Wednesday, December 28, 2011

What a difference a day makes...


Each year, on December 28, I pause to reflect on my story.

Life moves past us at such a brisk pace that it's easy to forget what life was like 44 years ago; what life could have been like, had God not intervened that night in 1968.  It was the last Saturday night of the year; I had a plan for my evening, and it certainly did not include an up close conversation with God.  But, He had a different plan...and, as it turns out, it changed my life forever.

But the path to that evening in 1968 started many years before...when my Grandmother, who lived with us at the time, would gather me up and carry me off to Church and Sunday School--I still have my first Bible, the one mom gave me to take to church with Grandma.  I didn't know, until I was a young adult, that my grandmother faithfully prayed for me each day--that "BJ would experience the power of Christ in his life and embrace Jesus as his Lord and Savior."  She eventually moved back to her roots in Fort Scott Kansas.  But I continued to get myself to church until about the 8th grade.

I don't recall why I decided to "drop out" but I'm sure it just didn't feel very "cool" to attend church and sunday shcool any longer--and since I went by myself, it was my decision to make.  Fast forward to the fall of my Jr. year in High School.  One evening I landed at a "Campus Life" meeting at the home of a classmate (Jim Rehnberg)...it was the kickoff for the school year and as advertised, it was a "Burger Bash"--all you could eat--and a huge crowd of students.  But I got more that evening than a big meal.  The Campus Life leader, Mark Zier, gave a short talk at the end and he asked the crowd..."If you died tonight, do you know where you're going?"  I didn't; it bothered me, then I moved on.

On the evening of December 28, 1968 I was set to attend an "Afterxms" party with some buddies (Jerry McClain was driving).  Our "wires got crossed" (coincidence?) and they never showed up; stuck, I recalled something was happening at the Rec-center with Campus Life that night--they called it a "Campus Life Rally."  There was a girl I had some interest in (Colleen Rehnberg) and I knew she would probably be there (I was right);  I managed to catch Mark (Zier) before he'd left his house.  He was delighted when I called, and he swung by and picked me up.  An evening of activities, music and then a guy, Roger Cross, got up and challenged me again about my life and death.  This time I was ready and wanted to get this question resolved; Mark talked with me and then invited me to pray a short, simple prayer, and the rest...is history.

Three weeks later I went to the Ventura "Rally" because Mark asked me to share about my recent conversion experience with that half of the county we lived in. Mark mentioned a girl he thought I'd really like, a cute sophomore at Buena HS named Laura--he wanted to introduce us; he was right.  In that span of three weeks I'd had two introductions that literally changed the direction and the outcome of my life: I'd trusted Christ and met my future wife--we married 3 years, 48 weeks and 6 days later.

My home was a rather complicated place.  Lot's of love and pain.  I was carrying some emotional baggage by that time and was making some bad choices.  Christ changed all that in an instant.  The baggage was there--if fact it didn't get fully "unpacked" for years.  But His presence in my life set me in a "best direction" that just never wavered.  Laura's family became a surrogate family for me as our relationship grew; they, especially her dad (my dad died suddenly in 1970), filled a great need in my life.

In the 80's there was a popular song written by Bill Gaither that really captured my story, I get choked up every time I sing it; the chorus declares..."Something beautiful, something good; all my confusion He understood, all I had to offer him was brokenness and strife, but He made something, beautiful, out of my life."

December, 28, 1968.  What a difference a day makes.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Goof proof...

"The Incarnation of Christ serves as a glorious reminder that God’s willingness to clean things up is infinitely bigger than our willingness to mess things up."
TULLIAN TCHIVIDJIAN

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Number 58

All's quiet.  A wonderful two-day Christmas celebration with our Kids and Grandkids.

Braden (10) played, quite well, his own arrangement of Silent Night that he'd composed on his guitar--seriously good stuff--amazed at his music progress since getting his instrument last Christmas.  Kellen (6 in three days) was busy shopping on Amazon for "treasure" (aka "Bionicals) to invest his Christmas money on.

We welcomed a new member to the family this year, meet Cosmo, Joseph and Miranda's 12 week old...toy poodle...a real hoot; fit in famously.

Movie selections this year...The Help and Water for Elephants...two great movies.  Visited with family in New Jersey, North Carolina and California over the phone, wish we could all be in the same room at the same time...but, we were earlier this year at Joseph and Miranda's wedding.

Best of all...we christened the celebration by reading Romans 5.1-11 that ends with this statement..."So now we can rejoice in our wonderful new relationship with God because our Lord Jesus Christ has made us friends of God."  The reason for the season.

Laura was a wonderful hostess today, Erin last evening.  Blessed in so many ways.  Thanks be to God.

Why We Need Jesus...

"Reason and morality cannot show us a good and gracious God.  For that, we need the incarnation...The God revealed in Christ does what reason and morality cannot to....Many people today act like someone has created a peace treaty between reason and faith, after reason won the war...Special revelation, especially the incarnation, is precisely where the Christian faith breaks down the wall our culture has erected between faith and reason...The gospel creates not speculative pundits, spiritual gurus, or moralists but witnesses."

Excerpts from "The God Who Came Down" by Michael Horton
Christianity Today  December 2011
Well worth the read! 

Behold...a Savior

Wishing my friends and family a Merry Christmas; may the light of this event guide you to a deeper understanding of Gods love and grace in the coming year..."Oh, how He loves you and me."

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Truth is...


Truth is to living what physics is to life.

We can't "see, smell or hear" the laws of physics, but without them, nothing works; that which we do see, smell and hear is the result of these laws being applied with purpose or spontaneously.

In the same way truth is the rail living rides on. Ethics, the rule of law, cultural norms, relationships, parenting, good government, freedom--to name but a few aspects of living--all work based on a set of core values, derived from the common grace of God, who wired humankind with an intrinsic sense of what truth is and an understanding of what's "right."

