Author: Dave Burchett

  • Stocking Stuffers…

    I love your feedback. Here are some stocking stuffers gleaned from recent comments from you.



    • I have received a lot of fun and favorable feedback to my post about what sound the cattle were making when they were “lowing” during the lyrics of “Away in a Manger”. Who knew that an intrepid reader of this humble blog would speak cow? Reader Leslie took the time to let me know that lowing really is a distinctive cow sound. According to Leslie, the official bovine linguist of this blog, lowing is “when you hear a mother cow ‘talk’ to her calf, you will hear a lowing. It is a very low and soft type of moo. Most mooing has a high pitch at the end of it. Lowing is soft and comfortable.” I think you can see that the time invested in this blog is well worth it when you impress friends and family with this little factoid. Thanks Leslie!

    • Gary L. Burchett wrote a rather brief note. “Hey Dave, We may be related.” Gary didn’t tip his hand about whether he was hopeful or fearful that he might be related to a “Bad Christian”. Well Gary, since there aren’t a whole lot of us Burchetts we may well be kin. My litmus test for family connection is to reference one of my relatives from Kentucky. His name was Grass Burchett. Yep. That was his name. It is unlikely that you would not notice a relative named Grass. So if Grass Burchett is in your genealogy we are related for sure. If not…you may have caught a break.

    • Shawn from Ohio is the official agnostic of this site (not sure if he speaks cow).  I have a minor bone to pick with my buddy from the Buckeye state. In a recent post about how people search for meaningless info on web search engines I posed a list of questions that were worth searching. Shawn wrote this in response.

    “Sadly missing from both lists (sorry, hope this isn’t too harsh) is TRUTH. Is truth so grotesque that we don’t want to talk of it? Are we that scared of what is true and want only “answers”? Are we out to confirm ours, or other’s conclusions of what their presupposed “answers” are? Can we not “handle the truth”? Not THE Truth, but truth, where ever that may lead.”


    It isn’t too harsh at all and when did you become Jack Nicholson? It is a rather presumptuous suggestion that I am not willing to seek truth (I refuse to do the all caps thing). The list I suggested presupposes a search for truth. If you examine the claims of Christ honestly you cannot consider those statements in a vacuum. Of course I have studied other texts and religions. I am not a “cradle” Christian. I did not grow up with Christianity forced down my throat. I came to faith in Christ after a search much like you are pursuing. So I resent a bit the inference that I am not willing to seek the truth wherever that may lead. I like to think that I am a moderately intelligent person (okay…I lack self-awareness) so I am not interested in wasting my time or money on something that is not true. So please understand that just because you have temporarily reached a different conclusion does not mean we are not both seeking the truth as honestly as we can. So Shawn, I love you like a brother (and a Buckeye) and our legions of “Bad Christians”  will be praying for you.  



    Bonus stocking stuffer…


    My nomination for the most obvious lyric ever written is awarded to the Beach Boys.  In their tune “Little Saint Nick” the boys let us know this incredibly insightful piece of information.


    Christmas comes this time each year!


    (To be faithful to the text I will show it in context)


    It’s the little Saint Nick
    Ooooo, little Saint Nick
    It’s the little Saint Nick
    Ooooo, little Saint Nick


    Ahhhhhh
    Oooooooo
    Merry Christmas Saint Nick
    Christmas comes this time each year


    So if the Christmas holiday has been sneaking up on you perhaps you haven’t noticed that Christmas comes at this time every single year! Thanks to the Beach Boys for that nugget.


    Oh my…it’s that time this year. Ahhhhhh. Oooooooo. Merry Christmas!



     


     



     

  • Grading CNN’s After Jesus…

    I must begin with a brief disclosure.



