Thought to Ponder

I’ve been reading Diana Hagee’s The King’s Daughter: Becoming the Woman God Created You to Be and am inspired. I thought I share a bit today for you ladies reading (sorry guys…I’ll try to put something else up for you later):

Hear Him speaking directly to you in this letter:

When I created the heavens and the earth, I spoke them into being. When I created man, I formed him and breathed life into his nostrils. But you, woman, I fashioned after I breathed the breath of life into man because your nostrils were too delicate. I allowed a deep sleep to come over him so I could patiently and perfectly fashion you.

Man was put to sleep so that he could not interfere with the creativity. From one bone I fashioned you. I chose the bone that protects man’s life. I chose the rib, which protects his heart and lungs and supports him, as you are meant to do.

Around this one bone I shaped you. I modeled you. I created you perfectly and beautifully. Your characteristics are as the rib – strong, yet delicate and fragile. You provide protection for the most delicate organ in man: his heart. His heart is the center of his being; his lungs hold the breath of life.

The rib cage will allow itself to be broken before it will allow damage to the heart. Support man as the rib cage supports the body. You were not taken from his feet, to be under him, nor were you taken from his head, to be above him. You were taken from his side, to stand beside him and be held close to his side.

You are My perfect angel. You are My beautiful little girl. You have grown to be a splendid woman of excellence, and My eyes fill when I seen the virtue in your heart. Your eyes — don’t change them. Your lips – how lovely when they part in prayer. Your nose, so perfect in form. Your hands, so gentle to touch. I’ve caressed your face in your deepest sleep; I’ve held your heart close to mine.

Of all that lives and breathes, you are the most like Me. Adam walked with Me in the cool of the day, and yet he was lonely. He could not see Me or touch Me. He could only feel Me. So everything I wanted Adam to share and experience with Me, I fashioned in you: My holiness, My strength, My purity, My love, My protection and support. You are special because you are an extension of Me. Man represents My image. Woman, My emotions. Together you represent the totality of God.

So Man, treat Woman well. Love her, respect her, for she is fragile. In hurting her, you hurt Me. What you do to her, you do to Me. In crushing her, you damage your own heart, the heart of your Father and the heart of her Father.

Woman, support Man. In humility, show him the power of emotion I have given you. In gentle quietness, show your strength. In love, show him that you are the rib that protects his inner self.

A Little Lack

It is a peculiar quality of my religion
That it holds the broken reed above the straight one
(as no musician would).
The smoking flax is greater than the bright one
Because it cannot help but to announce
That something in its life is lacking.

As something in my life is always lacking.

So it comes as no great shock to me
To find that I am reaching for perfection
And yet to find that I am never quite achieving it.
This little lack is all I have, sometimes,
That draws me back to Him
Who makes my heart to breathe.

Part 2

I think the big issue to discuss is the great irony in the fact that I ended my last post with “to be continued,” and it’s taken me a full month or more to write again. What can I say? I’m a crappy letter writer. (You wonder why all my friends tend to go crazy?) Actually the great irony is that my mom (who is never wrong) responded to “to be continued” with “yeah, but when?!” And she was right. I was planning to continue my blog in about a week, at most. I guess it seems that, while nothing can separate us from the love of God, a great deal can separate us from the love of blog.

The truth is that my “Part 2” kept changing. Originally, what I was going to write about was my further difficulties in achieving my other dream of owning a Christian bookstore. Do you know that the average cost of starting a small shopping-center bookstore runs around $300,000 (plus one year’s living expenses), because it takes a minimum of a full year before you start running a profit? For a store on the scale of Borders, the price tag goes in excess of a million. In case anyone hadn’t noticed, I don’t have anywhere near $300,000 (or a cool million) at my disposal. I don’t even have enough money to buy a new car. A loan? You want me to get a loan for that kind of money? Mister, in case you didn’t know, I just got turned down for a $250 credit card. That’s right. I figured I’d start working on my credit by getting an ultra-low balance credit card that I’d use to cover my daily expenses, groceries, etc. The response? Insufficient credit history. Crikey! I’ve got more than that in savings! Needless to say, that dream also is on hold.

