Total Pageviews

Friday, December 24, 2010

...And the Third Wise (Wo)man brought a Mustard Seed.

  
Mustard.png



                      

     I know little about mustard.  I know that I like it on hot dogs and that there are spicy and mild types.  I also know that Jesus used the analogy of its small seed becoming a great bush to describe the kingdom of heaven.  I was reminded recently at how God can use seemingly small things to move in great ways.
     Donald Miller is one of my favorite authors.  His theme in his book, A Million Miles in a Thousand Years, is for us to live a better story: a life of significance.  He recently spoke at the university my daughter attends and passed out envelopes which contained small amounts of money to each student and challenged them to use the money to live a life of significance.  One young woman received five dollars.
     What could she do with this small mustard seed?  Drop it in the bucket of a sidewalk Santa?  Slip a bag of food from a fast food restaurant into the outstretched hand of a homeless person?  Nothing wrong with these options, but they really don't require much thought or effort.  And, they fail in the challenge to LIVE a life of significance.
     Our young friend reflected deeply on the challenge and bought a face painting kit, went to a town fair, and painted children's faces for a small fee.  As she painted she explained the challenge to the parents.  In one afternoon she multiplied the $5 to $465 which was donated to an organization which helps the disadvantaged members of our world!  And, more important, others saw the young woman LIVING a life of significance, and perhaps were motivated to live like that as well.  The little mustard seed became a great tree in which birds could perch.
    

Monday, December 20, 2010

And the Second Wiseman Brought Milk

Circa 1935: A milkman chats with a father holding a baby, as he leaves the daily quota of milk on the doorstep. (Photo by Fox Photos/Getty Images)



My friend told a part of his family's history to a group of high school students at their Sunday evening worship service at our church.  During the Great Depression his grandfather was a teenager in the rural Midwest and he rounded with a milkman.  The young man noticed that the milkman was different.  Despite the economic hardships and gloomy uncertainty of the future, he was giving.  The milk was never withheld if a family couldn't pay for it.  Someone walking down a road was offered a lift.  Kindness was shown.

During their hours together, the two men likely talked about many things including sports, town events and personalities, and national and world events.  We don't know their words.  My friend doesn't know.  Probably because for whatever they seemed at the time, the words they spoke weren't that important.  The people that they discussed are long gone and the events are dusty memories in scrapbooks found in attics and antique stores.  From the eternal perspective they were non-events.

There was something else that the milkman talked about, however, that is known.  He shared the life and words of Jesus.  He told the young man that the original relationship between God and man became broken because another young man, Adam, chose to go his own way.  And that decision was sin.  He explained that all of us have sinned against this Holy God, and that a division between the created and the Creator exists which can never be bridged by man's efforts, however well-intended or good or "holy" they seem to him.  He shared that God, in the form of Jesus, humbled himself by leaving the unknown glories of heaven and the constant presence of God the Father and the Spirit to be born to an unmarried teenager in a manure-strewn barn in an insignificant village in the land of a conquered people who were in the process of being counted and taxed.  The milkman spoke about the words and actions of Jesus, and how those words and actions caused him to be hated by the elite.  He told how one of his followers betrayed him for the amount of money that a slave was worth.  He told how his friends ran away when he was arrested, and how one of his best friends, a man named Peter, denied that he even knew him.  Finally, the milkman told how Jesus remained obedient to God the Father, and allowed himself to be hung on a cross, died, and then rose from the dead to forever bridge the great division between men like the milkman and the teenager and God.

The teenager accepted the truth of the milkman's words and chose to follow Jesus.  His actions caused his family to disown him and throw him out of their home.  Alone, he chose to learn more about Jesus and he hitch-hiked to a large city where he studied and became a minister.  Like the milkman he too told the story of Jesus.  Many believed, including some of his family, and their lives and the world have been changed because of it.

In this time of Christmas tell the story.  Go tell it on the mountains, over the hills, and everywhere.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Message From the First of the Wisemen

  



                                                            

     A good friend of mine is a student at a prestigious university.  Diligent in his studies, he has been honored with recognition for his achievement.  The adage of silent waters running deep was never truer, and his words bear an insight that is not often seen in a man of his age.

