Happy Spring! Sorry for the few days’ hiatus. During this week I have submitted contest entries, bought a new car, enjoyed time with my sister and brother-in-love, received COVID shot number one, spent time with our family during teachers’ week off, entertained eleven forSt. Patrick’s Day, and outlined a new book idea. Here is a Spring poem I submitted to Scribblers Anthology for publication if they choose to use it. It uses mythology and traditional symbols for spring:
SPRING’S SERENADE
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No one will “earn” his or her way to heaven by “being good,” “doing good things,” “serving others,” or “being famous as a philanthropist, leader, or paragon of virtue.” Only by belief in Jesus as personal Savior is God’s way. Scripture supports this, and no amount of prosperity gospel preaching or thoughts of “cheap grace,” saying it once and then living as if this mortal earth’s pleasures are fine, is supported in the Bible. That being said, why do people…..
Today marks the Ides of March, made famous by the soothsayer in Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar” drama. It actually was really a term for the lunar time between the 13th and 15th of March when the moon was full. It was seen as a time of rejoicing until Shakespeare’s “Beware the Ides of March” quote.
Today’s Psalm reminds us of those who “discipled” or trained us up in the faith, and reminds us that we are to constantly seek discipling to…..
So many reasons to rejoice today. For all you math people out there, it is Pi Day 3.14. For the Jacksons, we rejoice that we got our first COVID vaccine shot yesterday and soon will be out of self-induced quarantine after a long year of precautions. Third, we dined at the awesome Cheesecake Factory after a year and a half absence. Yum. Fourth, it is Jakob Klemm’s wedding day to his lovely Jill and we’ll watch live-stream. Fifth, I met…..
A year ago, hundreds of people were dying from COVID-19 every day, often alone, often on ventilators. We remember and mourn their loss. Perhaps we think most about our own mortality when a tragedy like a pandemic comes, or when we attend a funeral or memorial service. Psalm 139 teaches that the day of our death is determined before we are born, and that the gift of life has a expiration date. Planned obsolescence so to speak. It is time…..
During the last year, we have faced trials from a pandemic. It has changed our world and our feelings of fragility, vulnerability, and fear. I know, and hope you do too, who guides our world, who knows the future, and who is our hope and salvation. We are never promised we will have a happy life in this world. We will face trials. How we choose to respond is key to our growth in the faith. It seems to me…..
After Easter, Pentecost, God sent the Comforter, the Holy Spirit. We can know personally the indwelling of Christ within us to comfort, to guide, to encourage, to chasten, and to provide answers to life’s biggest questions. Emanuel means God with us. Nothing we can do can earn us this gift. Unlike other religious practices, we do not reach out to God; He reached to us to draw us personally to Him. This is a Lenten truth.
MY PSALM 324 DWELL…..
We need to watch how we speak! Whether it’s on social media, on the phone, in conversation, or in print, our words do matter. As a writer, I need to watch tone, emotion, syntax, motivation, and truth in order to be authentic. When our faith guides our words, we are representatives of Christ and His kingdom. When we speak as professionals, in my case as an educator, I need to consider my audience and their viewpoints, prejudices, beliefs, and personal…..
Today’s topic for Lent is Sanctification. I know and you know we will never live up to Christ’s example in our lives. We are sinners, we were sinners, and we will always sin, but Christ atoned for those sins and we can be counted as righteous because of His sacrifice for us. However, that does not mean we should ignore our sinful nature. That would be cheap grace indeed. Therefore, through prayer, reading scripture, and conscious editing of our speech…..
Recovery comes in all shapes and sizes. Whether it is recovery of sight after retina surgery, recovery of a relationship strained by lack of communication, or finding a lost checkbook, recovery should bring two responses: One, thanksgiving, and Two, joy in knowing that all is not lost.
MY PSALM 321. RECOVERY
Almighty Father, Creator of All Things, Sustainer, Provider, We praise Your Mighty, Eternal Name When we see evidence of Your Power. You ask Your people…..