Wanderings

The Life and Times of Joe Suttle

Getting Rid of “Me”

That's not me personally, but the "me" that creates self-centered lives that destroy people and relationships.This mornings devotion from Dr. Gil was based on Proverbs 24:3, where the writer says "By wisdom a house (life) is built, and by understanding it is established."

What Dr. Gil said that got my blood pumping was "The idea is that one cannot build a lasting future on selfishness, impulsiveness, and rebellion." To this list, I would add "retaliation". You see, each of the words indicate a total unwillingness to listen to what others or our conscience have to say. Selfishness puts me first – what I want, not what "we" want or would be good for "us" (whoever that might be). Impulsiveness would imply that the action was done without considering (at the moment) any consequence or impact on anyone else. Rebellion to me is simply doing what I want, in spite of what the rules might be or the agreed upon way to act or live. Retaliation has the "you did it, so now it's my turn", or time to get even.

None of these will serve to build a long relationship. Time to re-evaluate why we do what we do?

Mount Hermon Fix

Wow! What a week we had at Mount Hermon this year. Spent time at Family Camp where Bill Butterworth and Chip Ingram were the main speakers. You can "Yahoo" or "Google" the names.

Had a super time, even thought this was not the "Homeschoolers Family Camp", there were many of us present. This turned out to be the largest camp Mount Hermon had all summer. What thrills and excitement awaited us!

There were two new rope/climbing courses on the grounds. The Canopy Course lets you traverse the redwoods on zip lines high above the ground – like through the tops of the redwoods. the Canyon Course was kinda just that – zip lines across the canyon. Due to the rains during the winter, the previous rope course had been damaged, and so they rebuilt. We did not go on either this year, but people who did had words of praise for Mount Hermon.

In addition to the great food, fantastic music Jack Pearson and Jesse Butterworth, there were just a multitude of things to do and see. Time to sit and share – build friendships and discover people from your past.

It happened to me on "Train Day". There we were sitting at a table on the Boardwalk in Santa Cruz. This guy from the next table (white hair like me) came over and set with us and we started talking. He was from Sun City, AZ. I asked him if he happened to know someone (a retired pastor) who had moved there, and got a negative response (OK, so it was not someone like Billy Graham that everybody knows). We kept talking, and he said he grew up in San Francisco. After looking at his name (Gordon Bostrom), my brain put two and two together – asked some questions…turns out his dad had been Prayer Chairman for the first (1958) Billy Graham Crusade in San Francisco. I was heavily involved in a youth organization (Christian Endeavor) that was active in many Northern California churches.

What a connection…across all these miles and years. What an encouragement he was to me about things that had happened in my life. Needless to say, we exchanged email addresses, but Gordon said later "I'm a phone kind of guy, could I have your phone number so I can call you?"

I'm thankful for the week we spent – thankful for the ministry of Bill and Chip (check out their podcasts or talk to us) and ever grateful for Gordon's words.

The Truth Will Out!

That's something that I think Shakespeare said. It had to do with the fact that when you did deeply enough, the truth will float to the top – it cannot be buried!If you watched the finale of "So You Think You Can Dance" on the Fox network, then you heard the words of the winner. Joshua Allen said "God is in control" right there on network TV. It was not one of those long thought out speeches.

When Cat Deely the host asked him if he had anything to say, he said "I just wanna say that never let anybody tell you you can't do something because God is in control and with God you can do anything! So thank you God, thank you." Notice, that it was not his parents, grandparents, dance instructor, judges or the voting public. It was God he thanked first!

In subsequent interviews, it seems that the TV editors avoid any mention of God, but if you go to the Fox website, you will find it right there in the "Results" for episode 26 of season 4. Watching some clips that Fox puts up from after the show, is a totally different experience.

If you missed it, you missed it! Even the episodes cannot be seen on Fox – who knows, maybe someone will put up Joshua's response on YouTube. I guess what popped up in my mind was the fact that Joshua wasn't afraid to say what he believed. A powerful statement of his faith – that someone (a higher power) was in control. And then that reference to Jesus' words "with God all things are possible."