Groups

Exaggerators of America.  Over one trillion members.  (And growing every nanosecond!)

 

A.A.A.A.A.  America’s Agency Against Acronym Abuse

 

Introverts Unite!

 

CPAs: You can count on them

Change Is Hard? Not For God

One secondary piece of evidence for the validity of the Christian faith is the massive social shift that 10,000 people went through within the first five weeks of the death of Jesus.  These people were all Jews who had been taught “religiously” for centuries that they needed to keep their distinctives; they needed to set themselves apart from the nations around them because their God demanded it (Leviticus 20.26). Some of the changes within the Christian culture:

-The Sabbath was changed from the seventh day of the week (Saturday) to Sunday.

-The righteous would be identified by faith rather than obeying the law.

-The sacrificial “system” in place for centuries was abandoned because of the perfect offering of the wholly holy Jesus for all people at all times.

-Jesus the man was acknowledged to be God.

-The Messiah was identified as one who suffered and died rather than as a military conqueror.

As Lee Strobel says in The Case For Christ, the best explanation for this huge shift was that these people had seen Jesus risen from the dead. And these changes were not all.  Over the next few months, the strict dietary laws were removed.  This was to symbolically make the case that the good news is for all nations – the gentiles are welcome in the kingdom of God (Acts 11.1-18).

This Jesus continues to make changes in lives all around the world as his people are called from darkness into light (Ephesians 5).

Sports for Old Guys

Here is how I know it is important to for old guys to find a sport to continue to play. When we started in the Over-40 basketball league, we shared the gym with the Over-50 teams.  They had a strange rule – no fast breaks.  What?  We were all young pups who had just qualified for our league, hooted privately at the restriction, and licked our chops at the prospects awaiting us in a decade.  Sadly, I don’t think any of us were still playing at age 50 – some combination of knees, hamstrings, backs, and interest failed each one. Despite our noise, those guys on the other court were the real stamina stars.  (It also makes sense now why they had so few teams!)

So what can we play?  First, remember that everyone says walking is less punishing on the knees than running but walking by yourself is still punishing.  And know that tennis looks easy but the court is hard, you have to chase the ball a lot, and Diane broke her foot one time while playing.  You can ride around in a cart while golfing, but it can be expensive.  My friend Hank was disappointed when Parkinson’s was ruled out as a diagnosis for his tremors and balance issues.  Evidently Parkinson’s patients could get free golf at his local course.

Watch the crowds at retirement centers like my Dad’s, and on Senior Mornings at the Mall.  They all sit in chairs and do exercises – light weights and leg lifts and arm rotations, all in a safe environment.  The more aquatic crowd does water aerobics, although my friend Tom tells me to be careful because you get a lot more tired than you realize because of buoyancy.

If you want to play a game, consider bocce ball.  Roll the balls and go get them.  Repeat.   For more variety, play ultimate Frisbee at the IM East intramural fields on Sundays in the summer after the evening service.  The grass is soft and cushioning when you fall. The sun sets after 9 PM, allowing a good hour and a half of playtime before the mosquitos come out.  The crowd includes young kids and college stars as well as older, more “experienced” players.  The stars run a lot; fast breaks are allowed.  The old guys with basketball or soccer memories know where to stand and how to play defense.

So the best advice for those seeking a continuing sport is to paraphrase Dory from the Finding Nemo movie: “Just keep swimming, just keep walking, just keep exercising, and play Frisbee as long as you can.”

Know That I Am the LORD

In chapter 35 of Ezekiel, prophecies are issued against Mount Seir.  Each of the three paragraphs (in ESV translation) ends with the same phrase: “You (or they) will (or shall) know that I am the LORD.”   God says, “I will lay your cities waste,”  I will make you a perpetual desolation,” “I will judge you,” and similar foreboding intentions.

The same phrase “know that I am the LORD” appears 96 times in the Bible; 72 instances are in the book of Ezekiel.  The promise is made when describing devastating destruction; similar havoc is to be visited on the nations that participated or gloated when Israel was taken away in exile.  But there are also bold promises of restoration and refreshment, especially Ezekiel 37.14: “And I will put my Spirit within you, and you shall live, and I will place you in your own land.  Then you shall know that I am the LORD; I have spoken, and I will do it, declares the LORD.”

Both the good and the bad.  It reminds one of another promise from Romans 14.11, quoting Isaiah 45.23: “As I live, says the LORD, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God.”  Romans goes on to say “each of us will give an account of himself before God”.

We all face judgment.  Those who know God and his Son Jesus will receive mercy and eternal refreshment; those who deny the Son will be looking at perpetual desolation.  Choose well.

Food

Salad?  That’s what my food eats.

 

Sweet dreams are made of cheese.  Who am I to diss a brie

 

Cole’s law: cabbage must be thinly sliced

 

Sign inside the front door: Please remove your shoes so dog can chew.

Brothers’ Prayers

Pastor Ben led our elder meeting prayer time last week with a Bible-based, encouraging exercise.   The prayer time we spend at the beginning of the meeting inevitably pays dividends of wisdom, fellowship, and improved conversations.

The first couple of minutes were given so that everyone could pick a Bible verse he would like prayed for himself.  Then each elder shared briefly the verse and any reason for picking it with the alert to listen up because each would be praying the verse for the person on their right.

The passages ranged through the Old and New Testaments. Example verses include Colossians 3.1-2, seeking things above; Psalm 51.1-10, having a pure heart; 1 Peter 3.7, being a better husband; and Psalm 22.14, waiting for the Lord in a new job.

The prayers were sweet, covering the verses and adding requests for the brother as led.  It took about thirty minutes for our group of thirteen.