Thursday, January 31, 2008

Battle for My Mind


"Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God's mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God—this is your spiritual act of worship." Romans 12:1


From Joe Stowell:


Os Guinness tells a great story about a Russian factory worker in the days when Khrushchev was the prime minister. Because of the enormous economic strain in those days, employees would steal tools and just about anything else they could get their hands on. To stop the thefts, a KGB officer was placed at every factory gate where each worker was carefully searched for contraband. Petrov, a long-time laborer, pushed a wheelbarrow loaded with two large sacks of sawdust out the factory doors every day. Each day the guard searched through the sacks of sawdust but consistently found nothing.


Weeks into this routine the frustrated guard finally said, “Hey, Petrov, I promise not to tell anybody. I can’t get what’s going on here. I don’t know why you need all this sawdust. What are you stealing?” Petrov grinned and whispered, “Wheelbarrows.”


Os Guinness makes this probing conclusion: “While we’ve been inspecting bags of sawdust, Satan has been stealing our minds.” What a great insight! And while how we behave—keeping all the rules and all the fuss over politics, abortion, and gay agendas—is not sawdust, it is easy to get sidetracked by the issue du jour while letting “control central” slip into thought patterns that quite frankly aren’t anything like God’s thoughts at all.


This is no small issue. God’s Word says that as a man thinks in his heart, so is he (Proverbs 23:7). I have always been taken aback by Jesus’ reproof of the religious folk of His day, when He said, “These people honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from Me” (Matthew 15:8)!


Excerpted from "Daily Strength with Joe Stowell" RBC Ministrieshttp://www.rbc.org/bible_study/strength_for_the_journey/daily/49315.aspx

I identified with Matthew 20:29-21:22


As Jesus and his disciples were leaving Jericho, a large crowd followed him. Two blind men were sitting by the roadside, and when they heard that Jesus was going by, they shouted, "Lord, Son of David, have mercy on us!"
The crowd rebuked them and told them to be quiet, but they shouted all the louder, "Lord, Son of David, have mercy on us!"
Jesus stopped and called them. "What do you want me to do for you?" he asked.
"Lord," they answered, "we want our sight."
Jesus had compassion on them and touched their eyes. Immediately they received their sight and followed him.


We went to numerous churches when I was growing up. There was a small church in Irwin, PA, right outside of Pittsburgh; we also attended Sand Beach Bible Church in Hummelstown PA, in a small community of 100. There were churches in Dallastown, York, Salisbury ... Mom also dropped us off at a goodly number of Vacation Bible Schools, after-school Bible classes and of course, the good old Good News Bible club.

In all of these meetings and lessons, there was one thing that I sought when growing up: I wanted to see who Jesus was. I really did. I wasn't as interested in those stories about other Bible characters whose names and places were hard to pronounce. I didn't really like flannelgraph (too static, and the characters kept falling off) or puppets (for some reason they always seemed creepy to me). But give me a good story about Jesus!

The miracles, the loneliness, and the crowd response always caught my interest. I especially loved when I could tell that the teacher was especially involved with the story and the subject. (Kids can always tell, can't they?) I could listen to a dedicated lover fo Jesus for hours on end.


Mrs. Soo was one of those teachers - a small Japanese lady who led a Good News Bible club in our ranch house garage in Irwin. She had a love for Jesus and for each of the kids attending - she even gave us chop sticks at the end of the school year.


I may not have understood all of Jesus, but I got to see some of Him in teachers like Mrs. Soo. And that was incredibly important at that time of my life.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Resolved...



"Shall we make a new rule of life from tonight:
always try to be a little kinder than is necessary."

- Sir James M. Barrie 1860-1937, British Playwright

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Commentaries on Romans 1:1


Paul, a servant of Christ Jesus, called to be an apostle and set apart for the gospel of God–


Chuck Smith: "Servant" means "bondslave." The slave was completely at his master's disposal. His one goal in life was to serve. "Apostle" means "one who is sent." Paul was called to be an apostle and sent by the Holy Spirit to witness to the Gentiles. "Gospel" means "good news."


Matthew Henry: "Separated to the gospel of God. "The Pharisees had their name from separation, because they separated themselves to the study of the law, and might be called aphoµrismenoi eis ton nomon; such a one Paul had formerly been; but now he had changed his studies, was aphoµrismenos eis to Euangelion, a gospel Pharisee, separated by the counsel of God (Gal. 1:15)...


