All posts by lifesmeaningministries

An Observation – on love

Back in ancient days when I was in what was then called Junior High School, 8th or 9th grade, one of our English teachers would put an expression on the black board and ask us to explain what it meant. One that has stuck with me to this day is from Shakespeare’s Sonnet 116. At the time I don’t think we even knew what a Sonnet was. At any rate the quote said:     

                “Love is not love which altars when it altercation finds.” 

The class talked about it for a little while but I don’t think that we really understood it. Since we are in the midst of this Holy Week and Easter Season I think it really is a very apt expression. Though Shakespeare didn’t really intend it in a religious sense.

From Holy Scripture we read and often quote it’s most famous verse. “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whosoever believes in Him will not perish, but will have everlasting life.” St. John’s Gospel Chapter 3, verse 16. This is speaking of the relationship between God and all mankind whom He created. That is the depth, St. John is saying, of the love that Almighty God, our Father, has for each one of us. If we have even a casual relationship with Christians or Christian church worship we’ve been told that God loves us. It is also one of those expressions that we first begin to question when we find ourself in some difficulty or need. Yet, Scripture continues to declare it as God’s truth for each human life.

We also realize that from the time the Bible records our first rebellion from God’s will we have caused our Lord a lot of trouble or “altercation” in the Sonnet’s terms. So much of what leads us to question God’s love is the brokenness of this fallen and rebellious world in which we live. We suffer because of things we’ve done ourselves, or things that happen to us even through no direct fault of our own. Yet we still declare that God’s loves us even though we don’t fully understand why things happen as they do. Is this really love with all of this altercation around me?

I attended a Good Friday community service last evening where the pastor was talking about the nature of this God-love. The service was a large gathering of eight local congregations, 300 or400 Christians, many young families with small children. The pastor knew the love the people had for one another and observed that many of these people would be willing to even give their life to protect one of their friends. Many agreed that they would be willing. We have all heard accounts of this actually happening in times of great danger.

But then the pastor asked how many of us would be willing to give the life of one of our children to save the life of another? This question bit us very deeply, and none in this large gathering was able to answer in the positive. None of us could say that we had that much love to help another in need.

Is that not the love we are taught that God loves each of us? And we can’t pass it off easily by saying, “Oh, but God knew He was going to bring Jesus back to life.” That trivializes all of the events that led to the the crucifixion and the words spoken from the cross. 

The man Jesus, the son of God in human flesh, was without sin. There was no guilt found in Him, and yet He was given by the Father to take the punishment each of us deserves. We hear that often in our church fellowships, but don’t ever minimize it. The depth of pain is contained in the words spoken from the cross on our behalf. “My God, My God, why have you forsaken me.” That is our pain He is feeling through the nails in His hands and feet and the hatred in the taunts of the jeering crowd. 

That is the love that refused to altar in the midst of your and my altercation of numerous sins and a very sinful nature. That is the depth of love God, our Father, has for you as He works each day, in each situation of life, to lead you into His best life. 

And since I’m writing this on the Saturday morning after Good Friday, we have the assurance of that love in the truth of the bodily resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ on Easter Sunday morning. These are not just nice Christian stories or sayings we write on a chalk board. This is life itself! The life that offers us forgiveness and cleansing of our sins. The life that comforts and strengthens us in worst of life’s times. The life that seeks to guide us day by day giving us meaning and purpose. And a life that assures us of it’s endless nature in eternal fellowship with our Good Lord.

This is the life and love that allows us to identify with the Lord Jesus when He said, “Father, into Your hands I commit my spirit”, and to know the depth of love that passes all understanding. 

God’s blessing my dear friends. Rejoice, and live daily in God’s love and your love for one another.  Amen.

An Observation – Holiness

Sometime back in grade school, many ….. many years ago, we were introduced to the 1913 poem Trees by Joyce Kilmer with its beginning line, “I think that I shall never see a poem as lovely as a tree.” The speaker insists that no human art or creation can match the beauty and majesty of nature. A commentary states that “The poem can thus be read as a hymn of praise to God’s creation, celebrating both the wonder of the natural world and its maker.” 

