Thursday, December 31, 2020

A Happy New Year?

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You are probably wondering why I have the above graphic on todays post. Above the year 2020  are the words, Happy New Year. It may have started that way but as we know, it has been a hard one for many people in the United States and the world and so I thought though that we might take a trip down the memory lane of this year and see what what did go on as January 2020 evolved in to December 2020, one month at a time. 

January

8:The American Cancer Society reports a 2.2% drop in the cancer death rate between 2016 and 2017, the largest single-year decline in mortality for this disease ever recorded in the U.S.[8][9]

 30: COVID-19 pandemic: The CDC confirms the first case of human-to-human transmission of the COVID-19 coronavirus in the U.S.[29]

 February  

25:Amazon opens its first cashierless grocery store, located in Seattle.[50]

29:COVID-19 pandemic: The first death from COVID-19 in the U.S. is reported by officials in Washington state, as the total number of cases nationwide reaches 66.[55]

March

13:President Trump declares a national emergency in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, freeing up $50 billion in disaster relief funds.[85

22:The USNS Comfort (T-AH-20) hospital ship is announced to be deployed to New York. The USNS Mercy (T-AH-19) is to be deployed to Los Angeles.[107]

April:

03: COVID-19 pandemic: The CDC recommends all citizens consider wearing cloth or fabric face coverings in public.[132

24: President Trump signs a $483 billion bill to rescue small businesses.[159]

May

27:George Floyd protests: Protests in Minneapolis turn violent as activists call for murder charges against the police officers involved in George Floyd's death.[190][191]

30:The first crewed flight of the SpaceX Dragon 2 (initially scheduled for May 27 but delayed due to weather) is launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, the first crewed spacecraft to launch from U.S. soil since 2011.[200]

June

09HBO Max removes Gone with the Wind from its streaming service, amid concerns over "ethnic and racial prejudices" depicted in the 1939 movie.[215] HBO reinstates the film on June 25, alongside a disclaimer saying it "denies the horrors of slavery".[216]

12: The Minneapolis City Council votes unanimously to disband the Minneapolis Police Department and replace it with a "community" safety department, however it is prevented from doing so by the city charter.[219]

July

04: The 2020 Salute to America Independence Day event is held in Washington, D.C.[240]

12:18 sailors are injured by an explosion and fire on the USS Bonhomme Richard in San Diego, California.[247]

August

09: Pr:esident Trump is escorted from a news briefing by the Secret Service following a shooting outside the White House, after which a 51-year-old male suspect is taken to hospital.[276]

11: Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden names Senator Kamala Harris as his vice presidential nominee, the first black woman to serve in the role.[277]

September:

09: President Donald Trump is nominated for the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize by a Norwegian lawmaker for his role in facilitating the Israel–United Arab Emirates peace agreement.[308]

18: The death of long-serving judge and women's rights advocate, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, at the age of 87, leaves an empty seat on the Supreme Court. President Trump says he will choose a woman to fill the seat.[317]

October

01: COVID-19 pandemic in Washington, D.C. – The White House COVID-19 outbreak is first announced, as both President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump test positive for COVID-19 and enter quarantine. Counselors to the President Hope Hicks and Kellyanne Conway and several other White House staffers, along with multiple members of Congress, also tested positive.[331]

02: The national debt surpasses $27 trillion for the first time.[335]

November:

14:  2020 United States election protests: In Washington, D.C., thousands of protesters march to support President Trump and his claims of voter fraud in the presidential election.[432]

15 SpaceX Crew-1 mission launches from Launch Complex 39A, Kennedy Space Center, Merritt Island, Florida. The first operational mission of the SpaceX crew dragon.[citation needed]

December

 11: The Food and Drug Administration authorizes the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use. This is the first COVID-19 vaccine to be authorized for emergency use in the United States.[577]

29The statue of Abraham Lincoln is removed in Boston.[62

These statics are provided by: 2020 in the United States - Wikipedia

Two items dominated the year. They are of course, the Presidential Election, and Covid-19 epidemic. And while there was some good things that happened this year, I was hard pressed to find many that came to us as good news. I did try to list one good item in each month. But I know that some may not agree with me on what they are, and that is ok. My intent was just to look back on the year to recall what has happened.

