The Truth Is in the Vacuum Cleaner

Even if you have a rug by the door. Even if you take your shoes off. Even if you are very careful. No matter how hard you try, you are bound to track dirt from outside inside your house. The truth is in the vacuum cleaner. It does not lie. Sure, especially if your dog is as hairy as ours, […]

Ten from Two

Your answer might be minus eight, but this is not a math problem. From two different sources this week I learned about ten things that might be particularly significant for a well lived life. From the first source there was a discussion about five habits. James Clear wrote that your five strongest habits are a great indicator of your life’s […]

Not Name Calling

Don’t take offense. It is not name calling. But as Christians you and I should be like a donkey. Of course not just any donkey, but the Palm Sunday donkey as he carried Jesus into the city. That’s us; we bear Christ (Christopher) to the cities, towns and villages in which we live. We are not culture warriors. Ours is […]

Speed Check Ahead

Does your car have a function that warns you about a “speed check ahead”? Somehow there is technology available to identify when a police car is in the area with a radar speed gun. That same technology can warn you when there is a red-light photo sensor at an intersection. Such warnings serve as helpful reminders to slow down and […]

At Home and Let It Roam

They say, “Charity begins at home.”  That’s good. Probably right. But what is charity, or what do we mean by charity? And is home charity’s destination or beachhead? A friend recently sent out a Latin poem the first line of which is “Ubi caritas et amor, Deus ibi est.” Another friend quickly identified it as an ancient hymn and gave […]

The Right Pronoun Issue

What are the right pronouns to use? He/him/his? She/her/hers? Lots of conversation surrounds pronouns these days. But we are having the wrong conversation about the “right pronouns”. That conversation speaks to which third-person pronouns we ought to use. Wrong conversation. The right conversation, the more helpful and ultimately more salutary one, centers instead on a better distinction between use of […]

10 Reasons to Read Your (Whole) Bible This Year

Late next week I will be involved in a one day conference that will challenge people to read through the Bible. This is not designed to be a burden; it is not forcing one person’s piety on another. It is to capture the imagination. “What difference would reading through the whole Bible in a year make?” Check out the following […]

To Open a Pickle Jar

Aging includes ups and downs. Both good and bad things grow out of the aging process. One of the biggest downs is that no matter how hard you try you will lose muscle mass and strength. You will struggle to lift heavy boxes. You will get tired easier and sooner when you work in the yard. This is why older […]

Take the Green Light

Where we live there are a lot of stop lights. A lot. Many intersections have multi-phase lights: blinking yellow, blinking red, red arrow, green arrow, red light, yellow light, green light. Multiple streets and lanes feed into the intersections from assorted directions, often more than just four. It can be quite complicated watching who goes when and where. You can […]

You Don’t Have One Either

Perplexing issues have plagued me recently, a couple thorny issues. So I started looking around for my magic wand, the one I used to use when I was a pastor. Then I remembered; I never had one. I still don’t. Neither do you. A friend reminded me this week, “You can’t fix everything.” Neither can you. There are no magic […]