I started writing this column 16 years ago in 2009 when I was a young man of 62. It has been published in newspapers from Texas to California, Washington, Pennsylvania, Florida and states in between. Online it has received over 400,000 views. I reached my seventies without spending a night in the hospital. In the last 6 years I have been hospitalized twice. Both were emergencies that would have been fatal without exceptional medical care. I am grateful. Next week, I will celebrate my 79th birthday. I am bumping up on 80!
Tuesday, November 25, 2025
The Weight of Glory
Tuesday, November 18, 2025
Preparing for Thanksgiving
The trees have turned. Most have lost their leaves. Invigorating cool air has spilled across the land. Families are getting ready for Thanksgiving. Some prepare for children to come home. Others make plans to travel. Thoughts turn to turkey, dressing, giblet gravy, pumpkin and pecan pie. Football is in the air. I like Thanksgiving and the American traditions that go along with it.
Monday, November 10, 2025
Response To Confusing Times
Five years ago, on a beautiful evening in Colorado, we opened our windows to a refreshing breeze of mountain air. We listened to the stillness, interrupted by the distinct sounds of howling. We stepped outside. It is not entirely unusual for coyotes to howl in the open spaces of the Front Range that sweep up to the foothills and the towering snow-capped mountains. But these howls were coming from the wrong direction. They were echoing from the streets of our neighborhood.
Monday, November 3, 2025
If You Believe
A scientist placed a number of fleas in a jar and they immediately jumped out. He then placed a clear glass plate over the top of the jar. The fleas continued to jump, smashing their heads into the invisible barrier. They kept this up for some time, jumping with all their might, crashing into the glass and falling back. They slowly adjusted the height of their jump to avoid crashing into the invisible lid. The scientist then removed the glass lid, and the fleas remained in the jar, jumping just short of where the lid had been, unable to clear the lip of the jar and escape.
Tuesday, October 28, 2025
Halloween
Next Friday miniature ghosts, goblins and superheroes will emerge at dusk to comb the streets in search of candy. It is a long tradition in America, one I grew up with as a child and one I enjoyed as a parent. It is, perhaps, one of the few traditions we still celebrate outside with our neighbors. Manicured lawns are transformed into a mystical world of floating cobwebs, jack-o-lanterns and tombstones.
Halloween, of course, has its dark side. Our nightly news
reports of abducted children and maps dotted with sexual predators have erased
the naïve world of Halloween past. We
are more aware that we live in a dangerous world where evil is real and
present.
Many churches are more than a little uncomfortable with
Halloween. On the one hand, it is
enjoyable to celebrate community with imagination, fantasy and neighborly
generosity. On the other hand, there
are demonic and destructive forces at work in the world that kill and
destroy. It is one thing to celebrate
fall and indulge in imagination. It is
another to celebrate the occult, witchcraft, the devil and demons.
Tuesday, October 21, 2025
Celebrities and Mortality
The list of celebrities who have died this year is growing
long. February 18 Gene Hackman died in
his New Mexico home. April 1, Val Kilmer
died. August 7, astronaut James Lovell,
commander of Apollo 13; September 16, Robert Redford died peacefully at his
home in Utah. And October 11, Diane Keaton succumbed to pneumonia in Santa
Monica.
Somehow we don’t think of celebrities as mortal. Their images on the screen make them bigger
than life: Popeye Doyle in The French
Connection, Little Bill in Unforgiven; Doc Holiday in Tombstone;
Tom Hanks portrayal of Lovell in Apollo 13; the Sundance Kid, Roy Hobbs
in The Natural; Louise Bryant in Reds, Nina Banks in Father of
the Bride.Their cinema performances made them seen immortal. But, they weren’t.
The truth of Scripture appears stark. “The days of our lives are but 70 years, or
if by strength, 80, for soon they are gone and we fly away,” (Psalm 90). “For the Lord God knows our estate that we
are but dust. For man is like the grass
of the field that flourishes as a flower, and after the wind passes it is no
more and its place remembers it no longer,”(Psalm 103).
My grandchildren have no recognition or remembrance of some
of the icons who shaped the world in my youth.
Paul Newman. (Did he have something to do with coffee?) Kirk Douglas, Burt Lancaster, Ricky Nelson,
Annette Funicello. I’m not sure they
even know who John Wayne was. “… After
the wind blows …”
“He was turned over to his enemies. He went through the mockery of a trial. He
was nailed to a cross between two thieves.
While he was dying his executioners gambled for the only piece of
property he had, his coat. When he was dead, he was taken down and laid in a borrowed
grave. Nineteen centuries have come and
gone and today he is still the central figure for much of the human race. All
the armies that ever marched, All the navies that ever sailed and all the
parliaments that ever sat and all the kings that ever reigned put together
have not affect the life of man upon this earth as powerfully as this One
Solitary Life.
Tuesday, October 14, 2025
Practicing Kindness and Compassion
I like to read. Always have. As a kid I rode my bike to our local library with my friends to browse and check out books. When I met my wife, we spent our evenings together in the library at Baylor University and, across the years, libraries have remained one of our favorite places to visit on our “dates.”
Same Kind of Different As Me is two stories. One, the story of an
illiterate black man named Denver who was raised in the cotton fields of
Louisiana and ended up homeless on the streets of Fort Worth. The other, an
upwardly mobile white man named Ron Hall who graduated from TCU and made a
fortune in the art world. They each tell their story, and the remarkable
intersection of their journeys.
Maybe I was drawn to the book because Ron Hall spent his childhood summers on a
farm near my boyhood home of Corsicana. His descriptions of Corsicana resonated
with my memories growing up on Collin Street, one of the signature brick
streets that reflect the glory days when the city boasted more millionaires per
capita than any other town in Texas. Maybe I was drawn to the book because Ron
and Denver intersect in the slums of Fort Worth east of downtown where my wife
started her teaching career fifty years ago.
But the true stories of Ron Hall and Denver Moore are not the main stories in
the book. They represent other stories: the story of our country and its
culture. Ron represents those who rise from middle class with professional
opportunities that can lead to great wealth. He also represents the dangers of
that path that include temptations for greed, materialism, shallow and broken
relationships. Denver represents the alarmingly huge segment of our population
that falls between the cracks, victims of prejudice, oppression, injustice and
neglect. He also represents the dangers of that downward spiral that includes
temptations of bitterness, anger, isolation and despair.
The greatest story underlying and connecting all of these is God’s story. Ron’s
wife, Deborah is the entry point for His work, one person who was open, willing
and obedient who became the catalyst for connecting these two broken men from
different ends of the social spectrum.
In a day when many look to government to heal our wounds and solve our social
problems, Same Kind of Different As Me serves as a reminder that the
real solution to our personal and social problems lies within us. It is often
buried beneath our own prejudices and fears, but it can be unlocked and
released with the keys of acceptance, trust, faith and love, all the things
Jesus demonstrated and talked about.
God wants to use each of us, whatever our race, whatever our circumstance,
whatever our background to make a difference in the world. “Thus has the Lord
of hosts said, ‘Dispense true justice, and practice kindness and compassion
each to his brother; and do not oppress the widow or the orphan, the stranger
or the poor; and do not devise evil in your hearts against one another,”
(Zechariah 7:8-10).