is as ever-present as good.

Faith, the Bible says, is the "assurance of what we hope for, the evidence of things unseen." Sometimes that means being assured of that which is good in the midst of overwhelming evil.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and Captured by the Light

March 18, 2008

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 43

Retriever Why am I pacing the floor, wringing my hands over these outrageous people? Psalm 43:2b (TM)

John Trent and Gary Smalley wrote a book called "The Two Sides of Love" in which they explain personality types in word pictures using animals. It's a great book, especially for families. The book helps you understand that, no matter what personality type you are, there are strengths and weaknesses to your particular bent. In fact, the thing that is your strength can also be your weakness. The ying and yang. The flip-side, as it were.

According to the test in the book I'm a "Golden Retriever". That's my dominant personality type. Like "man's best friend" I'm highly relational, love to please, fiercely loyal and hold stubbornly to what I believe is right. Those are strong qualities. But because of those strengths, I'm also highly prone to relational stress and pain. It drives me crazy.

As I read the Psalms, I see a lot of those same qualities coming out in David's lyrics. I think he had a lot of "retriever" in him. You hear his heart, his loyalty, his stubborn faith in God no matter what the circumstances. You also hear relational conflict and stress tearing at his heart.

And what do you do about your weaknesses? I think David's psalm offers good advice. You pick up the compass and lantern and keep walking. You keep learning. You keep seeking after God to help you maximize your strengths and minimize your weaknesses. You learn from your mistakes, but you stay to the path and keep walking.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and "kisses are a better fate than wisdom"

March 17, 2008

Homecoming

I've attended and served in all sorts of churches. Big suburban mega-churches and little country churches cut into cornfields. Methodist, Baptist, Quaker, Presbyterian, Reformed, Independent...I've made the grand tour. I've learned that there's positives and negatives to be found in every church. When you boil it down the church, after all, is just a bunch of silly human beings scratching their heads together and trying to figure out how to live with one another.

If there was one church that I would call "home" it's Westview. Yesterday I had the opportunity to go back and share the message at Westview. Wendy and I had a great time seeing old friends and making new ones. I love that feeling when your heart feels at home.

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 42

The_bluesWhy are you down in the dumps, dear soul? Why are you crying the blues? Fix my eyes on God — soon I'll be praising again. He puts a smile on my face. He's my God. Psalm 42:5 (TM)

Everyone needs to sing the blues once in a while. It's part of the human experience. The rain falls on the good and the bad. If you've never sung the blues then you can't appreciate fully the times of joy and praise that follow. The important part of singing the blues is knowing in your heart it is only temporary.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and Danny Hammontree

March 15, 2008

No Grass Growing Under Their Feet

EarthI had to laugh when I read a friend's e-mail yesterday. They had received Madison's support letter for her upcoming mission trip to Thailand. "No grass grows under that girl's feet, does it?!" the e-mail read.

I laughed because I was just getting ready to see Madison off on a different trip. She and her high school show choir are headed to the Big Apple for spring break. They'll perform in and around the city. Nope. No grass growing under those tootsies.

It reminds me of parent-teacher conferences. When I spoke to Madison's geography teacher, he laughed and said, "She's been to Asia. She's been to South America. That girl knows more about geography than me!"

Good for her. Good for Taylor. They've both been blessed to visit remote places and experience distant cultures. They both have taken the step of faith to go. My hope has always been that the girls grow up with a global perspective. Small town Iowa is a great, safe place to call home - but there's so much more out there.

Experiencing it can only help you to better understand yourself.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and Fleur-Design.

March 14, 2008

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 41

Super_glue "You know me inside and out, you hold me together..." Psalm 41:12a (TM)

For those looking at it from the outside, travelling for business seems fun and exciting. Perhaps it is for others, but weeks on the road are long and hard for me. The hours are long. The stress of travel wears on you as a million circumstances beyond your control can completely ruin your schedule and leave you stranded. I don't sleep well in hotels, tend not to eat well in restaurants, and I miss my family.

When I get weary and heavy laden, that's when I begin to unravel emotionally. I can feel it come on me like a slow rising tide. But, I've learned to recognize it, and I've learned to consciously choose to take it to God and let Him be my super glue. God helps me "hold it together." A verse I memorized kept coming to me this week as God reminded me of His presence in my stress...

Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all comprehension, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. Philippians 4:6-7 (NASB)

March 13, 2008

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 40

Merit_badgeDoing something for you, bringing something to you — that's not what you're after. Being religious, acting pious — that's not what you're asking for. Psalm 40:6a (TM)

I'm not an old man, but I've put in 15,294 days on this ol' Earth. Just over 10,000 of those days have been spent on my faith journey as a follower of Jesus. Along the path I've found one simple truth to be the most widely misunderstood:

All the good things you do will never get your ticket stamped to heaven. It's not about working hard enough. Salvation has never been about earning your own way.

It's a simple matter of believing.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and iccpictures

March 11, 2008

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 39

Taxi Oh! we're just spit in the wind. We make our pile, and then we leave it. Psalm 39:6 (TM)

Wendy will tell you that there are times I can easily get worked up about things. Take right now, for example. It's actually Tuesday night as I write this. I'm trying to get to Louisville for a meeting early tomorrow. There was not a rental car to be found in ALL of Cincinatti (where my plane landed) so I had to rent a taxi. I figured it's going to be a long night so I'll read tomorrow's chapter and write tomorrow's post tonight as I'm riding in the taxi from Cincinatti to Louisville.

Then the taxi broke down. So now I'm typing as we wait for another taxi to come. A very long day of travel just turned into a very long night of travel.

Sometimes we just need a good dose of context.

I think that's what David is doing in Psalm 39. We can get so focused on our momentary circumstances that we forget the big picture. We're all just spit in the wind. Today's troubles will be tomorrow's distant memory. Life is bigger. There are more important things to worry about.

Like the books says, "Don't sweat the small stuff (it's all small stuff)."

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and dee gee

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 38

King_david I'm on the edge of losing it — the pain in my gut keeps burning. Psalm 38:17 (TM)

When reading the psalms, I often take comfort in remembering that the author (in most cases) is David. You know, David the hero of David and Goliath. David of Michaelangelo's statue. The David we see in stained glass windows at church. King David who united the Kingdom of Israel. David the military general. David they sang songs about. David who was "a man after God's own heart".

Then I read David's intimate, private thoughts. I read the highs and lows of his emotions. I read his incredible faith and unnerving doubt. I read of his triumphs and his failures. Today I read that he was frayed and fragile and on the edge of losing it.

I know that emotion. I've felt that too!

I guess we're all...human.

Be gracious with yourself.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and Friends Friends Friend.

March 10, 2008

The Solace in Fathering Teenagers

Madison_cabaret_2008lr_2 One of my co-workers has done a lot of reading about child psychology and parenting. She once told me that medical research has shown teen-agers brains to be in such a state of change - such a boiling cauldron of hormones and chemicals - it's a wonder they can even tie their shoes.

I've never forgotten this even though I don't know if it's true. Frankly, I don't care if it's true. The very thought gives me solace Taylorpanama0107each day that I see the pile of shoes at the back door. These are the shoes we've asked a million times to take to their rooms. I'm reminded of this research when I find a chunk of chocolate cake on the floor in front of the refrigerator. They had to have noticed that a huge chunk fell on the floor when they were getting it out, but never bothered to clean it up. I bring the research to mind each time I feel taken for granted as a taxi driver, a handyman, a courier running a forgotten paper to school, or an ATM machine.

My daughters will testify that I still manage to lose my patience on a regular basis. Nevertheless, the men in white coats are held ceaselessly at bay by the knowledge that this forgetful, tunnel-visioned, self-centered behavior is all very natural. There is a medical reason for it. I hear Bill Cosby's voice reminding me that children are "brain damaged."

In addition to the comfort I take in this alleged medical research, I also get regular doses of encouragement like the ones I was barraged with this past weekend.

On Saturday night the whole family was gathered to watch Madison perform in her show choir's annual cabaret. She sang a solo and dedicated it to her big sister. She was beautiful, talented, and poised. I was enthralled. She was amazing. When she performed with the rest of the group she lit up the stage. Dad's buttons were busting off his coat on the drive home.

A few hours of shut-eye later it was Sunday morning and I found myself standing in the lobby at church. The woman I was speaking with happened to be in a small group at church with Taylor. I didn't know this. She then went out of her way to tell me that she thought Taylor to be an incredible young woman. "She is inspiring," the woman said. "You are really blessed." A sane, intelligent and trustworthy adult called my teen-age daughter "inspiring".

Sunday evening rolled around. Madison stopped by after church and dropped into the bedroom to tell Wendy and me about her experience at church that night. A person walked up to her and told her that they wanted to bless the light that they saw shining through Madison and all that they saw God doing in her life. This person then handed Madison five hundred dollars. When Madison asked this person what they wanted her to do with it, they responded that they expected Madison to do with it whatever God leads. Perhaps she'll apply it to her second missionary trip to Thailand this summer.

