Righteous Sinner

Two sides of David show up in the first three chapters of 1 Kings. First, we are reminded of his failings.  Bathsheba the mother of Solomon is part of the story, jogging our memory of David’s transgressions in 2 Samuel 11.  A more current critique is in verse 1.6 where David’s lack of discipline for his children was one reason why his son Adonijah set himself up as king.

But then in Chapter three, verse 8, Solomon’s prayer for wisdom includes the description of David that “he walked before you in faithfulness, in righteousness, and in uprightness of heart.”  Indeed David’s psalms have a mixture of both sides: a sinner who walks uprightly with the LORD.

How do these two sides fit together?  David is like Abraham, whose faith was counted to him as righteousness (Genesis 15.6).   We know that Abraham was a deceiver who had his own family issues (Genesis 12, 20).  We know that David, like Abraham believed in the One True God and was a man after His own heart.

It is an encouragement that Old Testament deceivers can be counted as righteous and upright.  How much more solid it is that our faith in Jesus is buttressed by his historical substitutionary death on the cross.  We do and will continue to sin.  But we are and will be counted as righteous as we acknowledge our need for a savior, repent of our sinfulness, and “believe in him who raised from the dead Jesus our Lord, who was delivered up for our trespasses and raised for our justification.” (Romans 4.24-25).

 

Hot Muffins

Two muffins were baking in the oven.

One turns to the other and says, “It sure is hot in here!”

The other one screams, “Oh, no!  A talking muffin!”

  

Several years ago I preached a sermon from Psalm 78, which instructs parents to tell their children what they know about God.  I suggested that telling about God is like telling a joke – you think through the wording, the phrasing, the audience, and make sure you get the punch line right.  After the service, fourth grader Grace ran up to me at the door, told me this joke, and ran away.  I was impressed that she heard at least part of the sermon.

 For more on telling the gospel, see the Category description above on “Why Gospel Messages?”

 

This Week’s Cool Number Dates 06/02/13 to 06/08/13

Friday this week is an Addition Day:  06 + 07 = 13.

Every month this century has had one Addition Day where the Month + Day = Year.  (This uses the definition that the first year of the century was 2001, since there was no year zero).  Addition days will stop at some point.  We will name that point in a later post.  Don’t worry, it won’t happen for a while!

I like to think of Thursday, 6/6, as Gravity Day. The gravitational constant G ~  6.672 x 10^11.  I made up Gravity Day.  Fortunately for all of us, I did not have to make up G; it was already there.

Battle Hail

 

Job 38.22-23

Have you entered the storehouses of the snow,

or have you seen the storehouses of the hail,

which I have reserved for the time of trouble,

for the day of battle and war?

 These verses are near the beginning of God’s long rebuttal list in Job – His creative acts, deeds that are plain for all to see but for which Job has no clue as to how or why they were done. 

I am reminded of the massive power in the army’s latest weaponry.  And the huge amount of time and energy it took to produce them: research, design, testing, manufacturing, deployment strategies. The weapons are fearful. 

But, the One who created the universe out of nothing can create even more fearful weapons instantly, at his command.  Snow, hail, rivers, locusts, earthquakes, and tsunamis, not to mention solar flares, supernovas, and colliding galaxies.

All those weapons that man makes need to be stored somewhere.  God keeps his battle-hail in storehouses beyond our understanding.  Wow.

More Kid Names

Here are some more riddles about kids’ names.

Who is the girl with one leg shorter than the other? 

Who is the kid waddling with the duck and goose? 

Who is the kid with the nails, next to the hammer?

Who is the kid in the trunk of the car?

Who is the annoying kid in the mailbox?

Who is the kid in the bathroom ?

Who is the kid in the English bathroom?

Who is the kid throwing stones across a lake?

Who is the kid throwing rocks?

