Blamelessness…empowered obedience

Yesterday we observed that Enoch walked with God in the midst of real life. So did Noah. And Noah was “blameless” in the midst of sin all around (sort of like Pat Boone!).

The LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intention of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. And the LORD regretted that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart. So the LORD said, “I will blot out man whom I have created from the face of the land, man and animals and creeping things and birds of the heavens, for I am sorry that I have made them.” But Noah found favor in the eyes of the LORD. These are the generations of Noah. Noah was a righteous man, blameless in his generation. Noah walked with God. And Noah had three sons, Shem, Ham, and Japheth. (Genesis 6.5 – 10, ESV, emphasis mine)

But unlike Enoch who walked with God and left the earth to be with God relatively early (see Genesis 5.21 – 24), Noah had work to do:

Make yourself an ark of gopher wood…and you shall come into the ark, you, your sons, your wife, and your sons’ wives with you. And of every living thing of all flesh, you shall bring two of every sort into the ark to keep them alive with you. (Genesis 6.14, 18, 19, ESV)

And one theme of Genesis 6 and 7 is that when God asked Noah to do something, Noah did it! Fancy that. I think it’s called “obedience.”

Noah did this; he did all that God commanded him. (Genesis 6.22, ESV) And Noah did all that the LORD had commanded him. (Genesis 7.5, ESV)

By the way, how did Noah pull that off? Gathering two of every creature? Answer:

  • Noah’s task was to build the ark and put the animals in.
  • God’s job was to provide the animals:

Of the birds after their kind, of animals after their kind, and of every creeping thing of the earth after its kind, two of every kind will come to you to keep them alive. (Genesis 6.20, NKJV, emphasis mine)

Noah: blameless and obedient, and God enabled the hard parts!

By faith Noah, being warned by God concerning events as yet unseen, in reverent fear constructed an ark for the saving of his household. By this he condemned the world and became an heir of the righteousness that comes by faith. (Hebrews 11.7, ESV)

Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” (Matthew 11.28 – 30, ESV)

For this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments. And his commandments are not burdensome. (1 John 5.3, ESV)

Walking with God in real life

Wow, here we are into the second week of January already! Time flies, but it’s not too late to start your readings in Genesis. I already shared our daughter Melody’s pastor’s treatment of Genesis 3, the first promise of Jesus’ first coming. A shorter version of Genesis 3, offered by a famous comedian, is:

And God said, “Don’t eat the forbidden fruit!” And they said, “Where is it?”

There aren’t many bright spots after the creation accounts of Genesis 1 and 2, but here’s one I saw in a new way this year:

When Enoch was sixty-five years old, he had Methuselah. Enoch walked steadily with God. After he had Methuselah, he lived another 300 years, having more sons and daughters. Enoch lived a total of 365 years. Enoch walked steadily with God. And then one day he was simply gone: God took him. (Genesis 5.21 – 24, MSG)

Did you notice? Enoch “walked steadily with God” in the midst of real life, still fathering sons and daughters. We are sometimes tempted to think that to be wholly devoted to God we have to withdraw from the world. Enoch didn’t do that, and neither did Jesus.

The Son of Man has come eating and drinking, and you say, ‘Look at him! A glutton and a drunkard, a friend of tax collectors and sinners!’ (Luke 7.34, ESV)

Two Resolutions

It looks as if it’s taking us all week to really get going into the New Year, so before launching into observations from Genesis and other life lessons, let’s have one more challenge: this one from Heather Holleman, December 31:

If I could pick two:

Since most everyone considers New Year’s resolutions today—as they prepare for 2023—I thought about the two essential practices that I would start if I were telling a younger me what to do: I’d commit to daily reading the Bible (and journaling what I learned, prayer requests, and gratitude), and I’d take a daily walk. That’s it. Bible and walking.

I couldn’t live my life without Jesus and growing in my faith through reading the Bible. And the daily walk keeps a body healthy to live a life of service and love to others.

