Archive for the 'death' Category

Twenty Years Ago Today

wreck0001.jpg Once upon a time there lived a man,
And his name was Hezekiah.
He walked with God both day and night,
But he didn’t want to die.
He cried, O Lord, please let me live,
Death is close, I know.
Lord smiled down on Hezekiah,
Gave him fifteen years to go.

wreck0004.jpgIn those days Hezekiah became sick and was at the point of death. And Isaiah the prophet the son of Amoz came to him, and said to him, “Thus says the LORD: Set your house in order, for you shall die, you shall not recover.” Then Hezekiah turned his face to the wall and prayed to the LORD, and said, “Please, O LORD, remember how I have walked before you in faithfulness and with a whole heart, and have done what is good in your sight.” And Hezekiah wept bitterly. Then the word of the LORD came to Isaiah: “Go and say to Hezekiah, Thus says the LORD, the God of David your father: I have heard your prayer; I have seen your tears. Behold, I will add fifteen years to your life. I will deliver you and this city out of the hand of the king of Assyria, and will defend this city.

Isaiah 38:1-6, ESV

wreck0003.jpgIt was, not fifteen, but twenty years ago today that God brought me right up to the edge. Oh how thankful I am for the extra years:

  1. To see all of my children reach adulthood and marry.
  2. To enjoy four grandchildren, and anticipate the two comming this fall.
  3. To enjoy the company of my wife.
  4. To give praise to my Savior for saving me and keeping me.

Life is precious. Make the most of every day God gives you. Serve him with your whole being. It is never too late to start over fresh. Every day God gives you is another chance to make a new start for him.

Reflections on the Resurrection, 2008

Reflections on the Resurrection

Because of its proximity to the Jewish Passover, we observe and celebrate the death, burrial and resurrection of our Lord and Savior on a sure, if not exactly fixed, spot on the calendar. Even the day of the week of Christ’s resurrection is explicitly revealed to us in sacred Scriptures. Isn’t it ironic that, instead of Easter, most in America give far more attention and money to the “observance” and “celebration” of Christmas, a sure event in history, yet which has no sure anchor on the calendar. I am glad that God has seen fit to have it thus. I do not believe it is a coincidence that it turned out that way, for the Resurrection of Jesus is far more important than his birth. Wise Solomon told us - and he ought to know, from bitter experience - that the finish line is far more important than the starting blocks. Now I know that it is impossible to finish something that never had a beginning, but the point is that many things get started that end badly, or are never finished at all. Jesus finished well.

You can say what you want about the Easter egg rising out of pagan roots. I see nothing wrong with “stealing” the enemy’s symbols and redeeming them for our own purposes. Say what you want; the egg is the perfect illustration for new life. As a kid my cousins and I would hunt those eggs as many times as we could get the adults to hide them. By the time we were finished most of the color was worn off of the ones we could find. We always left a few behind for the dog later in the day, and the mower later in the week. Pagan as it all may have been, I don’t remember an Easter when the grown-ups didn’t remind us of Jesus’ rising from the grave early on that first Easter morning, conquering over sin and death. We knew what Easter was all about. Our kids are grown now and have children of their own. This year I can’t wait to hide ‘em as many times as they want us to, and I can’t wait to tell them about my marvelous Savior who rose from the grave on Easter morning, and will raise all who are his on the last day.

I especially appreciate the happy Providence of the confluence of Easter and the vernal equinox, commonly known as spring time. I hate winter (There, I’ve said it.) with all of its uncertainty of bluster and bite. Most who say they love the winter don’t have to work in it. Even here in Oklahoma it is all I can do to endure the winter months. Maybe it is worse for me because I work mostly at night, and I hate the darkness just as much as winter. Maybe it is worse here because we will have a few nice days followed by a few miserable days, and then you start the cycle all over again, continuing with general uncertainty from Christmas till Easter. This winter has been especially hard, with a massive state-wide ice storm in December which left very few trees without significant damage. Many trees were beyond help and had to be cut down. We finally decided to cut down four large Pines and one huge Sycamore. New trees can be planted to replace the old, however. This winter took something from me far more important than a few Pine trees. Last month the winter of this mortal world took my Mom. So the coming of this Spring has been so much the picture of Easter to me: New Life, Colorful and Fragrant, coming from (seeming) dead, cold and gray; bringing heartache, depression, misery and dispair. That is what Jesus did when he rose from the grave.

My mother loved our little acreage. It seems that Easter was her first outing of each year to come up to see what was new, what had survived, thrived, or died. We shared a love for all things green and blooming out of doors. She would see something in a magazine and I would grow some for her, but we would both try it. Anything new I had discovered, she would want to try it too. Though we only lived sixty miles away, the soil at our place was a gardener’s paradise, while Mom and Dad’s soil came from that other place we won’t mention. She made up the deficit by sheer determination. Not everything, but a good bit survived down there. Some things even did well. She sure could grow a mean garden in that muck.

Every year it was the same. Mom would slip out after the afternoon feast, before anyone was ready to hide Easter eggs, so that she could walk among the young trees and shrubs alone. I know; she wanted to get out, away from other family members to steal a smoke. She was private like that, ashamed of a habit of a half-century’s span, but that was okay. I loved her. She was my Mom. But she really did go out to see, to study, to enjoy the new life peeking out, to see a picture of the Resurrection in every green spear and pink bud. I’m going to miss seeing her slight figure out there this Easter. But the Resurrection of our Lord and Savior is going to have a richer, more personal interest for me this year as I ponder its absolute necessity. I may have to take a stroll out there myself, before we hide the Easter eggs, just to see what she saw.

Jesus Lives, And So Shall I

Jesus lives, and so shall I.
Death! thy sting is gone forever!
He who deigned for me to die,
Lives, the bands of death to sever.
He shall raise me from the dust:
Jesus is my Hope and Trust.

Jesus lives, and reigns supreme,
And, his kingdom still remaining,
I shall also be with him,
Ever living, ever reigning.
God has promised: be it must:
Jesus is my Hope and Trust.

Jesus lives, and by his grace,
Vict’ry o’er my passions giving,
I will cleanse my heart and ways,
Ever to his glory living.
Me he raises from the dust.
Jesus is my Hope and Trust.

Jesus lives, I know full well
Nought from him my heart can sever,
Life nor death nor powers of hell,
Joy nor grief, hence forth forever.
None of all his saints is lost;
Jesus is my Hope and Trust.

Jesus lives, and death is now
But my entrance into glory.
Courage, then, my soul, for thou
Hast a crown of life before thee;
Thou shalt find thy hopes were just;
Jesus is the Christian’s Trust.

Flowers That Grow in Beauty

We fade and die like flowers that grow in beauty,
Like tender grass that soon will disappear;
But evermore the love of God is changeless,
Still shown to those who look to him in fear.

Bless him for ever, wondrous in might,
Bless him, his servants that in his will delight.

From Psalm 103, The Psalter, 1912; stanza 4 and refrain from hymn #10 in the original Trinity Hymnal.