Saturday, December 26, 2020

"Brave Baby Tears"

VERSES:

Brave, Royal Baby, with your Star

And shining angel army choir,

You settle where our dark worlds are,

To anchor us who wander far.

 

Into your stable cave’s black night,

Your star and armies bring their light,

But never show your strongest might

Until your weeping sings us right.

 

 

CHORUS:

Come, Holy Child, wash all our years;

Our tired creation’s wounds and fears.

Then, through your cross-born song of joyful tears,

We’ll join your singing kingdom as it nears.

 

(By Dennis Evans, December 29, 2020)



"Morning After Christmas"

 

"MORNING AFTER CHRISTMAS"

The Lord was making snow on Christmas night,

And served it up fresh the morning after.

He set it bright upon his earthen plate;

Upon its garnish (sprigs of western sage).

It made me smile. I ate some, and gave thanks!

 

(By Dennis Evans, December 26, 2020)

Thursday, November 26, 2020

God's Thankful People

Scripture Reading: Colossian 1:1-14

A mother and her little girl were shopping for fun in a big mall, and they were in the women’s section of a department store, trying on clothes. The mother was being helped by a sales woman and, while they were trying on things, the saleswoman gave the girl a stick of gum. So, the mother prompted her daughter, “Now honey, what do you say?” And the little girl looked up with a smile, and said, “Charge it!”

We don’t always know how or when to say, “Thank You!”

Now Paul was almost always thankful. Even when he had good reason to be angry or frustrated, even when he was in a dungeon and could be tried and sentenced to death. This was because of someone he wanted to be thankful for. Sometimes it is as if Paul said, “God loves you so much, and I love you too. God has given you so much, and done so much through you. What can I say to keep you going, and growing?”

Paul had a love that always wanted to give thanks. He always wanted to give thanks for other people, and for the Lord’s presence and gifts in their lives.

So, Paul (as he sits in the filth and darkness of his dungeon) writes, in his letter to the congregation in Colossae, to friends he has never actually met, but only heard of. Paul says, “We always thank God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, when we pray for you, because we have heard of your faith in Christ Jesus, and of the love you have for all the saints/ God’s-people) --- the faith and love that spring from the hope that is stored up for you in heaven and that you have already heard about in the word of truth, the gospel/good-news that has come to you.” (Colossians 1:3-6)

Think about this. Paul, in the stench of a stone-lined hole in the ground, was happy because he was thankful. Paul was thankful because someone else got the same thing he had gotten from Jesus. Someone else had confidence in the same Lord who was helping him even now. Someone else was learning to love others because Jesus loved them. Someone else had hope because they knew that Jesus was the face of a God who would do absolutely everything for them that they needed, and so much more.

Paul was thankful because he realized that he lived in a world where God was at work in others. He was happy because others were happy: blessed by God.

This is an important part of thanksgiving: to see God at work in others, to see God at work in people all over the earth. This is the fun of being part of a wedding, or a baptism. This is what makes it fun to do things with kids. But it is more than fun. There is a deeper pleasure in this. And not because you are being entertained, but because you see something of great value.

You see a husband or a wife who is patient with their spouse without treating their spouse as a child, but with respect and tenderness, because the Lord’s love has taught them what real love is. You have friends whom you know are deeply praying to be good parents. You hear the wisdom of the old as they talk about life, and death, and heaven. You watch friends and neighbors working and playing together to make a community, or a church. You learn the stories about how the Lord became a reality to the people around you. Thanksgiving is what you want to do when you see the gifts and treasures of God in the hearts of others.

The archeologists who discovered the old Egyptian tomb of King Tut (the Pharaoh Tutankhamen), when they made their way down the underground passage, and broke a small hole through the wall that blocked the way into the tomb. At first the hole was just large enough for one of the men to squeeze his arms and head and shoulders through, with a lighted lantern in his hand.

As he did this, in the lamplight, he saw the dusty gleam of gold and the glitter of precious stones. He must have also, somehow, seen the thousands of years between them, and the sight made him speechless. He froze at the sight of this; as silent as the grave. Those standing outsaid wondered what was going on with him. They kept saying, “What is it? Do you see anything? Do you SEE ANYTHING!!”

Finally, he got his voice back. He gasped his answer: “YES! Yes! Wonderful things!”

Thanksgiving comes from being a witness of wonderful things.

In Eastern religions, the truth is within you, and always was within you. It is NOT a gift. It has always belonged to you, just as everything is a part of you, and you a part of everything.

