I am not sure when I first learned the pledge of allegiance to our American flag. I did not attend kindergarten, though most of my friends did. So, I guess I learned it in first grade at Robert E. Lee elementary. With a portrait of the Civil War general peering over my shoulder, I faced the flag and tried my best, pledging to one nation “invisible.” That made sense. The nation seemed pretty “invisible” to me at the time. Later, I learned the word was “indivisible” and had deep meaning related to my school’s namesake.
Monday, April 7, 2025
Liberty and Justice For All
Monday, March 31, 2025
Good and Evil in the Garden
The first blossoms and blooms have appeared on the trees. Seedlings have raised their heads from the soil. Spring is coming! There is something therapeutic about digging in the dirt, sifting the soil through our fingers, planting seeds and seedlings that flourish in the sun,
Tinsley's Civil War Novel, Bold Springs, is Free as an eBook on Amazon April 1-5. Chosen Best Christian Historical Fiction by Readers Favorite 2022.
Tuesday, March 25, 2025
Choosing The Better Portion
We love celebrating birthdays with our grandchildren. After the candles are blown out and we have all joined in singing “happy birthday,” it is time to cut the cake. The birthday celebrant gets to choose the “better portion,” usually the corner slice or the one with the most icing. The younger the child, the more likely they are to make an honest choice. As we grow older, we defer, out of a desire to be polite or to conceal our gluttony.
Dinner was approaching and Martha was doing her best to cook up enough food to feed fifteen people, Jesus, his 12 followers and her own family. Outside, the men were deep in conversation and, in their midst sat Mary, Martha’s sister. Finally, Martha had enough. She burst through the door and demanded Jesus tell her sister to come help in the kitchen. But Jesus shocked everyone in the room with his response. “Martha, Martha you are anxious and worried about so many things and Mary has chosen the better portion,” (Luke 10:41).
Tuesday, March 18, 2025
What We Learned From Covid
It is hard to believe it has been 5 years since Covid brought the world to its knees. On March 21, 2020 my wife and I invited a group of our neighbors to bring their lawn chairs and meet in our driveway. Ten of us showed up and positioned our chairs 6 feet apart. A few had met, but most did not know each other. Our neighborhood was typical of most suburbs. We passed each other coming and going to work, then disappeared into our garages. We occasionally saw each other walking our dogs, but we rarely spoke. Faces might be familiar, but we didn’t know each other’s names. But that Saturday was different. Under the ominous cloud of the Coronavirus, our neighbors were hungry to meet each other, to talk and to share.
The group included a widow in her 70s, two young couples in their 20s, a couple in their 30s recently moved from Philadelphia and a couple in their late 40s, recently married and adjusting to a blended family. My wife and I had been married more than 50 years. The gathering was not somber. There was much laughter. One couple brought gifts of toilet paper with a card: “Just a little something to show that we got your back.” But there was a serious undercurrent, not knowing what comes next. We each introduced ourselves and shared how the COVID crisis was affecting us and our families. At the end, I led the group in prayer.
Bill's book, Bold Springs, is Free as an eBook on Amazon March 18-19. Chosen best Christian Historical Fiction by Reader's Favorite in 2022.
Tuesday, March 11, 2025
What We Can Learn From the Birds
I grew up in Texas, often wakened by the rasp of blue jays outside my window, frequently entertained by mockingbirds with their collection of stolen songs. Buzzards circled in the sky, high overhead on hot summer days, riding the wind, barely moving their wings.
Tuesday, March 4, 2025
God's Metrics
We
live in a world of metrics. We are obsessed with measuring progress in almost
every area of life. The business world has created an entire glossary of terms
for measuring CPM (Corporate Performance Management), ROI (Return on
Investment), Churn Rate (the measure of customer or employee attrition over a
specified time), EBITDA. (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and
Amortization), to name a few.
Our most recent metric seems to be money measured in the billions and trillions
of dollars. Thousands of Federal
employees have been laid off in what DOGE claims to be cost-savings
efforts. The three-year war in the
Ukraine seems to have come down to billions of dollars in mineral rights. A trade war over tariffs has erupted between
the U.S., Canada, Mexico and China.
Education has long used measurements to determine a student’s future. Any student with ambitions beyond secondary
education is familiar with the stress and importance of the SAT, ACT or, to
enter graduate school, the GMAT, GRE, LSAT and MCAT.
Sports is filled with metrics. Hundredths of a second separate sprinters,
downhill skiers, bobsledders and speed skaters on the podium. PGA golfers are rated by average score,
percentage of fairways hit, greens in regulation, putts per round and many
others. Baseball is synonymous with statistics: RBI, OPS, BA, BB/K, ERA, etc.
The list is long.
If measurements are so important in other areas of life, it might be good to know God’s metrics. How does God measure success or failure?
Most of us assume that God’s measurements are limited to religion: church
attendance, offerings, budgets, building, religious ceremonies and service.
Surprisingly, according to the Bible, these things are not God’s primary
concern.
The prophets taught that God could care less about religious ceremonies. In
Amos, God says, “Even though you offer up to Me burnt offerings and your grain
offerings, I will not accept them; …Take away from Me the noise of your songs;
I will not even listen to the sound of your harps. But let justice roll down
like waters and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.”
In Isaiah, God says, “I hate your new moon festivals and your appointed feasts.
They have become a burden to Me; … when you spread out your hands in prayer, I
will hide My eyes from you; … Wash yourselves, make yourselves clean; remove
the evil of your deeds from My sight. Cease to do evil, learn to do good; seek
justice, reprove the ruthless, defend the orphan, plead for the widow.”
When Jesus confronted the religious leaders of his day, he reproved them for
focusing on religious disciplines. “You
have neglected the weightier provisions of the law: justice and mercy and
faithfulness. These are the things you
should have done.” (Matthew 23:23).
Monday, February 24, 2025
Cemetery
Cemeteries can be fascinating places. The monuments and tomb stones bear record to generations who inhabited the spaces we now inhabit, walked the same streets, climbed the same hills, breathed the same air. I once walked through the cemetery with my father-in-law and listened as he told stories about his friends and family who were buried there. My wife and I now visit his grave and her mother’s buried side-by-side in that same cemetery.
Bill Tinsley's book of poems, People Places and Things is FREE February 25-27 on Amazon Kindle.