What will 2021 bring? Perhaps a great party this evening. Perhaps a tradegy for some that will drink too much and end up in an accident. But then, what of the New Year with a new presidential administration. And will we ever get beyond this covid epidemic? Some think so. Many don't. The answers to these questions are, we just don't know. Who knows what else may come. Good or bad, it is all in the hand of Almighty God.

Only God knows. And it is He that we must trust to get us through it. One day, and month at a time. 

Trust in the Lord with all your heart
    and lean not on your own understanding;
in all your ways submit to him,
    and he will make your paths straight.[a]

Proverbs 3:5-6


Thanks for stopping by today, Friends. Have a great New Years Eve, and stay safe. God Bless you!







3

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

"i Am The Light Of The World...."

 Then spake Jesus again unto them, saying, I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life. John 8:12


Inspirational Christmas Bible Verse John 8:12 Classic Round Sticker | Zazzle.com


Christmas is over for yet another year. It seems to me that we go through all the preparations for it, and while we may attend or host several parties, dinners, and perhaps potlucks at this time of year, once the 25th comes, and the unwrapping of gifts and dinner that day is over with well....it seems sort of a let down My son's father-in-law alluded to that on Christmas Eve after we had exchanged gifts that evening at my son's home.

I myself think its true. At the end of the day, we are left with wrapping paper waste, hopefully dishes that have been washed and put away, and maybe a few new gadgets or other gifts that we received and maybe we are bored with by now.

Our thoughts go to thinking about the New Year celebrations we will take part in, in those next few days

And perhaps the taking down of the Christmas tree and other decorations that we will put away for another year.

The one thing I always enjoy looking at when ever we go out in the evening, are the homes that are lit up during this season. Slowly each will disappear and won't come out again until next year. And to me, that is sad.

The world will grow a bit darker without them, and may seem a bit more dreary.

And I wonder why that is? Because we have just celebrated the really most wonderful time of year. The birth of our Savior Jesus Christ. It is He who came to light up the world, not some artificial colored lights that make our homes more beautiful for a short time.

Are we placing too much on the things of this world, instead of who came to us from Heaven?  Could be, I imagine. Even though during this time, we have attended special services at church etc, how quickly do our thoughts race ahead to what is next.

Now don't get me wrong. I enjoy everything about the holiday as well as anyone else. But, still there is always that sense of let down after it is over with.

If we truly believe that Jesus is the Light of the world, we should never feel let down because even when we are done with all the traditions of Christmas and they are gone until next year, Jesus is still there, waiting for us to continue our relationship with Him. To worship and thank Him that he was willing to come from His home on high, to spend each day of our lives with a sinful bunch of people that sometimes more often then not, forget that He is the most important part of our Christmas celebrations. And know that His light  will never go away nor will it be blown out by our insufficient breath to stop Him from loving us. 

Thanks for joining me today, Friends. God bless you and your loved ones!


Monday, December 28, 2020

Father Forgive Them...





Jesus said, "Father, Forgive them, for they know not what they do...Luke 23:34


Luke 23:34



What has that got to do with the Season of Christ's birth. It is part of the Easter Story, so why bring it up now?

After all, Christmas is about Jesus coming to earth, a season of giving gifts, holly, jolly and all the rest. And now that it is over, we will soon celebrate the New Year with more parties and maybe some fireworks. 

Why throw that verse in now?

Well, let me ask you a question about this years long 'old year."  Or even the years that have passed, no matter how long ago.

Has anyone hurt you in 2020? Or in anytime in years before that?

I would say your answer would be: Yes. At least at some point in your past.

So then the question I have to ask is: Have you forgiven them?

I have learned a lot about forgiveness over my 60 plus years. And the reasons for having to has not been easy, nor are they fun. Because being hurt is not fun. 

