Thought to Ponder

Yesterday’s daily from My Utmost for His Highest was a particular blessing to me and I thought I would share the whole thing.

And he…wondered that there was no intercessor. – Isaiah 59:16

The reason many of us leave off praying and become hard towards God is because we have only a sentimental interest in prayer. It sounds right to say that we pray; we read books on prayer which tell us that prayer is beneficial, that our minds are quieted and our souls uplifted when we pray; but Isaiah implies that God is amazed at such thoughts of prayer.

Worship and intercession must go together; the one is impossible without the other. Intercession means that we rouse ourselves up to get the mind of Christ about the one for whom we pray. Too often instead of worshipping God, we construct statements as to how prayer works. Are we worshipping or are we in dispute with God – “I don’t see how You are going to do it.” This is a sure sign that we are not worshipping. When we lose sight of God we become hard and dogmatic. We hurl our own petitions at God’s thrown and dictate to Him as to what we wish Him to do. We do not worship God, nor do we seek to form the mind of Christ.

Are we so worshipping God that we rouse ourselves up to lay hold on Him so that we may be brought into contact with His mind about the ones for whom we pray? Are we living in a holy relationship to God, or are we hard and dogmatic?

“But there is no one interceding properly” – then be that one yourself, be the one who worships God and who lives in holy relationship to Him. Get into the real work of intercession, and remember it is a work that taxes every power; but a work which has no snare. Preaching the gospel has a snare; intercessory prayer has none.

Calling

I am so sorry.

This is not what I meant to say. I have a lot of things I’d like to say, as soon as I can set myself down enough to say them. But right now I’d like to say to the whole world, on behalf of the body of Christ that I am so sorry.

I’ve been living in a bit of a bubble my whole life. Honestly, I really liked my bubble. I grew up in a family with no TV and no radio. Well, we had a TV and radio, but nobody was allowed to use them. I attribute this fact to my mother. We’d attempt to have the TV on and she’d come home and hear it and cry out, “I hear stupid! Turn it OFF!!” Needless to say the TV wasn’t on much.

Since then I have spent something like 8 years in and out of colleges, ministry schools, and the like. For the most part I have been either too poor or too cheap to really find out what was going on in the broader circles of the church and the world.

I’ve had a few inklings. I was aware that, for the most part, the church has been ineffective in reaching the world of today. From the external perspective, it seems like a lot of this has been because the world has been getting increasingly slick, while most of the church just can’t seem to acquire the funds to put on that kind of a show. Deeper inquiries usually come to the conclusion that there is a substance, called “vival” which we used to have and may one day acquire again, a sort of “re-vival,” if you will.

I hear a lot of people praying for that, expecting that, proclaiming that. REVIVAL IS COMING!! They’d say, like it was just around the corner. I remember my roommate my freshman year coming back from a church service he’d been to where some famous minister or another had proclaimed that IT was coming at the next meeting, like some magical fairy dust that was going to sprinkle down on the congregation and then spread to the rest of the world. Tom was impressed, but I tried to mask my unbelief. I don’t remember if anything ever came of that expected service.

Later, when I was at ministry school, I was talking with my friend, who was telling me that his primary purpose was to pray for and facilitate revival. At that time, I had the opposite problem. My church was so darn vived that I performed no useful function. My question was then, what do you do when there are no needs? I was beginning to think that the world was neatly divided into two groups: We had the world, which had already pretty much decided that they liked “sin” and “fun” more than they wanted Jesus, and we had the church, which had God and all the spiritual answers, but hadn’t really become quite cool enough to get people to peek in.

Lately though, I’ve been a little more out in the world, and I’ve taken enough time to quiet my heart to stop talking and start listening. And I’ve listened to the Spirit of God, and I’ve watched people, and I think I’ve come up with a few observations:

    First, people are sheep. This was a shocking discovery for me. I know, we hear it all the time, but it was a real revelation for me, because I’m not a very good sheep. I’m more of a moose. I like my kind and all, but I’m really kind of a loner, and if you listen to what I say, it’s usually really big and kind of goofy. So when I ran into normal people growing up, they didn’t seem like sheep to me. They seemed more like wild dogs. They travel in these great big packs, all doing thing, and automatically forming a hierarchy, and they’re kind of aggressive. And if you’re not the right breed, they’ll rip you to pieces. But they’re really sheep. They travel more in herds than in packs—packs roam all over the countryside, while herds stay in the same place until there’s nothing left to eat.

