I was pleased when I saw that Netflix was offering a new movie about Mary for the Christmas season. Her story is one of the most beautiful, best known, and most celebrated in all of history.
Tuesday, December 17, 2024
Mary
Monday, December 9, 2024
Making Life Meaningful
Ever since 1988 when Tom Hanks starred in Big, we have enjoyed his acting career. Forest Gump, Castaway, Saving Private Ryan, A Man Called Otto. To name a few. Whenever a new Tom Hanks movie is released, we want to see it, or at least, check it out. So, we went to see Here, his newest movie released in October starring Hanks and Robin Wright who played Jenny in Forest Gump.
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
White Space
Life starts out fairly simple. When my wife and I married we could, quite literally, pack all our possessions in the back seat of our car. But along the way, we picked up clutter. The closets and attic overflow. Once, I rented a storage unit so she could get her car in the garage. “Stuff” seemed to multiply. It filled every nook and cranny. It is hard to throw it away. Worn out baby shoes, broken toys and scribbled scraps of paper represent my life.
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
Best Thanksgiving Ever
I glanced at the magazines on the rack, and there she was, Martha Stewart, promising the “Best Thanksgiving Ever.” She was offering a perfect piece of pie while smiling a perfect smile with perfect teeth, wearing a perfect dress with perfect hair, surrounded by a perfect kitchen with an open window that looked out on a perfect garden. Every wrinkle and excess pound had been photo-shopped away so that she looked decades younger than her actual age.
Unlike Martha, when we sit down to Thanksgiving dinner we show up with
wrinkles, warts and all. We look our age. The kitchen is a mess with spilled
flour on the cabinet and a sink full of dirty dishes. The food, of course, is
great because my wife is a great cook: baked turkey, mashed potatoes, giblet
gravy, her famous dressing passed down from her mother, green beans, fruit salad,
cranberry sauce. Best of all, the pecan pie my granddaughter helps bake using a
recipe passed down from my mother!
But it occurred to me, when I saw Martha Stewarts’s magazine, that Thanksgiving
isn’t about the food or the perfect picture. Real Thanksgiving is about the
heart. It is difficult for a heart that is not thankful every day to be truly
thankful on Thanksgiving Day.
Which brings up a concern about Thanksgiving. Our tradition of gathering around
bountiful tables with family and friends seems more like a brief interruption
to the more important business of shopping.
We can hardly push back from the table fast enough to hit the stores for
Black Friday door busters that start on Thursday.
For Thanksgiving, Bill Tinsley's book, We Beheld His Glory FREE as an eBook on Amazon November 26-27.
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
What Is God Like?
What is God like? It is an important question. Our answer determines our worldview, how we see ourselves, how we see others and how we measure what is important.
If God doesn’t exist, as some assert, we can only view the world as a collision
of random accidents. We live accidental lives on an accidental planet in an
accidental solar system moving through accidental galaxies. Ultimately our
lives have no reason or purpose. We simply are, for a few short years, and when
we die, we are no more.
Others see God as the “prime mover.” He designed the physical laws of the
universe and set it in motion like a wind-up clock or toy. But, He is not
involved in His creation. It is simply unwinding itself, spinning along
according to its primal design. We each live our lives as infinitely
insignificant cogs in the master machine.
Some view God as an “all seeing eye” watching us. He is personally cognizant of
our lives and our actions and He is watching everything we say and do. We each
live our lives like Truman Burbank, Jim Carrey’s character in “The Truman Show.”
Still others envision God as a god of vengeance. He delights in taking note of
our sins and punishing us. Our journey on this earth is little more than a
process of being beaten into submission by a god who punishes us for every sin
we commit. Entire religions have been built around methods of sacrifice and penance
to appease this angry god.
Jesus had a different answer. If you want to know what God is like, Jesus said,
think of your father. Of course, not all fathers are good. There are some
deadbeat dads out there who spoil the image. But most fathers love their
children and would do anything for them. I was one of the fortunate ones to
have a good father. He was, and is, my hero. He was neither famous nor rich. He
had no lasting achievements. He died when he was 53. But he was a good man, one
of the best men I ever knew. He corrected me when I was little and did wrong
things. He taught me a better way and set a better example that has served me
for a lifetime. If I needed anything, he was there to help. That is why Jesus
said, “Don’t worry. Your Father who is in heaven knows what you need.”
Now that I am a father with children and grandchildren, I better understand what
Jesus meant when he said, “If you being evil know how to give good things to
your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give what is good to
you!” This helps me enormously. If God is like that it changes how I see
myself, how I see others and how I see the world.
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
Replenishing the Earth
The first photos of earth sent back by the Apollo crews in the 1970s dramatically impressed us that our tiny blue planet rotating in space is precious and fragile. The thin layer of air that surrounds us not only contains the oxygen essential to life but protects us from the sun’s ultraviolet rays and regulates earth’s temperature. Three-fourths of the atmosphere lies within 9 miles of the earth’s surface. Outer space is considered to exist 62 miles up. We are dependent on an amazingly thin film of atmospheric gases to sustain life on our planet.
Monday, November 4, 2024
Flying In Formation
I was outside on our deck at sunrise in Colorado. An hour before, a meteorite streaked across the sky among the brilliant stars before they faded and disappeared. The morning star was still visible. The eastern rim was streaked with crimson and gold against a faint, robin-egg-blue sky.
I heard geese in the distance and watched as a long line winged their way against the dawn. Then more. Hundreds of Canada geese continued in small and large groupings, one squadron emerging behind another in vee formations, sculling the air with their wings, honking their encouragement to those who led them south and west. I suppose they were headed to feed in the foothills. Migrating geese is one of the things I love most. Another aspect of nature’s beauty and mystery.
Tinsley's book, The Jesus Encounter, is FREE as an eBook on Amazon November 5-6.