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HOME TOWN!

2/29/2024

 
“You can’t go home again.”  So postulated Thomas Wolfe in his popular 1940 novel.  Still, how many of us would not like to revisit the world of our childhood as it once was?  I, for one, certainly would.

Obviously, however, I can’t.  Things change, as do places.  So I regularly choose to make such a trip vicariously by tuning into “The Andy Griffith Show” and visiting the fictional small town in North Carolina where it was purported to be situated.  All I can say is “Long live Mayberry!”

Of course, I can certainly visit my own home town whenever I desire.  Fayetteville, Georgia is still there, still alive, and still quite well.  Still, for all it now has to offer (which is quite a lot), the modern version of this place will always differ from the earlier version that I so valued back in my childhood.

That version had barely 13% of its current population.  It also lacked an equally significant percentage of the commerce and industry that would eventually manifest itself in its present form.  And yet, I would still contend that the earlier version had much to offer – maybe even more to offer - than the current manifestation!  At least in my mind it did.

I say this because, for me, it was the quintessential small town.  Carved out of the wilderness, and named for a hero of the Revolutionary War, it reflected the spirit of manifest destiny that once shamelessly characterized all that was to make America the great nation she was destined to become. But I digress.

In the days of my childhood, Fayetteville, Georgia was much more than just a small town.  As one who grew up on a farm several miles outside of town, I saw this relatively small municipality as “the big city”.  (While my father’s 40 acre farm was barely 30 miles south of Atlanta, it was situated only 4.5 miles north of Fayetteville. So, whenever, we went to the “city”, it normally meant we were going to Fayetteville.)

To this day, I can remember marveling at going to that “big city” and seeing all the sights.  Whether it was going to the County Courthouse, visiting Alford’s Department Store for a furniture purchase, stopping by either Jake Mask’s Tire Store for a repair or Travis’ Hardware Store for what we needed to make our own repairs back on the farm, going to Jones’ Pharmacy for the occasional “Root Beer Float”, or having a hot dog lunch at Willie Eason’s café, believe me when I say that, for a little boy growing up on a farm outside of town, such visits were remarkable and definitely made an impression.

I trust you get my point.  Every pilgrimage there insured that a small boy from the country was overwhelmingly awed by what he saw in that place!


As I reflect on this, I cannot help but recall the words of King David in his famous song of ascents in the 122nd Psalm, verse 1, when he said:  “I rejoiced with those who said to me, “‘Let us go to the house of the LORD.’”

In this statement, we have the paradigmatic example of how a country boy feels whenever he comes to town.  For David was the youngest son of Jesse who hailed from the rural little hamlet named Bethlehem.  In other words, he was essentially nobody from nowhere.  But he was going places.

One can only imagine the awe within him as he made the periodic trip up to the nearby capital city of Jerusalem, full of all the things that were not to be found out in the country.  Years later, of course, David himself would occupy the royal palace in that metropolis.  And he would increase the city’s splendor by bringing within its walls the Tabernacle in all its glory.

I wonder, though, if amidst the awesome burden of responsibilities that came with being king, he might not have looked back longingly at the relatively carefree days of his youth down in Bethlehem.  After all, it was here shepherding sheep that he learned a lot about how to lead people.  It was here, in defense of those same sheep, that he slew, first a lion and then a bear, and in the process, gained the confidence and experience necessary to defeat a giant named Goliath.

And given that when he first bursts onto the pages of Scripture, he is a teenager who is passionate about taking a stand for the one true God of Israel, it is evident that he had come to know his God and to serve Him in those childhood years spent in and around Bethlehem.

Little wonder that he was excited to go up to Jerusalem to the House of the Lord.  For there, he not only worshipped his Lord, but also feasted and celebrated with throngs of God’s people.  Given the close proximity of Bethlehem to Jerusalem and the fact that David was quite literate, it may well be that he even attended some form of school there at some point.

Thus it is that so many of the things David likely found in Jerusalem were the very things I found in Fayetteville.  While our family attended a small Baptist church near our home, I went to Kindergarten in Fayetteville at the First Baptist Church. I also attended elementary school, middle school, and high school there. I played sports there. I went to fairs there. I shopped there. I dined there.  I worked my first job(s) there. I dated there. I even met my wife there. 

