Monday, January 27, 2020

Seeing More Than You Expected



Daniel 3:25 
New International Version (NIV)
25 He said, “Look! I see four men walking around in the fire, unbound and unharmed, and the fourth looks like a son of the gods.”

Once or twice a year I would take several carloads of students to a computer show in Las Vegas. We spent the day looking at the latest innovations in the field of computers. We also marveled at the crazy lengths exhibitors went to trying to sell us their product. They showered us with relatively worthless gifts until everyone was walking around with a big bag of loot.

When the show closed, we would get in our cars and go to some casino where we could get a good meal for a very reasonable price. Then we headed south toward home in a caravan. As the miles ticked, by everyone would get sleepy—hopefully not the driver. South of Baker there are several exits off the I-15 freeway that go nowhere. There are no buildings, just a dirt road wandering off into the desert.

At the top of an exit I pulled over and stopped.

Students poured out of all the cars and ran up to me: “What’s wrong, Dr. Clarke?” they queried.
After a minute or two to let their eyes adjust to the darkness, I would point dramatically to the sky. “Look up!”

Their eyes turned heavenward, a unanimous awe inspired “Wow!” escaped their lips. They were city kids. They had never seen the majesty of a black sky with millions of stars, the Milky Way, the majesty of Orion.  Like Nebuchadnezzar in front of the fiery furnace, they would see far more than they ever knew existed. Their minds would begin to imagine how great God and His creation really are.

Thank You, O God, for being so immeasurably greater than our grandest concepts—and for being intimately interested in each of us.



Monday, January 20, 2020

Who Is Christianity Following?



Romans 1:16 
Good News Translation (GNT)
16 I have complete confidence in the gospel; it is God's power to save all who believe, first the Jews and also the Gentiles.

Many have said that the worst thing to ever happen to Christianity was the nominal conversion of Constantine. He said he had a dream that showed him a cross and heard the words in hoc signo vinces “In this sign conquer.” Constantine then became a Christian. It now became fashionable to be a Christian, so the world marched into the church. People became Christians, not because they had faith in and loved Christ, but because it made economic and political sense to do so. Christianity has never recovered.

Are we seeing the same phenomenon in America today? We find fundamental Christianity supporting a president who makes no pretense of being a Christian. But they like that he supports the independence of the country of Israel. Under his leadership the stock market has risen to record levels. Unfortunately, so have medical expenses. He is trying to purge aliens from America, even demanding that duly elected congressmen “go home.” I hear proclaimed by people I have respected for years, “Even if he is proved to be a liar, I will vote for him!”

In the 1930s both the Lutheran (Evangelische Kirche) Church and the Catholic Church in Germany strongly supported Hitler. After all, Hitler was a vegetarian and a teetotaler. He rescued Germany from terrible runaway inflation and brought in a strong economic recovery. But then he killed between 15 and 30 million people, including some 6 million Jews, as he purged Germany from social undesirables and non-Arians.  

Our ancestors fought the tyranny of King George III for freedom to live as our consciences direct. The Anglican Church strongly supported this tyranny. Are we, as Americans, going to accept injustice and erosion of freedom for an apparent economic advantage? Will we allow our own church leaders and political leaders to blindly support a new tyranny?
We pray, Oh Lord, that You will bring Americans to their senses.



Saturday, January 18, 2020

Don't Be Afraid



Isaiah 41:10 
King James Version (KJV)
10 Fear thou not; for I am with thee:
     be not dismayed; for I am thy God:
I will strengthen thee;
     yea, I will help thee;
          yea, I will uphold thee
with the right hand of my righteousness.

For my entire career I had been teaching mathematics. Many students hated mathematics; they feared it and were dismayed that they had to take it in order to graduate. I used everything I could think of to try and break down that fear. Those who would actually do what I told them to do in class and for homework usually succeeded well. They didn’t always lose their hatred for the subject, but at least they gained an assurance that they could do it. It gave them a feeling of empowerment that bolstered them for the rest of their college life.
Success comes from doing, not wishing for or dreaming about it, but from sitting down and actually sweating through the details until they began to see why it worked for them. Naturally there were some who expected—even demanded—that I do the work for them and give them a grade representative of what I could do. I would hold review sessions before major tests and exams. I would give daily quizzes that were aimed at making them acquainted with the kinds of questions I would later put on tests. I often handed out copies of previous exams I had given in that topic so they could work through them. I encouraged them to use these to simulate their exam experience. This was to help them to relieve their own stress during the in-class tests. I knew it had worked for me and that many students told me it had worked well for them, too.
I always explained to each class that when God promised wisdom to us—see James 1:5—there were no conditions attached to that promise. God would always give them wisdom. We would always pray for wisdom before each test.
Early on in teaching I discovered that each class had its own “personality.” A few classes stonewalled themselves behind an attitude of resisting everything I did for them. They refused to do homework or prepare for tests. They tried to demand that I give them a passing grade simply because they came to class regularly. One time six students, each bigger than I, marched into my office furious that the test I gave was not an exact copy of a previous test that I had given them for review. When I pointed out that, of course, the answers weren’t the same because the questions were similar but not identical, they vowed revenge. The next morning when I went out to my car to go to class, I found that the windshield had been smashed by a violent blow with a baseball bat. I told my class what had happened and explained that I was apparently doing too much for them. In the future they should look at their textbook for examples for tests and prepare for them in that way. Fortunately, I’ve had no more bat impressions in my windshield.
Thank You, Lord, for living up to Your promise to strengthen, help and uphold us, and for the fact that You really do that.