Truth, like physics, does not function in a deterministic way. I can ingore Newton's Law of Gravity and embrace a belief that I can float, then step of top of a tall building. Newton's Law does not override my choice. But my choice to embrace and believe I can float will not prevent a very bad outcome.

I can believe that truth is relative, subject to change, given to multiple definitions or simply an outdated cultural moray. People, and cultures, can choose to ignore the truth, or worse, be deceived and believe a lie--at great peril. The result/reality of these choices is sobering. Living spirals out of control. Chaos trumps the rule of law, justice becomes a myth, bondage becomes the norm and brokeness the face of a nation.

Life does not work without physics.  Living does not work without truth.   

My cyber "paper trail..."

Someone asked me recently "why do you blog?"  Nobody reads it, what's the point? It's not the "reading" that's the magic.  For now...it's the writing; great therapy, keeps me engaged, demands rigorous thought and teaches me a great deal as I work through the process.

For later...I'm leaving a cyber "paper trail" that my friends, family...especially my kids and grandkids...can log onto and "hear" me, remember me; who I was, what my passions in life were, how I thought and what I valued.  I pray it just might make a difference in their lives someday...can you spell l-e-g-a-c-y?

Grateful to live in an era that has empowered me "go on the record" and leave something of what makes me unique behind.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

History turns on small hinges...

President Barack Obama.
Speaker Newt Gingrich.
Governor Mitt Romney. 
 
All men with a record that they must run on.  

This we know from history: it turns on very small hinges.  That said, the view you take about "history" will have a profound impact on the results of the next Presidential election.  Will that view be...

"If the past sits in judgement of the present, the future is lost." 
So said Sir Winston Churchill.

Or...

"The past is prologue..." 
So said William Shakespeare.

So... What view will you take?  How will you apply your perspective (your "spin") to the 3 most likely choices we will have, first in the Republican primary, then in the general election in November 2012?  We have eleven months to figure it out, and we need to get it right--cause' there won't be any "do overs."
Indeed, history DOES turn on small hinges.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

My Christmas wish list...

The 7 modern sins...
  • Wealth without work
  • Industry without morality
  • Worship without sacrifice
  • Politics without principles
  • Science without humanity
  • Knowledge without character
  • Pleasures without conscience
Work, morality, sacrifice, principles, humanity, character and conscience.  This is my Christmas wish list for America in 2011; my prayer for my nation in 2012 and beyond...

"Father create in us a hunger for what is right and just.  Help us to understand...that a love for money, is the root of all evil; that work is an honorable endeavor that shapes our character and gives us meaning and purpose; that industry must in the end produce social justice and opportunity for all; that politics is the business of the people, by the people and for the people and is the most noble and self-sacrificing life call a citizen can pursue; that we celebrate what science discovers in the context of enriching our appreciation for our uniqueness as humankind and creating in us a deeper spiritual hunger; that we seek knowledge as a path to humility; that pleasure be the by-product of good character, honest work and noble intention, and not an end in itself; that we understand that living a values-centered life does by definition require sacrifice...and may all this lead us declare that 'You, are the awesome God.'"

Sunday, December 4, 2011

The reason for this season?

An anthem for this season of joy, hope and expectation...
"Chains be broken, lives be healed, eyes be opened...Christ, is revealed." 
The truth is...WE are the reason for the season, sinners in need of a Savior.

A city set on a hill...

December 1, 1862 Abraham Linclon reminded the nation: America is  "the last best hope of the earth."   Though often reviled around the world, I believe that President Lincoln's premise has been demonstrated time after time over the past 149 years...May God contine to bless America; may He empower us to be people of character and good will; with generous hearts, brilliant minds and dynamic vision...for making tHis world a better place.  
A city set on a hill, cannot be hidden.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

"...times that try men's souls..."

"These are the times that try men's souls" wrote Thomas Paine in his pamphlet "The American Crisis" published Dec 23, 1776; the Colonies faced the almost certain prospect of defeat in their war for indpendence. Paine implored Americans "don't give up the fight."

As the curtain begins to drop on 2011: our economy is misfiring on 7 cylinders, the world is a more dangerous place than ever before, we face the prospect of a nuclear Iran, an ascendant China...but the fact is that virtually every generation of Americans were forced to face down a crisis...and they survived, thrived and grew strong on the idea of the American Dream.

We must remember to "keep the main thing," the main thing. The "idea of America" has been the fuel driving our resolve to be "one nation, under God, indivisable, with liberty and justice for all;" an idea those who traveled this way before us thought to be worth sacrificing, fighting and dying for. Indifference to this "big idea" is the real, the urgent threat to our liberty.

Resolve to do your part; work hard, make informed decisions, be a person of strong character, celebrate interdependence and respect people who disagree with you--but press them to think outside their "box" and you, think outside yours. Don't give in to fear or indifference--be strong and of good courage. Let's leave a legacy that will inspire a new generation.

Monday, November 21, 2011

We had a "grand" time..

Enjoyed hosting our two grandsons for supper and a "sleep over" Friday. Love those boys! Such joy.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

From 1 to 10...it's a 10!


Thankful today for our two kids and their life-mates: Erin & Matthew; Joseph & Miranda... immensely talented people with great character; gripped by passion for life and their life's work, committed to making a difference. Guys...blessed by your friendship, humbled by your love. You have enriched us, thanks so much.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Coach K, best ever...


