Friday, March 23, 2018

March 23


Today is March 23, 2018.  It is Friday.  38 years ago March 23 was on Sunday.  I have two important reasons to remember that fact.  First, I baptized Sam Hatcher that Sunday morning.  Sam was the first person I baptized.  I was serving as an intern minister at a church in Euless, TX.  That meant I didn’t earn a salary.  I was offered the job in my last year as a seminary student by a friend who was the pastor.  He told me that as an intern I would not receive a salary but the experience would be invaluable.  Don’t you love the way that they make working for free sound good?  Anyway, I had never performed a baptism and he let me baptize Sam during the morning service.   

Since this was a special event I asked my girlfriend to attend.  I had to be there early so she came later in her own car.  Afterward I took her to the most expensive Italian restaurant that I could afford, Pizza Hut.  Don’t forget, I was an ‘intern minister’ with no salary.  Even Pizza Hut stretched my budget.   She and I had been dating a few months.  I knew I liked her and thought she liked me, at least she kept agreeing to go out with me so that was a rare and good sign.  The day was special as I had made it through my first baptism but something seemed to be different for me as we had lunch.  She was at the salad bar and I remember looking at her, smiling as I was overcome by a sensation that seemed to come out of nowhere realizing, “this girl could be a great wife and mother for my children”…I did not have any children at the time but this was God’s way of telling me she was the one for me.  Cathy must have seen the crazy smile on my face as she returned to the table, saying: “What is it?”  I brushed it off saying, “Oh, nothing” but I kept thinking, “If this feeling does not go away, I’m going to ask her to marry me.”

As a word of explanation, this wasn’t like me.  I’m not a spontaneous person by nature.  In fact, I’m quite the opposite.  Rarely do I say or do anything that has not been well thought out.  In fact, I usually think things to death.  That is what OCD people do.  We obsess with our thoughts seeking to make certain we make the right decision.  Then we obsess wondering, “Was that the right decision?”   OCD becomes a crippling disorder when the person gets so obsessed with making the ‘right’ decision that they cannot make a decision at all.  And here I was about to make the most important decision in my life, other than my decision to follow Jesus, without obsessing or thinking about the ‘right’ decision at all.  Maybe it just seemed so right that there was no need to obsess.  This was also early in my theological studies but I’ve now become very much aware that God rarely does things that fit perfectly into our logic and reasoning. 

I knew I liked Cathy; I liked her a lot…more than anyone I had ever met.  But, I had not yet thought of marriage.  I was too practical for that.  Remember I was only an ‘intern minister’ with no salary.  I was one semester from graduating from seminary with no real idea where or what kind of ministerial position I would have after graduation…or even if I would be hired by any church.  How could I think of marriage when I could barely take care of myself?  However, the feeling did not leave as we finished our lunch and I drove her back to the church parking where she had left her car.  I parked next to her car, turned off the ignition, turned to face her and said, “I want to ask you something before you get out of the car.  Will you marry me?”  She punched me in the arm and said, “Stop fooling around!” She could tell by the serious look on my face that I was not fooling around and then she got the same serious look on her face and said yes.   She still has to occasionally punch me in the arm and tell me to stop fooling around but on August 23 we will celebrate 38 years (in a row) of marriage to one another. 

I still shake my head on occasion and think how I made that most important and life changing decision in a manner that is so out of character for me.  It took me weeks to make a decision about buying our first sofa.  Even in my cautious, OCD careful ways of making decisions God seemed to get through and give me to comfort to trust Him as this was His plan for us.  Sometimes we need to step out of our normal routine or character or we will never experience the wonderful adventure that God has right in front of us.  We can get too locked down in our safe pattern of thinking and comfortable routine.  We do not need to explain or have complete understanding for every decision or action.  Faith often defies explanation or understanding.  I once had a poster in my office with two pictures and two captions.  The first picture is a person cautiously looking over a cliff with the caption, “What if I fall?”  The next picture on the poster is one of one of those ‘base jumper wingsuit flyers’ who leap off the cliff to soar along the mountainside like a bird.  That caption reads, “Oh, but what if I fly?”  

There are times when we need to follow our heart and trust God in faith as we leap. Now, we are not to jump foolishly off the cliff but we are also not to hang back in fear when we feel God calling us to trust His hand by faith.   Jesus said, “The wind blows wherever it pleases. You hear its sound, but you cannot tell where it comes from or where it is going. So it is with everyone born of the Spirit.”  Those who raise their sail to catch and follow the ‘wind of the Holy Spirit’ find joy, peace and life beyond expectation.  Those who lower the sail waiting in the harbor of life for everything to be safe and perfectly fitting into their logic before making a decision may miss the God’s plan and the adventure of a lifetime.

Our logic and reasoning can and should be be helpful but they should never take the place of or get in the way of following God by faith.  Again, I have noticed in nearly a half century of careful Bible study that God rarely does things that fit perfectly into human logic and reasoning.   Isaiah 40:31 says, “but those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength.  They will soar on wings like eagles.”  We may not have complete understanding of every issue and it may not fit our comfort zone or plans but if we live in a trusting relationship with God we can depend on His hand to guide to soaring heights us as we follow where the Holy Spirit leads.  I am reminded of that truth each day, and especially on March 23. 

