Intercom

We call it an intercom—with a chuckle or a grin. It’s really a hole in the floor upstairs—or a hole in the ceiling downstairs, depending on your viewpoint—an old heat vent in our creaky antique farmhouse, that used to serve as the sole method of heat movement to the upper rooms on sub-zero days and nights (not too effectively).

When we renovated, we replaced the old vent cover with a more sophisticated reproduction that can open or close (on the upstairs side), with a finger’s push on a little lever that shifts its iron slats to “open.”

So we can communicate one with another, each on different floors, without even raising our voices.

Or, we can shut off the opening. We can even cover it with a rug or pillow, and get privacy. But we can’t communicate via our “intercom” with it shut. We have to push aside any covering and move the little lever.

We humans have a similar intercom, and it’s amazing. By it we can communicate with the Master of Creation—and if that isn’t awesome, I don’t know what is!

But we can choose to keep that communication channel closed, and covered, (or just forget to open it) and thereby not hear from heaven, or get through to it with our questions, pleas, and praises. Only it’s different from the earthly farmhouse vent in that it opens and closes from below. Certain attitudes of mind and spirit can shut it in a snap, and keep it tightly clamped, until a change of heart pries it back open. Resentment, stubborn disobedience, indifference to God, or just preoccupation can slam the barrier. Any kind of uncorrected sin (like harbored anger, envy, malice–see Spiritual Organization) can shut it off. Then we can neither hear clearly and accurately from God, nor send our prayers effectively up to Him.

But we can remove whatever’s muffling it, and open the way to hear and commune. What an amazing privilege! A heavenly intercom!

Reminder: It’s Garbage Day

Just a reminder: Tuesday’s the day for a new page to appear each week under Spiritual Organization.

We’re still putting out the trash.

Today’s garbage is fermenting (phew!) Last week’s, in case you missed it on Tuesday past, contained deadly toxin. Click on the links here for these pages, or go to the right column, find the title, and click. (Either way, you might want to pinch your nose shut with a clothespin first…)

Wrong Way!

I saw the signs after I got on the ramp: “Wrong way!”

I was on the Off ramp instead of the On ramp!

Now what? I couldn’t turn around: the ramp was narrow, and walled. I couldn’t back up into the traffic. I proceeded carefully down the narrow lane (no cars coming yet!) and hoped for space and opportunity. And did I ever pray! Not with many words (“Oh, God, help me!”) but with much intensity!

Now ahead I saw room for a two-point turn. I also saw oncoming traffic. I had too little time to make the turn in front of it. The best I could do was pull as far off to the right as possible to let all oncoming drivers squeeze by, and hope a break in traffic would soon allow me time to turn.

The lead oncoming driver saw my predicament (stupidity?—error!) and slowed to a stop. Filled with gratitude to God and that driver, I made my frantic about-face and was quickly out of there, headed in the right direction.

Do you know what I did down there, while those oncoming drivers waited? I repented! Repentance is a complete turn-around, to head henceforth in the correct direction.

We all foul up unintentionally. I certainly didn’t purpose to head the wrong way into a busy superhighway. With confusing road markings and poor visibility* and having to turn left across traffic, I was earnestly trying to find the onramp slot. And when I saw my error, yes, I was horrified, embarrassed, mortified, but I got turned around as quickly as possible.

Then there was grace: I could turn because the oncoming driver gave me opportunity—not to continue error, but to make correction. He didn’t pull to his far right and wave me on in my wrong course, to a fatal crash on the six-lane!

To assume I could continue in the direction I was headed with no dire consequences would have been madness. Yet so many people—including “Christians” —think they can just continue on their wrong course, disaster-free. And too many bystanders in today’s church act like that’s okay.

If we’re in error, we need to repent. If we’re one of those headed in the right direction, we need to exhibit grace toward the wrong-way traveler. Grace allows, even helps make, a way for the erring one to get turned around. Grace neither rants against and ridicules his stupidity while allowing no room to turn, nor does it encourage or assent to her continuing the error. Grace slows to stop if need be, and allows an about-face.

If I’d been belligerent or stupid enough to proceed onward after my chance to turn, oncoming drivers then should have blown horns, waved and gestured, even yelled at me, then undoubtedly called the police! But grace and repentance righted the wrong—and so may it be in our churches, homes, and other relationships: Repentance and Grace.

* poor visibility turns out to have been poor vision, corneal dystrophy and early cataracts in both eyes. For more on this, go here.

Resolution or Repentance?

I (want to) resolve…

I want to get some things resolved here, right now, while this new year is still ringing in.

I want to get my HPS (Heavenly Positioning System) functioning properly. I want to make sure I’m on the right road in the months ahead, and going in the right direction!

What aim have I set for the coming year? Do I need a list of “Resolutions” or one good resolution, for a year or a month—or do I need Repentance?

Not just a one-time deal, repentance becomes dire necessity anytime life takes a wrong turn— which it can do shockingly fast and totally without our intending it— as the next blog post dramatically demonstrates…

Just for This Week: Re-establish Good Routines

It has suddenly occurred to me that what most of us need this first week of January isn’t resolutions about developing a bunch of new habits, but restoration or strengthening of good habits we already had or were developing–habits the holiday season discombobulated!

My personal journal entry for this morning:

“Oh Lord, how I love Your word! How I love Your Spirit in Your word! How it blesses me to be reading again at least three chapters in the morning! And not just reading, but soaking in those words from the page, to assimilate their spirit, their instruction into my life. It makes my eyelids moist with gratitude. So sweet, so very sweet, once again to rise early and precede all the ordinary operations of my day with this inwardly empowering blessing!

“This is the time for me to get back to routines that special events and visits away have jostled. How foolish it would be to jump ahead with grandiose self-improvement plans when what I really need is restored order! Without the latter, how can I effectively move forward with the former?

So here’s my spiritual aim “just for this week:” to re-establish and strengthen two good daily routines:

1) Rising early to attend the word of God with the aim of assimilating it into my soul and life

2) Recording five new gratitudes

How blessed I am by doing these two things today! How much better strengthened, elevated, and equipped I am right now for whatever challenges my day ahead might present! And how much more joy infuses my soul!”

Joyous New Year!