Christian Power Rangers?

Real power pulses from the Cross of Jesus.

Everyone seems to be fascinated with POWER today. Kids watch Power Rangers and play video games where they’ve got superhuman power to do stuff, all the while dreaming of being Harry Potter.

Actually, I missed the Power Rangers. Superman and other comic book heroes wowed my generation. My kids left home before Power Rangers took root in kids’ consciousness. They were the Transformers generation.

Here’s what Wikipedia says about the Rangers, “Morphed Rangers generally possesses superhuman strength, durability, and ability in hand-to-hand combat. Some possess superhuman abilities such as super-speed or invisibility, attributes somewhat related to their Ranger abilities…When enemies grow to incredible sizes, Rangers utilize individual Zords that combine into a larger Megazord.”

“Megazords!” Got that? Continue reading

Why Are Women Always Blamed?

It’s sure that people don’t blame the husband

One day, after a fierce race to get the kids to school on time, I  finally looked at my son Steve, who was about ten at the time. Really looked, I mean. The top of his head looked as if a tsunami has rolled over it.

“Did you comb your hair?” I challenged. “I didn’t have time,” he answered defensively.

I arranged the stricken locks as best I could and sent him off.

You might suspect that I wondered what people would think but for fathers that’s not really a problem. Nobody blames dad if the kids look like street bums. Mom gets the blame. Even the kid gets off the hook.

“That poor child! Where was his mother?”

That’s probably why men and their sons don’t worry too much about things like uncombed hair and wrinkled shirts. We can go to church with vertical stripes, an orange shirt with big red polka dots,  sporting a tie with blue horizontal stripes.

You think we’re worried about it? “What were you thinking?” she says in exasperation.
Let’s look in his head to see what he was thinking, “Boy, the Cowboys stunk up the place yesterday. If they don’t get another offensive tackle they’re sunk.”

Things like clothes don’t worry us. I know that women today are liberated but liberation or not, it’s wives and mothers who get criticized when we’re slouches. “What wife would let her husband out with a wrinkled shirt?”

I love it. Life is good isn’t it?

I don’t know who put this system in place but I’d like to thank him.

I almost said that I was sure it was a man, but I’m not certain. I think ladies love to see other ladies goof up so they can be horrified. “I’ll tell you, you’d never see my son out in public like that!”

He Got the Blame

It’s like the Lord. We sinned, He bore the blame. We messed up and He was crucified.

“For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, to bring you to God. He was put to death in the body but made alive in the Spirit.” (1 Pet. 3:17, NIV)

If I rejoice because of Christ becoming my scapegoat, it’s because He’s made me a son of God, my sins are forgiven, and I have the hope of eternal life because of Him. But, I can’t laugh about it, or take it lightly. No one ever paid a price like He paid for us. My response is to love Him with my whole heart and serve Him with all my passion.

Yes, it’s nice to have someone to take the blame. But, one little word of wisdom about your wife getting blamed for your laziness. if she finds out about it, she’s not going to be the only unhappy one in the house.

She’s got ways of making you wish you’d combed the little guy’s hair.
_______________________
Hmmm …

“If you don’t like change, you’re going to like irrelevance even less.” (Eric Shinseki)

Scared Of the Dark

Sunshine makes all the difference in the way you feel

I’ve got a confession. I was scared of the dark when I was a kid.

When I woke up at night, things stumbled around the house. I thought I could hear Boris Karloff, the horror film star, or Frankenstein’s monster looking for kids to munch on.

Evidently, I’m not alone. In my favorite comic strip, Calvin & Hobbs, Bill Watterson depicts Calvin waking up in the night, needing to go to the bathroom. He’s got a problem that he discusses with Hobbs, his Tiger friend. It seems there are monsters under the bed.

They come up with a solution. Calvin will throw his pillow under the bed and run to the bathroom while the monsters are occupied with the pillow. But, when he does it, suddenly all kinds of horrible sounds break loose under the bed accompanied by flying feathers.

Calvin is frozen in place. Hobbs says, “What are you going to do?”
“I think I’ll just stay here and wet the bed.”

I’m no longer scared of Boris Karloff when I wake up at night but it’s rare that I’m optimistic. Problems seem two times worse and solutions seem further and further away. The world is a scary place”until the first rays of sunshine peek through the window.

Then everything becomes possible again. Light makes a difference.

Here in northern France we’ve had a winter where the sun had made itself scarce. Lack of light starts to get to you after awhile.

