Thursday, February 13, 2014

SNOW!

Something
To
Think
About,
2/13

The snow that blankets my yard and covers my house and car (which I have to dig out in a little while), covers most of the Southeast US, and is headed North.  Friends further north, who have dealt with this longer, and deeper, expressed a common view: "We are ready for Spring!"  Such is the magnitude, in both breadth and depth, of this weather system that it was cancelling airline flights, provoking declarations of states of emergency, and spreading general bureaucratic heartburn even before it arrived.

Here it is.  Deal with it.

At this point I could get all Theological, and delve into God's sovereignty, and such, but I'll save that for another day.  
(If you crave such musings on this wintry day, here is one.)  Instead I'm choosing to wax thankful and useful.
As I write in the comfort of my warm kitchen, utility workers, firemen, EMTs, and policemen are out doing what needs to be done.  I've seen the snowplows go by several times last night and this morning.  A "mom of" posted a picture of Virginia Guardsmen putting chains on their Humvees so they would be ready to help.  Thank you, all.  
When I finish this, I need to go out and see if I can dig my car to freedom so I can keep an appointment.  I plan to check on my home-bound neighbors to see if I can be of service to them.  On a day like today, a knock on the door, a cup of hot-chocolate, a trip to the mailbox, or even an encouraging phone-call or email can be a great blessing.  Instead of spending all day asking "Why did this happen to me?"  Let's ask, "What can I do to help?"

Finally, a word of encouragement:  My lovely wife says that her favorite passage of scripture is, "This, too will pass."
It will.

It's STTA.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Gentle Persuasion:

Missionary activity is at the heart of Biblical faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.  The mandate to take the Good News into all the world was given by the Risen Lord.
". . . make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.  Teach these new disciples to obey all the commands I have given you. And be sure of this: I am with you always, even to the end of the age.”  (Matthew 28:19-20)
No doubt there have been, and are, missionaries who have used coercion in their attempts to accomplish that task.  As one, however, who has been privileged to know a number of missionaries, I've not met that kind of change-agent.  I've been in places where the change missionaries brought has been evident.  I've seen places where within my lifetime the face of the earth has been changed through their efforts, but not with harshness or arm-twisting.  What I have seen reminds of one of Aesop's fables that I read back in grade school.

It seems that the North Wind and the Sun were having a discussion about who was the more powerful.
A contest was proposed.
A man was walking down the road.  The one who could remove his coat would show that he was mightier.
North Wind went first.  He thought he could easily send the coat flapping off in the gale, but the harder he blew the tighter the man clutched his coat to protect himself from the icy blast.
Then the Sun took his turn.  Gradually, without any obvious show of power Sun just beamed his warmth on the traveler.  Soon the man's coat was slung over his shoulder as he continued on his way.

The greatest force I've seen in the missionary arsenal is the one expressed in a verse we teach preschoolers:  "For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life.” (John 3:16)  

It's STTA.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

I mentioned yesterday that I spent the weekend with some veteran missionaries.  Our Missions Conference also included input from a young family who just finished their first couple of years in another culture.  Interaction with both families reinforced something I observe--as missionaries get deeper into the culture of others, they find that in spite of all the language, clothing, food, and lifestyle differences, at the bottom people are the same.
Where mere outsiders see fascinating cultural oddities, and beauty; those who take time to learn the culture of another people-group discover that the culture of others, like our own, has two sides.  Both our way and their way of seeing the world and living in it, is a product  of God's image in man, thus cultures have elements of beauty, virtue, family love, and truth.  All cultures, however, are also made up of fallen people, thus our cultures include attempts to control our environment for our own selfish desires.  They are rife with greed, oppression, and all kinds of other evils. 
Good missionaries know that "my" task is not to impose my culture on others. Rather it is to humbly point out that the word of God, and the God of the word, confronts all cultures--"all have sinned."  As people come to realize this and begin the lifelong process of Spiritual transformation, they begin to transform their culture from within.  The conscientious missionary does not want the culture of others to become like his/her own.  Rather she/he passionately desires that all cultures would be shaped by God's truth.
That's a task in which we should all be interested.

It's STTA.

