Bleh., Part II

My dear brothers, take note of this: Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry, for man’s anger does not bring about the righteous life that God desires. Therefore, get rid of all moral filth and the evil that is so prevalent and humbly accept the word planted in you, which can save you.

James 11:19-21 (emphasis added)

There’s been more than a blogging funk in my life, there’s been a real, personal funk in the past week or so. In reality, it’s been building for some time now, it just hit me last week.
As a church, I mentioned before, we’ve been reading Ed Anton’s new book titled Repentance: A Cosmic Shift of Mind and Heart. It’s an excellent book that’s given me a fresh look at one of the most fundamental parts of Christianity – repentance. The church is nearly done with the book and the messages associated with it, but through our minister’s relationship with Ed, we’ve moved on to some bigger related things. It’s what I’ve been teasing you with – Corporate Repentance. That’s the idea that, not only can & do we sin as individuals, but a church has a culture, and enviromnent and a personality that can be sinful as well. Just as an individual needs to return to God and His ways, so does a church. But before I get into describing this exciting development in my congregation, I need to talk about me.
As a part of the teaching on the subject, Ed came into town and spoke to our leaders meeting of the Evangelist, the Deacons and the family group leaders. He was in the state meeting with the Dayton ICOC church on the same subject, and stopped by our meeting on the way to the airport. As he spoke about how God brought his reproof to the churches in Revelation and how that God has done that with His people forever and will do so today, if we let Him, he said something that hit me like a ton of bricks. “The question is how do you get ready for this? You get prepared to hear God’s reproof.”
You see, this idea that we need to repent as a church was a powerful one to me. It was at once brand new and exactly what I’d lomged for at the same time. But in the couple of weeks that the leaders had been talking about it, I hadn’t once thought that this repentance would need to hit me square in the heart. What would God say to me? It was terrifying. I honestly didn’t want to know, but the thought of not knowing was scarier. I left that meeting two Sundays ago feeling quite uneasy.
The next two nights I took long (cold) prayer walks. I asked God to show me what ever He saw in me, yet I was could feel my heart holding back. Or was I just trying to manufacture conviction? I didn’t know, and to some degree still don’t. I’m frankly frightened more by how hard this time of soul searching has been than what might be uncovered in my heart. Why has it been so hard this time around to just surrender to God and listen to His rebuke? How far had I drifte? I don’t honestly know, except to say that I’m a prideful, self reliant man. I take some measure of pride in being able to figure things out, and I’ve been relying on my own wisdom and analytical powers for answers too long. The result of this me focus instead of God focus is that when I looked up for God, he wasn’t as close as I expected He would be. I had fallen asleep and drifted away. The answer to this conundrum was not going to come from my careful thinking or study, only from falling at the feet of my God, being still and listening. It wasn’t, evidently, going to come quickly either.
I now see that God has been at work in me, preparing me for this from some time. That first passage above has been ringing in my head for weeks now. “Man’s anger does not bring about the righteous life that God desires.” I come from a long line, at least as long as I know of, of angry men. My grandfather, Dad’s Dad, was constantly spouting off about something. Not much patience, tolerance or understanding. Dad’s got the same character, although he’s better than Granddad, it doesn’t take much for him to blow his top. Growing up, I had a horrible temper, and my parents took my to psychologists and bought me punching bags to try to calm me. My parent’s home bore witness in holes in drywall and doors from my High School years. (I think the last of those got fixed just recently.)
When I became a Christian in 1988, that all but disappeared. Mom has commented that she knew I had met God because she could see the change in my temper. In recent months, however, I’ve noted that it has slowly crept back in, but as a Christian I’m good at masking it. I’ve caught myself swearing under my breath or in my head at times. I’ve wanted to and have thrown things in a rage or just banged them around a bit. I’ve shouted at my kids more times than I want to think about. Just the other day, Emily turned to me in tears and asked “Daddy, why are you angry?” I’ve prayed under my breath and out loud for patience in dealing with them, and all the while that verse from James 2 was playing in my head.
It wasn’t until this week, after the words from Ed and the cold prayer walks around the neighborhood that a clearer picture began to emerge. The anger wasn’t my trouble, it was only a symptom of the underlying issue. It wasn’t James 2 I needed, but James 4.

What causes fights and quarrels among you? Don’t they come from your desires that battle within you? You want something but don’t get it. You kill and covet, but you cannot have what you want. You quarrel and fight. You do not have, because you do not ask God. When you ask, you do not receive, because you ask with wrong motives, that you may spend what you get on your pleasures.
You adulterous people, don’t you know that friendship with the world is hatred toward God? Anyone who chooses to be a friend of the world becomes an enemy of God.