But, in the gospel, in the good news of Jesus Christ, everything is a gift. You yourself are a gift. When you are a Christian, you are not thankful for what is only yours alone; you are thankful for so many gifts beyond you.

God himself is a gift. God doesn’t belong to you, even though you love him as your own.

God is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. God gave himself to us as a God of an almost scary, radical, sacrificial love. God’s love either goes too far to seem believable, or else he goes so far that you can’t come without God himself, in Jesus, carrying you to himself; and you can’t come to him without being changed. And this is his gift.

And you, yourself, are a gift. “For he has rescued us from the dominion of darkness and brought us into the kingdom of the Son he loves.” (Colossians 1:13) The Lord’s whole purpose is to bring you home, as a gift for himself, a gift shared by the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit.

You are the product of a daring rescue. It is a rescue that takes you from darkness to light. And part of the light is to see yourself surrounded by gifts. You see yourself surrounded by a sort of “Gift-Love”: The Gift-Love of God.

God’s light is our understanding God’s grace, God’s transforming love, in all its truth, in all its beauty.

Because grace is such a great thing, its truth is hard to grasp. It is hard to believe in such an extravagant, unconditional love. But this is really the secret of the Christian life. It’s this big gift, this big love, that enables us to live in this world with a truly big faith, love, and hope in return.

There’s a story about a tourist in a famous museum in an old city. He saw another man standing in front of one of those famous abstract paintings that are so full of bright colors and strange shapes. The man just stood there looking, and looking, and not moving on.

That other man was almost making a spectacle of himself. So, the tourist decided to give it a try on his own. He stood beside the other man and looked, and looked, and looked at what was spoken of as a great masterpiece. Finally, he made a wisecrack: “I don’t see anything in that!” And the man who had stood there for so long whispered to him: “Don’t you wish you could?” (Maxie Dunnam, “The Communicator’s Commentary, vol. 8, p. 342f)


Let’s pray to see the wonderful things of the Lord around us in other people, and in the creation, and in our own lives. Let’s pray to see those wonderful things of the Lord, so that we can be God’s thankful people.

A mother and her little girl were shopping for fun in a big mall, and they were in the women’s section of a department store, trying on clothes. The mother was being helped by a sales woman and, while they were trying on things, the saleswoman gave the girl a stick of gum. So, the mother prompted her daughter, “Now honey, what do you say?” And the little girl looked up with a smile, and said, “Charge it!”

We don’t always know how or when to say, “Thank You!”

Now Paul was almost always thankful. Even when he had good reason to be angry or frustrated, even when he was in a dungeon and could be tried and sentenced to death. This was because of someone he wanted to be thankful for. Sometimes it is as if Paul said, “God loves you so much, and I love you too. God has given you so much, and done so much through you. What can I say to keep you going, and growing?”

Paul had a love that always wanted to give thanks. He always wanted to give thanks for other people, and for the Lord’s presence and gifts in their lives.

So, Paul (as he sits in the filth and darkness of his dungeon) writes, in his letter to the congregation in Colossae, to friends he has never actually met, but only heard of. Paul says, “We always thank God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, when we pray for you, because

we have heard of your faith in Christ Jesus, and of the love you have for all the saints/ God’s-people) --- the faith and love that spring from the hope that is stored up for you in heaven and that you have already heard about in the word of truth, the gospel/good-news that has come to you.” (Colossians 1:3-6)

Think about this. Paul, in the stench of a stone-lined hole in the ground, was happy because he was thankful. Paul was thankful because someone else got the same thing he had gotten from Jesus. Someone else had confidence in the same Lord who was helping him even now. Someone else was learning to love others because Jesus loved them. Someone else had hope because they knew that Jesus was the face of a God who would do absolutely everything for them that they needed, and so much more.

Paul was thankful because he realized that he lived in a world where God was at work in others. He was happy because others were happy: blessed by God.

This is an important part of thanksgiving: to see God at work in others, to see God at work in people all over the earth. This is the fun of being part of a wedding, or a baptism. This is what makes it fun to do things with kids. But it is more than fun. There is a deeper pleasure in this. And not because you are being entertained, but because you see something of great value.

You see a husband or a wife who is patient with their spouse without treating their spouse as a child, but with respect and tenderness, because the Lord’s love has taught them what real love is. You have friends whom you know are deeply praying to be good parents. You hear the wisdom of the old as they talk about life, and death, and heaven. You watch friends and neighbors working and playing together to make a community, or a church. You learn the stories about how the Lord became a reality to the people around you. Thanksgiving is what you want to do when you see the gifts and treasures of God in the hearts of others.

