Showing posts with label Personal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Personal. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Giving the (Blue) Devil His Due: Four Reasons Coack K Is Greater Than John Wooden

This is the most unlikely blog post I have ever written, and will probably be the only time I ever say anything nice about Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski, so copy and save this! But as a college basketball fan I have to give Coach K his props, and want to give four reasons why he should be considered the greatest NCAA tourney coach of all time, far surpassing John Wooden.

1.  Coach K doesn't cheat.  It is true that John Wooden won ten national championships, twice as many as Coach K's five titles. But Coach K's program has never had any kind of taint of cheating. Contrary to his sainted reputation, the same was not true of John Wooden. Widely known among basketball insiders, but rarely discussed in public, Wooden's players during the dynasty years received illegal favors from a local booster named Sam Gilbert. "Papa Sam" gave the players cash, cars, and even arranged abortions for the players' girlfriends. This was so well-known among coaches that Jerry Tarkanian used to joke that th most important piece of Wooden's famous "Pyramid of Success" was Sam Gilbert! Wooden did not actively court Gilbert's support, but he knew of his activities, and by all accounts essentially turned a blind eye to him. It is interesting that when Seth Davis decided to write a biography of Wooden, people inside basketball would often ask him in hushed tones if he was going to mention Gilbert in the book (he did).

Monday, April 1, 2013

Eulogy for Marty Pickup


Some of us here today knew Marty Pickup because he was our teacher. Others, because he was our preacher. Many, because he was our colleague. Those are the ways that I knew him, and as best as I can, I hope to represent all of you who learned from him, worshiped with him, and worked with him.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

The Squared Circle - Why I Loved Pro Wrestling

When I was a child, Saturday mornings meant three things: cinnamon toast, cartoons, and professional wrestling. This was long before the days of the WWE. When I was a boy, professional wrestling was locally produced, and what you watched on TV depended on the "territory" you lived in. Growing up in central Kentucky, I lived in what was called "the Memphis territory," a promotion run by Jerry Jarrett. The big stars were folks like Superstar Bill Dundee, Handsome Jimmy Valiant, Dirty Dutch Mantell, and the biggest of them all, Jerry "the King" Lawler.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Blog About Archaeology

I have been quite busy the last few weeks with travel. Last week I flew down to Florida to take part in a unique camp, a one-week production of The Music Man. The cast had scripts for some time, but we literally came in to little ACA Camp Geneva to block, rehearse, and perform The Music Man in one week! It was an intense experience, and a ton of fun.

Anyway, an old friend of mine, Luke Chandler, was also in the production, and we had a chance to talk a little bit about the archaeological work he has done in Israel. Luke has a great blog about Bible archaeology, and I'd encourage you to check it out.

http://lukechandler.wordpress.com/

Monday, June 4, 2012

Ferrell Jenkins's Bible Lands Blog

My friend and former boss Ferrell Jenkins has a wonderful blog that focuses on the lands of the Bible. Today he just clicked over a million visits! Ferrell will be presenting a special series on Bible History and Archaeology here at Woodland Hills this fall (September 30-October 3).

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Introduction to My Book Project

I have been doing research on Islam for some time now, and I have finally begun writing what will be a small book introducing Islam to Christians and explaining crucial similarities and differences between the two faiths.  I have planned the following chapters-

Friday, April 1, 2011

The Passing of Generations

This week our brother C.D. Williams passed from this life to the next. C.D. was a truly loveable person, always cheerful and positive. Even in the face of his declining health, C.D.’s bright outlook did not diminish. And it is no secret why C.D. was so happy. He was a Christian,

Friday, March 11, 2011

A Biblical View of Competition

I love to compete. Whether it is a friendly game of Trivial Pursuit, a fierce battle of ping pong, or a barbershop singing contest, I love the rush of adrenalin that comes from matching wits and skill with someone else. But I also love the Lord, and His word is clear that “God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble” (James 4:6). Taking delight in crushing someone else hardly seems consistent with the selflessness to which Christ calls His people. So how should Christians view competition? Is it possible to reconcile the competitive spirit with the Holy Spirit?

Monday, January 3, 2011

Logos 4 Custom Bible Reading Plan

Back in November I decided to take the plunge and buy Logos 4 (I got it at an enormous discount at a conference). Logos 4 is an amazing Bible study tool that seemlessly integrates thousands of resources in a digital format. I am in the initial stages of learning how to use the program, but it has already proven its worth.

One of the cool features of Logos is that it enables you to create a custom Bible reading plan. For several years I have used the plan developed by Mark Roberts. This year I wanted to try something different. And with the help of Logos I have created my own reading schedule.