You know what? There's still a pile of shoes left by the back door. You are still likely to find clothes laying on the floor upstairs. There are probably dirty dishes on the counter that should have gone into the dishwasher. It wouldn't surprise me to find food on the counter that never got returned to the refrigerator. There will, most assuredly, be homework assignments forgotten at home - again.

But, you know what? It's okay. The brain damage that comes with adolesence will fade in time. The beauty, character, faith and inspiration you can clearly see in both Taylor and Madison - well, those are eternal. I can live with that trade off.

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 37

Corporate_ladder"Don't bother with those who climb the ladder, who elbow their way to the top." Psalm 37:7b (TM)

There will always be someone who has more than you do. Always.

There will always be someone who looks better than you do, got more breaks than you did, lucked out more often than you ever will, and ended up with far more than they deserved.

Life is not fair. Bad folks often win and good folks often lose.

Happiness is not in having more of what we don't posses, but in the contentment of fully enjoying every good thing with which God has already blessed us.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and Varshesh

March 07, 2008

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 36

InsignificantGod's love is meteoric, his loyalty astronomic, His purpose titanic, his verdicts oceanic. Yet in his largeness nothing gets lost; Not a man, not a mouse, slips through the cracks. Psalm 36:5-6 (TM)

There's an old song that was sung back in the seventies. I haven't thought of it in years, but this verse in today's chapter brought it to mind...here are the words to the best of my recollection:

If I'd been the only one, alone in my despair, still you would have come for me.
If I'd been the only one, thinkin' no one cared, still you would have come for me.
If I'd been the only one.
Every tear he cried was just for me, the blood he shed was just for me
and as he slowly died on Calvary, I get the feelin' that he was thinkin' of me
If I'd been the only one.

It's amazing to come to the realization that what Christ did on the cross was as personal as it was universal.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and CaroWallis1

March 06, 2008

Thoughts on Birthing Class

Birthing_classOur friends Judd and Jodi, whom we've not seen since December (when you couldn't hack a good Iowa loogey without hitting a presidential candidate), are expecting their first child in a few weeks. If you'd like a good laugh today, you should read Judd's thoughts on their recent experience at birthing class.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and gaetanlee

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 35

ScreamPlease get up—wake up! Tend to my case. My God, my Lord—my life is on the line. Do what you think is right, God, my God, but don't make me pay for their good time. Psalm 35:23 (TM)

Psalm 35 is what Bible scholars call an "imprecatory" psalm. That's a large, important sounding word (which scholars love to use) which means to call down curses on someone. David starts out his song asking God to punch his enemies on the schnoz (that's a large, important sounding word for what Bible scholars call the nose). He ends up asking God to take up his case.

Some people have issues with imprecatory psalms. It doesn't sound too godly, asking God to punch your enemies in the schnoz. But, the psalms were David's gut-level-honest cries to God and David was fully human in his cries. I don't have a problem with that. The Bible instructs us to let God be the judge. In pleading his case before the Righteous Judge, David was doing exactly what God wants us to do - let Him be Judge.

Like David, I understand what it's like to be wronged. I know what it's like to be falsely accused. I can recall being slandered many times by strangers, friends and loved ones. I know the experience of people rolling their eyes and turning their back on me because they believed lies. I know hostile accusation. Perhaps the hardest thing when you've been wronged is to be "quick to hear, slow to speak and slow to anger" (James 1:19)- to choose not to take up your own cause and let God be the Judge.

I can scream and cry and plead my case before God, asking Him to lock up my enemies and throw away the key. I can even, if I want to, scream for the death penalty when someone cuts me off in traffic. The cool thing about letting God be Judge is that, in His omniscience (that's the large, important sounding word Bible scholars use for "He knows everything"), God knows when to judge in my favor and when to say: "Tom, silly boy, you don't know everything and you can't see all the circumstances. I appreciate the rant. I hear you. I love you. Now go sit down, calm down, forgive, let it go, and let me take care of this."

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and pensiero

March 05, 2008

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 34

StrawberryOpen your mouth and taste, open your eyes and see — how good God is. Blessed are you who run to him. Psalm 34:8 (TM)

Wendy and I often find ourselves in the company of non-believers and those whose concept of God and Christianity are far removed from ours. We find the conversations stimulating, fascinating and challenging. These conversations give definition to what we believe and, hopefully, challenge others perceptions as well. Recently we were listening to some people criticizing what they perceived to be the emotionalism stirred up at church camps. The belief was that Christians brain-wash their children.

