Waiting

1171215_88248255 (2)My daughter desperately wants an iPod but doesn’t have enough money to buy one.  She’s been trying every angle with her parents and brothers to see if she can beg, borrow, or steal enough to purchase one.  She’s offered to do house jobs for pay and she even divided the price of an iPod by four to show us what we could each contribute to make her purchase possible.  So far she’s had no luck.

She’s waiting.

I was Christmas shopping in a local department store the other day.  I found the item I needed right away, but the line at the checkout was really long.

Waiting.

My wife recently entered some songs she wrote in a songwriting contest.

She’s waiting.

After a year of contemplating it, a few months ago I applied to a seminary for entrance into one of their degree programs.  It took a while before I heard back and when I did, they sent me a topic for an essay I was required to write and submit for their review as part of the application process.

I was waiting.

When my older sister arrived for our family Christmas get-together last year she had just been to the doctor to check out some “suspicious” spots and was scheduled for a follow-up appointment when she returned home.

She was waiting.

A few years ago I made a trip to Africa and found myself counting the days until I would be reunited with my family.  On my flight home I was counting down the hours.

We were waiting.

I know parents who have a son off serving in Afghanistan and are praying for his safe return.

They are waiting.

I know a mom and dad who are praying for a prodigal child to come home.

Waiting.

A recent college graduate just applied and interviewed for his first position.

Waiting.

A young couple is engaged to be married.

Waiting.

A husband and wife have been in the application process most of this past year to adopt a child.

Waiting.

A child counts down the days until Christmas.

A family gets ready for relatives to arrive for a Christmas reunion.

They are waiting.

Life is waiting.  I can either wait expectantly or impatiently, but I’m going to find myself waiting.

They stand shamefully clutching their fig-leaf coverings as God promises our first parents an Offspring who will rescue them from their fall.

The waiting begins.

Abraham hears God’s promise to him, telling him that he will be the father of nations and that through his Offspring all the world will be blessed, even though he is an old man and childless as God speaks to him.

The waiting builds.

The nation of Israel groans under the hardship of Egyptian bondage and cries out for rescue.

The waiting seems unbearable.

Isaiah says that a virgin will conceive and give birth to a son who will be the Prince of peace.

Micah says that this son, the Ruler for Israel, will come from Bethlehem.

The waiting continues.

The angel announces to the virgin Mary, “You will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus.  He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. And the Lord God will give to him the throne of his father David, and he will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of his kingdom there will be no end.”

The waiting is almost over.

The angels announce to the shepherds, “Unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.”

The waiting is over.  The Promise has arrived!

But what is Jesus saying now?  “I am going to prepare a place for you, and I will come again and will take you to myself.”

Waiting again?

The beaten, pierced, lifeless body of Jesus lies in a cold, dark tomb.

Waiting.

The angels tell the followers of the resurrected Jesus as He ascends into heaven that, “This Jesus, who was taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you saw him go into heaven.”

Yes, waiting again.

Advent, a season of waiting, begins today.  It’s a time to remember anew the centuries of Israel’s waiting for the arrival of her Messiah.  Simeon waited to see “the Consolation of Israel” whom he one day held in his arms.  Anna devoted her life to fasting and prayer as she waited, and one day joyfully announced to others who had been waiting that the Redeemer of Israel was here.  Neither of them wanted to miss what they had waited for their whole lives.

What’s sad is that when Jesus, the promised Consolation of Israel, arrived most of that generation missed Him.  Some because they doubted and others because they got distracted and lost interest. There were some who grew discouraged by the waiting and quit, giving up hope.  And then there were those whose expectations became so distorted that when their Messiah came they didn’t recognize Him.  Waiting can do that sometimes.

Dietrich Bonhoffer said, “Waiting is an art that our impatient age has forgotten.”  In the busyness of shopping for the best deals, putting up Christmas decorations, baking traditional favorites, planning family gatherings, preparing for special programs, or coping with the fact that things won’t be the same this year, I don’t want to miss the call of the Advent season.  In an impatient, got-to-have-it-now culture, I must make time to wait in silence before Him: to wonder, to fast, to repent, and to prepare, for only in such waiting will I enter more fully into the blessedness of His arrival.  Again, Bonhoffer said, “Whoever does not know the austere blessedness of waiting – that is, of hopefully doing without – will never experience the full blessing of fulfillment.”

The waiting is not over yet.

Here is Eugene Peterson’s paraphrase of Peter’s closing words in his second letter.  They call us to this current season of waiting.  A second Advent is imminent.

With God, one day is as good as a thousand years, a thousand years as a day. God isn’t late with his promise as some measure lateness. He is restraining himself on account of you, holding back the End because he doesn’t want anyone lost. He’s giving everyone space and time to change.

But when the Day of God’s Judgment does come, it will be unannounced, like a thief. The sky will collapse with a thunderous bang, everything disintegrating in a huge conflagration, earth and all its works exposed to the scrutiny of Judgment.

