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David

On Vox: Short Rant

Posted on 2009.02.06 at 19:05

So, the credit crisis met the Wilsons when we had to buy a new vehicle. Credit was good, not great, but getting a loan proved to be more of a hassle than ever before. That was in October, before all the news broke about the "credit crunch."

We managed to secure pretty good financing though and continued on our merry way, reducing balances with an eye to getting completely free from debt.

Now twice in two week's time  we have received notice from credit card companies - Chase and Home Depot, that they were increasing their annual percentage rates dramatically. Chase at least came right out and said it was to increase their profitability.

So this stimulus plan is really working well. NOT.

Not a chance in this world that I'm going to do anything but tell both Chase and Home Depot to pound sand. Whereas I might have been willing to buy new appliances to lower my energy costs - no way. And I had considered using Chase as a vacation card each year - not going to happen.

When government gets involved in economics the result never is what the politicians tell you.

/rant off

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: Happy Birthday, Mother

Posted on 2008.07.15 at 23:57

It is my mother's birthday today. She would have been 88. Of all the losses I have ever experienced in this life, the loss of my Mother in 1991 has been the greatest. She was an amazing grandmother to our boys, and eventually a good mother in law to my wife. We all miss her, but we will see her again.

If I were hanged on the highest hill,
Mother o' mine, O mother o' mine!
I know whose love would follow me still,
Mother o' mine, O mother o' mine!

If I were drowned in the deepest sea,
Mother o' mine, O mother o' mine!
I know whose tears would come down to me,
Mother o' mine, O mother o' mine!

If I were damned of body and soul,
I know whose prayers would make me whole,
Mother o' mine, O mother o' mine!

Rudyard Kipling

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: What I'm Reading Right Now

Posted on 2008.07.05 at 01:01


It's been a while since I did one of these.


Your God Is Too Safe
Mark Buchanan


Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: James Taylor - the man loves his work

Posted on 2008.05.12 at 12:46

Q: Can you think of one moment from your experience with James that really stands out?

LG: Hmm. Well, during my first tour with the band, when I was still feeling a little insecure about whether I was "cutting it" or not, we were onstage playing....I don't

Larry and James -- Click here for full size
Larry and James in Nashville

remember the song...But it was something that had an instrumental section where the band was just grooving on a few chords. I'm playing the organ, and I look up and there's James, playing guitar, and staring at me - a really kind of glazed, lost look. I panicked a bit, thinking I must have been playing something terribly wrong. Not knowing how to react, I gave him a nervous smile, and immediately, his blank stare melted into a huge, almost blissful grin. I realized then that the STARE had been that of a musician completely lost in the joy of making music with others. You know, there's James Taylor, the songwriter, the singer, the entertainer; but ever since that incident, I realize what pulls him on stage year after year, is that he just LOVES making music. He thrives on the give and take that exists between musicians, he loves to groove....he gets lost in it. This quality of James comes through so deeply when he performs....that genuine love of making music.

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: Book Stack

Posted on 2007.12.31 at 23:36

Very challenging book. Almost through with it.



Got it for Christmas, looks great.

Also received for Christmas.


I just finished a class in which we talked about the ancient practice of lectio divina. The idea is that you meditate on a text and allow it to speak to you. I'll be taking up that practice in my devotions using this book by Eugene Peterson, author of the Message bible among other things.

Looks really good.

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: 34 year Anniversary Today

Posted on 2007.12.30 at 19:36

Today is the thirty-fourth anniversary of the day a young man with few prospects received the greatest gift this earth can give - the hand of my bride, Bunny.

So much has changed since that day, but our love has grown stronger, though buffeted and tried at times.

For folks on the outside, it would be exceedingly hard to explain just how important the love of your marriage partner makes as you try to work with God and His people. It would also be impossible to overestimate the toll our (the pastors) job makes on their lives.

Bunny has been so involved in everything good that has happened in our sojourns in different places of service, but nowhere more so than here at New Hope. She's taught children, worked with youth, worked with and led music (fashioning Easter and Christmas music as well), started a women's ministry, facilitated small groups, and so much more publically.

But privately she has given me the benefit of her relationship with Jesus through the context of her love for me.