 

 

 

 

Answers: Ilene, Drake, Brad, Jack, Bill, John, Lou, Skip, Chuck

Look for even more next week

The So Many Things To Do Lament

 God keeps his promise to work with my prayers (Romans 8.26), even a whiny, complaining lament.  I had a hard time identifying with the Psalms of Lament (like Psalm 28, 55, 56, 57) – full of opponents, pits, traps, and attacks, until I recognized MY silent assailant was having so many assignments that I could not possibly accomplish them.

 Last Wednesday night I once again reached the tipping point on too many things to do. Several days of meetings and emails piling on additional jobs had overwhelmed the switchboard; the kitchen was slammed with too many orders; the web site couldn’t handle the traffic; the rivers overflowed; the highways were gridlocked.  The nightmare came back in the night where I am walking around Berkey Hall on the MSU campus, trying to find the room where the final exam is being held for the class I forgot to attend all semester long.

So I just started making a list.  All the work projects, all the church responsibilities,  all the phone calls to make and emails to send – write down everything that needs doing very soon. Pray, “God, there are too many things to do.  How am I ever going to get out from under this long list?  Please help!”

 Here is how God answered my lamented (demented?) list:

          There is something therapeutic and peaceful in having everything on a list, gathered in one place.

          Something funny happens when categorizing the list.  Half are work, half are church, half are family – too many halves makes light of the problem.

          The right order for attacking the list becomes clear.  Usually a few small tasks to get started, then the most pressing, then a realization that not everything has to be done TODAY!

          A four hour slot of time opens up!

          Attacking the list becomes a challenge rather than a weight.

 Thank you, LORD, for hearing my complaint and guiding me past it. 

Circumcise Your Hearts

We used this prayer time with a small group of 6 men.  It took 15-20 minutes.  Each person had a one page copy of the verses with room to write answers to the questions.  Notice that each individual will likely have a different answer to the third and the last questions – our uniqueness is another reason to praise God!

Deuteronomy 10.12-22

“And now, Israel, what does the Lord your God require of you, but to fear the Lord your God, to walk in all his ways, to love him, to serve the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul, and to keep the commandments and statutes of the Lord, which I am commanding you today for your good? Behold, to the Lord your God belong heaven and the heaven of heavens, the earth with all that is in it. Yet the Lord set his heart in love on your fathers and chose their offspring after them, you above all peoples, as you are this day.  Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart, and be no longer stubborn.  For the Lord your God is God of gods and Lord of lords, the great, the mighty, and the awesome God, who is not partial and takes no bribe.  He executes justice for the fatherless and the widow, and loves the sojourner, giving him food and clothing.  Love the sojourner, therefore, for you were sojourners in the land of Egypt.  You shall fear the Lord your God. You shall serve him and hold fast to him, and by his name you shall swear.  He is your praise. He is your God, who has done for you these great and terrifying things that your eyes have seen.  Your fathers went down to Egypt seventy persons, and now the Lord your God has made you as numerous as the stars of heaven.” 

From this passage,

          What do we learn about reasons to praise God?

          What specific events are the Israelites to be thankful for?  How does this translate to our situation?

          Which commands  were most convicting to you right now?

          How are we to act?

          Out of all these “things to understand about God” what struck you most powerfully at this time?

Pray, especially being thankful and full of praise.  Confess sin – ways you are not acting as you ought.

 

Armor of God

Ephesians 6.10-20

Paul reminds his friends that “we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers over this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places.”  Accordingly, we need to have spiritual weapons.  These weapons may seem very ordinary and less powerful than an AK-47, BUT do these steps to be prepared for the battle – understand them, learn more about them, exercise each in your life:

          Fasten on the belt of truth

          Put on the breastplate of righteousness

          For shoes, put on the readiness given by the gospel of peace

          Take up the shield of faith for extinguishing flaming darts of the evil one

          Take up the helmet of salvation

          Take up the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God

          Pray at all times in the Spirit

          Keep alert with all perseverance, making supplication for all the saints

          Especially pray for anyone proclaiming the mystery of the gospel

The goal in the battle is to stand – after having done all, to stand firm.  Not flashy, maybe not impressive to men, but effective in kingdom work.