Since everything here today might well be gone tomorrow, do you see how essential it is to live a holy life? Daily expect the Day of God, eager for its arrival.

So, my dear friends, since this is what you have to look forward to, do your very best to be found living at your best, in purity and peace. Interpret our Master’s patient restraint for what it is: salvation.

We are waiting.  Come, Lord Jesus!

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Future of America on Election Night

It’s election day in America and it remains to be seen whether or not America’s future is bright or dismal.  Both sides claim that nothing less than this is at stake and that the stakes have never been higher in the history of our nation.  I agree with a blogger I read a couple months ago who observed that probably the voters and non-voters (women and slaves) of 1860 wouldn’t agree with our assessment of this election when the preservation of the Union and the question of whether or not this nation would continue to allow human beings to own other human beings hung in the balance.  I’m not downplaying the importance of this election, just pleading for some perspective.

My random thoughts on this election day:

  1. I am thankful.  I am thankful to God for allowing me to live in a nation where I get to participate in the process of choosing government leaders.  I am thankful to the thousands upon thousands of Americans who have spilled their blood on battlefields to secure and preserve this privilege.  That cost brings a sacredness to this privilege.
  2. I am optimistic.  It is an optimism that is not born in politics but theology.  Whether or not the guy I voted for wins or loses I know that overwhelming victory is mine through Jesus Christ who loved me (Rom. 8:37) and that this victory makes any election pale in comparison.
  3. I am sad.  The political gulf that exists between whites and people of color in America exists in the church.  I am coming to see more clearly why, in the words of Martin Luther King, Jr., and echoed by evangelical pastor Tony Evans, “11:00 o’clock Sunday mornings is the most segregated hour of the week.”  In 2010, Time magazine published a story (you can read it here) on this divide noting that fewer than 8% of American congregations have a racial mix.  It is sobering to realize that a magazine of such national stature has embarrassingly observed that Christian churches seem to do worse at positive racial relations than the world does.  Politics is one of the things that keeps black and white Christians divided into separate churches because, I guess, it’s just plain easier to hang around people who agree with your politics.  I’m sad over that; sometimes I’m just plain mad.
  4. I am undeterred.  No matter who wins the election, my work remains the same.  I will preach the gospel of Jesus Christ for it is the power of God that saves sinners from hell.  I will shepherd the flock committed to my care, working to anchor us in God’s truth, and leading us to love the vast diversity of people around us enough to reach out to them.
  5. I am prayerful.  As I obey God’s Word and pray for the President, the Congress and courts, I am praying that they would leave Christians alone to live out our faith in Christ (1 Timothy 2:2).  I am going to pray for moral courage and common sense to begin to rule more people in Washington, D.C. when it comes to curbing the treachery of abortion.  I am going to pray for Democrats and Republicans to figure out some way to get some helpful things accomplished for our nation.  I am going to pray for wisdom to speak God’s truth and righteousness in such a way as to not unnecessarily create enemies out of the people I’m here to reach because of being reckless with my words.

My projection on this election night is that the work I’ve been left here to do will get harder, humanly speaking, and will become more unpopular with the general populace.  But I will remember this, nothing ever gets harder for God.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Bullying the Chikin

The past decade plus has brought too many reprehensible stories of bullying that have resulted in suicides and retaliatory killings.  As I’ve always understood it, a bully is stereotypically a big-mouthed brute who tries to rule the playground or the lunchroom by intimidating others with verbal and physical threats.  He particularly delights in going after littler guys to make himself look big, or after potentially threatening people to make himself look powerful.  If the bully isn’t strong enough himself to back up his threats then he has his henchmen who are ready to step in to give the needed show of force.

For a more thought-out definition with better information, I turned to the Wikipedia article on “bullying.”  Here is some of what I found described there.

  • Bullying is aggressive behavior that expresses itself by the use of force or coercion to affect others.
  • It can include verbal harassment and may be directed repeatedly toward particular victims sometimes on the ground of religion.
  • The victim of bullying is sometimes referred to as a “target.”
  • One of the basic types of bullying is verbal and it typically involves subtle methods of coercion such as intimidation.
  • Bullies may have “lieutenants” who willingly assist the primary bully in his or her bullying activities.
  • Bullying can occur in any context where humans interact with each other including interaction between social groups.

So, there is this family who has built a successful business by having a cow encourage people to “EAT MOR CHIKIN.”  The president of this business is a Christian who believes the Bible, and that has led him to conclude that gay marriage is wrong.  Mind you, he doesn’t deny gay people courteous service in his restaurants, nor does he deny them employment based on their sexual preferences.  He just happens to believe homosexuality is wrong and that marriage, as defined by God, is a relationship that exists between a man and a woman.  For having the audacity to say that, this man and his business have been targeted by the gay community and politically-correct politicians who, with their willing lieutenants in the media, have engaged in a barrage of hateful verbal assaults, seeking to intimidate this business owner into adopting and advancing their agenda.  It isn’t acceptable to them to just be courteously tolerated in their beliefs and behaviors; they demand outright approval, and anything less than that is equated with hate and therefore a legitimate target for their assaults.  These supposed perveyors of tolerance expose themselves as nothing more than a gang of intolerant bullies who prey upon a particular religious segment of our society.

