Hey, What’s That In Your Eye?

On Wednesday nights a bunch of guys from our church meet to study the book of Proverbs. That may sound pretty dry, but actually it’s a terrific time. I like the book of Proverbs and for many years I’ve tried to read a chapter a day. It’s truly mystical how I can read the same things over and over, and yet get good insight every single time. And I’m even more amazed by what I’m learning on Wednesday evenings.

Today’s the eighth day of the month, so this morning I read Proverbs chapter eight after I prayed about which mode of transportation I should take — the convertible or the motorcycle — and verses 12 and 13 really stood out for me…

I, wisdom, dwell together with prudence; I possess knowledge and discretion. To fear the LORD is to hate evil; I hate pride and arrogance, evil behavior and perverse speech.

Which words jumped off the page?
The words that stood out to me were prudence, discretion, and pride. so I looked them up in the dictionary. I really struggled with what I found. Under those words the dictionary mentioned things like good judgment, being frugal, responsible, skilled, cautious, reserved, conceited, arrogant, egotistical, and vain. I want to exercise good judgment and be cautious and reserved. But if I take those definitions to the limit, I’ll be driving my wife’s Subaru with all-wheel-drive and heated seats.

That would be fine with me, except that she doesn’t like driving a stick-shift anymore, and no matter what I say she won’t take the DMV test to get a motorcycle permit. So the Subaru is out.

I also want to be frugal, cautious and responsible. The convertible fits that fairly well. It gets good gas mileage and it’s paid for… But how do I avoid being prideful, vain, arrogant and egotistical while driving a bright red sports car? I guess I’ll just have to make sure I park it next to a Ferrari, Porsche, Rolls, or Lamborghini … or at least a BMW, Cadillac, Corvette or Mercedes.

Buick vs. Cadillac
This car-choice dilemma reminds me of an experience I had years ago with two friends. They knew each other well, but they had some problems in their business dealings with each other. As a result they didn’t get along and seldom spoke to each other.

One friend was determined to drive used cars that didn’t look too expensive. His most recent purchase at the time was a big used Buick. (This was back in the prehistoric days when Buicks were monstrous.) One day he made a comment to me about my other friend’s car. He wondered how my friend could drive a Cadillac with a clear conscience.

I explained that my friend with the Cadillac had purchased a slightly used Mercedes and then sold it for a considerable profit. Then he turned around and bought the Cadillac. I went on to tell him that the Cadillac actually cost my friend far less than the used Buick he was driving. That didn’t matter to him. It was “the appearance that mattered.”

Speck vs. Plank
So what do you think? Can a Christian drive a Cadillac? What about a Miata or a Hummer? Must we all drive a Prius or some other “green” car?

Do not judge, or you too will be judged. For in the same way you judge others, you will be judged, and with the measure you use, it will be measured to you. Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother’s eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye?     – Matthew 7:1-3

Post Script
After thinking about the “appearance” vs. “stewardship” issue, I decided to keep the Miata for this project. Traveling in it will cost a lot less than finding another car. But in an effort to be “prudent” and ”responsible” I had some all-season tires installed at Jeff Fountain Tire Sales.

Two guys worked hard on my car. And when Miguel saw me taking pictures, he asked if I’d take one of him, too. (He’s the one with his hands in his pockets.)

The only thing left to do is get the oil changed, and then I’ll will be ready to go…

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Resolved … Have Wheels, Will Travel

My wife asked me the other day what my Leadership Inspiration blog is all about. She wanted to understand the purpose behind it. This turned out to be a good exercise for me… she helped me to focus on the what, why, and how… and the more we talked, the more excited I got. Here’s what I came up with:

Purpose
The purpose of Leadership Inspiration is to encourage, comfort, and strengthen others by providing stories of perseverance and faith, quotations, and interviews of leaders in business, government, ministry, and the military.

Now it’s time to find some good material. All I need to decide is which mode of transportation will be more comfortable. Somehow, Global Warming and Climate Change are creating record-setting cold temperatures and snow across the nation and around the world.

So the question is, do I take the convertible…

…or the motorcycle I affectionately call my Pack Mule?

