April 1

A Sliver of Christ

If I could be a sliver of Christ
A slim, barely noticeable sliver
If I could convey a sliver of his love
However small it may appear
If I could imitate a sliver of his charity
A sliver of Christ I would be
If I could offer a sliver of his friendship
Narrow as it might seem
If I could exhibit a sliver of his compassion
Though barely visible to the naked eye
If I could model a sliver of his kindness
A sliver of Christ I would be 
If I could emulate a sliver of his obedience
No matter how slight it may seem
If I could show a sliver of his mercy
No matter how limited that may be
If I could reveal a sliver of his glory
A sliver of Christ I would be
If I could exemplify a sliver of his humility
No matter how minute such may be
If I could express a sliver of his humanity
For all of humanity to see
If I could reflect a sliver of his divinity
A sliver of Christ I would be
If I could but a sliver be
A sliver of Christ I would be

As Christians around the world quickly approach Good Friday and Easter Sunday, I humbly offer this poem. I have a little book titled The Imitation of Christ by Thomas à Kempis. I have had it since high school, more than forty years. I hope that during all that time I have reflected a sliver of Christ to others. The world has been going though a dark winter. May we as Christians shine a sliver of Christ’s light and may all those slivers of light show the way out of the darkness: “I am the light of the world. He who follows me does not walk in the darkness, but will have the light of life.” (John 8:12).

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January 27

At First a Stranger, But Only at First

A stranger's eyes met my own
A stranger's eyes saw my needs
A stranger's eyes looked upon me kindly
At first a stranger, but only at first

A stranger's ears heard me weep
A stranger's ears heard my cry
A stranger's ears listened to my problems
At first a stranger, but only at first 

A stranger's voice consoled me
A stranger's voice comforted me
A stranger's voice encouraged me
At first a stranger, but only at first

A stranger's hand touched my forehead
A stranger's hand wiped my tears
A stranger's hand led me out of darkness
At first a stranger, but only at first

A stranger's arms lifted me
A stranger's arms embraced me
A stranger's arms held me tight
At first a stranger, but only at first

A stranger's heart felt my pain
A stranger's heart cried for me
A stranger's heart loved me
At first a stranger, but only at first 

It is a beautiful thing when a stranger helps someone in need. I am reminded of the parable of the good Samaritan, how a perfect stranger helped out a man attacked by robbers who was left for dead; how the stranger bandaged the man’s wounds, put him on his donkey, and took him to an inn. As if that wasn’t enough, the stranger promised the innkeeper he would take care of the bill on his way back! A beautiful story. Jesus used this parable to demonstrate what it meant to “love your neighbor as yourself.” Fortunately, there are people out there, day after day, being good neighbors during this time of pandemic, helping out perfect strangers. As in the poem, these strangers are strangers at first, but only at first.

Luke 10:25-37

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November 15

Life’s Odometer

The distance we have traveled in life
Whether one year or one hundred
Cannot be changed or altered
No matter how much we have blundered

We have been where we have been
We have done what we have done
None of that can ever be changed
No matter what we've lost or what we've won

But in Christ we have a rare opportunity
To be renewed, to be "born again"
To start fresh, to start over
No matter our past, no matter our pain

In Christ, we can reset life's odometer
And head in a whole new direction
Renewed in mind, body, and soul
In Him we become a new creation

Reflection: It is human to dwell on the past. We cannot help but hit the playback button of our minds as if we were watching TV reruns. Inadvertently, however, we sometimes trigger some of the same negative behavior simply by focusing on it. In other words, thinking too much about our past sins can keep us trapped in them. In Christ we find the strength to move forward, beyond past negative and sometimes destructive behavior.

Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.

2 Corinthians 5:17
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August 1

Anxious Moments

The teachers of the law and the Pharisees brought a woman caught in adultery.  They made her stand before the group and said to Jesus, ‘Teacher, this woman was caught in the act of adultery.  In the law Moses commanded us to stone such women.  Now what do you say?’  . . . Jesus bent down and started to write on the ground with his finger.  When they kept on questioning him, he straightened up and said to them, ‘Let any one of you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her.’  Again he stooped down and wrote on the ground.  At this, those who heard began to go away one at a time. . . until only Jesus was left, with the woman still standing there.  Jesus straightened up and asked her, ‘Woman, where are they?  Has no one condemned you?’  ‘No one sir,’ she said.  ‘Then neither do I condemn you,’ Jesus declared.   John 8:3-11 

When I read this passage, I sense several anxious moments.  A crowd gathered with the purpose of judging a woman and to have her stoned for committing adultery.  I sense the woman’s anxiety.  I sense the crowd’s anxiety.  Amid that anxiety, Jesus simply bent down and wrote with his finger on the ground.  That act probably baffled the crowd; not what they were expecting.  Whatever Jesus wrote has remained a mystery.  What we do know is that everyone but the woman – and of course Jesus – left.