The last several days, though, the sun has come out of hibernation and you see the results on people’s faces. It’s amazing what sunlight does to your outlook on life.

I think I understand better what Jesus meant when he said, “I am the light of the world.” It’s midnight in our souls without Him.

People stumble around with no hope here and no hope for eternity. Then like Paul on the road to Damascus, the light shines on them. It’s not enough, though. I grew up in the American South. There you get plenty of sunshine, more than plenty in fact. But a well-tanned skin doesn’t necessary equal peace in your heart.

Those life-giving beams have to pierce you, light up your spirit.

We’ve got to open our hearts to God by faith and let his radiance enter our deepest being, chase the darkness out of every corner of our lives. How? It starts with a prayer.

“Father, forgive me because I’ve sinned against you. I turn away from my sin and I commit my life to your Son Jesus. Change me. Let the light of your truth flood my being. I want to follow you now and eternally.”

And it continues with prayer, the Word, being with others who love the Lord, and obedience to what God says. We learn to open all the windows of our heart and let God’s light flood in.

Monsters can’t stand the light, and neither can fear, doubt, sin, and hopelessness.

“Jesus summed it all up when he cried out, “Whoever believes in me, believes not just in me but in the One who sent me. Whoever looks at me is looking, in fact, at the One who sent me. I am Light that has come into the world so that all who believe in me won’t have to stay any longer in the dark.” (Jn. 12:44-46, The Message)

Boy, I love the sunshine!

_________________________________

Hummm …
“Never let your mouth be on wifi when your brain is on dial-up.” Christi Lepant

What Did Spartacus Die For?

Check out our new e-book installment at the right of this page–The Call
I saw a film about a courageous gladiator name Spartacus. The film may or may not have been based on a true story but at the end, our hero Spartacus had been captured and hung on a cross by the Romans.

As a matter of fact, there were thousands of others crucified with him, so that mighty Rome could show the folly of messing with it.

And I had a question because it came home to me, perhaps stronger than ever, that Jesus wasn’t the only one to suffer and die unjustly on a cross. Why do we Christians make such a big deal of it? Didn’t Spartacus and his buddies suffer as much?

Jesus’ death stood apart for three incredibly important reasons:

The first difference was “WHO” was on the Cross.

God was on the Cross!

“The Son is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. For in him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through him and for him. He is before all things, and in him all things hold together. And he is the head of the body, the church; he is the beginning and the firstborn from among the dead, so that in everything he might have the supremacy. For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him …” (Col. 1:15-19)


The second difference was “WHAT” he was doing on the Cross.

Spartacus was just dying. Jesus was working, paying the price that the justice of God demanded for our sins, reconciling the world to the Father by his death on the Cross.

“and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross. 21 Once you were alienated from God and were enemies in your minds because of your evil behavior.” (Col. 1:20, 21)

I suspect that Jesus did even more than we dream. When he’s talking about “reconciling to himself things on earth or in heaven, what’s he on about? Things on earth would be us”rebelling sinners restored to the Father.

But, things in heaven? Would that be those who died in the faith before Jesus came to die on the Cross? I think so but even more  it seems to be talking about “thrones … powers … rulers … authorities” in heavenly places. I think there are some things that were restored that we’ll know nothing about until after this life. We’ll probably find that the Cross shook the universe far more than we had imagined.

The third difference is the “DIFFERENCE” that makes in my life and yours.

I suppose that Spartacus gives us a good example for standing up for what is right, but the ending of the story doesn’t leave a lot of hope.

With Jesus though, it’s different. He died but He rose again the third day. That same resurrection power works in the man who comes to God in repentance by faith in Jesus and it revolutionizes his life.

“ But now he has reconciled you by Christ’s physical body through death to present you holy in his sight, without blemish and free from accusation-“ (Col. 1:22)

In the family! Holy! Sins forgiven! Justified!

“And if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you, he who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies because of his Spirit who lives in you.” (Rom. 8:11)

“… nor thieves nor the greedy nor drunkards nor slanderers nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God. 11 And that is what some of you were. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God …” 1 Corinthians 6:10-12 (New International Version, ©2010)

For Spartacus, his cross put to death a noble dream”freedom. But the Cross of Jesus-Christ birthed a noble dream”freedom! Spartacus was just dying. Jesus was dying so that we could live.