Just prior to the start of the 2010 NCAA tournament, a radio sports analyst was hating on Duke because, he said, "the dukies are an elitist program; they just have too many white faces."  The analyst just didn't get it; you see, skin color isn't the issue, education and development are.  Duke basketball is an example of what college athletics should be about.  Talented young men (in this case), black and white, who leverage their skills to earn a world class education and prepare for life as an adult.
The real genius of Coach K is that he's managed to "keep the main thing, the main thing."  The results of his unrivaled ability as a coach, mentor, teacher and motivator have enriched the lives of hundreds of players, thousands of students and tens of thousands of fans.  Just what is the main thing?  Helping his players become college graduates and good citizens...and in some cases, professional athletes.  He has built a dynastic program on this foundation.
These days we hear more and more voices decrying the exploitation of student athletes.  These commentators reason that it's time we begin to pay college athletes.  We do that now; we call them FULL scholarships.  Short term, they are worth thousands of dollars.  Long term, hundreds of thousands of dollars and more.  
That said, exploitation is an issue in college sports today. But it's not about financial justice for athletes.  It's about institutions, programs and coaches who build their endowments, reputations and careers on the skills of young athletes and fail to deliver on their commitment to educate and equip their athletes for the long road of life.  There is an exchange that must take place over the careers of student athletes; athletic skills are exchanged for life skills.
It's here that Coach K's genius shines through.  He understands that his mission is much bigger than building winning a program; it's about shaping young men to become husbands, fathers, doctors, lawyers, teachers, bankers, business professionals, social workers, pastors; LEADERS and contributors.  Men who will advance Coach K's legacy by leaving their world's a better place for them having been here.
Coach K has set the bar for his success very high.  The by-product of that standard, the most successful basketball program of this or perhaps any generation.  The measure of that success is not the wins v. loses.  It's lives changed; that, friends, is real genius. 

Friday, November 11, 2011

Free and brave...

Big thanks to Veterans.

People around the world live in safety and freedom because of your service to country and an "idea." Your tour of duty has preserved innocent life and kept hope alive--it's a legacy of sacrifice and courage.

God bless each of you on this day set aside to honor you all.  We are free, because you are brave.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Roots...

A month of "thanks-giving"...November 6.

Like many people who invest themselves in ministry, tenure in one place is the exception, not the norm.  Prior to our arrival in Elkhart, 6 years was the "high water" mark for our service in one place.  Hard to put down roots and feel like you are part of a place when--your not.

Thankful that as of July 4, 2011 we have called Elkhart home for 17 years and last April 13 we marked 10 years with State Farm.  Normal feels pretty good.

Color me thankful.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Eternity...can wait.

A month of "thanks-giving"...November 5.

Dad died, July 1970, age 55. Mom died, December 1984, age 53. Never really expected to outlive them; THANKFUL to be well on my way to the 9th year of my 5th decade.

God created us with eternity in our hearts; His preface and introduction for my "life" has exceeded my expectations.
God willing, eternity...can wait.

Drop by drop...

Please enjoy this little "gem" from a good friend, Ruthann Blosser Longcor...a good thinker and writer.

"Love the saying 'Drop by drop a river forms.'  I read it in a book last week...and it's been going over and over in my mind.  After googling it, there is another version... 'Drop by drop, a mighty river forms.'  Rivers are powerful, yet each begins by simple drops of water joining together.

Makes me think of families, the climate in a home/workplace, and the power of little actions that add up to traditions, that eventually add up to legacies. Creating a loving, positive, inspiring atmosphere in our homes/classes/businesses...often starts with the most basic, intentional action...a smile, a hug, offering a favor. Consistent thoughts and actions, lead to trends...which can become a force. Wow.

So much potential just in an ordinary day..."

Words change lives.  Perhaps you can use these, to change yours.  Thanks for sharing your powerful insight with us Ruthann.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

The rustling leaves...

Heard from my friend this morning...

"C. S. Lewis wrote, 'At present we are on the outside of the world, the wrong side of the door. We discern the freshness and purity of the morning, but they do not make us fresh and pure. We cannot mingle with the splendours we see. But all the leaves of the New Testament are rustling with the rumour that it will not always be so. Some 'day, God willing, we shall get in.'  Last night at 8:30 p.m. my father got in."

Lloyd slipped into eternity and the everlasting arms of God.


(See the prelude to this conclusion, date: October 22, 2011 "Check-Mate!)

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Check-Mate!

Today I received a note from a good friend..."my dad's cancer is progressing. His time here is probably down to days..."  Lloyd has been ill for some time; he is a shadow of the man we knew when he was healthy. When I read my friends words I was transported back to the last time I was with his dad. It was years ago. I am saddened by this news, concerned for the grief this final act of life will introduce to my friend and his family...and not.

Lloyd will lose his life; but not once has he been in danger of losing his hope: the certain promise that he, as a believer in Jesus Christ, will finally be transported into the presence of His Lord and Savior, there to enjoy life as HE designed it to be.

Thanks be to God for the hope we have in Christ, and the healing death brings for those who have embraced Christ through saving faith.  For these death is not something to be feared; it is a gracious provision that carries us back into a "face to face" real-time relationship with God. Without death, we become eternal beings, like Lucifer and the legion of angels which were cast out of heaven because of their rebellion...eternally separated from God, without hope of redemption.

Death became the modality that God uses to foil Satan's attempt to co-opt God's crowning creative act, the human race.  So then, death is the definitive "check-mate" and demonstrates God's mastery; always steps ahead of evil and the chaos of sin. Genesis 3 describes the event that initiated the rebellion of Adam and Eve to sin and it's necessary result, death; it's also here that we learn that death is part of God's bigger plan for hope and the redemption of human-kind.

The rest, is history...1 John 4.9,10 "God showed how much he loved us by sending his one and only Son into the world so that we might have eternal life through him. 10  This is real love—not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as a sacrifice to take away our sins."

Lloyd knows that love is a four letter word, spelled H-O-P-E; more importantly, he knows that death simply marks the first day of the rest of his life...
Maranatha...
(Continued in "The rustling leaves..." October 27, 2011)










Friday, September 23, 2011

Politics as industry...