Why this came to mind now I have no idea but the description in the above commentary with the words “beauty”, “majesty”, and “wonder”, are a strong parallel for my thoughts this morning. I’m thinking about the concept of holiness, the awesome wonder and holiness of our Lord God. I think of Moses doing the mundane work of tending a flock of sheep and being confronted by God appearing to him in the form of a burning  bush that is not consumed. He heard the words, “take the shoes off your feet for you are standing on Holy ground”. (Exodus 3:5) Later, in the Exodus account, Moses has spent time with God and returning to his people with his face radiating light from his holy encounter. (Exodus 34:29f) Or the prophet Isaiah falling prostrate trembling before his vision of God Almighty. (Isaiah 6) There are many such descriptions of encountering God’s holiness.

In the fast paced and event crowded days we become calloused to a sense of the awe and wonder of the Lord God who appears to us in many and varied ways if we are willing to look around, to think, to meditate, to offer a brief prayer, to worship. The message in today’s sermon at church was about a Jealous God who will not allow worship due Him to be shared with any idols we may create. But this is not because He is a vain and egotistical lord. Rather, His jealousy is for us. We are His creation. He knows that our best good, our most joy-filled life, most secure and a life of peace, is only found when we are enfolded in the presence of His Holy Life. He is the source of life upon which we draw in worship, whether from the wonder of nature or the setting of corporate worship. It is important for us to look for and enter into that sense of God’s Holiness.

It is why we call the room for our worship a Sanctuary. It is why, in that room, we have an altar separated by a chancel rail. It is from this area that we hear the Word of God and receive the Holy Sacrament. There have been times at that rail that I have been unable to speak, and holy tears were the only response I could give. I don’t expect everyone to respond the same way, but however you respond realize that you come into the sacred presence of Almighty God. Be humbled and rejoice in it!  It is in God’s blessed presence you find your life.

“God, who at various times and in various ways spoke in time past to the fathers by the prophets, has in these last days spoken to us by His Son, whom He has appointed heir of all things, through whom also He made the worlds; who being the brightness of His glory and the express image of His person, and upholding all things by the word of His power, when He had by Himself purged our sins, sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high, having become so much better than the angels, as He has by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they.   …….

“You, Lord, in the beginning laid the foundation of the earth, And the heavens are the work of Your hands. They will perish, but You remain;
And they will all grow old like a garment Like a cloak You will fold them up, And they will be changed. But You are the same, And Your years will not fail.” (Hebrews 1:1-4, & 10-11)

An Observation: We’ve Changed….

Well of course we have with the passage of time. We’ve gotten older. We have a lot more technological innovations changing the way we work and play. We’ve learned new things. Yes, of course all these have changed our physical appearance and the manner in which we live. All this is natural with the passage of years, but I’m looking at more than this. I’m thinking of the change that has taken place at the core of our being. An inward change.

When I say “we’ve” changed I’m looking in the collective sense of society as a whole, the nature of the world in which we live in this third millennium. Individually we are called by our Lord to observe our world and guide our own lives by Holy Scripture as we are guided by the Holy Spirit. This is where we enter into a spiritual battleground, recognizing the changed nature of our world yet seeking to guide our selves and our family by the values and nature of our Lord Jesus.

Living in this vastly changed world we now occupy is what I’ve been writing about in my book Not For This Life Only and in these Observations on my website: Life-Has-Meaning.com. I am an old retired Lutheran pastor. What I write about is more than just an older person not being able to get used to “modern” ways. Of course there is that too, but the changes I refer to are fundamental to the nature of life itself.

In the Introduction to my book I referenced Dr. Peter Kreef’s statement that “We are the first civilization that does not know why we exist. …. The essence of modernity is the abandoning of [a] religious foundation.” Both Dr. Kreef and Dr. Carl Trueman, in his book The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self have traced the changes and acceptance of “truths” over past hundreds of years that have culminated in our accepting of what we see today as the “truth” of who we are as human beings. It is these so called truths that are contrary to the people God made us to be. Dr. Trueman refers to the modern self as Expressive Individualism.

Dr. Trueman said this term, coined by an American sociologist in the 1990s, refers to “the way we think about ourselves in modern society, the normative notion of the self, is one where our inner feelings are critical to our identity, critical to who we are; our ability to express those inner feelings is therefore essential to what we might dub as ‘social authenticity.’” This has opened the Pandora’s Box of societies sexual attitudes and political policies which are contrary to who God declares that we were created to be. Guided by our inner feelings and not by God’s truth is an acceptance of the devil’s taunt, “You will not die. Your eyes will be opened and you will be like God knowing good and evil.” (Genesis 3:5)

Our meaning, our nature, comes not from how we feel about ourselves inside, but who our God created us to be, and who our Lord Jesus redeemed by His precious blood. We are created male or female in the very image of God and made God’s redeemed child through faith in Christ. This is who you are by God’s pure grace apart from any inner feelings you have about yourself. You are loved with an everlasting love beyond anything you feel or think of yourself. Hold to this truth and live each day in its meaning. For in our Lord God your life does have meaning.

