Bread has become a delicacy. When my wife sends me to the store for a loaf of bread I stand dumbfounded in front of the shelves. Which bread to buy? There’s white bread, whole wheat bread, gluten free 7 grain bread, garlic bread, rye bread, and a dozen others. Then there are bagels: plain bagels, blueberry bagels and everything bagels. And what about donuts? I think donuts are included in the bread family. Okay, I choose donuts.
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
Bread of Life
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
The Anxious Generation
A couple weeks ago my 15-year-old granddaughter suggested I read Jonathan Haidt’s The Anxious Generation. I was stunned. Over my lifetime I have experienced several technological revolutions that have transformed the way we live: color TV, the personal computer, internet, email, mobile phones, smart phones. In every case I was an early adopter. But I missed the rapid and ubiquitous spread of social media.
According to Haidt, a recognized social psychologist, Gen Z,
those born between 1995 – 2010, is the first “phone-based” generation to
experience a “rewiring” of the brain through social media. A professor of psychology at NYU’s Stern
School of Business, he says, “I have seen the rising levels of anxiety and
device addiction as my students have changed from millennials using flip phones
to Gen Z using smartphones.” Access to social media coupled with adolescent
mental, social and psychological development has been devastating.
Interestingly, Haidt, who claims to be atheist, finds promising
solutions in spiritual terms. He draws on a book by David Steno, a social
psychologist, published in 2021, How God Works: The Science Behind the
Benefits of Religion. He names six
practices that can help all of us in our age of anxiety and fragmentation:
shared sacredness, embodiment (rituals), stillness-silence and focus
(meditation), transcending the self (inspiration), being slow to anger and
quick to forgive, and experiencing awe. He leaves out faith however, the key
element that makes all of these work.
Bill Tinsley's Sermon on the Mount Devotional Book is FREE as an eBook on Amazon June 2-4.
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Dealing With Rejection
Everyone has felt rejection. For many it is first encountered on the playground. Children choosing their friends or choosing teams until one remains, unchosen, unwanted, rejected. We discover life can be like musical chairs. When the music stops there is no place to sit. All the included places are taken.
Bill Tinsley's book of poems, People Places and Things is Free as an eBook on Amazon May 26-29. His poetry has won first place honors in the Colorado Open Poetry Contest and the Mississippi Valley poetry contes.
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
Authenticity
I stepped up to the counter and handed the cashier my twenty-dollar bill. Paying with cash today is rare, but I thought I would try it. I think the people standing behind me rolled their eyes. The cashier glanced at me, lifted the bill up to the light, squinted and examined it, then laid it on the counter. She whipped out what looked like a felt tip marker and marked it. After a long second, she placed it in the cash register and gave me my change. It seemed simple enough. But it made me wonder.
Tinsley's book, We Beheld His Glory, A Novel, is FREE as a eBook on Amazon May 19-21.
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
Why Go To Church
Given the secular focus of our culture with sports dominating Sundays, it is easy to conclude that very few people still attend church. But, according to the best research, that is just not the case. More people attend church than we might think.
I go to church because, down deep, I believe in Jesus. I think it is what He would want me to
do. Even though the Jewish authorities
turned against Him, it was Jesus’ custom to attend the synagogues. (Luke 4:16). And even though churches are seldom what they
ought to be, I need to follow Jesus’ example.
Monday, May 4, 2026
Mother's Day
This week husbands, sons
and daughters will elbow their way to the greeting card displays in search of
the perfect card to celebrate Mother’s Day. Florists will put on extra
staff to handle the demand. Restaurants brace for business.
Countries around the world set aside a special day for mothers. It is celebrated on the second Sunday in May in the U.S. Canada, New Zealand, Australia, India, Brazil, Germany, Ethiopia and the Philippines. Woodrow Wilson proclaimed Mother’s Day an official holiday starting on May 8, 1914. Still other nations honor mothers on different dates.
Regardless of our nationality, ethnicity or gender, we were each carried in our mother’s womb, given birth through her labor and, in almost all cases, nursed and nourished to life by her care.
No office and no position wields greater power and influence over the future of humanity than the influence of a mother. The memories and lessons given in infancy at a mother’s hand surpass every other classroom and instruction. The faith of a mother inspires and instructs more effectively than any pulpit or pen.We see it in history, and we see it in the Bible.
In a log cabin in Kentucky, Nancy Hanks Lincoln recognized the early gifts in her child. She not only taught him to read, but instructed him in the principles that would shape his life. Without Nancy, and Sarah, who became Lincoln’s step mother after Nancy died, it is unlikely that Abraham Lincoln would have ever surfaced to lead our nation in its greatest hour of crisis.
If it were not for Moses’ mother, the world would have never known the great law-giver who led Israel from captivity and gave us the Ten Commandments. It was she who hid him in the reeds at the river to save his infant life and it was she who cared for him in Pharaoh’s court.
How many mothers have petitioned God for the birth of a child, as Hannah prayed in the presence of Eli, the prophet? Without her prayer, Samuel would not have been born, and would not have been present to anoint David, the king of Israel.
In the fullness of time, in an obscure Galilean village, another young woman lifted up her eyes to heaven and sang, “My soul exalts the Lord, and my spirit has rejoiced in God my Savior. For He has had regard for the humble state of His handmaiden; for behold, from this time on all generations will count me blessed. For He that is mighty has done to me great things, and holy is His name.” (Luke 1:46-49). Without Mary we would never have known Jesus, and the world would remain lost in its sins without a Savior.
Paul referred to the importance of a mother’s faith when he wrote to his young protégé, Timothy: “For I am mindful of the sincere faith within you, which first dwelt in your grandmother Lois and your mother Eunice, and I am sure that it is in you as well.” (2 Timothy 1:5).
This Mother’s Day we honor all mothers who have shaped us and made a better world
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Are You Forgiven? Do You Forgive?
After 2,000 years science and psychology are finally catching up with the teachings of Jesus. A recent article in the Washington Post reported that psychologists are discovering the power of forgiveness for health and well-being. “A new analysis spanning more than 200,000 people across 23 countries and published in NPJ Mental Health Research, a Nature publication, found that forgiveness may be more than a moral ideal. It appears to function as a psychological ideal as well, across cultures.”[i]