Hmmm …
Good advice to teachers..
“People are generally better persuaded by the reasons which they have themselves discovered than by those which have come into the mind of others.” Blaise Pascal (in Pensées)

Are You Smarter Than A Goldfish?

“After awhile the joy that I got from watching them calmly do nothing was overcome by the frustration of having to constantly feed them and clean their bowl”

I wonder if there’s anything dumber than a goldfish. I make that observation from experience. Let me explain.

Once I visited a French friend who had an aquarium. Georges was a guy who did nothing half-way and his aquarium had all kind of fish, aquatic plants, cleaning systems, etc. It was like a little slice of the bottom of a very beautiful part of the sea.

I’m like Georges in that I like beautiful living things. I’m unlike Georges in that I have been known to do things halfway. So, half-thoroughly inspired by Georges’ fish, I purchased two goldfish and a bowl. I planned to work my way up.

The only thing, though, is that goldfish don’t do anything. They just kind of hang out all day long. I mean if they swam excitedly around the fishbowl, that would be something. If they swam towards the surface with all their might and leapt into the air before plunging into the water again, that would be worth watching.

But what they do is imitate a rock. Occasionally they swim around just a bit and they come to life slightly if you feed them. Otherwise you get more activity from a hound dog snoozing in the shade of the porch on a hot summer day.

At least the hound dog snores.

Actually they do accomplish one thing. They stink up their bowl. After a certain time, that crystal-clear water you put in the bowl is the color of uneaten fish food mixed with fish poop. You play a waiting game with you wife to see who finally breaks down and cleans the thing.

“The fish were your idea,”
she will probably remind you.

After awhile the joy that I got from watching them calmly do nothing was overcome by the frustration of having to constantly feed them and clean their bowl. I begin to have thoughts like, “I ought to take them to the bathroom and flush them.” I didn’t have the heart to do it, though, and things would have probably continued like that until one of us died of old age when help came from an unexpected source.

Unexpected Helper

My daughter had a little black cat named Betty who was just the opposite of the goldfish. She was always into something. One day I came in and found her with her little paw plunged into the fishbowl, aggressively seeking victims. “Get down from there!” I cried.

But, I came in another time and she was fishing again. This time, though, one of the fish was floating–but not in an upright position. That’s how I knew he was dead. (Still wasn’t moving).

It was my duty to get onto Betty. So I yelled at her a bit and swatted at her as if I was mad. But inside I was saying, “Yes!”

A bit later I came in and the other one was floating, too, so I knew Betty had come back to finish the job. I didn’t mourn a long time. Thanks Betty.

An Unsavory Job

Someone else once took care of an unsavory job for me. It was the Lord. I was floating, dead in my stinking sins. All my efforts at pleasing God were about as pleasant as filthy rags. And it was my fault. My sin had separated me from my Heavenly Father.

“It wasn’t so long ago that you were mired in that old stagnant life of sin. You let the world, which doesn’t know the first thing about living, tell you how to live. You filled your lungs with polluted unbelief, and then exhaled disobedience. We all did it, all of us doing what we felt like doing, when we felt like doing it, all of us in the same boat. It’s a wonder God didn’t lose his temper and do away with the whole lot of us. Instead, immense in mercy and with an incredible love, he embraced us. He took our sin-dead lives and made us alive in Christ. He did all this on his own, with no help from us! Then he picked us up and set us down in highest heaven in company with Jesus, our Messiah.” Eph. 2:1-6, the Message.

I was like a dead goldfish, rotting in my sin. For some reason God loved me … you, too! And Jesus gave His life to bring us back to life! Now instead of wilting away in the goldfish bowl, we’re turbo-charged spiritually! We’re busy serving Him because we’re so thankful for what He did for us and because His heart of love beats in our chest, too. My little bowl has become a living aquarium!

“He creates each of us by Christ Jesus to join him in the work he does, the good work he has gotten ready for us to do, work we had better be doing.” Eph. 2:10. The Message.

If you haven’t asked Him for life, do it right now. He’s up to any task. He’ll forgive you and give you a life that’s worth living. If you’ve received that new life in Jesus, get busy serving Him. The Lord wants to see a little movement in that goldfish bowl!

Hmmm…

“The irony of commitment is that it is deeply liberating”in work, in play, in love. The act frees you from the tyranny of your internal critic, from the fear that likes to dress itself up and parade around as natural hesitation. To commit is to remove your head as the barrier to your life.”
Anne Morris, seen on a Starbucks coffee cup.

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