An Observation about a … Walkman?

I am a grandfather and therefore about 40 years removed from raising our five children. But I still think a lot about that era and what my wife and I did with our kids. There were certain patterns in which both Audrey and I were raised, and certain values that we together felt were important. It was these values that guided our family life. I expect the same is pretty much true for other families of my generation. We could list a number of  examples but I’d rather get to the central point at which I’m aiming.  The Walkman!

Of course, one has to be close to my generation to even remember what a Walkman is! They were a portable cassette tape player in the 1960s and ’70s. Though now they still exist but have graduate to playing CDs rather then tapes, which now even those are well outdated. In any event it was a big thing with 1970s teens. They had head phones or earbuds and listen to their favorite music as loud as they wanted not bothering anyone else. But back to my parenting. 

I never allowed our kids to have a Walkman. I felt that it closed them in from the world and from others. I remember our vacations in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. We would walk along the boardwalk, lots of people around, and many kids all in their own world. I know our children didn’t like not having them. And it was not that their music was bad. It was just that when one is distracted in that manner they are not aware of, or more importantly looking for the beauty and interesting things around them in their present world. Or for that matter in conversations with those close by. 

Now move that image 30 or 40 year forward into our time and we can see how this has been multiplied many times over, and with adults included. I’m not opposed to technology. We are all immersed in it. It has its uses obviously, otherwise I wouldn’t be typing this on a laptop and sending it to you over the internet. But I am opposed to those things that close us in to ourselves apart from those around us, and make us unobservant of the beauty and interesting things in our world. … Did you notice that little green sprout popping out of the ground in response to those few warmer winter days even when there was still some snow around?

Life has meaning. That life is around us all the time in the world God created. There is life in the clerk at the grocery store, and just maybe that clerk needs a bit of life that we might share with them. That life really doesn’t come through a smart phone, but through one who learns that many things around us really are pretty neat, that that person really is important for me, and maybe I have a bit of life I can share with them.  Give it some thought. Life in this world God has given us really does have meaning.

Don’t settle for surface comments, even mine!

An editorial recently printed in our Frederick newspaper asked the question, What is an American? It was by Fred Fransen, President of Huntington Junior College in W.Va. He pointed out that our country was founded on ideas or principles that have endured up until recent decades. It is again time Dr. Fransen believes to take a hard look at those values.

It seems to me that this means looking beyond the surface declarations to the substance upon which declarations are made. This is what I was referring to last week on the issue of abortion rights which has become central in our current election cycle. I pointed out that a number of other moral issues precede the need to consider an abortion. This need to look beyond the surface is apparent, or should be, in most of what we hear and read.

I’ve said that my basis for writing is as a Christian seeking to base my judgments on the values and will of our Lord as understood through God’s Word in Holy Scripture. It is pointed out that much of Mr. Trump’s support is from a large block of Evangelical Christians. But again, this is a statement that needs to be examined.

An article in The Economist weekly of March 2021 asked the question “What is an evangelical Christian?” After looking at recent history since Jimmy Carter’s presidency in 1976 the article noted that “white evangelicals have established themselves as America’s most cohesive and influential religious voting block. … They have become “the bedrock of the Republican Party. After insisting throughout the 1990’s that character mattered, and that Bill Clinton was morally unfit for the presidency, they threw their support behind Donald Trump, a thrice-married rake.” It was then asked, “So what do evangelical Christian really believe?”

A recent article in World magazine noted that “some Americans who self-identify as ‘evangelicals’ to pollsters do not actually attend church regularly. Increasingly, the term is used more in a “political, cultural sense than a theological church sense,” said political scientist Ryan Burge. He predicted these “cultural evangelicals” will make up about 12 percent of Trump’s self-identified evangelical voters in 2024. Others have said that they are willing to overlook Mr. Trump’s moral issues because he is the only one who can beat Mr. Biden.

