Appropriate Names

I had a student who did not name his children until their first birthday.  He told me he wanted to name each child something that was appropriate for the child’s personality.  I have to admit it made a lot more sense than the way most of us do it.  Most of us name our children at birth after a relative or a name popular in our culture like a soap opera personality.  I have always liked Job’s names for his three daughters. See chapter 42.  The first one was Dove.  The second was Cinnamon and the third was Dark Eyes.  I have had some Cinnamons as students.  However, their names were not translated to English from the Hebrew.  They called themselves Keisha and Lakeisha.

My parents named me after my father’s father and never called me that name.  Instead they called me by my middle name.  Strange.  When people ask me what my first name is I enjoy asking them if they would believe it is Hercules.  Most just smile and write it down.  I did have a girl at our local pizza parlor say, “Come on. Tell me your real name.”  Smart girl.

I wonder what our names would be had we had the chance to name ourselves.  In Revelation 2:17 we are told we will get a new name in heaven, one that is appropriate for our personality.  “To the one who is victorious, I will give some of the hidden manna. I will also give that person a white stone with a new name written on it, known only to the one who receives it.”    What will be your new name?  Loved?  Forgiven?  Dove?  Sweets?  Surely mine will be “Amazed I Am Here?”  “Amazed” for short.

Written by Roger Bothwell on January 24, 2014

Spring of Life, PO Box 124, St. Helena, CA 94574

Rogerbothwell.org

 

Looking Good

I love people who are self-individualized.  So many of us try to fit in and not draw attention.  It seems that we don’t want to be noticed, as if we are fearful to be different. I have a student who comes to class each day looking different from the last class.  Today she arrived wearing pink contact lens and bright red lipstick.  There was no way not to notice her.  Last week she looked like Mortica from the 1960’s television program the Addams family.  She is a delightful person and very intelligently participates in class discussions.  Today she told me her boss at work isn’t as enthusiastic about her appearance as I was.  Granted, if I had a daughter I most likely would be uncomfortable if she did this.  However, it isn’t harming anyone and she brings smiles to her fellow classmates, which is more than I can say about some stuffy church members I know.

God loves variety.  There is such an array of differences in this small world.  Just watching the birds at our birdfeeder is a royal treat.  Sometimes when I am at the mall with my wife, I let her shop while I sit and people watch.  They are ever so much more interesting than birds.  Yesterday I saw a man who looked like Joseph Merrick, the elephant man.  We simultaneously came to the same door and he graciously opened it for me and allowed me to enter first.  His kindness made him look so much better.

Teens often experiment with strange hair colors and other decorations.  How wonderful it would be if we enthusiastically welcomed them to church each week, smiling instead of frowning.  It will make us look so much better.

Written by Roger Bothwell on February 4, 2014

Spring of Life, PO Box 124, St. Helena, CA 94574

Rogerbothwell.org

 

The Value of Promises

One of my students today asserted the premise that promises are only binding if circumstances remain static.  My contention was his position made promises useless because circumstances are always changing.  No one day is like another.  As time passes we become different people.  I look at my graduation pictures from high school and college and realize I am not that person anymore.  I have become someone else.  Therefore, I did not make the promises of the past.  Another person made them before I was me.

Apparently most people do believe the espoused premise my student was advocating since 50% of marriages, began with promises, end in divorce.  Circumstances changed.  People file for bankruptcy indicating they can no longer pay obligations made.  Circumstances change.  Children make promises to their mother or father when their parents are on their death beds.  Usually they are ignored because their parent is no longer alive.  Circumstances change.  Please do not misunderstand me I am not advocating one stay in a horrid, miserable relationship nor am I saying it is wrong not to pay when it becomes impossible to do so.  I am wondering about the value of human promises.

What I do rejoice in is that God keeps His promises despite the changing of circumstances.  However, because He knows the end from the beginning He can make the promises with full knowledge of what is coming.  His promises are much more intelligent than ours. Therefore, when we read I John 1:9 that He is faithful to forgive all our sins if we confess to Him, it is a sure thing. It was a promise made in full faith while understanding all the circumstances to come.

Written by Roger Bothwell on January 23, 2014

Spring of Life, PO Box 124, St. Helena, CA 94574

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Winter Visitors

We have two visitors who seem to be comfortable in our woods despite our very threatened dog. They have been with us for almost two weeks.  It’s hunting season.  I think they feel secure close to a house.  This morning upon seeing them and telling them this was her woods our black lab promptly squeezed in between me and the bathroom sink.  Perhaps she should stay close to me.  A few years ago when we lived in Northern California I looked out the window to see our cocker spaniel come tearing out of the woods with a large deer hot on her tail.

