Refueling with the 916th!

Hey everybody!  I was gone over the weekend because a guy from our fellowship, SMSgt Brian Bischoff, who is part of our nation’s Air Force Reserves, took me to Seymour Johnson Air Force base in North Carolina where they hosted a “clergy day”.  Clergy is me, I guess.  What they did was, load a bunch of pastors into a KC-135 Stratotanker, and took us up on a mid-air refueling mission.

It was amazingly cool.  Not so sure how cool it was for the Reservists who basically had to put up with what amounted to a tube of relgious pomposity hurtling through space….but for ME it was fun.

I got a chance to meet a guy named Erik Estep, who is a pastor with Village Church in South Carolina, which happens to be a Southern Baptist plant.  We hit it off pretty well…at least from my side of things.  He probably hasn’t quit grimacing about the Calvary Chapel jerk he had to put up with on the flight.

Anyway…here’s a video of my flight!

Ashes to Ashes…

ash.jpgI grew up in a decidedly non-liturgical home.  We were evangelicals, and my father was ordained in the Methodist church, which is why I’m a bit confused as to why we were so far removed from liturgies…but, such is the case for me.

Today is Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent for most Western Christian churches who observe liturgical calendars.

I have never observed Lent in my whole life.  I honestly didn’t even know for sure what it was until a few years ago.  Lent, in case YOU don’t know either, is a period of forty days prior to Easter, where the Christian, in imitation of Christ’s forty day wilderness temptation, observes a time of penitence, fasting, charity and prayer.

People practice the denial of self in a great variety of ways during lent.  Some abstain from certain types of food…I have one friend who gave up deserts for forty days (and consequently lost a lot of weight).  It was very meaningful for him.  I had another friend who quit watching TV for forty days.

Having grown up completely outside the reaches of liturgical observances, recently I’ve become quite fascinated with them.  A year ago, I began the practice of praying the “daily office”, from the Celtic Daily Prayers book.  It has had a profound effect on me.

Today, I’m confronted with Ash Wednesday…and I’m wondering about Lent.  Maybe I’ll take a foray into this liturgy as well.  Maybe God has something hiding in there for me…something I hadn’t noticed or known of during my upbringing and early Christian years.  If I don’t observe this year…I’m very inclined to plan for next year.  I think the joy of liturgies is that since they have no historical influence on me, I can see them as tools rather than standards, and can observe them without fear of messing up.

What would I abstain from for forty days?  Are YOU observing Lent?  What would you, or are you, abstaining from?

Eastgate Origins videos

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Ray Wilcox, one of the talented video gurus we have in our community set up a site that has streaming video of the Eastgate Origins series.  We were originally intending these to be DVDs that we’d give someone to get them up to speed…but technical issues and busy schedules have kept that from happening.  As I re-watched these…I’m thinking we may need to do something shorter…I got bored pretty quickly watching that guy yammer.  What do you think?

Watching, Waiting, Trusting and Expectant

Last Sunday at Burning House, Patti Crute shared something the Lord laid on her heart.  I though it might be cool to post it here, just in case you missed it, or wanted to revisit it.

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Burning House December 30, 2007

As we contemplate the New Year, I believe the Lord wants us to focus on watching & waiting, trusting & expecting. I read an article recently which reminded me of the importance of watching and waiting.

Leading up to Jesus’ arrival on this earth, many were looking for the Messiah. 

But who recognized Him???? 

There were shepherds watching their flock.  They may not have been expecting to see the Messiah that night and granted they were just doing their job, but being in an attitude of watching and waiting, suddenly a Heavenly Host appeared and told them a Savior had been borne….and they were among the first to greet and worship this new King!

Then there was Anna and Simeon in the temple, watching, waiting, and praying.  They recognized Jesus without being told by a Heavenly Host. Why???  Because they were watching and waiting, expectant! 

John 3: 14 & 15 (The Message)          

In the same way Moses lifted the serpent in the desert so people could have something to see and then believeit is necessary for the Son of Man to be lifted up & everyone who looks up to him, trusting and expectant, will gain a real life, eternal life. 

So for 2008, I believe the Lord wants us to be like Anna and Simeon – watching and waiting, trusting and expectant.  May we see him in unexpected places and may we especially be watching for his triumphal return.  He IS coming again.   

Update on a Long Road Home

I don’t know what it looked like in the heavenlies…but it must have been awesome.  The prayers, ascending like smoke before the throne of God.  A Mighty King hears, and smiles…and answers.

Aslan roars.

Sabet found a ride, and left a little earlier than he anticipated.  When he was finally able to reach Suzy, he was in Nairobi and will make his flights easily. 

What has you down?  What problems can stand before the Hero King?  Is He not strong, is He not loving?

Have faith, rejoice….and thank you for your prayers.

A Long Road Home

I really don’t know her that well, but for the first time in my experience I watched her normally staid, British countenance shudder.  Suzy Kuj was telling me about the difficulties Sabet has faced since going back to check on their clinic/mission in the Sudan.  His car had broken down on the way into Tonj, their village.  Without parts, it isn’t fixable, and parts take a long time to ship into Africa.  If  the parts don’t come in time, Sabet will have to beg a ride from Tonj to Rumbek on Wednesday (Dec 12th), which is not an easy prospect in a country ravaged by poverty and civil war.  Few have cars, fewer still have gasoline to fuel them.  He has to find a ride, or he won’t make it home for Christmas with his family.

