Triple Stuff

I am sitting here with a double stuff cookie in my hand.  Is it me or is double stuff now 1.5 stuff?  Single stuff seems to be ¾ stuff.   In order to get a double stuff do we need to purchase triple stuff?  Maybe it is merely the impression of a mind that remembers things bigger and better than they really were. Rarely are things bigger than they were when we were small and so very wowable.

It becomes more and more difficult to be wowed as we mature.  I don’t want to lose my wowability.  I still want reverentness to overwhelm me and to be filled with awe at things beautiful and lovely.  Our egalitarian culture encourages us to call everyone by their first name but there is something special in calling someone Sir or Mrs. or Mr. President. I do not want all things reduced to me.  How sorry I feel for a person who doesn’t believe in God.  The highest power he or she ever encounters is in the mirror each morning.  What an impoverished intellectual life that must be.

Unlike the size of things growing smaller as we age there are many things that grow in depth.   Frost, Shakespeare, Paul, Luther, and David are but a sample of the richness of understanding that comes with years.  Only in recent years have I understood that John 14, “In my house are many rooms . . .” has little to do with fancy buildings.

Surely eternity will always be about bigger and better and never smaller. However, the real joy will always be about depth, profundity and love.  Now that will be quite grand.

Written by Roger Bothwell on April 25, 2011

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

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On Faultfinding

I enjoy the letters to the editors of news magazines.  First come the pro letters followed by the cons.  It doesn’t take a genius to soon realize that it is not only possible but plausible to believe nothing anyone ever does is criticism proof.  One man’s dish of ice cream is another man’s poison and people aren’t reluctant to tell you about it.  If one is a public figure one inherits an instant hate club.  It doesn’t matter what one does; there is a way to negatively spin it.  This, of course, is not new.  Have you ever read the stuff our founding fathers wrote about each other?  It’s downright modern trash and teaches us there is, as Solomon said, “Nothing new under the sun.”

If people had been watching God create the earth some would have applauded while others complained that it took too long.  Seven days!  Really now.  What a waste of time.  He should have done it in a day.  Can you imagine God allowing Jesus to be born in a stable?  Come on – that is so degrading.  And why did Jesus allow Mary and Martha to suffer the death of Lazarus?   He really should have hurried to Bethany and spared them the pain.  Obviously we could go on and on.

I think some people just love to find fault.  As a psychology teacher I wonder if it compensates for their lack of self-esteem by keeping them focused on other people’s supposed faults.  But what do I know?  I can imagine my students have a huge litany of my shortcomings.  What is more than a little bit scary about all this is I hear this stuff from Christians and I wonder if they really are.  But there I go becoming one of them.

Written by Roger Bothwell on April 13, 2011

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

Rogerbothwell.org

 

Collateral Benefits

With great regularity my wife comes up with terrific ideas.  It’s nice to live with her because I often take the credit for the good things that result from her brilliance.  Here’s one of MY latest really bright ideas. Our new puppy Annie walks about the house looking for things to chew.   We supplied her with lots of chewy stuff but noticed the novelty of each new item soon wanes and she is off looking for something else.  MY new idea is to put the chewy items in the bag with her food.  They soak up the flavor and are then received with great unwaning interest.

Very early on in life I learned the value of surrounding one’s self with people who are smarter than I am.  My wife is smarter than I.  Thus we had children who are smarter than I.  I really don’t mind being the dumbest person in the family because of the collateral benefits I then receive.  It also works with friends.  I must say I have many really brilliant friends. They are fun to be around because they are witty and kind enough to laugh at my often poor attempts at humor.   Once again I benefit.

This idea also works in my spiritual life.  Some people are easily influenced by those about them.  I think I am one of those easily influenced because I note how quickly my conversation degrades or elevates depending upon the moral tone of those about me.  I’m a better person when I am with good people.  I can be pretty seedy when with those whose conversation focuses on base things.   If you are like me and have a malleable character, make it better by spending time with good people, smart people and best of all, spend time each day with Jesus and His word. You will be so pleased the result.

Written by Roger Bothwell on April 23, 2010

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

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What’s The Matter with Us?

It’s spring time on the east coast and one of the most wonderfully obnoxious of all plants has once again sprouted fresh new leaves.  I speak of POISON IVY.   As I am writing to you I am looking at my right hand all puffy and itchy.  My hand looks like I am wearing an inflated rubber glove.  One of my nursing students asked if I was retaining fluid and my answer was, “Only in spots.”