Jamieson, Fausset & Brown: the prophets and kings of Israel were officially "the servants of the Lord" ( Jos 1:1 Psa 18:1 , title), the apostles call themselves, in the same official sense, "the servants of Christ" (as here, and Phl 1:1 Jam 1:1 2Pe 1:1 Jud 1:1 ), expressing such absolute subjection and devotion to the Lord Jesus as they would never have yielded to a mere creature.
(Note: the picture on the above right is of part of the Via Doloroda, the path said to be the route that Jesus took on his way to Calvary. The last section of the pathway has been retained by the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.)


Saturday, January 26, 2008

Darrell and Coffee


I just got a call from Darrell Shanabarger up in my old stomping grounds of Canton OH. Darrell was the engineer on my midnight talk show "NightWatch" on the now defunct radio station WTOF FM. (Darrell, do you think our show put them out of business?) Good friend Darrell and I had many a wild program, some garnering calls from all over the state and even a few from West Virginia and Pennsylvania. Pretty good reach.


There are many stories I could tell you about this guy but the best one occured about 2 a.m. when both of us were dragging. I was about 26 at the time and was engaged to Jill. This particular night, the show seemed like it would never end. The call-in show was particularly brutal (maybe about cults or even some argument about the Koine Greek) and during a commercial break I asked Darrell if he could make some coffee.

He graciously complied and I must admit, it was some of the best coffee I had ever tasted. We woke up and charged through the rest of the shift with energy to spare. Darreel was the coffee man from then on.


Within the year I married Jill and, as you hear in some of the old newlywed stories, her cooking brought up a small conflict. No, it wasn't her meals, only the coffee.


"Jill," I said, "this coffee is just two weak. The stuff at the station seems much stronger."


"I'm putting it in as the instructions recommended," she replied. "And that's a brand new Bunn coffeemaker, too. It says to put in 4 measures per pot."


Still, it seemed weak. I hemmed and hawed about this for another week or so, with Jill upping the ante to 5 scoops and then 6 scoops of ground coffee. Still weak. Finally in exasperation she said, "Then find out how many scoops Darrell's putting in."


That night on the shift I asked him how many scoops he put in the filter before brewing.


"What do you mean, 'scoops?'" asked Darrell.


"You know, the measuring spoon thing in the can. How many do you put in the filter?" I asked.


"Well, I never used the scoop," said Darrell. "I thought you were supposed to fill the ground coffee up to the top of the filter."


We later figured out that he was puting in the equivalent of 13 to 15 scoops per pot.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Childhood Memory of Death... and Life


I can recall the month of family melancholia whenever my mother found out that her only brother, William Paholich, was dying of a brain tumor. I must have been about 10 at the time.


I had never seen my mother cry so deeply before then, even when my dad left our family.


We were out playing in the fields of my great-grandfather's farmlands in Tarentum, Pennsylvania, when my younger brother Brian came running out of the farmhouse.

"Mom is crying a whole lot and it's about Uncle Willie. She keeps saying 'the poor kid, the poor kid.'"


We ran inside and stood at a distance, watching our mom's deep grief. She'd lost a husband; now she was losing a brother.


I don't have time to go into the weeks of angst my mom endured as she hoped and prayed that Uncle Willie would get better, but one night she received a phone call: he had passed away. The tumor had its victory.


I recall a week later when Mom came and sat with me and told me two things about Uncle Willie that made a deep impression on me.


"Uncle Willie had always been a fireman," she said, "but in his hospital bed he told me, 'Kay, you know I've always wanted to be an artist. Now I get my chance. I believe God will let me be an artist in heaven.'"


And then she talked to me in the most serious conversation we had up to that time. She turned and said, "Last night I had a dream that Willie was in heaven on top of a hill. He was calling out to me:


'Come on up here, Kay. Come on up here' And he was smiling and happy.'"


Mom knew Willie was in Heaven. he was past his pain and suffering.


I began learning of the unknown ways of God here on Earth, but of His eternal love up in Heaven. I began learning that this life is just a brief visit. The real existence begins in the Home that is being prepared for us.