Hat Rack

My son Jesse submitted this one to the Nickelodeon TV show in the 1980’s and saw it scroll across the bottom of the screen.

 

What did the hat say to the hat rack?

 

You stay here.  I’ll go on ahead.

Turkey Herder

 I know that God wants me to work, and He has certainly provided entertaining occupations. My first paycheck came as a Turkey Herder on a chicken farm in St. Louis County.  Prior to that I had been paid with a baseball glove for scraping and painting the gutters and asbestos siding on our Selma Avenue home in Webster Groves; I still have that Ken Boyer baseball glove which was so big that it works great for softball games.  And even prior to that, when I was six and Sister Cindy was an infant, I was put in charge of the baby while Mom made a quick trip to the store.  Evidently I got the instructions wrong because Mom was really mad when she returned to find me playing ball in the street with Cindy sitting on a blanket in the front yard. 

 Anyway, my friend Don worked at the Four Winds Farm as an egg processor/egg distributor person – he would deliver chicken eggs sort of like a milk man delivered milk. Both of those professions are gone now and we are sad for the loss. Besides the egg business, the farm bought little tiny turkey chicks and raised them indoors in wire cages until they reached a certain size.  Then they moved the birds out to the open fields to grow plump and tender for your Thanksgiving dinner.

 Don recommended me for the specialty job on the days when they needed to move the white, domesticated birds out to the field. We had to go early in the morning to move the herd because as the day got hotter those turkeys didn’t want to move.  Each of us had two red flags on sticks that we were to wave gently behind to move the group along.  We were sort of like sheep dogs, but really just turkey flaggers. 

 As little chicks these turkeys’ wings and beaks had been clipped.  So they couldn’t peck the herders and they couldn’t fly away.  Ground transport was their only option.    Some birds were not persuaded by the flags; maybe they didn’t like red but more likely they just didn’t want to move.  The remaining option was the punt – catch them just right with your boot under their butt and you could send them to the front of the crowd.  They would flap their short wings just a bit and drop quickly to the ground. When they landed, they took several steps to get their balance and the herd would follow. Turkey punting was a great game.  Distance was valued and direction was important, but you had to be gentle to not bruise the valuable meat.  A shanked turkey punt did not look pretty.

 It is important to note these were “domesticated” birds, since all wiliness, courage, and other good qualities Ben Franklin saw in wild turkeys when he recommended them for national bird had been bred right out.  Some training was needed once they moved outside, to keep the birds from piling up on each other against a fence and to show them where the food was located.  As soon as they learned where to eat and that they shouldn’t make a mosh pit, they mostly walked around and gobbled and ate and pooped without any sense of danger. But possums were a real threat;  they would come in the field from the surrounding  woods next door, walk up behind the turkey, grab hold and just start eating turkey butt.  The turkey would  gobble, Gobble, GOOBle, GOOBLE as distress mounted but would just stand there and be eaten!

 Some employees would periodically take a weapon in a golf cart to patrol the perimeter.  The one time I went along, the unnamed but ever after remembered ranch hand wounded a possum with the rifle, wacked it on the head with a big pair of pliers, and declared, “I don’t think you’re playing possum now!”

 Once the herding was done, the rest of the day was spent cleaning out the trays where the turkeys and pullets were raised. For the littlest birds, there were columns and columns of trays upon trays of little pooping machines.  Pull out a tray, scrape the poop onto the floor, and rinse the sloped floor out the door into the small stream that flowed down to the appropriately and affectionately named S_ _ _ Lagoon.  I returned several years later to find the farm had been sold for a housing development with a fine “pond” in the middle of the houses.  I suspect the weeds and fish grow quickly in that pond.