     He recently was reflecting on the loss of his mother to cancer while he was still a teenager.  He offered that at first he thought that the tragedy had some lesson that he and others were to learn.  You know the thinking, "God permitted this to happen so that so-and-so would learn such-and-such or experience this-or-that."  Sometimes well-intended folks say this in their attempts to comfort the bereaved.

     Pretty common thinking.  I've heard it preached from the pulpit when Matthew 9:18-26 was the lesson:  "God used the death of Jarius' daughter to reveal his power over death.  This miracle brought many people to realize that Jesus was the Messiah."  Certainly both points are true, but that thinking scratches only the surface.

     My friend stated that while trying to connect the dots between the death of his mother and the unfolding of his and others lives, he realized that such efforts were in vain.  He said that her illness had lessons that were between her and God.  He added that how he reacted to it was between him and God.  Not accepting the limitation of human thinking and understanding to determine what the divine perspective is.  These actions place God in a box that is convenient for us to carry.  I don't believe that God wants us to carry him in times of tragedy such as this.  Rather, he wants us to trust enough that he can carry us.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Food Glorious Food--Part Two

     Years ago when our daughter and son were young, my wife and I were discussing a parenting concern and she asked, "How do we know if we're making the right decision?"
      I answered, "We don't now, but will when they're 18 or so."
     As parents we insured that they had their immunizations, ate balanced meals, studied and played.  And we prayed.  A lot.  Every day.  We prayed for the wisdom to recognize where their God-given abilities lay.  We recognized that even though their cells contained some of our DNA they weren't really "ours" but rather were God's.  The word our indicates possession; possession indicates control.  Parents aren't called to control their children, but rather to shepherd them.
     Shepherds, abiding by their flocks at night, are apropos during this Christmas season.  They protected their flocks from external dangers.  They insured that they ate appropriate foods and drank safe water and had enough rest.  They did this by leading and not by pushing or pulling.
     When our daughter was enrolling in college there were a series of activities and seminars for the parents.  The dean gave us the wise advice that in conversations with our freshman we replace the verbs  must, should, need to, have to, and can't with ones like might and consider.  A shepherd knows that these are better words to use as our children transition into our peers.

                    

 
     So what is the connection to food?  Our son has resumed eating like a normal teenager because he has decided to stop wrestling.  Gone is a 4 inch piece of celery for dinner and in its place is an 8 piece serving of boneless wings and potato wedges covered with cheese.  Gone is the starving, dehydrated, cranky 130lb-er.  The contented 145lb-er has returned.  Food glorious food!
     Dale and I are disappointed that he won't be competing in a winter sport--the first time since the fourth grade that we won't be sitting in a bleacher watching him--but we couldn't be prouder.  He assessed his situation, thought about his options, and prayed for wisdom.  He then articulated the reasons behind his thinking; no more "I just want to."  He went to practice and practiced with the intensity that his coach valued enough to name him one of the co-captains at the start of the season.  Last he looked his coach in the eye and explained that he could no longer compete for the team.
 
                               



                            2010 Season Record at 130 lbs:   5-3 with 4 pins, 27 total points


 



                                                               Way to go, Dano!
















                                                        



Monday, December 13, 2010

Say Yes to the Dress

A few weeks ago my wife, daughter and I were watching this popular reality wedding dress selection show--wow, what does that say about our society?--and I realized how little I remember about the high cost items at the weddings I've attended.  I could probably come up with some of the music:  "Here Comes the Bride", "YMCA", and perhaps an inebriated man channeling Frank Sinatra with a bad karaoke version of "New York, New York".  The food at the reception?  Not a chance, although I do remember that we had shrimp during the cocktail hour at my wedding.  Flowers, invitations, colors of cummerbunds and bridesmaids' dresses all are a blur.  And as for the most expensive item, the bridal dress, hey if I don't remember the food I sure don't remember that.