Wendy and I were revisiting the conversation the other night. While I will freely admit that I've seen more than one church camp manipulate presentations for the emotional effect (much like theatre), I also believe that a relationship with God is just that - a relationship. Relationships are sensory experiences and they produce real emotion. Christianity is not just an intellectual adherence to a set of dusty doctrines penned by monks centuries ago. It's a living, breathing, tasting, seeing relationship with the Almighty.

In my own relationship with God I'm given to angry rants, gleeful laughter, swelling gratitude, and remorseful tears. My relationship with God is as sensory as it is intellectual.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and jbelluch.

March 04, 2008

Intimacy Lost

LetterToday I came across a great post at Ginny's Small Studio about letter writing.

I miss writing letters. I miss receiving letters.

I miss the days of running to my College Post Office (CPO) box in anticipation of hand written letters from my parents and friends back home. I even miss the sense of loss when the CPO was empty. It made the days of finding letters inside even more special. I miss that tactile sensation of opening an envelope - like opening a gift - wondering what treasure of words, thoughts, stories and ideas lay inside.

My life-long friend Dave and I became friends through letters. I was in college as he was finishing up his last year of high school. I wrote him, he wrote back. I replied and he replied to my reply. We did not stop replying to each other. For years we faithfully wrote one another. Once, twice, three times a week we were journaling our lives, our thoughts, our passions and our foibles through letters and post cards. I went on into marriage and a career as he went on to study and teach in France. Still the letters continued.

Those letters are a treasured chronicle of that age of my life. The birth, growth and maturity of a friendship is right there in hundreds of envelopes on hundreds, if not thousands of pages covered in personal, handmade lines of ink and graphite.

I fear that our culture lost something when technology robbed us of letter writing.

Yes, e-mail is fast. Yes, e-mail is convenient. Yes, e-mail is cheap.

So is a prostitute.

The bytes and pixels of e-mail will never match the intimacy of a personal, handwritten letter.

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and Aphrodite. By the way, that's an iridium nibbed fountain pen making those letters [for those of you who've never seen one].

Chapter-a-Day Psalms 33

Naked_archaeologistGod takes the wind out of Babel pretense, he shoots down the world's power-schemesPsalms 33:10 (TM)

Wendy and I were watching The Naked Archaeologist on the History Channel the other day (for conservative Evangelicals: He's not REALLY naked on the show - you can watch it!). Not only do I love seeing some of the sites I visited in Israel, but I thought Simcha Jacobovici really approaches the archaeological aspects with an open mind. I may not always agree with him, but I love it when head-bloated, closed-minded academics make arrogant, black-and-white pronouncements about what we KNOW could NOT have happened. He's often quick to point out that we really DON'T KNOW that it didn't just happen the way the Bible says.

Some days that God must just laugh at us and what we think we know.

March 03, 2008

My Struggle with Winter Continues

SnowfallI hadn't seen my driveway since November. There has been so much ice and snow that the best I could do all winter was try to shovel down to the lowest layer of ice. It's been bad. More than on cars has been stuck on the island of ice at the bottom of our driveway.

Then it got near 60 degrees farenheit yesterday. I got out my shovels and spent hours chopping at the ice and clearing the driveway off. I was in my shorts and t-shirt. Sweat drenched my shirt as I hacked and scooped and gnawed until...

Concrete! Glorious concrete!!

My driveway had been released from it's winter chains and could breathe free once more. Free at last! Free at last!! Thank God Almighty it was free at last!

We had an ice storm last night, which covered my driveway in a layer of ice followed by an inch of snow.

ARRRRRRRRRRRGGGHHHHH!!!

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and Marko K

Chapter-a-Day Psalm 32

ConfessionWhen I kept it all inside, my bones turned to powder, my words became daylong groans. The pressure never let up; all the juices of my life dried up. Then I let it all out; I said, "I'll make a clean breast of my failures to God." Suddenly the pressure was gone— my guilt dissolved, my sin disappearedPsalm 32:3-5 (TM)

I've always thought that we Protestants threw some babies out with the bathwater when Martin Luther nailed his grievances with the Catholic church on the Wittenburg door back in 1517. One of them is confession. Sure, I don't think I need a human priest to absolve us (David took his sin right to God, and look at the result) - but I do think that we need confession. It is good for the soul.

Perhaps that's why there are sites springing up for people to confess and share their secrets.

I'm blessed with friends and loved ones with whom I can admit my failures, and I know from them I will receive forgiveness and grace. I also have God's promise that when I confess my sin, He is faithful and just and will forgive my sin and "purify me from all unrighteousness."

Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr and Jovike