That’s a good word. Daily walking and daily Bible reading. Again, I’ll be using the 5 chapters per week plan in the Pentateuch that June and I designed. Join me!

Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last, but we do it to get a crown that will last forever. (1 Corinthians 9.25, NIV, emphasis mine)

Train yourself to be godly. For physical training is of some value, but godliness has value for all things, holding promise for both the present life and the life to come. (1 Timothy 4.7, 8, NIV)

Just a water boy?

The whole nation has been tracking the progress of Damar Hamlin of the Buffalo Bills pro football team recovering from a heart-stopping injury on Monday Night Football, January 2. Andrea Adelson wrote a beautiful article on ESPN: Damar Hamlin injury isn’t the most important part of the Bills safety’s story. Here’s how it starts:

Damar Hamlin had every football program in the country recruiting him during his senior year at Pittsburgh’s Central Catholic, his talent and upside enough to make him an undisputed four-star prospect and ESPN’s No. 2 defensive player in Pennsylvania.

Late in that 2015 season, Hamlin took a hit to the side of his knee against Penn-Trafford in the WPIAL Class 4A district championship, and coaches decided to hold him out the following week in a state quarterfinal against State College as a precaution. But that was not going to keep him off the field.

Hamlin begged his coaches to let him do something to help. His defensive coordinator at the time, Dave Fleming, put it more bluntly.

“After being a pain in the butt about it, we let him carry the water bottles,” Fleming recalled in a phone interview.

So there Hamlin stood, captain of the football team, elite prospect with offers from Notre Dame, Ohio State, Penn State, Pittsburgh and many others, literally carrying water for his teammates. Because he had to be there for them. Because there was no other way.

The article goes on:

“He’s the pride of his family,” said Terry Totten, Hamlin’s high school coach. “He’s the pride of McKees Rocks. He’s the pride of Central Catholic and the University of Pittsburgh all because he does everything in such a humble, giving way.”

While Pat Boone at age 88 lives out his Christian faith in Hollywood, Damar Hamlin, at age 24, sets the example as an athlete.

But Jesus called them to him and said, “You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones exercise authority over them. It shall not be so among you. But whoever would be great among you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among you must be your slave, even as the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.” (Matthew 20.25 – 28, ESV)

Perspective and Prayer

If you’re a regular reader of The Ewellogy, you know that I have been known to watch sports from time to time. Some big games (like when Clemson plays for the National Championship) and not-so-big games. Sport is entertainment. Sport is a source of life lessons like this one on self-control. But above all, 

Sport is just a game.

If you don’t think so, all you need is Monday Night Football, January 2, 2023: Buffalo Bills playing at Cincinnati Bengals, next-to-last week of the season, with playoff seeding on the line. It was one of the most hyped games this season. The week prior, you couldn’t watch a college bowl game without being reminded at least 10 times that it was the Bills versus the Bengals Monday night. The game was only about halfway through the first quarter when Bengals pass receiver Tee Higgins was tackled by Bills safety Damar Hamlin. Most reports described it as a routine play that didn’t appear unusually violent. However,…

On the play…Higgins led with his right shoulder, which hit [Hamilin] in the chest. Hamlin then wrapped his arms around Higgins’ shoulders and helmet to drag him down. Hamlin quickly got to his feet, appeared to adjust his face mask with his right hand and then fell backward about three seconds later and lay motionless. – Mitch Stacy, Associated Press

A former NFL physician later said that if you’re going to collapse, there’s no better place to do it than an NFL field. There is a plethora of highly trained medical trauma people and all the equipment you need. Hamlin was administered CPR on the field for what was later reported as a cardiac arrest before being loaded into an ambulance on the field (one writer said he had NEVER seen an ambulance on the field). The Bills players circled up in prayer (on live television!). The picture shows both:

And then this week’s game of the century resumed…except it didn’t. Players were in tears. Coaches led them to their respective locker rooms, and about an hour after the collapse, the game was officially postponed. Later, it was canceled completely.