We serve right now in a military town, and we love these people dearly and are deeply thankful for what they do. Every medal and memorial is well earned and much deserved. So when I say that there ought to be recognition for the work of pastor's wives I'm not taking away from what our veterans deserve.

I'm just acknowledging that there are all kinds of wars. :)

Thank you Bunny. Love forever, David

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: Living On the Bleeding Edge

Posted on 2007.12.25 at 17:10

Just installed the Release candidate 1 for Windows XP SP3 and so far it does seem to have sped up my system appreciably. I'm always scared I'm going to brick my system, but enjoy being an early adopter.

I'm running Firefox 3 as well and trying it out. Again, very impressed with the difference in speed.

So now I guess the limiting factor is me. :)

We've sure come a long way from Usenet and the Tandy 1000.

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: The Christmas Truce

Posted on 2007.12.25 at 14:23

My lovely bride sent out an email about the amazing Christmas truce of 1914 the other day, and I just found this video I thought I'd share. Praying here on Christmas for peace on earth.


Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: Growing Up Into Christmas

Posted on 2007.12.22 at 13:21
78  Through the heartfelt mercies of our God,
      
God's Sunrise will break in upon us,
   
79  Shining on those in the darkness,
      
those sitting in the shadow of death,
   
Then showing us the way, one foot at a time,
      
down the path of peace."

Luke 1:78-79 (MSG)

If there's a season that is more sentimental than Christmas, I haven't experienced it. I find myself time-traveling between remembering what it was like as a child, remembering what it was like when we had young children, and thinking about the kids we know from New Hope and how their Christmases will be.

Funny isn't it, how I can't remember how my parents struggled to provide their boys some Christmas toys. I really cannot even remember much of what I got, or what we've given our kids. I just remember the feeling of Christmas.

When our oldest left here the other day, he left with a CD on which I had burned 27 minutes and 11 seconds of his Christmas morning experience in 1982. On that recording (transferred from cassette), you can hear my aunt Louise, uncle William, and my brother, father and mother as they got to see Adam come into the living room and see what he got.

The tape starts with us trying to wake a very sleepy boy. As I recall, telling him that Christmas was here and his presents were waiting had no where near the impact than "Grandmother is here". She loved Adam and later Sean with the same fierceness she had first loved my brother Bruce and me.

Waking up to find his Grandmother there was Christmas enough for Adam. Everything else was just icing on the cake.

I've really been thinking and praying through Christmas this year. There have been some major changes as we've lost family in the last couple of years that have pretty much severed my childhood from today. All those links are gone now. I'm blessed with an awesome wife and her wonderful parents - my "in-loves" who are like parents to me and have been for almost 34 years. Obviously my sons Adam and Sean give me great, great joy. And I have an awesome New Hope family here from the littlest to the eldest.

But there's been a "blueness" to this Christmas for me. So many memories of those who are gone. So many events that can never be repeated.

And yet...

When I listened to Adam's reaction the other night, something clicked in my soul.

It was as if God was telling me to grow up - into the real Christmas.

Not the one I remembered, that was centered on people - memories.

But the one that brought me Someone Who will never leave me. Someone who gave His very life for mine. Someone Who constantly is working in my life for my good. Someone who loves me more fiercely than anyone ever has or could.

It was as if God was telling me, isn't Jesus enough?

I'm embracing His peace today. I'm trusting in His mercy and grace for today and praying He'll give enough tomorrow. It took a four year olds little voice on a 25 year old recording to help me grow up into Christmas and realize that all I ever really wanted for Christmas is wrapped up in a person. And that person can sweep all my blues away into clouds of bright and beautiful joy.

He's what I hope you'll receive and treasure too.

Jesus.

Merry Christmas,

David

--
Visit with me at my blog:
http://davethepastor.vox.com/
Or visit New Hope!
http://www.newhopevalp.org/

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: Lest We Forget

Posted on 2007.12.20 at 17:14

Our oldest son Adam has been with us here the last few days, and we've really enjoyed the time together. One of the hardest things we ever did was to move here from Macon and leave him behind to begin life on his own. So these brief opportunities to share our lives are precious, even otherwise mundane things like shopping and grabbing something to eat.