    Second, sheep get scared really easily. They’re not aggressive, but when they feel threatened and there’s nowhere to run, they do butt into you and try to bite you. I thought I was being ripped into because I was the wrong breed. I was getting butted and bit because I was scaring the sheep. Apparently I wasn’t getting the TV memo on how normal people act.

    Third, sheep need a shepherd. They want a guy to tell them how the world works, and soothe them, and take care of everything for them. They want an authority figure who can do authority figure things and hold their hand every step of the way.

    Fourth, we don’t have enough shepherds. I’m really convinced of this. Most of the people who are set up as shepherds are really hirelings. I mean, they’re not all that bad. In a tight spot, a hireling is better than nothing at all. But the hireling doesn’t leave the 99 to find the one. A hireling conserves resources and moves on. A hireling makes a mental note not to go next to the cliffs from now on.

I’m saying all this because my roommate convinced me to buy an antenna this week. We’re going halves on it, so it’s no big expense or anything. Actually, we’re probably going to take it back. I barely got 12 channels on it. And most of those were fuzzy. But one of those channels that came in pretty clearly was a Christian station. I didn’t even know they made those. I was pretty impressed, so I stayed to watch.

I about gagged twice. These were well known ministers, in fancy suits, leading congregations mounting in the thousands, and they kept saying things that were just wrong. A lot of them were prosperity message issues, that I thought we had gotten over at least a decade ago. But it was all bad. Very entertainingly said, but…wrong! Sometimes I could even hear what they were trying to say and exactly where it was leavened with the stuff of hirelings.

And this is how I know I’m called to be a pastor (no matter what excuse I may make tomorrow)—it kind of made me mad. If Christians are the very possessors of the only word of God, how come what the world sees is this? The truth has been out for 2000 years. Hope and a pure life in Christ Jesus has been available for quite some time now. How is it possible that we keep forgetting? Why are there so few shepherds? Why is the unleavened Gospel so hard to get a hold of? Why is it that when a man is broken and hurting and alone in his house, it’s easier to acquire quality ography than quality preaching? Why is it that, for the man on the street, it’s easier to get someone to lead you to a meth lab, than to the presence of God? Is God so hard to find?

I think maybe He is. He’s as hard to find as fresh fruit at a convenience store. You go in there, and all they’ve got available is that “fruit juice flavored drink” stuff, which you know is made up of 10 percent fruit, 60 percent water, and 30 percent high fructose corn syrup. It isn’t as if the real stuff is harder to make. It just costs more.

So I wanted to say I’m sorry. I had no idea things were so bad. I had no idea we had such a dearth of good Christian teaching. I thought people were rejecting the gospel because they didn’t want the truth. But it turns out that, in a lot of occasions, the gospel hasn’t even been being preached. Or when it has been, the delivery has been so shoddy that it scared the sheep. Jesus said to beware the leaven of the Pharisees, and to this day we still think it’s because we don’t have enough bread.

So I want to make this promise to you (whoever “you” is, in the great big public void): I’m going to read my bible, and I’m going to deliver the obvious stuff. I’m going to say it as clearly and as simply as I know how. And I am sorry. I wasn’t doing it before because I thought somebody was already saying this stuff.

Thought to Ponder

“What think ye of Christ?” –Matthew 22:42

Who really is Jesus? Was he some psycho who wanted to get attention? Was he a great humanistic teacher? Was he a good moral role model but nothing more? Was he God? Is he God? Who is he? Why should we even care?

We are called to know Jesus as “THE way, THE truth, and THE life,” but can we really know what that means? We get so wrapped up in our theology security blankets and think that our salvation is secured because we have the right things to say in every circumstance, but is that “THE way” to find “THE truth” for “THE life” that we are supposed to long for?

Unwrap yourself from and quit bickering about the philosophy and theology of Jesus and start leaning about him from him. If we live by the Spirit, we will keep in step. We don’t keep in step by our doctrines but by who Christ is in us. You can have the most theologically sound and orthodox doctrines and dogmas that you follow, but if you don’t know Christ, it’s worthless.

Perfection

Pardon me while I take this moment to preach. I’ve been working at this ministry, and I’ve been hearing a lot of talk about theology and there’s one thing I’m very tired of—I’ll call it “get to heaven” Christianity. It’s this bizarre unscriptural idea that when you get saved, or become a Christian, or however you want to put it, you get a ticket into heaven and you get to admit yourself into the fellowship of other believers, but essentially your life doesn’t really change.