Father in  heaven...

Politics has become a growth industry in America, this is a problem; too much ambition and too little service.  It didn't start this way.  The noble has become ignoble.

Regardless of party affiliation, the pursuit of power, wealth, celebrity too, has become the focus of many elected to serve "the people" in Washington.  Congress has been sullied by gridlock, the "love of money", sexual scandal, graft and abuse of privilege.

I pray this election cycle breaks toward leaders willing to make tough decisions, without regard for how those decisions poll: that, will be patriotism.

...Deliver us from evil.







Thursday, September 22, 2011

Friday, September 9, 2011

Smarter than the average bear...

"Pass this jobs bill, right away..." (Friends the devil is in the details.  I'm all in on tax reform--can you say flat-tax?  It's the $400 billion in additional spending, with "I'll get back to you in 10 days on how I intend to pay for it"  that leaves me convinced that my President just doesn't think I'm very smart)"...because I need to save my job." 

Saturday, August 13, 2011

the post-racial President...one has to wonder.

So much for "the first post-racial President in our history;" sounded hopeful...sort of like "hope and change" and "change we can believe in."  This Presidency certainly will not be described as post-racial by any perspective of history.  Not because it couldn't have been.

You see, the "we think it's cool" crowd doomed that possibility almost from that night in Chicago, when a sea of well-wishers gathered to celebrate this President's election.  That certainly was a moment in history.  But it didn't produce a post-racial result.  You see, from that "moment" almost anyone who dared question this President's intelligence, fitness for office, ability to lead or wisdom in approaching the challenges facing the nation--has been tarred as a racist puppet of the Aryan Nation.

As I reflect back, all the (white) Presidents during my lifetime have been the subject of a national pastime geared toward laughing at their quirks, questioning their intelligence, reviling their politics and counting the days till the next election cycle.  In this modern era, virtually nothing has been out of bounds.  (Now, let me state for the record, I don't believe what we subject our Presidents to is good for the nation; that said, it's become the norm, not the exception.  It's mean, but it's not racist.)

So, when this President stepped up to become the focus of the electorates ire, it's decried as racism.  That is non-sense.  Are there racists in America?  Certainly.  Is some the what we hear about this President racist?  Certainly; just like some of what we heard about George Bush was hate speech.

This is America.  We need to be able to speak our minds, thoughtful or otherwise, because that's a treasured right here.  It's part of what makes us, us.  My concern as we move into the the next Presidential election cycle, is that we'll forget who we are and what makes this nation great.  I pray for a civil discourse.  But I also expect it to be a spirited and opinionated discourse--as it should be.  "Ideas" do that to people.  People must feel safe stating what they think about this President and believe to be the best course for the nation...regardless of their agenda.  

We make judgments about the ideas placed before us by politicians and the people that support them.  This election cycle should be no different than those that came before it...but some would seek to prevent this process from playing out that way.

It's here that we see a tragic irony.  The very people who anointed this administration as "post-racial" are the ones who continually play the race card to intimidate citizens; attempting to prevent them from engaging in a critical examination of the record this administration has produced.  That is their end-game.   If one cannot win on the facts, then win any way one can. 

I am concerned that the election to determine the next President will be characterized by class warfare, race-baiting, vitriol and a "take no prisoners" commitment to win at any cost.  Now is the time to brace for just such an election.  Prepare now to be driven to a decision by the facts and your conviction about what you believe is the best course for our nation going forward.  How can one do that?
  1. Critically consider your values and then ask, which set of ideas best represent those values. 
  2. Become thoroughly familiar with who the candidates really are...not who they, or their handlers, simply say they are.
  3. Go deeper than the talking points.  Think through policy and how it effects the nation going forward.
  4. Engage big ideas.  Read, study, pray and reflect on the politics of the 21st century, then measure the ideas of those asking for your vote against your own understanding and perspective, born from that "due diligence."
  5. Refuse to be an ideologue.
  6. Measure twice and cut once.
  7. Seek guidance from God; Seek His agenda.  Be willing to embrace it.
  8. Exercise your right, privilege and responsibility to vote.
We missed an opportunity to get it right under the leadership of this administration, one has to wonder, what could have been?  The good news is, while we don't always get it right the first time, Americans keep working at it until we do.  No, this isn't the first post-racial Presidency, but it's taken us one step closer to that vision of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr...Sweet dream(s).



Saturday, July 2, 2011

The real genius of Coach K...


Just prior to the start of the 2010 NCAA tournament, a radio sports analyst was hating on Duke because, he said, "the dukies are an elitist program; they just have too many white faces."  The analyst just didn't get it; you see, skin color isn't the issue, education and development are.  Duke basketball is an example of what college athletics should be about.  Talented young men (in this case), black and white, who leverage their skills to earn a world class education and prepare for life as an adult.
The real genius of Coach K is that he's managed to "keep the main thing, the main thing."  The results of his unrivaled ability as a coach, mentor, teacher and motivator have enriched the lives of hundreds of players, thousands of students and tens of thousands of fans.  Just what is the main thing?  Helping his players become college graduates and good citizens...and in some cases, professional athletes.  He has built a dynastic program on this foundation.
These days we hear more and more voices decrying the exploitation of student athletes.  These commentators reason that it's time we begin to pay college athletes.  We do that now; we call them FULL scholarships.  Short term, they are worth thousands of dollars.  Long term, hundreds of thousands of dollars and more.  
That said, exploitation is an issue in college sports today. But it's not about financial justice for athletes.  It's about institutions, programs and coaches who build their endowments, reputations and careers on the skills of young athletes and fail to deliver on their commitment to educate and equip their athletes for the long road of life.  There is an exchange that must take place over the careers of student athletes; athletic skills are exchanged for life skills.
It's here that Coach K's genius shines through.  He understands that his mission is much bigger than building winning a program; it's about shaping young men to become husbands, fathers, doctors, lawyers, teachers, bankers, business professionals, social workers, pastors; LEADERS and contributors.  Men who will advance Coach K's legacy by leaving their world's a better place for them having been here.
Coach K has set the bar for his success very high.  The by-product of that standard, the most successful basketball program of this or perhaps any generation.  The measure of that success is not the wins v. loses.  It's lives changed; that, friends, is real genius. 


