"'Writing is really quite simple; all you have to do is sit down at your typewriter and open a vein.' From the writer's vein into the reader's vein: for better or worse a transfusion" (From F. Buechner's, The Clown in the Belfry, 1992). My purpose in adding my thoughts to the myriad of others available throughout cyberspace is simply to open my own veins, or provide an outlet for self-expression with the hope that my own bloodflow may enhance someone else's Godward heartbeat in the process.
Friday, September 14, 2012
Waters Calling
I am more poet than fisherman. For that reason, when the waters call my name I choose fly fishing because I deem it more art than sport. Like verse aloft and prose landing feather-like on quiet waters, fly fishing is literature of the highest form. This poetry of motion is balm for a hurried soul and therapy for a ragged mind. Please excuse, I sense the waters calling me to compose...
Thursday, September 06, 2012
The Choice Has Never Been More Clear
Barack Obama did offer one truth at the Democratic National Convention in the middle of a mountain of half truths, twisted truths and blatant untruths. That one statement was that in this election, the choice has never been more clear. Focus on whatever issue one chooses, the paths delineated by the Democratic party and the Republican party differ widely--the Democratic platform leads radically to the left; the Republican party leads strongly to the right. And while many speak only of economic recession and resurgence, the most critical contrast for me in this election is a moral one. The official Democratic Party platform aggressively promotes same-sex marriage and abortion on demand. The official Republican Party platform stands upon and promotes traditional family values and the sanctity of human life. Obamacare demands institutions to relinquish freedom of religion, while Republicans fight to defend it. It is obvious to me that this then is a moral divide and that to vote for a Democratic candidate is an immoral choice.
So, finally after a term as a failed leader, we have heard Mr. Obama utter truth. Ours is a clear choice. But more significantly, ours is a moral choice. For me, I choose traditional morality and that means I will cast my vote for morality in America on November 6 by electing Mitt Romney as the next president of this one nation under God.
So, finally after a term as a failed leader, we have heard Mr. Obama utter truth. Ours is a clear choice. But more significantly, ours is a moral choice. For me, I choose traditional morality and that means I will cast my vote for morality in America on November 6 by electing Mitt Romney as the next president of this one nation under God.
Wednesday, September 05, 2012
Spinning the Truth
Barack Obama and his political party does do one thing well--they can spin the facts faster than LeBron James does a basketball on his best day. But this time the liberal media got one right. CNN wire staff reported following Tuesday night's Democratic National Convention that a statement repeated throughout the night was at best misleading. The Democratic speakers quoted the number 4.5 million several times in reference to new job creation during Obama's time in office. "Despite incredible odds and united Republican opposition, our president took action, and now we've seen 4.5 million new jobs," said San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, the party's keynote speaker on Tuesday night.
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick both cited the same number. However, according to CNN: "While a total of 4.5 million jobs sounds great, it's not the whole picture. Nonfarm private payrolls hit a post-recession low of 106.8 million that month, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The figure currently stands at 111.3 million as of July. While that is indeed a gain of 4.5 million, it's only a net gain of 300,000 over the course of the Obama administration to date. The private jobs figure stood at 111 million in January 2009, the month Obama took office.
And total nonfarm payrolls, including government workers, are down from 133.6 million workers at the beginning of 2009 to 133.2 million in July 2012. There's been a net loss of nearly 1 million public-sector jobs since Obama took office, despite a surge in temporary hiring for the 2010 census.
Meanwhile, the jobs that have come back aren't the same ones that were lost.
According to a study released last week by the liberal-leaning National Employment Law Project, low-wage fields such as retail sales and food service are adding jobs nearly three times as fast as higher-paid occupations."
Spin the truth as fast as you can, there are still fewer people working now than when Obama took office at the height of the recession.
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick both cited the same number. However, according to CNN: "While a total of 4.5 million jobs sounds great, it's not the whole picture. Nonfarm private payrolls hit a post-recession low of 106.8 million that month, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The figure currently stands at 111.3 million as of July. While that is indeed a gain of 4.5 million, it's only a net gain of 300,000 over the course of the Obama administration to date. The private jobs figure stood at 111 million in January 2009, the month Obama took office.
And total nonfarm payrolls, including government workers, are down from 133.6 million workers at the beginning of 2009 to 133.2 million in July 2012. There's been a net loss of nearly 1 million public-sector jobs since Obama took office, despite a surge in temporary hiring for the 2010 census.
Meanwhile, the jobs that have come back aren't the same ones that were lost.
According to a study released last week by the liberal-leaning National Employment Law Project, low-wage fields such as retail sales and food service are adding jobs nearly three times as fast as higher-paid occupations."
Spin the truth as fast as you can, there are still fewer people working now than when Obama took office at the height of the recession.
Saturday, September 01, 2012
Mitt Romney Is Not The Messiah, But ...
Mitt Romney is not the Messiah... but he is desperately needed at this juncture in the history of the United States. While the media pundits downplay the contrast between candidates, differences that matter could not be more stark. The incumbent plays to the camera and his policies are bankrupt--morally and financially. The Republican challenger is a man of value, morality and proven ability--corporately and domestically. This is not about control of the oval office; this is about the soul of America. No, Mitt Romney is not the Messiah. However, he is a man worthy of leading America and able to right the careening ship that Mr. Obama is defaulting to the ocean floor.