One report included this paragraph:

Fans were reliant on the game’s broadcaster, ESPN, for news about a terrifying injury rather than scores and highlights. “It was a nightmare,” said Joe Buck, the game’s play-by-play announcer. “It certainly was nothing that anyone is ever prepared for. You have all that hype and buildup, and everyone can’t wait to watch this matchup, and in the snap of a finger it’s completely different. Football just goes out the window.”

“Football just goes out the window.” Really? I’ve written before about the importance of perspective and priorities when it comes to watching football. “That game will go on whether I watch it or not.” But this story reminds us that the game itself might not go on if real life barges in. The game is of supreme importance…until it’s not. NFL players across the league are suddenly thinking about perspective. Denver Broncos quarterback Russell Wilson articulated it this way:

We know that injuries are going to happen and this game is a physical game, but, you know, people always say they’d die for this game and everything else, but when it’s really life on the line like we saw the other night and somebody’s heart stops, it changes your perspective even that much more. It’s just, life is so much bigger than this game. This game is important, it’s significant, it’s something that we all care about. It brings us joy. But it’s also not the everlasting thing. – reported by Parker Gabriel, Denver Post, January 4, 2023

The other takeaway is how quickly nearly everyone went to prayer. As I said, all or most of the Bills circled up for prayer. There were calls for prayer inside and outside the stadium. As Erik Reed of World Magazine wrote:

“Pray for Damar Hamlin” became a national exhortation. It was everywhere.

By the way, Damar Hamlin is better. CNN reported on Thursday morning, January 5:

Damar Hamlin’s agent Ron Butler told CNN the injured Buffalo Bills player is awake and has been holding hands with family in the hospital. The Buffalo Bills reported that Hamlin has “shown remarkable improvement over the past 24 hours” and “has demonstrated that he appears to be neurologically intact.” 

Good news and a better lesson: Perspective and Prayer – let’s remember both as we sail into 2023.

Don’t shuffle along, eyes to the ground, absorbed with the things right in front of you. Look up, and be alert to what is going on around Christ—that’s where the action is. See things from his perspective. (Colossians 3.2, MSG)

Pray diligently. Stay alert, with your eyes wide open in gratitude. (Colossians 4.2, MSG)

P.S. We learned Thursday that Damar woke up for the first time Wednesday night. Using a pad and paper, he asked, “Did we win the game?” Someone wisely responded, “Yes, Damar. You won the game of life.”

P.P.S. I just learned something about Damar Hamlin that’s worth another blog. Stay tuned.

Epiphany!

Good morning! It’s January 6th, the 12th day of Christmas, the commemoration of the visit of the wise men.

Now after Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea in the days of Herod the king, behold, wise men from the east came to Jerusalem, saying, “Where is he who has been born king of the Jews? For we saw his star when it rose and have come to worship him.” [after Herod told them to go to Bethlehem as prophesied by Micah], they went on their way. And behold, the star that they had seen when it rose went before them until it came to rest over the place where the child was. When they saw the star, they rejoiced exceedingly with great joy. And going into the house they saw the child with Mary his mother, and they fell down and worshiped him. Then, opening their treasures, they offered him gifts, gold and frankincense and myrrh. (Matthew 2.1, 2, 9 – 11, ESV)

Here’s a brief summary of what we know and don’t know:

  • We don’t know there were three. The text mentions three kinds of gifts. The gifts, by the way, could have been used to fund Mary, Joseph, and Jesus’ trip to Egypt.
  • We do know the wise men were NOT at the manger. Jesus is referred to as a “child,” and the place they visited him was a “house.”
  • We don’t know exactly what the star was: a comet, a conjunction of planets, or some other phenomenon.
  • We can presume that these “wise men” were descendants of men who were contemporaries of Daniel in Babylon. (See, for example, Daniel 2.17, 18)

So many lessons!