You might be asking the same question I have: Why not just stay warm, search the Internet to find some content, and get permission to republish it?  Answer: I’d like to find some new and interesting stories about leaders who are living their dream and fulfilling their life’s purpose. I’d like to learn from their insight and wisdom, and share it through Leadership Inspiration. I know my method seems a bit unorthodox, for an old coot like me, but I’m going for it.

Unorthodox
You’ve heard that God works through unusual ways, right? He spoke — literally — to Balaam through his donkey. He used a burning bush to capture Moses’ attention. He protected the Israelites by splattering blood on their doorposts. He parted the Red Sea and the Jordan River for the Israelites. He protected Daniel all night from the lions, and the next morning He let the lions consume the king’s guards. He used a tornado to take Elijah up to heaven. He chose a virgin peasant girl to enter our world, and He slept in an animal trough in a barn because the hotels were booked. He had John the baptist wear camel hair and eat locusts. Jesus’ first miracle was turning water into wine. He walked on water. He spit in some dirt to make mud and then used it to heal the sick. He cast out demons, raised the dead, upset religious leaders, and on and on… He must have seemed pretty unorthodox to the orthodox.

Press On
In light of all that, this little adventure doesn’t seem like much, does it? And it’s definitely not too hard for the Maker of the Universe. Then again, I could stay home and warm, and not risk anything. Nah… I’d rather try to “make some history” and see if I can “finish strong,” as Pastor Phil suggested.

Not that I have already obtained all this, or have already been made perfect, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me. Brothers, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.     – Philippians 3:12-14

Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Be not fearful or dismayed, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go.     – Joshua 1:9

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A Closed Door May Be The Key To Another

Sometimes we stare so long at a door that is closing that we see too late the one that is open.
                                                               
- Alexander Graham Bell

One afternoon in the fall of 1986 I discusssed my idea of launching a newsletter with my wife. After about an hour and a half we agreed we should pray about it, so we did. When we finished praying, the phone rang. It was a friend who I had not spoken with in several years, and didn’t know how to find — he was the former news editor at Christianity Today, and the person I most wanted to be the editor for my newsletter.

The timing of his phone call seemed like a clear indication we were on the right track, so we launched the publication. However, within a year we found ourselves in deep debt, and the newsletter was such a drain on the rest of our business that we were forced to sell a lot of our possessions – our home, office building, boat, and one of our cars — to pay off our debt and keep our business going.

Shortly after making those hard decisions, the rest of our business turned around and was profitable again. But the newsletter continued to lose money for almost ten years. We invested far more into it than it would ever return, but we believed we should continue to do it.

By the mid 1990s, we faced a new financial crisis. Paper prices were climbing every month at an astronomical rate. If we continued as we were, without making a major change, our whole business would soon fold. I tried everything I could think of to increase income, reduce expenses and stop the loses. Finally, after agonizing over the decision, I prayed again, drove to my office, and told my staff we were folding the newsletter. I laid off several good people who had worked very hard and served me faithfully.

It was a hard decision. A door was closing. One we had loved doing. But in hind sight, it was the right thing to do.

The people we laid off found great jobs in other organizations. And because we had started publishing our news electronically on the Internet, our subscriber base grew from 8,000 to more than 100,000 — without the cost of printing and postage.

Our e-newsletter served as a launch pad for the rest of our Internet publishing venture, which grew dramatically in the last half of the 1990s — and was one of the few profitable dot-coms in those early days of the Internet.

The prudent see danger and take refuge, but the simple keep going and suffer for it.     – Proverbs 27:12

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Confession Is Good For The Soul

I wish my life was just a series of holy experiences with God. Sad to say, it’s been far from it. Like the apostle Paul, I feel that ”Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners — of whom I am the worst.”

My behavior spiraled downhill fast in high school, where there were three groups of kids: greasers with the “wet look,” collegiates/jocks with the “dry look,” and the dozen or so guys I hung out with. We had the dry look, but we weren’t nice.

Wherever we went we caused trouble. We regularly drank too much, started fights at football games and parties, and stole cars for joy rides in the wee hours of the morning.