I hear this phrasing all the time: “Now you’re going to heaven, and you’re saved, but just because you’re saved doesn’t mean you aren’t going to sin anymore. We’re still human, and we still fail, but God forgives us our sins. It’s not that Christians don’t sin anymore, but Christians are forgiven.” I think this displays a view of grace that is fundamentally flawed. Understand, I don’t think that when you convert you suddenly become superman, able to leap over temptation in a single bound. We are still human, and we do still sin. But God help me if after 10 years of Christianity, I’m still sinning in the same way that I was before I became a Christian.

Let me put it this way: The Olympics is going on this summer in Greece. Imagine for a moment that you turn the TV on and watch the gymnastic events. Imagine that there is some there who executes every event flawlessly. She gets a perfect 10 in every event. At the end of the competition, they hand her the gold medal, and what’s more, she’s broken every Olympic record they have. What do people say about this ? She’s very Graceful. I don’t think that’s supposed to mean that somebody else took her place when it came time to stand for the judges. It means that she has the miraculous ability to perform excellently.

The Greek word in the Bible that is translated “grace” does in fact mean a gift. The word is “charis,” from which we get the word “charity.” It is also the word used in 1 Corinthians to describe the “gifts” of the spirit: charismata. But nearly every gift mentioned in 1 Corinthians describes an ability that is not within the normal scope of human ability to perform.

What I’m trying to say is that would be impossible for salvation to be a gift merely of nomenclature. Yes, Abraham believed God, and God accounted it to him as righteousness, which is to say that God just sort of pasted the label “righteous” over him. But God also gave Abraham the ability to act like a righteous man. Yes, Abraham did still sin. And he did some doosies. But that thing where he rescued Lot and didn’t keep any of the treasure was pretty impressive.

Paul makes this classic statement in Philippians 3: “Not that I have already attained, or am already perfected; but I press on, that I may lay hold of that for which Christ Jesus has also laid hold of me.” And to hear some people talk, that means that none of us are ever going to make any major improvements. We’re just supposed to press on, I suppose, for the sake of pressing on. We’re just to demonstrate our faith by working on it, but without the hope of ever actually getting anywhere with it in this life. Paul goes on to say that anyone who is mature in Christ should think about it that way, that he should never claim to have attained it, but should always be pressing on. And then in verse 16, he says, “Only let us live up to what we have already attained.” Which communicates to me that it is possible to attain at least some level of righteousness in this life.

“The wages of sin is ,” but sin brings wages, not an annuity. You don’t get the of sin in one lump sum after you die. Instead you walk out that every day. Sin brings its own suffering. Most people know the wages of sin now, in their lives now. They carry their own hell with them. So what great threat is it to know that when they die, they’ll go to a place where life is pretty much the same as it is here, perhaps a few shades darker? And what great promise is it to know that, that if they believe on Jesus, they will go to a place whose goodness they can’t really imagine?

Let me make this clear: If righteousness were only attainable once you get to heaven, I wouldn’t want to go there. I would ask God to blot me out of his book. What good is a God who can only set you free from sin, who can only make you righteous, once He puts you in a place where sinning is not possible? What kind of weak and powerless God is that? For this Christ died for me? So that once He’s weeded out all the bad people and put all the good people in a perfect environment, then we can finally stop sinning? Let it not be so!

I don’t believe that it is so. I believe that the cross of Christ was far more powerful than we currently imagine. No, I don’t believe that we will ever attain perfection in this life. Quite honestly, I don’t know that we will ever fully attain the perfection of God even in heaven. We are finite; he is infinite. Revelation describes a scene where 24 elders are forever sitting around the throne of God, constantly saying “Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord God almighty.” I believe that every time those elders look up, they see a new aspect of who God is, and they fall back on their faces, crying “holy!” At that rate, it may take an infinity just to perceive the holiness of God, let alone to attain it. Nevertheless, to follow Christ is to become like Him, and I believe that He gives us the power to become like Him, even as he gives us the ability to perceive how holy He is.