For a couple of weeks, my idea was to say that I’d put both sets of dreams on hold, and that I was just going to sit back and enjoy life for a while. Well, it was what I was going to say. I really was. Then work got to be unpleasant, and all kinds of political motives among employees started showing up. And so I woke up one morning with the sudden realization that, if I was going to be miserable, I might as well be miserable with a purpose.

I just don’t have it in me to sit around indefinitely and bide my time. I took a year off once before, between ministry school and going back to college. It was fun for maybe three months. Once I got properly rested, I got really really bored. I took a dance class; I took up guitar; I took up babysitting; I read 1500 pages of history textbooks. I don’t remember what all else I did, but none of it was particularly satisfying. I couldn’t make any of it into a lifetime goal. I don’t hobby well. I tend to be on or off. This putz around stuff doesn’t do me to well. As long as it’s carrying me to a goal, I can put up with an almost infinite strand of unpleasantness, but unpleasantness that moves toward no particular goal just doesn’t cut it for me.

So I woke up one morning and it was “pick a dream and go with it.” So I picked, and I didn’t pick business. The most direct path toward owning a bookstore at this point does not involve getting an entry-level job at my local bookstore (I wish people would quit suggesting that). There is nothing about running a business that I could learn from working customer service. In fact, none of the jobs I currently qualify for would teach me anything directly about business. It would all be a vicarious, sidward process that would take years to assimilate. Or I could go to business school and basically start from scratch, because I didn’t even take macro economics 101 in college. They’d stick me in undergrad classes, because an English degree has absolutely nothing to do with a business degree. However, an English degree is practically on the fast track to high scores in seminary. Frankly, what is the difference between interpreting William Blake and interpreting the book of Revelation? Not much, I can assure you (they’re both functionally impossible J).

So I’m going to seminary. I picked Gordon-Conwell. I’ll be enrolling as soon as I can get the darn application done. I’ve got a whole other essay to write about how difficult that has been. It has been unbearably busy for a month now.

I’m sure I have other things to say, but I’m going to be late for work, and I dare not put off posting this thing another day—who knows when that other day may ever be?

Toodles.
KB

Thought to Ponder

I Haven’t Tasted Your Apple

At the University of Chicago Divinity School each year, they have what is called Baptist Day. On this day each one is to bring a lunch to be eaten outdoors in a grassy picnic area. Every Baptist Day the school would invite one of the greatest minds to lecture in the theological education center.

The story is that one year they invited Dr. Paul Tillich. Dr. Tillich spoke for two and one-half hours proving that the resurrection of Jesus was false. He quoted scholar after scholar and book after book.

He concluded that since there was no such thing as the historical resurrection the religious tradition of the church was groundless, emotional mumbo-jumbo, because it was based on a relationship with a risen Jesus, who, in fact, never rose from the dead in any literal sense. He then asked if there were any questions.

After about 30 seconds, an old, dark skinned preacher with a head of short-cropped, woolly white hair stood up in the back of the auditorium. ”Doct’a Tillich, I got one question,” he said as all eyes turned toward him. He reached into his sack lunch and pulled out an apple and began eating it. ”Doct’a Tillich… CRUNCH, MUNCH… My question is a simple question, CRUNCH, MUNCH; Now, I ain’t never read them books you read…CRUNCH, MUNCH…and I can’t recite the Scriptures in the original Greek…CRUNCH, MUNCH.. I don’t know nothin’ about Niebuhr and Heidegger…” CRUNCH, MUNCH…He finished the apple. “All I wanna know is was that apple I ate bitter or sweet?”

Dr. Tillich paused for a moment and answered in exemplary scholarly fashion: “I cannot possibly answer that question, for I haven’t tasted your apple.”

The white-haired preacher dropped the core of his apple into his crumpled paper bag, looked up at Dr. Tillich and said calmly, “Neither have you tasted my Jesus.”

The 1,000 plus in attendance could not contain themselves. The auditorium erupted with applause and cheers. Dr. Tillich thanked his audience and promptly left the platform.

Psalm 34:8 – Oh, taste and see that the LORD is good; blessed is the man that trusteth in Him!

