Monday, July 27, 2009

The Solution to Worry

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(Today I was rummaging through some old Bible study files from my time at Gainesville Bible Church. I was struck by the relevancy and truth of something I wrote back in 2005 during my study of the Sermon on the Mount. It comes from Matthew 6:19-34. I wanted to share it with you because this passage has come to the forefront of my mind and heart repeatedly over the past year. Its truth is essential in the lifelong process of "growing young.")

“For this reason I say to you, do not be worried about your life, [as to] what you will eat or what you will drink; nor for your body, [as to] what you will put on. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothing? Look at the birds of the air, that they do not sow, nor reap nor gather into barns, and [yet] your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not worth much more than they?" (Matt. 6:25-26)

The whole Christian life contains many sacrifices — sacrifice of family, friends, employment, security, comfort, and control. The goal is to lose ourselves so that we may find Christ living in and working through us. Paul said that whatever he had gained in his life — all the awards, all the acts of piety — he considered lost so that he may gain Christ and know Him and the power of His resurrection (Phil 3). Jesus told the crowd that if anyone was to be His disciple, they must be willing to deny themselves, take up their cross daily (not an easy task), and follow Him (Mark 8:34; Luke 9:23).

It is the sacrifice of control that Jesus addresses in Matthew 6. We all want to have control over our own destinies. We want to have control over our tomorrows. How unnerving it is to go into a night’s sleep not knowing what is going to happen the next day! Especially when that uncertainty revolves around something as basic and essential as bread. You see, God wants us to recognize that He and He alone is responsible for every thing that we have every day. And when we worry about things, we are assuming (even if we don’t recognize it) that there is a chance God will not take care of our worries and concerns. Just a speck of doubt can produce a mountain of worry.

The solution to worry is for us to keep seeking God and keep striving for His holiness (6:33). Let God take care of the “what ifs.” This is so much harder than it sounds! Yet it is very, very necessary for spiritual health.

Be God's.

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Saturday, July 25, 2009

The Rags of the Rich & the Prize of the Poor

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One of the things I keep getting reminded of is how blessed we are here in America to have a lot of choices. I can go to the grocery store and scan through hundreds of brands of food or the clothing stores and pick and choose what looks good and what doesn't look good. I have my pick of just about anything I want and the only thing that keeps me from selecting whatever I want is usually money.

But every time I look at pictures from poorer countries, the abundance and excess of America hits me over the head like a lead pipe. This picture I posted above was taken during my trip to Haiti in 1995. Look at the kids. What do you notice? When I took this picture I noticed a lot. I noticed that the kids spoke no English. Their dialect is Creole, which is kinda a mix of French and Spanish. I also noticed their clothing. What do you see?

All four are wearing American t-shirts, three of which have distinctly American subjects on them. The boy on the far left is wearing a Will Clark t-shirt, first baseman of the San Francisco Giants back then. The boy in the middle-back is wearing an Emmitt Smith t-shirt, star running back for the Dallas Cowboys in 1995. The girl on the right is wearing Mickey Mouse and the girl in front appears to have some sort of manger or home scene on her shirt.

I doubt that these kids have any idea whose image or logo they are wearing. You see, in Chambellan, Haiti, where this photo was taken, there is no television. No newspaper. News of the time came via word of mouth, the military (Haiti has gone through many coups), or shortwave radio. No Giants or Cowboys games.

The rags of the rich are the prize of the poor.

What I notice about these kids I noticed in pictures taken in Kenya by two of our church mission teams last month. The Kenyans have a better government and economy than the Haitians but they also often dress in the cast-offs of American abundance. T-shirts that reflect American pop culture and not their own. It was still the same in Haiti, as pictures from our latest mission team there showed.

I know it wasn't the American government who handed out the discarded clothing to the poor, and I highly doubt it was the inept Haitian government. Most likely it was the humanitarian and mission organizations that gathered and distributed the clothing, or maybe also Haitian businessmen looking to make a quick buck. But there are very few bucks in Haiti. Do I like having ten choices of milk when I go to the store? Sure I do! But while we have great choice here in America, it's important to stay grounded in the reality that most other nations do not share such choice. There are poor people around the world who would gladly take our used clothing and unwanted items and treat them as the swag of the rich. Who will wear a Will Clark t-shirt because it's a good t-shirt that covers the body and protects from mosquitoes, and not because of his smooth left-handed swing or his killer smile.

Are you willing to part with your old garments in order to clothe another person's nakedness? Sometimes people need help around the corner. Christian Community Action (CCA) is a local ministry here in North Texas that will take your discarded items and give them to the poor locally. Do some Internet searching for mission or humanitarian relief organizations that accept clothing and other items.

Your rags could become someone else's prize.

Be God's!

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Monday, July 6, 2009

Signs We're All in Trouble

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Hot off the CNN news wire...

http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/science/07/02/climate.change.sheep/index.html?iref=newssearch


Well, if the sheep are gonna start shrinking, what hope to any of us have???? Run for the hills! (just don't step on any sheep. they may be kinda hard to spot.)

Click the link above for the scaaarrry story.


(NOTE: The link has been changed due to a disturbing blog spamming issue that has warped several of my links. Blogspot has been contacted. I dearly hope the new link above will work, assuming the story stays on CNN.com for a while. -- editor)


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