We were out in Destin today and stopped to get lunch. I sat down at a table near the window and was immediately under the watchful gaze of a child of about a year old. She for some reason was transfixed by my winning good looks. Adam came and sat across from me just as the father looked my way. I wanted to tell him, enjoy. They grow up so fast.

And in the shared experience that is parenthood, I believe that dad would have understood what I meant.

There are times when I look at Adam and the years just fade away.

For me, there were only two things I had always hoped to be - a husband and a father. So I was incredibly blessed when God gave me Bunny as my wife, and then 5 years later, came Adam. Due to some health problems I had growing up, it wasn't a given that I'd be able to have children. But there he was.

So I guess I look at Zachariah's brush with the angel through different eyes than some. If I had been him, praying for decades for God to bless me with a child, trying with all I had to live a life of honor, of right living in the eyes of God and man, maybe I'd have doubted too.

No doubt whatsoever that he and Elizabeth had prayed for God to give them a child. Probably day after day, and night after night they asked the Lord for mercy, for grace, for a sign. Years rolled by, then decades. Until one day, the crowning day of Zachariah's life as a priest, when God sent Gabriel down.

I don't think Zachariah was a man without faith. He had just enough faith to handle the days. But his faith ended with his own abilities. If old Zach couldn't do it, then it wasn't going to happen. Move along, nothing to see here, just an old man and woman without any children.

He had made God over into his own image - a weak old man.

He had forgotten what it means to believe in GOD.

It may seem like your time has passed. From where you stand there may be no way for you to see anything good happening.

But lest we forget,  take one chapter from God's response to Job.

1 Then the LORD answered Job from the whirlwind:

     2 "Who is this that questions my wisdom with such ignorant words? 3 Brace yourself, because I have some questions for you, and you must answer them.

     4 "Where were you when I laid the foundations of the earth? Tell me, if you know so much. 5 Do you know how its dimensions were determined and who did the surveying? 6 What supports its foundations, and who laid its cornerstone 7 as the morning stars sang together and all the angels shouted for joy?

     8 "Who defined the boundaries of the sea as it burst from the womb, 9 and as I clothed it with clouds and thick darkness? 10 For I locked it behind barred gates, limiting its shores. 11 I said, `Thus far and no farther will you come. Here your proud waves must stop!'

     12 "Have you ever commanded the morning to appear and caused the dawn to rise in the east? 13 Have you ever told the daylight to spread to the ends of the earth, to bring an end to the night's wickedness? 14 For the features of the earth take shape as the light approaches, and the dawn is robed in red. 15 The light disturbs the haunts of the wicked, and it stops the arm that is raised in violence.

     16 "Have you explored the springs from which the seas come? Have you walked about and explored their depths? 17 Do you know where the gates of death are located? Have you seen the gates of utter gloom? 18 Do you realize the extent of the earth? Tell me about it if you know!

     19 "Where does the light come from, and where does the darkness go? 20 Can you take it to its home? Do you know how to get there? 21 But of course you know all this! For you were born before it was all created, and you are so very experienced!

     22 "Have you visited the treasuries of the snow? Have you seen where the hail is made and stored? 23 I have reserved it for the time of trouble, for the day of battle and war. 24 Where is the path to the origin of light? Where is the home of the east wind?

     25 "Who created a channel for the torrents of rain? Who laid out the path for the lightning? 26 Who makes the rain fall on barren land, in a desert where no one lives? 27 Who sends the rain that satisfies the parched ground and makes the tender grass spring up?

     28 "Does the rain have a father? Where does dew come from? 29 Who is the mother of the ice? Who gives birth to the frost from the heavens? 30 For the water turns to ice as hard as rock, and the surface of the water freezes.

     31 "Can you hold back the movements of the stars? Are you able to restrain the Pleiades or Orion? 32 Can you ensure the proper sequence of the seasons or guide the constellation of the Bear with her cubs across the heavens? 33 Do you know the laws of the universe and how God rules the earth?

     34 "Can you shout to the clouds and make it rain? 35 Can you make lightning appear and cause it to strike as you direct it? 36 Who gives intuition and instinct? 37 Who is wise enough to count all the clouds? Who can tilt the water jars of heaven, 38 turning the dry dust to clumps of mud?