In his book Scribbling in the Sand, author and musician Michael Card describes this scene.  Card writes:

What Jesus did that morning created a space in time that allowed the angry mob to first cool down, then to hear his word, and finally to think about it, be convicted by it and respond — or not.  It made time stand still.  It was original.  It was unexpected.  It was a response to the noise and confusion and busyness all around him, yet it was not in the least tainted by the noise.  Instead, Jesus’ action created a frame around the silence — the kind of silence in which God speaks to the heart.  In short, it was a supreme act of creativity.  It was art.  (Scribbling in the Sand, InterVarsity Press, copyright 2002, at p. 16).      

We live in extremely anxious times. COVID-19, economic stress, and racial strife are all around us.  Responses amid these anxious times vary.  T .S. Elliot is quoted as saying, “anxiety is the hand maiden of creativity.”  I know this to be true because some of my own poems were born out of anxious moments.  Throughout history, God has spoken to us through art.  As Card puts it, This is art through which God is seen and heard, in which he is incarnate, is ‘fleshed out’ in paint and ink, in stone, in creative movement.”  (Scribbling in the Sand, at p. 17). 

How do you respond to anxiety?  How do you handle all the “noise and confusion”?  Perhaps you find yourself writing, painting, composing or dancing!  These are indeed anxious times.  Perhaps it is that “space in time” that fosters the best creative moments.  I would add that when creativity is used to honor God, it is indeed worship of the highest order.   

 

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May 29

A Second to Pray…

This morning I got myself ready for another day of working from home, like many of us. Sadly, however, so many folks have lost their jobs.  I plugged my work laptop into the charger and booted up.  I also plugged in my cell phone charger.  So, I was charging my laptop and cell phone.  I went to get some OJ and Belvita breakfast biscuits to charge myself up too.  😊 All charged up and ready to go!  That got me thinking.  I said to myself: “I charged up my laptop, my cell phone, and my body, but was I really ready to go?”  I was not.  I was forgetting something.  I needed to take a second to pray, so I did.  Now I was ready to go!  Sometimes a second to pray is all you need… Pray for all impacted by COVID-19 — that would be the entire world — for those who are sick and those who have lost loved ones. Pray for yourself! Nothing wrong with that. Here is a little poem I wrote years ago that talks about that “second” of prayer…

“One Second, Please”


God speaks to you and wants you to pray
But you do not even give Him the time of day
You say, "One second, please, I'll be right with you, Sir"
As if you were a salesman and He your customer

There is nothing you could sell Him, though
This is the truth, you ought to know
It is you who needs His guiding hand
You need Him now, please understand

One second is all you need
To meet the Lord and plant the seed
A second now can mean eternity later
Give Him the time, He is your Creator

So get down on your knees in prayer
Take that second and meet your Savior
You won't regret it, you won't look back
That second with the Lord is all you lack

Oh, and let’s “not forget this one thing, dear friends: With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day.” 2 Peter 3:8.

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April 25

Just Visiting

I'm a visitor, this is not my home
My stay is but a whisper
In the expanse of space and time
My body is but a vessel, a channel
To carry out God's work
To love and to serve Him
To say here I am, send me
I do not live for the today and the now
My tomorrows come and go
My SOUL purpose is eternal
My time on earth will one day pass
This flesh and blood is but a tent
At times weathered and beaten
Tattered and leaking
But that's OK, for it is only temporary
From dust it came and to dust it shall return
For I'm just visiting, this is not my home

“Here today and gone tomorrow,” a cliché, but nevertheless true. A funeral brings this home; natural disasters brings this home; soldiers dying in battle brings this home; COVID-19 brings this home. Here today and gone tomorrow, not just a cliché.

For we know that when this earthly tent we live in is taken down (that is, when we die and leave this earthly body), we will have a house in heaven, an eternal body made for us by God himself and not by human hands. We grow weary in our present bodies, and we long to put on our heavenly bodies like new clothing.

2 Corinthians 5:1-2

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March 17

A Pocketful of Scripture

I remember the things I used to keep
When I was a child, a long time ago
I kept baseball cards and I kept marbles
Stuffed in the pockets of my favorite blue jeans
I remember the matchbox cars and the toy soldiers too
There was the toy pistol and my neat magic tricks
And I remember the pennies, the nickels and dimes
All stuffed in the pockets of my favorite blue jeans
As I grew a little older, there were other things I kept
Stuffed in the pockets of my favorite blue jeans
Some of those things were real cool, my friends kept them too
But I'm ashamed to admit, some of them were not good
As I grew a little older still, I heard a voice from above say
"Empty out those pockets, and make room for my words"
And then what I saw, I could hardly believe
A hand from above reached way down to me
All I could see in the hand was a page from a book
I reached out and snatched it, as the hand let it go
I saw words on the page, the most amazing words they were
God's very own words, words I had never read or heard
Excitedly, I took out all the junk that I kept in my pockets
And filled them with the words God gave to me
Words that transformed me, words that healed and saved me
Words I now keep in the pockets of my favorite blue jeans

Luke 11:28 – 1 Timothy 4:4-5 – Hebrews 4:12-13

My Reflection: There are pockets in our lives that are crammed with the most useless things and sometimes the most destructive. God can fill those pockets with some wonderful and extraordinary things, if we only let Him.

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