  • Jesus was visited by shepherds (the uneducated poor) and wise men (the educated wealthy)
  • We can say that…
    • The wise men at the beginning of the story were inspired (by the star) but not informed (by scripture)
    • The Jerusalem religious leaders and scholars were informed but not inspired. I wrote about this last week.
    • Finally, the wise men were informed AND inspired, and they worshiped.

I leave you with the song that nicely captures this beautiful verse – well worth the three minutes.

When they saw the star, they rejoiced with exceedingly great joy. (Matthew 2.10, NKJV)

P.S. We live in Monument, Colorado, and a smaller town just to our northwest is Palmer Lake. In 1935, the town laid out the Palmer Lake Star on a small mountain as a symbol of hope in the middle of the depression. One can see it from I-25 driving north from Colorado Springs and from many other places, too. Every year it’s on from Saturday after Thanksgiving through December. 12 days ago, Christmas night, we had a glorious sunset. Loralyn Kokes posted this picture on NextDoor:

Four Years and counting…

Today marks the end of four years of daily blogging: inspired by Seth Godin and Heather Holleman, I committed to publishing a blog every day beginning January 6, 2019. By my count, 1468 blogs in 1461 days. Thank YOU for reading!

My first blog in this string was about Simeon’s daily obedience, and it turns out that’s what daily blogging is. Just show up and write. (Full disclosure, I do not say that I write a blog every day; I publish a blog every day – sometimes I write ahead.)

Writing every day actually takes the pressure off. I don’t expect (and I hope you don’t either) every blog to be a masterpiece. I created the Ewellogy in January 2014, and in the five years from then until I started daily blogging, I wrote 32 blogs. On average, one blog every 8 weeks. I’m not any smarter now than I was then, but now I write 56 blogs in 8 weeks. One reason is the commitment. The other reason is that I don’t sit around waiting for the perfect idea. A friend of mine said,

The perfect is the enemy of the good.

And so I write. Sometimes from what I see in my daily Bible readings; sometimes from something going on in the culture; sometimes to challenge us on an aspect of discipleship or disciple-making. I take part of my commission from what Jesus said to the apostle John:

Write what you see in a book and send it to the…churches… (Revelation 1.11, ESV)

When Mary met the angel

Just like the story of Pat Boone gives us hope that we, too, can follow Jesus in a messed-up world, another article in the Wall Street Journal reminds us that following Jesus is not such a bad idea after all. When Mary Met the Angel by Rebecca McLaughlin is too good not to share: it has it all, from the virgin birth to the resurrection. It’s long, but I commend it to you in its entirety. Here are some highlights (also long!):

The first person ever to hear that Jesus is the Son of God was a low-income teenage girl in an obscure backwater of the Roman empire. She went by the most common name for Jewish women of her time and place: She was just another Mary. But then she claimed an angel had appeared to her and told her she would give birth to the Son of God. From the perspective of both Jews and Romans in the first century A.D., her story was completely unbelievable. How has it lasted for 2,000 years?

…Mary’s story feels like a fairy tale. But angels in the Bible aren’t remotely fairylike. They’re terrifying messengers from God. Of course, if there’s no God, then angels are ruled out. But if there is a God who made the universe, it’s not irrational to think he could have made angelic creatures too.

To first-century Jewish ears, the claim that Jesus was conceived by the Holy Spirit of God would have been offensive and absurd. The Greek and Roman gods had been depicted spawning demigods with human mothers, but Israel’s God was nothing like these pagan deities. He was the maker of the heavens and the earth—the one whom humans could not see and live. What the angel told Mary was the kind of thing that could get you stoned for blasphemy. When Jesus as an adult claimed divine identity, he nearly suffered stoning several times.

For Romans, Mary’s claim that Jesus was both human and divine would not have sounded blasphemous per se. Not only did their gods sometimes spawn humans, but emperors could be proclaimed as gods. Divinity was like a Roman Nobel Prize for greatness. But Jesus never led an army or controlled an empire. Worse, he died the most humiliating death a Roman could imagine. The notion that he was God made flesh would have been laughable.