I think the first time I really forgave someone was my mom. As a teen, I hadn't gotten along with her. And forgiveness for her didn't come until I was about 40 years old. At that time, I had a teenage daughter of my own, and well...I realized that I had no right to judge my mom until I could see her side from another side. 

Besides, I had not been a sinless teen myself. An nod doubt, she had had some real things to complain about me. About that time though I had read a book by a Christian counselor who stated that we have no right to hold unforgiveness to people who had hurt us, when Christ him self has forgiven us by dying on the cross.

Huh. I had never looked at that way. But he was right. And so I have tried hard to practice that in my life every since. And believe me, I have had lots of practice. 

At the same time, I have tried to ask forgiveness of those who I have hurt because it is never my intention to hurt anyone.

So getting back to why this subject now?

In a few days, we will start a new year. I sure pray it will turn out better then 2020. And with all that went on this year, we had no control over the virus that swept into our lives to take away what it has taken from us. But so far as forgiving other people, we do have control over that. We can choose to start the year with at least the determination to forgive those that have hurt us.

It's not easy, but it is possible. I have done other posts on forgiveness that maybe you have read already, or perhaps not. I suggest if you need to forgive but do not know how, you search for them. Or go to other Christian websites that can teach you how to forgive. Not only can you learn how to do that but other important things about how not to let others treat you the ways that are hurtful. Such as not being a doormat to people. There is more to unforgiveness, then just forgiving. Like you can forgive even if the other person doesn't accept it or will not also forgive you. 

And best of all, there is the best source and what it has to say about forgiving. And that is is the Bible. Because Jesus himself knew what it was. How could he forgive us if he didn't first give us his own example of it that day on the cross. 

We must learn to forgive, if we expect to receive his. For he says:

 For if ye forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you: But if ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses. Mathew 6:14-15

If someone has hurt you and you have not forgiven them, start off the New Year by controlling the things you can. It can make a lot of difference to you and those around you.

Thanks for coming, Friends. I figured out what my problem was so hopefully will be back again tomorrow! Have a wonderful day and God bless you! 





Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Sparkling 2020

 


What has the year 2020 brought you? Has it brought you beautiful fireworks like this one, that was included into Pinterest's site at the end of 2019 or beginning of 2020?

Did it bring you the hope that the new year would bring you peace, love, a more healthy bank account. 

Or did it end up stealing from you that hope, joy, peace,,,and perhapes take someone you love through the death of any kind of sickness, let alone the awful covid virus that continues to replace all that is good, with fear?

The man in today's story lost someone he loved from it and we wonder the question of where is God at times like this. 

But, I will let him tell you his story. And maybe it will bring back some hope for you during this Christmas Season and for 2021.


He Lost His Spiritual Mentor to the Coronavirus

A businessman struggles with his faith after his dear friend dies of Covid-19.

by  - Posted on Jul 27, 2020


The call came late on a Monday evening. It was an elder at my church.

“Bill, I just heard from Kathe,” he said. “Tim died.”

Tim Russell was an assistant pastor at Second Presbyterian Church in Memphis, where my family had worshipped for years. He’d been diagnosed with Covid-19 a little more than two weeks earlier. He was gasping for breath the last time I’d called him. Now he was gone. No visitors had been allowed at the hospital, not even Tim’s wife, Kathe. He’d died alone. He was 62.

Tim was more than my pastor. He was a good friend. A spiritual mentor. The man who’d taught me more about God and being a person of faith than just about anyone I knew.

There would be no funeral. Memphis was on lockdown, and public gatherings were prohibited. I hung up the phone, feeling shattered. How would I get through this coronavirus pandemic without Tim’s guidance?

I’d leaned on Tim for years, especially recently. I own a lumber mill, and starting in 2018 an international trade dispute had wiped out a third of my revenue. I’d laid off nearly half my workforce, sold equipment, sold my car and cut my salary by a third. After two years, I remained in the most tenuous financial position imaginable, just hanging on and praying to avoid another setback

Then the virus hit. The market for my mill’s American hardwoods cratered. Supply chains froze. My operations manager and I oversaw a skeleton crew at the mill and sent everyone else home to quarantine with their families.