Tomorrow evening the temperature will drop into the single digits.  I find myself wanting to invite them inside where it will be warm.  However, I know they will be just fine.  This afternoon I watched them experience a thirty mile per hour wind gust and they paid no more attention to it than they had the two gray squirrels that scurried between their legs earlier this morning.  I’m still waiting to see a moose which my neighbors tell me they have seen.

God was very busy the sixth day of creation.  Our world teems with a huge variety of life forms.  It is no wonder He finished that day with the pronouncement, “That is very good.”  Yes, it was.  Now that astronomers are able to spot planets moving around suns thousands of light years away they have announced this week that there are more planets in the universe than suns.   If only one ninth of them are as lovely as our earth we have many places to visit.  As Robert Frost once said, “and miles to go before I sleep.”

Written by Roger Bothwell on January 14, 2012

Spring of Life, PO Box 124, St. Helena, Ca 94574

rogerbothwell.org

Zero to Two Hundred

It’s called a Hennessy Venom GT Spyder.  Believe it or not this is a production car that does 0 to 60 in 2.5 seconds and 0 to 200 in 15.3 seconds. It takes me that long just to get out of my chair.  This incredible acceleration is possible because it has 1244 horse power and only weighs 2473 pounds.  On top of all that it is beautifully designed. It can be yours for only 1.1 million dollars.  They made 6 this year.  I’m not sure about the gas mileage but if you can pay that much for a car who cares about the price of gas.

What would one do with all that power?  “When Jesus had called the Twelve together, he gave them power and authority to drive out all demons and to cure diseases . . .” Luke 9:1  Probably there isn’t a pastor in the world who has not dreamed of having that power.  It’s part of our nature.  Little guys put on capes and pretend to be Superman.  We want to do spectacular things. We want to help people.  There is so much need.

Perhaps the issue is trust.  There is an old axiom about power corrupting and absolute power absolutely corrupting. We would most likely start off being controlled and generous but soon we would start doing little things for ourselves and then bigger and bigger things. Then there is the issue of the adoration and affirmation one would receive.  I have been fascinated by the verses that tell us that often after doing something incredible Jesus would slip away to be alone.  We need power but too much power is dangerous – dangerous to others and mostly to ourselves.

Written by Roger Bothwell on January 31, 2013

Spring of Life, PO Box 124, St. Helena, CA 94574

Rogerbothwell.org

 

We Love Being Loved

The award season is upon us.  There are the Grammy’s, the People’s Choice Awards, the Country Music Awards, the Golden Globes Awards, the Screen Actors Guild Awards, the Academy Awards and on and on.  I wonder why we watch them.  I’m guessing we have a vicarious experience with all the glamour and affirmation.  I am a tad amused when the winner says to the audience, “I love you.”  Really?  What is really happening is we as humans love to be loved.  Receiving adoration from the masses is intoxicating.  Few can resist the euphoria of the moment.

In Acts 12 there is a scary story about Herod Agrippa I.  “On the appointed day Herod, wearing his royal robes, sat on his throne and delivered a public address to the people. They shouted, “This is the voice of a god, not of a man.” Immediately, because Herod did not give praise to God, an angel of the Lord struck him down, and he was eaten by worms and died.”  He obviously didn’t receive a lifetime achievement award.  Or maybe he did.

The fact is God created us to be loved – primarily by Him and then by others.  The whole purpose of our being is for us to be part of His family.  Many years ago I received a phone call telling me one of my church members was on a twelfth story hotel ledge.  I spent most of an hour trying to get him to come in.  Finally in desperation I said, “You have to come in because I love you.”  It was magic.  All of his pain seemed to wash away as he reached out his hand and came in.  Surely there is no more important message for us to proclaim other than, “Jesus loves you.”

Written by Roger Bothwell on January 30, 2013

Spring of Life, PO Box 124, St. Helena, CA 94574

Rogerbothwell.org

 

Standing on Shoulders

When one walks about in Westminster Abbey it is difficult not to be awed by those buried there.  We can start with Chaucer and work our way through the centuries.  Poet laureate Ben Jonson is buried upright. Henry Purcell, Isaac Newton, George Handel, Charles Dickens, David Livingstone, Charles Darwin, Robert Browning, Rudyard Kipling are just a sampling of the greats.  Many are below the floor and one finds oneself standing on a great person’s marker.  When I was a boy my Dad taught me that it was disrespectful to walk on people’s graves.  However, one cannot avoid doing so in Westminster.

While walking from marker to marker I realized that all of us stand on the shoulders of those who have gone before.  Those individuals would be shocked to see our modern technology but we are not smarter than they.  We just have more information. That information came by building on information we inherited from them. Our children will know more than we because we teach, they learn and they build upon it.