    • I am a member of the media and I am an Evangelical Christian. Both effect how I view a program like After Jesus. While being in television sports production makes me a lightweight to many who deal with hard news…the principles of journalism are the same. Being a member of the media causes me to be both sympathetic and suspicious when I evaluate a project like After Jesus: The First Christians. I am sympathetic because I know how impossible it is to cover such a sweeping topic to the satisfaction of all. I am suspicious because I believe that even the best journalists can allow a bit of bias to creep in…sometimes without even realizing that it is happening. So I was curious about how CNN would handle this topic.

    I believe I am the third member of the Crosswalk bloggers to weigh in on the show. I confess that I am a little intimidated to follow Dr.Albert Mohler and Dr.Ray Pritchard. I am not nearly as smart as Dr.Mohler. And I am embarrassed to reveal that I am not nearly as smart as my friend Ray Pritchard. That is tough to admit. Nonetheless, I was asked to comment on the show so here goes.


    My first impression was from the perspective of working in television production. I was blown away with the production values of the show. The technique used to give a three-dimensional look to classic art was amazing. I know a little bit about the amount of time and money needed to produce those images. I will watch the show again simply to enjoy the beauty of the images. Actor Liam Neeson provided first class narration for the project. From a production viewpoint I would give CNN a solid A.


    From a journalism point of view I would have to grade CNN down a bit. I am not sure why programs like this can never seem to find a spokesperson who has an Evangelical bent. That perspective could have taken this production to a level rarely achieved by a network source. But CNN chose to ignore the perspective of millions of viewers by their selections of experts. I am not criticizing the other choices but it would have been a much better show if the producers had included the balance of evangelical scholars. To any network honcho reading this blog…I can give you names of brilliant and articulate evangelicals to contact for future productions. They do exist. Really. Because that balancing element was not included I would give the show a grade of B for journalistic integrity. That is a good grade but it could have been better.


    The final grade will be on the handling of the topic of the early church. I admit I view this through my bias of being an Evangelical. I thought CNN did a pretty good job of providing background and historical information. Dr.Mohler provides an excellent overview of some of points that might be misleading or needed the balance that other scholars could have provided. I will not plow the same ground that his blog covers. Overall I was pleased with the CNN production. I would give the show a grade of B because some points were made that clearly (to these eyes and ears) deserved counterpoints to be fair.


    The history of the early church is fascinating to me. According to some historians there were many, maybe even dozens, of men claiming to be the messiah during this time. How did Jesus and his rather undistinguished group of followers begin a religion that would number over two billion 2,000 years later. Why did Christianity not quietly fade away like all of those other “messiah movements”? Was it simply, as one expert noted, because Christianity was the “right religion at the right time”? Or is the reason much more powerful than simple timing?


    I agree with Dr.Mohler’s assertion that Christians have nothing to fear from an honest presentation of the facts. I applaud CNN for this effort and challenge them to dig up an evangelical or two for the next production. I would give a final grade of B+ for After Jesus. I often joke that the most powerful apologetic for Christianity is that it continues to flourish despite Representatives like me…and perhaps you. It is indeed a miracle that the humble followers of the rabbi from Galilee changed the world. My buddy Ray Pritchard nicely summarizes the questions that the message of Jesus addresses.


    Why did the message have enduring power? The answer is, Christianity speaks to two problems everyone faces:


    1) What happens when I die?
    2) How can my sins be forgiven?


    No one escapes those questions. Here is the Christian answer:


    The death of Jesus solves the sin problem.
    The resurrection of Jesus solves the death problem.


    After Jesus is a good primer for early church history and it is important for Christians to understand this period of history. I would recommend Rodney Stark’s book The Rise of Christianity: How the Obscure, Marginal, Jesus Movement Became the Dominant Religious Force as a good resource for further study. Understanding the early church helps us to understand our heritage and perhaps where we have lost our focus. The program After Jesus airs again this weekend. It is worth your time. Just make sure the show is a starting point and not the finish line in your quest for the story of the early church.


