Showing posts with label lifestyle worship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lifestyle worship. Show all posts

Sunday, July 16, 2023

School of Life

An iconic hometown building with a story to tell.

When it’s 75 before sunrise and the air is saturated with humidity, all of life can seem gray, moist and dull. Even the brightest flowers in front of one our town’s most iconic buildings become blah pastels. So, why post a picture? Because before it was a brewery and an American Legion hall and a place of gathering for veterans of the Civil War, it was a school in the days before public education.

Teaching our children well has always been a priority here. The town history commented, “The schools of Peterborough have given to the world a long succession of boys and girls who have become splendid men and women.” Growing up here, I can attest to that. All very cool and interesting, but as I walked away, I remembered what I had read awhile earlier from my daily dose of Proverbs—they were words of instruction for the school of life. Timeless (and much-needed) lessons like...

“How much better to get wisdom than gold, to choose understanding rather than silver.” (Proverbs 16:16), and “A wise man’s heart guides his mouth, and his lips promote instruction.” (Proverbs 16:23). And especially...

“The human heart plans the way, but the Lord directs the steps.” (Proverbs 16:9)

It was good to remember that no matter what the camera lens may have said, there is nothing gray in those wonderful words of life, no matter what your age.

I again started this morning’s walk asking God to show me something beautiful or that He was seeing. I confessed to thinking, “nah, there’s not much out there today,” but sensed a response of, “If you really want to see what I see, even on a gray day, you’ll find it.” Well, amen to that.


Now to go and (try to) live “splendid”-ly well in the school of life. What the world needs now…

Sunday, July 2, 2023

Abundance

The flower boxes of Main Street love the rain. Selah.

It’s another rainy morning in New Hampshire, and the temptation is huge to complain. “Enough already!” Until I see scenes like this while walking downtown. Lots of rain, yes, but look at the abundance here, and in our rapidly growing veggie gardens. And don’t forget how barren and naked everything feels in winter. The psalmist had it down right: 

“God, You cause the grass to grow for the cattle, and plants for people to use to bring forth food from the earth, and wine to gladden the human heart, oil to make the face shine, and bread to strengthen the human heart.” (Psalm 104:4-5)

Every day, even the rainy kind, “is a day to be thankful,” says author Ralph Marston. “Life's abundance has no limit, and gratitude is what keeps that abundance flowing. In every circumstance there is something for which to be thankful. Even when there seems to be nothing else, there is hope.”

That’s really good, but perhaps without realizing he was following the Master voice, Mark Twain takes it a good step further: “If you want love and abundance in your life, give it away.” 

Amen to that. Let it rain…

"Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers, drive out demons. Freely you received, freely give." (Matthew 10:8)

Sunday, June 25, 2023

Before Sunrise

Main Street in the 5:30 a.m. stillness.

The almanac says sunrise here was at 5:10 a.m. But down in the village, it’s almost an hour later before the sun peers over the hill. It’s this in-between time that can be priceless and worth getting up for, no matter where you call home. Because except for a jogger and an occasional vehicle likely in search of coffee, the calm and stillness can be more refreshing than last night’s sleep. You see things you don’t see in the heat of the day. You feel the blanketing fog of God and His creation embracing and painting the town before disappearing until another time.

Each step can become an unconscious prayer, when you get a relatable sense of what the psalmist was talking about:

“Cause me to hear Your loving-kindness in the morning, for on You I lean, and in You I trust. Cause me to know the way I should walk, for I lift up my inner self to You.” (Psalm 143:8) 

These before-sunrise walks also have a way of awakening purpose for living, or as the great theologian J.I. Packer has put it, “If you’re trying to do something worthwhile, you will find that a great deal of what you’re doing will prove to be fun.” Amen to that.

It’s going to be a steamy day, but while you were snoozing, know that it’s already gotten off to a beautiful start. Just look….

Sunday, June 18, 2023

Timeless Wisdom

My dad, mom and me at a cookout at my grandparents’ house many moons ago.

Hardly a day goes by when I don’t miss my dad, especially his wisdom. And I can’t think of him without also remembering his work ethic even when he didn’t feel like it, and his undying passion for family, community and serving others. While listening to the birds sing through the rain this morning, I realized that not only was today Father’s Day, but it’s also June 18 and nearing the halfway point of 2023 already. Good grief time flies!