Thomas Edsall of The New Your Times had an article entitled “The Deification of Donald Trump Poses Some Interesting Questions”. I’ll let the article’s title speak for itself. You can look it up on the internet if you care to. I’ve already declared my personal opposition to Mr. Trump for President. I’ve said enough about that and it is not my central issue. I’m looking at the shallowness of our evaluations and our need to stand firm on a foundation of well considered values.

Jesus, on trial and standing before Pontius Pilate said, “I have come into the world, to bear witness to the truth. Everyone who is of the truth hears My voice.” Pilate said to Him, “What is truth?” (John 18:37-38) That is our challenge, to determine what is the truth. I leave it with you to seriously consider. It is a very serious question and one that can lead to some personal sacrifice and pain. It certainly did for our Lord.

Observations on the American Political Climate

I have never gotten involved in politics except for my own voting preferences. But this year is different, at least in my making some comments about what is happening nationally. Our country is in total confusion and grabbing at straws, primarily because we have lost our central anchor point in our Judeo-Christian foundation.

America has been the so called world leader, but we are now in a position where we don’t even know how to lead ourselves. I know these are statements of an “old man” whose values are grounded in another era. I thank God for that, even though that other era was no utopia either. At least it didn’t have me submersed in an electronic screen, and it allowed me to use my imagination, look out at the world asking questions, and develop real relationship with people who became a part of me.

What does Make America Great Again mean? I wrote above that we have lost our central anchor point in our Judeo-Christian foundation. That doesn’t mean that we are not to allow other faiths to worship as they wish, but we have taken the whole aspect of inclusion to change the very foundation of our souls.

I can’t continue what I’m seeking to share by using veiled references to a candidate. I am totally opposed to Mr. Trump for President. But that doesn’t mean I’m recommending another candidate. That’s my own personal voting preference. Rather, I look at what is happening around our country in those promoting their favorite candidate.

Many have pointed out that President Trump appointed the conservative Supreme Court Justices who were the balance in overturning the legalization of abortion. For many the opposition to abortion has become a central determining issue. I’m opposed to abortion also, but there is far more to it than that. Abortion, presented as a women’s right over her own body, is only the end point of many other moral choices we’ve allowed to become normal and assumed values in today’s world.

I understand the concern when a pregnancy puts the mother’s life in danger, but that is a small percentage of aborted pregnancies. The far larger numbers represents the devaluation of marriage and family; an economy that requires the employment of both spouses in order to have the lifestyle they want; thus pushing off child bearing to a later age when it is more difficult or not at all; removing sexual intercourse from the bond of a covenant marriage and making it an assumed part of a longer term dating relationship; along with the easy availability of contraceptives and abortifacient drugs. The affects of all of these and more are seen throughout western society.

Mr. Trump is hardly an exemplary leader in areas of sex, marriage, and family. And while that is not a political leaders primary function, if they have not sought to govern their own life in these fundamental areas I am not going to look to them as a good national leader. Making America great is meaningless without a solid and consistent moral base.

An LA Times article questioned whether humans can survive democracy. A better question is whether democracy can survive fallen humanity. ….. “A democracy can only be sustained if informed citizens operate within a moral framework. This, in turn, requires an understanding of the world as it actually is, especially what it means to be human. Elected representatives who can’t distinguish good from evil, or “man” from “woman” can hardly be expected to enact policies that allow men and women to seek the good.”

There is much more to say about our need for good leadership, but one must not look only at narrow issues that seem to satisfy surface policies and only give the appearance security, prosperity, and a good life.

What is sin?

Sin – now there is an interesting word to start a mid-week morning. But anyone who has read even parts of the Bible know the word and have some thoughts about what sin is. Sin calls attention to laws or values established by God. We don’t relate it to civil laws. We don’t say we have sinned when we go over a speed limit regulating traffic, or an error we’ve made in paying our taxes. No, to sin speaks of breaking a commandment we believe has been established by Almighty God. Even then we try to soften the word, just as we do with speed limits, by saying that what we did really isn’t so bad, it was in the tolerance allowed by the speed camera’s setting.

There is a lot more to sin than that. Sin is certainly a matter of violating the Ten Commandments, something we do that is against God’s will. But sin is even more than that. Sin is part of our nature. In our Lutheran worship service the pastor begin by declaring, “If we say we have no sin we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, God who is faithful and just, will forgive our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness.”  The pastor then invites the congregation to take a few minutes in silent prayer to confess the individual sins our  Lord brings to mind. These are our individual known sins that we’ve committed against God during the past week.

