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 clichĂ©, 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 clichĂ©.

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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April 11

Cold Feet

This morning I was a little chilly.  “It will get warmer” I told myself.  After all, it is Spring.  I walked by the wooden cross my wife and I have been placing on the kitchen table the last few Easters and lit the candle beside it.  I began to pray, but my feet felt a little cold. I stopped and said “excuse me Lord” – I chuckled as I said that – and went to get my sandals.  I came back and finished my little prayer.

This made me think about cold feet.  You know, about how people get “cold feet” – especially when they are about to embark on a new adventure.  The online Cambridge Dictionary defines cold feet as follows: “to suddenly become too frightened to do something you had planned to do, especially something important such as getting married.”  Hence, the gift of socks for the bride or groom.  😊

What also came to my mind was the following verse from the Bible: “I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either one or the other! So, because you are lukewarm—neither hot nor cold—I am about to spit you out of my mouth.”  Rev. 3:15-16.  I know, that sounds a bit harsh.  The point here is that God wants us to seek him wholeheartedly, fervently, and not have cold feet about our pursuit. 

My prayer today is that during these extraordinarily difficult times more and more people seek God wholeheartedly, fervently, and not have cold feet about it.  And, if we get cold feet, imagine ourselves wearing the sandals Jesus wore when he walked on this Earth, bringing the good news and healing people.  God knows we all need healing these days. 

Tomorrow is Easter Sunday and that, my friend, is my prayer this Holy Saturday. Amen.

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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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January 19

The Night Watchman

Deafening noises surrounded me
I was blinded by all the "bling-bling"
I couldn't see past tomorrow
And who knew what the next day would bring
I heard talk about some god
I didn't see him, I didn't hear him
But others said they did
I thought it was just their whim
It's a crutch, I would say
I didn't need this god of theirs
Prayer, worship and going to church?
I always thought that stuff was for squares
Nothing in my life told me otherwise
My parents broke up when I was five
I was a punching bag for the local bully
I did what I could just to survive
But then one day I met this god
I was alone in a cell in some county jail
I spent the night with the night watch guard
Some blind old man who could only read Braille
I said to myself, how dumb is that!
A blind old man guarding the cell
All he cared about was reading his Bible
And preaching to me about heaven and hell
I told the man I knew all about hell
Why, I was an expert on that subject
I shared with him my sad and sorry story
How nothing but grief did I expect
The old man listened to me like no one had
His wrinkled face strangely peaceful
And with his old bony fingers across each page
The blind man read to me from the Bible
All night long the old man shared the story of God
Of his love and mercy, and of Christ his Son
To my surprise, I found myself listening intently
And wished that the old man was never done
But morning came and the old man left
And at the table sat the morning guard
He picked up the Bible and began to read
Though he did not have for it the same regard
After some time he put the book down
And I asked if I could borrow the Bible
He laughed out loud, picked up the book and asked...
You mean this old jailhouse manual?
I told him of how I spent the night
With the old blind guard reading the Bible
The guard once again laughed out loud
As he put the book down on the table
He said there could be no blind old man
Because there was no guard on watch that night
He explained that the jail was short-handed
Because the jailhouse budget was very tight
So it was that night that I first met God
And learned about his love for me
Now I understand and believe
Because in that cell, God set me free

2 Corinthians 11:23 – Acts 16:25-26 – Revelation 2:10

My Reflection: There are stories of people “finding” God in prison. Saint Paul himself, who in his early life persecuted Christians (and perhaps had some thrown in prison) spent time in prison. Even today, Christians are incarcerated in some places for practicing their faith. So, actually, it would not be unusual to encounter God in prison when one considers that some of his best ambassadors have been there too.

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December 18

I Once Knew Jonah

Once Upon a time, a very long time ago
My dad decided to go on a trip
He promised he'd be back, as soon as he could
He promised to write, he promised to call

But the days came and went, and so did the weeks
The weeks became months and the months turned to years
I never did hear from my father again
I never got a letter or a call from the man
Once, I read a story about a man and a fish
How the fish ate the man, swallowed him whole
I told myself as a child, that my dad was the man
Swallowed whole by the fish, with his promises and all
But unlike the story about the man and the fish
My dad never made it safely to land
He must still be out there, somewhere in the ocean
Perhaps he'll come back, or write me or call
I'm a man now myself, have a family and all
I have beautiful children and a wife I adore
I pray that I never have to take a trip like my dad
I'm afraid of the fish that swallowed him, promises and all

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July 22

The Bully

He was so much bigger, and so much stronger
I was small and scrawny
Light as a feather and of sleight build
And he was quite brawny

For some unknown reason this kid didn't like me
He let me know every chance he got
By punching me in the face and stomach
And often by taking a cheap shot

In the projects he was a known bully
I was his favorite target, I guess
As much as I tried to avoid him
I could not, oh what stress!

I grew up, got out of the projects
Went to college, then to law school
Practiced law not far from home
I always thought that was so cool

One day in front of my office
A man walked up to me
Asking if I could help him out
And, to my surprise, who did I see?

It was the bully, with a disheveled appearance
He recognized me, saw my name on the front door
I gave him a few dollars, and he walked away
I felt badly for him, not scared as before
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July 18

In for Two, Out for Life

It was only two hours, but it felt like forever
I was so scared in that cell, cried my eyes dry
There was only a bed and a toilet
That's the who and the where, and now for the why

I saw the look in my mom's eyes
When she looked at that dress
She really wanted it, that much I knew
But she could not have it...unless

You see, we were a poor family, seven kids
On welfare, food stamps, and all
Living out in the projects
I was just a kid, who liked to play ball

I decided to make my mom happy
So I tucked the dress under my shirt
But I did not get very far
'Cause the store cop was very alert!

He took me by the hand
Around the corner to the local pen
Put me in a cell, with the bed and the toilet
I had stolen before, but never again

Those two hours in that cell changed my life
They caused me to think, to promise myself
That I would do more than play ball
I would instead reach for a book on the shelf





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