     39 "Can you stalk prey for a lioness and satisfy the young lions' appetites 40 as they lie in their dens or crouch in the thicket? 41 Who provides food for the ravens when their young cry out to God as they wander about in hunger?

Job 38:1-41 (NLT)

Uh huh.

God is sovereign.

Whatever he has ever done, He can do now.


Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: Advent lament

Posted on 2007.12.16 at 00:20

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: I Know What This Blog Needs- A Sermon!

Posted on 2007.12.15 at 22:16


What Child Is This?

John 1:1-14

My absolute favorite Christmas show is A Charlie Brown Christmas. And my absolute favorite part of that show is when Charlie Brown gets frustrated with how the kids are treating Christmas and in an almost primal scream asks “Doesn’t anyone here know what Christmas is all about?” Then Linus goes into his recitation of the Christmas story from Luke, complete with dramatic lighting, music, and a children’s choir.

When he’s finished, everything about the way the kids celebrate Christmas changes. 

I’m expecting similar results here today. (GRIN)

The text I chose was given to John by the Holy Spirit and is quite different than Matthew or Luke’s versions of what Christmas is all about. You remember John, right? He likes things simple. He’s the one that gave us our favorite Bible verse – or at least our favorite when it comes to memorization. John 6:35 “Jesus wept.” I like it when they keep it short and to the point, don’t you?

I was emailed a while back a condensed version of the entire Bible – the Bible in 50 words.

God made, Adam bit, Noah arked, Abraham split, Joseph ruled, Jacob fooled, bush talked, Moses balked, Pharaoh plagued, people walked, sea divided, tablets guided, promise landed, Saul freaked, David peeked, prophets warned, Jesus born, God walked, love talked, anger crucified, hope died, Love rose, Spirit flamed, Word spread, God
remained.

I know, I know – the Pharoah plagued is a bit lame, but I especially like the Saul freaked and David peeked part.

We’re always trying to take what God does and try and fit it into a package we can handle. Trying to reduce His greatness, to slim down His omnipotence, to limit His foreknowledge and make it into something we have down cold.

We like it simple.

Okay, so here we are at John 1.

God has once again met us at the very point of our need. He’s not only going to make it simple for us, he’s going to retrace His steps so we can see how we got to Christmas. Somewhere along the way this week I realized what he had done was the equivalent of someone speaking very slowly to a person who didn’t speak our language.

That doesn’t ever seem to work on TV.

But here God is using visual aids – things we know and can get a grip on. They come a little bit later in the text, so hang with me here.

In the beginning the Word already existed.

How does the Bible begin? “In the beginning, God…

Here John is back at ABC, square one, version 1, God 1.0. When this occurs we have no idea. The idea John is trying to help us with is that the Word is before time. You can put any sort of handle you want on that thought as long as it ends up being pre-existent to wherever you thought was the beginning.

But I thought we were here today learning about Jesus? We are. The word John uses there translated “Word” for us, is the Greek word logos. Oh, that clears it all up.

Think with me here. No, I just wanted a break. Wow, that’s great. I’ll make a mental note to use that again when I get stuck. Okay, now really, think with me. I’m thinking of a word. Any ideas? No, actually I was thinking of bacteria – not sure why. See if I’m going to ask you to think about a word with me, I need to give you not just that word, but an explanation of what it means. In a sense, that’s what the rest of this passage does.

John has already told us that the “Word” existed before the beginning. The next thing he tells us is that the “Word” was with God. And then he adds to that “the Word was God”. And speaking slowly to us, because we don’t have the spiritual language skills of angels, he says “He existed in the beginning with God.”

This “Word” or logos was a concept to the Greeks. They were fixated on what made the universe tick. They had their gods, but when they really wanted to consider the meaning of life and the reason everything existed, they called it the “logos”.

Sounds like God to me. But if John wanted to explain God to Greeks, he couldn’t begin with that word. So the Holy Spirit led him to use “Word”. Everyone would understand that on some level, but the real deep thinkers would be taken real deep.