And because it’s who I am, let me end with another geometry illustration. Xanga won’t let me draw much, so please forgive me while I try to describe it. In your mind, draw a line going up and a line going to the right, so that they meet in the bottom left corner. The vertical line represents some imaginary measurement of how much a person is like Jesus. The horizontal line represents your daily walk. On the right hand side, draw an arrow pointing straight up. God’s perfection is infinite, so “having attained it” is infinitely that-a-way. Hopefully you’ve seen a population curve. That’s the one that starts real close to horizontal, and gradually increases the slope so that, before long, the curve is almost pointing straight up. But the curve never actually attains to a vertical line. That’s how our walk with Christ is supposed to be. Every day is a little more vertical. No, you never quite attain to perfection. But, by God’s grace, every day is a marked improvement.

Thought to Ponder

This is from one of my dailies (My Utmost for his Highest to be exact).I enjoyed it so much I decided to quote it verbatim:

“[Jesus] said unto him the third time, lovest thou me?” –John 21:17

Have you felt the hurt of the Lord to the uncovered quick, the place where the real sensitiveness of your life is lodged?The devil never hurts there, neither sin nor human affection hurts there, nothing goes through to that place but the word of God.“Peter was grieved because Jesus said unto him the third time…”He was awakening to the fact that in the real true center of his personal life he was devoted to Jesus, and he began to see what the patient questioning meant.There was not the slightest strand of delusion left in Peter’s mind, he never could be deluded again.There was no room for passionate utterance, no room for exhilaration or sentiment.It was a revelation to him to realize how much he did love Jesus; but he did not say, “Look at this or that to confirm it.”Peter was beginning to discover to himself how much he did love the Lord, that there was no one in heaven above or upon earth beneath beside Jesus Christ; but he did not know it until the probing, hurting questions of the Lord came.The Lord’s questions always reveal me to myself.

The patient directness and skill of Jesus Christ with Peter!Our Lord never asks questions until the right time.Rarely, but probably at least once, He will get us into a corner where he will hurt us with His undeviating questions, and we will realize that we do love him far more deeply than any profession can ever show.

Thought to Ponder

I’m being chased. Recently, all of the material I’ve been reading (from four different books mind you) and listening to have been focused around a single theme: being filled with the spirit. I took a break from reading The King’s Daughter by Diana Hagee but picked it up again the day before yesterday. The next chapter in the book is entitled “The Holy Spirit and Me” There’s a prayer at the end of the chapter that I would like to share you.

Father, I ask that You reveal Yourself to me in a way I have never known before. If there is something You have for me that I have not expierenced, then show me now. I ask You to pour Your Holy Spirit into my heart. With this infilling, I ask you to impart in me the passion to witness as Your disciples did on the day of pentecost. I ask that You help me with my prayer life, lifting me to levels far beyond my natural strength and understanding. When I pray, I want the authority and the power of the living God. Guide me through Your Holy Spirit, in the path You would have me go. Father, I ask that you pour into my heart a love so rich that it can be described only as agape love. A love that is so pure that its only source can be the throne of the living God. Lord, if htere is more of You, then I want to have it. Amen.

Here are also a couple of things that I underlined in the chapter that really caught my attention:
1. First, the infilling of the Holy Spirit gives us added powere to be effective witnesses. Second, the Holy Spirit gives us the powere to pray according to the will of God. And third, the Holy Spirit becomes our guide and Teacher when we read the Word of God.
2. Salvation is your foundation. The infilling of the Holy Spiritand the fruit of the Spirit build your spiritual house. You live in this house; all of these parts make your Christian walk functional.
3. This is the response of an Orthodox rabbi when asked the question ‘What do you believe about the Word of God?’
“The Word of God is the protoplasm of all living things. It is the basis of all creation. The Word was spoken and life was. There is also a dynamic to the Word. It knows what you need at any given time. In Hebrew writing, the letters leap upward like cloven tongues of fire. This represents the dynamics of the Word. It is never stagnant. That is why you can read something one day and it means one thing to you, and you read the same passage of Scripture nthe next day and it means something totally different. It meets the needs of the individual at any given time. The Word has power. The Word has discernment. The Word of God is alive.”

If an Orthodox rabbi can feel so fervently about the lifing Word of God, how much more should we, as Christians know this fervor? “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us;” he taught us what to do and gave us the power to do it. If we are to be effective tools for a living God, we need to read his living and life giving Word and let His Spirit fill our lives like “a hand in a glove” so that we can do what we are being directed to do.

A couple of items

First: my dearest one wrote a blog last night. You should go read it.