Through everything, I’d held to Tim’s unwavering teaching about the providence, goodness and grace of God. “That’s the Jesus I know,” Tim would boom out in his James Earl Jones voice whenever someone at church told a story about God at work in their lives. Tim helped me know that Jesus too. To trust that God held all things in his merciful hands.

“Tim’s gone,” I said to my wife, Lisa, who’d drawn close when she heard my voice on the phone.

“Oh, Bill,” she said, and we held each other. Tim was Second Presbyterian’s pastor to adults. He had mentored our whole family, not just Lisa and me. We often shared meals with him and Kathe, sometimes inviting them over for lunch after church—we call it dinner in the South. We’d get into theological conversations that lasted for hours. Lisa’s parents live with us, and they loved Tim too. He’d been deeply involved in our now-grown kids’ lives.

We all could have used some of Tim’s unshakable faith. Lisa and her parents rarely left the house now. Our youngest son, who was still in college, was sheltering at home with us. Our three older kids were scattered around the country.

There is nothing like knowing your family is at risk to make a man feel helpless. Same with owning a business and fearing you won’t be able to take care of your employees.

Tim was the second person I knew to die from Covid-19. The other was an acquaintance. It was only a matter of time before someone else I knew got sick. Maybe even me. Lumber mills had been deemed essential because of construction needs, so I kept going to work. It was a trade-off between safety and staying in business.

Lisa and I prayed for Tim and his family as we went to bed. Our prayer list was long these days. Intellectually I knew that God was here, at work, in charge. But it was hard to feel certain. I could will myself to think it. Not that long ago, I would have texted Tim and he’d have texted back a reassuring message full of graduate-level vocabulary. Where could I turn now?

One lesson Tim had helped me learn was that I didn’t have to do faith all by myself. For much of my life, I’d assumed I had to be self-reliant. My father had walked out on my family when I was four years old. My mom and I had struggled, and I’d put myself through college working multiple jobs.

I’d wanted to be a teacher and a football coach. Then I met Lisa and realized supporting a family on a beginning teacher’s salary would be hard, so I switched to sales for a lumber company and worked my way up to a place where I could start my own mill.

I sketched out plans for Classic American Hardwoods in my living room in 2001. Nearly two decades later, the company had 160 employees and $50 million in annual sales to customers around the world.

Along the way, I realized my coaching dreams by volunteering to lead a struggling football team at an inner-city Memphis high school. Those boys were so inspiring, a film crew showed up to make a documentary, Undefeated, which went on to win an Academy Award in 2012.

Afterward I got my 15 minutes of fame and wrote a book about leadership and, to this day, still get invited to speak at corporate events and meetings all over the country. I even told a story in the November 2014 issue of Guideposts about forgiving my father.

Maybe it was around then that Tim’s way of relating to God began to sink in for me. I’d carried a lot of hard feelings toward my dad. Watching the boys on my team deal with their own family troubles helped give me the courage to express my feelings when Dad unexpectedly walked back into my life.

As my kids got older and I switched from coaching at Manassas High School to helping out with my own boys’ football teams, I allowed myself to trust that God really was there and I really could depend on him and on other people.

From 2013 to 2017, Tim was away from Memphis serving as head of a Christian school outside Boston. I missed him, but my business was recovering from the 2008 financial crisis and my family was thriving. I felt as if God had my back.

Then in 2018, a long-simmering trade dispute between the United States and China blew up into a full-scale trade war, with tariffs flying back and forth on entire categories of products—including American hardwoods.

I had never needed Tim’s guidance so much. It felt like God’s timing that he’d returned to Second Presbyterian a year earlier. Tim preached a God who was firmly in charge of creation, whose ways were just and merciful.

“Above all things, trust in the divine providence of God,” he said.