 

I wish those things were the worst of it.

We had two unofficial leaders. We didn’t vote for them. They just naturally took charge and made sure we had something crazy to do almost every night.

One of these two leaders was an amazing fighter. He was only about my height, but like David against Goliath, he was fearless and would take on guys much bigger. And I never saw him lose a fight.

Our other leader didn’t look for fights. He looked for girls. He could handle most guys when needed, but he also had a unique bad-boy charm that the girls loved. As a result, he dated some of the brightest and most beautiful girls in school. He was the kind of guy that every daughter’s father hated, and why some bought shotguns.

We admired the leader who could fight so well, but we envied the ”lover.” And as pathetic as it seems now, he became our hero. We actually tried to emulate the guy who broke girls’ hearts. And some of us formed habits that went from bad to worse.

Even after God made Himself known to me, I found myself continuing my selfish actions, and needing to confess my sin afterward. And no matter how many times I watched Good Will Hunting or heard “it’s not your fault” from a well-intentioned minister or counselor, I knew deep down it was my fault. I was guilty. I needed a redeemer, and someone who would empower me to change.

Thank God for Jesus Christ and His willingness to pay the price for my sins and send His Holy Spirit to us all.

Do you not know that the wicked will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: Neither the sexually immoral nor idolaters nor adulterers nor male prostitutes nor homosexual offenders nor thieves nor the greedy nor drunkards nor slanderers nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God. And that is what some of you were. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God.     – I Cor. 6:9-11

Therefore confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed….     – James 5:16

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Do You Believe In Guardian Angels?

Call me crazy, but I do. And not just because angels are mentioned so many times in scripture.

On several occasions my wife and I have had someone rescue us from dangerous — even life-threatening — situations. And in all but one instance, we never knew them, or had an opportunity to find out who they were.

Back before most of us started carrying cell phones, my wife was driving our small pick-up truck one night, and she had our two oldest sons were with her. She was on the Capital Beltway (I-495) in Virginia when the truck suddenly died. So she coasted onto the narrow, right shoulder, which had a large concrete barrier that made it very difficult to get out of the truck. Soon after the motor quit, the battery died. The lights were out. No emergency flashers. Nothing.

Cars were flying by just inches from the left side of the truck, when a guy pulled up behind the pickup truck, rushed my wife and sons into his car, and took them to a nearby gas station. My wife got out of his car to talk to the service station attendant, and by the time she turned around to thank her rescuer, he was gone.

That was the most recent “out-of-the-blue” rescue.

The first time I remember being rescued by someone I was ten years old. I was at Ocean City, Md., with my mom and several other family members. They were sun bathing on the beach while I was jumping waves with a huge crowd. It seemed that as the waves got bigger, so did the crowd.

Then, when I jumped a very large wave and came down, I could hardly touch the sand on the bottom. After the next wave, I couldn’t touch at all. Even between waves the water’s depth was well over my head. Within seconds I was way beyond the breakers,  swimming as hard as I could toward shore, but still being pulled away from the beach.

As I continued to swim, dog-paddle, and then swim some more, I could see my uncle standing on the shoreline, waving frantically for me to come back in. Apparently he couldn’t tell how hard I was trying!

Back then I didn’t know what a rip-current was… But I did know I was alone, very tired, and getting scared.

Then I heard a voice say, “I’ve got you.” And someone behind me grabbed the waste of my swimsuit and started pushing me toward the shore. Soon I could touch sand again between the waves, and before I knew it, I was standing in the breakers.

I walked up to my mom and my uncle and they asked me what happened. I turned around to show them who had helped me get in… but once again the rescuer was gone.

On another occasion, when I was 13, I had an operation for a hernia. The morning following the operation I was given a shot  of demerol for pain. The nurse who gave it to me went off duty without recording it, so the new nurse gave me a duplicate shot.

Minutes later breakfast came. While I was still eating, propped up in the hospital bed, I fell asleep. Then I stopped breathing. And finally my heart stopped.