And that same Holy Spirit knew that you and I would be here today reading this. For us, he led us to the first thing we know about Jesus – about who this baby is - He is God.

I guess in a lot of ways, that’s where the fusses we get into over Christmas today really have their root. In many ways “Christmas” or “that “C” word as I heard one commentator refer to it, divides people simply because of Jesus’ claim, backed up by this Scripture and many many others – that he is God.

I read earlier in the week that certain department store chains were not calling Christmas trees, Christmas trees – instead referring to them as Holiday trees. Is there another Holiday we use those for that I don’t know about? Sounds silly, but at the root is a refusal to allow any reminder that Jesus is God.

The next simple fact that John clues us in on is that Jesus, the Word, God, is also the Creator of the Universe.

3 God created everything through him,
      and nothing was created except through him.
 4 The Word gave life to everything that was created,[a]
      and his life brought light to everyone.

So Jesus is God the Creator, who brings everything to be. Once again John repeats Himself for emphasis. “created everything through him, and nothing was created except through Him.” And he goes farther. Not content to limit Jesus to the creation of stars, nebula, galaxies and planets, he points to Jesus as the giver of all life.

I’m a science geek. I love to read about the latest advances in medicine, chemistry, physics and the like. And I’m a wee bit amused at those who seem to think that there’s a disconnect between being a follower of Jesus Christ and having a brain. Ok, maybe I exaggerate. Some think we have a brain, but as followers of Jesus, we are insane. No, that wasn’t better either. Well, anyway, some of them seem to want to talk to us reeeeeaaaalll slooooooowww.

But here’s the thing. In this are, it really boils down to two choices. You can believe that the universe happened by accident, a series of cosmic coincidences almost to infinity, or you can at least admit the possibility of a designer – a creator if you will.

Friends, that job is filled in Jesus. He is the bringer of life, and light.

See I told you that John was going to use some visual aids we could all understand. We all understand life. When we have it there are possibilities galore. Even on our worst days we still have… a day. Without life, we aren’t.

But light – light is a revealer. Light gives you the ability to see, to perceive, to know. And here in John 1, John says that Jesus is the light who brings the true revelation of what God is, to us.

And, oh I love this – that even when things get tough, even when it seems like things are dark, that there’s no hope or even a possibility of hope – Jesus wins.

5 The light shines in the darkness,
      and the darkness can never extinguish it.

It’s a cold and cruel world we live in. But it will never be without hope.

So John’s told us that this baby is God, He is Creator, He is the Purest Revelation – the Light. But the best is yet to come.

Jesus is the Savior

6 God sent a man, John the Baptist,[c] 7 to tell about the light so that everyone might believe because of his testimony. 8 John himself was not the light; he was simply a witness to tell about the light. 9 The one who is the true light, who gives light to everyone, was coming into the world.

 10 He came into the very world he created, but the world didn’t recognize him. 11 He came to his own people, and even they rejected him. 12 But to all who believed him and accepted him, he gave the right to become children of God. 13 They are reborn—not with a physical birth resulting from human passion or plan, but a birth that comes from God.

Jesus had an advance party on his earth adventure. John the Baptist. I like to think of him as Jesus’ “away team” like on the old Star Trek tv show, where the crew would send some people down to a planet to check it out. You could almost always count on a couple of the security team guys, the ones wearing red, to kick the bucket while they were there. I always wondered why they wore red, because those were always the ones who died. Personally, I would have still gone, but I would have changed shirts to something less obvious. But then again John the Baptist didn’t. His away team outfit was a bit unusual as was his job.

John was to tell people that God had sent Messiah – the revelation of God. Jesus was that revelation – that light. And Jesus was coming to His own people, the Jews.

I have always wondered what it was like to have created the world and then come down and live on it. How Jesus must have felt knowing that His creation of the trees – that one would be used as His cross. But when he came to His creations – the people of Israel, they didn’t see Him as God at all. They rejected Him and His message and eventually were so angry at what He and that message said that they killed Him to shut Him up.

But there were some who believed then. The disciples, some women, some others. And to them, and to all of us who have followed them,  He gave the right no one but God could give – the right to inherit eternal life – to be made right with God. John says that those people have been reborn.

