Wednesday, February 27, 2013

To My Followers

To my followers:  I've posted two blogs today.  The first one below was written last week, but for some reason was never posted.  The next one below was written just today.  Sorry for the confusion.

Jay Plank

A Message

Every so often, I get a comment on one of the blogs. I enjoy the comments, even the ones (although there are few of them) that do not agree with me. Discussion on issues is a part of who we are. That’s why I do not have comment moderation enabled on this blog; however, I will remove a comment if it is patently offensive or otherwise inappropriate.
One of my recent commenters is a woman named Carrie Looney. I give her entire name because she did the same in one of the comments. I know who this woman is, but haven’t met her. I’m going to use the blog to send you a message, Carrie.
I’d love to correspond with you from time to time, but don’t have your email address. Use my blog email address aminnot-blogger@yahoo.com to send me your address, if you wish to do so. If you do, I’ll send you my private email address. If you’d rather not, that’s OK, too.
I know most of the others who comment. Kathy is a good friend from Western Kansas. WDK is a relative who lives not far away. Scotty is my son. Chris is a friend from Northeast Kansas. And so on.
Carrie is a special person, even though we’ve never met. She is a descendent of the woman who graciously volunteered to pay for my college education and provided just the right amount of love and support for us when things seemed to be at about their worst for us. Also named Carrie, she did things like this not only for me, but for countless others over the years of her life…people who the granddaughter Carrie will probably never meet. However, young Carrie seems to have an interest in knowing more about her grandmother’s efforts and in seeing some of the results of her grandmother’s work.
I’m not a young man any more. I have far more years behind me than I do ahead of me. Who and what I am today, however, is in large measure the doing of the woman who quietly stepped to my side that day almost thirty years ago and gave me hope. I’d like to think that I have been and am doing the same as I can and am able.
You may think that I devote far too much time to this part of my life and Carrie Lou’s role in it. If you think that, you don’t understand the immense importance of what God did for me through her. To say that I am here writing this, having an intact family and a decent job could, I think, only be said because of her effort on my behalf. I shudder to think of what may have happened had she not been there for me.
You too never know what effect you may have on the life of someone else. You don’t have to have a lot of money to have the most profound, life-changing effect on another. Kind words, a deed done well, a friendship, or just an understanding heart can literally give life and hope to someone who has that need. And you'll probably never, ever, ever know the full import what you did.

We Will Be There



One would think that with several days of non-activity, one would be able to post a blog on time.  For those two or three of you who read this, I try to post a blog every week no later than Tuesday on each of my blogs (work and personal).  The work blog was posted yesterday, on time.  The personal blog, well, this is it and it’s late.  And we’ve had several snow days this past week and a weekend in between.  We never lost power at the house and had I had plenty of time to do this, but no.  I just had to procrastinate, and now I’m doing a late one on Wednesday.
Would I be labeled as “old” if I said I actually enjoyed several days of not having much to do and being at home?  Yes, it did start to get a little old.  Yes, I did make a trip or two to a store during that time, and we were at Sunday events at our church.  But it really was kind of nice to be home with not much to do and enjoy the time.
And yesterday afternoon it was good to come back to work after almost a week of not being here.  The desk was just as I had left it.  The office fairies that are supposed to come in and clean up emptied the trash and probably vacuumed the floor, but they didn’t touch the desk.  Probably that’s just as well, though.  I might not have found anything had someone cleaned it during my absence.
Facebook was a wonderful way to maintain contact with the outside world during the storms.  I have great friends, and for the most part they are careful to not inject a lot of politics or bad thoughts into their posts.  I know some are struggling right now with issues of health, family, job, or other.  They struggle sometimes to maintain an upbeat attitude, but I continue to be amazed at the resilience of the human spirit.  I feel a connection, even now sitting here, with those I know are wrestling with some issues brought on by the fallen creation.  And I hurt with them as they pass through yet another trial by fire, and pray God’s grace and love continue.
I trust that they too, knowing that their friends are also hurting and working with the darkness of this present age, are praying for their friends as well.  We all are in the battle of our lives.  Some of us are manifesting the scars of that battle more acutely than others; but we all show the effects of it, and ultimately will be consumed by it, if only temporarily.  For we all are destined to die and return to the dust from which we are created.  We have the sure hope, however, of life unhindered by the forces of this world and forevermore living in a creation that is neither corrupt nor decaying.
And that, I think, is what makes us continue on…to be as upbeat and positive as we are.  We know there is more than this.  We know there is something better.  And we know that we will be there because of the love of the Creator God of the universe.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

They're Still "Good"



Cardinals, titmice, chickadees, juncos, sparrows…all of these varieties of birds and probably more that I haven’t seen yet have been enjoying the grains and seeds I’ve put out on the patio and deck today.  I usually feed the birds, but when it’s warmish and no snow on the ground, they don’t come all that much.  But when the snow comes or it gets very cold, they’re all over the feast on the deck.
An interesting creation, birds.  Carrying very small brains, but having within them somehow the knowledge of flight and a small body that manages to stay warm in the coldest weather, birds in general are a lesson in both the simple and the complex.
For example, the chicken incubates her eggs for about 21 days.  During that time, the egg goes from a single cell to a chick complete with the knowledge to scratch the ground for food, drink water, and huddle together for warmth.  Baby ducks, ducklings, incubate for two or three days longer, and come out of the shell with the knowledge of water and swimming.  Other birds incubate their eggs for a longer or shorter time, but all come out of the shell with inherent knowledge of how to survive.
As simple and as stupid as one might think birds are, they in reality retain within them an amazing knowledge of direction and place in the environment, where to look for the food that they need, the dynamics of flight, how to raise their young, how to build a nest, and for many, where to migrate, how to get there, and how to get back…never having been there before.
We used to call someone a “dumb cluck” when we thought that person was less than intelligent somehow.  Of course, we were referring to a chicken.  But my mind about chickens and birds in general was changed when we kept chickens for several years when the boys were little.  There is nothing stupid or dumb about a chicken, or other kind of bird, for that matter.
These creatures of God’s creation do their part in the great scheme of things, and are good, just as they were millennia ago when He first created them and called them “good”.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Unity...No?