James 4:1-4 (emphasis added)

I have become selfish and worldly. I wanted things my way, and when they didn’t go that way I was angry. I’ve been looking at everything as the woorld does – selfishly. Is it furthering my agenda? Does it help me get what I want? Stupid computer or Christmas lights, I don’t want to deal with you now, I want to play on the web. Maria, don’t bother me with household projects, I want to work on my car. Kids? Not a blessing and a joy, but a pain and in the way. Just shut up, obey and get in bed now so I can go blog. DIDN’T YOU HEAR ME? GO TO BED! Then the tears. The sigh from Dad. An apology, but not a change of heart.
The most important things in my life, my wife and kids, were merely in the way unless I needed them. Maria’s quietly taken on more and more responsibility that I have just been ignoring, not wanting to be bothered, and I can now see the burden it’s put on her. The joy she once had is largely gone, replaced by a load that she wasn’t to bear alone. So, while there have been things that I’ve wanted to share, to blog about, I just couldn’t. Each time I went to sit down and write, there was this elephant in the room that I had to deal with first, and I wasn’t ready to deal with it. I’m not sure I am yet ready, but at least I can write about it.
But God’s getting me ready, I don’t understand how but He is. I know because now I see what I deparately wanted to avoid. I know because I’m getting the strength to talk and write about what I wanted to keep hidden. I know because I’m beginning to look forward to next week. That’s when the leadership group, the four deacons and our minster, will sit down and talk about how this idea of Corporate Repentance is hitting us and how we together and idividually have sinned and how that has effected the church. I need to talk about it, but even more profound is that I want to talk about it. I want to deal with it, to get some help, and to finally shake it off, and return my focus to God.
More about the church developments soon, I promise.

Bleh.

I’ve been threatening for a week or two to post on some significant news – good news, I think – in my church and some other stuff that’s been on my mind. I still intend to, but every time I get an opportunity to do so, I just don’t feel inspired to do it.
I’m in some sort of blogging funk where I just don’t want to. Hence all the tinkering with my site templates and whatnot. 🙂
Hopefully I’ll get over it soon.

This is a Test

Just checking to see if everything works, I’m afraid I’ve completely borked my site. If you look at the old posts, you’ll notice a lot of extra question marks. That’s ’cause I misconfigured the character set when I upgraded. So I attempted to restore the old database, pre-MT 3.2. Then I couldn’t log in. At all.
Yikes.
So I put the new database back and crossed my fingers.
If you’re reading this it worked.
I have some cool things to talk about, but I’ve gotta get this issue resolved first. Stay tuned.

Well Said

Well, as you can see, the work here at salguod.net is progressing nicely.  There’s still much to do, no Scripturizer, no Acronyms, No subscribe forms, no formatting buttons and I haven’t even begun to work on the individual pages yet.  I have some thoughts for some more substantive posts, but that will have to wait until later.

Until then, I leave you with these tidbits:

1 – Someone left the door open and Greg has snuck back into the blogsphere while we weren’t looking.  The sentry must have been napping.  I’ve returned his link to it’s rightful place in my newly returned blogroll.

2 – In a somewhat rambling thread (registration required) at ICOCnews that I haven’t even read all of, I found this gem of a quote on baptism from Mark, aka Snookerdoodle:

The answer I like best goes like this: God can save anyone he darned well wants to, even if they don’t get Immersed For The Forgiveness Of Sins. But he has promised said salvation to folks who do so. So, we are left with a choice between taking him up on his offer or turning it down and hoping we’ll be another Thief On The Cross Special Case.

What about Grandma Who Never Got Baptized? That’s really none of our stinking business and we have no way of knowing anyway.

 My thoughts exactly.

 Anyway, back to the updates.

Ta-Da!

Looks different, Eh? MT 3.2 has a nifty little plug in built into it that lets you reset all the templates back to the default. So this is what MT 3.2 looks like out of the box. Not too bad.
Of course, you’ll also notice that the recent comments are gone. The calender is gone (and likely to stay gone). The Blogroll is gone. The Scripturizer auto-linking is gone. The subscription form is gone. The real time preview is gone. The formatting buttons are gone. Heck, the entire left side column is gone!
So I’ve got a little bit of work to do to put some stuff back. 🙂 But it’s a nice, clean look, don’t you think?
More changes later.