Thursday, June 23, 2011

Wait just a minute!

I, like many Americans, believe that the time has come for the US to wind down our "boots on the ground" involvement in Afghanistan. I also believe that this fledgling democracy will need our assistance for years to come...technology, training, infra-structure, humanitarian aid, health-care support, education and aid for arming and deploying an effective security-military force with a cadre of leaders to inspire and train them.

That said, I am ashamed of many of my fellow-citizens.  Today, listening to one of NPR's afternoon programs as I made my way around my city, I heard one caller after another pummel our nation with vitriol I do not understand.  These citizens believed, no, reveled in the belief, that the US has been decisively beaten.  They asserted that any reasonable person, any honest person, would be incapable of identifying even one positive outcome from our heartbreaking sacrifice in this 10 year conflict.

These folk are flat-wrong.  Consider that...Ten years ago Afghanistan was a country ruled by one of history's cruelest regimes; today, it is governed by freely elected leaders.  Women, previously virtual prisoners in their homes, are serving in Parliament. Camps Al Qaeda has used to train, indoctrinate and dispatch terrorists to take innocent life around the globe, have been dismantled; their infra-structure ravaged and in disarray.  The Afghans have a growing security force of 79,000 soldiers who are warriors at heart, and now are receiving the training and equipment needed to sustain this young democracy in the perilous days ahead.  Afghanistan's economy has doubled in size.  School enrollment has risen from 900,000 to over 6,000,000; including over 2,000,000 girls. Access to health care has risen from 8% to 80% of the population.  In 2010, the Pentagon announced that geologists had discovered nearly $1,000,000,000,000 (one-trillion) dollars worth of mineral deposits, a potential wind-fall of wealth the Taliban never would have found.  Much remains to be done, but our efforts on behalf of the Afghan people, and the noble cause of liberty and self-determination have produced splendid results; the price has been profound--but history will be kind in its assessment of this investment of innocence, dreams, treasure and thousands of lives.

The free-world, soldiers from around the globe, have engaged the enemy in the field and prevailed.  For our part, we must refuse to allow those who would redact the reality of what has happened in Afghanistan by being well informed about the truth and assertive in our efforts to "pass the word" from neighborhood to neighborhood, business to business and generation to generation.

I am proud.  I am grateful.  I am humbled.  Now, let's bring our warriors home to the adulation they so richly deserve, and pray for that day when we turn swords into plowshares.

God bless America, "Annuit Coeptis."  

Sunday, May 29, 2011

R.I.P

Time adds little perspective.
Death in a hostile place, a time not chosen.
Cities hard to pronounce; countries hard to find.
Cause, clarity; clouded, confused. Hard to recall.

Time dulls memory.
Pace pushes people on.
Space vacated, empty, gone.
Place dissolves, no trace, so it seems.

Taps begins to play.
This I remember.
Their laughter, their scent.
First date, first kiss, first love.
A Friday night, when life was simple.
The future a certain dream, bullet proof...not.

Tears flow freely now.
Pride in a life well lived.
Grief for a life given; invested and gone.
The loss, the pain; heart broken, shattered.

These are the Soldiers, Sailors, Marines and Airmen...
Their last full-measure given; duty, honor, country.
May they rest in peace.

May we never forget.

Monday, May 9, 2011

What mom's do...

God makes the day.  Family makes the day a joy.  Mom's make the day a ministry.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Irish Eyes...

Red hair, hazel eyes
Bright with life,
mischief, delight.

Red hair, hazel eyes
dimmed by rebellion
discipline too harsh.

Red hair, hazel eyes
filled with sorrow;
bad decisions,
heartbreak the consequence.

Red hair, hazel eyes
swept by strength;
refuse the victim
children her focus.

Red hair, hazel eyes
glimmer fades;
live with regret,
press on; what waits?

Red hair, hazel eyes
determined, hard;
give up?  Refuse.

Red hair, hazel eyes
weary, worn;
too many
bad days,
lonely nights,
dreams dashed.

Red hair, hazel eyes
ablaze with light,
smile restored;
happiness,
an island
found.

Red hair, hazel eyes
weak with disease,
filled with fear,
questions;
needing peace
wanting rest.

Red hair, hazel eyes
closed too soon;
hope a reality,
mountains our reminder,
eternity her destiny.

Red hair, hazel eyes
a memory now;
children her legacy,
Peaceful rest.
Irish eyes are smiling.
Miss you mom.

Saturday, May 7, 2011

In Tribute...

This weekend, our country honors Mothers.

I want to extend that "honor" to a host of women God has used in my life; too many to name them all, but these stand out. My Grandmother--who stood in the gap for me, my mom who loved and raised me; my "little" sister who shared my childhood with me; an Aunt who rescued me and cousin who was a "big-sister" to me; "Mom's" who took time to invest in me like I was their son; teachers who brought out the best in me; my mother-in-law who was a part of my life for 42 years; my daughter, an inspiration for me; friends who've believed in me, encouraged me and stood with me through the intersections and storms of life; partners in ministry who've shared a common vision with me.

All have prayed for me.

You are a tapestry of faithfulness and virtue.  Thank you for the part you've played in making my life better, and me a better man.