The man in the bed next to mine buzzed the nurses’ station. No one came quickly, so he jumped out of bed and ran down the hall to get someone. Fortunately, Mrs. Deputy, the head nurse, came quickly and gave me a heart massage and mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, which brought me back to life.

Again, I have no idea who my rescuer was… but I’m glad he didn’t wait any longer for a nurse to arrive.

There was another life-saving incident when I actually knew the rescuer’s name, but I’m still convinced he was an angel. Maybe I’ll tell that story someday, too… In the mean time, if you find yourself in trouble, don’t hesitate to ask Him for help. You might just find angels in your midst.

For he will command his angels concerning you to guard you in all your ways; they will lift you up in their hands…     – Psalm 91:11-12

See that you do not look down on one of these little ones. For I tell you that their angels in heaven always see the face of my Father in heaven.     – Matt. 18:10

He will command his angels concerning you to guard you carefully…     – Luke 4:10

Are not all angels ministering spirits sent to serve those who will inherit salvation?     – Heb. 1:14

Do not forget to entertain strangers, for by so doing some people have entertained angels without knowing it.
     – Heb. 13:2

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Promoted Beyond Natural Talent or Experience

“I will lead the blind by a way they do not know, in paths they do not know I will guide them. I will make darkness into light before them and rugged places into plains. These are the things I will do, And I will not leave them undone.”  – Isaiah 42:16

Life was going well after I followed the advice I had been given by my father and my friend to rejoin the buying division at the grocery-store chain I had left to open my head shop. It wasn’t long before I was given a promotion and raise. And then something totally unexpected happened.

My friend called to tell me that he was leaving the publication where he worked. And he thought I might be able to do the job. Like many people, I had never heard of Christianity Today magazine. But when I learned more about it — especially the fact that it had been started by Billy Graham and his father-in-law, L. Nelson Bell, I got excited. But there was one big problem. The opening was in management, and I didn’t have a college degree. And most of the CT staff had graduate degrees.

I was interviewed by Editor Harold Lindsell, Managing Editor Eugene Kucharksy, News Editor Edward E. Plowman and several others. I was offered a position in advertising sales. As a result, I had the opportunity to travel around the country and meet mid- and top-level managers at Christian organizations. I learned about hundreds of religious organizations, denominations, and educational institutions. And every morning when I was in the DC offices, I learned from the brilliant men at CT during staff devotions.

In the mid-1970s, CT was in a terrible financial crisis. Its circulation had grown dramatically in the early 70s, however, it was a “thought journal” with content targeted to pastors and theologians, so it had a very low renewal rate. When it was almost out-of-business, Eugene Kacharsky suggested I take over as business manager. And soon afterward the board hired the former head of Campus Life magazine, Harold Myra, as publisher.

We studied the publication’s production costs, overhead, and promotional efforts. We tested new subscription offers, evaluated every department, cut where necessary, and developed a plan for growth. When we presented our projections to the board of directors, they almost laughed at us. They couldn’t believe that we could be cash-flow positive in just a few short months, after almost two decades of losing hundreds of thousands of dollars each year.

It truly seemed like an insurmountable task. Few believed it would happen. But like the blind mentioned in the scripture passage above, the Lord lead us down paths we had never walked before. And just as He promised, He guided us through the darkness and got us through all the rugged places, and never left us alone.

In the late 1970s Christianity Today moved from Washington, DC, to the Chicago suburbs, where management launched or purchased several additional publications, newsletters and online services.

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Death Still Hurts, No Matter What You Believe

My sister was sobbing when I answered her call last night. Caller ID told me who it was before I picked up the phone. When I heard her uncontrollable crying I was shaken.

Her best friend from high school — for over 45 years — had died unexpectedly in her sleep. My sister was crushed. “I won’t see her anymore!” she said between sobs.

Memories of her friend flashed through my mind: the three of us riding to high school together; smoking cigarettes; swimming at night; skipping school; parties. After high school the two of them went to California and Hawaii together. And during that hippy era, they sent me my first (and only) foofy hippy shirt for my birthday.

They were always a team. Friends for life, even though they weren’t living in the same town.