     

  • Our zeitgeist reveals a sad cultural malaise

    I love to learn new words. So when the term zeitgeist cropped up in a recent news story I immediately sought to find the meaning. Dictionary.com defines zeitgeist as a German noun that means the spirit of the time; general trend of thought or feeling characteristic of a particular period of time. Google has adopted the word to title it’s ongoing charting of the search patterns of internet users around the world. Each calendar year produces the “Year End Google Zeitgeist” which, according to Google spokespeople,  speaks to our collective consciousness. After reviewing the list I would suggest it reflects our collective cultural unconsciousness. I am not sure whether to laugh or cry or alternate the two responses.


    If I hired the guy who does the movie trailers my thoughts would be something like this…(dramatic music)…


    In a world full of suffering, genocide, hunger, loneliness, broken families, spiritual longing, and fear…millions of cyber warriors search for answers to save the planet. Nothing could ever prepare you for what these tattered legions decided was the most important search topic of this year.


    Paris Hilton!


     


     


     


     


     


    Pardon the gap. I had to take a moment to take a knee and catch my breath. Paris Hilton was, inexplicably, number one for the most typed in search item on Google news. That was the stunning revelation for me. I would have thought that Paris Hilton searches would happen at the regular site and more serious inquiries would occupy the news site. Wrong.


    Here are the top 10 news searches of 2006.


      1. paris hilton
      2. orlando bloom
      3. cancer
      4. podcasting
      5. hurricane katrina
      6. bankruptcy
      7. martina hingis
      8. autism
      9. 2006 nfl draft
    10. celebrity big brother 2006


    A few serious concerns managed to work their way onto the list. Cancer concerns edged out Martina Hingis but could not pass Orlando Bloom. Autism searches were slightly more prevalent than people seeking NFL draft info. I don’t want to make this part of my grumpy old man series from earlier this year but I have to admit this list is a little depressing. Perhaps the bleakness of the news drives people to escapist entertainment. But I keep coming back to one huge concern.


    Paris Hilton?


    I know that millions of people search for more important info than the list detailed above on Google and other internet search engines. I regularly get comments from readers who “googled” certain terms and they find my website. So I don’t want to overreact to this list. But Paris Hilton?


    Here is my hope and prayer for 2007. I don’t expect that any of these searches will be number one in the next zeitgeist list. But I do hope that millions will take the time to search for topics like these…


    10. How can I find significance?
      9. How can I find joy and contentment?
      8. What happens after I die?
      7. What really matters in this life?
      6. How can I make a difference?
      5. How can I find strength to endure trials?
      4. Can faith help my family?
      3. Is the Bible relevant today?
      2. Who is Jesus Christ?
      1. What does that mean to me?


    Even the men who followed Jesus for His three years of ministry had to answer many of the questions above. Jesus asked numbers one and two directly in this account from the Gospel of Matthew.


    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?”


    And that is the question that all of us must answer. If I could give you any gift this Christmas I would love to give you  the ability to consider the claims of Christ without the bias and baggage of bad experiences. There are people who have damaged the cause of Christ because of their false teachings, sin, and ungodly behavior. People have been deeply wounded by people who loudly lift the banner of Christ. I can not deny that fact. But that does not change the fact that I must answer this question.


    “Who do you say I am?”


    Peter responded to the question.


    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.”


    I believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of the living God. I believe that Jesus became flesh and came to earth on this event that most of us call Christmas. I know that belief has changed my life. I encourage you to consider the question. A relationship with Jesus is worth the search.


     


  • John’s pain is also ours

    I value nearly all of the comments I receive from readers of these humble ramblings. Occasionally I get a mean-spirited post that promptly finds it’s way into the cyber trash can for all of eternity. We have one basic rule at “Bad Christian” World Headquarters.

    Verily, verily, all words that proceedeth out of thy posts and thy comments shall be civil…thus saith the one who pays the server bills.


    King James style rules just sound more authoritative. Some comments that reach this site touch me deeply and that happened today. A reader named John left these comments after reading yesterday’s post about the Time Person of the Year nominations followed by my nominations for people of the year. Here are some of John’s comments.


