Popeye Moments & Calling

Holy Discontent Holy Discontent: Fueling the Fire That Ignites Personal Vision
By Bill Hybels / Zondervan

One thing I am learning the older I become, is that life is full of changes. There is no getting around it. There is no such thing as “security” or “settling down” or a “bowl of cherries.” The real question is… how will I handle the inevitable changes that will come, usually when I don’t expect them, and with details that are really irritating and inconvenient? Will I allow these “curve balls of life” to get me down with discouragement and disappointment, or will I accept them as new opportunities for growth and maturity?

I recently read a book by Bill Hybels that was initially sparked in his life by the question, “Why do people do what they do?” In the book he talks about the idea of a “Popeye moment.” This idea comes from the old cartoon character, “Popeye the Sailor Man”… who I am old enough to actually remember watching on Saturday mornings at my Grandpa & Grandma’s house! You may be interested to know that my family did not have a TV until I was in Junior High – by choice!

In each episode of Popeye, some “curve ball” would arise in his life, and you would watch the inner tension rising, his pulse racing, and the adrenaline get pumping. At some boiling point he would blurt out… “That’s all I can stands, and I can’t stands it no more!” At that point, he would rip open a can of spinach, wolf it down in one gulp, and become a super-charged sailor man of overwhelming power for good. He would always save the day, bringing life back to a more “normal” state. He’d end the program singing “I’m strong to the finich, ’cause I eats my spinich, I’m Popeye the sailor man.”

Hybels proposes that we ask ourselves the “Popeye Question… What is it that you can’t stand?” He asks what is the “one thing” or the “pesky preoccupation” of our minds… “the things that keeps us up at night, and that ignites your heart and imagination.” It is the force bringing sorrowful tears, or the kicking and screaming inside of you… this he says, is the foundation of your “Holy Discontent,” the title of his book.

The Call The Call
By Os Guinness / Thomas Nelson

I am now reading another book by Os Guiness, entitled “The Call: Finding and Fulfilling the Central Purpose of Your Life.” What does Os mean by “the call?” He states on page 4 that “calling is the truth that God calls us to himself so decisively that everything we are, everything we do, and everything we have is invested with a special devotion and dynamism lived out as a response to his summons and service.”

Recently there have been some “curve balls” in my life and I am in the process of understanding my “Popeye moment” and figuring out my “calling.” In my case it revolves around my work, career, business and skills and talents. I desire to use the gifts and abilities God has given me for the greatest impact for good and in service of others, as possible. I am not sure where this journey will lead, but I am definitely on a ride I did not expect even a year ago.

In the words of singer-songwriter Steven Curtis Chapman, “I’m diving in, I’m going deep in over my head, I want to be caught in the rush, lost in the flow, in over my head, I want to go, the river’s deep, the river’s wide, the river’s water is alive, so sink or swim, I’m diving in.”

Father Elijah

Father Elijah Father Elijah, Children of the Last Days Series #1
By Michael O’Brien / Ignatius Press

A really, really good book by Michael O’Brien. This is a very well written fiction story written about the Apocalypse. I found it to be deeply engrossing, imaginative, and spiritually challenging. Even though the author writes from the Roman Catholic tradition, I believe his understanding the human condition, political developments and the “end times” to be very Biblically based. A very good read!

Why does God allow bad things to happen to good, innocent people?

Fox NewsThis basic question was posed by the “Fox & Friends” hosts, to Fr. Jonathan Morris, a Roman Catholic priest in the Vatican this morning as I was working out. Fr. Morris basically said that a more constructive question is, “Why is it that some people choose to use the gift of free will to do bad things (like the VT student) and others choose to use their free will to save others (like the professor)?

This is also a very good question. But, his response still doesn’t fully answer the first question about God’s role. I think some people would feel that he didn’t answer the question.

C. S. Lewis wrote an entire book about this topic entitled, “The Problem of Pain.” He wrote out of his own experience and firsthand relationships with people who struggle with this topic. Later in his life he wrote out of his own pain “A Grief Observed,” based upon his own deep struggle to align his faith with the loss of his wife Joy Davidman, to cancer. I recommend both books.

Peter Kreeft has helped us to see the question this way: “Imagine, he said, a bear in a trap and a hunter who wants to liberate him. The hunter cannot win the bear’s confidence, so he has no choice but to shoot the bear full of tranquilizers. The terrified bear thinks the hunter is trying to kill him. He does not understand that the hunter is acting out of compassion.”

“I believe,” Kreeft says, “God does the same thing to us sometimes, and we can’t comprehend why He does it any more than the bear can understand the motivations of the hunter. We simply have to trust God.”

