Friday, November 22, 2013

Thank-filled

Is there a time when gratitude reveals our selfishness?

Things I am thankful for: electricity, a car that works, food I like, clothes, money, a nice tv, my iPhone, family, raspberry m&ms, friends, etc, etc, etc.

It's good to be thankful for "stuff" and some people.  It's just that I'm wondering why a spirit of gratitude has be to attached to "things."

The obvious problem with Thanksgiving being glued to stuff, and even people, is that both of them aren't sources of joy, they are causes.  Causes that don't have the power to provide gratitude.

Electricity can't give me gratitude, I'm just glad it's here (and really put out when it's not). My car doesn't have joy in it that it gives me, I give it value and am thankful when it works. Even family can't give me joy.

Please understand I am thankful for people and things and will celebrate that next week.  But, my relationship with God is both a reason for gratitude and a source.

By living as a follower of Christ my spirit is changed so that I am thankful in Him and He teaches me how to have a thankful heart and live a thank-filled life.

I'm thinking there's a difference between being thankful for something and being a thankful person.

Let's be thankful people.

Pastor Dave

 

Friday, November 15, 2013

Know More or Miss Knowing

What would happen if people judged you by your big toe? Not even both of them, imagine complete judgement of who you are based on just one toe on the left foot.

The website 'dates-r-us' would ask people to send a photo of the big toe on the left foot. No face. No profile. Just Big Lefty. How accurately would people be able to judge you based on that one slice of visual information?

What if the cover letter on you resume was a portrait of Big Lefty. The prospective employer would look at the toe and make a conclusion based on the wealth of information gleaned from that digit on your foot.

Both silliness and injustice (and in my case fear - there's a reason I never wear sandals) seem to scream in our spirits.  "That's not right!  There's no way to know someone from such a limited exposure! My toe doesn't reveal enough about me! My toe doesn't tell you the whole story!"

Do you know that we do that to God all the time?  Based on a limited view, a small window, an event, or even a single bible verse.

That's how things get taken out of context in the bible. I focus on  a toe and assume I know the person.  The bible is a story. The Christian journey is a story. We err when build our judgement on less than the whole.

Look at the whole story of Christ. Hear him hum through the events in the bible before he was born. Watch him walk in the gospels and fill the air with his song. Listen to his Holy Spirit empowered echo in the birth of the church, and tune in to the choir as his musical score continues in and through us.

His big toe is great, but get to know more than that or you'll miss knowing him.

Still Getting to Know Him,

Pastor Dave