    Thanks for sharing your thoughts about these amazing men and women of God.


    I’ve just stepped through some deep valleys and there were times when i had difficulties in believing that God is good. When a super-hard blow came yesterday, i lost all feeling and was totally nonchalant about life.


    I’ve lost nights of sleep and have not been eating due to this distressing season – but your post helped to remind me that there is still a loving God – *even if* He does seem so distant and far and even if my questions of “What’s going on, where will this lead to” are not answered.

    My heart ached for John. I have been there, done that, didn’t have the energy to get the t-shirt. I have no idea what trials he is going through. But I am asking our little band o’ bad Christians to pray for him. I remembered an earlier post that I had written about a song I love by Andrew Peterson. Please forgive me for the re-run of that blog. I hope John returns today to read this and I hope he knows that the body of Christ cares about him. I also pray there is something in this article that will encourage him.

    One year ago  Andrew Peterson was not even on my playlist radar. Youngest son Brett suggested I should check out Peterson after he had performed at a chapel service at Baylor University. Andrew Peterson quickly moved to my top-rated playlist. The iPod shuffle today landed on a haunting and beautiful song called “After the Last Tear Falls”. Andrew Peterson has filled part of the void that I felt when Rich Mullins was tragically killed almost ten years ago. His ability to use the power of music to portray truth is reminiscent of Mullins. Here are some lyrics from today’s song.


    After the last tear falls
    After the last secrets told
    After the last bullet tears through flesh and bone
    After the last child starves
    And the last girl walks the boulevard
    After the last year that’s just too hard


    There is love
    Love, love, love
    There is love
    Love, love, love
    There is love


    Andrew Peterson gives me a powerful reminder that in this fallen world, full of sin and pain, there is a love that can save me. He recognizes that trouble will not escape followers of Jesus. In the midst of our cancer journey Joni and I have felt His love. That love and grace should be my focus as I navigate this crazy and confusing world.


    After the last disgrace
    After the last lie to save some face
    After the last brutal jab from a poison tongue
    After the last dirty politician
    After the last meal down at the mission
    After the last lonely night in prison


    There is love
    Love, love, love
    There is love
    Love, love, love
    There is love


    Satan tells me there can be no love from a God that allows such pain. The truth is that I am God’s hands and feet to reach out to a wounded world. If everyone who has claimed the name of Christ got serious about doing something tangible we would make a real difference. Would such a concerted effort eliminate all pain and suffering? Of course not. But the body of Christ could make an incredible difference by practicing sacrificial living, giving, and service. There is love. We need to reflect that love. The body of Christ needs to focus on what unites us instead of what divides us.


    And in the end, the end is
    Oceans and oceans
    Of love and love again
    We’ll see how the tears that have fallen
    Were caught in the palms
    Of the Giver of love and the Lover of all
    And we’ll look back on these tears as old tales


    Andrew Peterson’s message is powerful. Someday we will see how God worked in the ugly fallenness of this planet to accomplish His purpose. I once heard a pastor say that he expected to spend the early part of eternity walking around heaven making comments like these.


    “Oh, I get it now.’
    “Now I see how God was working.”
    “I understand why that happened now.”


    In the end, there is love. Sometimes I fear my actions don’t reflect that I really believe that with complete certainty. That is why I am grateful for the trials. The good times are fun. But only the hard times slowly mold me a very tiny bit more in His image. In those really hard times I truly realize that there is love.


    John finished his comment with these words.


    I’ll just take a leaf from their books and learn from them. I’m glad that they lived a life where they trusted in God’s goodness. if they could hold on to God (and I’m sure its not easy), i think i could at least give it another good go at it.


