Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Think on these things

Today Barak Obama, the first U.S. president of African ancestry, is being sworn in as commander-in-chief. President Obama will be taking the oath of office with his right hand placed on a Bible that belonged to Abraham Lincoln. This event also takes place one day after the birthday observance of civil rights leader, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and two days after the Obama family attended their first church service since August 31st (at the 19th Street Baptist Church in Washington, D.C. Founded in 1839.) Wow, ain’t that a whole heaping bunch of historically significant parallels coming together all at once?

Of course from a completely opposite spectrum, Sunday two NFL quarterbacks who led their football teams to victory and the prize of a Super Bowl match-up on February 2nd in Tampa Bay, Florida, are both outwardly vocal about a deep faith in Jesus Christ. Ah yes…herein would comprise the good stuff. One of those increasingly rare times when we sigh just before inhaling that deep breath that puffs out our chest, a moment among moments, one that tends to make we who are among the privileged feel particularly proud to be Americans.

These are instances when we have a chance to just look at the positive’s in life…forget for awhile all the bad things…and maybe even allow ourselves to think, yes…God IS in His heaven and all IS right with the world. That is if you don’t allow yourself to really look too closely at what else is going on in the world around us. Or the fact that there are plenty of people who espouse faith in Jesus Christ who don't wind up being the winners in this lifetime.

Today is also a day when many millions…perhaps billions…will not even be aware of, let alone be acknowledging anything particularly momentous about any of these solely American moments. Beyond the fact they probably couldn’t care less, they’re in the midst of their own life-and-death struggles. And you can imagine for the great majority…life (no matter how many hardships must be endured) is still preferred over the alternative.

Have you got a good answer for that one? Why, given the worst that life is capable of throwing our way would a rotten, miserable, terrible life be preferred over death? Granted, there is that whole uncertainty part about the dying thing...and then shuffling off this mortal coil does seem to have such a permanence to it too. (Did you realize we'll probably be spending a whole lot longer time dead than we ever did alive?)

Here's a twist for you then? You can read in the New Testament book of Philippians…right there in chapter one…the Apostle Paul making the statement, “For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain. If I am to go on living in the body, this will mean fruitful labor for me. Yet what shall I choose? I do not know! (Phil. 1:21, 22 NIV.) Later in the same letter to the Christians in Philippi Paul would pen this comment, “Yes, everything else is worthless when compared with the priceless gain of knowing Jesus Christ as my Lord. I have discounted everything else, counting it all as garbage, so that I may have Christ and become one with him. I no longer count on my own goodness or my ability to obey God’s law, but I trust Christ to save me. For God’s way of making us right with himself depends on faith.” (Phil 3:8, 9 NLT.) How can he say such things? You’d really have to think that Paul must not be in his right mind…then again could it be that Paul really has gotten himself into the proper mindset?

Jesus was a great one for challenging people with hard questions. From the fifth chapter of the gospel of John there’s this situation, “Jesus returned to Jerusalem for one of the Jewish holy days. Inside the city, near the Sheep Gate, was the pool of Bethesda, with five covered porches. Crowds of sick people—blind, lame, or paralyzed—lay on the porches. One of the men lying there had been sick for thirty-eight years. When Jesus saw him and knew he had been ill for a long time, he asked him, ‘Would you like to get well?’” That’s certainly one of those accounts worth reading in full sometime. You could also look in the gospel of Matthew and see this incident, “When Jesus came to the region of Caesarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, ‘Who do people say that the Son of Man is?’


‘Well,’ they replied, ‘some say John the Baptist, some say Elijah, and others say Jeremiah or one of the other prophets.’


Then he asked them, ‘But who do you say I am?’”

Great question. Far more significant than anything anyone else had to say about Jesus…Christ asked each of the twelve men who had been with him for around three years this one crucial question. Here’s how one of those disciples responded, “Simon Peter answered, ‘You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God.’

Jesus replied, ‘You are blessed, Simon son of John, because my Father in heaven has revealed this to you. You did not learn this from any human being.’” (Matt. 16:13-17 NLT.)

I'm going to use this as a place for me to stop this time…and an even better place to pick it up from during my next entry. In the meantime though, I sure hope you’ll give some thought to these questions yourself. By the way, this one comes at no extra charge. It’s another comment made by the Apostle Paul in his letter to the Romans. He writes in chapter 13 verse 1, “Obey the government, for God is the one who put it there. All government has been placed in power by God” (NLT).

As Barak Obama is sworn in by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court this January 20, 2009, everyone should be able to breathe a little easier now knowing that this is God’s man for these times…and I’m also thinkin’ it’s going to be the Cardinals winning it all in the Super Bowl!

Until next time, I remain ever yours regardlessly,

the old-man at the mike-ro-phone

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