Sadly, however, with all the changes that have occurred over the years, many of the specific places within my home town that were once so dear to me now no longer exist.  Stores, restaurants, banks, theaters, gas stations, ball fields, parks, houses, schools, and even churches that once stood in that place have long since disappeared, been supplanted, or else repurposed.  New people, new businesses, new buildings, new streets, new parks, new factories, new stores, new government facilities, new schools, new churches, and even a massive new hospital now fill the ever expanding spaces incorporated within the ever expanding city limits.

Perhaps this is why I was thrilled recently to find a copy of a publication titled “Walking Through Historic Fayetteville”, prepared as a class project by the local middle school back in the day.  Reading through its pages filled with pictures of people and places and anecdotes and stories about them has been like a trip back into my childhood.  It has made me more and more thankful for when and where I was born and raised. 

More importantly, it has also made me more and more thankful for the people God positioned there in that time and place in order that they might have an impact on me.  Grandparents, parents, siblings, uncles, aunts, cousins, neighbors, friends, classmates, teammates, coaches, teachers, doctors, employers, and pastors all found time and ways there to leave their imprint on me.

David went on to accomplish much in his life.  But surely, much of what he did accomplish was due to the foundation he was given by those who helped to form his values and convictions in his home town.  I have something in common with David, in the sense that I had similar help from others during my own formative years in my own home town. I trust that, like David, I will build upon that foundation and eventually leave a mark upon others in turn.


SOURCES:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_Can%27t_Go_Home_Again;

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fayetteville%2C_Georgia.

https://fayettehistoricalsociety.com/old-fayetteville/.

SCRIPTURE:

https://biblehub.com/psalms/122-1.htm.

SEE ALSO:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuiBGht6FHY.

PAID IN FULL!

2/25/2024

 
The Bible reminds us that the borrower is always a slave to the lender (Proverbs 22:7).  Therefore, it behooves us, as much as is possible, to follow the admonition of the Apostle Paul in Romans 13:8 to “owe no one anything, except to love each other…”

Still, very few people can get through life without having to borrow money for substantial purchases such as a vehicle or a house.  Like most people, my precious wife and I acquired a mortgage along the way.  But thankfully, there eventually came a day when we were free of that burden.

Back when we retired a few years ago, we managed to pay off our mortgage and became debt free.  In the intervening time, by God’s grace, we have managed to remain so!  Trust me when I say that few things are as satisfying as not being in debt to any person for any reason!

Given all this, I was particularly delighted to have been invited to attend the note-burning ceremony earlier today as a part of the morning worship service of the church from which I retired. For decades, prior generations there had given sacrificially, often as much as twenty percent of their annual income, in order to see the debt reduced.  As they did, they held on to their vision that this day would eventually come to pass.

And rightly so; for living debt free is indeed a powerful thing.  With no mortgage, my wife and I find that we can now more easily afford to spend money on all the other things that we value.  Chief among these things are our children and our grandchildren.

In like manner, once a church family becomes debt free, she is freed up to spend resources was once earmarked for debt on other, far more important priorities. 

In our twilight years, my wife and I look forward to focusing more and more on our kids and grandkids.  This is only natural.  But in a very real sense, it is also quite spiritual. 

Upon my arrival at the above church as Pastor, I inherited $2.7 million of debt – itself down from the original $5.9 million that the church had taken on several years earlier when she decided to relocate. We immediately set about paying down that debt.  We eventually succeeded in reducing it to a mere $700 thousand.

At that point, we felt led to buy additional property and build additional buildings.  Thereupon, we rolled the $700 thousand outstanding debt into a loan of an additional $10.8 million.  The resulting $11.5 million debt was initially offset by a three year capital campaign in which we raised $3.6 million, leaving the church family with a resultant debt of $7.9 million, which we once again set about reducing.

Over the years, we undertook no less than seven different capital stewardship campaigns in an attempt to decrease that debt.  Upon my retirement, due to the faithful giving of the church family at that time, that debt was down to right at $2 million.  And now, due to the continued faithfulness of the present church family, it has at last been paid in full!