I did something this morning that I don’t do very often.  I read the forward of the New Testament in Modern English, translated by J. B. Phillips.  Phillips, an Englishman, lived in the first and middle part of the 20th century.  He was an author, translator, and clergyman, having written over a dozen books in addition to the translation of the New Testament that bears his name.
I like the Phillips translation for its readability and the knack it has for seeing through what many times is an unintelligible or very stilted Greek translation, making it much more understandable to the modern day reader.  Although he completed his work in the late 1950’s, his translation is as fresh today as it was over 50 years ago.
The final paragraph to the forward talks about his being indebted to all kinds of people, and his having developed a gratitude that is, in large part, “…evoked by the assurance that has grown within me that here in the New Testament, at the very heart and core of our Faith, Christians are far more at one than their outward divisions would imply.  From this unquestionable evidence of fundamental unity I derive not only great comfort, but a great hope for the future.”
I’m not certain what you think about unity, denominationalism, the fellowship of believers, Christendom, and all that goes with these topics, but here is a man who, rather than being upset over differing opinions, division and strife, instead sees in the New Testament a unity among believers that goes far beyond the outward appearances.
Sometimes I wonder if we Christians in this modern day are more pessimists than we are optimistic.  I wonder if we tend to see things on the half-empty side much more than on the half-full side.  And I wonder if it may just be human nature to do so.
Just look at the news.  It is well known that news that is bad or controversial is a much better “sell” than the good news.  Yes, sometimes they’ll put a good news piece in the mixture, but by and large we hear about murders, car wrecks, bad snowstorms, and fighting among politicians much more than we hear stories about people helping people, the beauty of nature or some other good news.
How would it change us if we consciously began to see the good…to look specifically for areas of agreement and fellowship?  How would we begin to act if we tried consciously to fill our minds with those things that are good and right and noble about other people, rather than accent our differences and argue with those who don’t agree with us?  How much more could we accomplish working with God toward the redemption of the fallen creation if we quit spending so much time differentiating ourselves from everyone else and began to work together to mitigate such things as child abuse, sexual trafficking, pornography, dysfunctional families, hunger, and poverty?
I’ll leave you with the words of J. B. Phillips as he translates Philippians 4:8.  “Here is a last piece of advice.  If you believe in goodness and if you value the approval of God, fix your minds on whatever is true and honourable and just and pure and lovely and praiseworthy.  Model your conduct on what you have learned from me, on what I have told you and shown you, and you will find that the God of peace will be with you.”

Wednesday, February 06, 2013

The Simple and The Complex



I have kind of a “thing” for amaryllis.  As you know, if you read this regularly, I blogged about a couple of plants that bloomed very, very well recently.  What I didn’t tell you is that we have four bulbs all together that we’ve collected over the years.  I did mention one that hasn’t bloomed in a long while, but we also have another one.
That one is a bulb we got a year or two ago.  After it bloomed, we let it leaf out and we cared for it the rest of the summer.  I put it away in a dark, cool place for awhile last fall and got it out, along with one or two other bulbs, sometime in November of last year.
Both bulbs had a hint of green on their top, so I knew both were viable.  We put them in the window and watered.  The one bulb started growing leaves, but didn’t bloom, rather quickly…I’d say within a couple of weeks.  The other bulb just sat there.  The green on the top continued to stay about the same, but nothing else happened.
We were wondering if something was wrong with the bulb.  Then just a few days ago, we saw the hint of the tip of something coming out of the top of the bulb.  The next day it was clear that what was emerging was a flowering shoot.  This will be the first time I have been able to make an amaryllis re-bloom in a year following purchasing one.
Why it waited so long to come out, I don’t know.  The other bulbs started relatively soon after watering and putting in a sunny place.  And why this one will bloom when the other one, which I treated the same as this one, produced only leaves, I don’t know either.
I thought about these two bulbs when I went back to the kitchen at the church to get a cherry turnover someone had graciously left there.  There were two or three in the box, and I got to thinking about the mass production of those and how, if you do the same thing in the same way, you’ll get the same results each time…a perfect cherry turnover.  Except that with flower bulbs, that evidently doesn’t work, because I treated two amaryllis bulbs the same.  One bloomed.  One didn’t.  One started growing right away.  One waited two months to start.
I don’t know that there is any great and glorious eternal lesson I can learn from this.  It’s more a matter of understanding that living things, including people, don’t always conform to the accepted ways that things are done and we just have to know and understand that and work with and within it.  Life is a complex thing, whether in the form of a bulb or a baby, and we continue to marvel at what we see and yet don’t understand.
I think that’s one reason I so enjoy the orb spiders in the fall of the year when they spin giant webs at the corners of houses or in doorways or between limbs of trees and bushes.  These seemingly simple life forms have within their DNA the capacity to create a material that, pound for pound is ten times stronger than steel, yet has great flexibility and “stretchiness”.  They then weave this material into a true work of art that at the same time is critical for the survival of the next generation.  Tell me that isn’t complex and I’ll sell you the Brooklyn Bridge.
Getting back to the amaryllis, I don’t remember what color the blooms are on this plant just starting, but we will be able to enjoy a late-blooming work of art for the next several weeks as we watch it grow and mature.  And maybe, just maybe this coming fall, somehow all four of our bulbs will come out of the closet downstairs and bloom their hearts out again for us.  It’s worth looking forward to.