Acts 2:4 All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit enabled them. (NIV)
Sunday, May 31, 2009
Daily Devotions: A Pentecost Spirit
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Stushie's Art: The Last Five Screensavers
Frequently I post my own computerized artwork on the blog.
Celebrating 500 years of John Calvin
Purple and Blue Celtic Cross
Only six more missions to go before the program ends…
This is part of my psalms project. If you'd like to see the other seventy, click here.
God as the Cosmic Gardener of our tiny planet
You can check out the rest of my artwork at my flickr page
My Last Five Podcasts
Friday, May 29, 2009
Daily Devotions: Street Talkers
My wife Evelyn and I were gone for a couple of days this week. We went to one of our favorite cities – Asheville, North Carolina. We enjoy going there and walking in the downtown area. We love looking at the architecture of the buildings, walking along the sidewalks, and seeing the amazing artworks, galleries, and creativity that Asheville has to offer.
But there’s also a “weird” side to the town that just astonishes us and yesterday was no exception. As we were walking up the hill to some of the wee bistros at the top of Patton Ave, we noticed a street vendor and a driver were having a conversation. The driver’s car was stopped at a red light and both people seemed to know each other.
“I haven’t seen you in a while, “said the vendor. “Where have you been?”
In a loud voice, the woman driver answered, “Oh my boyfriend put me in jail for a while. I just got out this week.”
Evelyn and I looked at each other incredulously. This unknown woman was letting everyone know that she had been in jail and didn’t seem to mind who knew. Only in Asheville, I guess.
At one time, we were known to be People of the Book. We tried to live our lives and mold our society on good old fashioned Biblical principles. Now it seems that people no longer live by God’s rules and as the years go past, we become more brazen about our sinful ways and more boastful about breaking the rules.
I worry about the world that our kids are going up in. There’s seems to be no boundaries, no common rules, and no order or decency. The world is becoming more hostile, disloyal, and unfriendly. People no longer live by the Book, only by the rules that they write for themselves.
The world needs true Christian people and our next generation desperately needs faithful Christian leaders. I hope and pray that God will graciously allow them to be raised up amongst them.
Prayer: Lord God, we have carelessly set aside our beliefs and allowed our society to abandon its allegiance to You. We have corrupted our values and been led astray by our own willful and harmful desires. Forgive us, Lord, for not heeding Your words or ways. Raise up strong leaders like Joshua of old, who can help our children and children’s children return to the Promised Land of faith, hope, and love. In Christ’s Name, we pray. Amen.
John Stuart is the pastor of Erin Presbyterian Church in Knoxville, Tennessee. If you would like to comment on today’s message, please send him an email to pastor@erinpresbyterian.org.
Sunday, May 24, 2009
Memorial Committee
I could see all the people
In our living Memorial Committee.
A lady in a wheelchair
Who, at the age of twelve
On her home island of Hawaii,
Watched Japanese planes
Fly across the sky
On their way to bomb
Pearl Harbor.
Across the aisle
Sat another lady,
Whose young Jewish parents had given
Her away to a Dutch couple,
Just before they were arrested
By the Nazis
And taken to a Concentration Camp
Where they died.
Three rows behind her,
Was a man who had been
Amongst the first American troops
To liberate European Jews from
Hitler’s Death Camps.
Behind him was a farmer’s wife,
Whose brother
Had been seriously wounded
On a beach in Normandy
June 6, 1944.
Four pews in front of her
Sat another man
Whose father
Had been a fighter pilot
Over the English Channel
And into France.
On the other side
Sat another woman,
Whose husband
Fought alongside
Fellow marines
Across several
South Pacific islands.
In the soprano section
Of the church choir,
Sat the preacher’s wife,
Whose father had been rescued
Off the coast of Italy
After his British destroyer
Was torpedoed and sank by
Enemy aircraft.
And sitting quietly,
At the back of the choir
In the tenor section,
Was a paratrooper,
Who at the age of twenty,
Had miraculously survived
The Battle of Bastogne
In that deadly winter
Of December 1944.
With such members
In our Memorial team,
We will never forget
Those who served
And died for Freedom.
John Stuart is the pastor of Erin Presbyterian Church in Knoxville, Tennessee.
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Daily Devotions: The Power of Prayer
Philippians 4:6 Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.
Podcast version here
There’s a lot of anxiety going around these days. People are afraid of catching the flu; communities are dreading the closure of businesses; and even churches are seeing their resources diminishing. With no political, economic, or even spiritual stability, now is the time to seek God in prayer. It’s worked in the past, when things were a lot worse. So, instead of being fearful and anxious, let’s try to become more faithful and prayerful.
Presenting our requests to God gives us an opportunity to voice our concerns and externalize our anxieties. If we bottle up our fears inside us, we will experience undue internal pressure and a lot of stress. Prayer gives us the chance to release the tension and place our anxieties before God. Remember the old saying: a burden shared is a burden halved.
Realizing that we cannot control things around us enables us to ask God for help. We are not spiritual supermen or superwomen. We don’t have the capacity to be able to do everything ourselves. Recognizing God’s sovereignty over our lives can release us from trying to solve the world’s problems. We can only handle what God has potentially given us to handle. Everything else is in His domain.