I rejoiced as I watched a mortgage document with large red letters written across the face stating “PAID IN FULL” go up in flames!  The burden of debt was finally lifted off the backs of God’s people.

I am no longer Pastor there, having served that church during the time God ordained.  The Lord has now called a new Pastor to lead the church forward.  But I can only imagine the possibilities as the current church family now re-imagines how the resources once allocated to debt retirement will now be spent on ministries to others in the name of Jesus Christ.  At long last, in this regard, the church is free to make a difference!

And now, more than ever, the church family can not only “owe no one anything”, but can also “love others” in ever more creative and effective ways!  After all, in the words of the Apostle John, “We love others because He first loved us.”

And it was His love for us that has set us free, not just materially, but spiritually.  In the words of the song-writer of old…

He paid a debt He did not owe,
I owed a debt I could not pay,
I needed someone to wash my sins away;

And now I sing a brand new song,
“Amazing Grace,”
Christ Jesus paid a debt that I could never pay.

He paid that debt at Calvary,
He cleansed my soul and set me free,
I’m glad that Jesus did all my sins erase;

I now can sing a brand new song,
“Amazing Grace,”
Christ Jesus paid a debt that I could never pay.


Multiple generations of a certain church family are rejoicing this day.  And rightfully so, for their debt has been paid in full.  Not just materially, but also spiritually! 

SONG SOURCE:

https://hymnary.org/text/he_paid_a_debt_he_did_not_owe.

SCRIPTURE SOURCES:

https://biblehub.com/proverbs/22-7.htm;

https://biblehub.com/romans/13-8.htm;

https://biblehub.com/1_john/4-19.htm.

DON’T BRING ME DOWN!

2/19/2024

 
My title today comes from a hit song from back in the day.  It was dedicated to the NASA Skylab space station, which re-entered the Earth's atmosphere and burned up over the Indian Ocean and Western Australia on 11 July 1979.  But I digress.  The song itself has been on my mind as the events of the past few days have unfolded.  Allow me to explain…

Those of you who read my blog regularly will know already that, in my retirement, I have planted myself an orchard. To this, I have added one grape arbor, one row of blueberries, and another of raspberries.  But my crowning achievement was to be my giant blackberry hedge, consisting of two rows of alternating vines, the first containing 27 plants and the second containing 26 plants.

I planted them in the spring of 2022; and, along with my grandsons, actually enjoyed a handful of blackberries in the late summer/early fall of 2023.  But while all the vines survived, only a few thrived and produced fruit.  Why?  The answer consists of three little words:  weeds, weeds, and weeds!

You see, by the end of two growth seasons, I came to conclude that what starts out each year as two rows of easily discernable blackberry vines inevitably ends up as a mass of weeds, within which only a handful of the biggest blackberry vines are even visible.  Lesson learned!

So, as I am want to do, I began the tedious process of seeking a solution to this dilemma.  To my surprise, the process did not take long.  I soon discovered the existence of “weed barrier cloth”.  After a quick trip to the local hardware store, I had in my possession several roles of heavy duty woven ground cloth designed to be water permeable but plant proof, along with the push pins to hold them to the ground. 

While this material was new to me, it seems that landscapers have been hip to this little trick for quite a long time.  And now I know why!

Long story short - as I type this, all my rows of blackberry, blueberry, and raspberry vines have now been ensconced within barriers of this material.  What is more, after pinning the cloth to the ground, I then finally found a use for a stack of cedar poles bequeathed to me by my father-in-law.  (He could not bring himself to dispense with the 8 foot sections of the trunks of small cedars he had cut down when clearing the woods to build his house, and had amassed quite an assemblage of them as a result.  I’m now glad of that!)

In any event, I then placed these around the exterior of my newly matted creation in order to keep me from sucking the edge of the mat up into my lawnmower once I start cutting grass.  Voila!  I found myself with a protected bed in which all my berry vines can now actually flourish.

