Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Growing Young In Christ



“A man growing old becomes a child again.”
 - Sophocles


“It takes a long time to grow young.”
- Pablo Piccasso


“Being young is a gift.
Growing young is a choice.”
- John Parkhurst
-    
   Perception is not always reality.  A violin player stood in a cavernous Boston subway, playing continuously for an hour.  Six people stopped and listened briefly; a few dropped money into a hat as they rushed by. 
   The violin player finished playing.  Silence.  Nobody noticed him.  No applause.  No recognition.  Joshua Bell, one of the greatest violinists in the world, had played an intricate piece with a violin worth 3.5 million dollars.  Because of the environment and his hat on the ground, he was seen as a street musician.  Perception.
   You may recall the movie titled The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.  Based on a story by F. Scott Fitzgerald, “It is the tale of a man who is born in his eighties and ages backwards…”
   I am a Christian Benjamin Button.  My birthday cake had fewer candles this year than last, and the last had fewer than the year before.  Rather than growing older, I grow younger.  Each year, as I draw closer to Jesus, as I see and hear more clearly God’s Word, as I clear each hurdle in the race toward eternity with my Savior, I realize that I am becoming, truly, a child of the Lord.
   Jesus said, In Matthew 19:14, “Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these.”
   You see, I have been born again!  I am a child!  The old is gone!  One who looks at me for the first time sees a man of a certain age.  But that’s perception.  Not reality.  I’m young!  I have accepted Jesus!  Christ is patiently remaking me – teaching me wisdom and what it is like to be a child again with full trust in his Father.  The Holy Spirit fills my soul.  Life is beautiful and rich with heaven on the horizon!
   I have a new spring in my step and feel a great love and joy.  Each prayer, each Christian experience causes me to grow newer in the Lord.  God restores me, and I grow younger in spirit and in mind.  “Yes, like a small child is my soul within me,” says Psalm 131:1-2.
   Proverbs 6:31 states, "Gray hair is a crown of splendor; it is attained by a righteous life."   There is no fountain of youth, but, thankfully, there is God’s Word, God’s Spirit, God’s Son who give me life eternal.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

WHATEVER BEGINS ALSO ENDS


WHATEVER BEGINS ALSO ENDS
-       Seneca

“The future is something which everyone reaches at the rate of sixty minutes an hour whatever he does, whoever he is.”  C.S. Lewis

On this New Year’s Eve I reflect as I am wont to do about the past year, the past ten,  twenty.  I do not celebrate the new year in; I am wary of it.  I offer a contemplative wave good-bye to the one departing.  I knew it well.

Time.  It marches onward at a disciplined, unrelenting pace.  We may think that it “just flew by”.  Or, perhaps, it just “drags on and on”.  As time does, indeed, march on, many cultural practices and societal icons appear or disappear – are sometimes missed greatly or are never thought of as they are trod upon and slip quietly into the past.

In the first decade of the 21st century we have experienced the ebb and flow of practices and icons lost or introduced.

Newspapers are being trod upon by the march of progress.  Have you noticed how thin they are compared to the 1990’s?  Have you seen how sparse their classified sections are?  Advertising is the name of the money game with newspapers.  With a huge percentage of their income usurped by the web, newspapers are fighting not only monetary loss but also societal change as more and more people get their news on television or on line.  A long-time newspaper reader, this writer could never have imagined reading the news electronically.  But I do.

Remember the dial-up internet portals?  Inexpensive but oh, so slow.  I could no longer abide waiting, watching as the document I was downloading from a given site appeared line by line e – v – e – r     s - o     s – l – o – w – l - y.  Sign me up, Comcast!

Encyclopedias!   Those twenty or thirty volume compilations of vast knowledge that had to be updated with an additional yearly volume.  They looked good in the den’s book case.  They also gave the message that your family was educated, and if you didn’t know an answer, you would quickly look it up from one volume or another.  Did you know that the word google is now an accepted verb in the English language?  Now if you display encyclopedias on your bookshelf, it is an indication that you are not technically savvy and that time is passing you by.  Anachronism!

This writer remembers 78 rpm brittle plastic records that played scratchy music, one song per side, and they broke easily.  As time passed, they morphed into smaller 45 rpm discs, still one song per side, with a big hole in the middle.  Along came the 33 1/3 rpm “albums” that were quite a bit larger with a small hole in the middle.  They had several songs on each side.  Then came CD’s. It seemed they would rule the recorded music world for a long, long time.  Wrong!  Apple’s Steven Jobs created a process where we can download music song by song for approximately one dollar per song, and we don’t have to purchase those others that took up recording space but had little success in the music world.  Now, CD’s are commonly found at tag sales, another casualty of the march of time.  

Cell phones have totally and fully barged their way into our worlds.  Small and handy, they are becoming ever more sophisticated.  The iphone, arguably at the pinnacle of  sophistication, seems like it can hardly be improved upon and that it will rule its world for a long, long time.  You and I know better.

A casualty of the cell phone revolution is the old, dependable, hard-wired home telephone.  Wired into most every room, it sits silently on table, counter, or bedside.  Mute testimony to progress on the march.

When was the last time you had a roll of film developed or loaded a roll into a film camera?  I can’t remember.  I don’t even know where to find my film cameras.  Did I donate them to some needy organization?  I hope so,   Otherwise, they’ll end up in a land fill for study by some future generation.  “What is that?” they may say.

My fingers no longer do the walking.  The yellow pages are passe’.  The books too large and the print too small.  Save a forest!  They’re gone!

Who uses a fax machine anymore?  They’re still around, but if you can send a PDF electronically, who needs to have it copied at one station and downloaded and printed at another before it ends up on your desk?  Forget it.  Outdated technology.  Gone.


Time changes everything, but there is something about us that is always surprised by change.


I don’t know about you, but I haven’t handwritten a letter in years and years.  With my poor handwriting, that’s really a good thing.  I’ll write thank-you’s or invitations, but letters?  email!

Take a look at the automotive industry.  Goodbye Pontiac, Hummer, Saab, Saturn, Plymouth.  The entire Chrysler Corporation is on the brink of extinction.  Stardom in classical car shows, ready to join so many others including  Hudson, Packard, Studebaker, - I’ve owned each of these in their time.

Of course, that raises the question about yours truly!  Franklin Roosevelt is my favorite politician.  I heard Truman speak on his famous 1948 whistle stop campaign.  In 1946 I saluted Eisenhower; he saluted right back.  I stood next to JFK in 1960 and George McGovern in 1972.  I had a diploma handed to me by Gerald Ford in 1977.  I’ve met Joe Leiberman, twice, and John McCain in 2008. 

This year we lost many icons from many fields of endeavor including Ted Kennedy, Dom DiMaggio, Paul Newman, Walter Cronkite, and John Updike.  I think I'll take my temperature.



We think that life has an inexhaustible supply of days.  But things happen only a certain number of times, and not many times really.  How much more will I remember a time of my youth, a time so very much a part of me that I cannot conceive of life without it?  It once seemed so limitless!  Amazing!