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Work Heartily


Colossians 3:23 
King James Version (KJV)
And whatsoever ye do, do it heartily, as to the Lord, and not unto men.

During the summer after I graduated from Andrews University, I landed a part time job at an aluminum foundry in Stevensville, Michigan. It was owned by two men who worked very hard and were having excellent success. They put me on the band saw and lathe. I quickly proved that I could make lathe tools better than anyone in the shop. In fact, I adopted the attitude that this was my foundry, and I would do the best I could for it.


Work started about 6:00 in the morning to gain the advantage of the cool night air blowing across Lake Michigan. However, by 9:00 temperature in the foundry was upwards of 120º. I wore long sleeves because the band saw threw off red-hot aluminum chips that would often land on my arms. At that temperature my shirt was soaked with sweat, so the chips didn’t burn me. The shop provided salt tablets, but I wouldn’t take them because I felt it would be unhealthy. After three or four weeks, however, I was suffering from heat exhaustion. I broke out in hives and was constantly sick to my stomach. I finally decided that I was too weak to work. I spoke with my boss, and he insisted I take a salt tablet because that would cure all my woes. I gave in and swallowed a tablet. Within 20 minutes my strength returned, and I gave them a full day’s work.

They soon found that I could do oxy-acetylene welding better than anyone in the shop. We would often talk about how to do things better. When the time came for me to leave and go on to graduate school, the owners came to me. They told me that I was a real asset to the foundry and asked if I would become a third partner with them, rather than going off to school. I attribute this offer to my applying the spirit of Colossians 3:23 to my job. This same attitude had gotten me a job, three years earlier, where I could work my way through Andrews University.


May I continue work heartily as to the Lord at all my responsibilities.


Sunday, January 12, 2020

Joseph's Dilemma



Matthew 1:18-20 

Good News Translation (GNT)
This was how the birth of Jesus Christ took place. His mother Mary was engaged to Joseph, but before they were married, she found out that she was going to have a baby by the Holy Spirit. Joseph was a man who always did what was right, but he did not want to disgrace Mary publicly; so he made plans to break the engagement privately. While he was thinking about this, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream and said, “Joseph, descendant of David, do not be afraid to take Mary to be your wife. For it is by the Holy Spirit that she has conceived. 

Joseph loved Mary. She had gone to visit her cousin and had stayed there for at least three months. Now on her return she was obviously pregnant. He asked her how it happened. She gave him a very unbelievable story about how an angel had told her she would have a baby by the Holy Spirit. She told him, furthermore, that she had been absolutely faithful to him. God had put the baby inside of her. In Joseph’s eyes, as it would be in the world’s eyes, it was obvious that Mary had had some relation with a man. The contemporary experts openly accused Christ as being the child of fornication.[2] According to Roman law, Joseph could and should divorce Mary. According to Levitical law, she should be stoned to death. But Joseph loved Mary, so he was going to try and not embarrass her. He would separate from her quietly, and she could stay with her parents until the baby was born. Mary’s parents could take the baby as their own, and she would then still be marriageable or whatever else she wanted to do with her life.

This expert opinion reminds me of an exhibit I saw in Yellowstone National Park that pointed to a mountainside that had a large number of fossil trees, many of them vertical. A sign gave the expert explanation of how it had happened: “Across the valley rise the slopes of Specimen Ridge, but the forest you see there today is only the latest chapter in a remarkable story. Buried within the volcanic rocks that compose the mountain are twenty-seven distinct layers of fossil forest that flourished 50 million years ago. Sporadic volcanic eruptions occurring over a period of about 20 thousand years buried many successive forests under blankets of ash and volcanic debris. Groundwater seeping through the silica-rich volcanic debris fossilized the buried vegetation. Movements of the earth’s crust and erosion have revealed the layers of buried forests at several localities in the park.”

I had several friends, experts or self-proclaimed experts, point out to me that it was obvious that one could count the rings on these petrified trees and it must have taken at least 20,000 years for these various forests to have been buried in succession, so the earth as we know it must have been around for at least 20,000 years. I’m no expert, and I certainly wasn’t about to argue with them.

Then on May 18, 1980, Mt St Helens erupted under the observation of the world’s greatest experts. The original Spirit Lake on its slope was destroyed with ash but an even larger new Spirit Lake was formed. A vast layer of trees that had been killed by the eruption floated over the surface of the lake. Over the succeeding 20 years or so these floating logs became water logged and sank. Many of them settled vertically in the water, with their roots hanging down. Geologists recognized that had another eruption or series of eruptions filled the new lake with ash, it would have produced the same type of exhibit as Specimen Ridge. And 20 years is vastly different from 20,000. Some geologists pointed this out to the National Park Service. They removed the now embarrassing signs at the exhibit.

In similar fashion, the visit of the angel to Joseph in a dream, convinced him in spite of the opinion of experts that Mary’s story was correct and he must marry Mary and raise Jesus as his own son.

Thank You, Lord, for sometimes stepping in and nixing our expertly reasoned misconceptions. Help us to review them as graciously as did Joseph.