How To Tell The Senior Adult is Still Alive

Today, a nurse visited our house on behalf of an insurance company.

Margaret and I are taking out what’s called “long term health insurance” in case either or both of us ever have to go to a nursing home. We’re realists about this, and the last thing we want is to be a burden on our children, who will have their own challenges.

The agent had said the nurse’s visit is to make sure we are real persons, still active, and not a few weeks away from needing to go into assisted living. Makes sense.

She was nice, asked the typical questions about our health histories, that sort of thing. Then, she threw me a curve.

“I’m going to give you a list of ten words,” she said. “Repeat each one after me. At the end, repeat back as many of the ten as you can.”

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What God Did For Me. You too?

Yesterday in the church where I was guest-preaching, the worship leader confessed to the church he had a sin problem. “A major one,” he emphasized.

And no one blinked an eye.

That minister was on safe ground, surrounded as he was by a hundred or so people who also had sin problems.

It was a typical church filled with normal Christians.

I waited patiently for the Lord, and He inclined to me, and heard my cry.

He brought me up out of the pit of destruction, out of the miry clay; and He set my feet upon a rock making my footsteps firm.

And He put a new song in my mouth, a song of praise to our God; Many will see and fear, and will trust in the Lord. (Psalm 40:1-3)

This is a unique scripture. To my knowledge, there is not another like it in all the Bible. No wonder since it’s as sweet and powerful as it’s possible to get. (Get the impression I like this text?)

Those of us who came to the Lord at an early age–I was 11–sometimes say we have no testimony to speak of, nothing dramatic about the change the Lord effected when He saved us. Maybe not, but I’ll tell you something we may be in danger of missing: In the life of any believer who has grown in Christ through the years, God has performed this very same feat, transitioning us from the bad to the good, the low to the high, the binding to the liberating, darkness to life. Life to death.

It’s a continual process for as long as we are in this body and in this world.

I have sinned far more as a Christian than I ever did before coming to Christ. And, if I may be permitted to say so, the Lord has forgiven me for far more since I was saved than He did at the time of my conversion.

Time and again over the 60+ years of my Christian walk, the Lord has heard my cry, lifted me up, set me on the solid rock, put a new song in my mouth.

The gospel hymnwriter clearly loved Psalm 40:1-3–

“I was sinking deep in sin, far from the peaceful shore;

Very deeply stained with sin, sinking to rise no more.

Then the Master of the sea heard my despairing cry.

From the waters lifted me; now safe am I.

“Love lifted me. Love lifted me.

When nothing else could help, love lifted me.”

Three things strike me about this passage; three aspects to the treasure it contains, the radiance it beams forth.

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12 More Scriptures–Verses that mean a great deal to me

Everyone has his choice verses of Scripture, texts that grabbed him and won’t turn him loose and have come to mean a great deal to him.

We posted 12 such texts from the Old Testament, 12 from the Gospels, and 12 more from the rest of the New Testament, and I thought that did it. Later, when another favorite verse would come to mind, I would think, “How could you have left that out? That’s one of the all-time great scriptures!”

So, here we will have the final (I expect) list of 12 verses that we skipped the first time but shouldn’t have!

1. Resurrection: Job 14:14 and 19:25-27.

In the middle of this philosophical/theological discussion between Job and his friends over Why-do-the-righteous-suffer, Job raises the eternal question: “If a man dies, will he live again?” It’s a great question, one everyone wonders about. Every culture has struggled with this issue through all the centuries.

Something inside the human mind takes conflicting positions on this question: we want it to be so, and yet we wonder, “How could it possibly be so?” That is, we hope and we fear at the same time.

It helps to see that Job ended up answering his own question in 19:25-27. “And as for me, I know that my Redeemer lives, and at the last He will take His stand upon the earth. Even after my skin is destroyed, yet from my flesh I shall see God, whom I myself shall behold, and whom my eyes shall see and not another.”

Don’t ever let anyone tell you the Old Testament does not teach a hope of eternal life. We know better. The Jewish scriptures are saturated with insights and promises of Heaven and the afterlife.

2. Praise: Ezra 3:11-13.

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The Week I Drew 1,000 People

Once when I was 16, I picked 350 pounds of cotton in one day.

I did, if you let me define “one day.” Actually, I started at noon and picked until past dark. Next morning, I was in the field before sunrise and picked right up until 12 o’clock, weighed in, and went home.