A couple of timely quotes that dad lived and that I’ll try to hold onto, too…

From the apostle Paul:


“Live life, then, with a due sense of responsibility, not as men who do not know the meaning and purpose of life but as those who do. Make the best use of your time, despite all the difficulties of these days.” (Ephesians 5:16)


And from the late pastor and author Leonard Ravenhill:


"Though you cannot be the salt of the whole earth nor the light of the whole world, you may season your community and lighten your neighborhood.”


So be it, dad, ’til we meet again.

Sunday, June 11, 2023

Awaken the Dawn

A downtown Sunday morning, just before sunrise.

Running will come later but it is hard to beat a before-sunrise walk around town to awaken the senses to each morning’s little miracles…like no rain clouds in sight!

And for each step, wise words from Solomon for a new day: 

“Let your eyes look directly ahead and let your gaze be fixed straight in front of you toward the path of integrity.

Consider well and watch carefully the path of your feet, and all your ways will be steadfast and sure.” (Proverbs 4:25-27)

 Keep looking Up. Love your neighbor as yourself.

Sunday, June 4, 2023

Church with Feet On

On mission at the high school, on a Sunday morning.

Just about everyone knows that Church is not a building, even though that is what most people (even believers) think of when someone says the “C” word. Of course, it’s not really something you go to. Instead, it’s meant to be a gathering of fellow believers who meet with God and encourage one another to keep going on this wonderful, narrow road while sharing Hope with others in word and deed. But sometimes, when the right circumstances come together, a different kind of Church can happen in some unlikely places—where the “called out ones” actually get called out. Even on a Sunday.

Last weekend was such a time. Plans had been made in advance for spending several days on the Maine coast, partly to fulfill an obligation and partly to get a change of scenery. In the back of mind were plans to gather with fellow believers at some local Down East “C” building come Sunday. Instead, I cut all of those plans short and hustled back home in time to participate in a 5K run/walk to benefit teen mental health and suicide awareness. 


On a Sunday. A Sunday morning, even, when my body and soul were used to gathering with the saints and were pulling hard in that direction....


...It felt weird. It felt wonderful. It felt a bit like being that salt seasoning and light carrying that Jesus taught His followers to be in Matthew 5:13-16.


I do not know exactly when or how this particular mission grabbed my heart, but when it did, it hit hard. The more I heard and read about it, it crushed my heart to think that many young people felt so alone, so hurt, so isolated by COVID, so unaccepted (by others and themselves), so fearful of world conditions and things in their own little world, that they would think no one really cared. That there seemed to be no hope, no way out. To then keep it all stuffed down inside themselves in silent pain.


A guy’s DNA is to want to fix things, and fix all what was wrong for these young people. But in this case, there are very few fixing options for anyone. Until I remembered that Someone came for all of that, and cared for all of that, and that all that going to the “C” gathering-with-believers experience had stirred up a passion for things I knew I could and wanted to do—to pray, and to listen/“be there” in some way. And that 5K was one small but practical way to “be there” in person and for those providing resources, and to listen to stories, and to try to put names with faces of students who were rallying to do the same for their friends so I could pray. Even make it a habit to pray for the middle and high schools as a whole whenever I drive by.


“Why this mission, and why now?” It’s something many believers ask themselves. Only God knows. Seasons come and go, and so do the eternal things that God will suddenly pour into our heart out of nowhere with a sort of burning. And the only explanation I can come up with is that the more time you take to get to know, and listen to, and seek to follow the greatest Light of the world of all time, the more He becomes the motor that drives your thinking, your passions, your interests, and your everyday interactions—especially with those who find going to the “C” word on Sundays a very foreign idea.


Kind of like, that’s the whole point of the gospel.


Because nearly 900 years before Jesus, there was a prophet named Isaiah who described what His mission would be all about. And in Luke 4, the Light of the world Himself not only confirmed it, but passed the baton of salt and light on to all believers down through the ages to carry for as long as we have life and breath…


“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because the Lord has anointed me;
He has sent me to bring good news to the oppressed
And to bind up the brokenhearted,
To proclaim freedom for the captives,
And release from darkness for the prisoners”
—Isaiah 61:1: Luke 4:16-21, ISV


To go to church on Sundays, yes, but much more than that— to be church with feet on.