And again, John slows down and tells us what that means. It’s not a physical act. Old Nicodemas, as smart as he was went there a little later on, so puzzled he wanted Jesus to explain how someone could go back into the womb. It’s not physical, it’s spiritual.

And it’s not our idea – we never would have thought of it.. We never could make it happen. There’s nothing we can do to earn forgiveness from God – nothing. I’m not going to have to wait for someone to pray me out of purgatory so I can leave that bus stop on the way to heaven when I die. Salvation isn’t a human act – it’s a God act.

Someone told me one time that we had to do our part. That’s true of course. We have to be sinners without any hope of forgiveness. Ok, check. Got that done. John gives us in one very clear sentence, what we need to do to be saved, to become children of God.

12 But to all who believed him and accepted him, he gave the right to become children of God.

So two words – believed, and accepted and one object – Him (Jesus)

John uses the word “believe” or “believed” over 100 times in his gospel. It never in any single instance means dry dusty knowledge like “I believe red bricks are good.” Nor does it mean something frivolous like “I believe Dairy Queen Blizzards are the twelfth wonder of the world.” When he uses the word it means to stake your life upon it – to give it your all – everything you have – and never look back.

So a person that wants to follow Jesus, who wants to be made right with God and follow God’s plan and pattern for their life must believe in the Word that Jesus left us and in Him as explained in that Word. There’s no expression of Jesus no true expression of Him that isn’t contained in or explained by this book – the Bible. So a Buddhist Jesus, or a Mormon Jesus, or a Karmic Jesus won’t work – can’t be, because they are outside the light of God’s revelation in and through His Word.

Jesus – God of very God. Jesus – Creator of everything that was made. Jesus giver of Life, revealer of Light. And yes, Jesus, born of a virgin.

Can you accept that? In this context the word translated accept doesn’t just mean nod your head. It means pledge your allegiance to. To receive as who he says he is and act accordingly. You receive Jesus, you receive the Holy Spirit living within you. You receive Jesus, you place yourself under His authority and pledge yourself to do whatever he calls for you to do. You receive Jesus and he becomes your master and you become his bondservant.

John says that people who do that receive the right or the authority to change their family name. They become joint-heirs with Jesus Christ. Once they were enemies of God, but now they have become part of God’s family.

I love the way Eugene Peterson translates the last verse we’ll look at today.

14The Word became flesh and blood,
      and moved into the neighborhood.

Jesus came into this world the same way we all did. He grew up as any other little boy in his era would have. But he was different in two very important ways. First, he never sinned. That’s important because if he had the second way couldn’t have been true. “He was God.”

When Jesus moved into our hood, or pitched his tent among us, he was just doing what any other short term visitor would do. The people who used tents back then were transients – soldiers, sojourners, and shepherds. Tents were useful because they could be moved quickly, but they weren’t very sturdy. Jesus was fully God, but took on human flesh and blood like any other man. He was fully God and fully man. He gave 200%

John says that everyone who saw Jesus said that he reminded them of someone. I know when I go back to Macon, at times I will run into someone and they’ll tell me that I resemble my father. I generally thank them and then walk away thinking, “man I’m getting old”. But I genuinely appreciate what they mean.

John has that sense in what he writes when he says

He was full of unfailing love and faithfulness.[e] And we have seen his glory, the glory of the Father’s one and only Son.

Don’t you wonder what it must have been like to know Jesus as the apostles did? To see Him as He performed His miracles, to listen to Him speak, to see His great power as He raised Lazarus or even after the resurrection?

Well, John gives us a snapshot here when he says that Jesus was full of unfailing love and faithfulness – grace and truth. Who wouldn’t want a friend like that? Someone who knows you intimately – as you really are – but who loves you anyway – even loves you for exactly who you are!

That would be glorious! That would be like knowing and loving God Himself. John says, we have seen that in the flesh – seen Him! He is unique – one of a kind – and everything the Word said He would be. And the word he uses doesn’t mean he glanced at Jesus, it carries the idea that John and the disciples couldn’t stop looking at Him and seeing God.

 He is Jesus, come to save His people from their sins.

 I wonder, do you know Him today?

