06/23/2010
AIN'T
He was just a little boy,
 On a week's first day.
 Wandering home from Bible
 school, And dawdling on the way.
 
 He scuffed his shoes into the grass;
 He even found a caterpillar. He found
 a fluffy milkweed pod, And blew out
 all the 'filler.'
 
 A bird's nest in a tree overhead, So
 wisely placed up so high.. Was
 just another wonder, That caught
 his eager eye.
 
 A neighbor watched his zigzag
 course, And hailed him from the
 lawn; Asked him where he'd been
 that day And what was going on.
 
 'I've been to Bible School ,'
 He said and turned a piece of sod.
 He picked up a wiggly worm replying,
 'I've learned a lot about God.'
 
 'M'm, very fine way,' the neighbor said,
 'for a boy to spend his time.' 'If you'll
 tell me where God is, I'll give you a
 brand new dime.'
 
 Quick as a flash the answer came!
 Nor were his accents faint. 'I'll give
 you a dollar, Mister, If you can tell
 me where God ain't.'
01:52 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0)
06/20/2010
DADDY YOU'RE WONDERFUL!
God is saying, "Trust Me with your life"
 
 You say I exaggerate the splendors of a fine
 home? That the love and loyalty which gradually
 take shape within a family are not worth what
 they cost? Consider this incident, reported from
 New York City. One afternoon an extremely
 popular opera was scheduled for performance
 at the Metropolitan Opera House. A famous
 tenor was to sing, and every seat was sold.
 But just before the curtain rose a disappointing
 announcement was made. The famous tenor
 had fallen ill; his role that afternoon would be
 sung by an almost unknown substitute. So
 the performance began, and the substitute
 tenor made his entrance and sang his first
 aria. Usually that solo is followed by a tumult
 of applause; this time the audience sat silent.
 Then something dramatic happened. A small
 boy, seated in a box near the stage, rose and
 addressed the singer. In a high, childish voice
 audible to everyone he exclaimed, "Daddy,
 you're wonderful!" Then, suddenly, everyone
 was clapping furiously ... clapping and wiping
 away tears. How much are family love and
 loyalty worth? They are beyond price.
 
 "My father's generosity was large, and so was
 his whole soul; he was affable, eloquent, and
 sweet in his conversation." Those words were
 written in the year 1494 by a man named Baber,
 a fifteenth century Emperor of Hindustan.
 
 "Our father always played at being young with
 his children. He was proud of us. We knew it
 every day. Living at our house was nice. These
 words were spoken by a man named William D.
 Wilkins in the year 1956.
 
 This was one of the most vivid of my boyhood
 experiences, my first trip down into a coal mine.
 My father's mine was in the process of having an
 elevator cage installed so we had to descend in
 a barrel. Father got in the barrel first, reached
 over and lifted me in. The cable swung the barrel
 out and over the center of the dark shaft, twisting
 us around and around as it dangled there. All I
 could see below was blackness and a tiny light
 at the bottom. The engineman threw a lever. We
 started to drop. In an instant the whiteblue of the
 sky was gone. Father held me tight in his arms.
 My heart was beating like a trip hammer. My little
 world of time and space and the things I knew and
 could see had suddenly been whisked away, as
 though some giant hand had snatched it from
 around me... but my father was there. I felt him
 in the darkness . . . As the cage shot down in
 the darkness, banging hard against the wet, black
 walls, I could hardly catch my breath. "Don't be
 afraid son," he said... the speed of the cage
 diminished. A pressure came in my ears, and I
 swallowed hard. A second later the black wall of
 the shaft before me suddenly gave way and we
 came to a stop at the bottom of the mine. Father
 lifted me out of the barrel. I was as bewildered as
 a boy could be; I just stood there, clung to my
 father's hand, and wondered what could possibly
 happen next ... It was as quiet as a mausoleum.
 I could hear only the steady trickle of the mine
 seepage, water dropping on the loose rock, and
 father's breathing near me. Then he lit a kerosene
 torch, the flame blown forward by the downcoming
 current of air from the shaft behind us. He took a
 better grip on my hand in the dark and told me to
 follow him. Stooping low, the shale roof pressing
 down on us and the walls of coal pressing in on
 us in the darkness, father led the way along the
 tunnel toward the yellow dots of light ... There in
 the mine someone asked me if I was afraid and I
 remembered saying, "Well, I'd be awfully scared
 except my father is with me." I remember my
 father looking at me with a grave and yet wonderful
 smile and saying, "Then you will never be scared,
 son, because a Greater Father than I will always
 be with you."
 
 GOD OUR FATHER IS ALWAYS THERE
 
 HAPPY FATHERS DAY!
00:37 | Permalink | Comments (0)
06/19/2010
THANKS, DAD
from Our Daily Bread
 
 Scripture:
 
 We exhorted, and comforted, and charged
 every one of you, as a father does his own
 children. —1 Thess. 2:11
 
 Reflection:
 
 In the US, more long distance calls are
 made on Mother’s Day than any other day.
 But on Father’s Day, the most collect calls
 are made. It seems that children still depend
 on their fathers to provide, even when they
 are far away from home.
 
 Fathers are needed and wanted for much
 more than financial help. While 1 Thessalonians
 2:10-12 is primarily directed toward church
 leaders, Paul talks about how their role is
 similar to a father’s. He states: “You know
 how we exhorted, and comforted, and charged
 every one of you, as a father does his own children.”
 
 Exhorted is “to call near.” It is easy for fathers
 to think that all that’s required of them is to
 bring home a paycheck. But children need
 their close encouragement.
 
 The word comforted is “to console.” Nothing is
 more valuable to a child than the time given by
 a father to listen and talk. Without constant
 relating, relationships turn cold.
 
 Charged is “to affirm.” Fathers challenge their
 children by affirming the truth of God’s Word
 as they live it out in front of them. And even in
 failings, they affirm what is right through the
 asking of forgiveness.
 
 How thankful we can be for fathers who help
 their children “walk worthy of God” (v.12).
 
 GOOD FATHERS REFLECT THE HEAVENLY
 FATHER.
 
 Prayer:
 
 Oh Father I am so thankful for my father/
 He was a special gift from You.
 Help me to shom my honor for him
 by what I say and do. In the Name of the
 Son of my Holy Father AMEN
 
 HAPPY FATHERS DAY!
14:22 | Permalink | Comments (1)