Asking God for help in prayer is a great act of faith. When we pray, we actually respect God and His power. We understand that we are finite creatures in need of an infinite God. By praying, we give God His place in our lives and put Him at the center of all things.
Yielding to God’s will in prayer frees us from our fears. We have faith that God will work out everything for the common good. God may say “no” or “not now” to us, but at least He will have answered our prayers. Surrendering ourselves to His wisdom and will is a sincere act of faith, service, and love. It also calms our spirits, for we know that whatever transpires, it is God’s will.
Encouraging others to pray with and for us has a communal blessing that strengthens our spirits. Yesterday, a friend sent me an email with the following quote from C. S. Lewis, ‘prayer does not change things, it changes me.’ When we solicit other people’s prayers, we are changing inside. Instead of isolating ourselves and internalizing our troubles, we allow other people to know of our concerns and to seek their prayerful support. This is one of the greatest benefits of belonging to a Christian community.
Requesting God’s help, recognizing our frailty, and realizing that prayer is a powerful way to change our circumstances releases us from being overwhelmed by our fears, worries, and cares. It’s a spiritual way of stepping back from the problem and letting God step in to help us. We allow God to be God and we permit ourselves to be His children.
Prayer: Lord God, we thank You that we can freely come to You in prayer at any time, with any problem, and in any situation. We know that You hear our cries for help from our hearts and souls. Ease our anxieties and calm our fears. Listen to our petitions and allow us to hear Your answers. In Christ’s Holy Name, we thankfully pray. Amen.
John Stuart is the pastor of Erin Presbyterian Church in Knoxville, Tennessee. If you would like to comment on today’s message, please send him an email to pastor@erinpresbyterian.org.
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Daily Devotions: Faith for Hard Times
In these uncertain economic times, how can our Christian faith help us?
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
Daily Devotions: Tennessee's Biggest Idiots
One of our local radio stations has a talk show host who devotes a section of his program to what he calls “Idiot of the Day.” In the last 24 hours, I’ve come across several people who would easily win that title.
Monday, May 18, 2009
Friday, May 15, 2009
Bumper Sticker Shock
...sadly, a lot of Christians seem to believe this...
Photo source from MTSOfan's page on Flickr
http://www.flickr.com/photos/mtsofan/
Thursday, May 14, 2009
4 Minute Daily Devotions: Effective Preaching
Hebrews
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
John Lennon’s ‘Imagine’ to be played on Liverpool Church bells.
Liverpool Cathedral, in the hometown of John Lennon, will perform his peace anthem ‘Imagine’ using the church bells. Even although Lennon’s song includes the lyrics “Imagine there’s no heaven,” church officials have given the go ahead for this special pealing of church bells to take place.
4 Minute Daily Devotions: Prisoner for Christ
Our government is concerned about torturing terrorists over here, but what about human rights abuses taking place against Christians in
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
4 Minute Daily Devotions: Faithbook
2 John
Prayer: Lord Jesus, thank You for allowing us to freely come to You, so that we may be completely reconnected and restored to God. May our lives become faith-books that can be read by other people, so that they may also seek to reconnect their lives to You. In Your Holy Name, we pray. Amen.
Friday, May 08, 2009
Ohio Teenager Threatened with Suspension...if he takes girlfriend to Prom
FINDLAY, Ohio -- A student at a fundamentalist Baptist school that forbids dancing, rock music, hand-holding and kissing will be suspended if he takes his girlfriend to her public high school prom, his principal said.
Despite the warning, 17-year-old Tyler Frost, who has never been to a dance before, said he plans to attend Findlay High School's prom Saturday.
Frost, a senior at Heritage Christian School in northwest Ohio, agreed to the school's rules when he signed a statement of cooperation at the beginning of the year, principal Tim England said.
The teen, who is scheduled to receive his diploma May 24, would be suspended from classes and receive an "incomplete" on remaining assignments, England said. Frost also would not be permitted to attend graduation but would get a diploma once he completes final exams. If Frost is involved with alcohol or sex at the prom, he will be expelled, England said.
4 Minute Daily Devotions: Prison Wall
Isaiah 61:1b He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim freedom for the captives and release from darkness for the prisoners…
Thursday, May 07, 2009
Asheville Insomniac
It’s after
As I look out
of my hotel room window,
I see a mountain mist
meandering across
the mall parking lot.
Specks of rain
have peppered my window,
so I play an eye game
by reflecting the street lights
through the spattered pane.
My room’s refrigerator
chirps contentedly
like an Icelandic cicada.
Somewhere,
down the hall,
I hear a subdued television.
I smile
and settle down
to sleep.
I much prefer
my own
secluded
Late Show.
Psalms Project - Psalm 68
You can check out the rest of my art of the psalms project at http://www.flickr.com/photos/traqair57/sets/72157603288751629/
Saturday, May 02, 2009
Over A Million Americans Tortured in 2008
So I’ve been reading and hearing a lot of people talking about this torture business and how they want to prosecute the last Administration for doing it. Critics and politicians of GWB want him to be put on trial as a war criminal.
Warning!!!! - www.abortionno.org has a graphic video of an abortion that America does not want to see.
Friday, May 01, 2009
4 Minute Daily Devotions: God's Global Warming
Acts