I wept silently with my sister on the phone, while I tried to console her and cheer her up. She sounded much better by the time we hung up, but I knew what she would do after we talked. She would cry. And then cry some more.

Many years ago I would feel sorry for people who lost family members or friends. But I didn’t understand what it meant to grieve or mourn. I had never felt that pain for myself.

My relationship with my dad had been strained over the years. When he was about five years old his father died, so he didn’t have a great example to follow. His marriage to my mom ended long before their actual divorce. The first time he left our home I was about 13. Then he came back and my mom left. They fought over custody of us, and had us testify in court against each other. It was a crazy life.

Members of the Greatest Generation

Members of the 'Greatest Generation'

After I came back from California, and for the first few years of my marriage, my relationship with my dad improved. By the time I was 25 he and I really got along. One day we went to lunch together and I shared the good news about Jesus with him, while we ate apple pie a la mode. He actually prayed with me in the restaurant.

I felt my dad had earned the reputation to be part of Tom Brokaw’s “Greatest Generation.” He had been a sitting duck in B-17 airplanes when he flew missions over France and Germany during World War II. But he wouldn’t talk about it. He never bragged. Despite our family problems, he was my hero. Only my wife could give me greater joy than my dad. When we laughed together or he gave me his smile of approval, I really experienced love.

Back then a lot of dads didn’t hug their sons. It wasn’t manly. My dad was a ‘real man’ so he didn’t hug. But he laughed and joked and had a way of letting you know how he felt… and his handshake was just as meanful as any hug I’ve ever gotten.

In early 1974, soon after my second son was born, and just before I had to leave on a week-long business trip to Los Angeles, my dad came over to visit. We listened to a tape by David Wilkerson. When I got back from LA I called my dad to say hello. I spoke to my stepmother instead, who said my dad wasn’t feeling well.

I went to bed that night 35 years ago, and at 3:30 a.m. the phone rang. It was my stepmother. She was sobbing just like my sister was last night. I could barely understand what she was saying… “He’s dead. Your father died!”

How could that be?! He was fine when I saw him a week ago. He’d been exercising for weeks, walking everyday. He’d lost 20 pounds on a diet. And he was down to just one or two cigarettes a day. I thought he was healthy!

That was the first time I ever really knew what grief and mourning was like… I could actually feel the pain physically in my stomach and chest. Sometimes it was difficult to breathe. This kind of thing only happened to other people, right? Not anymore.

Of course, I knew my dad was in heaven. I knew what God had done for him many years ago on the cross, as well as what He had done in him recently. But the pain was still terrible. Almost overwhelming. Now I understood Jesus’ words. Mourn with those who mourn. It wasn’t just the polite thing to do anymore. I truly understoon the pain of losing someone you love.

But we do not want you to be uninformed, brethren, about those who are asleep, so that you will not grieve as do the rest who have no hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so God will bring with Him those who have fallen asleep in Jesus. For this we say to you by the word of the Lord, that we who are alive and remain until the coming of the Lord, will not precede those who have fallen asleep. For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first. Then we who are alive and remain will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so we shall always be with the Lord. Therefore comfort one another with these words.  - I Thes. 4:13-18

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Looking for Guidance? Listen Carefully

When my dad walked through the door of my head shop and offered his unsolicited advice, I paid close attention to what he said, and I can still remember his words:

“You should sell this shop… and get yourself a 9-to-5 job, and enjoy your family.”

Looking for Guidance 40 Years Ago

Looking for Guidance 40 Years Ago

A short time later, in another conversation with my dad, he suggested I call my previous employer to see if I could get my old job back. However, if I followed this new advice I would have to admit to my former boss that I made a mistake when he gave me the “it’s us or your head shop” ultimatum. And now that I needed a job, I doubted he would give me one… I didn’t want to face him, or the possibility of being rejected, so I didn’t do it.

Instead I looked through the classified ads and found the Bible-selling job. It paid well — if you sold the product. But the sales manager consistently dropped us off in poor neighborhoods to sell these expensive Bibles to people who really couldn’t afford them. I had some conflicts with the tactics, and ended up talking more about what was in the Bible than about selling or buying a Bible. It wasn’t long before I knew I needed to make a change.

