Category Archives: News and politics

Vote for character today


What if your candidate was described like the paragraph below. Would that make you more interested in voting for him/her?  

It could be said also they (the reporters) had seen and heard for themselves a [candidate] who was friendly and undisguised, loyal to his party, fond of his family, a man who cared about the country and about them, who believed the business of government was their business, and who didn’t whine when he was in trouble, but kept bravely, doggedly plugging away, doing his best, his duty as he saw it, and who was glad to be among them. He wasn’t a hero, or an original thinker. His beliefs were their beliefs, their way of talking was his way of talking. He was on their side. he was one of them. If he stumbled over a phrase or a name, he would grin and try again. and they would smile with him.

Sounds pretty good to me. Go vote today.

David McCullough describing Harry Truman (farmer turned politician who never graduated from college!) in Truman (p. 664)

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Should Leaders confess? Part II


I wrote the previous post on this topic a week or so prior to the Haggard incident. While we might quibble over how much gets told to the population and what kind of stuff gets told, hopefully we agree that lying to the laity isn’t a good idea either. I do hope he is willing to come clean. I’d love to see a willingness to own without denial and to give a good example of what real confession looks like. We all have a tendency to confess in ways that make us look not so bad. I expect that he probably didn’t do all that his accuser has stated. The political reasons for the revelation of facts now cannot be understated.

 A good reminder to us that “little” sins lead to bigger ones.  

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Filed under Christianity: Leaders and Leadership, News and politics, sin

How a secret can kill you


The news here is still all about the tragic killing of the Amish girls by a 32 year old husband, father, and church goer. News media report that he had a 20 year old secret of molesting family members that he could no longer handle. Don’t know if it is true, but it wouldn’t be surprising if it was. A secret sin/trauma eats away at us like cancer. We live a private hell while pretending to others that nothing is the matter. Some can maintain the front for a long time, but the cancer will will win every time if it is not treated.
An interesting thing tends to happen. In an effort to avoid exposing our secret, we wall it off from others (and sometimes from self). But we actually make it grow in meaning and power. It becomes unforgiveable (even if our outward theology would deny this fact), something for which we can never receive comfort and peace. Over time, it grows into other areas of our lives and makes every thing we do relate to the secret. Its no surprise that our logic and bodies break down over time.

Don Miller in Blue Like Jazz writes of a friend who had 2 secret affairs. He probably didn’t want to confess his sin to his wife on the basis that it would hurt her (or maybe because he would lose her). But really, he didn’t want to accept grace. Miller described the terrible effects of the secret on the man,

He said he would lie down next to his wife at night feeling walls of concrete between their hearts. He had secrets. She tries to love him, but he knows he doesn’t deserve it. He cannot accept her affection because she is loving a man who doesn’t exits. He plays a role. He says he is an actor in his own home. (p. 22)

Miller goes on to say later (p. 86),

I will love God because he first loved me. I will obey God because I love God. But if I cannot accept God’s love, I cannot love him in return, and I cannot obey him. Self-discipline will never make us feel righteous or clean; accepting God’s love will. The ability to accept God’s unconditional grace and ferocious love is all the fuel we need to obey him in return. Accepting God’s kindness and free love is something the devil does not want us to do. If we hear, in our inner ear, a voice saying we are failures, we are losers…this is the voice of Satan trying to convince the bride that the groom does not love her. This is not the voice of God.

Sounds about right.

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Filed under News and politics, self-deception, sin

Quick forgiveness for the Amish shooter?


A follow-up on the shooting of Amish school children by a man supposedly taking revenge for something that happened in his life some 20 years prior. The following appeared in an msn story (http://msnbc.msn.com/id/15113706/):

‘They honestly have forgiven’
Meanwhile, Rita Rose, a local nurse and midwife who delivered several children in the Amish community, told NBC’s Ann Curry that the mother of a 13-year-old girl who died has forgiven Roberts.

