More Snow and Job

I look out of my office window to another blanket of snow.  This is the 2nd major snowfall this week.  Tom and Jeff Schumacher are cleaning the parking lot and sidewalks with their blade and snow blower.  Even though Putnam County is under a Level Two Snow Emergency, I had no excuse for not coming into the office as I only need to walk less than 100 yards through the snow and the drifts were not that big.  I will get our snow blower out and clean our driveway and walks over the noon hour.  The snow is to be finished by that time.

Even though I have complained a lot about the snow this winter, I must admit that there is something nice about a fresh covering of clean, white snow.  It reminds me of Psalm 51: 7, “Cleanse me with hyssop(a plant with purifying properties), and I will be clean; wash me, and I will be whiter than snow.”  

Each year, for about 5-6 years now, I have been reading through the Bible using a schedule that takes me through the whole Bible one time and the New Testament and Psalms twice.   I read a chapter or two from four different sections of Scripture.  February and March take through the book of Job.  I am not sure that I would read Job regularly if it was not on my yearly schedule.  While it has been a difficult book to understand, each year I am getting a little more out of it.  It reminds me clearly “what not to say” to a person who is suffering.  Certainly our minor suffering with all the snow this winter is nothing compared to the suffering Job went through. 

The Season of Lent begins with Ash Wednesday on March 9.  Now is the time to plan for a Lenten Discipline.  I know that Lenten disciplines do not get me any brownie points with God or put me on a higher spiritual plain, but I have found that they help me to know who God is and how much dependence I place on stuff and certain habits that are not the most helpful. I haven’t quite decided what I plan to do this year.  I am challenged by “40 bags in 40 days” that I found on the website, thepracticaldisciple.com which has lots of ideas for Lenten Disciplines.   Let me know what Lenten Discipline you will be choosing so we can pray for one another.

Simplify your life-- 40 bags in 40 days
What to do
Place 40 grocery sacks in a visible place. I put mine in
my closet so that when I would pick out clothes I would come
face to face with my bags. Then every day during Lent, except
for Sundays, fill a bag and either toss it out or give it away. I gave
many bags to the bargain box and some directly to people who
might benefit from them.

Some tips to keep in mind
• Resist doing more than one bag per day. Stick with just one bag a day and you will develop a habit of eliminating clutter. I only doubled up when I knew something conflicted with my discipline. For instance, I doubled up for a week before Spring Break, since I would be gone.
• Never make an exception. Once you skip, the discipline typically starts to unravel. If you do miss, just pick-up where you left off. Do a bag and don’t worrying about catching up. Pick-up the bag you missed on a Sunday or on a day where you really have an easy time filling it.
• Starting will be easy, but you might find yourself groping for ideas of what to toss after you fill 10 or 20 bags.
Here are some suggestions:
Books Clothes Shoes
Old files Stored boxes Drawers
Closets Cleaning supplies
Cupboards Dvd’s
Cd’s, Audio Tapes
Albums Toys
Video Tapes Sports gear
Don’t forget junk in your cars or garage!
• When struggling with whether or not to get rid of something you may suffer from the “I’ll use it someday” syndrome. Consider these 3 questions—
-How long have you been waiting for ‘some day’ to come?
-Are you realistically likely to use it?
-Could someone benefit from using it now?
Answers to these questions might help you let go.

Benefits
Simplifying your life yields practical and spiritual benefits. De-cluttering relieves stress, helps you efficiently use time and space, and frees you up for greater priorities. Letting go of things, expands your trust in God. Many of us horde to feed our sense of security and control. When that occurs our trust in God atrophies. Blessings on your Lenten journey and please share your successes.
Published by: http://ThePracticalDisciple.com.
Permission granted to reproduce for non-commerical purposes. 
Copyright 2009

Finally Some Warmer Weather, Birthday and Valentine’s Day

I noticed in the Findlay Courier a couple of days ago that Monday the 14th (if I remember correctly) had been the 2nd warmest day of 2011 so far. The warmest day had been on January 1 with, I think, 57 degrees. Unfortunately we were in Colorado on January 1 and the thermometer on the deck of the cabin where we were staying did not reach 0 degrees that day! The warmer weather feels great and it is good to actually see patches of lawn that have been covered with snow since January 6.


I actually got my bicycle out on Sunday afternoon. I only got in 7 miles as it was quite windy. It did feel good as I don’t think I had ridden since September. It is always easy for me to convince myself that I am too busy to ride and get the exercise that I need. Don’t hesitate to ask me how I am doing with my exercise and bike riding.

I am reminded of I Corinthians 6:19 which says: Do you not know that your bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? I need to take care of my physical body as I take care of my spiritual life. I know they are very much intertwined. But even though I know this in my head, it is difficult for me to make the life changes that would respect my physical body as the temple of the Holy Spirit that it is.

I was born on Saturday, February 14, 1953 in Sentinel, Oklahoma. Yes, that would make me 58 years old! A new hospital was being built in Cordell, Oklahoma at that time so my parents needed to drive to the nearest town with a hospital when that time came. Yes, I was a Valentine’s birthday and would often get a heart shaped birthday cake. Recently I have requested that my birthday “cake” be a cherry pie which Dianne bakes for me every year. (Fortunately, I waited until Saturday the 14th to be born as I could have easily been born on Friday the 13th!)


As my body seems to be creaking a little more each day, it is sometimes easy to fall in a negative mode instead of seeing each day as a wonderful gift that God has given us. Every day is indeed a gift from God that needs to be enthusiastically unwrapped to find what is awaiting us. God shows us each day his love for us but often we miss it. I want to look expectantly each day for the love that God wants to share with me and pass it on to others. May you be encouraged to do the same. More next week.

Snow and the Sermon on the Mount

It is Friday morning and I have not been out of the village of Pandora since Sunday and in fact have not driven our car or van since Sunday. The furthest I have been away from home or church office this week is the Pandora post office. I am not sure that is bad or good but it is unusual to not sit behind the wheel of a car for this long of a time. I will be driving to Findlay after finishing this blog so I will not have made it a whole week.

One of the main reasons for not going anywhere this week was that this was the week of the big snow and ice. Actually it wasn’t as bad for us as anticipated by weather forecasters and certainly not as bad as many parts of the country. The snow that was mixed with sleet and freezing rain was certainly difficult to clean off our sidewalks and driveway. Now we are waiting for the next accumulating snow to come sometime next week. Hopefully it will not materialize.

As the storm was being forecast and anticipated, it is interesting to reflect on how glued I was to the local TV news which was all about the winter storm and how I was constantly checking my computer for weather updates. What was it that created in me a desire for any information I could get on the storm? I could not change the path of the storm or diminish its effects in any way. Maybe the storm is fascinating because it shows a power that none of us can do anything about. Certainly we cannot control the weather. We can only wait for it and respond to it. (Sorry about the rambling, disconnected thoughts on the weather this week.)

This month, I am preaching on Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount in Matthew 5, 6, and 7. John R W Stott the great English Bible expositor says this classic sermon, the so called “Manifesto of Christ” appears to be the best-known and the least obeyed teaching of Jesus.

As we study this familiar text of Scripture once more, my hope is that we will not just look for interesting new insights but that it can be a transforming passage for us as individuals and as a congregation. Me we as Myron Augsburger wrote come to the Scripture ready to obey it and allow it to change our lives.