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Friday, December 18, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words 12/18/20
“Good men must not obey the laws too well.” (Unknown) As a child I was always taught to obey
the law! As I grew older, I realized that there were exceptions. I
learned about “Jim Crow” laws. I even learned that some “laws” espoused
by the Bible had exceptions. A man was told that Jesus said, “Love your
neighbor.” The man responded, “…but Jesus never met my neighbor.”
Would Mr. Rogers be comfortable living in your neighborhood?” ;-) Jack
FROM WILLMAR REV: I
use this often when closing my funeral messages— Three surprises will be found
when walking the streets of gold in Heaven- 1) finding some you never thought
had a chance of being there; 2) some not there you thought surely would be; 3)
the biggest surprise when seeing the glory of God displayed before you your
very eyes, that you were there?! Have a
blessed Friday, Jack!! 0;-)===JACK: Another surprise......I think that the quote is from Martin Luther. He thought tht he was more sinner than saint.
FROM GOOD DEBT JON: Thought-provoking as always, you bring up an excellent point
about the Jim Crow laws. Shiva Ayyadurai mentioned this, an MIT Ph.D.,
known by the New York Times as “always the smartest man in the room” in his
Massachusetts Supreme court case he won a few days ago against the Republican
party. Oddly his Jim Crow reference referred to how the voting
machines were used in a Senate race to allocate only 3/5 of the vote for his
voters. Dr. Shiva knows a bit about this; he came from India as an
untouchable and moved to the top of his field. Only in America can you
change your social-economic class through hard work. He invented email when he
was 14. He is interesting to listen to; we take our liberty and
freedom for granted and eschew opportunities to give thanks and be
grateful. Dr. Shiva is in year four of his battle. If his rights can be
taken that easily by corrupt politicians and a few machines, I think we all
have to wonder about the fragile nature of our rights.===JACK: Law is never simple. Even when Jesus said, "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul and mind, and love your neighbor as yourself," it's subject to interpretation: "What does this mean?" Countless sermons have not fully come up with the answer. ===JON:True
enough. The law is not simple but the results of simple math are. No one of
sound mind believes now or then that blacks were or are 3/5th of a
person. I presume that would apply to all humans? It is only when
you cast people or groups as less than human that things like this are thought
permissible.
FROM MY LAWYER: Me and Jesus would have been pals!!!===JACK: You might have been able to help him with the Law.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: MY NEIGHBORS SEEM TO BE KIND AND CARING, BUT I HAVE NO IDEA WHAT ACTIVITIES THEY ARE INVOLVED IN EXCEPT FOR A VERY FEW. I FEEL THEY ARE GOOD PEOPLE
! i THINK MR. ROGERS COULD COUNT ON ANY OF THEM TO "DO THE RIGHT THING". SOME LAWS WE MARCHED
AGAINST IN LONG GONE YEARS, WERE ABOUT UNFAIR HOUSING LAWS, AND UNEQUAL SCHOOLING FOR MINORITIES. IN CHICAGO THAT IS STILL A PROBLEM, AND PROBABLY IN MANY BIG CITIES..===JACK: It must have been exciting to be "activists" for a just cause in those days.===OAKS: So true! I guess it made us feel we were standing up to be counted in a just cause. The Congress passed a Fair Housing Law, the Fall after we marched, making it unlawful to refuse to rent to or sell to ANY
individual. Which helped, but the ones who integrated
neighborhoods still suffered consequences!===JACK: I will not forget one of Bill's "favorites," Once to Every Man and Nation Comes the Moment to Decide."
Thursday, December 17, 2020
Jack’s
Winning Words 12/17/20
“Every wall has a door.”(Emerson)I don’t know
if Michael Jordan ever read Emerson, but he said something similar about
walls.When Jordan was cut from his H.S,
Basketball Team, he refused to give up. “When faced with a wall, don’t give up.Figure out how to climb over it, how to go
thru it, or work around it.”He also
said, “I’ve failed many times, and that’s why I’ve been successful.”Remember, when you encounter a wall, look for
the door.;-)Jack
Wednesday, December 16, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words 12/16/20
“Wow! Face it…God’s crazy about you!” (Pr Bob Langseth) I admire “farm boy” Pr Bob
who’s able to take “religion” and apply it to today’s world. “God loves
you” becomes, “God’s crazy about you.” People loved the stories Jesus
told, because they related to everyday life…”A farmer went out to sow.” is an
example. Today’s quote was used to begin a Confirmation Day sermon. I
believe that God does get excited when young people confess their faith.
