Sunday, January 7, 2024

Sunday’s Blessing – 01/07/2024

May today be filled with awe of the Creator
May every tick of the clock expose a new facet of God’s character
May every sound remind you of His voice crying out through His creation
May every heartbeat remind you of your purpose
May every thought be of the goodness, mercy, and grace of the Father
May you be immersed in the unfathomable love of Jesus

Sunday, December 31, 2023

Sunday’s Blessing – 2023/12/31

Today, may you know the One Who knows you best
Today, may you love without limits
Today, may you believe without doubts
Today, may you give from abundance 
Today, may you share without reserve
Today, may you worship without hesitation 
Today, may you know the truth untainted 
Today, may you live with purpose 
Today, may you not wait for tomorrow 

Friday, December 29, 2023

A New Year’s Blessing for 2024

May the coming year be filled with wonder.
Wonder at the faithfulness of God.
Wonder at the opportunities which present themselves.
Wonder of dreams dreamed.
Wonder of victories won.

May the coming year be filled with peace.
Peace from the Prince of Peace.
Peace when disappointments come.
Peace when dreams are not realized.
Peace when loss is the outcome.

May the coming year be filled with grace.
Grace from God which is new every morning.
Grace to make good choices.
Grace to be content.
Grace to live thankful.

May the coming year be filled with love.
Love from the One Who loves you most.
Love given to those in your world.
Love received from family and friends.
Love for life lived to the full.

May the coming year be filled with hope.
Hope in the promises of God.
Hope for a better future.
Hope for desires fulfilled.
Hope, even when you can’t see it.

May the coming year be filled with faith.
Faith in the unlimited God.
Faith to believe beyond what you see.
Faith to carry you through the next step.
Faith to believe you can.

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

The New Year Phenomenon

Why is January 1 such a mystical day, at least to the Western world? We celebrate as though we had somehow won a major contest or some long-awaited event finally arrived. Please understand, I’m not being critical of this behavior. I celebrate as well. My question is, why do we greet January 1 with such fervor?

For some, finally putting an end to a year which has included some tragedy or major issues which negatively affect our life somehow brings closure by changing the year portion of the date. It gives a mental separation from the occurrence. So, we celebrate the passing of a bad year. In like fashion, we greet the new year with hope of a better outcome. It’s like being given a blank notebook where we can write the story we want, where the ending is the desired outcome: wealth, relationship, career, health, etc.

The reality is any day can be the day of change or reconciliation. It just somehow seems easier when the calendar gives us a physical reminder that things are changing. Whenever I think of this it reminds me of the story when the descendants of Jacob left Egypt. You know the story. God sent Moses to deliver the People of God from slavery. After they made it back to Mt. Sinai:

The Lord said to Moses and Aaron in the land of Egypt, “This month shall be for you the beginning of months. It shall be the first month of the year for you. – Exodus 12:1-2

God has the ability to reset the calendar for anyone, any time. For years, Israel had lived in bondage to Egypt, a journey which started with such promise. They came to Egypt at the request of Joseph due to the famine which threatened to kill them all. They were welcomed as friends due to the favor Joseph gained with the emperor. It was a joyous time, reuniting Jacob’s family (now called Israel). Their fortune changed when a new generation of leadership took over. They felt threatened by Israel and forced them into slavery.

This is the same thing that happens to us. We make choices which takes us into a new land. This newfound life can be wonderful, sometimes for years, or even decades. Then change occurs. Sometimes suddenly. Sometimes unexpectedly. Sometimes tragically. You may find yourself in a prison of sorts. Not anything you intended. Not anything you chose. Nothing is familiar anymore. There is seemingly no way out.

Regardless of where you find yourself today, regardless of how you got to here, regardless of how long you have been here, there is hope of a better outcome. Through trust in an unlimited God, we can experience deliverance to a place that we may not even be able to imagine. We most certainly may not know the path, or means, or timing. However, God can change your calendar any time He wants. Maybe January 1, 2024 will be the day of new beginnings for you. Or possibly, even December 27, 2023. Or March 23, 2024. Or any other day you are ready to embrace the plans God has for you.

All I can tell you is to be ready. Keep your eyes on the source of your deliverance, which is the Father. When He comes, be willing, just as we saw with Mary, and say, “Yes!” 

Monday, December 25, 2023

Is This All There Is To Christmas Morn?

A few years ago I wrote a Christmas song. Below are the lyrics. I don't have a decent recording of it, so just imagine it being sung by Michael Buble to an amazing tune.


Is This All There Is to Christmas Morn?

Verse 1
Preparations made, All the gifts sit underneath the tree.
Minds filled with wonder, Each package full of hope and mystery.

Verse 2
Did they remember, After oh so many lists and hints were given.
That one special gift That would make life truly worth the living.