Mary Patricia B.
Patricia B.
Tamara M.
Carolyn C.
Patty C.
Janice C.
Erin H.
Miss Arlene
Mrs. Rattray
Mrs. McCann
Sheila Z.
Betty C.
Patty C.
Marilyn B.
Norma Z.
Stana M.
Carlene L.
Carol S.
Karen H.
BJ R.
Deb M.
Miriam R.
Becky W.
Ruthann L.
Connie S.
Nancy K.
Jill C.
Vicki J.
Beth L.
Jan F.
Lori V.
Jan K.

Finally, I honor my best friend, "for life" companion of 38 years, mother to our wonderful children and my most faithful prayer warrior.  My lovely bride who has refused to give up on me; I love you...

Laura

Thanks to all of you.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Mission Accomplished...

Hats off to our President, his administration, CIA and of course our Navy Seals.

It took a great deal of courage to authorize a very bold, boots on the ground "Kill" mission, and quick disposal of OBL's remains;  great risk for President Obama's presidency, his leadership, the potential windfall for Bin Laden's legend, the stature of our presence in the world and safety of those he ordered into action.  (Recall President Jimmy Carter's debacle in the dessert of Iran during the hostage crisis.)

I am grateful today--grateful for justice, but not giddy with joy; not dance in the street happy.  The demise of OBL is another page in a tragic commentary on the continuing cost of a life driven by blindness to God's truth.  OBL became a mass murderer because he chose to believe a lie; but he didn't start out that way.  He was a son, a brother, a husband, a father...and as heinous as his crimes against humanity are, and difficult as it is to comprehend, he was loved by God, but unredeemable, because of a decision to hate.  His end befit his crimes; his legacy will be infamy.

We projected our power, righteously and appropriately; we did what had to be done. Yet, I feel sadness that our world has come to this intersection in history; profound loss as I reflect on the thousands of lives taken; heart sick because so many survivors dreams have been crushed by this Islamic madness.

Today I don't celebrate.  Today, I am reminded to pray God will continue to heal those who grieve.  Today, I am reminded to pray God will open the hearts and minds of a new generation of kids growing up right now in the Middle East, and in households around the world...may they embrace His plan and experience His perfect love in way that will transform their destinies, the region and our world.

God bless America, our President and our efforts to lead the planet to a better place.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Petrovillains, smoke and mirrors...

From "The Editors" of the National Review, April 26, 2010..."In 2008, when the national average was last peaking above $4 per gallon, candidate Obama made it clear that while he would have preferred a “gradual” increase, he saw ever-higher petroleum prices as a necessary antecedent and augur of our immaculate, green-energy future."

While I disagree with now President Obama, this is a legitimate policy perspective; I wish he'd be transparent and quit wasting time and money looking for the "petrovillains."  Embrace it, manage it and let the people decide on the facts, rather than facades, in 2012.

Enough with the smoke and mirrors...

Sunday, April 24, 2011

The love of God.

Grateful today that in 1968 I embraced the Risen Christ.

He paid a debt He did not owe, because of His great love and the Father's grace.  It's been 43 years.  I've experienced real transformation; a day does not slip by that I don't reflect on how different my life has been because of a very simple, heartfelt prayer.

But more than that, I have confidence, assurance that "It is well with my soul."   He has promised..."No power in the sky above or in the earth below—indeed, nothing in all creation will ever be able to separate us from the love of God that is revealed in Christ Jesus our Lord."    Romans 8.39

He is risen.  He is risen indeed!

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

A little demagoguery will do...NOT!

I just received an invitation to a coordinated event at 9am on Friday to "call the Congress and demand that my President be impeached."  Folks, this is silly.

Regardless of what one might think of this administration, it's policies and the direction of the country, impeachment is a bad idea--and to demand it "en masse" is a slippery slope that sets a very dark precedent for our Nation.

This "impeach Obama" mantra is a distraction which will cost time, money and focus; it will shift the debate from issues of substance to "more partisan politics as usual."  It's time America get back to traveling the "high road" and demanding our politicians take the lead in getting us back on track; to that place where good government embraces a commitment to the welfare of the nation and to future generations v. winning the next election cycle to exercise power.  "Impeach the President" won't get us there.

Why make it more difficult to govern well, by behaving badly?  Speak your mind, write the local "people's view" section of your hometown paper, work to stop policy you don't believe is good for the nation, protest--but don't use your disagreement as an excuse to demagogue your discontent.  That's what elections are for.

Channel your angst and volunteer to work for a candidate whose vision you can embrace.  When you do, it makes our nation stronger and better.  It reinforces the values that make our political process exceptional.  Don't pander to the base nature of the human condition--it diminishes us all.

Stand up to be heard, sit down to be appreciated.  Refuse to be the problem.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Lost and found...

Loss. I've had my share over the years.

Two weeks after I graduated from High School, my father died, I was 17. In 1984, just after my 31st birthday, my mother died . I was 38 when I learned I had diabetes. I began a "rest of my life" battle with skin cancer in 1996, at age 43. Disappointment...oh my, where do I start. Failure--several crushing instances. Unrealized dreams, of course.

My story isn't unique. It's called, "being human." Loss is just a part of the "living experience." Life is hard, and, can be very harsh. Loss, though we all face it, is not simply a one size fits all process. For some, loss means never experiencing "what could have been." For others it's remembering "what was." For all of us it's losing people we love, to death. Life's "Harsh passages" include broken relationships, disease, tragic accidents, children "lost" in adolescence and never able to move on to productive adult lives, addiction, betrayal, unfaithful spouses and/or friends...have I described your "loss-story" yet?

Recently, an extended family member, and friend, facing a number of very difficult circumstances posted a comment about loss, she concluded, "Easy to be philiosophical...easy to be grateful too." As I paused to reflect on her words, I was struck by this profound insight.

"Easy to be grateful too..."  Really?  We can't, generally, control loss. Bad things happen to good (and bad) people. We can, however, control our attitude and our response to loss. We can ask "why me?" or we can declare "why NOT me!" That's the "philosophical" part.

