Thursday, May 26, 2011

A Message for Graduates

For those of you who have graduated or have had a child graduate from high school since I have been pastor of Northside, you have heard this before.  For those of you who have not, this is a story I usually tell the graduates at their lunch on Senior Sunday, like I will this coming Sunday.

My own experience of graduation from high school had it's highs and lows.  On a blustery May evening in 1978, on the football field of Yoakum High School, I was given an award from the local Rotary Club that I had not foreseen coming.  It was a shock, it was an honor, but that emotional high was short lived.  As I sat on the back row of the 144 seniors of my class, a violent gust of wind came down the field, I was able to just barely grab my hat as it flew off my head.  As I put it back in place, I realized the tassel was gone. I looked behind me toward the end zone, there was my tassel, headed for a touch down.  I did not think I had time to get it before my name was called to go receive by diploma so I had to let it be. As I went to get my diploma with no tassel a more humbling thought came to me, my tassel just amassed more yards on this field on a Friday night than I did playing four years of football.

Highs and  lows, I don't know about you, but my high school years were full of them, often very close together. It has been that way through the rest of life, but life does get better than high school. It is a good thing to know that God is there to help us handle both the ups and downs, the highs and the lows.  The longer I live, the better I see Him do that.  May God bless your highs and lows with his steady presence.

For the journey...

Thursday, May 19, 2011

When the World Ends

By now you have heard of Harold Camping's prediction that the rapture will take place this coming Saturday.  According to the 89 year old engineer Camping, this is the day based on calculations he has made that include a wide variety of factors - from Biblical prophecies to the founding of Israel in 1948 to data he has gotten from tree rings.

Camping is not the first to set a date on the rapture, though he has spent the most money announcing his prediction in media and advertising.  He will not be the last.  The response of people has ranged for all out belief and preparation for the end to mocking ridicule.  A local chapter of the American Humanist Association is hosting a two day party, Saturday and Sunday.  An atheist in New England has started a business offering to take care of raptured Christian's pets after they are gone - $135 for 10 years of care, up front of course.

I remember reading of another time of dire predictions about the end times based on strange signs in the heavens including an unexplained darkness in mid-day.  One legislative body was debating about ending their session during this darkness, when one wise man argued they continue.  He stated, if this was the end and he was about to meet his Maker, he wanted to "be found at my post."

Jesus is coming back but I am preparing my sermon for Sunday.  It is about "What Happens When You Read the Bible."  I plan to see you there.

For the journey...

Friday, May 13, 2011

A Healing Place

This week I heard a doctor make the statements, "chronic life-long problem," and "trying to avoid a total breakdown."  He was referring  to a painful foot problem that I have dealt with for almost a decade.  A typically successful surgery I had in 2008 has turned out not to be.  That surgery cannot be repeated or corrected.  I have tried a host of other options.  I am trying another type of custom orthotic in my shoes that this doctor had made for me.  In receiving them, I heard those statements.

Before I had any of this information, I had felt led to preach this week on the power of Jesus' touch.  In Matthew chapter 9 there are a series of people he healed.  He was touched by a woman and a chronic life-long problem ended.  He took a girl's hand and she returned to life.  He touched the eyes of blind men and they could see.

Sometimes you preach to others; sometimes you preach to yourself.  This week will be the latter. I am profoundly interested in what God will say.  I know I am not alone.  Perhaps you are reading this and you have a much more serious life threatening or life altering problem.  I pray that Northside can be a healing place for all of us.  It is what we will focus on this Sunday.  Pray for me and I will pray for you.  I look forward to seeing you Sunday.

For the journey...

Tim

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Osama's Mama

In all the discussion of Osama bin Laden this week, I have heard something about everyone around him and in his life  - except his mother.  I decided to do some checking.  The most information I found comes from a book, Bin Laden: Behind the Mask of a Terrorist by Adam Robinson.

Bin Laden's mother was a beautiful young Syrian woman named Hamida who caught the eye of Osama's father, Mohammed, late in his life. Mohammed bin Laden was wealthy, powerful and had 10 or 11 wives and somewhere around 54 children.  Hamida did not like living in Mohammed's compound among his many wives and children and she was divorced soon after Osama was born.  In the time she did live there, she was ostracized by the other women.  Hamida was called "the slave" and therefore Osama was called "son of the slave."  Osama was raised mainly by nurses and nannies in the compound after his mother was sent away following the divorce.

When Mohammed bin Laden died in a helicopter crash when Osama was ten, Osama went to live with his mother whom he barely knew.  He felt abandoned after his father's death.  His mother tried to reach out to him but he kept his distance from her and according to Adam's book, within a few months there was no interaction between them for the rest of their lives.

Is there some connection between the absence of a mother figure in his life and the way Osama bin Laden's life turned out?  I cannot help but think so.  Bin Laden never valued other people's lives and certainly not any woman's life.  Where do most people learn to value life and other people?  My experience says a mother has a big role in that.  How the world may have been different if Osama and Hamida had a close relationship?  Our family life determines so much of our future. Who knows what might have been?

I do know that there are many women in difficult circumstances who do an amazing job and raise remarkable children.  One such woman was Hannah the mother of Samuel.  We will look at her life this Sunday and see the how God can bring fulfillment even in circumstances that are less than ideal. I hope to see you Sunday.

For the journey...