What had happened was that Junior Romans’ cotton that year was crazy lush, the soft stuff just falling out of the bolls, and I knew this was my chance to set a new personal record. A few days later, in agriculture class at Winston County (Alabama) High School, when my friends began boasting about how much cotton they could pick in one day–for the best, it was 200 or 250 pounds–I casually let drop that my personal best was 350 pounds.

The things we do for bragging rights.

People ask me how many drawings do I think I’ve done over the years. Children will say, “Have you drawn a million people?”

Not even close. In fact, I’d be surprised if I’ve drawn 75,000.

Think of it. A million is one thousand times one thousand. There have been many years when I probably did not draw more than a hundred or two. The last quarter century, however, I’ve gone about it seriously, and may have done 50,000 in this time.

Next week, however, I expect to sketch one thousand people. Here’s how.

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12 New Testament Scriptures That Won’t Turn Me Loose

Having listed a dozen favorite mind-grabbing texts in the four gospels that define so much of my ministry, we come now to the rest of the New Testament.

Again, the challenge is choosing twelve. Why, I could get that many out of Romans 8 or Romans 12 alone.

But, here goes.

Twelve New Testament scriptures that have me in a hammer-lock, a death-grip, a loving embrace, and will not turn me loose.

1. Fellowship: Acts 2:42.

“And they were continually devoting themselves to the apostles’ teachng and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer.”

One morning, the church in Jerusalem began the day with 120 members and ended it with 3,120. That was one revival God sent on the Day of Pentecost!

The challenge now for that small bunch of believers was discipling the new converts, grounding them in the faith, assimilating them into the congregation, and establishing them so solidly in godly living that they could live for Jesus no matter what circumstances the future might hold.

We get the impression the discipleship program the church launched was not a formal classroom situation, but was free-floating, fluid, and flexible. Their approach involved four activities:

–The apostles’ doctrine. They didn’t have the New Testament or even the Gospels, but they had the next best thing, the apostles. So, the men who had walked with Jesus for three years now began talking about Him to the new believers. Unbeknownst to them, they were preparing for writing the four gospels.

–Fellowship. Koinonia. The word means to share, to have things in common. Nowhere does scripture define or describe what they did that fell into this category, but I think we know: they hung out together. Sometimes formally–in ministry and classes and projects–and often informally–going for walks, meeting for pizza after church, visiting with each other.

–Breaking of bread. Does this refer to the observance of the Lord’s Supper or to meeting at someone’s house for potluck? Answer: yes. Both. A great way to get to know someone.

–And prayer. Nothing bonds people like praying together.

2. Conflict: Acts 6:1-7.

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12 Gospel Scriptures That Have Branded Me

This is tough, trying to pare down the scriptures that have nurtured me most faithfully over the years from childhood to an even dozen. I was able to pull it off in the Old Testament, but not the New.

The New Testament is the heavy weight, the major force, in the believer’s life–in his study, meditation, doctrine, instruction.

A young pastor friend told me recently he majors on the Old Testament, he loves it best, and that this is where his sermons come from. I told him I was horrified (maybe overdoing it just a tad for effect).

For a disciple of the Lord Jesus Christ, the New Testament is “where it’s at.” The Old Testament is all about roots and background, preparation and anticipation. The Old Testament is filled with stories of God preparing His people, of symbols and prophecies and rituals all of which would be fulfilled in Jesus.

How odd to prefer the rituals and symbols to the reality and substance that is in the Lord Jesus Christ. We must never choose the Old Testament over the New. They are essential, priceless, and complementary, but the New is dominant.

I gladly own up to being a New Testament Christian. Nowhere else on earth do we find the story of Jesus. It’s the only place where we are given His teaching and the doctrines of our faith. It’s where we are given instructions for godly living and directions for faithful ministry during this period between Jesus’ two visitations.

Focusing on the New Testament is not optional for a disciple of Jesus. This is our life. It’s what we are all about. We must become students of the New Testament (and only then, a student of the Old Testament secondarily and indirectly).

Originally, I had thought to post 12 texts from the Old and 12 texts from the New Testaments that mean the most to me, that identify me, that have “branded me.” Bearing out what we’ve just said about the New being more essential for the Lord’s disciple, I’ve found I can’t do that. So, what we will do is post 12 scriptures from the Four Gospels, followed by 12 from the rest of the New Testament.

Here then are twelve Gospel texts that mean a great deal to me. They are part of my DNA, essential aspects of my faith. Anyone running a spiritual autopsy on me would find that these are responsible for my backbone, my heart, and my vision. This I believe.