As I have reflected on all of this, I have been reminded of a spiritual principle.  That principle is based on what we read in the Bible in the New Testament Book of Hebrews, chapter 12, verses 1 and 2:

“Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith.”

Of course, the writer’s analogy is found in the context of sports - specifically that of a marathon runner entering the stadium for the last lap of an ancient Greek marathon.

But focus on that word “entangles”.  In the Koine, or Common, Greek language in which the New Testament was originally penned, that word is “euperístatos”.  It is a compound word consisting of “eú”, or “well”; “peri”, or “all-around”, and “hístēmi”, or “to stand”.  Properly, therefore, it translates as “well-planted all-around”, describing whatever is encompassing, encircling, and/or surrounding us.  The point is that we must actively strive to be rid of any and all such hindrances that encircle us and hamper us as we desperately seek to advance.

In the natural world, specifically with regard to the health of my berry vines, weeds have done just this. I am well served, therefore, in subduing them.  In the spiritual world, with regard to the health of my soul, sin does much the same.  And I am well served to subdue any form of it that hinders my progress!

This is precisely why the Biblical writer here tells us to “throw off” or “lay aside” any such encumbrances.  Here, the word is “apotithémi”, which is also a combination of terms, including “apo”, or “to put aside”, and “tithemi”, or “to put, place, lay, set, fix, or establish”.

What lies beneath matters, my friends!  Weeds from underneath encumber and hinder the upward advance of berry vines.  Sin does the same thing from underneath for upwardly aspiring human souls! 

Therefore, if it behooves me to lay down a barrier against weeds for my berry vines as they reach for the sky, how much more does it behoove me to lay down a barrier against sin as I seek to grow ever Heavenly?!

I have now done the former.  More than ever, I now intend to do the latter!  Maybe you might consider doing the same. 

Beware whatever brings you down.  The consequences can be devastating!

SONG SOURCE:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don%27t_Bring_Me_Down;

https://genius.com/Electric-light-orchestra-dont-bring-me-down-lyrics.

SCRIPTURE SOURCE:

https://biblehub.com/niv/hebrews/12.htm.

GREEK EXEGESIS:

https://biblehub.com/greek/2139.htm.

https://biblehub.com/greek/659.htm.

“A NEW DAY A’ COMIN!”

2/15/2024

 
According to an old adage, if you don’t like the weather, just give it five minutes and it will change!  This seems to be particularly true here in east Tennessee. 

​After all, just a couple of weeks ago, we were experiencing the worst winter storm in memory, with nine inches of snow that was followed by freezing temperatures that lasted for eight straight days.


Conversely, we are now basking in comparatively balmy weather.  For several days now, we have enjoyed sunny, 65 plus degree, short sleeve weather.  Go figure!

Of course, I know it won’t last.  If memory serves me correctly, prior to “Snowmageddon 2024”, the biggest snowfall we experienced in the last twenty years was when we once got ten full inches in March.  Only that snowfall melted away quickly; whereas the most recent only refroze and stayed around for over seven days.

Given this, the old folks would call what we are now experiencing a “false spring”.  Generations of wisdom had taught them that so much warmth so early in the year was inevitably destined to be followed by more winter weather.

And yet, whenever such cycles unfold, I, for one, am grateful.  Not only can this brief respite be good for my psyche, as I am no longer cooped up inside, but it also provides the opportunity to get outside and undertake so many of those cherished tasks associated with that most beloved of seasons - summertime!

I say again – I know it won’t last.  Not for now.  Between today and the true advent of summer, many a cold day is in store.  And yet, this week has been an invaluable reminder that such a day is indeed coming!

As I live out the days allotted to me in this world, such times as this remind me that there is coming a day when all my troubles will be behind me.  That time is not yet.  But it surely will come!

And when that time does come, I shall live forever in the warmth and light of one eternal day!  Neither coldness nor darkness shall ever impact that day, wherein we shall dwell forever in the golden splendor of the “Day of the Lord”!

We know this because of the promise of God’s Word.  As King David himself testified (in the Old Testament Book of Second Samuel, chapter, 23, verse 4), there is coming a day when we will experience “the morning light as the sun rises, like a morning without clouds, like the brightness after a storm.”