Second, my mom made a funny:

“Winter weather is something to be avoided — if possible by moving to Florida… I’m convinced it came as a result of the fall. “

Third, my mom has recently discovered the internet. She’s been all over the place, browsing movie previews, and reviews, and reading up on her favorite ministers’ daily publications… and forwarding this info to everyone she knows. She even got a Xanga site. The great irony is that, she has no problem sending out mass emails, but she has never—in however many months she’s had this thing—she’s never posted anything. The same goes for my dad. They both got weblogs purely for the sake of posting comments on their own children! I think this is a travesty. My dad can be forgiven on the basis that he really isn’t the broadcasting type (he could post jokes or something, though. My dad likes corny jokes). But my mom—that’s a lady who’s got a lot to say. And she’s saying it. You try having a conversation with her that only lasts 5 minutes. But not on her weblog. I think everybody should go comment on her site and force her to say something. But that’s just me.

And now, the news in brief.

Actually, I’m not in my briefs. I’m in my nice work clothes, ready to go nowhere. I’ve had a job for two days and they already sent me home. We had a record-breaking snow last night. 14 inches. That’s the most in one night that I ever remember (Obviously, I’ve never lived in Montana). I left yesterday at 3. I was supposed to stay till 5 (the call-center must go on, regardless of weather), but the police and the national guard and the secret service were all apparently escorting a bush down by our building and they had to shut the road down from 3-6. I had the option of leaving at either 3:00 or 6:00. Since my trainer had been stuck in the mountains since I started working, I wasn’t exactly accomplishing anything, so I went ahead and left at 3.

Then it showed another 10 inches. So now I have time to write a blog.

Actually, it’s a pretty great story. The day before there was all this “winter weather advisory” stuff going on. I didn’t believe it. You know how the south is. They announce that there’s going to be a few inches of snow and everybody storms the grocery stores, stocking up on milk, water, bread, and frozen TV dinners. No, I’m serious. I always wondered what they were going to do with frozen TV dinners when the power went out. Now I know. What if the power is just fine, but you can’t drive your car?

Anyway, we got this email at work that day saying that, no matter what, even if the rest of the company closed up shop and went home, we’d be there. Because we’re the response center. We have to respond to people who don’t have nice cushy excuses like a foot of snow to keep them from calling in prayer requests and book purchases. The only thing that’s going to stop us is if the power goes out. No problem for me. I don’t think it’s going to snow. So I get up that morning, and fail to make a lunch for myself, knowing that my job is only 15 minutes from my house and I can always come back for food. And I go to work. And it starts snowing just as I hit the roads. And it keeps on snowing. And I get out of morning devotion (I love a job that has morning devotions) and they’ve blocked the back route to my building because somebody might slip on the stairs, because there’s an inch of snow. Wimpy southerners. An inch of snow.

And it keeps on snowing.

Come lunch time, I realize I’m in trouble. I didn’t bring a lunch. My car is covered in 3 inches of snow. Getting the car cleared is not the problem. Getting home through the snow and panicked drivers and back again in less than an hour is the problem. So I am reminded of the cafeteria in our complex, two buildings over. OK. I’ll just eat there. It’ll ruin my budget, but I’m really hungry. And even the best budged cannot stand against the pangs of hunger.

So I go outside, and it’s snowing. Pretty hard. Maybe 3 inches of snow already cover the ground. I’m wearing loafers. No problem. I’ll drive my car two buildings over to eat, and then drive back. Of course, I don’t clear off my car or anything. I’m just driving within the complex, not even going on a real street. I just get in the car, turn on the wipers, and go. So I’ve got bad tunnel vision. So what? Nobody else is driving in this stuff. They’ve all gone home already.

I get to the place, which is miraculously still open, have myself an amazing greasy cheeseburger, and head back to my car.

It’s been snowing for half an hour so thick you can’t see through it.

After I find my car, I attempt to get back to my office the same way I left. I turn on the wipers and go. It’s just 2 buildings over. Yeah. If you turn right instead of left. I thought there were only three buildings in our complex, all lined around a little U. Well now I know that there are at least 7. I’m not sure exactly what I did. Well, actually, I do know what I did, but I can’t describe it to you any more than I could do it again. If I turned right, I would have gone back to the main street, which I did not want to do. But apparently I took the wrong left. All I know is that when I went there, it was all over level ground. But when I went back, I suddenly found my self sliding up a hill covered in snow. I couldn’t do it.