But after Jesus’ death, another Mary made another claim. Mary Magdalene was one of many women among Jesus’ disciples, and on the third day after witnessing his crucifixion, she went to Jesus’ tomb to tend to his body. Like Jesus’ mother, Mary Magdalene claimed that she had talked with angels. Then she reported that she had met with Jesus too. The first Mary said that Jesus had been supernaturally born from her womb; the second, that he had been miraculously reborn from his tomb.

The first Mary’s claim that Jesus was the everlasting ruler of the world sounds much less crazy now, when billions across the world acknowledge Jesus as their King. When Mary Magdalene first made her claim, the followers of Jesus were a tiny Jewish sect. Today they represent the largest global religion: 31% of humans say they are Christians…Far from being a white Western religion, Christianity was multiethnic from the first, and today Christians are by far the world’s most racially and culturally diverse religious group.

None of this makes Christian belief any easier for those who think that science has ruled out the possibility of such things as virgin births and resurrections. But as Princeton historian Hans Halvorson has written, the scientific revolution was started by early-modern Christians not because they wanted an alternative hypothesis to God but because they believed in a God who is both rational and free. Today, many Christian scientists who believe that Jesus was miraculously born and resurrected see these extraordinary miracles as moments when the God who wrote the laws of nature and sustains them day by day did something different.

What about ethics? Once pregnant, Mary prophesied that God would start a moral revolution through her son—that he would raise the poor and lowly and upend the power structures of the world (Luke 1:46-55). Her statements would have seemed bizarre in the Roman Empire, where might was right. But as the historian Tom Holland has argued in his book “Dominion: How the Christian Revolution Remade the World,” Jesus’ upside-down ethics has so impressed itself upon our minds that today we think universal human rights, caring for the poor, justice for the oppressed, and equality for men and women are just basic moral common sense. Mr. Holland sets us straight: “That every human being possessed an equal dignity was not remotely a self-evident truth. A Roman would have laughed at it…The origins of this principle [lie] not in the French Revolution, nor in the Declaration of Independence, nor in the Enlightenment, but in the Bible.”

…Christianity’s claim that God not only became human but modeled and commanded care for the most vulnerable, before he himself died a brutal and humiliating death, has placed the poor, sick and oppressed forever at the heart of Christian ethical concern.

…Christians believe that the Son of God was born to die, so that all who trust in him could live as sons and daughters of God—wrapped up more tightly in his love than the newborn Jesus was wrapped up by Mary in his swaddling clothes.

When Mary met the angel, she was a no-name girl from a disempowered people in a seemingly inconsequential place. Today, if you worry that you might be insignificant—unknown, unloved and unimportant in this world—perhaps this Christmas you will hear her message with fresh ears. If she was right about her son, then you are worth the birth and life and death and resurrection of the Son of God. – Rebecca McLaughlin, When Mary Met the Angel

Good stuff, written, perhaps, so that those who consider themselves intellectuals can see that the Gospel is not so far-fetched after all and that many of our values about equality and dignity for all are actually Christian. I sent the article to a friend of mine who would probably describe himself as agnostic. He thanked me and said it was “well written.” I’m praying it will be “well-read.”

Let’s go into the New Year with our heads held high, humbly believing and sharing the best news ever passed on.

But the truth is that Christ has been raised up… (1 Corinthians 15.20, MSG)

For nothing will be impossible with God. (Luke 1.37, ESV)

It can be done!