I chose the following options:
  • A plan that has readings for each weekday (Monday - Friday).
  • A plan that will finish the entire Bible in a year.
  • A plan that includes readings every day from each major section of the Bible (Genesis-Esther; Job-Song of Solomon; Isaiah-Malachi; the New Testament).
So today's reading will be Genesis 1-2; Job 1; Isaiah 1; and Matthew 1. This way I will get a portion of narrative, a portion of poetry, a portion of prophecy, and a portion of the New Testament every day.

One of the blessings that comes from this sort of schedule is that it opens the door to connections between parts of Scripture one might not normally read together. So I am excited at the prospect of all sorts of new discoveries this year, and from time to time I will share them with you.

In the meantime, let me encourage you to find time for the word every day.
How can a young man keep his way pure?
By guarding it according to your word.
With my whole heart I seek you;
let me not wander from your commandments!
I have stored up your word in my heart,
that I might not sin against you.
Blessed are you, O LORD;
teach me your statutes!
With my lips I declare
all the rules of your mouth.
In the way of your testimonies I delight
as much as in all riches.
I will meditate on your precepts
and fix my eyes on your ways.
I will delight in your statutes;
I will not forget your word. (Psalm 119:9-16)

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Inez Scott (September 2, 1915 - May 20, 2010)


My Granny passed away last Thursday night, and we had her funeral yesterday. I am posting the eulogy I gave for her here. I hope to resume normal blogging next week.


I would like to start today with a reading from the Book of Acts.

Now there was in Joppa a disciple named Tabitha, which, translated, means Dorcas [in Greek that means “gazelle”]. She was full of good works and acts of charity. In those days she became ill and died, and when they had washed her, they laid her in an upper room. Since Lydda was near Joppa, the disciples, hearing that Peter was there, sent two men to him, urging him, "Please come to us without delay." So Peter rose and went with them. And when he arrived, they took him to the upper room. All the widows stood beside him weeping and showing tunics and other garments that Dorcas made while she was with them. (Acts 9:36-39).

This was one of my Granny’s favorite stories in the Bible, probably because she could relate to Tabitha as a lifelong seamstress. She did a lot of sewing for people all her life. Even after she had lost the ability to walk, if I came home and needed something hemmed she would grab her walker, hobble over to her sewing machine and go to work.

But Granny wasn’t just a seamstress; she was herself the very thread that held the fabric of our family together. And though there were plenty of reasons that fabric could have frayed and fallen apart, her unbelievable resilience didn’t let that happen. Because of Granny we can look around today see - not clothes that she made - but something much more beautiful – we can see a family that she raised. Each of us is part of the patchwork that Granny knitted together with skill and love.

Some of you here today have only known Granny as a shut-in. You didn’t know her when she was a little girl who could knock the tar out of a baseball (at least, that’s what she told me!). Or as a blushing bride, who married just a few days after her 16th birthday. Or as the student of Scripture who filled notebooks with detailed notes during Bible class.

Instead, many of you have only known her since she became confined to her house. In the last 18 years I can only think of two times she left the house (until she went to the nursing home) – when Pop died in ‘92, and when my Mom died ten years ago. For years her world consisted of three rooms - a bedroom, kitchen and living room.

Within those three rooms her life followed a modest regimen. She would wake up and head to the bathroom, where she would usually make the first of her many phone calls for the day. Then she would go to the kitchen and wait for breakfast to be made by whoever was helping to take care of her that week. It always included an egg and sausage or bacon, a biscuit, a glass of milk, and plenty of Country Crock Spread, which she often ate directly out of the tub (to my chagrin!). Once breakfast was done she would sit at the table for a long time and listen to gospel music, especially to recordings of Pop singing with his gospel quartet. Eventually she would head to the living room, and enjoy the rest of the day talking on the phone, working puzzles, watching TV, having company. When she was ready to head to bed, she expected you to set out her big blue cup filled with ice so that she would have cold water to drink in the morning, her medicine, and a couple of wintergreen mints.

Sounds like a pretty simple life. And it was. But Granny enjoyed every single day of it! She was the most content person I have ever known in my life. And because of her attitude she did not let the four walls of 40 French Ave define her existence, or her inability to get around very well to confine the scope of her influence.

Granny was irrepressible because she loved people. She loved her friends from church, and while she may not have attended for several years, she knew more about what was going on in the congregation than just about anybody else! She took special interest in the preachers who worked with the church here, and encouraged them in their ministry. Paul Johnson, John Smith, Allan Shepherd, and Robert Speer spent lots of time coming to see her and pray with her, which was a genuine delight for her. She loved her neighbors, and they loved her. I am so thankful that through the years people like the Bushes, the Pucketts, Mr. Deaton, and most of all, June and Carl Banks lived on our street. She loved you all and was so grateful for all of the many kind favors you did for her.