    The people I wrote about in yesterday’s post are not superhuman. They are, however, super dependent on the knowledge that God is holy and good, Jesus is their advocate before the Father, and the Holy Spirit is their comfort in the trial. I hope that you see that God is still there through His people. I don’t know why you are going through your trial. I do know that Jesus loves you. And so do His people. And His people are praying for you and rejoicing that you are going to give it another go at it. May God meet you as you step out in faith.

  • Congratulations to you, and you, and you, and you….

    Steve Martin closed a comedy CD with this classic bit….


    You’ve been great, I’d like to thank each and everyone of you for coming out tonight:


    Thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you….(you get the point, the bit kept going)


    Now Time Magazine has one upped Martin’s attempt to suck up to everyone by naming Me (and You) as Person of the Year!


    TIME_PERSON_OF_THE_YEAR_sff_NYR104_20061216205739


    I am sharing the award with millions of my closest and dearest friends. I was awarded this pretigious nomination (along with those other people) based on this criteria.


    The winners this year were anyone using or creating content on the World Wide Web.


    Since the criteria was not for creating “good” content I can, with clear conscious, accept my nomination as Person of the Year. This joins my list of lifetime accomplishments that includes being a member of Sam’s Club, standing somewhat uncomfortably next to Jack Nicholson at a Forum restroom during a Laker NBA game, and directing the television broadcast of the baseball game that featured the baseball bouncing off of Jose Conseco’s head and over the fence for a home run. Yes, it is an amazing life I have led.


    I think Time’s copout is a bit disappointing but it is generating the desired publicity and office patter. However, I have some ideas for Time if they are looking for real persons of the year. I would nominate some people who have demonstrated grace, courage, and what it really looks like to be a follower of Jesus. Last January I nominated our friends Bob and Susan. That nomination remains intact. This is what I wrote in January of this year about Bob and Susan.


    These are two people that have affected my life for better because of their unquenchable faith. Susan has been battling cancer for a couple of very long years. The chemotherapy caused a reaction that severely damaged Susan’s neurological responses. Her balance, coordination, and speech were all profoundly affected. Yet everytime we visit she ends up encouraging me with her smile, spirit, and strength. Bob has cared for Susan with a dedication and love that embarrasses me. Bob went for months sleeping only minutes at a time and yet he served and loved his wife without complaint. He had pledged to love her through better or worse and, unlike so many of us, he stuck to the pledge. I had always wondered exactly what Paul meant in Ephesians when he wrote that husbands are to love your wives just as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her. I left Bob and Susan’s house after one memorable visit with that Scripture verse reverberating through my thick noggin. I had just seen the working model of how a husband can love his wife like Christ loved the church. Recently Susan personally dictated a Christmas letter that put the whole thing in perspective for me. For this family who has been through so much to be grateful for God’s blessings is an amazing demonstration of faith that is real. Faith that works even when the sky is dark. I can talk about apologetics. I can argue the validity of the ancient records. I can present the evidence for Jesus in historical documents. But nothing demonstrates the amazing grace and presence of a living God more than watching how men and women who love the Lord deal with such adversity. There are many stories of people who live a life that truly reflects the power of God living within them. You just don’t hear about them often enough. Pray for Bob and Susan as they trust God in every moment. They don’t make the news and they won’t be on the cover of Time. But in the midst of disappointing actions by too many Christians in the year of our Lord 2006 they are a beacon that shows that my faith is not only real…it works at the most difficult times. How can you endure such a trial? Paul begged for a trial to be taken away and received this response.


    “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.”


    It cannot be explained how the Holy Spirit comforts and sustains you in those trials. Joni and I have experienced it through the death of our daughter. I have recently seen it in the lives of my friends. I am grateful that I have had the privilege of sharing my life with these special followers of Christ. I hope that I will pass the future tests and trials of life like the example they have set for me.