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

What is Truth?


What is truth?  As a person who made my living by studying and seeking to understand and reveal the correct meaning and relevance of words, I have long realized the importance of the way properly we use and understand words.  Words are significant because words have meaning.  Changing the meaning of words can have a significant result. 
We have seen recent changes in the meaning of certain words and the elimination of some words.  There are indeed words that are vulgar offensive and should not be used.   I always said that using profane, vulgar and offensive language was a sure sign of ignorance and a poor vocabulary.  However, changing the meaning of words can cause major changes in our culture.  ‘The Gay Divorcee’, a 1934 American musical film starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers would probably be quite a different movie with that title today.  Hallmark's ornaments for the holiday season caused some controversy when the replacement of the word "gay" while quoting "Deck the Halls” on their red "Holiday Sweater" ornament was decorated with the lyric, "Don we now our fun apparel."  Well that is the original meaning of the word, ‘gay’.  I raise eyebrows when I tell people that I have always been in favor of gay marriage.  I think every marriage should be fun. 
Back to a more serious discussion on the matter I believe we live in a precarious time where words are intentionally and cleverly used incorrectly to advance an agenda, be a weapon or provide a diversion from truth.  Several years ago I noticed a phrase that began to creep into our language.  It seemed innocent and even positive as people spoke of and were encouraged to follow ‘their truth’.  It was a way of giving permission to do whatever anyone wanted, as long as it seemed ‘true’ for them.   Now we are seeing people appear on TV and are “appreciative of this opportunity to speak “my truth”.  By the way, when my children were very young I told them to remember that “everything you see on TV is there for one primary purpose, to create a large audience and make money for their sponsors.”  In this day of ‘fake news’ and playing fast and loose with the language, I think we should remember that we need to listen and watch everything with a very careful filter.  The problem with such declarations as “following or speaking my truth” is the misguided belief that ‘truth’ is a malleable concept to be individually defined (and changed) according to how one feels at the moment. 
2000 years ago a Roman governor stood before a man on trial for his life and asked him the simple yet profound question, “What is truth?”  Little did Pontius Pilate know that he was looking at the truth as he asked the question.  Before Jesus could respond Pilate turned away.  Too often that mirrors our encounter with truth today.  We turn and walk away before seeing the real “way, truth and life.”  Our cultural march toward relativism and the desire for tolerance for those following ‘their truth’ has not created more agreement for other opinions or lifestyles but just the opposite.  We seem to find ourselves more easily offended than ever.  Offended people often become very angry people.  Unless that anger is properly handled it can be destructive.  Mature people understand that while they are entitled to their own opinions, they are not entitled to their own facts.  Facts (truth) should never be changed to validate one’s desired conclusion.  If I could have changed truth/facts to authenticate my desired outcome, I probably would have remained an accounting major in college.  I always had trouble getting my outcome to match the teacher’s math. 
Let me offer a few suggestions to keep from being a growing population of people who are so easily offended, then I will close with a way to find and follow real unchanging truth.  First, of all the real difficulties in life, things don’t get much smaller than an offense.  An offense taken only produces a feeling, a moment of emotional confusion.  Through the course of your life there will be many more serious matters to deal with than a brief hurt feeling.  Also, you can do more about being offended than most anything else you will encounter.  You do not need to see a specialist, take medicine, or have a medical procedure.  You can simply choose how you will respond, act or feel.  You can choose to be offended, upset or angry or you can choose not to allow the negative actions of someone else dictate negative results in your life.  If you are looking to be easily offended, upset or angry; you will not have to look far.  Likewise, if you are looking to overlook, love and forgive; you will usually find ample opportunities all around.  Which outlook and lifestyle would you rather choose?  It’s your choice!
That brings me to the way to find and follow real unchanging truth.  Let’s go back to the question of Pilate in John 18:38.  He did not know he was looking truth square in the face when he asked Jesus that question.  He was not in the room earlier (John 14:6) when Jesus told his disciples (and now us), “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.”  So if you are wondering about how to know what is right and wrong, how to keep from being confused, led astray or how to live the best life in confusing times.  Look at unchangeable truth; Jesus!  He is “the same yesterday and today and forever” (Hebrews 13:8).  He is the truth you need to live a stable and fulfilled life, free from petty feelings and life on an emotional roller-coaster.  Don’t let the words or actions of others hurt your feelings so easily.  However, if your feelings do get hurt before you respond in a negative fashion take a look at the truth.  Take a close look at the scarred hands of the Truth.  He had far worse done to him than will ever be done to you.  None of us will ever be beaten and nailed to a cross yet he loved them and asked for their forgiveness as hung there dying.
Real, unchanging and eternal truth is a life loving God with all your passion, heart, and intelligence and loving others as well as you love yourself while you treat them the way you want to be treated.  That’s the Bill Drees translation of the Greatest Commandment and Golden Rule but it is still true!