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For vitamins beyond Sunday, see the Day Starter morning devotionals on Facebook at: www.facebook.com/renewchurchhancock


Sunday, May 14, 2023

Still Life

Under the bridge at Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge, Moody, ME

As with most weeks, this one was filled with lots of noise…. The sounds of athletes and crowds at games, and the waves crashing at the seashore, were fun. The sounds of miles of crazy traffic on highways and the non-stop noise of scattered thoughts looking for resolution were not. Which is why this may have been my favorite photo of the week. It was a picture of what Elijah experienced when he longed to hear from God:

“Then the Lord passed by and sent a furious wind that split the hills and shattered the rocks—but the Lord was not in the wind. The wind stopped blowing, and then there was an earthquake—but the Lord was not in the earthquake. After the earthquake there was a fire—but the Lord was not in the fire. And after the fire… there was the soft whisper of a voice.”—1 Kings 19:11-12


Likewise, it’s easy to forget (and important to remember) that when the psalmist penned the much-loved words, “Be still and know that I Am God” (Psalm 46:10), it was in an atmosphere of a lot of noise.


Stillness is beautiful. Stillness is vital to the soul. But like Elijah and the psalmist, we often have to fight through all the noise to get there.


Even when you (me) want to capture all the noise, excitement, atmosphere and action of a game, the real beauty is looking at the stillness of the photos afterwards. In the screaming silence, you see details and facial expressions of hurt, frustration, determination and joy that simply zipped by in the moment. You see people. You notice what’s important.


It's not unlike this photo, too, when the roaring Atlantic tide comes to a screeching, mirror-like halt in the marshland. Because when you stop and look carefully, you notice not just a reflection but one of heaven on earth. Just as God desires it.


And so three captions of wisdom for the “favorite photo of the week,” from fellow travelers who’ve gone before…


Videos, reels and movies are fun, but… "Photography takes an instant out of time, altering life by holding it still.”—Dorothea Lange


“Let us leave a little room for reflection in our lives; room too, for silence. Let us look within ourselves and see whether there is some delightful hidden place inside where we can be free of noise and argument. Let us hear the Word of God in stillness and perhaps we will then come to understand it.”—Saint Augustine


“Blessed are the single-hearted, for they shall enjoy much peace. If you refuse to be hurried and pressed, if you stay your soul on God, nothing can keep you from that clearness of spirit which is life and peace. In that stillness you will know what His will is.”

—Amy Carmichael


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For vitamins beyond Sunday, see the Day Starter morning devotionals on Facebook at: www.facebook.com/renewchurchhancock


Sunday, May 7, 2023

Beauty In the Routine

Just before sunrise this morning at Cunningham Pond.

On a morning like this, I will look at my praying hands clasped around a coffee mug.
Praying…among other things, to see the beauty in the routine of things.
Celebrating fullness of life and activity, yes,

But remembering to celebrate chill-out simplicity, too.

Because it is often here where God speaks loudest, and where it is easier to listen.

Like today, before sunrise at a nearby lake when the world was still asleep.

But all of Creation—loons, songbirds, a gentle breeze making new leaves dance—was full-throated in being thankful for a new day.

And so should I.

And so I did.

And to also remember those praying hands clasped around a coffee mug—

That God had planned to put things in our hands since before the beginning of time that would bring pleasure to both of us, and others.

Even (and maybe especially) in the routine...

A camera…to see new angles of Creation and reflections of the "Maker of heaven and earth" (Psalm 121:1) in everyday faces and places.

Two different kinds of keyboards with the same purpose…to find words and notes that encourage and point Up.

A kayak paddle…to “be still and know” (Psalm 46:10) when all around is 24/7 noise.

A basketball and a baseball bat…to run free, to jump, to remember joy, and to know that celebration and life mission are always better with teammates.

Freshly tilled soil after a long winter…maybe as a subconscious assurance that no matter how things look, "the whole earth is still full of His glory." (Isaiah 6:3)

Like today, like before sunrise at a nearby lake when the world was still asleep.

But to also remember to then loosen the grip of those praying hands around my coffee mug,

And ask them a daily question:


“Are there different ways to do what you’ve always done to help someone—even yourself—see or feel the goodness of God, even on a routine kind of day?”


And to know that there is only one good answer.