    I get chills as I read those words. Who knew that Joni and I would have the chance to trust Jesus in the midst of our own trial with Joni’s breast cancer just two months later. And as we have walked through the valleys of fear and trials He has been right there with us every single step of the way. And Bob and Susan have stepped outside their own problems to show love and concern to us as we learn how to trust Him during adversity. Joni and I often think of Bob and Susan when we start to grow discouraged and we soldier on. Because of their grace filled example we have seen how Jesus works in the midst of the storm.


    I would also nominate Ed and Judy. I wrote about a recent setback in my friend Ed’s battle with cancer in a recent post. Here is Ed’s description of a difficult night.


    Judy and I appreciate your prayers that carried us through a long, dark night. As you know by now, the main source of discomfort for me and concern is the “skin issue” once again. Last night was the first night off meds–pain meds, sleeping meds, antibiotic meds.–every hour filled with itching, skin falling off, twinges of pain in the knee, and, as you might imagine, anxiety.


    With decades of studying about, relating to, walking with, and telling others about “Our Father” in my life, I was able to focus my thoughts on a comforting phrase from the New Testament–Abba Father (Romans 8:15).


    So you have not received a spirit that makes you fearful slaves. Instead, you received God’s Spirit when he adopted you as his own children. Now we call him, “Abba, Father.”  NLT


    This is an endearing and intimate title for God the Father that could be translated, “Father, my  own dear Father.” It is the title a child uses to relate to a father when the child knows that he or she is dear to Him, the one He delights in.


    So, last night was so much more than a night of malaise, it was a night I spent on my Father’s lap, talking with Him about my fears, feelings, and hurts. It is the upside of suffering for the child of God–deepening intimacy with Abba Father.  Please continue to pray that the knee will continue to improve, the rash will stop, and that I can return to my life with these lessons of faith in my heart.


    Once again I am humbled in my puny walk with Jesus. That is an amazing line. “The upside of suffering for the child of God is deepening intimacy with Abba Father.”  Ed has weathered this storm, is doing well and I am sure those lessons of faith are deeply ingrained in his heart.


    Which brings me to my other person of the year. My bride. How can I ever doubt the courage, strength, dignity, and faith of this amazing woman? She has endured six months of chemotherapy, two months of radiation, and numerous setbacks with trust and determination. She is my hero and my person of the year. I write silly blogs and direct sporting events. Susan, Ed, and Joni have stepped up and stared the giant in the face without backing down. You will never be able to convince me that Jesus doesn’t work in the real world. I have seen it.


     


     


     

  • Finishing up the gift list for Jesus

    I love Dave Barry. As long as he is alive I will not have the weirdest brain on the planet. Here is his take on the secularizing of Christmas greetings.

          Once again, we come to the Holiday Season, a deeply religious time
    that each of us observes, in his own way, by going to the mall of his
    choice.

        In the old days, it was not called the Holiday Season; the Christians
    called it “Christmas” and went to church; the Jews called it “Hanukkah” and went to synagogue; the atheists went to parties and drank. People passing each other on the street would say “Merry Christmas!” or “Happy Hanukkah!”or (to the atheists) “Look out for the wall!”

        These days, people say “Season’s Greetings,” which, when you think
    about it, means nothing. It’s like walking up to somebody and saying
    “Appropriate Remark” in a loud, cheerful voice. But “Season’s Greetings”
    is safer, because it does not refer to any actual religion. Some day, I
    imagine, even “Season’s Greetings” will be considered too religious, and
    we’ll celebrate the Holiday Season by saying “Have a nice day.”

    There is a lot of humor and an uncomfortable amount of truth in those paragraphs. And while I will be going to the mall of my choice this week with my beloved this is also a deeply religious time for me. For me this is a time to celebrate and marvel at the concept of God becoming man. The past two posts have offered some gift ideas to give Jesus on His upcoming birthday. It is an odd concept indeed that we generally give Christmas gifts to everyone but the one who is having a birthday. So if you are a late arriver we have been looking at the gifts of the Magi (wisemen) to see if we can get some last minute ideas. The first gift was gold and the second gift was frankincense. The third gift given by the magi to Christ child was myrrh. 
     