In the words of the accomplished songwriters Bill and Gloria Gaither…

There is coming a day,
When no heart aches shall come,
No more clouds in the sky,
No more tears to dim the eye,
All is peace forever more,
On that happy golden shore,
What a day, glorious day that will be.
Yes, indeed, what a day, glorious day that will be!


Amen!

HYMN SOURCES:

https://library.timelesstruths.org/music/Heavenly_Sunlight/;

https://hymnary.org/text/heavenly_sunshine_heavenly_sunshine?extended=false;

https://namethathymn.com/christian-hymns/what-a-day-that-will-be-lyrics.html.

SCRIPTURE SOURCES:

​https://biblehub.com/2_samuel/23-4.htm.

WHAT SHOULD’VE BEEN!

2/10/2024

 
Sadly, Toby Keith died this week.  More than likely, you, my readers, will know just who he was.  If not, I hope you will find out.  This country music star sold over 30 million albums in the US, which made him the fifth best-selling country artist in the US since 1991 when Nielsen started tracking music sales. 

Along the way, he released 21 studio albums and seven compilation albums, plus 69 singles.  Of these, 65 charted on the Billboard country chart, 55 reached the Top 40, 42 made the Top 10, and 20 hit #1.

His music was not only popular; it was also inspirational, as it profoundly impacted millions of people, including me.  His death has done much the same. To begin with, being born in 1961, he was my age. He was also a country boy at heart, as am I.  Moreover, he also loved sports, and even dreamed of making it in pro football, as I once did.  What red-blooded American boy of that era did not?!

Yet, when that did not work out, he followed in his father’s footsteps and went to work on an oil rig.  He once stated that he was beside himself as he was earning over $40,000 a year in the Oklahoma oil fields right out of high school.  And yet, that career too was short lived, as the bottom fell out of the oil business in the early 1980s.

Devastated at the time, he would later realize what a break that would turn out to be.  After all, he would have had to work for exactly 10,000 years at that salary level to acquire the fortune of $400 million he had amassed at his passing.
​
But the fortune he left behind pales in comparison to his legacy.  Over his multifaceted career, which included music, television, and films, he received multiple awards.  These included four Academy of Country Music Awards, two American Music Awards, three Billboard Music Awards, one Country Music Association Award, and three People's Choice Awards.  He also received seven Grammy nominations.  My strong suspicion is that he will now be awarded one posthumously.

He will also be remembered for a great many hit songs.  These days, my favorite among them is “Don’t Let the Old Man In”.  At age 62, full of aches and pains, my reasons should be obvious. 

But my all-time favorite will always be “Should’ve Been A Cowboy”.  Released in 1993, per Billboard magazine, this mega-hit soon became the single most played song of the entire 1990s.  The lyrics include these words:

I bet you never heard ol' Marshall Dillon say
"Miss Kitty, have you ever thought of runnin' away?
Settling' down, would you marry me?
If I ask you twice and beg you pretty please?"

She'd have said yes in a New York minute
They never tied the knot
His heart wasn't in it, he just stole a kiss as he rode away
He never hung his hat up at Kitty's place

I should've been a cowboy, I should've learned to rope and ride
Wearin' my six-shooter, ridin' my pony on a cattle drive
Stealin' a young girl's heart, just like Gene and Roy
Singin' those campfire songs, oh, I should've been a cowboy

I might've had a sidekick with a funny name
Running wild through the hills chasing Jesse James
Ending up on the brink of danger
Riding shotgun for the Texas Rangers

Go west, young man, haven't you been told?
California's full of whiskey, women and gold
Sleepin' out all night 'neath the desert stars
With a dream in my eye and a prayer in my heart

I should've been a cowboy, I should've learned to rope and ride
Wearin' my six-shooter, ridin' my pony on a cattle drive
Stealin' a young girl's heart, just like Gene and Roy
Singin' those campfire songs, oh, I should've been a cowboy


This song obviously pays homage to Gene Autry and Roy Rogers.  My sisters and I played it at our father’s funeral.  We did so for two reasons.  First, because my father loved all things “cowboy”.  He owned horses, went to horse shows, and rode all over the country, all while never missing an episode of either “Bonanza” or “Gunsmoke”.  As a child, I was included in most all of these endeavors.