1. Persecution: Matthew 10:24-26a.

“A disciple is not above his teacher, nor a slave above his master. It is enough for the disciple that he become as his teacher, and the slave as his master. If they have called the head of the house Beelzebul, how much more members of his household? Therefore, do not fear them….”

I wish I had kept every note from preachers and/or their wives who reported to me over the years on the mistreatment they had been dealt in churches they pastored. “Where is God?” some asked. “Why does the Lord let this happen?” “All we wanted to do was serve Him, and now look at what happened.”

My usual response is to give them Matthew 10:24 and say, “The Lord told you when He called you that this was going to happen.”

They say they’d forgotten it. Some say they had expected persecution and trouble, but not from believers. Once again, if they had read–really read, I mean–the Word, they would have seen it, expected it, and prepared for it.

After all, the one who betrayed the Lord Jesus was not an unbeliever, but a disciple who had walked closely with the Lord for three full years.

2. Disciple-making: Matthew 28:18-20.

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12 Old Testament Scriptures With My Name All Over Them

You probably have your list.

If you have been a follower of Jesus for years and have read the Bible through several times, some scriptures more than others have grabbed your attention and held your heart and occupied your mind.

These are mine.

Why twelve? I’m not sure. This Saturday morning, lying awake in the pre-dawn hour before walking on the Mississippi River levee, this was on my mind. Twelve such scriptures in the Old Testament and an equal number in the New. (Note: That was the plan originally. But, once we got into the Gospels, it became apparent that it would be impossible to limit the list that severely. So, we are giving 12 favorites–texts that have branded us!–from the Gospels and 12 more from the rest of the New Testament.)

What follows are texts that identify me, define me, explain and motivate and direct me. They fascinate and instruct me. A hundred other scriptures have spoken to me directly and powerfully, but these are the ones I’ve returned to repeatedly and find myself, in the eighth decade of life, clutching as my own. They have my name on them, so to speak. They are God’s word to me.

We’ll list them in the order in which they’re found in the Bible, followed by a brief commentary as to why we treasure each so highly.

1. Laughter: Genesis 21:6.

“And Sarah said, ‘God has made laughter for me; everyone who hears will laugh with me.'”

In fulfilment of God’s long-awaited and oft-repeated promise, Abraham and Sarah had finally received their son. The 90-year-old mother had given birth to Isaac. The Hebrews pronounced his name as “Yitzhak.” My Old Testament professor, Dr. George Harrison, would tell say, “Sarah named him ‘Laughing Boy.'”

I love to laugh. I like being around laughing people. And, I love Sarah’s statement, “God has made laughter for me.”

God has made laughter for each of us. I love to remind audiences (particularly senior adults), “Some of you have not been getting your daily share!”

It is good to laugh. Laughter is healthy (Proverbs 17:22). The Father in Heaven loves the sound of His children laughing. Laughter is a vote of confidence in God, demonstrating that He is in charge, His promises are sure, and the future is bright, no matter what the circumstances of the moment are threatening.

2. Grace: Exodus 20.

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How to Justify Slavery

On television the other night, I saw something that baffled me.

A New Orleans native (who is also a national celebrity) was being informed by a historian that, after researching his background and lineage, he had uncovered evidence of a relative who had fought on the side of the Confederacy in the Civil War. The celebrity was aghast. “I find it humiliating,” he said, “that a relative of mine would fight to defend slavery.”

The professor, an African-American, told the local fellow, as white as they come, “Well, it’s not you. He lived in the South and almost every male between the ages of 16 and 45 had to go fight in the war.”

Had they asked, I would have added, “There were so many dimensions to that war and so many reasons soldiers took up arms. As one-dimensional as we want to make it now–“They fought to defend slavery!”–it was also about doctrines of States Rights, economics, fear, family, sectional prejudice, peer pressure, and a hundred other things.”

But yes, the bottom line is that whether this nation would be slave or free hung in the balance. We cannot escape that reality.

“America’s Great Debate” has taken over my nighttime reading the past couple of weeks. Subtitled “Henry Clay, Stephen A. Douglas, and the Compromise That Preserved the Union,” this book, written by Fergus M. Bordewich, shows how slavery dominated politics in this country in the years before the Civil War. In 1849-50, Congress had to figure out what to do with California, Texas, New Mexico, and Utah. As they enter the Union, will they be slave or free? Should all new territories brought into the Union be free, as the Wilmot Proviso of 1846 instructed? Where should the borders of these states be? Isn’t California large enough for several states? But if we divide California, what of Texas, which is larger? Texas claimed portions of New Mexico right up to and including Santa Fe. Utah was being called Deseret and might as well have been located on Mars.

