Thought to Ponder

“Whoever loves discipline loves knowledge, but he who hates correction is stupid.” – Proverbs 12:1

Have you ever said, “Lord, change me” and then rejected the criticism of your neighbor? Now I don’t mean the kind of criticism that is said with a spiteful attitude and primarily about something temporary or physical. No, I mean the kind of criticism that hits a nerve because you know it’s true but don’t want to really listen because it would be too hard to do. The kind of criticism that could get you that “A” on a paper or be a more visible representative for Christ. Are you willing to open yourself up to other people for correction or are you planning to be mulish all your life? We can’t improve if we don’t know what needs to fix.

Also, stop fencing yourself in with excuses about your past failures. Your past cannot dictate who you are unless you choose to give in to it and the “oh woe is me” attitude that goes along with it. Now don’t get me wrong…some things that happen in people’s pasts hurt and have had an enormous effect on who they’ve become. But do you honestly think that you’re useless because of something that happened yesterday or fifteen years ago? Of course not!

God loves each and ever cracked, bruised and broken piece of us because they make us even more unique and better vessels for him to pour out life and healing in the cracked, bruised and broken world that we live in. If we don’t have these experiences, we can’t relate; and what is a ministry that doesn’t cross the boundary between heaven and the earth? We are the messengers. Your failings are the kinex that God uses to branch out with.

So the next time you ask God to “change you” if it’s really something that needs to be changes, listen to the criticism that he imparts to you through your neighbors and if it’s not, thank him for another opportunity to shine for him and pour out his healing into the lives of your fellow battered.

Wait for the Switch

This is a hack. This is only a hack.
Had this been a real website update, it would have looked *way* cooler.

This would be, I guess, phase 1 of my switch to a whole new blog. I’ve brought everything over from MovableType to WordPress, which, contrary to what Jared Bridges seems to think, is pretty hard work. I’m pretty sure the only thing I’ve got to do on this end is go through and update all the poetry. WordPress recognizes linebreaks differently than MovableType, and as a result, everything on here in verse (pretty much) has been converted to long, senseless, lines of text. I’ve got to go back and add in those breaks manually (gulp!).

If you’re the sort of person who goes aimlessly browsing through other people’s archives, now would be the time to do so. I could use your help. If you see typos or other obvious mistakes, put a comment on the post (thereby also testing the new comment system). Hey, if you’re really vigorous (and I can trust you with a login), I might even teach you to put in those linebreaks for me!

Phase 2 will be coming shortly: the new site design complete with new url (and a new banner from one I love dearly). I’ve seen the prototypes. It’s **nice**.

Phase 3 is going to be the tricky part. We need to figure out the best way to run both blogs on the same site. I welcome all suggestions…

Thought to Ponder

A story from one of my dailies that I really thought was special:

A visitor at a school for the deaf and dumb was writing questions on the blackboard for the children. By and by he wrote this sentence: “Why has God made me to hear and speak, and made you deaf and dumb?”

The awful sentence fell upon the little ones like a fierce blow in the face. They sat palsied before that dreadful “Why?” And then a little girl rose.

Her lip was trembling. Her eyes were swimming with tears. Straight to the board she walked, and, picking up the crayon, wrote with firm hand these precious words: “Even so, Father, for so it seemed good in Thy sight!” (Matthew 11:26).