The archeologists who discovered the old Egyptian tomb of King Tut (the Pharaoh Tutankhamen), when they made their way down the underground passage, and broke a small hole through the wall that blocked the way into the tomb. At first the hole was just large enough for one of the men to squeeze his arms and head and shoulders through, with a lighted lantern in his hand.

As he did this, in the lamplight, he saw the dusty gleam of gold and the glitter of precious stones. He must have also, somehow, seen the thousands of years between them, and the sight made him speechless. He froze at the sight of this; as silent as the grave. Those standing outsaid wondered what was going on with him. They kept saying, “What is it? Do you see anything? Do you SEE ANYTHING!!”

Finally, he got his voice back. He gasped his answer: “YES! Yes! Wonderful things!”

Thanksgiving comes from being a witness of wonderful things.

In Eastern religions, the truth is within you, and always was within you. It is NOT a gift. It has always belonged to you, just as everything is a part of you, and you a part of everything.

But, in the gospel, in the good news of Jesus Christ, everything is a gift. You yourself are a gift. When you are a Christian, you are not thankful for what is only yours alone; you are thankful for so many gifts beyond you.

God himself is a gift. God doesn’t belong to you, even though you love him as your own.

God is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. God gave himself to us as a God of an almost scary, radical, sacrificial love. God’s love either goes too far to seem believable, or else he goes so far that you can’t come without God himself, in Jesus, carrying you to himself; and you can’t come to him without being changed. And this is his gift.

And you, yourself, are a gift. “For he has rescued us from the dominion of darkness and brought us into the kingdom of the Son he loves.” (Colossians 1:13) The Lord’s whole purpose is to bring you home, as a gift for himself, a gift shared by the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit.

You are the product of a daring rescue. It is a rescue that takes you from darkness to light. And part of the light is to see yourself surrounded by gifts. You see yourself surrounded by a sort of “Gift-Love”: The Gift-Love of God.

God’s light is our understanding God’s grace, God’s transforming love, in all its truth, in all its beauty.

Because grace is such a great thing, its truth is hard to grasp. It is hard to believe in such an extravagant, unconditional love. But this is really the secret of the Christian life. It’s this big gift, this big love, that enables us to live in this world with a truly big faith, love, and hope in return.

There’s a story about a tourist in a famous museum in an old city. He saw another man standing in front of one of those famous abstract paintings that are so full of bright colors and strange shapes. The man just stood there looking, and looking, and not moving on.

That other man was almost making a spectacle of himself. So, the tourist decided to give it a try on his own. He stood beside the other man and looked, and looked, and looked at what was spoken of as a great masterpiece. Finally, he made a wisecrack: “I don’t see anything in that!” And the man who had stood there for so long whispered to him: “Don’t you wish you could?” (Maxie Dunnam, “The Communicator’s Commentary, vol. 8, p. 342f)

Let’s pray to see the wonderful things of the Lord around us in other people, and in the creation, and in our own lives. Let’s pray to see those wonderful things of the Lord, so that we can be God’s thankful people.

Wednesday, September 2, 2020

THE FOURTH GRADE CERTIFICATE OF HUMAN DECENCY








THE FOURTH GRADE CERTIFICATE OF HUMAN DECENCY

Your Fourth Grade Certificate of Human Decency: In the fourth grade everyone is supposed to learn what it means to be a decent human being. 

No matter how much education, training, and experience a person may have; they can never graduate to Certified Official Adulthood without passing their Fourth Grade Certificate Examination.

No citizen should serve in public office, at any level, without said certification.

The student will not earn their Life Certification without mastering the following areas of decent behavior.

The standards of human decency include, but are not exhausted by, the following principles of life:

1.   Tell the truth, not just for your own good but for the good of others.

2.   Don't expect everyone to do things your way.

3.   Be a good sport: as a gracious winner and a cheerful loser.

4.   Be a team player. This is also good citizenship.

5.   Stop arguments and rivalries and fights.

6.   Help others and encourage them.

7.   Include the kids on the sidelines to get them to join in the game.

8.   Never try to get someone put out of the game.

9.   Never make fun of other people or mock them. Never call anyone names.

10. Always take (and show) a real interest in others.

(Editor’s Note: In Political Life: Reagan was pretty good at the 4th grade test. The Bushes were excellent, especially when Barbara was watching.)