Monday, February 10, 2014

" . . . of whom the world was not worthy." (Heb. 11:38)


 
SOMETHING 
TO THINK ABOUT
One of the privileges of being a small church pastor
Ruth Hodge visiting with some CBC ladies last Saturday
is hosting visiting missionaries in our home.  This past weekend we enjoyed having Ruth and Lonnie Hodge as house guests.  Our church has invested in the Hodges ministry in Bolivia for decades.
One of the things I've noticed about missionaries
Lonnie enjoying a good laugh
over the years, is that the dedication it takes to settle in a foreign culture, learn a new language, and reach out to people whose ways seems strange is something often handed down from parent to child.  At breakfast this morning Ruth told us about her step-mom, Muriel DeRitter.  
Muriel was one of those hardy folk who didn't have sense enough to realize what they couldn't do, so they just went out and did it.  Muriel went to Africa during World War 2.  Her ship had to outrun a submarine in order to arrive.  She--a nurse, who hadn't been schooled in tropical medicine, because the war prevented her from getting to the school--was put in charge of a clinic in the Belgium Congo.  A doctor who visited once a week helped her out.  On her first furlough she received training in treating tropical diseases and remained in the Congo until the revolution forced the white missionaries to leave.  After that she married a widower and became step-mom to one of the finest missionaries I know.  
Muriel appeared before the Lord a short time ago after her assignment on earth was finished.

"Well done, good and faithful servant."

It's STTA.  

You can find out more about the message, and her step-daughter proclaim here.

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Where'd I Come From?

I watched the creation/evolution debate last.  It was a well done presentation, though nothing new was presented.
The matter of origins--"Where did I come from?--has become an increasingly controversial matter.  Am I merely the result of eons of random action, or am I "Fearfully and wonderfully made"?
 
If you are a reader of STTA who does not share a commitment to a Biblical Worldview, let me first say, "Thank You."  I really appreciate you hanging out with me.
I go on to encourage you to not reject the grand story you find in God's word based on a disagreement about how all this stuff--me included--got started.  I make that request based on several reasons:
  1. What you have heard "the Bible says" may not be what the Bible says at all.  Some of what you have heard is put out there by those who deny the Bible.  It's like evaluating steak houses based on reviews written by vegetarians.
  2. Those of us who believe the message of the Bible represent a pretty broad view of origins--all the way from those who believe the world is just over 6,000 years old, to those who find room for billions of years of earth history.  I'm not saying everybody's right.  I am saying that people with a variety of views on origins find the message of the Bible, and in particular the story of Jesus Christ, to be compelling and life-changing.  I'd encourage you to get beyond Genesis, before you reject.
  3. All views of origins involve an element of faith.  We weren't there.  We trust evidence, and more importantly the interpretation thereof.  Some of us trust God and His revelation.
  4. It's complicated.  Anyone who tells you it isn't, doesn't have an adequate grasp.
If you are still with me, go with me to the point of the absolute beginning, whether you see that beginning as being a mere six millennia ago, or billions of years in the past.  Step back one second before that threshold.  What do you see?  Two places in the Bible give an answer:
"In the beginning God. . . ."  Genesis 1:1, and
"In the beginning was the Word. . . ."  John 1:1  (Later verses identify the Word.)

If, and it is an "if" we reject at our peril, all that is comes from God, then it makes sense to believe that we had better consider Him.


It's STTA.  


You can find out more about God's plan here.

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Super Bowl Ads, Telling Us About Ourselves

 
SOMETHING 
TO THINK ABOUT
Especially when the game isn't that good people's attention turns to the Super Bowl ads.  The commercials always attract considerable discussion and even controversy.  The spots and the public's reaction to them provide an indicator as to where the edges are in our culture.  Often the ad-makers want their product to be edgy, yet they in  know that being too far over the line can turn customers against their product, rather than draw them in.  One problem is, as a friend of mine used to say, we don't have "a public."  We have "publics."