Usually we think of shut-ins receiving cards and calls, but there is no telling how many cards and notes Granny sent to people over the time she was shut-in. And I wouldn’t begin to try to estimate how many hours she spent on the phone. Rather than fret over what she couldn’t do, Granny embraced what she could do to encourage and care for other people. When she couldn’t walk on her own, she learned to use a walker. When she couldn’t do that, this lady in her 90s who had never driven a day in her life learned to use a scooter (and was much better at driving it than any of us who tried it out!).

A couple of years ago she decided that she needed to talk to one of her nephews about becoming a Christian, and she did. She was very careful to preface what she said by making sure everyone knew she didn’t believe in women preachers (!), but then she proceeded to admonish him to obey the gospel. And you know what – he did, something that thrilled Granny. Granny did more good from her living room rocking chair or scooter than most people do all their lives.

And of course, Granny loved her family. Six children, fourteen grandchildren, thirty great grandchildren, and over twenty great-great-grandchildren! As she often joked, “What a mess me and Homer made!” What always amazed me about Granny was her detailed knowledge of all of us. She could tell you what was going on in everyone’s life, down to all the great-great-grandkids. I could never keep all the names straight, but as the matriarch of our family she delighted in us.

She rejoiced at our successes. She anguished with our mistakes. She mingled her tears with ours. She had an inexhaustible supply of love for us. And not only us. If anyone of us had a sweetheart or friend we brought to meet her, Granny instantly became their Granny as well.

The last time I had a meaningful conversation with her was at the end of January. I went up to see her and fortunately caught her on a day when her mind was bright and she had the energy for a visit. We talked for a long time, and during that conversation we had an exchange that captured the essence of my Granny.

You have to understand that Granny went through a lot. She lost a little girl, Bessie Yvonne, who was only a year-and-a-half old, a heartbreaking time for Granny, and a wound that stayed with her all her life. She had to raise her kids during a period when Pop was not always the husband he should have been (and I don’t mean any disrespect to his memory – he would be the first to tell you he made mistakes that Granny had to make up for). She scrubbed so many floors to make ends meet for the family that she had calluses the size of quarters on her knees, and I’m sure that is one reason she had such a hard time getting around later in life. She raised her own kids in trying circumstances, then Granny helped to raise two of her grandchildren. She lost her husband, and a few years later another daughter. She had a hard life.

So, when we visited back in January, I had to ask her, “Granny, how did you ever make it through all the tough things you had to go through in life?” She looked at me with a quizzical expression on her face and said, “What tough things?” That is the essence of my Granny. As far as she was concerned, her life wasn’t tough. She just did what she had to do, what any wife, mother, grandmother, sister, friend, would do.

There is only one source of that kind of contentment. Granny loved the Lord. And the words of her favorite hymn explain how she coped with life:

"Looking to Thee for all I need, Finding in Thee a friend indeed, All of the burdens of the day meekly I bear; Neither the foe nor storm I fear, Savior divine, for Thou art near, Ready my cares and troubles all freely to share."

The key to contentment is Christ, as the apostle Paul made clear when he wrote the Philippians to thank them for a gift they sent to him when he was in prison:

But I rejoiced in the Lord greatly that now at last your care for me has flourished again; though you surely did care, but you lacked opportunity. Not that I speak in regard to need, for I have learned in whatever state I am, to be content: I know how to be abased, and I know how to abound. Everywhere and in all things I have learned both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need. I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me. (Philippians 4:10-13).

And of course, the other thing that helped Granny deal with the ups and downs of life was her incredible sense of humor. Granny was one of the funniest people I have ever known. She was incredibly quick-witted, and she had the timing of a professional comedian. One night was I was home I offered to do the dishes, and by the time I was done my shirt was soaking wet. When I came back into the living room she said, “Your belly is wet. You should have put on one of my aprons…it would have covered half of you.”

And she loved to be teased as much as she loved to dish out a zinger. Another time while I was home she was reading the obituary, and saw where an older lady she knew had donated her body to science. She said, “What in the world did she think people would want to use her body for.” So I said, “Granny when you die I am going to donate your body to science to find out how it is that after all your other joints wore out your jaw just kept on going!” She loved that – and would often tell it on herself.

That’s what I will always remember Granny for – contentment in Christ, and the ability to laugh at life and herself. That is how she could reflect on 94 years of challenges and say, “What tough things?” And that is a legacy I would encourage all of us to share.