“She holds no ill will toward the shooter. She’s very forgiving. Christ forgave us, and we in turn forgive, and they honestly have forgiven,” she said. “Even last night, there was no anger toward the shooter.”

REALLY? Is this a higher form of spirituality? Did Jesus suffer from some sort of weakness when he overturned the tables at the tempte? My pastor preached on the last chapter of Nehemiah recently where Nehemiah goes on a bit of a rampage because priests have neglected their job or engaged in nepotism and folks are buying/selling goods on the Sabbath. He asked whether or not we are angry about the right things. While I applaud not becoming bitter over the sin of others, saying in less than 24 hours that they had forgiven their daughter’s killer sounds a bit premature. Yes, Christ calls us and empowers us to forgive others. But we ought to be angry at all forms of sin because they are an affront to God–especially those that damage little children (remember the millstone imagery!).

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When life doesn’t make sense


Yesterday our Lancaster county neighbors suffered a terrible tragedy with 5 young girls being executed at school by a local man. A friend of mine was recently and suddenly abandoned by his wife. Another friend has had several tragedies in a row. These things have made me think about the questions we ask in this situation. When these tragedies strike we often ask, 1. Where is God and why did he allow this? and, 2. What did I do wrong and why am I still struggling with despair? (this comes later)

Both questions are easily answered: I don’t know why (will never know why) and Nothing is wrong with you because what you are experiencing is terribly normal. Funny, neither answer is acceptable to us. And so we keep looking for the why and we keep mulling over why it is that we aren’t handling it very well. The why did God let this happen question is very biblical, very faithful to the God of all creation. Job, Jeremiah’s lament, the Psalmists, and Jesus himself asks the question, “My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?” It seems we are to ask the question but yet learn to live with the silent presence of God. A helpful response once said by my colleague, Diane Langberg, I don’t know why this happened, but I do know that Jesus knows this experience of abandonment. The cross is where trauma and God come together. (my rough paraphrase). When we try to go further to understand the why, we err into speaking for God, just like Job’s counselors.

The second question does come later when we think we should be over the pain. Some traumas are like being knocked out by a punch. First we wake up woozy and numb. Then as our heads clear the weight of the pain really sets in. Every movement hurts. Many are surprised by the weight of the pain and think it means they are weak Christians. Says who? If Jesus is deeply moved to tears over Lazarus’ death, which he was going to reverse in a few seconds, shouldn’t we who wait much longer to see healing also be laid low by our suffering?

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The plight of Genarlow Wilson: Should we really loose laws protecting minors from sex?


Heard a story this am on Tom Joyner’s morning radio program. Mark Cuban (owner of the Dallas Mavericks) was bringing attention to the story of Wilson’s 10 year prison sentence for consensual oral sex with a 15 year old. Wilson was then 17 (for a website, see: http://www.wilsonappeal.com/index.php). A videotape helped seal the deal. He is now (unless the governor or the GA State Supreme Court intervenes) forever a sex offender. In GA, children under 16 are considered unable to give consent, even to another minor. So, teens having sex is/was criminal. Unfortunately, their laws aren’t very specific, so Wilson gets treated the same as a 50 year old doing the same act on a minor.

That’s not good. A one size fits all legal code turns salvagable people into sex offenders. So it seems that folks are petitioning to change laws in several states (GA already has for future crimes). What gets me is that while the law/punishment is not right, neither is saying, kids will be kids. I’m concerned that we aren’t taking stock of how WE helped develop a society that says freedom of speech (putting sex and sexual situations on TV, allowing unfettered access to sex on the web to whomever has the ability to click a mouse) is more important than protecting children. Seems if something is really bad for an individual and has dire consequences for minor who we want to protect, its not wrong to educate our boys and girls that minor sex is not only unhealthy (we have ample evidence of the mental health consequences for girls having early sex) but unlawful. If we loose the laws, then we will also make it easier for predatory teens to get away with their actions as well.

A heartbreaking story for every angle…

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