“Morning is had hand. Light will soon come flowing over the edge of the world, bringing with it the day. What a gift! Whether wrapped in streams of color or folded in tissues of mist, it will be mine to use in ways that I can foresee and in those that are unexpected. The day will make its own revelation, bring its own challenge; my part will be to respond with joy and readiness.”—Elizabeth Yates, “A Book of Hours”

Sunday, April 30, 2023

Wisely and Well

Yesterday's pre-sunrise at Rachel Carson National Wildlife Refuge, Moody Marsh, Maine.

“What is life? You are a mist that is seen for a moment and then disappears."—James 4:14


Some days, you really notice. You notice that it seemed only five minutes ago that you woke up and sipped your first coffee and here it is 5 p.m. already. Where did the day go? And by the way, weren’t we just shoveling out from 37 inches of snow, so how did we get to yard work and black flies already?


Yesterday, “really notice” happened again. While walking down to the beach to catch the sun rising over the Atlantic, I passed a blanket of cool mist that was hung beautifully over the relatively mild marsh (pictured). Some of it was still there when I came by again about a half-hour later, but much of it had quickly become just a beautiful memory. Life had moved on.


It’s all a reminder, as the psalmist realized, to regularly ask God not in a scary way, “let me know how fleeting is my life” (Psalm 39:4), and perhaps in a more intentional way, “Teach us to number our days aright that we may gain a heart of wisdom” (Psalm 90:12). Or, as one translation emphatically puts it, “Oh! Teach us to live well! Teach us to live wisely and well!”


And maybe the best way to do that is to remember what it’s like being a kid and a parent…


Both of my children are now quite adult and in their mid-30s, but I still get people asking “how are your kids?” I catch myself calling them the same thing, too, and it’s probably because God has engrained that timeless concept deep into our DNA. After all, regardless of our age, God still lovingly calls us who believe His kids, too: “See what great love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God! And that is what we are!” (1 John 3:1)


Maybe because a child often looks to the parent first for every single need and then later in life for wisdom and counsel and guidance. The child may grow up and have a family of his or her own, but the parent is always just a call away. And a parent is always a parent, no matter how old the child is. Hardly a day goes by when the parent doesn’t pray for or think fondly about a child. A parent always wants to hear from the kids and longs to see them, and always wants the best for them. The door is always open and the light is always on.


And to think that we have the world’s most perfectly amazing Parent!


But while always never more than a breath away, God is no helicopter Dad—He has created us kids to learn from Him and then launch out and make our own mark in our corner of the world with our mist-like lives. To live "wisely and well." It could be one of a million beautiful, meaningful, even life-changing things. And it doesn't matter how young or old we are. But if it is only this, it will be enough …


“Watch what God does, and then you do it, like children who learn proper behavior from their parents. Mostly what God does is love you. Keep company with Hm and learn a life of love. Observe how Christ loved us. His love was not cautious but extravagant. He didn’t love in order to get something from us but to give everything of himself to us. Love like that.” (Ephesians 5:1-2, Message)


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For vitamins beyond Sunday, see the Day Starter morning devotionals on Facebook at: www.facebook.com/renewchurchhancock

Sunday, April 2, 2023

Checkout Line Awakening


Last night’s thunder and lightning have been replaced by this morning’s mighty rushing wind that is making the trees roar and setting the two ship’s bells in the backyard to dancing. Their joyful clanging is almost church-bell-like while reading an ancient Hebrew invitation on this first day of Holy Week: “I was glad when they said to me, ‘let us go to the house of the Lord!’” (Psalm 122:1) But their joyful clanging triggers another reminder: More than 2,000 years ago, Jesus showed up not just at synagogue but wherever His followers happened to be in their normal everyday life.

It's good to remember that He still loves to do that...


...Preoccupied with life and a bunch of to-dos on a rainy Good Friday morning not long ago, and wondering if anyone (including myself) had grasped the meaning of this day in history, something wonderfully jolting happened while standing, of all places, in the grocery store checkout line. It began with a rugged-looking workman in front of me who was carrying the surprising combination of a balloon presumably destined to be given to his child, and a pot of springtime for someone special in his life. But none of it was as surprising as his reply to the cheerful cashier's "Happy Friday, sir!"


"Thank you, and happy Good Friday to you...if you believe in all of that."

"Oh, I do! Happy Good Friday to you as well, sir."