    Myrrh is an aromatic gum produced from a thorn bush and it is obtained in the same manner as frankincense. The bush is gashed and the resin bleeds out and is collected. However, if frankincense represents sweetness, myrrh represents bitterness, at least to the taste. Myrrh was used chiefly in embalming the dead, (John 19:39) Nicodemus brought Myrrh and aloes to wrap the body of Jesus. 

    Myrrh was a commodity of great value for early commerce.

    As they sat down to eat their meal, they looked up and saw a caravan of Ishmaelites coming from Gilead. Their camels were loaded \with spices, balm and myrrh, and they were on their way to take them down to Egypt. (Genesis 37:25) 

    The Psalms tell us that myrrh was a valued perfume.

    All your robes are fragrant with myrrh and aloes and cassia; 
    from palaces adorned with ivory 
    the music of the strings makes you glad.  .(Psalms 45:8).

    Myrrh kept its fragrance for several hundred years when stored in an alabaster pot. Myrrh also had medicinal qualities, sometimes mingled with wine to form a painkilling drink. That was offered to Jesus on the cross to ease His suffering. 

    Then they offered him wine mixed with myrrh, but he did not take it. (Mark 15:23)

    So the Magi brought myrrh as a gift of great value but also as a foreshadowing of the human suffering that Jesus took upon Himself when He came into our world. So what can we give to Jesus in response to His willingness and love to take on suffering and death on our behalf? How about giving the gift of being willing to die to our self…our selfish desires…our own agenda? It is a daily choice that followers of Jesus make to live like that. We ought to consider others as more important than ourselves (see Rom. 12:10). We can’t do that unless we first learn to die to ourselves. The Message has an interesting take on Colossions 3.

    So if you’re serious about living this new resurrection life with Christ, act like it. Pursue the things over which Christ presides. 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. Your old life is dead. Your new life, which is your real life–even though invisible to spectators–is with Christ in God. He is your life.

    Jesus is my life. And I want to be serious about living this resurrection life in 2007 and beyond. During the hustle and bustle of the Christmas season I need to take time to remember that. So let’s review our potential shopping list for Jesus on His birthday. Perhaps you would like to give Jesus the gift of more time with Him.  How about the gift of really believing that Jesus is Lord over all…not Lord over what you and I select? Perhaps you are ready to take the faith step of being willing and ready to die to your desires so that you can serve the needs of others.

    There are just ten days until we celebrate the birthday of Jesus. He gave us a gift that we cannot repay when He surprised earth by bringing Heaven to this planet on Christmas Day. So it seems appropriate to wrap a little something for Jesus and present it to Him this year. Merry Christmas!

  • More gift ideas for Jesus on His birthday…

    As a public service I am providing a shopping guide for things you can give to Jesus on His upcoming birthday. Let’s be honest…giving the King of Kings and Lord of Lords a unique gift is really tough. Yesterday’s post examined the gifts brought to the young Christ child over 2,000 years by the three wise men, I had hoped that examining what the Magi brought might jump start our gift giving ideas.  By the way, there is a plaque that is available in catalogs this year with the title “What if They Had Been 3 Wise Women?” Here is the conclusion….


    They would have asked directions.
     Brought practical gifts
     Made a casserole
     Cleaned the stable
    ‘ Changed the baby
     And there would be peace on earth.


    Alert readers from yesterday remember that the first gift was gold. That is always a lovely gift. But now it gets a little tougher.