I got out of my car, cleared a few windows and looked around. I was on a hill. There was a building far off to port. And I was not in Kansas anymore. I had no idea where I was, or how to get back. I had only driven maybe a tenth of a mile.

So I backed down the steep slope and pulled into the parking lot of the unfamiliar building. I trudged through the snow, up a flight of steps, and walked inside. I was very pleased to see that this building had the same doormat as mine. It meant I wasn’t in wonderland or anything. Then I looked up. The sign said ‘Wells Fargo delivery entrance.” Scratch that. Back in wonderland.

I wandered around to the front of the building, found somebody by the door and said, “Hi. I’m lost. Can you tell me where I am?” It was two ladies, I guess housekeeping, waiting for a ride.

“Well, you’re at Wells Fargo,” they said.

Thanks.

“Where are you trying to get to?”

“Well, I’m trying to get to Billy Graham. Can you tell me the
quickest way to get there on foot?” Great. Now I sound like some
kind of wacko. I’m seeking the great Dalai Lama.

“On foot?”

“Yeah. My car’s a little stuck.”

“Well, you turn left on *&^, and then go across to…

“No wait. Then he’ll be going across a busy intersection…”

Intersection? Now wait. I may be lost, but one thing I know is that there is no busy intersection between me and where I want to go. Then it hits me. Two streets over is the Billy Graham Parkway. Named after Billy Graham, whom I work for. Trust a famous evangelist to put his offices in the vicinity of a street named after him. Not that I blame him. I think the road actually goes on land that used to be his property.

“No no, wait. I mean the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association,
where I work.”

“Well where’s that?”

“Um, buildings one and two?”

“Wow. You really are lost. You’re in building seven.”

“Excuse me, sir. If you’re going to be in this building, I’m going to have to ask you to sign the guestbook.”

I’m lost and I’m going to be late for work and the big guy in the black uniform with a gun wants me to sign his guestbook? There are so many things wrong with this picture. But the housekeeping ladies explained to him what I was doing there and that I was lost and stuff, at which point the security guy insisted that he was the only one who was authorized to give directions to stranded wayfarers. Which is fine by me. I don’t rightly care who directs me as long as I get where I’m supposed to be going. So he says, you head out the way that you came and you find the road and you turn that way, and stay on the road and you’ll come right around to building 1. I think he was more focused on me heading out the way that I came than making sure I got to the right place, since I didn’t really understand which way “that way” was, but I can follow the road just fine.

Except that every road does at least two ways. The right way and the wrong way. I walked back to my car, and then up the way that my car had gotten stuck and kept on going. I figured out pretty quick that I was still lost, since I was suddenly surrounded with trees and farming equipment. But it was snowing thick and I was on a road that was sure to have people on it sooner or later, and I didn’t want to go back to the Guestbook Gestapo. So I trudged.

And I trudged

And eventually I came to a street. The sign said Yorkmont, which is the street that you come down to get to the BGEA every day. Heading one way was a long line of cars heading back to the main road, which is where you come from when you are heading to work. Since all the cars were obviously driving home early from work, I figured I was found enough to know that I, who was going to work should go the opposite way. So I trudged.

And I trudged.

All this is in my brown penny loafers, mind you. I had a good thick coat on, but my shoes were slip-ons, and we’re up to about 5 inches right now.. So I trudged in the street. In the median that had been created by cars driving only in the ruts of previous cars. And I trudged. Finally, a kid my age who was driving my way, stopped and asked me if I wanted a ride. Heck yeah.

So I hop in, and he’s asking me where I’m trying to go, and I’m explaining that I’m totally lost. Finally I said I was trying to get to the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (as if he actually will know where that is), and he says, “Well that’s behind us.” I looked up, and sure enough, in front of us is the Farmer’s Market, a landmark which I have never before seen. Once again, I had turned left when I should have turned right. The kid was nice, and offered to turn around and drive me over, but I could tell the nightmare that would be, for him to turn around. There were no driveways on the right side of the road, and turning left meant getting traffic to stop for us. Twice. I thanked him and said not to worry about it. I can trudge much faster when I know where I’m going.

Actually, I jogged. The “median” wasn’t that deep, only an inch or so, and traffic was moving very slow. I passed maybe 15 cars on my way back. It was maybe a quarter mile before I saw a familiar building. From behind. Across an open snow-covered field. It was either walk around the street way, an extra quarter mile or so, or shoot straight across a field with 5-6 of snow. Heh heh. My feet were already wet anyway.