“It’s just been hard, but I needed to hear what you said this morning.”  She was talking about Sunday’s teaching out of Mark 6, where we were reminded that doing God’s will doesn’t guarantee smooth sailing.  I looked at her in awe.  Her two children were playing on the chairs beside us, oblivious to the strain I saw evident on their mother’s face.  As I watched them play, I realized how close to Christmas it is right now.

I stand here at this computer portal, and I’m calling all you Saints to PRAY!  Pray to the Hero, ask that He be the Hero in this circumstance. 

Pray for a miracle, that every obstacle be removed from Sabet’s pathway to his family.  Pray for a ride, pray for fuel, pray for a timely arrival at the airfield that will launch his trip to the states. 

“Oh mighty King, we call on you today for mercies in abundance tomorrow.  Tomorrow let a way be made for Sabet Kuj, our brother, to return to his family for Christmas.  All things are possible with You.  Tear down every barrier to his travel, build up every road.  Grant him wings of an eagle, and set him on his way.  All for your glory.  All for your purposes.  All for your Kingdom.  Let Your Kingdom come, let Your will be done, on this earth like it’s done in Your heaven.  Because Jesus said we could ask, we pray in His name.    Amen.”

If you’re interested in issues dealing with the Sudan, I would like to recommend a movie to you.  It’s called “God Grew Tired of Us“, and it’s really an excellent film.  Go fire up your Netflix account and slam that thing into your que…you won’t be disappointed.

The Healing Weeds

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Ok…so I’m going to abandon the Sketchcast answers to questions I didn’t get to for technical reasons.  Sorry.

So here’s a question from the pile:

“Why would God allow the Holocaust, earthquakes, etc to happen in the first place?”

I read a newspaper article about my dad who, years ago, said when he got to heaven that would be the first question he asked God.  That statement in itself is filled with a lot of irony, but I like it.  I don’t know if that’s really what he asked.  Maybe my first question will be “what did my dad ask you when he got here?”  But I digress.

That is the age old question dealing with the problem of sin and pain.  There really is no good answer for it.  Notice I said “good” answer.  There are many attempted answers which come off almost flippantly about sin not being God’s fault, and so on.  But those are hard to sell to the hurting. I think, instead of trying to answer that question, I’ll pose another.

I was watching one of those survival shows that have been on constantly, and the host was clawing his way through the jungle, when he pointed out a spiny vine which was hanging down from the canopy, oozing a sticky, viscous liquid.  He smiled and gave it a wide berth, explaining that the vine was extremely toxic, the liquid of which if it were to get under the skin would cause the skin to literally rot off your bones.  My inner 15 year old said “coooool!”…but my rational side said “Why is that there?  What possible use could there be for such a horrifying plant?  Why would God allow that plant to sit in the jungle waiting to rot the skin of some poor, unsuspecting survival show host?”

One of the reasons I’ve never been big on going camping is that very thing…nature is out to kill you! has always been my motto.

On the other hand, the survival host went just a few more steps and smiled at an obnoxious looking weed and said “But not everything here is dangerous!”, and he went on to explain that the weed in question had powerful anti-toxins in it’s sap which were very useful for cleaning wounds and creating compresses.  And as I marveled at the placement of such a wonderful plant near the flesh rotting vine, I had to ask another question: “Where did THAT come from?”  For everything that is so wrong in this fallen world, there is still a lot that is RIGHT.  Where does the good stuff come from?

I have a doctor friend who was telling me one day that the amount of things that can go wrong during pregnancy is staggering.  He smiled and confessed that he is still amazed that so many children are born without a hitch.  Where does that come from?  I was reading an article about the second law of Thermodynamics, the concept of entropy…that everything is wearing down and moving toward a chaotic state, order to disorder, and so on.  The article posed a question that has many physicists stumped and that is “why does ANYTHING work?”  If the normal path is toward disorder, why is there any order at all?  What keeps your alarm clock from just falling apart or your food processor from exploding every day?

The question of why evil and pain and suffering still exist in this world when we believe there is a good God in control is a hard question, one I don’t feel qualified to answer.  But there is another question that must be logged right beside it, and that is, “what do we make of all the good in this world?”  For as much as there is that seeps flesh eating poison, there are almost as many healing weeds nearby.  As hostile as this world still remains, the evidence of a Friend is there at every intersection.

Evil is here, we can’t deny it.  But so is good.  Let’s at least try to keep our questions balanced and factor in both sides.

What do you think?

The Joshua Bell Illustration

Hey everyone!  As I mentioned Sunday, I’m posting the YouTube video of the Washington Post experiement with Joshua Bell.  I’ve watched it several times, I find it fascinating.

And, in case you’d like to read the whole article that goes with the video, you can read it HERE

 Oh….and one more thing.  I’ve had a couple people tell me that the Sketchcast videos get chopy at the end of them.  Have you had that experience?  Just wondering.