More to the point, my father, Cleo Eugene Jackson, Jr., went by the name “Gene”.  His younger (and only) brother, Roy Larry Jackson, went by the name “Roy”.  In my life, I have been blessed to go quite a few places, meet quite a few people, and accomplish quite a few things.  And yet, I sometimes wonder if I should’ve simply been a cowboy instead, just like Gene and Roy ultimately were at heart!

“Should’ve Been a Cowboy” eventually sold 3,000,000 copies, certifying it as three times Platinum.  And yet, Toby is best known for another song:  “Courtesy of the Red, White, and Blue”.  Released in 2002, it was certified four times Platinum, selling over 4,000,000 copies!

This song encouraged a nation that was reeling from the recent September 11th attacks.  It also inspired and motivated an entire generation of American service personnel, whose job it then was to stand up to evil, protect our nation, and right a terrible wrong!

This latter task was embraced even further by Keith, as he went on to become an avid USO supporter who performed for more than 250,000 troops in 17 countries over the next two decades.  These concerts invariably ended with a rendition of another of his smash hits, “American Soldier”, a salute to each of the five branches of service present, and a toast to them via his ubiquitous “Red Solo Cup”.

These concerts, and hit his music, may well ultimately prove to be his greatest legacy.

Keith’s family has announced a private ceremony for mid-February.  Thereafter, a memorial service will be announced.  At the latter, no doubt a bazillion country music stars will be present.  As well they should be.  More to the point, an entire country will be present – if not in person, at least in spirit.  As well they should be. 

Why?  Because it is only fitting that that we should gather to celebrate the life of a modern American success story – a nobody who became a somebody, a single man who became an everyman, and superman who remained a common man – all for doing little more than relating to each of us in our daily struggles.

Various television networks are airing documentaries about Toby this week.  The internet is also awash with accolades for him.  Indeed, Sirius XM Satellite Radio has even devoted an entire channel to him and his music.

It was while listening to the latter that I heard a very significant affirmation by Garth Brooks, who said that Toby had done something that few people ever actually do in life, in that he had left something behind that would outlive him. 

Wow!  How profound!

For me at least, here lies the greatest takeaway from Toby Keith’s life.   He had originally wanted to be a football player.  But that door was closed to him.  He then wanted to make a career in the oil business. That door also was soon closed to him.  Undeterred, he decided to fall back on what he knew all along was a God-given talent.  Thereafter, he began honing his musical skills, repeatedly putting them to use as a performer.  Then, having done all he could, he patiently waited to see what would come of it.

The Bible admonishes us as much.  In the First New Testament Letter of Peter (chapter 4, verse 10), we are instructed:  “As good stewards of the manifold grace of God, each of you should use whatever gift he has received to serve one another.”

For my part, I am gifted neither as a singer nor a songwriter.  But I am glad that Toby Keith was gifted in both ways.  Just as I am that he chose to put both of these skill sets to use for the benefit of others.

Still, I do have certain other gifts from God.  And I pray that I will be just as faithful both to discover and to employ these gifts for the benefit of my fellow man as was Toby Keith. 

What I pray for myself, I also pray for you, my friend.  Whatever else happens in your life, don’t come to the end of the line, when the old man wants in, and fret over who and what you should’ve been!!!

SOURCES:

https://www.fanbe.co/artist/toby-keith/achievements/;

https://www.musixmatch.com/lyrics/Toby-Keith/Should-ve-Been-a-Cowboy;

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Courtesy_of_the_Red,_White_and_Blue_(The_Angry_American);

https://www.military.com/off-duty/music/2024/02/06/americans-were-never-supposed-hear-toby-keiths-ass-kicking-post-9-11-battle-song-radio.html.

SCRIPTURE:

https://biblehub.com/1_peter/4-10.htm.

REPURPOSED!

2/5/2024

 
I love the humorous piece Paul Powell once shared titled “You Know You Are A Redneck If”...