    Then they opened their luggage and presented gifts: gold, frankincense, myrrh. Matt 2:11 (MsgB)


    The second gift brought out of the luggage by the Magi was frankincense. Frankincense is a very costly and fragrant incense. It is a gum distilled from a tree found in the Middle East. It is a white resin or gum, and is obtained by slitting the bark of the “Arbor Thurisfrom”, allowing the gum to flow out (there will be a test). The word actually means “whiteness”, referring to the white colored juice which flows out of the wound in the tree. This gum hardens for three months, and is gathered at the end of the summer, and sold in the form of “tears”, or clumps of hardened resin. Frankincense is highly fragrant when burned, and was, therefore, used in worship, where it was burned as a pleasant offering to God. It is interesting to note that this sweet smelling resin comes as the result of the tree’s woundedness and pain. It is cut open and bleeds to give us the sweet smelling scent. The spiritual parallel is interesting. When we can worship God in the midst of our sorrow, our brokenness, then it is a sweet smelling offering to our Lord. 


    King David wrote, “The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise.” (Psalms 51:17 )


    Much emphasis in worship today is on “celebration”. No time for agonizing and tears, only for shouts of joy and victory. While joyful praise is acceptable and pleasing to God, tears, like frankincense resin, oozing out of our hurts, broken hearts, and tears of repentance are especially pleasing – a sweet smelling sacrifice to the Lord. Anyone can dance and shout when blessings are flowing, and everything is going their way. But true worship happens when we must overcome feelings of self-pity, fear and doubt. So how can we offer a pleasing aroma to God?



    How about giving Jesus the gift of belief for His birthday? You believe that Jesus is the Son of God…that He came to earth as a little baby over 2,000 years ago. That he lived a Holy life and died on a cross as perfect sacrifice for my sin and your sin. I would guess that most of the people who stumble onto this blog believe that. But what I am talking about is really believing God in every circumstance.


    Think about giving the gift of really believing in Jesus for every need this coming year.



    Believing that you are an amazing one of a kind creation whom God has placed where you are and with gifts that can be uniquely used where you are.



    “You’re blessed when you’re content with just who you are-no more, no less. That’s the moment you find yourselves proud owners of everything that can’t be bought. Matthew 5:5 (MsgB) 


    Later in the gospel of Matthew we find this…If you puff yourself up, you’ll get the wind knocked out of you. But if you’re content to simply be yourself, your life will count for plenty. Matthew 23:12 (MsgB)



    I believe that comparison is one of Satan’s primary strategies to cause despair. You are wonderfully made by the Creator of the Universe and you are valuable. Michelangelo made a nearly perfect sculpture of David. The statue’s muscular tension is precisely rendered down to the muscle contraction on his forehead as David is poised to go into battle. It is perhaps the most important sculpture in the world and it was carved from one large block of marble. Why is that unique? Two other artists rejected the block of marble because of imperfections. Michelangelo saw the beauty in that block of marble that others did not. Jesus sees the beauty in you that others might not. Can you believe in a Jesus that can take you, even if you feel like a rejected block of marble, and then lovingly chip away until you become a beautiful work of art? Can you give Jesus the gift of believing that He is really there with you…as your Good Shepherd…ready to bind up your wounds and lead you to still waters.


    “I am the Good Shepherd. The Good Shepherd puts the sheep before himself, sacrifices himself if necessary. A hired man is not a real shepherd. The sheep mean nothing to him. He sees a wolf come and runs for it, leaving the sheep to be ravaged and scattered by the wolf. He’s only in it for the money. The sheep don’t matter to him. “I am the Good Shepherd. I know my own sheep and my own sheep know me. In the same way, the Father knows me and I know the Father. I put the sheep before myself, sacrificing myself if necessary. You need to know that I have other sheep in addition to those in this pen. I need to gather and bring them, too. They’ll also recognize my voice. Then it will be one flock, one Shepherd. This is why the Father loves me: because I freely lay down my life. And so I am free to take it up again. No one takes it from me. I lay it down of my own free will. I have the right to lay it down; I also have the right to take it up again. I received this authority personally from my Father.” John 10:11-18 (MsgB)


    The Good Shepherd had the choice and chose to give us the marvelous gift of laying down His life and then taking it up again. Believing Him…really believing Him…would make a lovely gift to Jesus on His birthday.