As we move into the New Year and continue our spiritual disciplines, including Bible reading, we can’t help but wonder if the Christian life can be lived in this culture anymore. I have good news: it can! And it’s not theory. On December 23, the Wall Street Journal published a full-page interview with commentary about Pat Boone. I commend the article in its entirety. Here are some snippets:

If you’re under 50, you may not recognize the name Pat Boone. Consider this: For most of the latter half of the 20th century, there wasn’t a person in America who didn’t know who Mr. Boone was and what he stood for. He was the All-American; the kid in the white buck shoes; the clean-cut alternative to early rock-’n’-rollers like Elvis Presley, Little Richard and Chuck Berry; the star of a dozen Hollywood movies, none of which contained anything resembling profanity, social subversion or a love scene. Life magazine put Mr. Boone on its cover in February 1959, dubbing him “The Million-Dollar Idol of U.S. Teen-Agers.”

“Back then being the All-American kid was popular, and being a family guy was popular, going to church was popular, and all of that was OK,” he says during a recent interview in his memorabilia-filled office on the Sunset Strip. At 88, Mr. Boone is spry and sharp and, despite our presence in the godless wilds of La La Land, not the least bit hesitant to quote Scripture to a complete stranger: “When the wicked are in authority, sin flourishes, but the godly will live to see their downfall” (Proverbs 29:16). A well-thumbed Bible stays on his lap for the entirety of our 3½-hour conversation. “This is my 40th year to read straight through the Bible, word for word, from beginning to end.”

…Sixty years ago, when he moved his family to Los Angeles, he paid $159,000 for a house on a 1.2-acre lot at the corner of Sunset Boulevard and N. Beverly Drive. He still lives there. “I turned down $20 million for that house,” he says matter-of-factly. “I’m going to be offered more than that, I know.” But he won’t sell. That house is where he and Shirley, his wife of 65 years, raised their four daughters. It’s where Shirley died in 2019.

…From the beginning he was intent on charting his own show-business path, one that wouldn’t force him to sell his soul in exchange for success. “When we moved to California, I said consciously to Shirley, ‘We’re not going to live by Hollywood standards, we’re going to live by Tennessee standards.’ ” I might have guessed what they are, but he spells them out: “Bible-believing, churchgoing, standing for righteousness, morality—the things that people in Tennessee just take for granted and they don’t take for granted out here anymore.”

…The America of the 1950s is fading from memory. The animal spirits unleashed by the birth of rock-’n’-roll have run wild in the land for nearly 70 years. The fabric of the country has been torn and stitched back together so frequently that it’s become almost unrecognizable. Nothing now is as it was then. Except Pat Boone. He is the same guy at 88 as he was at 18: an American square. And proud of it.

God bless Pat Boone, and God bless Matthew Hennessey and the Wall Street Journal for writing and publishing an article like this.

Go out into the world uncorrupted, a breath of fresh air in this squalid and polluted society. Provide people with a glimpse of good living and of the living God. Carry the light-giving Message into the night… (Philippians 2.15, MSG)

In the beginning, God…

Wow! Welcome to 2023. Time to start our Bible reading plan for the year, and this year it’s different!

If you want to read the Bible through in one year, the Discipleship Journal Bible Reading Plan is among the most doable: 25 readings each month, each from four different places in the Bible. It’s a lot of work, but it can be done.

For a couple of years now, we’ve used The Navigators’ 5x5x5 reading plan for the New Testament: 1 chapter/day, 5 days/week. We liked the leisurely pace so much, with time to meditate on what we were reading, that June said, “Why don’t we broaden that concept to include the Old Testament?” So we did.

June and I developed a reading plan to go through each section of the Old Testament at the rate of one chapter/day, five days/week. This year, we start at the beginning, “a very good place to start.” We have 260 reading days (5 days/week x 52 weeks), and the Pentateuch (Genesis – Deuteronomy) doesn’t have 260 chapters, so we’ve added in the Gospels of Matthew, Luke, and John.

Join me! We called the New Testament year 1, and we did that last year, so now we have Year 2: Pentateuch. Some of this year’s blog entries will come from these readings.

In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. (Genesis 1.1, ESV)

Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? (Isaiah 43.19, ESV)

thoughts about life, leadership, and discipleship