Wanderings

The Life and Times of Joe Suttle

History Channel Echo

Actually, it's more like my Bible reading echoed what we watched on HC the other night. The show was about the end of the world – Armegeddon! The show was a mix about what Christian, Jewish and Muslim religions had to say about the "End Times."

The echo I picked up here in Second Peter 2 was about angels being cast out of heaven (verse 4). Surprising how HC got the story right in so many ways. Evil walks about the earth, seeking whom he/it can devour. Just like a roaring lion. There is so much in chapter 2 that it cannot be covered in a flash.[more]

Needless to say, there are some things that strike at the heart of many of today's preachers and religions. Peter calls them "false teachers" who present messages that even deny what they were originally taught – like they think that by some magic, they know more than what they were first taught. What is worse is that they begin to convince others that what they think is a "better" way, and so deceive them.

The problem here is that the "deceived" fall prey to the fallacy that "a loving God would not want me to do 'that'" in clear defiance of what God's Word says. Read this chapter twice, and then tell me what a "false teacher" is and what they will teach.

S'cuse me, while I read it again…

A Sack of Flour?

Before continuing on in Second Peter, I looked back at the first four verses. The analogy just popped up right in front of me. Here was Peter – that gruff, tough fisherman who is now confronted by a society (Emperor Nero) who wanted to kill Christians. This wasn't just a "kill'em" kind of thing. It was find them, torture them until they babble on and on about how they are not believers, begged not to be killed and then keep going until they die. Nero wanted those early believers to deny that Jesus was their "King" because he wanted to be recognized as their king.

What brought the flour to mind is in verses 3 and 4 where Peter says that what we become is not [more]because of what we generate or create on our own, but because of the power and knowledge that He (Jesus) gives to us. A sack of flour has no power to become bread or pizza dough on it's own. It takes something outside itself to give it the power. Even then, once it is mixed with water, yeast, salt and other ingredients, it does not have the power to stir itself in the bowl.

That sack of flour is just like a rock sitting by the road. It has no power to roll across the road unless someone or something forces it to move – gives it direction and energy.

So it is with our lives as believers or Christ-followers. We get the power from His words. When we take them in (you know, study and think about what He said), then we have power because we have direction. It is not until that happens that we can effectively live.

Look at it this way – a battery has no power unless and until someone gives it the chemicals that cause the reaction to produce electricity.

You can sit there like a sack of flour or a rock, or you can open up and let His words fill your life. It's a decision that you have to make many times, every day.

The Project and The Garbage Can

OK, so the office move is 90 percent complete. Computers, desks, DSL and phones moves. Some electricity and lights and here we are. Thanks to a lot of friends who helped get stuff moved around before the garbage can incident. Here goes with a list of names – Tim, Angela, Dianne, Mike, Joshua, Nathaniel, Karen and then all those people who bought stuff at the garage sales (saving me a trip to the dump or e-waste).[more]

Now if my left middle finger would just heal. My advice from all this is either get a bigger house, or be more careful. Those two nails I pulled without using a ladder or piece of wood (for leverage) resulted in a splint on my right wrist to ease the pain of "tennis elbow". Not only that, the order is no lifting or pulling with my right arm. Add to that lack of grip in my left hand, there is not much I can do at times. The boys want to earn some money, then I got work for them – have I ever.

By the way, Karen's mom is happy as can be in her room. She has TV, phone and her dolls – and people who want to take care of her.

Stay tuned…