Monday, February 27, 2012

When God Tempts


In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Promises are dangerous things. Sure, when you make a promise, you have in mind only the wonderful, glorious things that such vow will open to you. But the razor's edge of a promise is that you actually have to keep it. Once you give your word that you will do something, or that you will not do something, you must keep it.
Promises come in all shapes and sizes. The one most familiar to most of you is probably your wedding vows. You promised to love and cherish your spouse, to have and to hold her, remain faithful to her for richer or for poorer, for better or worse, in sickness and in health, til death do you part. This is no light wish or flip gesture. You were joined to each other under this vow before God. For better or for worse, she is yours and you are hers. “What God has joined, let no man put asunder.”

Return to Me


In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

As rebels, Lord, who foolishly have wandered
Far from Your love – unfed, unclean, unclothed –
Dare we recall Your wealth so rashly squandered,
Dare hope to glean that bounty which we loathed? (LSB 612.1)

We have wandered far from the love of God and from His grace and favor. Ever since Adam and Eve were thrown out of the Garden of Eden, man has been wandering the earth, seeking his own way to his own goal. The road is hard and unpleasant, and the destination horrible beyond imagination.
Isaiah says, “All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned – every one – to his own way” (53:6). You and I have gone our own ways, seeking after the desires of our hearts and minds. Lost in the darkness and the shadow of death, you groped along, trying to find the scraps of something good, holy, clean. Just as in Israel in days of old, everyone does what is right in his own eyes. Whatever floats your boat. Different strokes for different folks, after all.

Monday, February 20, 2012

No Other Glory


In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

The desire to see God is a common drive among mankind. Though it may manifest in various ways, much of man's searching and striving in life is an effort to see, to apprehend, to comprehend the divine. The divine touches every inch of creation, and yet how does one touch the divine?
A great many people seek to see God in nature, in the things of this world. This is a worldview common among tribal religions the world over, which seek to pacify the spirits who control the elements which might otherwise conspire against them. Hindus, too, see the divine in everything. The pantheism native to the East says that everything is divine, and so everything must be regarded as a potential object of worship. A deity might choose to speak to you through the newspaper you choose to read. The cow in your pasture might be the mother of your grandchildren. The trees house the ancient spirits of the earth.

Monday, February 13, 2012

A Cleansing Touch


In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

One of the most important issues in American everyday life is cleanliness. Just watch TV for an evening and count how many commercials run for things that clean: soap, shampoo, dental care, hair care, toilet paper, sanitizers, and so on. Clean is big business, and a big concern for a lot of people. Just think of the old adage: cleanliness is next to godliness.
In fact, much of the world takes to be more than just a quaint saying. In most of Asia, even in the dirtiest jungle, there is a concern for the state of one's feet. It is customary to take off your shoes when entering the home or temple of a Hindu or Buddhist, because to bring in the dirt of your travels would be to contaminate sacred space. The feet are considered perpetually unclean, and to display your feet or touch someone or something with them is considered insulting and offensive.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Jesus Brings Healing to Creation


In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Discomfort is a fact of life in this world. Sometimes the discomfort you feel may be worse than others, depending on the source and duration. There is the irritation and discomfort of attempting to choose carefully a nice, smooth, flat campsite, then lying down and finding that you are directly atop a large rock or intrusive tree root. There is the discomfort of enduring a summer day when it is ninety-five degrees and ninety-five percent humidity. There is the discomfort of too-tight pants caused by too much indulgence.
Similarly, you and I endure a range of psychological and emotional discomforts. Worry about what the future will bring is discomforting. Stress over trying to accomplish ten things at once and doing them all right is discomforting. Encountering someone with whom you have quarreled or fallen out is discomforting. Seeing graphic images or hearing tragic stories in the news is discomforting.
And yet, all these discomforts are relatively easily remedied. But often you face another set of circumstances that brings more lasting discomfort. Illness can plague for weeks, months, or years. Personal tragedy strikes a mark on the heart that will never quite heal. These discomforts are not so easily relieved by rolling over or thinking positive.

Monday, January 30, 2012

He Taught As Having Authority


In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

It may be said that teachers shape the future. What a teacher says and does in the classroom forms and informs a significant part of what the students will become. From a very early age, a child is taught to believe what his teacher says, because she is the one old, wise, and learned, the one entrusted with teaching him the way things are.
People teach all sorts of “stuff”. Take a look at school curriculum, and you will find vast mountains of information that must be processed, digested, and regurgitated into and out of the students. Math, science, history, reading, English, art, music, PE – all categories of knowledge and information that a child must grasp to become a well-rounded, well-prepared adult in society. And the know-how and authority to teach all this is granted by a $100,000 piece of paper from some college, and a license from the state.

Monday, January 23, 2012

The Challenge of Contraception for Those Who Respect Life

As we observe a week of prayer and reflection on the sanctity of human life, I thought it fitting that something be said about the value of the life-creating act itself. The Lord has given us the gift of sex and of fertility, and He has blessed us with the command to "be fruitful and multiply". There are some grievous problems with interfering with this command. Following is a summary of an article I came across, with a link to the full text from the blog of the One More Soul organization.


Contraception poses a challenge to those who respect life. It may not be immediately obvious that there is any connection between contraception and abortion, but on further examination, a relationship between the two becomes apparent. Ignoring the issue of contraception leads to a lost opportunity to respect life to the fullest degree. There are at least three connections between contraception and abortion to consider:
1. Many contraceptives can directly cause early abortions.
2. Contraceptive use creates a perceived need for abortion as a “back-up.”
3. Contraceptive use causes a devaluation of human life.
The fundamental problem with the use of contraception is that it is a form of idolatry - a failure to "fear, love, and trust in God above all things." If your heavenly Father has promised to give you all good gifts, will He not also give you whatsoever He sees that you need? Furthermore, contraception sets up the "ME" as god, divorcing the gifts from the Giver, and telling God that "I" know better how to use His creation than He does.

For the rest of the above-quoted article, please visit the One More Soul blog.