In II Timothy 4:3 Paul speaks of “itching ears.”   While he was not speaking of the fruit of exposure to poison ivy, he was speaking of something far worse.  He was talking about our seeming hunger to listen to pass on poisonous stories.   We seem to crave hearing the worst about someone or something.  If there is a bad story we seem quick to listen and pass it on as truth without any verification.  In Paul’s time gossip was passed on by whispering in someone’s ear.   Today via electronics we can prodigiously spread vicious tales.  We are literally capable of inflicting pain, chaos and untruths in gigantic proportions. Very few of us seem to be immune.  I know I am guilty.  As soon as I hear something juicy, I rush down the hall to pass it on to my colleagues.   What is the matter with us?  We almost seem to delight in hearing bad news, even when it is so preposterous it can’t be true.

Paul also wrote in Philippians 4:8 that we should think about things of “good report.”   I’m sure all of us would agree that is what we should do, but good stories rarely tantalize and satisfy our itchy ears as much as something sensationally scandalous.   What is the matter with us?

Written by Roger Bothwell on April 22, 2010

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

Rogerbothwell.org

 

“Whole Lotta Shaken Going On”

Almost everywhere I go these days there are containers dispensing hand sanitizer.  I see them in schools and offices and this weekend I noticed one in the lobby of my church.  It’s a good idea considering how often we shake hands with others.  It really is surprising how healthy most of us are considering that people cough and sneeze into their hands and then shake our hands.

Shaking hands is a very old custom crossings many cultures.  Last evening I noticed the following in Galatians 2:9, “James, Cephas, and John, who seemed to be pillars, perceived the grace that had been given to me, they gave me and Barnabas the right hand of fellowship.”  Martin Luther once refused to shake hands with Zwingli because Zwingli believed the Lord’s Supper was only a memorial. And John Wesley refused to shake hands with George Whitefield because they disagreed over the doctrine of election.  It is interesting how passionate we can be over our beliefs.  I won’t mention politics other than to say I know a Republican who won’t shake hands with a Democrat.  Ouch.

If you want an interesting topic to occupy your time look up variations of the word “shake” in a concordance.   You will find hands shaking, heads being shaken, the heavens and the earth shaking, fruit trees shaken, knees shaking, minds shaken and of course the whole room was shaken when the Holy Spirit came upon the disciples at Pentecost.   Jesus even told His disciples to shake the dust off their feet if they were not welcomed where and when they tried to share the Good News.

I have often thought about shaking Jesus’ nail scared hands.  I do think He will extend them to us, but I think the sight will be too overwhelming for me to reach out and touch them.

Written by Roger Bothwell on April 20, 2010

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

Rogerbothwell.org

 

Annie’s Tough Love Lesson

It was time for some tough love.  For some unknown reason Annie, our new lab puppy, decided the road was a place to explore.  Just as soon as I would carry her back and put her down she scurried back to the street.  It was time to put on the little red collar and turn on the electric fence. Because we knew what was coming, we almost cried as she headed for the street toward the little white flags.  She never knew what hit her. I don’t think she will be very interested in the street anymore.  The little white flags have taken on new meaning.

God tells us not to do certain things.  We are curious beings and find delight in exploring forbidden things.  The forbiddenness actually increases the lure.  If we could only understand, God only wants to keep us from harm. He withholds nothing from us that is good.  If it’s good He encourages us to go for it.  Just as we are many times smarter than a puppy so God is many times smarter than us.  We know Annie cannot safely play in the street.  God’s commandments are His telling us not to play in the street.

Sometimes He has to decide it’s time for some tough love.  At Thanksgiving we often sing, We Gather Together to Ask the Lord’s Blessing.   There is a very meaningful line that often rings in my head.  It goes like this, “He chastens and hastens His will to make known.”   I was a father before I finally understood that line.  I think He must cry when He sees what is coming but He lets it happen because He knows it will save us from something far worse.  We are loved.

Written by Roger Bothwell on April 21, 2010

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

Rogerbothwell.org

 

Annie’s Dilemma

Our ball of fire lab puppy, Annie, has adapted to us very well.  From the very first night she slept quietly, well almost quietly.  She snores. She has us trained to run for the door when she starts sniffing about the house. She gets a treat when she waters the lawn.  The problem is she now fakes it. She squats and then comes running for her treat.  We had a dilemma today. It was over a stick.  It was the perfect stick.  It was much too good to put down. However, how does one eat one’s treat when one’s mouth is already full?  This produced a lot of whining.

She is so much like some humans I have known.  God offers some incredible blessings.  However, often they are conditional on our actions.   Sometimes we have to give up something to make ourselves able to prosper from what He offers.  If we want the blessing of health we have to give up some bad eating habits.  We have to get off the couch and walk around the block each day.