Upgrade Complete, Sort Of

Well, it’s done. I thought by doing a clean install, following the great instructions at Learning Movable Type, that everything would be reset. I guess I was wrong. I’d kinda like a fresh start on my templates, so I’m going to dig into that a little more. Expect more changes to come.
You’ll also notice that there’s no more Secret Code. MT 3.2 has some more advanced anti-spam techniques that I hope will mean I don’t need that anymore. We’ll see.
Also, the formatting buttons are temporarily gone too. I hope to have a better version after a bit. I might put the old ones back up temporarily.

Upgrade Time

Well, I think I’m going to attempt the MT 3.2 upgrade today. It’s my birthday and I’ve got the day to myself. Things may get a little strange around here as a result. I’m going to do a fresh install instead of an upgrade, so my templates will get wiped out and I’ll end up with the MT defaults, so it will look different. It’ll likely take a few days to get everything back to normal, but hopefully it will work pretty quickly.
Wish me luck.

Just Like Jesus

There are several things that I need to post in this category, things that reminded me of Jesus.
First is an entire blog of comments by volunteers helping out in New Orleans. The blog title is Katrina Relief, but I like the address better: whereisawjesus.blogspot.com It’s a collection of stories of how Jesus is being revealed through the efforts of these folks. It appears to be sponsored by the Tammany Oaks Church of Christ of Louisianna, but there’s a link to submit your story and to link your organization. One Columbus area Church of Christ, the Northland Church of Christ, and a Columbus Presbyterian church, Northside Fellowship are participating as well.


On another Katrina note, Keith Brenton posted about how his Little Rock Arkansas church has reached out to the families that have ended up there in a former retirement home, Parris Towers. The Pleasant Valley Church committed to furnish 40 of the apartments, but to date have filled over 150 with furniture. In the process, they been able to bring many to church with them. Keith writes:

The people of Parris Towers are the mission field that came to us. The local media took note of our response. No one prayed aloud on a street corner to attract attention to it; no one sent out a press release about it.

How cool is that?


We subscribe to The Week magazine, which is really good by the way. It has a regular feature on the first page titled “It Wasn’t All Bad” This story was in the November 18th issue:

When Israeli soldiers accidentally shot to death Ahmad Khatib, a 12-year-old Palestinian boy, his family didn’t vow vengeance. Instead, they donated his vital organs, which have been transplanted into six Israelis. Ahmed’s lungs, kidneys and liver went to Israelis of 7 months to 58 years; his heart now beats in the chest of Samah Gadban, a 12 year old girl. Her mother, Yusra, hopes to speak to Ahmad’s family, especially his mother. “I will ask her to receive us for a visit,” she said, “so I can hug her and kiss her and thank her.”

Now that’s a peace plan. Did I read somewhere Love never fails?


Lastly, I’ve been meaning to point you to this post from the New Wineskins blog. It’s a powerful story about two Christian men and how their faith would one day be tested. One man, when confronted with an opportunity to be like Jesus, took it, though it meant sacrificing his life long dream and his life savings for the man who had cheated him out of it, just because that man was a Christian.

More than three thousand nights have passed since that evening. Chief still owes on his debt. Oh, he paid a token payment in the form of a few wormy sheep, but he’ll never fully repay the debt. Kiplagat has not required him to. The church has grown.
Kiplagat obeyed God, and what did it get him? It cost him his life’s savings and his dream house. But, oddly, Kiplagat says it cost him nothing. He says it gained him a friend. He says God used it to strengthened the Church. He says it built his faith. He praises God and he says his temporal losses don’t matter because: “This (pinching up the skin of his forearm) doesn’t last forever.”

You really need to go read the entire thing, it’s an inspiring story of love and forgiveness.

Those Greedy Oil Companies!

This fuzzy picture was taken with my cell phone a mile and a half from my home Sunday evening. That’s $1.89 for regular. Another mile from there and it was $1.86.
There’s a lot of talk these days about greedy oil companies and high gas prices. Yeah, they took a spike during the Katrina crisis, but they’ve fallen right back down again. Of course it put a scare into the mind of folks driving big vehicles. I admit I thought briefly that maybe having a 7 passenger van wasn’t such a good idea. Then I realized that renting one for the 10-15 days a year we actualy needed the space would cost much more than the gas we’d save driving something smaller for the rest of the year, even at $3 a gallon.
The other folks hollering about ‘Big Oil’ are the politicians. Of course, they’re never one to miss an opportunity to make points with the people. After all, those greedy oil companies made record profits. Well, according to Jeff Jacoby in The Boston Globe as reported in The Week magazine this week, Big Oil’s profit margins are actually lower than average, 7.7% compared to 7.9%. Pharmaceutical companies make 18.6% and banks make 19.6%. So while Big Oil made record profits, they also must have made record expenditures to get there.
I know, I know, facts can really ruin a good story.

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