Running throughout every discussion, but unspoken–like the 600 pound elephant in the living room which no one wants to mention–was the issue of slavery. This practice was calling the shots on every issue, influencing the votes on every new state entering the Union, and driving the Southerners to insist that each state has the right to override federal laws if they conflict with the state law.  It was coloring every conversation, dictating every vote, poisoning every speech.

Reading of this on-going struggle that brought the U.S. Congress to a virtual standstill in 1849-50, over a century and a half later when slavery is universally acknowledged as the absolute worst idea humans ever concocted and entirely without any defense or justification, we are aghast at the way national leaders spoke of their fellow humans of dark skin, how they justified keeping them in bondage, and the legal maneuvering to protect that most terrible of institutions.

I am a child of the South. Even though all our historical research (what there was of it) shows every relative of ours on both sides of the family to have been poor and owning no slaves whatsoever, some of our relatives fought for the Confederacy. In no way were they fighting to preserve slavery in their minds, although that was the effect of it. They were, as simply as I know how to put it, on the wrong side of that war. It is good that the South lost that war.

Just reading the speeches, writings, and reports of conversation of slavery’s proponents back then horrifies us now. “What were you thinking?” we want to ask them. “What were you using for brains?” “Where was your heart?” “And you called yourselves Christians?” Some of them did.

We are amazed at the way they justified slavery–the way they played with words, twisted history, quoted authorities, cited statistics, claimed the high ground, and assailed those wishing to set the prisoners free.

Here are 10 ways to justify slavery, based on the activities of politicians in the years leading up to the Civil War. In citing these, we hope to hold up a mirror to our own times and the way political leaders would circumnavigate Truth in the name of expediency and furthering their own careers.

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Funeral Lessons: Things You Learn or Relearn When a Close Loved One Dies

Monday and Tuesday nights of this week, I slept in our family farmhouse alone. It’s the first time in my long life I’ve done that. That house was built early in 1954, and ever since my parents have lived in it, never venturing away for more than a day or so. They were the ultimate homebodies. Over the years, whenever I visited them, I never needed to call ahead to see if they would be at home.

They were always home. Always.

Now, the house is empty.

Dad died in November of 2007; Mom died last Saturday, June 2, 2012.

Mom and Pop are united in Heaven. They each lived past their 95th birthday, and Mom almost made it to 96. Longevity is a good thing if you get the living part right. They aced it.

Tuesday, we had Mom’s funeral. Her casket sat at the foot of the church altar just as her youngest son Charlie’s had in April 2006 and Pop’s did 18 months after that.

The same three preachers did Mom’s funeral as did Pop’s (Pastor Mickey Crane, my brother Ron, and I). The songs were different, and maybe the scriptures. But the congregation was much the same.

It felt like the second verse of the same song.

This Thursday morning, lying awake in bed when I wish I could have been sleeping, I thought of lessons you learn or get reinforced in family funerals that you might otherwise miss. I came up with 12; there are probably 500.

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What I Owe to This Lady

My mother went to Heaven yesterday.

Lois Jane Kilgore started life on this earth just on the next ridge from where she ended it. She came and went in the very same bed (when Granny Kilgore died in 1963, mom got the ancient high-poster bed, dresser, etc). This was Route 3, Nauvoo, Alabama. (There are no more “routes,” due to the 911 emergency system needing every street and road to have a name.)

Mom was born July 14, 1916. She died June 2, 2012. Almost 96 years. Of her siblings, she was the last to go.

For most of her life, Mom mistakenly celebrated July 21 as her birthday. I’m not sure why, but no doubt it had to do with their being very rural, her being the sixth child in a family of nine children, and the way doctors kept records back then (meaning: haphazardly).

When she received a copy of her birthday certificate from Montgomery and discovered her birthday to be July 14, my dad feigned shock. “That’s grounds for divorce,” Pop teased. “She was an older woman than I knew.” Her being only 17 and he 21 when they wed–March 3, 1934–she could actually have used a little aging before taking on all she did.

She was the farmer’s daughter. She married a coal miner. Theirs was a hard life together for many years, due to a number of factors: he was no church-goer, he was a hard-worker but also undisciplined in his personal habits, and poverty was a constant companion. But Mom made the most of the life she had chosen.

She was a champion.

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