The "grateful" part comes when, our pain notwithstanding, we aren't swallowed by bitterness; through the darkness of the moment, we still see the sunshine we've experienced over the years--as well as the expectation that the sun will shine again. Loss frames our perspective. It reminds us of the providence of God and the blessings we enjoy and have enjoyed through the ebb and flow of life. It's ironic, loss and gratitude are two sides of the same coin. Tennyson understood this when he penned "It's better to have loved and lost, than never to have loved at all."

The sentiment that struck me as so profound was "easy." It just never occurred to my friend to not be grateful. The emotional and spiritual place that she "lives" made gratitude a logical extension, not of her pain, but of His promise. The Psalmist (42.5) said it this way..
"Why am I discouraged?
Why is my heart so sad?
I will put my hope in God!
I will praise him again—
my Savior and my God."

Loss isn't abandonment. It isn't the death of hope. It's an intersection of life where one can step back and see life not just for what it isn't, but for what it is; it's at that place, in that moment, we see the goodness of God, and it's easy to be grateful.

Lost and found. A fitting description.

Friday, April 8, 2011

When will spring come?

This is the hardest part of the weather calendar in N. Indiana.

The caldendar says it's spring, reality says "it's ugly."  Things are ready to go, mowers have been serviced, hedge has been trimmed.  Irrigation system is functional again.  Bud's are on the trees and bushes...the evergreens aren't just green now, they are awake!  Robin's are busy being the "dirty birds" of the neigborhood.  Lily tracks fresh scent everywhere we go.  We are ready, where is spring?

It feels like Thanksgiving Day when I was a little  boy.  Would our guests and extended family ever arrive...
"Mom, how soon will they be here?"  
"Pretty soon BJ."  
"Mom do you think they're still coming?" 
"BJ, they will all be here, just like last year." 
"But mom, we are ready, where is everyone?" 
"They are on the way."  
"Then where are they?"  
"BJ, why don't you wait outside for them, greet them when they arrive."  
"I think they changed their mind, they aren't coming this year." 

That's the way our conversation advanced every year.  A little boy, anticipating a favorite event, thinking it would never happen...but it always did.

I'm ready but spring just hasn't arrived...yet.  When it does come and the days slip quickly into summer...the memory of this misery becomes dim, almost dream like.  Every day a new color explodes some place along my route to the office.  It's warm, balmy...with life sustaining showers from time to time.

There are many "seasons" in our lives...they come, they go--some are better than others; they make life interesting and always produce something my memory clings to, which produces a life-time of pleasure and expands my perspective.

Yes, spring hasn't arrived but summer's comin'.  It will be OK, sooner than later.  I can wait, the memories from "seasons past" will sustain me.

Praise God from whom all blessings flow!


Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Truth is...

Truth is to living what physics is to life.

We can't "see, smell or hear" the laws of physics, but without them, nothing works; that which we do see, smell and hear is the result of these laws being applied with purpose or spontaneously.

In the same way truth is the rail living rides on. Ethics, the rule of law, cultural norms, relationships, parenting, good government, freedom--to name but a few aspects of living--all work based on a set of core values, derived from the common grace of God, who wired humankind with an intrinsic sense of what truth is and an understanding of what's "right."

Truth, like physics, does not function in a deterministic way. I can ingore Newton's Law of Gravity and embrace a belief that I can float, then step of top of a tall building. Newton's Law does not override my choice. But my choice to embrace and believe I can float will not prevent a very bad outcome.

I can believe that truth is relative, subject to change, given to multiple definitions or simply an outdated cultural moray. People, and cultures, can choose to ignore the truth, or worse, be deceived and believe a lie--at great peril. The result/reality of these choices is sobering. Living spirals out of control. Chaos trumps the rule of law, justice becomes a myth, bondage becomes the norm and brokeness the face of a nation.

Life does not work without physics.  Living does not work without truth.   

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Bring'em home...

Iraq needs to fish or cut bait.
Let the Arab League work it out with Libya.
Afganistan just smells too much like Viet Nam.

We've done our part.
Let the tribal tensions run their course.
Please, bring our young men and women home.   

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

180 degrees.

REPENT - to feel such sorrow for sin or fault as to be disposed to change one's life for the better; to turn around and move in the oppisite direction.

The heavens declare...

Went into the office this morning; still dark. Stepped out to retireve something from my truck; so focused I almost missed a truly beautiful sunrise...so breathtaking it startled me. World is a chaos...I was reminded in this quiet moment that God is still in control.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

In retrospect...

I'll be 58 on March 14.  I don't consider myself to be a "senior citizen" but I'm guessing some younger folks are thinkin' that way about me...in much the same way I thought about "50 Something's" back in 1978.  While I don't "see" myself that way now, truth is, I can certainly see "that place" from here.