“In today’s lingo, God might say that he thinks you’re the GOAT!
;-) Jack
FROM RVB IN WB: My
youngest son has a shirt that says: God is dope and thinks the same of me!===JACK: Are you sure that the shirt says, "dope?" Maybe it says, "God is hope."===RVB: Jack,
you read it correctly! One
millennial meaning is: Awesome
or the best ever Ask your great grandchildren, ===JACK: I asked my daughter, and she said: "I knew that!"
FROM LBP: I guessed right about what GOAT means. Yay! My 9 yo likes to
be aghast at the things mom doesn’t know. My 13 yo just sighs===JACK: I like to play with people's minds.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: THIS DINASOUR DOES NOT KNOW THE CU;RENT MEANING OF GOAT! :-( but as Yancy has said, "God
is crazy about you! He'd have your picture in his wallet,
& on his refrigerator!" I think others have said very
similar things, and we can be assured his love is unconditional !! That is a great comfort! Thankful for your daily words which make us THINK! ===JACK: G.O.A.T. = Greatest Of All Time. Another millennialism is "dope." God is dope! = God is the greatest. Try these on your grandchildren, and they'll probably think that old gram is really with it.
Tuesday, December 15, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words 12/15/20
“One day I will find the right words, and they will be
simple.” (Jack
Kerouac-poet) I have great admiration for writers…particularly
poets. To be able to say a lot in a few words is a gift. Ogden Nash
makes me laugh: The Perfect Husband : “He tells you when you’ve got on
too much lipstick – And helps you with your girdle when your hips stick.”
(Do people still wear girdles?) One of my goals for Winning
Words is to write something worthy without being wordy. ;-) Jack
FROM CZB IN NEW HAMPSHIRE: Good
morning! Ogden
Nash’s home is two doors down from ours. He used to write in the barn that was
next door. Lots of fun history where I live. Our house was built in 1890. It
used to be the guest house for a stately house across the street. And
to answer your question, girdles have been replaced by “foundation” garments,
the category leader is Spanx. It’s huge business! Everyone still wants to look
thinner than they might be!===JACK: If only Ogden were living today...You could show him Winning Words. As for girdles, I know that the word is passe. I won't say it out loud, but I think that the POTUS wears spandex. I wonder who helps put it on?===CZB: Oh
my gosh, that is a visual I could have done without!!!! hahahaha!===JACK: At the golf course he let's it all hang out.
FROM WILLMAR REV: "Always a challenge for the better
preachers . . . when younger, I thought the sermon had to be 40 minutes to be
worth its salt, and then I grew wiser?!" 0;-)===JACK: When I started out my mentor was "20 minute-Tillberg", known for his short sermons. I've since cut down to 10 to 12 minutes.
FROM RS IN SAMN: And you succeed. Thank dear Jack, for
being part of my quiet time with God. Blessings. ===JACK: Sometimes, I wish that Winning Words could be like Face-Time when we could have time to talk back and forth.
FROM RS IN TEXAS: Goal achieved.===JACK: Thx
FROM FUNERAL DIRECTOR: Jack, you do, every day that we are blessed with an
edition. ===JACK: Thanks for the good words. Are eulogies just for the dead? ===FD: What a great question! I think a lot of folks today need
to hear their eulogies now! You’ve got me thinking……===JACK: Success! WWs is designed to make people think.
FROM ST PAUL IN ST PAUL: O. Nash also had a
great toast for a wedding couple which i have used many times: When you
are wrong, admit it. And when you are right, forget it!
rather wise words i do believe. take care,===JACK: For a toast, I though you'd use another Nashism..."Candy is dandy, but liquor is quicker,"
FROM LK IN OH: Covid notwithstanding. . . . ."Merry Christmas" abounds! Jack, I hope you are healthy in all respects. May God continue to bless you and all those you love!===JACK: Thanks for the Xmas Greeting. I havw ni qualms about writing Xmas...because of my Greek language classes. It was in one of my early sessions that I leaned that X was the first letter in the Greek word for Christ....Xmas: the same as Christmas.
FROM DAZ IN COLORADO" : W W are never
wordy and very concise also thought provoking ===JACK: It helps to work with an edit0or, like David.