- You have at least one old refrigerator on your front porch.
- You can entertain yourself for more than 15 minutes with a fly swatter.
- Your boat has not left the driveway in 15 years.
- You burn your yard rather than mow it.
- The Salvation Army declines your furniture.
- You offer to give someone the shirt off your back and they don’t want it.
- You have the local taxidermist on speed dial.
- You come back from the dump with more than you took.
- You keep a can of Raid on the kitchen table.
- You keep flea and tick soap in the shower.
- You’ve been involved in a custody fight over a hunting dog.
- You have a rag for a gas cap.
- Your house doesn’t have curtains, but your truck does.
- You wonder how service stations keep their restrooms so clean.
- Your lifetime goal is to own a fireworks stand.
- You have a complete set of salad bowls that all say “Cool Whip” on the side.
- Your working TV sits on top of your non-working TV.
- You’ve used your ironing board as a buffet table.
- You’ve used a toilet brush to scratch your back.
- You think fast food is hitting a deer at 65 mph.


Would that I could write any such!  Still, pay particular attention to the eighth assertion:  “You come back from the dump with more than you took.”  Why do I say this?  I’m glad you asked.  You see…

My wife and I live a mere four miles from the local “County Convenience Center”.   That is the official name for what might normally be termed a “Recycling Center”.  For our part, being old school, my wife and I just call it “The Dump”.

Given all this, we elected to forego any weekly garbage collection service.  Despite the fact that our son considers us just plain too cheap to pay for anything, we concluded that we have no intention of shelling out a monthly fee to someone to do something that we ourselves can do for barely one third of that cost!

Besides, there are a great many added benefits to going to “the dump”.  On more than one occasion, my wife and I have stumbled across a discarded piece of junk or broken furniture that sat awaiting disposition, and upon inquiry, have found that we could indeed take possession of it.

Why does this matter?  Because my wife and my daughter have gotten into what I call “junking”.  They acquire old pieces of junk furniture and then repurpose them.  By this I mean that they clean them up, paint them, and/or appropriately “distress” them for resale at their booth in a local “antique boutique” store.

All of this brings to mind the modern phrase “repurposing”.  According to Webster’s Dictionary, to “repurpose” is “to give a new purpose or use to”.  To their credit, my wife and daughter have found innumerable ways to do this for what was once deemed useless and discarded furniture. 

A case in point…  My wife took a standard chest of drawers and removed the bottom three drawers.  She then added shelving so as to make this bottom open area a nook, suitable for displaying any number of items.  Thereafter, she added a coat of paint and distressed the entire piece accordingly.  The result was a masterpiece, which did in fact sell straightaway.

Furniture, of course, is not the only thing that can be repurposed.  Nor indeed, is it.  Far more important entities have been repurposed.  And chief among these are humans being themselves! 

You see, long before the repurposing of furniture ever became a thing, the repurposing of human beings was already a thing.  What is more, it was a divine thing!

After all, God has a divine purpose for each and every one of us.  As the Biblical book of Ecclesiastes (chapter 3, verse 1) states:  “To everything there is a season, and a time for every purpose under heaven.”

And in light of this, whenever we feel that we have been run-down, worn-out, and used-up, we need to remember what) the Lord said to us through His prophet Isaiah (in chapter 43, verse 19):  “Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?  I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert.”

As a run-down, worn-out, and used-up individual (at least from the world’s perspective), I am ever thankful for a Heavenly Father Who sought me out, Who redeemed me, and Who found a whole new future for me!

Clearly, Christ Jesus chose to go to the dump on my behalf.  And although it cost Him supremely, He nonetheless came back with something that may have seemed irredeemable.  He came back with me. Just as He did with all who needed redemption.  That includes you, my friend!

From God’s perspective, we have all now been repurposed.  For that, I, my friend, am thankful.

I can only trust that you are as well!

JOKE SOURCE:

Paul Powell, Laugh and Live Longer:  Good Humor to Brighten and Lighten Your Life (Tyler, Texas:  Self Published, 2008), p. 24.

AVAILABLE ONLINE AT: 

https://www.baylor.edu/content/services/document.php/66830.pdf.