Wow, people were actually talking Gospel things in public? In a grocery store, no less. And that was that, or so I thought. Until it was my turn to check out, and the cashier continued her train of thought as she scanned my items, then looking out the window at the dreary weather: "You know, I was just telling my husband this morning, every Good Friday, it seems to be like this. I don't think that's a coincidence, do you?"


Wait. Was this cashier opening the door to further conversation about the Good Friday I had nearly forgotten in all my preoccupation? And here? Where anyone and everyone could listen in, in a grocery store checkout line? How cool! And the door was opened, and the uplifting conversation went public. It’s easy to look for Jesus on Sunday mornings in “the house of the Lord” when God's people gather together. Easier still is to forget that...


... just as He burst forth from the tomb on that most glorious of mornings, Jesus still shows up in unlikely places by bursting in to our preoccupied everyday lives.


This was not the first time Jesus showed up at a grocery store checkout line. Something similar happened several years earlier during a different holiday....


Everyone was in a kind and festive mood, even though the line was long, and remarkably patient for day before Thanksgiving. The line seemed to be moving at a snail's pace—make that a frozen snail. Stores seem to love this. It's why they often display some of their most tempting goodies nearest the cash register, so that you check it all out while you're waiting for the snail to move. The marketing scheme worked. I scanned it all, because there was nothing else to do. But then looking up one of the shelves by the window, my eye caught a jolly figure standing outside the store with a red collection bucket and bell. 'Tis the season, after all, and I purposed to stop by on my way home. 


Fortunately, the people in front of me had only a couple of items, so I was out of the store faster than expected. As I headed to the bearded fellow with the red bucket and bell, I noticed a sign and easel had been set up next to the collection pot. Today was a special collection for a young local guy who had been seriously wounded while serving in Iraq. Instead of emptying my pocket of loose change as usual, without hesitation, I went to my billfold and pulled out dollar bills and stuffed them as best I could into the bucket. 


The jolly bearded gentleman handed out remembrance pins with a photo of the soldier on it, and as I started walking away, pinning the pin to my fleece, I suddenly—out of nowhere—felt a wave of tears trying to rise up. For sure, part of it was the emotion of being a dad, and thinking: "If it was my son, I'd give anything to make his world right again. Anything!" But then Divine revelation while, of all places, walking downtown: As I was making my way back to my car and asking God aloud about this strange reaction, almost immediately, I sensed Him speak in so many words: "This is how I feel about you, and for everyone you see around you right now, and in that grocery line. I have looked upon My kids, gravely wounded by sin, and I determined that I would give anything to make it right again. And I did.”


Right then and there, on a side street downtown, while walking and talking and doing the supposedly unimportant stuff of life, I celebrated Thanksgiving and Easter together in a moment that seemed far more significant and weighty than the goodness of what happens on any given Sunday morning....



... "You saved four dollars today. Thank you, and happy Easter!" And just as I was on that day several years ago, and thinking of the rugged workman with the balloon and his Good Friday sermon starter, I left the grocery store checkout line on that dreary Good Friday morning grateful all over again for the One who really matters in this life--no matter where I am.


And with it, renewed hope that no matter what kind of mess the world is in right now, God is still speaking to and through His kids today right in the middle of it all—in “the house of the Lord” on Sunday for sure, but perhaps most loudly and urgently in the streets, the daily grind, and in the grocery store checkout lines.


"This is my Father's world...He speaks to me everywhere."

Hymn, by Maltbie D. Babcock

Sunday, March 26, 2023

Living On the Mound of Integrity

 

Watching high school heroes at the old Peterborough High School.

I got my love for baseball, and for the Red Sox, while spending many days growing up on my grandparents’ farm. This was back when Boston was a perennially horrible team, and yet I’d often come inside on a summer afternoon and find my grandmother faithfully listening to Curt Gowdy’s broadcast on the radio while going through a pile of ironing. There was something mesmerizing about listening to a game unfold on the radio, imagining being there, imagining the crowd, imagining making the game-saving play.


Baseball wound up being about the only sport I was halfway decent at—an adequate second baseman who hit line drives and just loved the smell of the cut grass and glove leather, and the sting of the bat as the ball made contact. Many of those years, like in the photo above, were spent after school watching my high school heroes. The hitters were fun to watch, but I was especially fascinated by the pitchers, like “Rad” Carlson and Alan Buxton and Steve Hartwell. How did they do it, pitch after pitch? The focus. The resilience. The determination. The mind over matter battles.


In some strange, unexplainable way, I wanted to be like them.