I tried to do that as my business struggled. I stayed in constant touch with Tim. And he stayed in touch with my family, even helping my kids find churches when they went off to college and got their first jobs.

It was Tim’s voice in my head when I lay awake late one night, terrified my lumber mill would go under. I realized I’d been doing everything I could to get control of the crisis. But a trade war was beyond my control.

Trust in the divine providence of God, I told myself, echoing Tim. It was all I could do. It kept me going.

Except now Tim was gone. Was that God’s providence?

The days after Tim’s death were strange. Local news outlets reported on his passing, and I tried to explain to reporters what Tim meant to our community. The Today show picked up the story and aired footage of our church choir singing hymns to Kathe from the street outside Tim’s house.

“He was everybody’s pastor,” said our senior pastor, George Robertson, in a 15-minute online address to the church. “He was even my family’s pastor.”

I went to work, went home, ventured out to buy food.

Easter came, and we were still cooped up in the house. Second Presbyterian streamed services online. Lisa dimmed the lights in our family room, and we sat down to watch, as we did every Sunday in quarantine.

“If this feels odd to you, remember that the Last Supper was eaten in seclusion in a home and this might be the most authentic communion you’ve ever taken in your life,” Pastor Robertson said.

That put me in mind of something Tim often said. “Who’s the audience at a church service?” he’d ask. “Is it you? No. It’s God. We don’t come to church to be entertained. We come to worship God—pastors and laypeople alike. Let’s remember that the next time we’re tempted to gossip about the service.”

Pastor Robertson encouraged us to get some bread and wine. He held up his own bread and wine and said a blessing. Our family knelt at the coffee table and shared out the sacrament.

I closed my eyes. It all did feel odd. And outside the house, the world continued on its frightening path. My business remained on the edge of a cliff. Most of my kids were still far away. Our community was reeling. Tim was gone.

And yet, at that moment, I didn’t have to will myself to trust God. In my quiet family room—with Lisa, her parents and our youngest son around me, Pastor Robertson’s calm voice in the background and the bread and the wine in my hands—I could feel God’s presence.

Even in the midst of chaos and fear and uncertainty, God was at work, moving all things toward a future I could not envision. A future I didn’t have to envision. If I trusted my business to God, then I could trust my family and my own life to God. I could trust my grief to God.

I could trust God, period.

Rising from the floor, I knew the days ahead would be hard and maybe, for a time, worse than what we’d already endured. I also knew that, above all, I would follow my friend Tim Russell’s lead and trust in the providence of God. And I would be okay.

💓

As the end of the year draws ever closer, we should not lose hope for a better new year. For that love, peace, a healthier bank account. God does not want us to lose our joy, despite a deadly virus. He does not allow our loved ones to be taken for any reason, let alone because he is a mean God.

Why he has allowed this year to do the damage it has gone through is far beyond our understanding even if it is just one of those end-time signs that we are taught in our churches. Perhaps it is an end-time sign that tells us that we must be ready and that is what he trying to teach us.

I don't know but until Jesus comes back, we sometimes do not fully understand. And as the man in the above story knew, that no matter how hard things became, he could trust the providence of God.

We that have come to Christ can know that also. We can trust him. Because he knows what lies ahead for us and our hope is in him despite what comes in the new year. 

 - For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the LORD, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end.

Thanks for coming by today, Friends. Have a peaceful, blessed day no matter what is going on around you! 





Tuesday, December 22, 2020

BUT FOR THE GRACE OF GOD.....


 


The photo of the gentleman above is not a pretty picture. Is it?

It is an ugly, despairing photo. A picture of disgust. A picture of all too many homeless people.

I don't speak of the man himself in that description. For he is just one of the millions that look like him. And that is what is disgusting. That people walk the streets, dirty, hungry, and in despair.

Along with all they go through on the streets, they also have to hear the jeers from the passer byes that ridicule them, judge them, and/or ignore them.

Bad enough that they live in other countries. Worse yet, they are in the United States. Because for many, they don't get the help they need to rise up out of their situations.