Reluctant Evolution
Change is inevitable externally and should be embraced internally, but I confess to frequent bursts of reluctance. Something about sameness conjures an illusion of wholeness, while possibly masking stagnation. Yet these days I am forced to admit certain unexpected evolution personally. Growing up my concern was always serving God and others with such intensity that I disdained any thought of material success or financial security. I was following the way of the cross and way of St. Francis, thinking the cross incompatible with commerce and service at odds with financial security. Years later, I find myself Director of Major Gifts for a private institution, immersed in scrutiny of financial markets, giving trends in the private sector, and gift & estate planning options. What's more, over the past few years I've met gracious and generous Kingdom minded people that just so happen to be persons that work hard to earn a profit. Commerce is not the enemy of the Cross after all and servanthood may be found at the top rung of the corporate ladder.
Another component of this silent self-evolution is the accelerated dawning that politics are not of the devil and that Christians should aggressively participate--promoting and insisting on morality, virtue and integrity in elected leaders, from the White House to the State House. Never before in this country has it been as necessary to rouse the Christian army to full political stature. We cannot hide behind stained glass, hoping this pall shadow will pass. I am finally ready for muscular political involvement in order to preserve this one nation under God. Lest I leave this paragraph vague, let me encourage every American to vote for Mitt Romney for president on November 6!
Another component of this silent self-evolution is the accelerated dawning that politics are not of the devil and that Christians should aggressively participate--promoting and insisting on morality, virtue and integrity in elected leaders, from the White House to the State House. Never before in this country has it been as necessary to rouse the Christian army to full political stature. We cannot hide behind stained glass, hoping this pall shadow will pass. I am finally ready for muscular political involvement in order to preserve this one nation under God. Lest I leave this paragraph vague, let me encourage every American to vote for Mitt Romney for president on November 6!
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Election Rhetoric and the Genius of James
Election year is a season of rhetoric complete with intermittently inspiring ideas and frequently disappointing realities. Aristotle defined rhetoric as "the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion." Translated into the vernacular of today, rhetoric is telling people what they want to hear so that they in turn will do what you want them to do. Perhaps this election year is a good time to invoke the genius of James: "Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says. Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world." (James 1:22, 27 NIV). In other words, powerful rhetoric is word wedded to action. It is noun and verb together creating an unforgettable and unavoidable statement of truth. In this election season pray with me for our nation and choose wisely our next leader. More than anything else, refuse empty rhetoric and insist on truth validated by action.
Monday, August 27, 2012
Grace as Potential
First day of a new school year... Not a Western phenomenon but certainly a Western obsession. Some face the day with knotted stomachs, while others enjoy a Type A adrenaline rush toward over-achievement. No matter the individual response, collectively it is a rite of passage, more substantial than New Year's for change resolution. Lived now vicariously through daughters, grandchildren and university students, I cannot refuse the growing connection for me of first days with grace. Perhaps due to a better grasp of grace's saving grip on me, I detect grace in every moment of potential. How often we think 'If only...', 'I would have...', 'I'd give anything if...' Grace secures another chance, another first day of school--endlessly. Enormous potential resides in first days, and grace extends potential in every breath we enjoy.
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Longing To Feast
The awful hollowness of a day lived absent of the conscious awareness of God's presence is excruciating enough to create an insatiable longing to be enveloped by Him. King James English expresses it, "As the deer panteth for the water, so my soul longeth after Thee, Oh God." A more familiar modern declaration is, "Lord, I'm desperate for You..." Either expresses the recognition of a bankrupt heart, bending in desperate humility, clinging to the hem of His garment. St. Bernard of Clairveaux states it well:
We taste Thee, O Thou Living Bread
And long to feast upon Thee still:
We drink of Thee, the Fountainhead
And thirst our souks from Thee to fill.
Never surrender experiential heart-theology in favor of smug self-sufficiency. Long to feast upon Him still...
Sunday, March 25, 2012
Perpetual Incarnation
This moment perches precariously on a knife edge, animation suspended between memory and mystery -- tip-toeing a tightrope of chronology & dimension. Lean too far behind and tumble into remorse, regret, reprise, repeat. Stretch too intensely toward tomorrow and drift into fog, fantasy, make believe, fairy tale. Either behind or ahead is dysfunction. To live this breath in healthy tension with present attention, this is the divine mandate--nothing less than perpetual incarnation. Relentless intersection. Created in the image of "I am", "we are."
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Advance To Abandonment
Lent compels us: advance to abandonment. Whereas we often confuse abandonment with passive inactivity, the Lenten season insists that we take action, cutting erroneous ties and re-lashing our moorings to Christ. With the Prodigal, "I will arise and go to my father..." I will arise-- I will wake up, get, up, grow up, and climb up. I trash and discard the garbage piling up in my heart and mind. Ruthlessly, I inventory motive and attitude and address each in desperate fashion. I recalibrate my attention to Christ each day with savage intentionality. "Reckon yourselves dead to sin..." This is no valley of ease; this is a summit to scale under harrowing and hellish conditions. Lent places me precariously on a rocky crag with no safety net below, and bids me ever higher. "I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me, and gave himself for me." (Galatians 2:20)
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