I went back to searching help-wanted ads in the classified section of the newspaper. I sent my resume to numerous places. But nothing seemed to work.

A short while later I had a conversation about my job-search struggles with the friend who had prayed for us and who visited me in my head shop one night. Just like my dad, he asked if I had talked to my former employer. I told him the same thing I told my dad: “He’d never take me back after the way I left…”

I continued to struggle for weeks and eventually called an employment agency. They sounded optimistic, but they needed a letter of recommendation. I was stuck. The only way I could get a letter of recommendation would be to call my old boss. So I finally did.

When I called and asked him if he would consider writing a letter of recommendation for me, he said, “You’re not asking to come back to work here?” I told him I didn’t think that was an option, and he asked, “Didn’t you like working here?” I told him I liked it very much, and then he asked me to meet with him that afternoon.

I was humbled a bit. He offered me a job a couple of notches down on the ladder. Basically I had to start all over again in the same position I had when I originally joined the company. But I was hungry, so I took the job. Within six months I was back to the position I had attained before I’d left, only with a higher salary.

I could have saved a lot of time, frustration, and trouble if I had just listened to my dad and my friend, and not thought I knew best.

Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding…     – Proverbs 3:5

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Sometimes It Takes A While To ‘Just Get Over It’

God, in His grace, has done many awesome things in my life. But I haven’t been immune from sin. Far from it.

Sexual sins were my greatest problem when I was young. I believe a big part of it started when I was about ten, after my uncle, Father Joe (a Catholic priest) molested me. Those sickening memories haunted me until my mid-30s.

As a result, for many years I despised homosexuals. When a blantantly effeminate man would serve me in a restaurant, I would get very angry and often wanted to leave. My frustration and anger grew to a boiling point until shortly after my uncle died. Before his death I was too embarrassed to tell anyone about what had happened, and I doubted anyone would believe me. But when my mother — Father Joe’s sister — asked me to go to his funeral, I wouldn’t do it, and I told her why.

Just as I had always feared, I don’t think she believed me. Regardless, I started getting more out-spoken and angry around gays, which made my wife very uncomfortable.

Eventually, in my frustration and anger, I actually called the Catholic bishop’s office in Washington, DC. I’m not sure why, or what I planned to say. I only I knew I wanted to spew something hurtful and ugly. I wanted revenge.

 I didn’t get any further than the bishop’s secretary, who was an effeminate-sounding male. He screened my call, and asked why I was calling. I told him what had happened when I was a kid. He was barely polite when he informed me that there was no way he was going to put the call through… my anger turned to rage.

Not knowing where to turn, I called the local Catholic church that was only a mile or two from my office. A polite woman answered the phone. Without going into any detail, I asked to speak to a priest. She suggested I come over and visit, so I did.

Our Lady of Nazareth Catholic Church, Roanoke, Va.

Our Lady of Nazareth Catholic Church, Roanoke, Va.

When I got to the office, the secretary took me straight into the priest’s office. He was a thin, short, white-haired little-old-man. As I walked through the door he placed two chairs about four feet from each other and asked me to sit down facing him. Then like a gentle grandfather he asked, “How can I help you?”

I actually didn’t believe he could help. The decades-old incident was followed by so many sins that I couldn’t begin to imagine how he could help. So I angrily blurted out what had happened 25 years before. A minute or two later, when I was finished expressing my hatred and anger, he asked me a simple question:

“Do you want to be healed?”

What kind of question was that? Of course I want to be healed! But how?

He slowly and calmly said, “Close your eyes. Imagine your uncle standing on your left side, and imagine Jesus standing on your right. Now tell your uncle that you forgive him.”

I thought it was a wierd request and it felt a little creepy. But I was so desperate that I was ready to try anything. Despite how strange it seemed, I closed my eyes, imagined my uncle next to me, and said, “Father Joe, I forgive you.”

Then the priest said, “Now tell Jesus that you forgive your uncle.”

I did.

Immediately after I said, “Jesus, I forgive my uncle,” the priest prayed for me and it was over.