Thought to Ponder

We profess with our mouth’s that Christ is the King of Kings, Lord of Lords and Prince of Peace. What we don’t or refuse to recognize is how truly important those names are. He is sovereign over all things, people, relationships, and situations. God knows everything, but how often do we reject his true council and sovereignty in our lives?

I went to my parents’ church here in Knoxville today and Pastor Riley was speaking of a childhood game he used to play: King of the Hill. I think that he was right that we all still unconsciously play king of the hill in our families, jobs and relationships. The question is, who is the king of your hill? Are you vying for a better position at work, trying to dominate in you home, or simply trying to keep ahead of the Joneses?

We get so caught up in the “American Dream,” which insists on our upward mobility, that we forget the true source of success in our lives: Christ. When will we recognize Christ’s awe inspiring Lordship in our lives and give him complete control of our hill? I don’t see a better candidate than an omniscient and merciful God to guide us in the right path and be our King of the hill.

Thought to Ponder

Children are also our roll models whether we want to believe it or not. We are supposed to pay attention to them and emulate their eagerness to please and their faith that their parents will provide.

Matthew 18: 1-6

“At that time the disciples came to Jesus and asked, ‘Who is greatest in the kingdom of heaven?’ He called a little child and had him stand among them. And he said: ‘I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. Therefore, whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. And whoever welcomes a little child like this in my name welcomes me. But if anyone causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a large millstone hung around his neck and to be drowned in the depths of the sea.’”

Vision

Okay. Let me begin by saying that I’m a mystic. In modern psychological terms, this means that I’m a prime candidate for schizophrenia. I have delusions of grandeur all the time. It also seems that I am the envy of those who aspire to poetry and ecstatic religion. It is only with some great difficulty that I can distinguish between present reality and my imagination. I am constantly on the verge of either changing the world forever, or losing my mind. Again, it is only with some difficulty that I am able to make a distinction between the two.

Fortunately for me, having had my skills sharpened by reason of use, I am able to process this visionary impetus quite easily. Some revolutionary idea comes, I hash it out, check it for flaws, and keep it or toss it. As a result, it usually isn’t me who ends up going crazy. It’s everyone around me. I hash out these high falutin ideas by talking about them, and when any particular vision has me, I believe in it fanatically. To anyone who is an intimate part of my life, it looks like the world is perpetually crashing down around my shoulders.

It isn’t. It just looks that way. I do have a sense of perspective. I am confident that the truly God-sent ideas will have staying power. It is only that I am convinced that we must also process the bran if we are to retain the germ. There’s a lot of chaff out there for every grain of wheat.

There have been two visions for my life that have had particular staying power: one is a call to business. The other is a call to ministry. I tend to alternate between the two. I can trace this back at least to when I was fourteen. I had this really brilliant idea that I was going to open up a series of Olympic sized swimming pools in the town I was living in. Mostly I was frustrated to that the biggest pubic pool was about the size of what goes in somebody’s back yard. The only glitch in my plan was the part where my dad got a new job and we moved about 300 miles. The next thing I can remember is trying to manipulate God into calling me to be a pastor. It went something like this: “Don’t send me to Africa.” You know the saying, if you pray to God, “please don’t ever” that’s the one thing He’ll do. The obvious solution is to absolutely convince yourself that the one thing you never want to do is the actual calling God has on your life. I’m pretty sure there’s a flaw in my logic somewhere, but at the time I didn’t catch it. I just remember that I successfully put pastoral ministry completely out of my thoughts for nearly a decade.

When I was seventeen, the summer before my senior year in high school, I came up with a new grandiose vision for the ultimate Christian bookstore. I seriously approached my parents and asked for permission to drop out of high school, get my GED, and start this business immediately. I was also seriously appalled at my parents lack of vision when they insisted that I complete my schooling.

Having graduated from high school, it seemed the most natural thing in the world for me to be frustrated that they didn’t offer a bona fide degree in theology for undergraduates at the college that I chose, despite the fact that I never for a moment thought that a theology degree implied a calling to something like pastoral ministry. I don’t know what on earth I thought I was going to do with a theology degree, but I certainly knew I wasn’t going to pastor. I was so frustrated with my academic limitations that I dropped out of the school where I had an 80% scholarship and moved a thousand miles to attend a non-accredited ministry school (a move which, though I don’t understand it, I still believe was based on the genuine leading of God).

