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A New Definition of Integrity??

6 Apr

Webster’s Dictionary defines integrity as “firm adherence to a code of especially moral or artistic values.” Good definition, in my book. However, on SportsCenter this morning, something was said about a rookie pitcher, that his pitches have INTEGRITY. I wondered (as I chased health on a treadmill), “What does that REALLY mean?”

His pitches are true to what they appear?? Batters would love that, but any pitching coach worth his salt would not see that as a compliment. But it would be impossible for his pitches to hold to a moral code . . . Pitches cannot choose right from wrong (can they)??

I love how we redefine words on the fly. That is a mark of modern culture, and SportsCenter is masterful in that art. But the truth is, INTEGRITY is INTEGRITY and that is that. We need pitchers who are PEOPLE of integrity. We need coaches and influencers in sports who are people of INTEGRITY, from the major leagues right on down to all of the Maple Parks of the world. Without people of integrity, we have chaos. And, in my opinion, there is a little too much chaos in this world today because of a lack of integrity, many times in the lives of people who claim to know Christ.

What can we do about this?? Know what integrity is and LIVE IT!!!

The Perspective of Holy Week and Easter

6 Apr

The perspective on Holy Week and Easter is interesting when spring break collides with it in the wrong direction. That is exactly what is happening this year, and Sunday will be a big indicator of that. I am curious to see what happens. After all, Easter is the HIGHEST of Christian holidays in significance, right??? I know some will travel to family this weekend, and that is a great thing.

Some will be like the kid that told me I should be a man and go to Garden City this weekend and party. I told him I am a man, and I pastor a church. It flew right over his head. I wonder what Holy Week will mean to him this weekend?? He is a member of a church (not Ebenezer), so at some point I would assume he has made a profession of faith. But what does Holy Week mean to him??

Some, no matter where they are, will put Christ first this weekend. I am thankful for them. Even more so, God is thankful. He knows our hearts, He knows our thoughts, and He sees all that we do. Would it be safe to say that Holy Week marks the most pain He has endured for us?? We know what Holy Week means to Him.

What does it mean to YOU??

Okay, now how about gas prices??

5 Apr

The 15 British sailors and marines are HOME! Crisis averted . . . For now, anyway. So, if the Iranian captivity has caused gas prices to go up, NOW THEY CAN COME DOWN!! I am not usually a suspicious person, but the last couple of years and the price of gas has changed me. Somebody is making money on all of this, and I am afraid I don’t want to know who it is.

I want a car that runs on recycled trash, with a Mr. Fusion mounted on the fuel tank and a flux capacitor so I can travel in time. But, alas, those options only come on a DeLorean, and I don’t think there are any of those left on this earth.

So, gas prices must come down. I wonder if we the people should start lobbying our senate for an investigation???

Spring Fever

4 Apr

All of the students I know have it . . . Most of the teachers do, too. EVERYONE is ready (it seems) for spring break next week. When it is all over, just a few weeks left in school. And then the long summer. Next year, Florence School District 1 is starting on August 20 (YES, I did type “20” as opposed to “2”. Hard to believe, but we might actually HAVE a summer this year.

But back to spring fever. The pollen. The 80 degree weather. YES . . . I love it.

And thanks to our friends in the global warming department, the forecast for our Easter Sunrise service at 6:30am on Sunday is 29 degrees (not 79 or 59). BRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!

I am so ready for summer!!!

You gotta recognize

3 Apr

Okay, I have to tip my hat to Florida. I really didn’t think they could handle Greg Oden, but they did . . . Like child’s play. What they have done is quite impressive in this day and age. Billy Donovan is a good coach and they are a talented team. I have to confess that I was one of the nay-sayers. And they proved me wrong.

And now, time for the ladies . . . Dare I say that I think Tennessee looks pretty strong???

What a weekend!

2 Apr

If I said we had a bunch of significant events at Ebenezer this weekend, that would be a huge understatement. This weekend, two of our families saw death; then, renewal and hope (in the dedication of our Habitat house); God spoke (at our adult choir musical) and then He spoke again (at the Disciples’ musical). And, at the end of the day, God added to His church . . . Three of the Disciples joined our church as candidates for baptism.

Lately, I have really been burdened to make sure we are not the Church at Sardis in Revelation 3. My burden is to make sure we are never a church that appears to be alive on the outside, but really dead on the inside. When I look over just this weekend, I see the hand of God moving in our midst over and over again. That reassures me that we are on the right track, but we must be vigilant. It all comes back to YOU and ME!

March Madness at Moore

30 Mar

I just went to a March Madness basketball tournament at Moore Intermediate, where different classes played each other in what must be considered intramural games. WOW . . . I now understand completely why our basketball league is the way it is. I saw more muggings today than a New Orleans beat cop during Mardi Gras. I thought about encouraging Drew to leave and not play in his second game, but two things stopped me: 1)He was really having fun. 2) I am not his momma. Dads are supposed to laugh at danger.