Monday, January 21, 2008

My Memories of Jim Wood


Here I am at graduation ceremonies two years back. It's hard to believe that it was over 30 years ago that I would sit in a little church in Sand Beach PA ( a little burg near Hummelstown - I don't even know if Sand Beach was even considered a town in itself) and hear an evangelist named Jim Woods come and speak the words of the Lord in a distinct Kentucky-cured dialect that stuck with me for weeks on end.
I don't know what ever happened to that preacher who reminded me so much of Abe LIncoln. He had the height, the dark hair, and the gaunt features of Abe. But Mr. Woods could lay out a clear plan of Scriptural truth in a way I loved: unadorned yet loving. Interesting but not fanciful. Thought-provoking but not anecdotal.
I remember making a decision under his preaching. I believe it was for a committed life to serving the Lord with more zeal and purpose... a serious thing for a boy not yet in his teens.
What did I love about his speaking? The bare-faced honesty about it.
During the shock of divorce and the shame that I felt when friends were starting to keep their distance ( a child of divorce was a pretty embarrassing thing in the 60s in the classrooms I attended), it was wonderful to hear and feel the energetic exuberant love of God from a simple backwoods preacher who would stop by on occasion to present God's Word.
I'll always remember the blessing of Jim Woods.

Friday, January 18, 2008

My Childhood View of God


I wrote this first chapter over two years ago and had it packed away in my archives. It will give you the initial view of how I perceived God, due to the surroundings that shaped my perception of Him:



My knees shook.

I was only nine years old. I was frightened and frustrated by the slowly unfolding scene before me. Nine year olds aren’t supposed to deal with this kind of fear. But there I stood, next to my four brothers and one sister, the oldest thirteen and the youngest six. We were all shoulder-to-shoulder in line, a sort of tragic/comedic pose that none of us had planned. We stood in the small kitchen of our rural house in the outskirts of Hershey, Pennsylvania, sharing the same child-like feeling that this shouldn’t be happening.


The six of us were openly crying, sobbing in children sobs, the kind that make little noises with each breath. My mom stood in the doorway of the room, staring across the room at my dad, arms folded and her jaw set.


This is summer time, and summer is supposed to be fun.


Yet there stood my father, hand on the doorknob, wearing sunglasses even though he was inside the house. He wore Bermuda shorts and a short-sleeve shirt and looked for all the world like a man about to pack his kids off for a day at the amusement park.


Except he was going, and we were staying.


“This is it,” my mom said, folding her arms. “Tell them, all six of them. You make your final choice. It’s either your mistress, or it’s your children. Make your choice. But tell it to their faces.”


I looked over for support from my older sister. Her cheeks were red and a tear rolled down the side of her nose. One of my brothers was crying so hard that he was gagging.
My dad looked at us, raised his hand slightly, waved and walked out the door.

There. It was done.

Except for the crying.

The dad that I had known all of my life, the man that brought home candy from business trips, the one who sat in a chair reading the newspaper and chuckling while we colored cartoon faces on his white socks, the father who taught me how to throw a football – that same man had closed the screen door, hopped into his Volvo and had gone to live with another woman. A night club musician, at that. He left my diligent Russian-heritage mom (who knew how to make incredible pierogis and kapusta) for a bespangled xylophone player who didn’t even know how to cook a Thanksgiving turkey, for crying out loud.


As a nine-year old boy who was still learning the nuances of catching a baseball in a leather mitt and of trying to understand the necessity of Sunday School, this was the bulldozer that leveled everything. I didn’t realize it, but my childhood had been largely built around the safety and protection and character of my dad.

And now he was gone.

I sit and type this memory during a break in the classes in a private academy where I teach (the students are taking aptitude tests today, so I have a little bit of time on my hands). I feel a deep grieving within my chest that rises up and pushes tears to my eyes. This is still too fresh for me. I take a break and leave the computer to take a quiet walk down the school hallways to get a coffee and try to compartmentalize this pain, push it back in the proper slots that all adults are supposed to have. I’m a teacher. I’ve been a pastor. I should be over this, right?


