Tuesday, June 26, 2007
New Pictures of the Boys!
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Heaven and Hell on Earth
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
The Cost of Freedom
I have a friend named Adam Bellinger who just shipped off to Iraq last week. He's leaving behind a beautfiul little girl named Natalie who is Cooper's age. I was having lunch with both of them just days before he was shipping out and I was so humbled by the sacrafice he was preparing to make to ensure Freedom for little Natalie and for the rest of us as well. Living in a military town for the first time in my life, I feel like I'm on the set of the show "Heroes", because modern-day, real-life heroes who are prepared to give their lives to protect our way of life surround me. Thanks to you all!
This picture is of a young man named Christian Golzinski who is accepting the flag at his father's funeral. His father (Staff Sergeant Golzinski) had volunteered for a second tour of duty and was killed only two weeks before he was to come home. In a recent letter to his family he wrote, "sometimes we have to fight, and even die, so that our families won't have to". This picture moved me so deeply as I studied the flurry of mixed emotions on this young man's face when he was handed the flag and the load of carrying on his father's legacy here on earth.
We as Christ-followers are handed a very similar responsibility to that of young "Christian". Jesus died so that we could live in freedom, and as He empowers us through His Spirit, we are to carry out that legacy of freedom and grace here on earth. We all feel unworthy and incapable to do this, but He gives us the grace and strength to do it one day at a time.
Thursday, June 7, 2007
Did Jesus turn the water to Wine or was it juice?
I've been to many weddings in my life and I've learned that it's really all about the reception. The silent cultural code of ethics states that I will buy a gift, put on a suit, give you a Saturday of my life and sit through typically dry service all to be able to celebrate with you at the reception. The wedding ceremony itself is for the bride, but the reception is for everybody else. That's why we kind of feel cheated when we go through the whole process and then the reception is a lame collection of bad music, stale finger foods, dry cake and warm punch. A wedding reception should be the biggest party on earth, because it's the closest thing we have in this life of the wedding ceremony for the ages we will experience someday when the Bride of Christ (the church) will be joined with Jesus in a perfect union forever.
Jesus knew the significance of a wedding and He realized that it needed to be an all-out celebration. Now comes the question about the "real" wine. Let me put it this way, of all the wedding receptions I've ever been to, I've NEVER been to one where anybody freaked out because they ran out of juice! Personally, it seems very obvious to me from reading the text and looking at the cultural circumstances to see that it wasn't only real wine, but it was excellent wine! Excellence honors God and I don't think we serve a God who "waters down" His miracles. You could dump a bunch of Kool-Aid mix into a pitcher of water and make instant juice, but the miracle comes when a process that by its very nature takes a long time (fermentation) is done instantly.
The real problem with this issue honestly has little to do with the alcohol content of the miracle, but it has everything to do with the dangers of reading ANY particular agenda into the Biblical text. We should all be open enough to let the Truth of God's word speak for itself instead of trying to squeeze God in a box formed from our own cultural leanings, personal experiences and limited worldviews. God is so much bigger than that and we must fight the temptation to brush any complicated issue in the Bible under the rug just to avoid the tension or debate it might bring up.
Paul wrote in the New Testament that as Christians, "all things are permissable for us but not all things are beneficial." In other words, we have unlimited rights, but we must also be willing to lay down those rights to help us reach others. I see absolutely no moral or Biblical objection to moderate alcohol consumption, but if abstaining from drinking can help to keep weaker Christians from stumbling, then it's worth it not to drink. My frustration is when those "weaker Christians" are the modern-day Pharisees who point a judgmental finger at anybody who interprets God's word in a way that is different from their own interpretations.
I look forward to reading your comments on either side of the issue. Thanks.