You'd think the VW take off on a Wonderful Life would be safe
2014 Volkswagen Game Day Commercial: Wings
2014 Volkswagen Game Day Commercial: Wings
enough.  Not so quick.  All the engineers who earn their wings, in der werbespot (commercial), are white guys.  Somebody lost his wings on that one, or at least spent the night on the sofa.
Innuendo is the language of advertising--imply don't say.  Personally, though my wife loves Reese's Cups, I wasn't too fond of the candy company's ad.  It seemed to imply that introducing a third party into a sexual relationship is a good thing.  It looks like the edge is further from the center than it used to be
Audi 2014 Big Game Commercial - Doberhuahua
Audi 2014 Big Game Commercial - Doberhuahua
The Doberhuahua won't catch on as a pet, but the concept
that one shouldn't have to compromise--to put it in the words of some older ads, that "We should have it our way," because "We deserve it."--is, in the world of promotions, a given.  It is settled.  "Settling" is out.

Coke is one of the most wide-spread trademarks in the world.  I
Coca-Cola - It's Beautiful - Official :60
Coca-Cola - It's Beautiful - Official :60
thought them having a variety of people sing "America" in eight languages was cool.  Others not so much.  Jim Denison does a good job exploring some of the implications.  Basically, it seems there are some who say, "It's our song.  If you can't sing it in English (We invented that language, didn't we?) leave it alone.  Some edges aren't clearly defined.

OFFICIAL Chrysler and Bob Dylan Super Bowl Commercial 2014 - America's Import
OFFICIAL Chrysler and Bob Dylan Super Bowl Commercial 2014 -
America's Import
  Chrysler wants to move one of those boundaries.  Speaking the clearest English I've ever heard from him, Bob Dylan is prepared to leave beer brewing to the Germans and watch making to the Swiss, but calling for a pride-in-craft that has been lacking for too long in our nation, he declares: "We will build your cars."  It's a theme Chrysler has been on for a while.  It's an attempt to move the line.  I hope they succeed.   It's an illustration of the truth that what is, is not necessarily what will be.

Speaking of change:  I noticed as I looked at these ads, that before I could watch the ad, I had to watch an ad for the ad.  :)

In case any of this upsets you, watch this.  I love it.

MetLife : National Anthem - Peanuts Super Bowl Commercial 2014
MetLife : National Anthem - Peanuts Super Bowl Commercial 2014


It's STTA.  

Monday, February 3, 2014

Super, And Not So Much

I'm not really a football fan.  I enjoy watching a game from time to time, but I don't invest enough energy to deserve that "Fan" title.  Even as a casual observer, though, I think I'm entitled to say, "Last night's Super Bowl wasn't."  I can imagine prayers going up from the NFL head office.  "Lord, a blackout would be nice."
Even if you have a really big bottle, and you try really hard, you can't put lightning in it.  If it happens to be there, be honest enough to admit it's not my fault.
In our day we are arrogant enough to think that just because we say something is great, or wonderful, or "Super" that it is.  If you are of that persuasion, replay last night's game.
We live in a time in which cat litter is described, on the package, as "extreme,"  many fast food joints no longer even have "small" drinks, and "Good" just isn't good enough.  If "all the children are above average" how do we describe those who really are average, or those who truly do excel, for that matter?
I find myself in a bind here.  My primary purpose in using language is to communicate, not correct.  I can step up to the counter and unload a tirade to the high school kid taking my order, about how all I really want issmall drink, or I can just bite my tongue, go along, and order a "medium," knowing it is the smallest thing they sell.  I will know, but keep quiet about the fact that medium can't be medium if it doesn't have something on each side that makes it medium. 
The real problem is not with ordering drinks.  The real problem has to do with the fact that calling something that is small by a bigger name doesn't make it bigger; it makes the things that truly are big seem small.  In a world where everything is the greatest nothing seems great.
We live in a world where, if we are going to be understood, we have to communicate in "Grande"s, "Colossal"s, and "better-than"s.  Folk actually think that something can be "more perfect" than the merely "perfect."  They're "absolutely sure" about that.  They know their conclusion is "more right" than any other.  If I need to use that over the top language to make a kid who did something worthy of praise feel good about her accomplishment, then I'll sprinkle superlatives like a salt-a-holic seasoning a tomato.  When I'm able, though, I'll do what I'm lamely doing right now-remind myself, and you, that just calling it "the greatest" doesn't make it so.
I have an important motive.  In the Bible I meet One Who is superlative in every sense.  I want to make sure that I reserve the best for Him.

  

It's STTA.