That’s what went through my mind when I read about the nonsensical controversy that erupted over Chick-fil-A’s president Dan Cathy’s affirmation of a biblical definition of marriage.  It is a controversy ignited by gay-rights advocates, grand-standed by politicians who intend to shut these restaurants out of their communities, and advanced by their media lieutenants.  When I heard the story I thought, you’re kidding me, right?  A successful American business owner who makes really good chicken sanwiches, waffle fries, and lemonade is not allowed to voice his beliefs regarding marriage from the Bible without hysterical screeching from those who believe otherwise?  Wow!  There really are those in America who don’t want people to have the right to believe what they want to believe and say it, who are willing to target those people, and use bullying techniques to intimidate them into silence with verbal harassment.  Perhaps the most amazing part of this is that those who engage in these bullying methods are portrayed as the tolerant ones.

The natural anger this story stirs up inside of me is quelled when I remember one simple reality: that’s our world.  As a Christian who believes God’s Word, I get it that America is part of a world system that doesn’t love or respect the God who has revealed himself in the Bible.  I get it that as a Christian I am a foreigner in this world even though I live in America.  I get it that I am not to be surprised that this world doesn’t simply ignore God’s Word, but actually hates it and hates its messengers.  Jesus said that would be the case.  I get it that I am called, by the grace and mercy of the gospel, to be tolerant of intolerant people, even, if necessary, to turn the cheek to bullies.

When I use the word “tolerant” I am referring to the old definition: “respecting people and treating them kindly even when you believe they are wrong.”  I can disagree with someone and believe they are wrong but still treat them kindly and respectfully.  I can even be friends with someone who believes differently from me.  But that’s not the definition of tolerance used today.  The new definition, “never regarding anyone else’s opinion as wrong,” means that even suggesting that someone’s belief or opinion is wrong is intolerant.  I believe any individual has the right to believe what he or she wants to believe.  I would hope for the same in return, which seems reasonable and for most of its history, has been a very American thing to do.

However, I also get it that if what I believe actually happens to be the truth (truth being defined as that which corresponds with reality), then there will be those who don’t want it spoken because when everything is said and done, truth wins.  Since the one operating the levers of this world’s system is a liar, I am not surprised by the bullying techniques used to silence truth.

So, in the meantime, I will be thankful for people like Dan Cathy who will not be intimidated into silence.  I will pray for the courage to do the same.  But at the same time I will love those who believe differently than I believe, and behave differently than I behave.  I will resist the temptation to view myself as superior to them.  I will not be drawn into their intolerant hatred.  I will be sad for them for I know that one day they will stand before the God they ignore and reject, and on that day their bullying won’t work.  They, with all their lieutenants, will be silenced once and for all.  For you see, while I believe in an individual’s right to believe what they want, I also believe that accompanying that right is the fact that every individual will answer to God for what they have chosen to believe and they will reap the consequences.

Honestly, on a human level, there is satisfaction in that for me when I read stories like those cited above.  One day Chicago Mayor Rahm Emmanuel, Chicago Alderman Joe Moreno, Boston Mayor Thomas Menino, and Jim Henson’s muppets will realize they were wrong and Dan Cathy was right.  But on a deeper level, the feeling is sorrow.  I know they spurn that sorrow, but I can’t help but pray,  “Father, forgive them for they know not what they say!”

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

Photoblog – Camp Patmos, Kelleys Island, OH

Random photographs that I’ve taken at Camp Patmos, located on Kelleys Island, Ohio.

Sunrise 1

Sunrise 2

Sunrise 3

Shoreline

Dining Hall and Lakeview

The swimming pool

Sailing

The lighthouse at sunset

The lighthouse at the camp

The lighthouse

Looking across the bay at sunset to the Perry Peace Monument

Posted in Photoblogs | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Photoblog – Nature 1

I haven’t had time to write lately, so I thought I’d share from one of my few hobbies – photography.  I know, every photographer with a digital camera these days thinks he is a professional photographer and is sure he is going to get his “million-dollar” shot.  I haven’t taken mine yet.  Just the same, the following are pictures of flowers in our backyard that I took as I was experimenting with the macro setting on my camera (I took a class in May that helped me actually figure out where my macro setting was).  My wife made these pictures into some note cards.  I noticed on the back of those cards that she put my blogsite so I thought it would be good to put the pictures up on the site so that anyone who actually checked out the site from the card would find some pictures.  So, here goes for your enjoyment.  The names, by the way, are her inventions – a little too girlie for me, but hey, I just take the pictures and let her do the creativity.

– sunlit peony –

– rose petal perfection –

– rose perfection –

– rosebud solo –

– peony perfection  –

– peony in white –

– peony in pink –

– purple princess –

Posted in Photoblogs | Tagged , , | 1 Comment