Having moved clear across the country, I discovered that I was ill equipped to fit into the mold that my new school had established for “ministry.” Even the stuff I’m good at became peremptory failures. I just sort of sat there for two years and generally looked stupid. Nevertheless, while I was sitting there looking stupid, I received the most astounding vision for a Christian bookstore. To this day I believe that the vision I received both needs to be done and will be done, in due time.

And with this long prelude, I come to the last few months. I’m not really sure why I majored in English. Oh, I have a few guesses, but they’re in the same category as guesses why I went to MorningStar school of ministry. The bottom line is God told me and I’m a mystic, so I can say that. So Nyeaah.

So I get out, and I’m just sitting here for about a month. And I get to praying. Remember, that I’ve completely abandoned the any pretensions to ministry since it all went up in smoke at the ministry school. So I say,

“God, I’ve graduated, and now that I’m through all that mess, what do you want me to do?” And He says.

“GO TO SEMINARY!” Well, okay, it was quieter than that, but it had the same effect. So I start laughing and I says, “After I am worn out… will I now have this pleasure?” and then it turned into this big argument about whether or not I actually laughed at God.

It took a couple of days, but I talked myself out of it. I had this big deal I wrote about putting out fleeces for God to manipulate around, a bunch of hoops for God to jump through… However, the only serious test I could think of was for God to give me a straight path. If I’m supposed to go to seminary, tell me how I’m going to get through it and what I’m supposed to be doing when I get done.

Then I started looking. I researched schools, I talked to people who had gone to seminary. I sought counsel from parents and pastors and chaplains and everybody else I thought might care. I got responses everywhere from my mom telling me that I was crazy, but that if it was God, I could do what I thought was best to my pastor telling me that, if I was going to be certain of getting a job at a respectable Baptist church, I had better go to school at a recognized conservative Southern Baptist seminary, such as his alma mater, some 300 miles away.

It was the “be a good Baptist” speech that scared me. I like my Baptist church. It’s a good church. I don’t know, though, that I’m ready to commit myself to “being a Baptist.” Being a member of a church of a particular denomination is one thing. Stamping myself neatly into the mold of a particular denomination is quite another. Basically, the line was something about, if I went to a non-Baptist seminary, then a lot of Baptist churches would be suspicious and unwilling to give me any position at their church. What I’m thinking is, “why would I even consider being associated with any church that had those kinds of sectarian issues?” But what I mumbled back was something about not being sure about the whole denominational thing. I’m not really sure about how all these large, supra-church structures work So he went into an explanation about how basically all denominations are like that, so I’d best figure out which one I wanted before I went to school. Then he went back into the push for a good Baptist seminary.

My brakes were officially braking. I don’t want to be a good little Baptist and preach the party line. I don’t want to concern myself with making sure I’ve jumped through the appropriate hoops to get a position that pays enough to do “God’s work” and still buy a nice house. If I preach, I want to preach the Truth that needs no accreditation. Seminary was officially on hold.

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(to be continued…)

Thought to Ponder

God wants more from us that an acknowledgement of his Godship. Even the demons proclaim his as God and tremble in fear for their existence. A truly repentent heart proclaims God as God, recognizes that we can only attain salvation through God’s son, and listens to the indwelling Holy Spirit for guidance through life. Our lives change when we accept the grace and mercy of Christ’s salvation. We can put aside our old lives and sorrows that are attached to it because we become new creations in Christ.

Thought to Ponder

Epicureans believe that “personal happiness is the only sensible goal in human existence. Individuals are powerless to change the world and are not obligated to try, just seek to be happy.”

People have a longing in their lives that they cannot explain. They try to satisfy this longing with worldly love, possessions and relationships. Many people try to fill this void in many ways: love and human relationships, social causes, work and personal achievement, and religion. Becoming busy in life in order to achieve “happiness” does not fill the emptiness that people feel. John Choron said that “if you work hard enough, long enough, work (love, relationships, social causes, achievement, religion, etc.) becomes your ultimate goal and you’ll probably be too tired and too involved to be disturbed by the possibility that your existence is meaningless.” Satan has been very successful in blinding people from the more important things in life by means of fear, worry and making people “too busy” to think.