So clomp clomp clomp to the back of the building, then hedge between building and shrub, around that narrow spot where the only space between the corner of the building and the 2-foot deep fountain is the 6-inch ledge of the holding tank, and on to the previously referred to blocked-off sidewalk. Under the yellow tape and into sweet warmness. My lunch was only an hour and 20 minutes. Pretty good time for getting lost, I think.

But the great irony: Now get this. When I came back in and apologized and told me story (in brief) to people in charge… My team leader. Bless her heart. She told me they had food provided for us, in the bad weather.

Telemarketing for Jesus

OK. I’ll be good. I’ll go ahead and announce that I do indeed have a job. I’m sure a great number of you have listened to the rumors instead of waiting for the press release, but fortunately, in this case, the rumors were mostly true. I’ll start working for the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association tomorrow. 8:00 am. Show up early and we’ll walk you over to devotions. Does this mean I’m getting paid to pray? It’s a possibility.

What I’m going to be doing is basically working in a call center for BGEA. Mostly, I think, it’s going to be updating addresses and accepting donations, and setting people up to receive the magazine. But there is supposed to be a bit of praying for people over the phone, leading them in sinner’s prayers, etc. The pay is very reasonable, at a rate to which I formerly referred as measly. But the hours are fewer. It’s officially part-time: between 20 and 30 hours a week, depending on the schedule you get. The manager, when I spoke to him, said that some shifts may be as great as 34 hours or as small as 16. If I get anywhere near 16, I’m going to have to take up a paper route or something, but that’s okay. I made a commitment for a year, and that’s just a little bit under how much longer I plan to stay in Charlotte. What a coinkydink.

Valerie is much more excited about this than me. My joblessness seems to have been really freaking her out. I haven’t been quite so worried. I have this amazing ability to put off fear of my life falling apart, so long as I know I’ve been doing what’s right. So as long as I was looking regularly, and keeping disciplined and busy, I was fine. It was only when I managed to goof off for a day that I got really weirded out. So far as actually getting a job, I knew that was going to happen, because God is gracious.

That’s not to say that I wasn’t very frustrated. I discovered a lot about myself that I didn’t suspect. Like the fact that I had very little self-discipline, especially where it concerns creating and sticking to my own schedule. It was very easy to goof off a whole day. Which then did make me very depressed. But then, my depression was at least partially justified because I had, in fact, made a fool of myself and wasted a day.

So what really got my attention was not that I got a job, but under what circumstances I got a job. It was the first day after I had finally decided to get out the daily planner my parents had given me 6 (count ‘em: 6) years ago and start using it. Monday was the first day that I wrote down for me an agenda, and then followed through with it. Monday was also the day that I finally gave in and followed through with filing for unemployment.

The unemployment thing wouldn’t really be a big deal, except I’m trying to teach this Sunday school. I was trying to find some way to demonstrate for them that God is really involved in our lives, and the official lesson for that day was on prayer. And the official verse was in Ezra 8:21 where Ezra announced that he specifically didn’t request an armed guard from the emperor while his people went across hostile territory back to Jerusalem. Ezra had every right to an armed guard, and he would have gotten it if he had asked for it. But Ezra had told the emperor that God watches out for the people who look to him. So he was ashamed to say, “God will protect us—can we have an armed guard?” And I said to myself. You’re not supposed to do that. That’s like those people who say that God will heal them, so they don’t go to the doctor. You’re supposed to do both. That’d be like me being fully entitled to unemployment insurance (which I am) but insisting instead upon trusting in God to keep me fed.

Now all of this would be fine, but I was trying to demonstrate to these kids that God is real and really watching out for us, just like Ezra was trying to demonstrate for the Persian king. So I announced, with only a little faith, that I was going to put off applying for unemployment until I got down to my last dregs, so I could demonstrate that God would provide. Notice I didn’t say that I wouldn’t apply for unemployment. Just not until the last minute. I wanted to see if God would provide. And I really wanted to demonstrate that God would provide.

Of course, it would be the easiest thing in the world to demonstrate that me getting a job was no miracle. I happen to consider myself one of the most employable people in the world J. But the same could be said for Ezra, that it was no miracle that he got across the entire middle east without being attacked. Maybe his group just wasn’t worth the effort, they were so poor. But it is interesting to note that I got my job offer the very day I applied for unemployment online and set a date to go down to the main office. Which would be today. Which I may still do, on the basis that I might still be entitled to the money I would have received the last 6 weeks or so.

