Life’s priorities change when you get old. I called my 81-year-old brother who has been homebound for 5 years as a double-amputee diabetic. He asked me to hold on a minute. The stray dog that wandered over to their house was hungry and needed to be fed. And the stray cat that his wife hauled to the vet where she spent $200 to have its ear infection treated was also there. The cat, which they call Catter, always wants to watch the dog eat. And, of course, afterward, the cat wants to be fed. And the birds! The birds are emptying the bird feeder every other day. “It’s like Grand Central Station,” he said. So, I hung on until they cared for their menagerie.
Tuesday, October 8, 2024
Menagerie
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
Liberty and Justice
Every time we voice our pledge to the flag, we are reminded of our American commitment: “one nation, under God, with liberty and justice for all.” Justice is important. We cannot have liberty without justice.
I once stood beside the execution table in the death chamber at Huntsville, Texas. The sense of the place was haunting. Many have gone to their deaths in that room guilty of the crimes for which they were convicted. Others, it appears, were innocent. John Grisham’s novel, “The Confession,” underscores the difficulties. Although a work of fiction, his story of a young black man wrongly convicted in Texas and executed in Huntsville is chilling. It is reminiscent of scenes from Steven King’s novel, The Green Mile.
Monday, September 23, 2024
What Dogs Can Teach Us
Over the years our family has included both cats and dogs that helped us raise our kids. They became our companions. Our cats seemed willing to allow us the privilege of living with them. Our dogs seemed grateful for the privilege of living with us. They taught us the difference between dog theology and cat theology.
Tuesday, September 17, 2024
God Is Bigger Than You Think
We like to keep God in a box. We use different labels. Some are religious: Hindu, Buddhist, Islam, Christian, Jew. Some are denominational: Catholic, Lutheran, Presbyterian, Assemblies of God, Baptist, Pentecostal, Non-Denominational. Some are theological. Some are philosophical. But God is bigger than we think. God cannot be defined or contained in any box, religious, theological, philosophical, or physical. God is bigger than any nation, any generation, any time, any galaxy or universe. God is greater.
Tuesday, September 10, 2024
Surprised by Oxford
I have always loved to read. When I was a boy, I built a treehouse in the persimmon tree outside our kitchen window, a haphazard assembly of used boards that made a comfortable platform between the limbs where I sat concealed and shaded above the roofline of our house. I spent hours in that tree reading. It was like a time machine, transporting me to distant places, past and future. I still read constantly and enjoy a pretty wide spectrum. I appreciate a good book.
Tuesday, September 3, 2024
Love Never Fails
Five years ago, Amber Guyger was found guilty of murder. She had returned to her apartment after a long day as a Dallas police officer to find what she thought was a intruder in her home. She drew her gun and fired, killing a young black man, 26-year-old Botham Jean. But, it wasn’t her home. The apartment she entered was one floor directly above her own and the man she killed was her neighbor, at home eating a bowl of ice cream.
William Tinsley's Civil War Novel, BOLD SPRINGS is FREE as an eBook on Amazon September 3-6. Click the image to the right.
Tuesday, August 27, 2024
Significance of Labor Day
Next weekend our nation will pause to observe Labor Day. First proposed in 1882, it became a Federal Holiday in 1894 and has been celebrated on the first Monday of September ever since to honor labor and recognize the significance honest work adds to our lives. We celebrate it with the scent and sound of sizzling steaks at the lake, rooting for our favorite football and baseball teams. And, of course, America’s favorite pastime, shopping.
Labor has always been an important aspect of the Christian faith. Jesus grew
up in a carpenter’s home and continued in the trade after Joseph’s death. Those
who knew him in Nazareth referred to him as “the carpenter,” (Mark 6:3). The Apostle Paul worked as a laborer mending
tents in Corinth. He wrote to the Colossians, “Whatever
you do, do your work heartily, as for the Lord rather than for men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the reward of
the inheritance. It is the Lord Christ whom you serve,” (Colossians
3:23-24).
Our work can be the most effective means for improving the
world and sharing the message of the risen Christ. A few years ago I met Debra. She went to Uzbekistan on a short-term
mission assignment and decided to stay.
She started a tailoring business, enlisted two women to work for her,
mentored them as followers of Christ and helped start a new church. After two years, she gave the business to her
co-workers and returned to the United States.
I asked her what her church thought about what she did. She said no one
asked.
When I served as interim pastor in Nuremberg, Germany, I
met Kim. She and her husband had moved to Nuremberg a year and a half before. She said they were “firmly
convinced that God was using my husband’s company to bring us over to be
“believers on the ground in this country. We are very involved in our
German church, seeking to help them develop a strong gospel and cross-centered
emphasis, to support and help in any way we can.”
I was reviewing my sermon
notes prior to the church service in Nuremberg when Eddie Wong walked in. I introduced myself and asked if this was his
first time to the church. He said he had attended the Nuremberg church a couple
years ago, before going to China. He
came to Germany and worked in a bakery to learn the trade, then moved to China
where he worked in a bakery as a means to share the gospel with others.
Debra, Kim and Eddie are examples of a multitude of
believers from all over the world who are discovering that work is far more
than a way to make a living. It is the
place where we demonstrate daily the character and presence of Christ and it
can be the vehicle that enables us to share our faith anywhere in the world.
Perhaps this Labor Day can serve as a reminder that our work can be far more
effective in communicating the gospel than many church programs. How we use our professions to honor God and
to serve others can change the world.