I’m not saying that you can’t be happy in life. Life is a test of faith, and there are things that are more important than those things that the world can give to us and puts so much emphasis on. Without a personal connection with the source of life, how can we claim to have found meaning and feel happy?

For the Record

I just want to make sure that everybody knows that I’m not a blithering idiot with no plan. I had a plan. I had a very good plan. Seminary was about step 15 in that plan, not step 2. It’s the sudden shift that’s causing me irritation. As far as going to Seminary is concerned, I’m actually kind of excited. I’ve only been wanting to learn to read Greek and Hebrew for 5 years. I was very disappointed when they didn’t have it available at MorningStar

The biggest sheepskin for me is money. I don’t have any intention of going through the dirt poor thing any more. I can live off of $13 K per year. I have no desire to. If I go right back to school, I’m still going to want an income of close to $20,000 a year. That would cover house, car, food, a movie now and again, and hopefully something to pay off school money problems as well.

Another thing I want is a lot of people to tell me, “Yes, Kyle, I’ve prayed about it and thunked about it, and this is exactly what I think you’re supposed to do.”

I suppose if I was being a real Gideon, I’d ask for something extravagant, like snow in July or something, but I guess I’m not that interested in avoiding going back to school.

Yesterday I did my research and found that there were basically four seminaries in Charlotte: Two Presbyterian and two inter/non denominational. One Presby school was at Queens, and it was the liberal branch of the Presby church. I’m not that liberal. They also had a degree plan that fit neatly into six years. I’m not that liberal. The other was called Reformed Theological Seminary, and they were very impressive in their academics and mind blowingly conservative. They believe that the Bible is the absolute truth, dictated word for word from the mouth of God. I believe that all scripture is God-breathed, and that it’s all true, but word for word? If that’s word for word, then we’ve got a lot more to worry about than evolution and the ordination of women. If the bible was dictated verbatim, then He’s got major multiple personality disorder. I prefer not to believe in a God who is crazy. RTS also included a copy of the statement that every professor must sign every year. Basically if they have any misgivings about the Presbyterian creed that was established every year, they are required to notify the school immediately. I got the distinct impression that the creed was more important than the scripture. What if they found that a conservative interpretation of the bible necessarily contradicted the creed?

The third school was called Southern Evangelical Seminary, and they scared me from the get-go. Let’s start with the portable buildings for offices. Then we can move to the general… lack of affability… in the admissions staff. I got my admissions info and left. I never even looked at it. Later, a friend described them as the “fightin’ fundies.” Rigid fundamentalists. In my opinion, the fundamentalists have moved as far to the right of a plausible interpretation as the ultra-liberals have moved to the left.

The last one seems to be the zinger. Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. Interdeominational, the school has students who go on to minister with Baptists, Presbyterians, Methodists, and a whole host of other denominations. It happens to be the same school that my good friend graduated from, and he highly recommended it to me. Good solid biblical background, he says. I was a little scared when I first found them—they were in a business park. But they were finishing their actual campus to open this fall, and the interior was much more comfortably furnished than the scary school. It seems silly to judge by the furniture, but you have to wonder, if this is what they consider appropriate to welcome students, what will they do after you start attending classes? The Admissions counselor at Gordon-Conwell was also the most helpful of any of the schools I went to. He was very encouraging, asked questions, gave helpful suggestions.

It was pretty easy to pick my favorite out of the schools. What’s been hard has been obtaining advice from qualified counselors. Friends and family have given me their input (Family has stood firmly on the side of getting a job before even considering going back to school), but pastors and school counselors have not been so easy to catch. I have an appointment tomorrow with my pastor. One day my school chaplain will give me a call. I think she may be on an international school field trip. I tend to forget they have those.

I also finally got my appointment with Adecco today. Someday, I’ll manage to get a job.

You should be proud of me. Only 1 ½ pages today. J