Since I had finally gotten my life organized, yesterday was also the day that I finally did my taxes and discovered that I was due nearly $600. THAT I did on purpose. I’ve heard a lot of arguments on why you should go through this great effort to make sure that you don’t owe them and they don’t owe you. Usually the argument goes that going out of your way to make sure that you get a tax refund is basically using the government for a savings account, and they make an awful bank because they only charge interest, and never pay it. BUT. If I could ensure that over a period of 12 months I would actually save that money in a bank, I wouldn’t want to pay it out in taxes. But I know me. I’m a good saver, but not that good of a saver. There is no way I would have put that additional money in a bank. It would have gone straight into something really frivolous, like an extra bag of fritos on the way out of the grocery store… every week for a year. And even if I had invested it in a savings account somewhere. What kind of return does a bank give you? .05% ? Not much of a difference from nothing, is it? As it is, I now have $600 that I will plop down right back into savings—despite this sudden need I have to upgrade my car stereo.

And lastly. When it rains it pours. I got home last night from all my errand running, and checked my email, and found a note from a recruiter at American Express Financial Securities. They wanted to schedule an interview with me. All of this on the same day. It feels very weird to go from no interviews at all, to turning down an interview. The really weird part is that the American Express job (in the event that I actually got it) would probably have paid better. But. A bird in hand…

As always,
I have more to say,
but I’ve done enough
for today.

Thought to Ponder

Just a short one today; must get back to studying for exams….

The Sabbath was made for the good of man, man was not made for the Sabbath. –Mark 2:27

God created the Sabbath so that we would be forced to slow down and rest. There are constant references in the Old Testament about keeping the Sabbath day holy and how to accomplish that holiness. In fact, keeping the Sabbath holy was so important that the people were risking death if they worked. It’s so important for us to take a regular time to rest and let our minds and hands take a break from the work that we do six days a week. If we don’t, we run the risk of working ourselves to death in our zeal to accomplish.

Writer’s Speedbump

The other reason I’ve been avoiding posting so often has been that it just takes so long. I sat down around 2:00 to write last night, mostly because I couldn’t sleep and I had been gotten on to for not writing, so why not? I typed out the first thing that came to mind, just some stuff that I’d been thinking about. I typed straight through it. I didn’t edit anything. I didn’t correct anything. I went back and fixed two capitalization problems and a typo. It was 5:30 when I got done.

It’s not that I’m a slow typist, but it takes me that long when I’m trying to say something very clear. I want to pick exactly the right word and exactly the right metaphor.

When I was being home schooled, and working on my writing, my mom handed me a book by a lady—I don’t remember her name, but the book was called, Writing down the bones. I’ve found out since then that it’s pretty much the writer’s textbook everywhere in the world. She only had one premise: that we spend too much time internally editing ourselves to make it sound right. The result is that we never get anything said because we’ve already decided that what we have to say is pretty darn stupid.

Her solution was to encourage people to journal for 20 minutes or so a day. Pure stream of consciousness. The words go into your head and onto the paper. After 20 minutes, if you think you have something in there that’s worth using it, then you can pop out your superior editing skills and chop away until you have a good finished product. Good call, huh? It’s usually best for a sculptor to start out with too much material than with too little. Too little and you end up with all those Grecian statues without heads and arms J

I try. I really do. I did better when I was a kid. And if I completely unplug my brain, sometimes I can manage to write as fast as I’m thinking. But I ain’t too good at it.

Like right now? No problem. I think something and it comes out. All conversational like. But when I’m trying to say something that makes sense… Ew! By the time I get done thinking it through, I forgot how it started. So I end up with a lot of starts and stops as I have to re-process everything I already had down 15 minutes ago. I out-pace my little fingers.

It’s probably a really funny sight. I’m sure I look all studious when it happens. I’ll get to a certain point in my argument and then I’ll make some hyper jump out to left field somewhere. And then I have to figure out how on earth I got from point A to point B. So I get all excited, and I jump up and pace the room, figuring out all the little details of my new idea. Of course, once I’ve figured out all the nuances and implications… I’ve been standing up and pacing instead of writing. So now I have to sit down and type it out. Only I already forgot what it was I thought. So I have to do it all over again.

And that’s my revelation for the day. I’m going to bed now.
KB