03.01.09

What Do You Worship?

Posted in Discipleship, God in general, relationship at 12:10 am by Administrator

Everyone worships some thing or things in their lives. What do you worship? Where does your time, money and attention go? That is probably what you worship. Many claim that they worship God but is that really true when we look at their checkbooks or see what they do with their time? So if people aren’t worshipping God what do they worship? Some people worship nature or reason. Recently I have been reading the Alcoholic’s Anonymous handbook because a friend of mine was trying to illustrate a point. I actually like what the book has to say about it so I will excerpt it here.

What do you Worship?


Without knowing it, had we not been brought to where we stood by a certain kind of faith? For did we not believe in our own reasoning? Did we not have confidence in our ability to think? What was that but a sort of faith? Yes, we had been faithful, abjectly faithful to the God of Reason. So, in one way or another, we discovered that faith had been involved all the time!

We found, too, that we had been worshippers. What a state of mental goose-flesh that used to bring on! Had we not worshipped people, sentiment, things, money and ourselves? p54 AA Big Book

2 Peter 2:19 says “ They promise them freedom, while they themselves are slaves of depravity—for a man is a slave to whatever has mastered him.

The quotation from the AA book really illustrates what Peter is talking about. It really got me thinking.

09.22.08

Hurricane Ike: The Aftermath

Posted in Discipleship, God in general, Ministry, relationship at 11:53 pm by Administrator

Recently I posted two pieces on my blog Left of Self Center about Hurricane Ike that had a weird foreshadowing of what was to come. In these posts, I talked about how a hurricane can change everything. Little did I know that Bolivar Peninsula would become an island and that all the towns on it would be virtually wiped off the map.

Brett the Survivor

One of the other things I mentioned was that a hurricane can change the pace of our lives. Anyone who has lived the past week in Houston has definitely had the pace of their lives changed. Yet despite all the hardships many of us have had to endure at the hand of this powerful storm, I find that so many good things happen in the wake of these storms. When I heard about September Serve , I never imagined this happening. Yet I won’t use my words to describe it, I will share with you the words of my brother Chet in an e-mail blog he was sending to his friends when he came in from San Antonio to weather out Hurricane Ike with me.

“It was an exciting adventure. We lost power around 5:00 Am It was only really bad for a few hours, but it was intense. The next day we went driving around and there were trees down all over the place. It was like someone took a shredder and sprayed leaves and limbs over every yard and street. Afterwards we got 12″ of rain, and there was flooding everywhere. Phones were out, electricity, no TV, or computers, and no cell phones. The instant communication, information, and comfort were gone. It felt marooned with no travel, no communication. Yall knew more about what was happening than we did. All stores and restaurants were closed. No gas stations could pump gas because they didn’t have electricity.”

“One incredible thing was once the rain slowed, everyone came outside, talked, and they all started helping each other clean up their yards and reestablish order. Everyone was laughing and men helped the single moms move branches, and several kids had brooms and were sweeping the streets. Wow it really showed me how much modern technology has damaged our communities. People turn to each other when nothing else exists.”

“I could not imagine 3 to 4 weeks in Houston heat and humidity with no electricity. Now that is pure drudgery. Well I was there for my family and the adventure of experiencing a hurricane, not drudgery. So after extending a invitation of air conditioning and electricity at my home, I decided my career as a eyewitness reporter in the destruction of Ike was over. It was time to go home. I could not get home quick enough. I am now in my cool home, with lights all around me, lap top in my lap, remote in my hand, cold beverages from my refrigerator, despising my neighbors who I have talked to maybe once or twice in 7 years. I am just glad I am not in Houston any more, but I will be forever moved by the destruction I saw, the fun I had, the drudgery I experienced, and the community and humanity I felt.”

Point is this. Adversity brings people together. Adversity makes our faith stronger. The helping hands I saw being extended between people proves this.

Neighbors helping Neighbors

Many of the people in the picture above go to either the Loft or attend services over TWUMC . We jumped out and worked to clean up the street and the neighborhood and help out our neighbor. It why I made many 140 mile round trips to Bryan/College Station to get people gas, ice, food, and information for those who couldn’t get it for themselves. We find out what is truly important when we lose things we put our reliance on: Electricity, Technology, Convenience, and so many other things that just aren’t important. My brother felt what being a Christian is really about. He felt what humanity is all about: a relationship with our God and one another.

By the way, my brother is the good looking guy in the blue shirt in the middle of the picture.