I get it. We don't want to give them our money that we have worked hard for. Our reasoning is that they will just use it to drink or buy drugs with.

But can I say this? BUT FOR THE GRACE OF GOD, THERE GO I.

It's true, I might be where they are had it not been for God. My daughter said this to me a few months ago. "Maybe if I were in someone's shoe like that, I would need to drink or take drugs too."  Thankfully I have never been homeless. I have come close to it at times. But God has never let me beg for food, or not have a bed to sleep on at night. He has provided for me even through the very thin times of my life.

Now don't get me wrong. I do not allocate drugs and alcohol. But I  am sad for those that have to have it to survive.

I read something this morning that I want to share with you today on this subject that may clear up some things that we need to think about. 

Sharing is caring!

Practical Ways to Help the Homeless - Mocha Man Style

Panhandlers are a common sight in cities across America. In Houston, I encounter homeless people on a daily basis especially when I’m stopped at a traffic light and they aggressively start cleaning my windshield.

While most people get upset by this act, I try to support the men and women when I have some spare cash on hand.

“Why did you give him money?” My son asked after witnessing me hand a few dollars to one of these guys.

“Because he doesn’t have a place to live and he probably doesn’t have any food,” I said.

“Why doesn’t he just get a job?” My son asked.

“I wish it were that simple,” I said. “No one wants to be homeless, but many factors can affect a person’s life and leave him on the street.”

A few years ago, I volunteered at a homeless shelter once a week. While talking to the residents, I learned how complicated life can be.

At the shelter, I met all types of people – veterans, teachers, truck drivers, even a college professor with a Ph.D. Bouts with mental illness, depression, drug and alcohol abuse, and domestic violence were some of the leading causes of the residents’ homelessness.

Their stories were heartbreaking and their experiences affected me deeply.

Now, when I see homeless people on the street, I cannot ignore them. Although I don’t always give them money, I try to show some compassion by talking to them, looking them in the eye, and telling them about local shelters where they can get some assistance.

😢

Indeed. Who are we to judge them when we have no idea what they went through their life to get them where they are now?

I know someone that works at a church run food pantry. Homeless people come out of the woods to go to church there. Not to hear preaching or singing. No, those homeless people go in for the food they can get.

My friend made a comment about them just coming for food and not coming for services. She said they just want to take, take, take.  She was not doing it in a spirit of love at all. It was like she was begrudging them for being in their situations where food is what they were after.

Here she was, living in a nice home, and money coming in each month and having to pay for it when these people were getting free food and not having to do anything for it.

I didn't respond to that statement, but I wondered what she would think if she was in that kind of situation. I wonder how she would like living in the woods, instead of her nice apartment. 

Would she trade her life for theirs just because she worked for what she has, and they don't? NO!

It's true, that saying, "You can't understand someone until you have walked a mile in their shoes."

We have no right to judge them. In fact, the bible tells us to not judge others. Not anyone, and that goes for people that live on the streets, drinking out of a whisky bottle.

No, we can't save the world. But when we see someone in need, we can offer them even a dab of help. A kind word, a smile, or telling them that Jesus loves them.  Sometimes maybe a buck or two, buy a sandwich  for them or give them a coat. 

More suggestions on how to help homeless or poor people is on the site above, if you would like to check it out.

 In the meantime, It is not just a suggestion in the bible. It is a command that we love others and give to those in need. 

Because: BUT FOR THE GRACE OF GOD, THERE GO I.


FOR GOD SO LOVED THE WORLD THAT HE SENT HIS ONLY BEGOTTEN SON, SO THAT WHOSOEVER BELIVES ON HIM WILL HAVE EVERLASTING LIFE. JOHN 3:16


Thanks for coming today, Friends. May God grant you peace throughout this busy season


Tuesday Blessing. Have a Blessed Day!


Silent Night

  Silent Night “Silent Night” is a favorite Christ­mas song for many people around the world. Its gentle melody suggests a “heavenly peace” ...