God wants to forgive us of our sins but we make ourselves ineligible because we continue to harbor grudges against others.  It isn’t that God doesn’t want to forgive us.  Our unforgiving spirit interferes with God’s work in our hearts.   Often just like Annie we whine about life’s misfortunes when the irony is we are the author of our misfortunes. It is easier to blame them on someone else.   My students who do not study don’t do well on exams and it is my fault when they receive a poor grade.    If we truly want all the goodness God offers there are some things we must let go.

Written by Roger Bothwell on April 19, 2010

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

Rogerbothwell.org

 

The Simplicity of Morality

So many things in life become more and more complicated as one immerses oneself in the complexity of design and function.  But in the development of morality it is quite the opposite.  We start off life as a child. (That was profound.)  For a child the world is full of dos and don’ts.  There are hundreds of them for the child to learn if they are to stay safe and please the giants in their lives.  But something wonderful happens as we mature.  Most of those rules and regulations cease to have any meaning because we have come to understand our world.  No longer does the rule not to touch the hot stove exist.  We know better.  We need no rule.  We become freer and independent. We are governed by intellect and knowledge.

Soon we understand there are really only Ten Commandments and once understood they encompass everything else.  Then Jesus tells us there are only two and finally we come to grasp the marvelous truth that the way we love God is by loving other people and we are then down to one.  Jesus tells us when we do it to the least of them we have done it to Him.

Thus we come to Galatians 5.  Freedom in Christ is Paul’s great theme.  How difficult it must have been for one who described himself to be a Pharisee of Pharisees to free himself and step into a whole new morality.  How grand to grasp the truth that all laws were nailed to the cross of Jesus and God doesn’t have a Santa Claus list that He is checking twice to see if we are naughty or nice.  Instead we become temples of the Holy Spirit that lovingly lives out its life within us and by thus we automatically keep the rules without thought.  Oh, the glory of such freedom.

Written by Roger Bothwell on April 14, 2011

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

Rogerbothwell.org

Life’s Great Irony

One of life’s great truisms is if we are selfish we will never reach our fullest potential.   And one of life’s great ironies is if we are unselfish we will never reach our fullest potential.   If we are selfish we will become stagnant and cease to grow.  And if we are givers God will launch us upon a journey to infinity, for God is a giver and we were created in His image.  Should we seek to be like Him the possibilities before us are amazing.  Paul says our possibilities are beyond our wildest imaginations. Peter says we have been given exceedingly great and precious promises. Jesus says ask and we will receive.

So what is wrong when we ask and don’t receive?   It is all about motive. If our asking is selfish it is futile. When we cease to be givers we cease to be like Him and thus we have lost our original purpose for being.  Why should God pour out blessings for us if we are like the Dead Sea that only takes?   The more God can trust us to be a conduit of blessings to others, the more blessings He will channel through us.  Heaven is full of blessings and God needs ways to dispense them.  The more we give the more we become. The more we become the greater the possibilities for us to become even more. It is a never-ending pattern of growth.

Here is the fascination of this.  If we don’t give we die and will never be all that we can be.  If we give we will live and never be all that we can be, because there is always tomorrow with bigger and better blessings. The possibilities are infinite.  How grand.

Written by Roger Bothwell on April 16, 2010

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

Rogerbothwell.org

 

Marathon Day

It is Boston Marathon Day.  World Class, elite runners are gathering from all over the planet. However, because the temperature will be near 90 degrees and for the first time in 116 years officials are advising many not to run and to defer their applications fees until next year.  Over 1,000 people have been trained in the art of CPR and will be stationed along the route from Hopkinton to the finish line in the city.   In 2007 in Chicago when the temperature hit the mid-eighties the race was stopped at 3.5 hours.  It was just too dangerous.   However, the winners will cross the finish line in just over 2 hours.

Racing is as old as people.  Who is the fastest is something we want to know. It drives us.  In New Testament times reference is made to crowns that fade.  For a short time it sits on top of the winner’s head but is very short lived.   In Boston in 2011 there was $806,000 prize money to be awarded so the motivation is a bit more than just olive leaves.

Lest we feel left out because our physical prowess does not rank us in the money winners there is another crown waiting for us.  Paul wrote, “Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last; but we do it to get a crown that will last forever.”  I Corinthians 9:25 and Peter wrote, “And when the Chief Shepherd appears, you will receive the crown of glory that will never fade away.”  I Peter 5:4.   In Christ we are more than conquerors. What great verses!

Written by Roger Bothwell on April 16, 2012

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

Rogerbothwell.org