Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Celebrate

When you read this on Sunday morning we will be in the season of Advent. Thanksgiving and Black Friday will be behind us. During the days leading up to the Advent season I wondered, “Just what does it take to have a Happy Thanksgiving?” Thanksgiving involves, for most of us, unhealthy portions of food, football, and festivities. At times, it is easy to let the formality get in the way of the family. Is this what it takes for us to have a happy Thanksgiving? The first Thanksgiving was preceded by the death of more than half of the original pilgrims who set out on the Mayflower. The rest would have perished as well if the Native Americans had not had compassion on them and share their stores and shown them how to plant and cultivate.

The first Thanksgiving was not a day to celebrate plenty. It was a time to celebrate grace and mercy, compassion and deliverance, survival and recovery. In reality the pilgrims were probably much more frugal with their use of food than we have been over the last few days.

Immediately following Thanksgiving, we move to what has become known as Black Friday, a celebration of materialism and greed. A store in Los Angeles saw roughly a dozen people pepper sprayed by a woman seeking an advantage in a battle over an X-box. In our own Wal-mart in Ennis, an employee told me about a fist fight that broke out over an item that was in limited supply. This behavior is so foreign to the Christmas spirit, to the giving and sacrificing of the Christ child, to God putting on flesh in order that we might be able to put on spirit and wholeness. We are in danger of losing Christmas.

Our holidays, all of which are rooted in some grand idea of respect, honor, worship, and recognition, have become sale days.

In these four Sundays of Advent leading up to Christmas we need to do what we can to reclaim our holidays. At the same time we need to recognize our own responsibility for making them that way in the first place. Advent is when we think about the coming of the Christ, not just in the manger, but in our own lives and as the reigning King of the universe. It is a time to recognize how much our Savior loves us and what is expected of us as members of His Kingdom. May our actions, our attitudes, and our words throughout this season reflect that which we truly celebrate.

Pastor Craig

Monday, November 21, 2011

Woefully Inadequate!

Have you ever felt inadequate? How about “woefully inadequate?” I felt this way just this last Thursday. I received a copy of my dissertation back with comments from my Technical Reader. Now before you are too hard on either of us, our whole cohort was given an early warning that Mr. John Anderson was one of the most demanding Technical Readers available. It is his job to be picky. It is his job to get your dissertation ready for public viewing. It is his job to make sure you final product does not embarrass the seminary, the specific program you are in, or yourself as the researcher, so I am not really complaining, just feeling “woefully inadequate!”

His exact words, “Your Chapter Two is woefully inadequate and incomplete.” One of my colleagues said, “I wanted to call him and make sure he was OK after I got mine back because I thought he might have been the victim of a brutal slaying with all the red on my paper!” I consider myself to be in excellent company.

I knew it was woefully in adequate when I sent it in. I was expecting a massive number of corrections and revisions, and that is exactly what I got. I imagine the feeling might be similar to something we might feel in the moments immediately before we appear before God’s throne in heaven. It is time for a reckoning. God is about to evaluate your life.

Actually, Mr. Anderson would be more like Jesus, the Messiah, than God as Judge. The technical reader looks at everything concerning your paper. He actually gets out a ruler and measures the margins and the indentations. He checks your formatting for headings and punctuation. He is the best thing that could happen to you. He is preparing you to appear before the group of scholars who will examine your work and ask you to discuss it and answer questions. You want to make a good impression on them, and you don’t do that with a bunch of typos and errors. He is making sure you have nothing to be ashamed of when you stand before those who will render a judgment on your scholarly attempt.

“Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a workman who does not need to be ashamed and who correctly handles the word of truth.”[1] So, when our name is called and we know it is our turn to answer to the King, we will see the doors open wide and recognize our sweet Savior standing by His side and waiting to stand by ours, and we will be comforted with a great comfort!

Pastor Craig



[1] II Timothy 2:15

Saturday, November 12, 2011

A Jug of Milk, A Hammer, and A Tent Peg

The Old Testament book of Judges contains many of the lesser known heroes of the Bible. Three of these can be found in a single extended story contained in the fourth and fifth chapters of the book of Judges. It is one of the Biblical stories where women save the day while the men lag behind in doubt.