No, I mean it was finally, totally over. The anger, hatred, frustration, guilt, everything about it was over. Gone. For the first time in 25 years, I felt clean, forgiven, and ready to start a new life.

Some of my Protestant friends may struggle with the theology of what happened to me with that little white-haired man. I won’t defend it. I can’t explain it. But after more than 20 years, I know it worked. So if you frequently find yourself angry, hateful, or frustrated, give some thought to forgiveness — for your own sanity, as well as those around you.

For if you forgive men when they sin against you, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive men their sins, your Father will not forgive your sins.                        – Matthew 6:14-15

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They Were Baptized, Both Men and Women

Sometimes I don’t hear very well. My dad said, “Get a 9-to-5 job,” but I tried to turn it into some sort of missions work. The best I could do was find a job selling Bibles door-to-door. Seriously. I sold family Bibles door-to-door.

I was paid straight commission. No salary. And I wasn’t very good at it. I was so excited about what God was doing in our lives that I talked about it whenever I could… instead of sticking to the sales script.

One day, when I knocked on a door, an African American woman with a giant smile on her face opened the door and said, “What are you selling?” Then she invited me in, told me to sit on the couch, and asked me about my faith. I was completely off my sales script again.

It wasn’t long before she explained my need for a ”baptism of repentance” like John the Baptist performed in the wilderness. I explained that I had been baptized in a Lutheran church as a baby, and again in a Catholic church when I was ten years old.

All of a sudden she screamed, jumped up, and ran around the corner. I followed to see what was wrong. Water was flowing over the kitchen sink onto the floor like a waterfall. I immediately wondered if this was another “sign” that I should pay attention to… After she cleaned up the mess, we sat down again to discuss my need for a “full-immersion” baptism. She told me her husband was a deacon and he could baptize me.

About that time, guess who walked through the door. The deacon.

He took over the conversation and showed me some scriptures to convince me of the importance of being baptized (again) to publicly demonstrate my faith. He told me he could do it Sunday morning. And I agreed to meet him after his church service.

I was lying through my teeth. I had no intention of ever going to his African American church in one of the roughest parts of Washington, DC, to be baptized.

My conscience bothered me a little, but I soon forgot about that meeting.

A week later, when I was wrapping up a Bible sale miles away from the deacon’s home, there was a knock on the door. My customer opened the door. It was him. The deacon from the week before. Out of nowhere.

I reached out and shook his hand and apologized for not showing up on Sunday. He asked if I “still want to be baptized.” I told him I did, but I couldn’t do it this coming Sunday. I had plans. He asked about Saturday, and again I had a conflict. Friday wouldn’t work either. He kept asking, until we got to that night… I had nothing planned. No more excuses. I agreed to meet and follow him downtown to his church.

It was cold and raining that night in late February or early March. I walked through the wide-open front doors of the church into a small, very dark lobby. When I looked to my right, I was startled by a very tall black man standing right next to me in the stairway. He smiled, but it didn’t help much. I was scared.

Another guy took me upstairs to change into “baptismal clothes” and then back down to the sanctuary. A few women were singing gospel songs in the front of the church, and a few more were sitting in the pews. The “baptismal pool” was made out of cinderblocks about 4-ft. high. There was one metal folding chair outside the pool and another on the inside. They served as the stairs in and out of the baptismal pool.

I followed the deacon into the cold water. It seemed to be about the same temperature as the air outside — freezing! I wondered why they left the front doors open, and why the church didn’t have any heat. My teeth were chattering and my knees were shaking. Literally.

The deacon asked if I believed that Jesus Christ died for my sins, and then he dunked me all the way under that freezing water, as he proclaimed, “I baptize you in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.”

I can’t explain what happened afterward. It sounds crazy, but I stood up in the water, cold and shaking, and then stepped up on the chair and then onto the cinderblock wall, and I was totally warm. It was as though I wasn’t wet and the room temperature was normal.

Don’t feel bad. When I got home and told my wife about it, she thought I was crazy, too.

But when they believed Philip as he preached the good news of the kingdom of God and the name of Jesus Christ, they were baptized, both men and women.         – Acts 8:12

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