A Better Place

I took the long way to school this morning.  I left a few minutes early so I could poke along and savor the autumn colors.  Opening the car window,  I filled my lungs with the scent of fallen leaves mixed with fallen apples as I passed an already harvested orchard.  Remembering Jesus and His disciples harvesting a handful of grain while passing a field,  I pulled over and kicked around in the grass under the fruitless trees until I found a really nice apple the harvesters had left behind.  Rubbing it until it was nice and shiny,  I took a big juicy bite.  It was grand.  Actually it was a Cortland.

I enjoy doing things Jesus did.  I allowed my mind to run a bit wild and imagined Jesus standing among the trees polishing up an apple.  Truly there are many ways we can do what He did and He is anxious to help us.  We can perform miracles of love that can transform lives by our being attentive to the needs of those about us.  If we are having difficulty with that, upon our request,  the Holy Spirit will heighten our sensitivities and actually give us the resources to come to the aid of others.

When Paul wrote, “Let this mind be in you that was in Jesus” he was calling us to a higher plain of daily living.  He was telling us that we could think better thoughts than our norm and act in ways far beyond our usual level of giving.  Tomorrow you and I can be something so much better than what we are today.  And should we be so, the entire world will be a better place.

Written by Roger Bothwell on October 30, 2008.

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A Community of Caring People

It’s fantastic to live in a community with people who care.  This evening we were unaware that the thunderstorm heading our way housed a tornado. That is we were unaware until friends south of us who were watching television saw the threat to us.  Our phone rang and Paul Ravina’s caring voice said, “Turn on your television you are in a tornado warning zone.” Thank you,Paul.

The next few minutes were filled with getting birds into the basement and in general preparing for the worst.  Thankfully after much thunderous noise and lots of water the storm moved east.  Hopefully those people also have someone to call them.

In I Peter 5:7 we read that God cares for us.  If we are to be imitators of Christ, as we are urged to do in Philippians, we must indeed be watchful to see need and to be quick to offer and supply what is needed.  Thankfully, I not only have people who call me I also have people who enable us to quickly reach out when we perceive problems.   Just last week I overheard one of my grad students say quietly to another student, “I don’t know how I am going to feed my four children lunch.  I don’t have any food or money.”   Needless to say because so many of you on occasion send offerings to our Spring of Life ministry her problem was cared for immediately.   It is very rewarding to be a part of something much bigger than ourselves.  God gives to us that we might be streams of blessings.  And when we are a stream we are the ones with the biggest smile.

Written by Roger Bothwell on July 28, 2010

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All of Us Are Teachers

My father was a school teacher.   His brother was a school teacher.  His brother’s wife was a school teacher.  My step-mother was a school teacher.  I married a school teacher.  As a school teacher I stand in the midst of a family tradition.  This evening I stood in a graduate class of thirty-two students and was amazed that almost half of them were leaving other careers and reeducating themselves so they could enter elementary classrooms.  The other half are already elementary teachers getting their masters’ degrees.

Teaching is a profession whose value is not defined by its remuneration.  Only in eternity will we begin to realize the value of what teachers do day after day.  The opportunity to reach into the mind of a child and to challenge and inspire them to greatness is without a doubt one of the most exciting things that can happen to anyone.  Yesterday our President used his bully pulpit to address the children of our land and he said, “Take responsibility for your education. Go to class and listen. Don’t let failures define you. . . .That is the promise of education in America, that no matter what we look like or where we come from or who our parents are, each of us should have the opportunity to fulfill our God-given potential.”

God gave our children pliable minds.  What they become, who they will be, very much depends not only upon what we say to them but what we are in front of them.  Each of us is a teacher no matter what we do for our paycheck.

One of my favorite authors wrote, “He who co-operates with the divine purpose in imparting to the youth a knowledge of God, and molding the character into harmony with His, does a high and noble work.” White E.G., Education, p. 19.

Written by Roger Bothwell on September 10, 2009

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Cheery Trees

Our fruit trees are in full bloom.  Apple trees and cherry trees are breathtakingly beautiful.  You could easily call both the apple and cherry trees “cheery” trees.  A storm passed through this afternoon and something strange happened to one of the cherry trees.  The wind, which wasn’t severe, combined with the heavy rain pretty much knocked off most of its pinkish white petals.   What is interesting is this did not happen to all of the cherry trees.

So why?  Could it be that one tree caught a blast of wind the others didn’t?  If not, was that tree weaker than the others?  It reminded me of some folks I have known along life’s way.  Some manage to survive major storms, while others seem to fall apart under similar trials.  I used the word “seem” because there is so much we do not know about each other.  Perhaps it only appeared that the trials were similar.  Maybe something additional happened that we did not see.  One thing for sure, they had different childhoods, which could have strengthened one and weakened the other.

As we do not know why one cherry tree fared better than the other, we do not know why people respond so very differently to what appears to be the same events.  Jesus was so wise when He instructed us not to judge others.  We don’t have enough information and insight to do so fairly.   When we judge others we often use ourselves as the standard and when others don’t respond as we would, often we are harsh and belittling.  Using ourselves as a standard is so wrong because we make a zillion excuses for ourselves that we do not afford to others.

It is a wonder that God loves us so much.