Since that day, I have been amazed by pitchers’ ability to stand tall on the mound and overcome the previous inning’s three-run double or even shake off the previous game’s embarrassingly bad outing. But one day about a dozen years ago, that amazement went to an entirely different level…


Gil Meche, who at the time was a 32-year-old pitcher for the Kansas City Royals, decided to retire due to a string of injuries that he felt made him ineffective in helping his team. But that’s not the real story. Meche was under contract, and could have gotten paid handsomely even if he chose to ride the bench or tried to contribute here and there (and probably not very well) with a wounded wing. Or, he could have had surgery and sat at home the rest of the year doing whatever he wanted, collecting the $12.4 million of what was “guaranteed” to him as part of an $11 million-a-year for five years contract. He could have said, as many of us might be tempted to think: “Hey, I’ve got it coming to me, so I’m taking it.”


Instead, Gil Meche determined that his injured body was no longer of any value to the team, so he walked off the mound and away from baseball, and left the money on the table. All $12.4 million of it. Sports journalist Joe Posnanski put Meche’s actions in its proper light: “I’ve seen a few pieces on the Internet lauding his integrity for walking away from that money…but frankly, I’m stunned at the rather passive way in which most of the people are lauding him. The man walked away from $12.4 million dollars. If that has ever happened before in the history of professional sports, I have never heard about it.”


And I remember thinking afterwards: This isn’t just a baseball story, pay attention—this is a type and shadow of what this Walk is supposed to look like. And a strange but strong hard-to-explain current within me rushed from toe to head:


I want to be like Gil Meche. 


To live on a mound of integrity rooted in humility—or, as the Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe has described integrity, a “blunt refusal to be compromised.”


Integrity knows what is the right thing to do and chooses to walk in it even though the temptation may be strong to play it safe, and comfortably, and with the approval of others. Integrity cuts through the gale-force wind of selfish desires, is willing to swim upstream counter to the flow of popular opinion and well-meaning advice, and most of all knows what is the right thing to do or believe, and why—and then sticks to it.


More than some heroic aspiration or inspiring baseball story, integrity is a theme that keeps showing up in both the Old Testament and the New. Integrity, in fact, is the opening anthem of the songbook known as Psalms:


"God’s blessings follow you and await you at every turn:

    when you don’t follow the advice of those who delight in wicked schemes,

When you avoid sin’s highway,

    when judgment and sarcasm beckon you, but you refuse.

For you, the Eternal’s Word is your happiness.

    It is your focus—from dusk to dawn."—Psalm 1:1-2, The Voice


And that’s exactly what Jesus modeled: “For Jesus is not some high priest who has no sympathy for our weaknesses and flaws. He has already been tested in every way that we are tested; but He emerged victorious, without failing God.”—Hebrews 4:15, The Voice


And this is what Jesus impressed upon Paul, who passed it along to Titus, who passes it along to us more than 2,000 years later:


“And here you yourself must be an example to them of good deeds of every kind. Let everything you do reflect your love of the Truth and the fact that you are in dead earnest about it.”—Titus 2:7, Living


The God who loves us will use any everyday interest, even baseball, to speak to us. And the message that began with my grandmother at the ironing board and peaked at Gil Meche's story might be this: The greatest threat to the depth and integrity of a Believer’s Walk is not lack of prayer, fellowship with the saints, or time in the Word. It is rationalization—when we catch ourselves compromising and making excuses for our careless words, attitudes, and actions. Like…

  • When you’re surrounded all day by an unbelieving world and scary headlines, how do you stand? Where is your hope?
  • Who or what is more of an influence and more appealing than God? What really drives you and orders your steps? (Be careful before you answer.)
  • When there’s no church gathering or fellowship going on, how do you live, and move, and speak, and think?
  • And does what you know and think about God show itself in a tangible way in your daily actions?

All these years later, I still want to be more and more like Gil Meche. I want to stand tall on the mound of integrity every day, and walk away from all temptations to compromise. But how? “And here’s the wind-up, and the pitch…”


“Let us exercise Godly jealousy over thoughts, words, and actions, over motives, manners, and walk. Never, never let us think we can watch too much. None of us is more than half awake.”—J.C. Ryle


Or, put it another way:


“Live in such a way that you would not be ashamed to sell your parrot to the town gossip.”—Will Rogers


Selah.