The story opens with Deborah. She is identified as a prophetess (4:4) and judge, in that she held court under a palm tree (4:5), for the people of Israel. Being judge meant that she would settle disputes between people. She, probably much like Moses did, heard only the most complex cases, leaving the simpler ones to be decided by judges over certain sections of the people.

In her role as leader she sent for Barak and instructed him, “The LORD, the God of Israel, commands you: ‘Go, take with you 10,000 men. . . I will lure Sisera. . . and give him into your hands.’”

Sisera was the commander of the armies of Jabin, a king of Canaan. The army was well equipped and formidable with over 900 iron chariots. The Israelites, a non-professional fighting force, had zero! This makes it fairly easy to understand when Barak spoke to Deborah and said, “If you go with me, I will go; but if you don’t go with me, I won’t go.” In other words, “Forget the command of God. I only trust people who are willing to stick there neck out, who are willing to back up the words with actions!” Deborah went. 

The Bible tells us “The Lord routed Sisera and all his chariots and army by the sword, and Sisera abandoned his chariot and fled on foot.” Enter the next heroine of the story, Jael.

Sisera was scared for his life. He came to Jael’s tent and asked he to hide him. She became the instrument of God to defeat the enemies of Israel. She said, “Come right in. Don’t be afraid.” (4:18). Sisera, be afraid, be very afraid! It says she gave him a drink and covered him up so no one would see him. It was while Sisera was feeling all safe and secure in his secret hiding place that Jael “picked up a tent peg and a hammer and went quietly to him while he lay fast asleep. She drove the peg through his temple into the ground and he died.” One version says, “she struck once and did not need to strike again!” Yes, Sisera, be afraid. Be very afraid! God works, sometimes through the commander of the armies and sometimes through a woman with a jug of milk, a hammer, and a tent peg!

Pastor Craig

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Veterans' Day

This is a very awkward article to write. How does a pastor write about Veteran’s Day and the birthday of the United State Marine Corps? For those of you who may not know, every Marine’s birthday is November 10th because 236 years ago the Marine Corps was founded at Tun Tavern in Philadelphia, PA on this date, and for those of you who missed it, Veteran’s Day was Friday, November 11th. Most of you probably didn’t think about it until you opened your mail box on Friday and found it empty.

What is the appropriate way for one who is a follower of the Prince of Peace to, at the same time, show proper appreciation for those who have helped keep war outside our own borders for the vast majority of our history? A simple thank you hardly seems sufficient. However, even that is more than some vets get.

Throughout these most recent conflicts I struggled as to how to pray for our troops. Many of you know that two of them were my own sons. Oh, I have no problem praying for their success and safety, but, as I do that, am I in fact praying for the death of someone else in a foreign land who may have a spouse and family as well? In a firefight between our people in uniform and those who would engage them on the battlefield I will always ask God for the life, safety, and success of our men and women.

Certainly, the best thing, the greatest gift we could pray for and wish for our military personnel would be that the need for their service would one day pass away from the face of the earth. However, that seems unlikely, and as long as the need remains, I am thankful we have some our best and brightest who are willing to take up the call and respond, putting themselves at risk that you and I can sleep securely at night.

The call of Christ to “Love one another” seems like the impossible dream much of the time. There is no glory in the killing of another human being. There is glory when good triumphs over evil. Sometimes it is difficult to decide if the cause is completely just. So, we do not pray for war. We pray for the men and women who are sent on our behalf to fight the war. We pray for success and safety, and, on days like we had this past week, we thank them for what they have done for us. We pay for the peace that passes all understanding to calm those whose hearts, souls, minds, and spirits are troubled by what they have seen and done. We pray for those who have suffered such great personal loss of a loved one because we are all sinful creatures and are not any closer to a peaceful world than when the angels first proclaimed it for the shepherds one night in a field 2,000 years ago.

So, we continue to preach the Gospel message of love, peace, hope, compassion, forgiveness, and mercy in the midst of a broken and sinful world. We pray for our enemies. We do our best to forgive those who have offended us. We pray for and ask for forgiveness for the ways and times we have offended others, and we long for a world that might be at peace and soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines that can stand-down from their watchfulness.