Chorus 1
Year after year when the paper and bows
Lay shredded on the floor.
So many gifts were opened,
But not the one I’m longing for.
Everything I needed, just not what I wanted,
Yet still I hoped for something more.
Is this all there is to Christmas morn?

Verse 3
Still a young virgin, All her life ahead was yet to be.
Her mind filled with wonder, Each day full of hope and mystery.

Verse 4
The angel appeared, He spoke words that were very hard to hear.
But in simple faith, Mary asked the Father to come near.

Repeat Chorus 1

Bridge
While picking up the wrap and bows
That were strewn across the floor.
I found the family Bible
And opened it once more.
Luke’s story brought me back to Bethlehem.
A baby born in a manger filled with hay.
The greatest gift in all the world
Came to me on that blessed day.
This is all there is to Christmas morn!

Chorus 2
Now year after year when the paper and bows
Lay shredded on the floor.
All the gifts were opened
How could we long for more?
I remember the Baby, lying in the manger
Now there’s no need for something more.
This is all there is to Christmas morn!

© 2013 Kurios Music. Words and music by Dudley Harris.

Sunday, December 24, 2023

Christmas Blessing

Christmas Blessing

Celebrate the Christ Mass this holiday season
It’s not a birthday celebration, but a celebration of One birthed
It’s not the day we mark, but the event which changed everything
Even during the Christ Mass, the Eucharist is still the primary focus
Without the birth of Christ, the Eucharist would be meaningless
But without the Eucharist, the birth would be of none effect
With both we are changed – the birth and the Eucharist (celebration of the sacrifice of Messiah)

So, sing the songs of the season, the most prophesied event in scripture
Give gifts to remind yourself that the ultimate gift was given
Rejoice, because you have reason to be joyful
Embrace those you love, because we only have them for a moment
Make memories to last a lifetime
Remember the blessings you have experienced
And never forget the Eucharist, the reason for the birth

The songs have said this very thing
A sacrificial lamb, born in a manger
Born that man no more may die
Born to give you a chance at second-birth
Born in the shadow of a cross
Born to die so we could live
Messiah, Emmanuel, Christ, Jesus, Son of God, Propitiation for our sin

Friday, December 22, 2023

The Dichotomy of Christmas

I’ve probably thought more about Christmas this year than any prior. As I’ve already commented, I have come to a place where the “happy holidays” and “merry Christmas” can both be embraced without any effort at all. When you look at life through a single lens, it’s easy to come to the black and white view many have about most every aspect of life.

I grew up in church. I have been a student of scripture for the past 50 years or so. When you read verses in the Bible like this one you can develop a very closed view of our world:

If anyone comes to me and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be my disciple. – Luke 14:26

These are words spoken by Jesus (i.e. Red letters). I’ve heard this passage “explained” in many ways and have even “explained” it a few times myself. Then you read another verse like this one:

And you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength. The second is this: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. There is no other commandment greater than these. – Mark 12:30-31

How can you love your neighbor and hate your own family? Is that what we are to understand from these two very different quotes of Jesus? I don’t think so, but many use these kinds of verses to belittle the Christian faith; a faith based on the Bible.

But others in the Christian community make the same egregious error by trying to “spiritualize” everything. There is nothing “spiritual” about a decorated tree. Many American denominations put up a Chrismon Tree each year to celebrate Christmas and to spiritualize the most common Christmas tradition.

Others scream with veins popping in anger, “Keep Christ in Christmas!!” I have come to believe it stems from verses like those cited above, where at first glance you assume Christians cannot participate in any secular activity. Those with this mindset quickly remind any naysayers of this: 

Therefore, go out from their midst, and be separate from them, says the Lord, and touch no unclean thing; then I will welcome you. – 2 Corinthians 6:17

Yet, Jesus had dinner with “sinners”, talked to women in public (woman at the well), and also claimed to be the Son of God. He didn’t seem to have a problem participating in carnal activities yet did so without sin. This is why the Pharisees had him killed.

So, bringing this back to Christmas, how does a Christian celebrate during this season. We could do like the Jehovah’s Witness tradition calls for, and just pretend there is nothing different than any other day. We could be Scrooge and grumble about the whole thing. We could try to correct everyone’s theology to conform to ours by forcing every aspect of the season to be spiritual. Or we could do as what I believe Jesus would have done, and be salt and light as we go about celebrating this festive time of year. Sing the carols, light the tree, be joyous in giving gifts to others, and be gracious in receiving gifts given to us. 

I believe this would go much further in reaching out to others and showing them the “Reason” we have hope and joy. The “Reason” we can laugh and sing in a world that is seemingly darkening by the day. There has never been a greater need for “The Light” as there is today. How will they ever know the Blessed Hope we have in Christ if we do not show them? How will they ever see The Light if we keep it hidden behind our wall of judgement and condemnation?

How about giving it a try? The current approach is clearly not working.