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Call Your Mother May 11, 2012

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Well, it’s Mother’s Day this weekend.  The time to pay homage and honor to those women in our lives who have helped us get where we are today.  My friends over at Frugal Dad put together this wonderful piece on the sacrifices of time, funds and determination that moms have given to their kids.  Enjoy, and Happy Mother’s Day!

The Apostle Peter: Living Out the Resurrection Life April 11, 2012

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Our own Easter celebrations earlier this week were much different than that of the first Easter.  Jesus’ disciples weren’t fully aware of the importance of His resurrection as they were perplexed an letdown.  Wasn’t this Jesus to be the political Savior for which they were waiting?  Scripture tells us that those like Thomas doubted.  You can imagine that the conversations they had over the weeks led them to fully understand what had gone on and what was to go on in the future.  Those must have been conversations that built up the trust and understanding of what had really gone on that leads us to see the hope we see in the book of Acts.

Fast forward a few weeks to Pentecost where we see that hope and confidence in the Apostle Peter.  Peter, who had so readily betrayed Jesus the night of His arrest, is a different man when we seem him in Acts 2.  This is where the Holy Spirit is first poured out on the Church.  On this strange and wonderful morning, we see a loud sound coming from heaven like a rushing and mighty wind.  And everyone there appeared to have divided tongues of fire above them, and they were filled with the Holy Spirit.

Verse 7 tells us that some in the crowd were amazed and marveled, saying “Look are not all these who speak Galileans?”  This group felt that they shouldn’t have known and spoke in the language in which they were speaking.  Others in verse 12 and 13 were perplexed.  Some mocked saying that the crowd was drunk.

And here we see how the Truth that Peter so truly believed in motivated him to live in a compelling and pleasing way.  Peter’s words in this first real public sermon for him are very attractive.  He goes on to talk about how the Prophet Joel and even King David both had foresaw the coming of Messiah and how Jesus had fulfilled so many of their prophecies.

What astonishes me the most in Peter’s words here is his confidence.

Is this not the same Peter who only a few weeks before is denying his relationship with Jesus?

The main reason for this difference we see in Peter is that he is no longer trying to do things on his own.  He is a picture to me of Isaiah’s words that it is “not by strength, not by power, but by my Spirit, says the Lord.”  Peter gives you and I today a brilliant illustration of having the Lord fill our cup and living out a life that spills out onto others out of the overflow God gives us.

May each of us live out the resurrection life today that Peter so readily demonstrates!

The Most Important Thing Jason Russell Ever Did March 18, 2012

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A “Well said!” to my friend, Julie Barrios, who recently wrote The Most Important Thing Jason Russell Ever Did.  We can be in prayer for Jason Russell, his family and the work of Invisible Children.

Don’t Be A Marlin March 8, 2012

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I am, more oftentimes than not, a Marlin.

No, this is not my post about my being drafted by Miami (the Angels would pick me first anyway).  And I am not referring to the giggling one in Cabo.

The Marlin I’m referring to is that of Nemo’s dad, played by Al Brooks, in Pixar’s Finding Nemo.  In that wonderful film (which to my surprise is nearly 10 years old!), Marlin is a worry wart, a Debbie-downer, and one who is constantly relying on himself and not able to see anything beyond his own two fins.  My own proclivity to Marlinism goes back many years and as I see more and more the ways that I Marlinize, I’m learning that it doesn’t get me anywhere.

In fact, one’s own Marlinishness can only lead to more fretting and less trusting.  The Apostle Paul told the church at Phillipi similar words when he encouraged them not to “worry about anything, but in every situation with prayer and petition, and thanksgiving, present your requests to God.”  Why?  Because then, “the peace of God, which is above all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”  The benefit of not falling into Marlinism is peace.  God’s peace, and protection in Jesus.

That’s more than anyone could ask for.

A Word for the Weekend: Playing “Cards” February 10, 2012

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Evelyn Underhill writes:

Osuna says that God plays a game with the soul called “the loser wins”; a game in which the one who holds the poorest cards does best.  The Pharisee’s consciousness that he had such an excellent hand really prevented him from taking a single trick. 