Before I finish my remarks, I want to say something to my aunts and uncle. I have never known of a family that went to the lengths that you did to be caregivers for Granny so she could stay at home. Aunt Georgia came and helped with Granny until her son’s illness required her full attention. Uncle John drove up from Tennessee and for many years spent a third of his life taking care of his mom. Aunt Avanell served as the primary caregiver after my Mom died, coming up to take care of Granny each week during the week, then going home to work and make a living on the weekends, and did this until she ended up in the hospital needing open-heart surgery. And since Aunt Sue was the youngest and lived here in town, here in the last couple of years the burden increasingly fell to her. The Bible says we are to honor our father and mother, and the honor that you showed Granny was remarkable, and I am so proud to be your nephew.

So today, in the words of the apostle Paul, we are “sorrowful, yet always rejoicing” (2 Cor. 6:10). We are sorrowful because we will miss the lady who has been the thread that held our family together, but we have so much for which to rejoice. We rejoice that she lived a long life filled with friendships. We rejoice that she not only endured hardships, she triumphed over them in Christ. We rejoice that she could be taken care of by her own family, and that when her needs became too great for that she was able to adjust so well to extended care somewhere else. And we rejoice that when she slipped from this life she did so in grace and peace, bathed in prayer and love.

I would like to conclude by reading the rest of the story of the lady called Tabitha or Dorcas.

So Peter rose and went with them. And when he arrived, they took him to the upper room. All the widows stood beside him weeping and showing tunics and other garments that Dorcas made while she was with them. But Peter put them all outside, and knelt down and prayed; and turning to the body he said, "Tabitha, arise." And she opened her eyes, and when she saw Peter she sat up. And he gave her his hand and raised her up. Then calling the saints and widows, he presented her alive. And it became known throughout all Joppa, and many believed in the Lord. (Acts 9:39-42)

The great hope we have is that Granny’s story will end like Tabitha’s. Some day the Lord Himself will say, “Inez, arise.” He will giver her His hand, and she will open her eyes and see Jesus.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Blog Hiatus - Gone to Finland!

Just wanted to let you know that I will be out of the country for a few days, and will not be blogging for a while. I will be singing at the Vaasa Choir Festival with my quartet, Lunch Break. See ya in a few days, Lord willing!

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

I Almost Punched an Old Geezer

Yesterday I met with what I affectionately call my "Old Ladies Class," a Bible study I do at Morningside of Belmont here in Nashville. When class was over I got on the elevator with one of the members (Frances), and an older gentleman who has visited class from time to time also got on (Bill). Bill is at an age and stage where he doesn't remember much, and Frances reminded him that he had visited our class on occasion.

As we exited the elevator, Bill looked at me and said, "You should teach about the seven ways to lose weight." It is not uncommon for older people to just blurt out things about my weight, so I just benignly smiled and walked away. I was looking for another lady who no longer attends class, but who I always try to find to say hi to.

I couldn't find her, so I turned around to leave, and then I spotted Bill imitating me as a fat person to one of the staff. I couldn't believe it. That is something little kids in school do, not adults. And I really wanted to go over and punch him in the face. Instead, I just glared at him for a minute and walked away.

I really hope that he is no longer responsible for his actions, that what he did is not an indication of a lifelong habit of cruelty, but instead the result of the infantile behavior that accompanies senility.

I have to admit that I thought later about other things I could have done to him, like:
-Grabbing his walker and taunting him to chase me for it.
-Asking him why his family doesn't love him and put him in a nursing home.
-Punching him again.

And there is a good chance he would not remember any of this tomorrow!

But the experience made me appreciate with greater awe and admiration how Jesus responded to those who viciously attacked him-

1 Peter 2:21 For to this you have been called, because Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example, so that you might follow in his steps. 22 He committed no sin, neither was deceit found in his mouth. 23 When he was reviled, he did not revile in return; when he suffered, he did not threaten, but continued entrusting himself to him who judges justly.

After all, I am fat - there's no denying it! But Jesus was slandered as a false prophet, impugned by false witnesses, condemned by cowards, and beaten and murdered. There was nothing true or right or just in how He was treated. But He did not "revile in return." He trusted in God.

Lots of you have been slandered and abused in ways much worse than I can imagine. Take heart in Jesus' example - put your trust in God, and in due time, He who "judges justly" will vindicate you.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

My Hobby - Barbershop Singing


As I move stuff from my old blog to my new one I thought I should also make reference to my main hobby, which is singing barbershop. I am in a quartet called Lunch Break, and I am also a member of a chorus, the Music City Chorus here in Nashville. Barbershop singing involved four-part close harmony a capella music, and if you like harmony, there isn't a better form of music in my opinion.

My quartet is a "comedy" quartet, in that most of what we do is parodies, accompanied by slapstick style visual gags. Here is a photo from one of our most recent contests.