We continue our prayer of confession saying, “Most Merciful God, we confess that we are by nature sinful and unclean. We have sinned against you by thought, word, and deed,  by what we have done and what we have left undone. We have not loved you with our whole heart. We have not loved our neighbor as ourselves.” This is the second part of what sin is all about. It is who we are. It is our fallen nature. In the presence of Almighty God we can’t just sluff this off with some excuses about everybody being the same, and anyhow God is loving and forgiving. Yes, both are true, but they are not a “get out of jail free” card. 

The words that follow in our prayer of confession hit me very hard when I have to say them. I understand the reality of their truth. “We justly deserve your present and eternal punishment.” Sin is what I do, and also part of my nature in rebellion against my Creator and Lord. I cannot escape this with any excuses or self-justifications. “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” St. Paul wrote in Romans 3:23. It was St. John who declared “if we say we have no sin we deceive ourselves and the truth is not is us.”(I John1:8)  It is the truth that we have inherited our sinful nature from the rebellion of our first parents. (Genesis 3) This rebellion from God explains so much of what we see continually in the evils of the world around us. There is no other ultimate explanation and there is nothing mankind can do about it.

However, our Sunday’s liturgical confession doesn’t stop with our deserving eternal punishment. We appeal to the mercy of our God.  “For the sake of your Son, Jesus Christ, have mercy on us. Forgive us, renew us, and lead us, so that we may delight in your will nd walk in your ways to the glory of your holy name. Amen.”

It is then that we are able to hear from our pastor God’s gracious words. “Almighty God in his mercy has given his Son to die for you and for his sake forgives you all your sins. As a called and ordained servant of Christ, and by His authority, I declare unto you the entire forgiveness of all of your sins, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.”

There is no sluffing off. No self justification. No excuses. No confessing one little sin and being done with it. We fall humbly before the mercy of Almighty God and come to the foot of the cross of Jesus Christ where alone we are assured that our just condemnation before God has been paid. Our debt is satisfied. “Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.”(Romans 8:1) What else can we say to that but “Thanks be to God.”

Yes, we will sin again. Yes, our human nature is to rebel against our Creator. But because of the depth of God’s love He has provided the way for us to come to Him in the sacrificial death and glorious resurrection of His only begotten Son, Jesus Christ. The sentence of eternal separation has ben satisfied. We are able to serve God and others in the love of God given to us in Jesus Christ. AMEN.  

What Good is Marriage?

I’ve been reading Touchstone Journal for some time. It is published by The Fellowship of St. James. The most recent issue, January/February 2024 has a very insightful Editorial on the current state of marriage. It is entitled  What Good Is Marriage? The Deliberate Demise of Augustine-Christian Marriage by Allan C. Carlson. 

It is not a long article but well worth your time to look it up, and even a motivation to subscribe to the Touchstone Journal. Mr. Carlson’s editorial explains a lot of what we see around us in today’s world, and reinforces the truth of Scripture that our Lord’s plan for His creation has always been the only correct path for men and women. 

May you have a God-blessed week as you walk each day with our Lord Jesus.

Pastor Irv

Being nice to those who are naughty.

I’ve commented during this Christmas season on the “Naughty and Nice” balance sheet we are told Santa Clause uses, and how we let it work into our theology. The popular melody tells us that Santa’s watching and we better be nice if we want to get Christmas presents. I’ve said that we tend to look at our Lord in the same way. There are several paths this kind of discussion can take. “I live a decent life. Why are all these problems happening?” “Why do bad things happen to good people?” Or, “It isn’t fair. I deserve…” 

What strikes me is that these paths of thinking are not what our Lord Jesus was trying to teach. “But I say to you who hear: Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, and pray for those who spitefully use you. To him who strikes you on the one cheek, offer the other also. And from him who takes away your cloak, do not withhold your tunic either. Give to everyone who asks of you. And from him who takes away your goods do not ask them back.”  (Luke 6:27-30, NKJV)  This is certainly a lopsided balance sheet! There is no question of fairness here. But these are Jesus words. Further, they are what He demonstrated toward us in His own life. It is this “grace” that changes minds, hearts, and lives.