If #2 is true, HAHAHAHAHAHAHA. (I am just catching up after what I saw today)

Hey Mr David!!

30 Mar

I love to hear that! It usually means that a kid I know (through the church or through coaching) sees me and wants to say hello! Or, at kid at church has a significant revelation they want to share with me. Either way, I love it.

This morning I had to go into school with Drew to get his drum that he left yesterday. Coming back out, four Ebenezer girls came walking up the walk and they all yelled it. I responded, “Do I know you guys??” They all replied “YES!!!” They were glad to see me. It is funny, because when they get to Sneed Middle School next year, they will cover their faces and run when they see me. It is not cool to talk to your pastor in middle school. A couple of them hugged me and they went on in. And I thought about Sneed and was thankful that they will still talk to me right now.

I have pastored, youth pastored, and coached a lot of kids in my lifetime, and one thing I will tell you is this: “Hey, Mr David” means as much to me as anything I have ever heard. Church politics and ball park politics can really drive you nuts, but nothing can negate or replace the opportunities YOU have to impact kids. That is what it all really is about: The chance to make a difference.

Are YOU making a difference today???

Be careful of your heroes

28 Mar

The Pat Tillman Friendly Fire case is receiving a lot of airtime on all national networks . . . Did the Army cover it up?? Did they suppress evidence and/or withhold the truth from his family? If you read the account, it is unfortunate and tragic.

Pat Tillman was an NFL star who left it all to enlist after September 11. The press made a tremendous deal about the fact that he left a career of millions to serve his country. It is touching and patriotic. Everything his unit says about him tells us he was the real deal and this was not a publicity stunt.

In April of 2004 he was in a convoy that was attacked. To make a long story short, he took several bullets protecting another soldier in his unit. He literally stepped into the path to save his comrade’s life. It is a touching story with one shortfall: Those closest to him talk repeatedly about his feelings about religion. At his funeral, his younger brother came to the podium and said “Pat is not with God. He is ******** dead.”

Pat Tillman did something heroic, and of that there is no question. But he was a man, just the same as any of us. He struggled with his relationship (or lack of it) with God. He was the victim of a tragedy. May God have mercy on him.

I’m your huckleberry!

27 Mar

Do you remember that famous movie line?? Who said it, and in which movie?

The movie was Tombstone, the actor, Val Kilmer, and the character was Doc Holliday. He said it twice to Johnny Ringo, both times trying to gunfight him. But what does that mean??? I Googled it, and here goes (from the World Wide Words website):

“What it means is easy enough. To be one’s huckleberry — usually as the phrase I’m your huckleberry — is to be just the right person for a given job, or a willing executor of some commission. Where it comes from needs a bit more explaining.
First a bit of botanical history. When European settlers arrived in the New World, they found several plants that provided small, dark-coloured sweet berries. They reminded them of the English bilberry and similar fruits and they gave them one of the dialect terms they knew for them, hurtleberry, whose origin is unknown (though some say it has something to do with hurt, from the bruised colour of the berries; a related British dialect form is whortleberry). Very early on — at the latest 1670 — this was corrupted to huckleberry.
As huckleberries are small, dark and rather insignificant, in the early part of the nineteenth century the word became a synonym for something humble or minor, or a tiny amount. An example from 1832: “He was within a huckleberry of being smothered to death”. Later on it came to mean somebody inconsequential. Mark Twain borrowed some aspects of these ideas to name his famous character, Huckleberry Finn. His idea, as he told an interviewer in 1895, was to establish that he was a boy “of lower extraction or degree” than Tom Sawyer.
Also around the 1830s, we see the same idea of something small being elaborated and bombasted in the way so typical of the period to make the comparison a huckleberry to a persimmon, the persimmon being so much larger that it immediately establishes the image of something tiny against something substantial. There’s also a huckleberry over one’s persimmon, something just a little bit beyond one’s reach or abilities; an example is in David Crockett: His Life and Adventures by John S C Abbott, of 1874: “This was a hard business on me, for I could just barely write my own name. But to do this, and write the warrants too, was at least a huckleberry over my persimmon”.
Quite how I’m your huckleberry came out of all that with the sense of the man for the job isn’t obvious. It seems that the word came to be given as a mark of affection or comradeship to one’s partner or sidekick. There is often an identification of oneself as a willing helper or assistant about it, as here in True to Himself, by Edward Stratemeyer, dated 1900: “ ‘I will pay you for whatever you do for me.’ ‘Then I’m your huckleberry. Who are you and what do you want to know?’ ”. Despite the obvious associations, it doesn’t seem to derive directly from Mark Twain’s books.
Short question, long answer!”

Hope that helps!