This incident was over thirty years ago and yet I still feel as if someone had pushed me down and stepped on my chest with both feet. How could anyone think that this was okay? Who makes the rules? It reminds me of another childhood memory where, as a spectator at a local baseball game, I was hit with a batted ball, a looping shot that smashed into my skull and knocked me from my seat. As I fought the pain in my skull and spit the aluminum taste from my mouth, I noticed groups of teenagers doing a poor job of trying to hide their laughter. What could possibly make them think this was funny, I asked myself in more anguish than the pain brought, why can they not see that I am hurt?

How could anyone think this is okay? Who makes the rules? Why am I such a small player in the scheme of things?


It brought to mind another deeply painful incident. I can’t scour it out of my mind…

I stared in terror. I couldn’t move.

This can’t be happening. This can’t.

This past week hasn’t been real. Perhaps I can re-think this whole week – would that make a difference?

My new stepfather lit a cigarette, glanced at us and jerked his thumb toward the moving truck. “Go. Get in. Now.” He turned his back to us and blew out a puff of smoke.

My mom had re-married. We were to begin life in a new region, at least six hours away in a small community in Maryland. We had hurriedly shoved every possible belonging into the back of a rented moving truck, ending up with an unstable heap of furniture and boxes shoved toward the front of the truck’s enclosed trailer. There was about five feet of open space between the rocking mound of tied-down gear and the back pull-down door.

And that was where we were supposed to go. We stood in and helped one another into the back of the truck, sleeping bags in hand. My oldest brother quietly rolled out each of our bags and instructed us to lie on them. We turned to take one last look at our farmhouse before my stepfather walked in front of our line of vision and pulled the moving truck’s door down. We were in total darkness for the next six hours.


I propped my head on my arm in that thick darkness, staring at the ceiling and hearing the terrifying creaking of the furniture, trying to hold back the panic that rose and puffed behind my ribs. Stuff like this doesn’t happen to children. This isn’t real. I heard the sobbing of my next youngest brother who openly panicked (To this day he still has claustrophobia, not wanting spaces any tighter than a living room.).

At six-fifty this morning I sat at a local coffee shop and drank some dark roast, reflecting on the brutal childhood years of trying to deal with this rejection. I finger a small card that has a Latin phrase I’ve been studying while preparing my doctoral dissertation: Coram Deo: “before the face of God." I suppose I should come up with a pithy saying that tells the reader of this magnificent God who watches over all, but I don’t get that out of this phrase …nope, not at all.
I don’t think of Him as being a God on a tower overlooking the football field of players. I see Him as the personal God who sits and has coffee with me. He wakes me in the morning with a quiet hello when I know He could just as easily send a splitting thunderclap or a jangling emergency.


I never remember my dad coming into my room – day or night – as I lay in bed as a child. I don’t remember him sitting and playing very many games with me. Once, as a ten year old, I sat with him and played a round of Scrabble, beating him on the last word. I could see in his eyes that he was upset. Dad, I want a partner to enjoy, not a competitor. And so went my youth experience, filled with uncomfortable visitation trips and half-hearted holiday presents.
My dad didn’t watch over me in a living-room-and-kitchen kind of way. He made occasional visits in a mall-and-theater-type of way. Some kids would enjoy this. I detested it. But I didn’t detest Dad. I wasn’t mad at him…but I wasn’t happy with him either. He was sort of ... there, and I was sort of ... here, and it was just as much my part to go out to the car and get in for visitation as it was for him to drive down from Pennsylvania to pick me up. He initiated a scene by buying a gift that he assumed I would enjoy, and I finished the act by smiling and promising to play with whatever it was, even though I would probably have no use for the item. That’s the way it was – a balance between parent and child. That was normal, wasn’t it?


Well, that’s the way I saw God, too. He was polite, yet indifferent. That’s okay, I thought. I can work this out as well. God will initiate the scene by showing me a nice time in a large building with well-mannered adults who sang, listened to a long message, and had a nice pot-luck dinner once a month. My job was to sit still, listen to whatever sounded interesting, and make sure I ate enough of the main course so that I was allowed to have a generous hunk of Shoo-Fly Pie.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

New Turn



I'm going to take a small change of direction within this blog and tell you about the various events within my childhood, things that helped create the path that would lead to my walk with the Lord. My upbring has been a checkered one: my parents were divorced when I was 10, my mother remarried about a year later, and the family I grew up with totalled 10 children. I was number 4. My siblings were Bruce, Gwen, Brent, Wendy, Brian, Sheila, Brock, Kandy, and Tammi.