Francis of Assisi understood this when he said that it is “in giving that we receive,” “in pardoning that we are pardoned, and it is in dying that we are born to Eternal Life.”

May each of us take satisfaction in the hand dealt to us and, greater yet, more readily see that our Heavenly Father transforms that hand as only He can do into something wonderful.

To Life…and a Great Man January 16, 2012

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Martin Luther King, Jr. once said that “an individual has not started living until he can rise above the narrow confines of his individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.”  As we celebrate this wonderful man’s life today, may each of us have the courage to find a way to rise about our own confines and serve the other in our midst and, in the process, become more fully alive.

India marks a year without recorded cases of polio January 13, 2012

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As one who worked for many years in international relief and development, this story is a great reminder to us in the West that many diseases we feel are gone still lurk in many parts of the world.

India marks a year without recorded cases of polio.

Not Your Usual Christmas December 21, 2011

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With losing two relatives this year, this Christmas, admittedly, does not have the usual pomp and circumstance that I’ve experienced in the past.  It’s a sad-Rudolph-sort-of-Christmas, involving the joy of the season intermingled with moments of grief and memories of Christmases past that can no longer be relived.  It’s in times like these that French theologian Charles de Foucald’s quote rings true, and is a reminder to all of us of the real importance of Christmas:

Let us thank God a thousand times if in the sadness which invades us it seems to us as if we are rejected by the world.  The depression and suffering, the bitterness with which we seem sometimes to be soaked to be soaked, were the lot of Our Lord on earth.  Are we not fortunate to share them?  We should pity the happy people.  Pity those whose happiness, even though it be quite legitimate and innocent, keeps them attached to the world.  God is good that he has so despoiled us of everything, that we can draw breath only by turning our heads towards him. How great is his mercy, how divine his goodness, for he has torn everything from us in order that we may be more completely his.  So the sufferers are the happy ones through the goodness of God.  In suffering, I give thanksMay these days of Christmas festival bring you, in your suffering I do not say consolation, but the blessing God intends for you. The child Jesus will perhaps not give you any sweetness, – he reserves that for the weak ones, – but his hand will none the less be spread to bless you in these days of Christmastide, and whether you feel it or no, he will pour abundant grace into your soul (from Meditations of a Hermit).

Amen.  To all who are grieving or are in places of suffering, may the grace and blessing of Jesus be upon each of you.

Merry Christmas!

Reliance December 6, 2011

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It’s the Christmas season.  The weather outside in southern California is not too frightful, but it recently brought a sickness to our home where words like “sore throat,” “phlegm” and “vitamins” were part of our daily vocabulary.

And wouldn’t you know, my schedule was quite busy, where there was enough to do that a day off, while probably needed, was not that easy to come by.  And so the choice was to either push through on my own strength or to admit my inability to do it on my own.   And it’s always easier to do one over the other.

This was also Peter’s journey.  As the Lord called Him to climb out of the boat and walk on water, Peter was faced with a similar situation—to admit that he could not do the seemingly incredible task on his own.  And so he stayed afloat as long as he kept his eyes on Jesus.

In this busy Christmas season, we, too, have the invitation from Jesus to rely on Him in our own lives’ situations that seem all too ominous, to keep our eyes focused on Him and remember that we cannot do it on our own.  As we follow Jesus, may we remember that He goes before us as He did for His disciples into Galilee, and look for His presence at this busy time of year, keeping our eyes fixed on Him and admitting to ourselves, and to others, where we could use their help, want their assistance, and need their grace.

Coming Towards… November 21, 2011

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It hit me yesterday that it was the New Year’s Eve of Sundays.  The church calendar flips over this week to start a new year.  And that new year begins with what has become for me one of my favorite seasons—Advent.

Advent comes from the Latin words “ad” and “venio” meaning to “come toward.”  As we come toward the holy day of Christmas, Advent offers a time to prepare our hearts for receiving the Christ Child Jesus, our Messiah!  As you do this this year, consider an Advent Guide that may be useful for you and your community.

Happy Advent!

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