Life is so much shorter than I ever imagned it would be, and so much more than I ever dreamed it could be.  My cup isn't half-full, it overflows..
  • In High School a guy named Mark Zier walked into my life and lovingly led me to a life-changing decesion to trust Christ; then he introduced me to a girl who eventually became my for-life companion.
  • I have been blessed by that girl, Laura Cherrie, who became my wife (we were both 19), help-mate, mother of and for our children, my best friend and companion, for 38 years and counting!
  • Neither of my parents were college grads and when the time came for me to enroll, my father died; there was no money for higher education.  God provided, first at Duke were I received my BA and then at Talbot Seminary where I earned an M.Div. all without student loans.
  • God blessed us with two children.  Erin and Jospeh have made me so proud because of the people they have become; honest, engageing, generous, interesting good-hearted young adults...and two of my closest friends.
  • We have two grandsons.  Braden and Kellen make us laugh, give us hope for the future, love us in a special way unique to our role in their lives...and enjoy hanging-out with us.
  • I have enjoyed two modestly successful careers centered around helping people; for 25 years as their Pastor and, now, for the last 10, as guy that takes the "scarey" out of risk as their State Farm Agent.
  • Over the years I've witnessed lives change in long-term and very profound ways; I have played a part in that process as a tool in the Master's Hand; what a privilege those moments of been.
  • While I have experienced disappointment and betrayal in and from friends, my life has been rich beyond measure because of folks who've come alongside and embraced me (changed me) with their friendship.
  • I have traveled with people through the most difficult intersections of their lives, prayed with them and waited; then watched God do what only He can do..."exceeding, abundantly beyond anything we could ask or imagine."
  • Laura has loved me and patiently waited for me to become the man she needed and so richly deserves.
  • The roles (the work of my hands) I have chosen to invest my energy in, have been challenging and rewarding.  Not once have I felt trapped in doing what has been my life's work.  It's been and continues to be too much fun.
  • My girlfriend's dad, (my future father-in-law) stepped into my life as the man I needed when at age 17, my father died--he continues to be a rock for me.
  • Mentors have invested their lives in me.  They've taught me, listened to me, cried with me and believed in me. 
  • Life has softened me.  Tenderness comes easy today.
I enjoy a rich tapestry of memories, some good and not.  These memories confirm what most people eventually come to realize: there are a few regrets, there are scores upon scores of very special people and wonderful events, whose images remain clear to the smallest detail.  I smile me each time I think about these people and replay those special moments.  There has been failure, good fortune and difficulty; pain, lost dreams, heartbreak and victory.  But through it all runs a story, my story, of God's grace transforming me, using me, teaching me and most amazingly, loving me with an everlasting love.

When I die, I pray my legacy will be people I've touched saying, "I love Jesus more."

Praise God from whom all blessings flow.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Today.

Today empty nest, too quiet.
Today strength remains, ravaged by age.
Today confidence, morphs to doubt.
Today weakness, a familiar face.
Today profile weathered with time, hair a pensive memory

Today independence is community.
Today knowledge is wisdom.
Today love is tenderness.
Today time is precious.


Today HELP stopped being a four-letter word.






Sunday, February 6, 2011

We hold these truths...

Super Bowl pre-game reminded us again; America is unique.  It's amazing what people can do when given the freedom to succeed AND to fail.  

This game has become a metaphor...

Back in July, each team started at the same place, 0-0, as every other franchise in the NFL.  Now, 106 young men, two teams remain standing; black, white, brown...not all born equally, privleged start and not.  All shapes, sizes...some more talented than others.  All making the most of what they've been given, working hard and sacrificing for a dream.  Working together to create synergy.  All competing on a level playing field, and yet, a few with a clear advantage over others, not all endowed equally--size, strength, speed?

That said, each strives to overcome, to elevate their game and maximize their opportunity, against all odds. The underdog can prevail, because "heart" can't be measured.  Mistakes will be made, injuries will occur that force a change to the gameplan and the unexpected will be the norm.  Bad calls?  No doubt; someone is going to feel like it wasn't fair.  Most will perform up to standard, a few will be disappointed--and not play well at all.  The ball will be dropped and it will take some bad bounces.  But there won't be any do-overs.  One performance will be judged most outstanding of all...and propel that player to a new level of achievement and noteriety.

At the end of the day, some will win, others will lose.  And tomorrow morning?  Each will crawl out of bed, and begin again, in an attempt to make the ascent to the top of their profession; each sore, tired, some beaten...all driven by conviction; it's a new day, it's a new opportunity; "I believe 'it' can happen...if I work hard, stay focused and apply myself."  This hope compels them to bear down, start over and try again.  They will take what they learned (the good, the bad and the ugly), winners and losers, and use that as leverage to get better; and they will.

I believe this is why this night, this event, is more celebrated, anticipated and watched than any other event on the calendar in America.  It represents our hopes and dreams, our core values as a nation, at so many levels.  We watch these young men compete and we are reminded, dreams come true here; hard work pays here, the hope of success far outweighs the risk of failure.  Bottom line: "It" can happen, it does happen.  If it doesn't?   "Loss" isn't the end of the world, it's the begining of a new cycle.

Everyone has to play by the rules, but the rules aren't designed to produce pre-determined outcomes.  So, many compete; some win, some lose...some never win or lose, because they never try, that's ok too.  America is a place where dreaming is a part of our culture, where we set the bar; where people can "do better" and to no one's surprise, we do.  

America, we hold these truths...

  


Thursday, February 3, 2011

Where can I run?

Can swift water outrun its flow,
Can darkness swallow the sun?

Where can I run…
His lovingkindness not transform?
His watchcare not attend?
His provision not sustain?
His strength not carry?

Can swift water outrun its flow,
Can darkness swallow the sun?

Sunday, January 23, 2011

It could be worse.

It's cold outside, but that's okay, summer's comin'.

In the meantime, sit back and enjoy a hot cup of good coffee, the NFC/AFC Champs, Super Bowl, Daytona 500, Down Hill Raceing, March Madness, Opening Day, Spring, and not having to mow the lawn.

Winter just helps me catch my breath.

Carpe Diem

Today a gift; time, breath, life.  Now what?

Today horzion indigo-blue dawn.
Today sweet slumber, my retreat.
Today moments with God, my hope.

Today wished away?

Today sundance East.
Today love's gentle touch, my confidence. 
Today grandson smiles, my delight.

Today mine to squander, make great?

Today sun blazes zenith, Noon.
Today disapointment, my challenge.
Today sweet fragance, my respite.

Today spent, invested?

Today  moon reflects suns glory, sublime beauty.
Today kind word, my comfort.
Today quiet reflection, my strength.

Today, something of significance to last?

Today, here, gone.
Today, all I have, all I need.
Today, I will rejoice and be glad.