                                Reception, Ceremony, Lights




But, I do remember some of the words spoken over 25 years ago to the bride and groom by a priest.  He recalled the words of a popular song from the post-WWII era, "Little Things Mean A Lot", and advised that the big things in life like a major illness in a child draw the man and woman closer together.  However, little things like dirty socks that don't make it to the hamper can become the sand between the gears that spell doom.  Every day dirty socks.  On the floor.  Not in the hamper.  Crunch...grind...cough...sputter.


Another little thing can be that the couple speaks different love languages.  Looking for a good gift this Christmas season for a couple in your life?  Consider the Love Languages by Gary Chapman.  Compared to the cost of a wedding dress, it is a little thing, but it could allow a husband and wife or engaged couple to have a greater understanding of each other and keep the machine running.



Thursday, December 9, 2010

Bob the Builder. Can we fix it? Yes We Can



  I was talking with a fellow surgeon today about a recent patient that he examined.  His patient is an athlete who has the capability of playing his sport at the highest professional level with an earning potential  in the hundreds of millions of dollars.  Unfortunately, his patient also sustained a significant injury which may prevent that potential from ever occurring.

      "This sport is all this guy knows," he told me.  "What does someone do when the most important thing in the world is taken from them?"

     What a great question!  A Holy Spirit inspired question that each of us is asked if we are quiet enough to hear it.  God's word tells us, and our observations confirm, that in this world we will all have troubles, woeful troubles that suck the breath from our lungs.  God's word also answers this question.

      Jesus told a story one day about two men.  One man built his house with a foundation that was dug down to solid rock.  This man is described as hearing Jesus's teachings and then putting them into practice.  Another man also hears these words, but chooses to ignore them.  He is described as a man who constructs a house on the ground without a foundation.  A flood occurred with the torrent striking both houses.  The one with the strong foundation was not destroyed, but the foundation-less one collapsed and was completely destroyed.

     The strong foundation is not reading God's word and thinking, "Wow that's good."  It is not sitting in a room listening to the word being explained and nodding and shouting "Amen."  It is engaging the world you live in, and letting your good deeds shine so that your Father in heaven is given the glory.

    

Friendship


The child returns home after the first day in a new school in a new town and is asked, "Did you make any new friends today?" Girls night out with friends. Three smiling men wearing tuxedos flanking an anxiously awaiting friend in front of an altar. Special people that laugh with us, listen to us, and support us when the wind blows cold. People who know our deepest fears and anxieties and pray with us. Solid and steadfast, holding us accountable.


During the Christmas season we especially reach out to our friends and enjoy their conversation. So, how do we converse with our greatest friend, Jesus? I admit that my conversations mirror the man in this video.


Not asking Him what he is doing in his creation. Not learning where I can participate in his plan. Not being still and listening. Just talking about me, and my needs, and my wants.


If we treated our earthly friends like we treat God, would they still be our friends?


Thank God that despite ourselves God loves us so much that he voluntarily left his exalted position in heaven and joined his greatest creation, mankind, on earth. He taught us how to live. He then voluntarily gave up his life to give us what we could never accomplish on our own: a right standing before his Father. Thanks be to God!

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Food Glorious Food--Part One

There are two things that I love musical theater and food.   Living in Kansas I don't enjoy the former nearly as much as when I lived in the Metropolitan New York area.  And the scale and mirror tell me that I enjoy the latter way too much.

I don't merely enjoy eating food.  I enjoy cooking it as well.  Peeling, cutting, dicing.  Deglazing a pan and making a reduction sauce.  Kneading dough.  Stuffing the Thanksgiving turkey.  I enjoy the process as much as watching others tuck in to my finished product.  And those who have watched me do a home remodeling project or planting pansies know that I can drag out the process better than most.