 Do you need someone to love you just as you are? Jesus’ love is unfailing.

Do you need someone who will never leave you, never forsake you, never pretend you aren’t there, never fail to answer your cries?

Jesus is full of faithfulness.

 You will never truly understand Christmas until you look God the Father in His face and tell Him thank you for sending your Son for me, a sinner lost and burdened with a sin debt that could never be repaid. Have you received Jesus? Have you believed he is everything the Bible says He is and has done everything the Bible said He must do to give you new life and new hope with God?

What Child Is this? He is our Hope. He is our Life. He is our Light. He is Jesus.


Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: I Hate It When This Happens

Posted on 2007.12.14 at 17:34

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: On Dogs

Posted on 2007.12.14 at 11:53


This morning, I was awakened by a horrible whining yelping sound. Our Great Dane, Henley, had somehow managed to get himself (and his sore left hip) wedged under the frame of our bed. We were able to (thanks to Bunny's quick thinking) pull his mattress (yes he has his own) out from under him and then free him.

Anxious minutes rolled by until he stood up and walked away.

Henley is a huge dog - maybe 155 lbs and about 42" high.

But he's also prone to injury, especially to his spindly legs. And every time it happens, our hearts miss a beat. We love dogs, and Henley and Ellie our miniature schnauzer are part of our family.
It hasn't always been that way. Growing up, both Bunny and I had dogs around, but they were outside dogs. Even after we married we got a lab and kept it in the back yard. But one year we gave our oldest son Adam an opportunity to earn points toward certain things he wanted by doing his chores. he could have earned a new bike, video games, a trip to Six Flags, but what he decided he wanted was a dog.

On so Daisy, the proto-schnauzer came into not just our life, but our home. Daisy was our first inside dog. She immediately decided to test our love for her by chewing all the ends of every window sill in our house. She gradually relented though, and for many years after was the only dog for us. Then several years later came Ellie, as Sean wanted a dog as well. Ellie, though she's the same breed as Daisy was, is a fat girl. But the personality pup is something else.

Then, when my job required a lot of travel away overnight, we purchased Chloe, our first Great Dane. This amazing animal was Bunny's constant companion and protector. She'd ride through some rough neighborhoods in downtown Macon, and when some thuggish characters approached, Chloe would stick her head out of the sunroof of the car and they'd walk another way. She moved with us to Valparaiso when we were called here, and the first night in our house was spent by Chloe, Ellie and me on the floor of the bedroom.

She was an amazing companion who died tragically one night when she slipped the leash and ran into a tree after skidding on some pine straw chasing a neighbor's cat around a corner. All our hearts were broken that night as we buried our friend.

A few weeks later, when I was pouring our heartbreak out on a Great Dane email list, I got a reply from a rescue organization in Tampa that they had a Great Dane puppy, black like Chloe, but a male, that a guy had given his fiancee and she had refused it - and him. The breeder wouldn't take the dog back so it went to rescue.  We drove to Tampa, and on the way back, Henley napped in  Bunny's lap. He'd outgrow that pretty quickly.

Now he's going on 6 years old, and Great Danes aren't the dogs with the most longevity anyway. So we hurt with him, and we love him fiercely every single day.

Today started awful, but so far he's doing fine.


Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: Let's have a moment of humility

Posted on 2007.12.13 at 22:06




See, I was just...

          I was thinking that....

                      Maybe if I wrote more often I could...


and then  I saw this cartoon. :)

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: Now That's Just COOL!

Posted on 2007.12.12 at 16:07

After sitting under the Eglin AFB final approach for 8 years, you get where you can tell the aircraft by sound. Today I heard something very different and jumped up and ran outside to see.

F-22

cool

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


During the War for Independence , Major John Andre was captured by the British and sentenced to death as a spy. Unable to run for safety, unable to find refuge from his enemy, he could have become bitter. But his relationship with Christ was where he found his hope. Major Andre was executed in his pursuit of freedom from tyranny, but after he died there was found in his pocket a poem he had written while awaiting his death.

His dying words remind us of the need to run for refuge in Christ.

Hail, Sovereign Love, which first began

The scheme to rescue fallen man!