 





Saturday, August 15, 2020

Haiku: "Faint Trails"

 


In the wild . . . faint trails

With a purpose, pass unseen,

Till you walk in them. 

(August 2020)

Saturday, May 2, 2020

"Love's Pandemic Strategy"

(April 2020) 



















"LOVE'S PANDEMIC STRATEGY"

You caught us well in Bethlehem,
But did not catch what ails us.

You caught our baby-self, our childhood-self.
You caught our saying “mother”, “brother”, “friend”.
This became yours, and makes you ours, for good.
You caught us well, in flesh, in rest,
In work: our seeking, questing;

Our laughing, weeping; and our many loves
To which we may say “yes”, or “no”, or “wait”.
To our surprise you caught our grown-up life,
Without contracting our diseased
Autonomy-obsession.

Pandemic freedom shuns tough claims of love
And trust. Disharmony endangers all
Our needed bonds; with you, with others. Self,
Itself, our being, forms a trap:
A stranger we must wrestle.

Every human carries this pandemic,
And bears its wounds within our heart and mind.
Those scars on our behavior span the world.
Our planet radiates the shade
And smell of viral darkness.

You caught us without catching this disease.
Our healthy vitals worked so well with you:
So charmed, we failed to grasp your alien scheme
To carry in you what we are.
You would contract our plague like

A lover poisoned by their true love’s kiss,
Or quarry by their faithful owner shot
Right through the heart, with no love lost. You did
Lure us, so we would infect you.
But love, your love, arranged this:

You caught this, arms outstretched, upon a cross.
“X” marks the spot upon your map of love
(Love’s trysting place with death), where we played false
While you played true, and won us whole!
Our curse, your cross, connected.

We hang here, nailed together.
That's your doing, all along.
We're caught! Now, can we catch you?

(by Dennis Evans, May 2020, edited)

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

New Innocence


"NEW INNOCENCE"

To be
So free,
That everything I see
Is full of seeing deeply:
Myself, at last, forgotten.

(Dennis Evans, February 2020)

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

"Reflections on the Book of Ecclesiastes"

(February 11, 2020)
Photos taken along the Columbia River
Near Mattawa/Desert Aire WA
February 2020
“Vanity of vanities, says the Preacher, vanity of vanities! All is vanity…. There is nothing for a man than that he should eat and drink and find enjoyment in his toil. This also, I saw, is from the hand of God; for apart from him who can eat or who can have enjoyment? For the man who pleases him, God gives wisdom and knowledge and joy; but to the sinner he gives the work of gathering and heaping, only to give to one who pleases God. This also is vanity and a striving after wind.” (Ecclesiastes 1:2; 2:24-26)
Let us simply go. Go forth and live; in the sheer wonder that there is nothing for us, in this life under the sun, except for God to lovingly give his gifts to us; or for God to lovingly give to others through us.
Through the power of God, offering himself in Jesus on the cross, carrying the sins, and the evils, and all the striving emptiness of this world, dying and rising from the dead, we are claimed by God to be God’s beloved ones. As God’s beloveds, we are “given to”; or, as sinners, we are “given through”; through God’s power in Jesus. 
Otherwise, what is there in life for us to hold onto? What is there to call our own?
Holding on and calling anything our own are vanity, emptiness, and worthlessness in comparison with being either given to, or given through.
The whole duty of human life is to live what human life is created for, under the care of Almighty God.
All of human life (the life of the whole of humanity) is the essence of living in the fear of God. This means that our life is always full of the apprehension of a strange and blinding beauty; and of a completely undeserved, untamable, and uncompromising majesty.
The whole of human life (the essence of life for the whole of humanity) is found in our genuine experience of the ways of God, in fellowship with God: given to us so as to become the laws of our own hearts. The law for life is the intimacy of knowing God from the inside of his own heart. In Christ, the law of God’s life becomes the law of our lives.
“The end of the matter; all has been heard. Fear God, and keep his commandments; for this is the whole duty of man. For God will bring every deed into judgement, with every secret thing, whether evil or good.” (Ecclesiastes 12:13-14)
It is the determined will and judgement of God, for his children and for his sinners, that God will allow nothing else for us but this. God will certainly preside (over our lives, and over everything in creation, for all time) to protect us from everything that does not bring this life to us. Everything else (in this world under the sun) will be refused, and taken from us. Anything else, and everything less than this, would be nothing but worthless: an empty vapor, dust, vanity, no life at all. God will give us nothing less than what is truly life.