Recently I heard a foolish person talking about being self-made. It is a completely ridiculous thought.  It is impossible to be self-made.  We are the product of all the learning and wisdom of those gone before us.  Carl Sagan once wisely said, “If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch you must first create the universe.”  And so it is with our salvation. We are not self-saved.  We have no righteousness to bring before God.  Eternity is built on the sacrifice of God Himself.  He made us.  He took responsibility for us and died for us.  We are the product of love and it doesn’t get any better than that.

Written by Roger Bothwell on January 29, 2013

Spring of Life, PO Box 124, St. Helena, CA 94574

Rogerbothwell.org

If I Were a Bell

When I was very little before we moved to the country I loved Sunday mornings. One of the local churches rang the bell in their steeple to call people to worship.  It was so beautiful as it echoed through the neighborhood.  I have loved church bells ever since.  Sometimes while waiting for a traffic light in town church bells begin.  I quickly open the car windows to get the full effect.  Bells can be pealed for joyous occasions such as a wedding.  Bells can be tolled for sad occasions.  One of the famous lines in literature is by John Dunne, “Never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.” Or bells can be rung just to tell us it is noon.

If I were a bell I would peal instead of toll.  On occasion I hear sermons filled with gloom and doom. Instead I would peal the love of our Jesus and the transforming power of His grace to make us better people.  We have so much to peal.  Why burden people with bad news?  They get loads of that from CNN, NBC and FOX.  Sometimes we wonder why attendance at church is low.  Could it be that people come weary and leave even more so?  The Gospels are the GOOD NEWS.

Recently I read an interesting article about ten ways the world can come to an end.  It covered everything from volcanoes to nuclear war.  However, the best way wasn’t mentioned.  So let us peal it out loud and clear.  Jesus said, “I go to prepare a place for you.  And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also.”

Written by Roger Bothwell on January 23, 2012

Spring of Life, PO Box 124, St. Helena, CA 94574

Rogerbothwell.org

Living in the Dark

When classes last three hours I sometimes end up sitting on the desk.  It is a vulnerable position because during winter mornings in Massachusetts it is dark when I get up.  Sometimes I end up with mismatched socks much to the amusement of my students.  But this morning I graduated to a new level of unawareness.  Halfway through the day I suddenly realized my shoes were not matched.  They didn’t even look alike.  One was dark brown and the other light brown.  I am so glad I did not have a class today.  I do cultivate the frumpy professor look but this is more in the absent minded professor category.

Getting dressed in the dark is one thing but some people live in the dark.  They don’t have a clue what they are missing if they don’t know Jesus.  Without Jesus they have to cope with their guilt.   Without Jesus they run out of life after a few decades.  Without Jesus life’s great questions, why am I here, where am I going, go unanswered.  Without Jesus there is no hope for anything more than one can manage to grab onto in a short life.

With Jesus “our citizenship is in heaven.”  Philippians 3:20  Heavenly citizenship comes with a privileged passport that merits unlimited visas.  With Jesus life has purpose far beyond the important human responsibility of family.  It is difficult to think of anything more important that raising a healthy family but beyond our imaginations there await us goals and tasks to challenge our ever-growing intellects and characters.  With Jesus we move into the light and out of the darkness.

Written by Roger Bothwell on January 6, 2014

Spring of Life, PO Box 124, St. Helena, CA 94574

Rogerbothwell.org

Paul in Philippi

Paul was not to be trifled with. Philippi was a Roman colony where Rome had sent 300 distinguished veterans of the Roman legions to provide leadership and a strong Roman presence. Enter Paul, himself a Roman citizen.  As he moves through the city he is followed by a servant girl who continually calls out, “These men are servants of the most high God and they are telling you how to be saved.”  One would think Paul would have appreciated this but she was a major distraction from his preaching so he cast the spirit out of her.  Her owner, realizing his loss of her special powers, dragged Paul and Silas before the city magistrates, not Romans, and had Paul and Silas beaten and jailed.

The beating was not the savage kind that Jesus received but never-the-less significant.  During the night an earthquake broke the prison doors and their chains.  It is then that the magistrates discover Paul is a Roman citizen and they had beaten him without a trial. Realizing their predicament they tried to get Paul to quietly leave town.  Ah, no.  Paul will not hear of it. He made the magistrates come to the prison, publicly apologize and personally escort him to freedom all the time knowing the Romans in town would definitely hear of this travesty.  Paul would not let them sweep it under the rug.

In Philippians 3 Paul acknowledged while he was pressing toward the goal of being like Jesus, he, Paul, had not yet attained.  On the cross Jesus said, “Father forgive them.”  In Philippi, Paul made a public spectacle of his persecutors.  Oh, I’m sure he forgave them.   But not before he got his pound of flesh.  I love it that Paul was as humanly flawed as you and I.

Written by Roger Bothwell on January 8, 2014

Spring of Life, PO Box 124, St. Helena, CA 94574

Rogerbothwell.org