Hail, matchless, free, eternal grace,

Which gave my soul a Hiding Place!

Against the God who built the sky

I fought with hands uplifted high--

Despite the mention of His grace--

Too proud to seek a Hiding Place.

Enrapt in thick Egyptian night

And fond of darkness more than light,

I madly ran the sinful race,

Secure, I thought, without God's grace.

Indignant Justice stood in view;

To Sinai's fiery mount I flew;

But Justice cried with frowning face,

"This mountain is no Hiding Place!"

Ere long a heavenly voice I heard,

And mercy's angel soon appeared;

He led me, with a beaming face,

To Jesus as my Hiding Place!

On Him almighty vengeance fell,

Which would have sunk a world to Hell;

He bore it for a sinful race,

And thus became their Hiding Place!"

A few more rolling suns at most

Shall land me on fair Canaan's coast,

When I shall sing the song of grace

And see my glorious Hiding Place.

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: The Jesus Way

Posted on 2007.12.11 at 21:15

"We can't say Jesus is the way—"I'm going to follow Jesus"—and then use all the devil's ways. All the "I like to do" or "have a talent for" or "have an aptitude for" or "have a spiritual gift" language is popular in our churches, but we have to do it Jesus's way.

The way Jesus did it is as important as the way Jesus is.

I'm just trying to connect ways and means. The means by which we do something can destroy what we're doing if they're not appropriate.

And I think the American Church is very conspicuous for destroying the way of Jesus in the ways we do church."

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: New Hope Worship 12/09/2007

Posted on 2007.12.09 at 22:51


Continuing in the "Nights Before Christmas" series with our focus on Joseph, the man chosen by God to be an earthly father to the Son of God. That's some job description. The RA's lit the Advent candles again with Nathan Fannon reading the Scripture from Isaiah 9.

It Came Upon A Midnight Clear

Holy Is the Lord
All the Earth Will Sing Your Praises

As a birthday gift to Craig Bryan, one of our members, Bunny had a girls trio sing "When We All Get To Heaven". Not a song that fit the message, or one we sing normally, but it was our gift to Craig. He was speechless.

Made Me Glad
A Shield About Me

Jesus Paid It All

Great atmosphere of warmth and love today.

Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


David

On Vox: A Cotton Patch Christmas

Posted on 2007.12.08 at 10:50


18.             The beginning of Jesus the Leader was like this: While his mama, Mary, was engaged to Joseph, but before they had relations, she was made pregnant by the Holy Spirit. Since Joseph, her fiance´, was a considerate man and didn't want to make a public scandal, he decided to quietly break up with her. As he was wondering about the whole situation, a messenger from the Lord came to him in a dream and said, "Joe Davidson, don't be ashamed to marry Mary, because the Holy Spirit has made her pregnant. Now she'll give birth to a boy, who you'll name Jesus,1  because he will deliver his nation from their errors."

22.             This whole event was the completion of what the Lord had said through the prophet: "Listen, a young lady will get pregnant and give birth to a boy, and they'll name him 'God-is-with-us.' "

24.             Then Joseph woke up and did as the Lord's messenger had directed–he married the girl. But he didn't sleep with her until she had her baby. And he did name it Jesus. Matthew 1:18-24


"Tell me who you admire, and I'll tell you who you are."

I had a seminary professor tell me that once. When I thought about it, most of the people I admire, and have admired over the years - I knew. My wife, with her laughter, beauty, and grace. My mother, with the eagerness to see others go farther than she had, and the will that it would be done. My father's gentle spirit. My father in love's faith, and my mother in love's gift of kindness. A teacher or two - Hazel Struby and Kathyrn Futral from Mercer, who convinced me that I could learn math and write prose. Friends in the ministry like Arnold Hendrix who have the patience of Job. And many others.

One outside that group who really affected me though I never met him was the late Clarence Jordan. An amazing man - part New Testament scholar, part Old testament prophet - Jordan lived an incredible life. Part of that was his translation or version as he called it, of parts of the New Testament into my native tongue - Southern or specifically, Georgian.



The clip above is part of that. If You want to read more, surf over to Cotton Patch Gospel


Originally posted on davethepastor.vox.com


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