We are called to be nice even to those who are naughty towards us. That is the meaning of the cross. Jesus took a punishment into himself that we justly deserve. That is the heart of our Gospel message, but it is also what Jesus calls us to live out in our life. Not that, by so doing, we are atoning for our sins. That has been totally completed at the cross. But that is the depth of love God has even for the least of created people. It is realizing that depth of love that has changed our own life. We have a new heart because of realizing that love. Now, we seek to reflect that sacrificial love in our actions toward others. It is that, alone, that changes another person’s heart causing them to want the source of that love – Jesus. 

Thoughts About Christmas – Part 2

When our five children were young Audrey and I never emphasized Santa Claus as bring gifts. Oh, we did our Christmas shopping, decorating, and had presents ready for Christmas morning. But it was all for family fun, and we knew that Jesus was our greatest gift. His love was the reason for everything else we did. Our family and church fellowship was and still is the greatest joy we have at Christmas.

It is fun to have a picture taken with our young children sitting on the lap of the department store Santa, but it is too easy to be caught up in the abundance of glittering presentations. Most people still use the name for December 25th calling it Christmas. The first part of that word being Christ, our blessed Lord and Saviour. Our effort must be to keep for ourselves and our family, as the slogan says – Christ is the reason for the season.

At this time of year we hear the song Santa Claus is coming to Town. It was written in 1934 and sung on radio for the first time. It became an instant hit. 500,000 copies of the sheet music were sold in the first two days. It has been re-recorded and played everywhere since then. The jolly, red suited, bushy white bearded gentleman who comes down house chimneys on Christmas Eve to leave the children gifts, while his reindeer and sleigh are parked on the showy roof, have become a standard image. And yes, for my first few Christmases when I was young we put out a plate of cookies and a glass of milk for Santa on Christmas Eve. But I soon learned that it was my Dad who really ate those cookies.

The song is cute and popular, but it is lousy theology. Unfortunately, I think it tends to reinforce the “balance sheet” image some have of our Lord.

    You better watch out, You better not cry, You better not pout, 
    I'm telling you why, Santa Claus is coming to town
    He's making a list, He's checking it twice
    He's going to find out, Who's naughty and nice, 
    Santa Claus is coming to town
    He sees you when you're sleeping, He knows when you're awake
    He knows when you've been bad or good, So be good for goodness sake

The question of being good or bad is a very flexible standard. Do we make the judgment or is it outside of us by some fixed standard? And do we only have to be good when Judge Santa is coming to town? So we shape up in December, but we can let the other eleven months slide a bit. And do we behave only because we expect to get something good in return? This is not the relationship we have with our blessed Lord. Though, all too often, we hear expressions that show this wrong view. “If God really is a God of love, how could He allow this to happen?” “If God really created the world why do we have all of these wars and killings?” “I believe in God, but God helps those who help themselves.” I’m sure you have heard, or perhaps at time said, similar things. Once we depart in our understanding of God as we learned to know Him in Holy Scripture, we are left with a Santa Clause god or no god at all. Tragically, too many people have gone that path in today’s world.

There is a standard of good and bad established outside of us by an absolute will that is other than mankind. That Other is Almighty God. His will is stated in the Ten Commandments. They apply to all mankind forever, not just one or two months a year. Even more than this The Lord God is our Creator and His standards are given for our best good. Since He designed us – and in His image – He has ordained how we will find the best and most complete life.

Yet even more, He confronted us when we chose to violate His standards and suffered the consequences of our actions. But He was not willing to abandon us completely. C.S. Lewis expressed this in The Screwtape Letters, his fictional account of an older devil instructing his younger trainee. “For we must never forget what is the most repellent and inexplicable trait in our Enemy; He really loves the hairless bipeds He has created and always gives back to them with His right hand what He has taken away with His left.”

God, our Father, loves us. He loves us so much that He was willing to become one of us in the person of His Son, Jesus Christ. Jesus is the heart of this whole Christmas Season. We have been bad. We are bad. We fail to fully live the life God desires for us. But in His forgiving, redeeming, cleansing love He reaches out to call us back to Himself. As we are willing to yield to His voice and seek to keep Him as the center of our life we find a gift beyond anything a Santa and His elves could provide.

Have a blessed Christmas Season. Enjoy the gift giving, food, family, and fellowship knowing above all that we share these things in love because He has first loved us.