I even like to go food shopping!  No not like, enjoy.  Who am I kidding I revel in going food shopping.  Seriously.  Perhaps it is a throw back to when I would shop with my mom, but I relish going through the aisles, opening an egg carton to check for damaged goods, and squeezing a tomato for firmness in the produce section (hmm, that doesn't read quite right) ;>)

Perhaps when I go food shopping I don't see it as onerous toil, but rather as a reflection of God's abundant blessings and grace.  First, I have a job and have enough money in my wallet to buy food.  Second, I have enough food every day--three times a day with snacks in between.  And of course the wide variety of food.  Stand in the produce section and look at the colors and shapes and smells and remember the tastes.  There are tart yellow lemons, green limes and orange, well oranges of course.  Mrs. Carrot next to her cousins Misters Parsnips, Turnips, Rutabagas--all waiting to be thrown into a pot of browned stew beef to make a savory winter soup.  Apples.  Not merely the Macintosh of my youth, but Granny Smiths, Red and Yellow Delicious, Galas, Honeycrisps, and Fujis!  Really?  All this variety in just one variety of fruit.  What a blessing from an awesome Creator God!  And do I even need to mention the produce from exotic lands such as mangos, bananas, kiwi, pineapple, ugli fruit, and papayas?

God isn't boring or limited in his provision to us. He is creative and boundless.  Clearly he could have provided us with just one food item: the bread from heaven that he provided the Israelites in the desert during all of the years of their wanderings.  (And even that wasn't bland as I had supposed: Exodus 16:31 "It was white like coriander seed and tasted like wafers made with honey.").  No, God created us with tastebuds and he clearly overwhelms them.

Monday night after work I shop for food and then take a portion of my spoils and make dinner.  Here is yesterday's dinner.  Took about 15 minutes to make and is delicious.

       Boil some gnocchi in salted water.  It is done when it floats to the top.

      While the water is getting hot, pour some olive oil into a pan and saute some onion.
    
      Add some dry white wine to deglaze and then some spinach, red pepper flakes, lemon juice, frozen peas and some cream (it is ok to use half and half).  Let it go to a soft simmer.

     Add the gnocchi and a small amount of some of the water that the gnocchi cooked in.  The sauce will thicken.

     Serve in bowls with parmesan cheese flakes and parsley sprinkled over the top.

ENJOY!

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Stockholm Effect

The first days of advent have brought snowflakes, Christmas music on the radio, and Rudolph on tv.  The exteriors of houses are garnished with wreaths and garlands and lights of every size and color that are twinkling, blinking, chasing.  Inflatable snowmen, Santas in sleighs, and creches with the Holy family, shepherds, angels and wisemen surrounded by a menagerie.  It's the most wonderful time of the year!

The first days of advent have also brought controversy at the Lincoln tunnel of all places.  A billboard features the three Magi approaching a stable in which Mary and Joseph kneel on opposite sides of a manger with the star of Bethlehem shining brightly overhead.  The image is a familiar representation of the birth of Jesus as recorded in Luke.  However, the words accompanying the representation are far removed from the Gospel writer and represent the view of a society know as American atheists and insist that, "You KNOW that it's a myth...this season celebrate reason."

How should I respond?  Disbelief?  Anger?  I recalled the words and tears of Jesus as he looked at Jerusalem from a distance and cried "how often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, and you were not willing."  No, disbelief and anger are not how Jesus would respond.  He would (and does) shed tears of sadness.

Non-believers in Christ are not the enemies of those of us who have accepted the invitation to follow him.  Instead, we should see them for what they truly are, prisoners of war held in captivity by many guises of Satan including their sense of intelligence, their self-will, and their pride.  Truly, they are no different than any Christ-follower was before they accepted the free gift of salvation.

The liberators of the Nazi concentration camps were amazed that many of the camps were unguarded with open gates at the time of liberation, yet the prisoners remained inside.  Battered women remain with their abusers and victims of child prostitution with their pimps; this senseless phenomenon is seen in victims of the Stockholm Syndrome.  Psychologists report that people who exhibit this syndrome believe that their captor is giving life simply because he doesn't take it from the victim, allowing the captor to become the person in control of the captive's basic needs and even his life.

The group that paid $20,000 for this billboard deserve one thing from all Christians: our prayers that their hearts will be softened and our love.  And should they recognize the freedom of living, truly living, that following Christ allows, then they too will celebrate the Most Wonderful Time of the Year!