It really boils down to “who” you put your trust in, and if that “who” is trustworthy. If you trust only yourself, you will eventually be faced with your own limitations. If you trust other men, or governments policies or political systems, you will also eventually be disappointed. If you trust God, you may not always understand the “why” questions, but you can find out if he is trustworthy or not through personal experience.

Suffering and tragedy is a reality. I have seen it up close and personal. Does this mean God does not exist? Does it mean he doesn’t care? I think not. It means He has a bigger purpose and plan in mind that I can’t fully understand at the moment. I CHOOSE to trust Him anyway, because in every other area of life, I have found Him to be trustworthy.

Cho Seung-Hui had a choice and made his choice with the free will God gave him. Others made their choices. I have to make mine. In the end, we will all be held accountable for those choices. No one will get away with anything.

Is Al Gore Right? – Who is Causing Global Warming?

Greenhouse GasesMany of you who know me, also know that I have been very suspicious of the “global warming” fad, since it began. The assertions I hear in the popular media from the sky is falling, global warming proponents are:
- The earth is in a warming trend
- This trend is unusual and will keep going indefinitely unless we do something radical to reverse it
- This trend is caused by human beings and their activities, so it is therefore changeable by human beings altering their activities

First, no one denies that temperatures are about a degree warmer than they were a hundred years ago. The question is what is causing this to occur? The reasons for my objections for the human causes of global warming are many, but to simplify them, they are:
- My suspicion of the “science” used to support the human causes of global warming claims. It looks like bad science to me.
- The astonishing intolerance and hatred from global warming proponents, against any who dare to question their beliefs or underlying presuppositions, or biases. This reaction is very unscientific, if I understand “the scientific method” at all.
- The “political” and “power” nature of the human cause of global warming movement. I suspect there are other motives and agendas at work here.
Al Gore speaking- Hollywood fawning all over Al Gore and his “documentary” called “An Inconvenient Truth.” That Oscar was a sham and not deserved.
- The hypocricy of the global warming proponents who are mostly centered in rich, developed countries, who don’t want to allow poor, third world developing nations reap the same benefits enjoyed in developed countries. They don’t seem to understand the catastrophic effect that holding back the third-world will have on the lives of millions of people, mostly children.

I recently watched a very good documentary film produced by BBC Channel 4, that captures most of my objections in one, interesting, fact-filled, intelligent, one might even say “scientific,” thought-provoking piece. “The Global Warming Swindle” has not been aired in the US (I can’t imagine why!) but is fortunately available for online viewing here: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4520665474899458831. I encourage any person seeking after the “truth” to make this a part of your search. One must deal with other points of view on the “theories” of the human causes of global warming. To ignore evidence or deny other points of view, is simply foolish and is unscientific by definition.

The other great resource is a novel by Michael Crichton entitled, “State of Fear.” This is an entertaining thriller, in the style of so many Crichton books, only this one actually has footnotes in it supporting the author’s views on “global warming” as expressed through the characters and in the plot of the story.

I highly recommend both of these resources for anyone serious about learning more on this important topic. I believe the global warming frenzy is one of the biggest deceptions being perpetrated today. The fact that millions of people believe it, is a sign that our world and our society is losing it’s ability to think critically, and it doesn’t question things seen, heard and experienced though media and entertainment. The fact that this media is an industry, with individual people behind it, wielding the power to sway the minds of millions, is of great concern to me.

The loss of critical thinking skills is one of the trends that is contributing to the decline and extinction of western civilization itself!

Taylor University Parents Weekend

The Misery of Job Book CoverWe visited our son Noel, at Taylor University this past weekend, for Parents Weekend. On Friday, we ate at Ivanhoe’s Drive In, relaxed and played guitars, and saw the movie, “The Prestige.”

Saturday we had breakfast in Noel’s apartment, watched some college football on TV, walked the campus, watched some live lacrosse, visited the Brown collection of books and writings of C.S. Lewis, George MacDonald, and may others in the library, bought some stuff in the bookstore, got coffee from Steve Morley in the Student Union, visited with Noel’s apartment buddies John, Brent and Kyle and their parents, went out to a Mexican restaurant in Marion with everyone.

On Sunday we went to church at First Church in Muncie, and ate lunch at the Dining Commons with some more of Noel’s friends, including our niece Ali. We watched the first half of the Bears-San Francisco game, and headed home. Basically, it was a very relaxed, fun time with Noel. He’s doing well, and we look forward to having him home for the winter holidays, then watching him graduate in the Spring.

BTW – We witnessed an amazing dramatic interpretive performance of “The Misery of Job and the Mercy of God” (a book by John Piper), by Mark Tilghman and his wife, at First Church of God in Muncie. You can download this performance on iTunes.