The many towns I lived in included Dallastown, PA; Hershey, PA; Irwin, PA; Delmar, DE; Salisbury MD; and Delmar MD (Delmar lies on both sides of the Del/Maryland state line).


I will try to add to this blog throughout the day and share the many childhood and teen-year lessons that God has graciously given me.


I'll also show what it was like to live in one of the biggest families in the state.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Robert Burns and God

Burns:

But, Mousie, thou art no thy lane
In proving foresight may be vain:
The best laid schemes o' mice an' men
Gang aft a-gley,
An' lea'e us nought but grief an' pain,
For promised joy.
Still thou art blest,

compared wi' me!
The present only toucheth thee:
But, oh! I backward cast my e'e
On prospects drear!
An' forward , tho' I canna see,
I guess an' fear!

God:

"For I know the plans I have for you," declares the LORD, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." - Jeremiah 29:11

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

Mid-week notes

I participated in a book reading at a local Starbucks last night. I was reading excerpts from my upcoming book "Crying Island," and making comments about it. I felt very uncomfortable and probably won't do it again. Problem number 1: The crowd cannot get satisfied because the author is only reading excerpts. The listeners, no matter how they react, do not appear satisfied. The other author and I were not able to complete full chapters, leaving the listeners feeling like they were having the channel turned off in the middle of the program. At least that's the way I felt the audience was taking it.
Problem number 2: The reading took place in a Starbucks, which, as you know, has no private room. Yes, indeed, I was standing behind a podium in the middle of the store, with a line of customers moving past and the schhhhlarkkkkk of the espresso machine drowning out whole paragraphs. Imagine someone slurping into a PA microphone in the middle of a library and you get the idea of the difficulty of concentration.
The invitation gesture was nice and I was asked to participate in the next one later this month at another Starbucks but I won't be attending. It seemed a bit too self-serving.

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Nicholas is back at ETSU and doing well in his new position as a dorm proctor. He is taking classes right now to prepare him for this new position of responsibility. He'll be visiting us back here in Knoxville at the end of this month.

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Jill is designing the interiors of our new home, room by room as the weeks go by. The main room is a stone fireplace room and her thoughts are to make it with a country flair. I enjoy the way she adds the little extras to make this large home feel comfortable. Like the other residents of the Tan Rara subdivision, we enjoy the sound of the nearby railroad as it chugs by. We almost feel like the train is a part of our subdivision's family. One neighbor who is moving away told me that he will honestly miss the sound of that old railroad.

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Our office leadership has invited all of us division heads to participate in a through-the-year Bible reading. Each Monday is our accountability day, and we are marching through the Bibles and reflecting on it at the beginning of the week. One of the department heads has stated that this is a great eye-opener for her. But that's the truth for all of us, isn't it?

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I wonder when we will get snow here? My guess is in late February.

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Great comforting words that only Jesus can give:

Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid. - John 14:27

Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Dependence Upon God for the New Year


In light of the new year that is upon us, and bearing in mind that many of us are now trying to map out the things we'll be doing in the coming months, I present to you a magnificent devotional thought by Oswald Chambers:


One of the most difficult questions to answer in Christian work is, "What do you expect to do?" You don’t know what you are going to do. The only thing you know is that God knows what He is doing. Continually examine your attitude toward God to see if you are willing to "go out" in every area of your life, trusting in God entirely. It is this attitude that keeps you in constant wonder, because you don’t know what God is going to do next. Each morning as you wake, there is a new opportunity to "go out," building your confidence in God. ". . . do not worry about your life . . . nor about the body . . ." (Luke 12:22). In other words, don’t worry about the things that concerned you before you did "go out."


Have you been asking God what He is going to do? He will never tell you. God does not tell you what He is going to do— He reveals to you who He is. Do you believe in a miracle-working God, and will you "go out" in complete surrender to Him until you are not surprised one iota by anything He does?


Believe God is always the God you know Him to be when you are nearest to Him. Then think how unnecessary and disrespectful worry is! Let the attitude of your life be a continual willingness to "go out" in dependence upon God, and your life will have a sacred and inexpressible charm about it that is very satisfying to Jesus.