WEBSTER’S REFERENCE:

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/repurpose.

SCRIPTURES:

​

THE GREAT PRETENDER

2/1/2024

 
Back in the day, Tony Williams and the Platters had a smash hit with their song titled “The Great Pretender”.  Covered by nearly a dozen other artists and appearing in multiple television shows and movies, the song eventually received a Grammy Award.  I have been humming that tune in my head over the past few days as I have been observing my grandsons.

Now, I recognize that many of you, my faithful readers, may grow a little weary of me writing about them. But I just cannot help it. They are a hoot!  So much so that I have finally reached the stage of my life where I appreciate the sentiment behind the old bumper sticker that says “Let Me Tell You About My Grandchildren”.  But I digress…

As of late, I have noticed certain recurrent phrases being tossed about among them as they play together.  These include “Hey, tend like we (are doing this or that)…”, “Let’s batend like we (are in this, that, or the other place)”, and “Okay, plike we (are about to experience this or that adventure”.

By now, you will likely have figured out that “tend like”, “batend”, and “plike” are all varied attempts to say “pretend”. “Tend like” is self-evident; “batend” is the result of a four year old attempting to annunciate “pretend”; and in case you wondering, “plike”, I have surmised, is a contraction of “play like”.

The seven of them range in age from 7 to 2.  And clearly, they are all in that magical age where their imaginations run wild!  They can be a cowboy riding a bucking bronco one moment and a fighter pilot flying a jet aircraft the next.  They can go from playing a farmer driving a tractor to being an astronaut flying a rocket the next. 

In “The Merry Wives of Windsor”, Shakespeare has a character named Pistol affirm to another named Falstaff that the world is his oyster.  That phrase has come to mean that anything and everything is open to someone to enjoy, if they will but pursue it.  Remember, pearls are found inside oysters!

The point in all of this is that anything and everything is possible when you are a child.  While you have certain boundaries, you are not yet constrained by the burdens that accompany adulthood.  And therefore, you are free to dream and fantasize and to let your imagination run wild!

Would that we could hang on to that quality as we age.  All too often our imaginations are simply crushed by the overbearing weight of adult responsibilities.  

Of course, in a certain sense, this is to be expected.  After all, does there not eventually come a time when we must all grow up?  One cannot simply play his or her way through life without ever demonstrating some greater level of maturity that involves embracing responsibility. 

As the Apostle Paul put it (in his First New Testament Letter to the Corinthians, chapter 23, verse 11):  “When I was a child, I spoke and thought and reasoned as a child. But when I grew up, I put away childish things.”  One chapter later (chapter 14, verse 20), he further admonished the Corinthian believers to “stop thinking like children” and instead to “think like mature people”.

Still, there is something to be said for the glories of childhood.  Albert Einstein himself once said that imagination is more important than knowledge!  His point, in part, was that the preeminent quality of childhood is superior to the preeminent quality of adulthood.  Many a scientific breakthrough has occurred as a result!

Of course, Jesus, too, praised the qualities of childhood.  Only He did so, not in the context of imagination and knowledge, but in the context of reason and faith.  In the New Testament Gospel of Matthew (chapter 18, verse 3), He tells us that unless we become like little children, we will never enter the Kingdom of Heaven!  His point is that a simple, childlike faith (and not some complicated, protracted, reasoned discourse) is all that our Heavenly Father requires for our salvation and eternal life!

In light of that, I, for one, exult in being a simple child of God!

I hope you do as well.

SOURCES:

HIT SONG:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Pretender.

PHRASE ORIGIN:

https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/21713/what-is-the-meaning-and-origin-of-the-common-phrase-the-world-is-your-oyster#21757;

https://nosweatshakespeare.com/quotes/famous/the-worlds-your-oyster/;

https://linguaholic.com/linguablog/the-world-is-your-oyster/.

SCRIPTURES:

https://biblehub.com/1_corinthians/13-11.htm;

https://biblehub.com/1_corinthians/14-20.htm.

    Cleo E. Jackson, III

    Occasionally I will add
    a few thoughts to my blog. If you find them inspirational, I will be
    honored.

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