Written by Roger Bothwell on May 13, 2015

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Advantages

If it had been a plain grayish moth I would have merely crushed it for being inside my house, but this was a beautiful Monarch butterfly and ever so carefully I cupped it in my hands to take it outside.   As I watched it drunkenly reel around the patio into the blooming Jewelweed I realized my action was so like how we treat our fellow humans.   If someone is beautiful they get special treatment.  The pretty are given the finer seats.  If a plain someone enters we barely notice.

Even Jesus’ brother James writes of our behavior.  He said, “For if there should come into your assembly a man with gold rings, in fine apparel, and there should also come in a poor man in filthy clothes, and you pay attention to the one wearing the fine clothes and say to him, ‘You sit here in a good place,’ and say to the poor man, ‘You stand there,’ or, ‘Sit here at my footstool,’ have you not shown partiality among yourselves, and become judges with evil thoughts?”

In the vast majority of presidential elections the taller man wins.  There is no doubt there are many social advantages to being taller or prettier.  I have noted through the years there are many people I do not want to stand beside.  The comparison finds me wanting.  But I am encouraged by Peter’s speech in Acts 10:34.  He declares that God is no respecter of persons. This doesn’t mean He doesn’t respect us.  Quite to the contrary, Peter is saying God loves and treats all of us the same.  There are no persons or groups that are more special than others.  Sorry about that.  Most of us think God loves our group more than another.  I’m afraid not.  Actually that is really good news.

Written by Roger Bothwell on August 17, 2009

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A Cell Phone No Call List

This week cell phone numbers were released making it possible for us to receive a host of unwanted junk calls that will be charged to our minute allotments.  Fortunately we can be enrolled on a no-call list.  At first I thought I would write about God not having a no-call list, but that seemed too obvious, so I decided not to mention it.  However, there are some wonderful verses of Scripture that do relate to this.  How about Romans 10:12 and 13?  “For there is no difference between the Jew and the Greek: for the same Lord over all is rich unto all that call upon him. For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.”

This is a devastating passage to those who think they belong to an exclusive God club.  It is so human to think we are special.  Well we are.  Everyone is special.  Really?   Remember the classic line from Gilbert and Sullivan,                “If everyone is somebody than nobody’s anybody.”?  That is great human logic.  When we are as limited as we are that has to be true.  However, God is limitless.  If He knows how many hairs are on our heads, and He does, check out Matthew 10:30, then each of us is somebody special.

Now we would like to think those verses only apply to our group.  Sorry. Paul said “whosoever shall call.”   So if you are a card carrying somebody on earth you are a non-card carrying somebody in heaven.  Better yet, if you are a nobody on earth, you really are a somebody in heaven.  As a matter of fact, God not only doesn’t have you on His no-call list, He doesn’t have one, He has been calling you.

Written by Roger Bothwell on February 3, 2009

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A Thief at Barnes and Noble

I saw a guy standing in front of the magazine wall at Barnes and Noble stealing sniffs of aftershave. You know those cologne advertisement pages in magazines that you peel back and release wonderful scents.  He was sniffing and then putting the magazines back on the shelf. I figured he was stealing because the person who bought the magazine wouldn’t get 100% of the intended dazzle. I wondered if they should add a sniffing device to the exit door along with the magnetic machines designed to catch thieves.  A sales assistant could come running over and say, “Hey pal, you smell like Armani Code.”  Of course that would mean the machine would have to sniff you on the way in and remember you if you were wearing it upon entry.  They could call the machine Rover or Lassie. I understand they now have machines at airports that take your thermal picture to see if you have the flu.

There are few secrets left in this world.  There is an electronic trail of almost everything we write or do.  Those secret love emails you wrote to your sweetie are residing in some federal computer just waiting for publication.  Your super market has a record of your last box of Oreos.  So just in case you thought you were getting away with something, you’re not. One of my memory verses when I was little was Ecclesiastics 12:14, “For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it be evil.”   That was frightening.   You can be sure I was deliriously happy when I discovered I John 1:9.  It promises God will forgive EVERYTHING.   Phew!

Written by Roger Bothwell on May 7, 2009

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A Sure Thing

While waiting for our pizza this evening at Chucky Cheese I enjoyed watching a four-year-old little boy beat the system.  He was playing Skee-ball. Actually the word “playing” isn’t quite the right word.  He was picking up the ball, running up the lane and depositing it in the 100,000 point hole. It didn’t take him long to rack up a million points and lots of tickets to spend at the redemption counter.  He totally maxed out his full potential. He had a sure thing.

I meet a lot of people filled with anxiety about their eternal future. Mentally healthy people want to live.  Eighty or ninety years really aren’t enough.  We don’t hit our full mental stride until seventy. If I charged a hundred thousand dollars for a ticket that guaranteed heaven, people would line up from my front door to San Francisco.  We long for surety.  We want a sure thing.

Well I can guarantee you heaven.   I really can.  I found a sure thing. It’s not based on money or deeds.  It is based completely on trust.  The following is better than a four-year-old dropping a wooden ball in a Skee-ball hole.  Jesus said, “Most assuredly, I say to you, he who hears My word and believes in Him who sent Me has everlasting life, and shall not come into judgment, but has passed from death into life.”  John 5:24

It’s the surest thing you will ever find on planet earth.   Please stop saying, “I hope I will be saved.”   We don’t honor God with that kind of talk any more than I would have honored my dad by saying, “I hope you do” after he promised me he would bring me something special.

Written by Roger Bothwell on November 25, 2009

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