FROM VGW MARY: Always
worthy, never wordy===JACK: Congratulations! You were the first one to notice...worthy...wordy.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: I no longer wear a
girdle! As Jack Nicholson said you can only hold your stomach in for so many
years! Ha!===JACK: How about lipstick? Do you remember when you first tried it?===OAKS: Very soft colors of lipstick for special occasions in 8th grade;; More vibrant as we went high school, which was 10th - 12th grades in Moline, as you know.===JACK: Lips that touched lipstick never touched mine until sometime after high school (maybe after seminary...I can't remember HAHA).
FROM NELLIE: John Freed's words are worthy in any length so far as I'm concerned. You and your WINNING WORDS are one of the short list of blessings
in 2020!===JACK: Just like a sermon...long enough to make the poit; short enough to keep the interest.
Monday, December 14, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words 12/14/20
“I have written your name on my hand.” (Isaiah 49:16 – God’s translation) I was surprised
to read that God has a tattoo…my name written on His hand. My grandson’s
first tattoo was his confirmation Bible verse. I’ve come to appreciate
translations of the Bible that put it into the language of today…anything that
helps me to grasp the message. My name on His hand! I must be
important to Him. There’s room for your name too, because you’re also important
to Him. ;-) Jack.
FROM FACEBOOK LIZ: thankful that tattoos are becoming passe... young people are
such sheep. gauges are proof that some will do anything to be “different.”===JACK: When did you decide to be different?===LIZ:i didn’t... i just do what i do w/o regard to what people
think. gisela and i are the only “girls” we know who do not have pierced
ears.===JACK: So, Gisela decided to be like you? I'm sure thar she's her own person in other ways. We all are.===LIZ: gisela was not allowed to get them pierced till she reached
majority age... then she no longer wanted them. same w/me. body altering
decisions are for adults to make. you obvs do not know gisela. she goes her own way, always
has... and she has made it work for her. she is a leader in every respect, and
totally fearless... but that’s like me, actually. 👍🏻===JACK: Why am I not surprised?
FROM BLAZING OAKS: I LOVE your idea of God's hand being
tattooed with our names! If I have to give a devotional, I"m going to
pass this on, with credit to you! This is a good verse
to carry with me, and easily memorized!===JACK: The quote is from a little book by Max Lucado, and he evidently "picked up" that modern translation of the Bible verse.
FROM OUTHOUSE JUDY: His hand is big enough for everyone! As is His heart! ===JACK: How bibg is God's hand? He's got the whole world in His hands.
Jack’s Winning Words 12/11/20
“Some things are just better left unsaid, and I usually
realize that right after I say them.” (Sent by St Paul in St Paul) Hall and Oates are
famous for a “rock ‘n soul” song with the theme: It’s important to choose your
words carefully, because some bad things can be made worse by the
wrong word at the wrong time. In my younger days we’d call it: A case
of foot-in-mouth disease. “Oops! Let me re-state that!”
Has it ever happened to you? ;-) Jack
Thursday, December 10, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words 12/10/20
“A candle of God’s goodness can serve as a beacon of hope
for those navigating dark passages of their lives.” (Hanukkah Quote) One thing that Hanukkah and
Christmas have in common is a message of HOPE. God’s goodness is always
with us…told by the menorah’s nine candles, or the one Christmas Star. As
we traipse the dark passages of life, let’s not forget that God is with
us. In the darkest hours, seen or unseen, our Hope is that G-d goes with
us. ;-) Jack
FROM GOOD DEBT JON: A good message. What is January 6th?
Is that the Advent?===JACK: There are two Christmases...Dec 25 observed by those related to the Roman Catholic tradition and Jan 6 (Epiphany), observed by the Orthodox (Russian and Greek) traditions. It is thought that the wise men arrived, probably 2 weeks after the birth of Jesus when the Holy Family had moved to other housing. Sometimes, by explanation, a simple story becomes more complex. ===JON: Nice.
I am hoping for an Epiphany myself on Jan. 6th. All the best. ==JACK: "Epiphany" is from the Greek....epi and phanos....a day of light (enlightenment).
FROM SF IN FL: Thank you. We are lighting the first candle this evening on
Zoom with our kids. Different for sure. Praying for good health and
peace. ===JACK: I wonder it "the old-timers" would approve of Zoom or even understand it. All that counts is that G-d knows!
] FROM JJ IN SJ: Thank you Jack. Those are winning words.===JACK: Why not light a candle today....and let it be a sign of HOPE for a better tomorrow.
Wednesday, December 09, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words 12/9/20
“Remember that at the end of the day, it’s not what you say or do, but how you make people feel that matters the most.” (Tony Hsieh – Former CEO of Zappos) Tony was a multi-millionaire businessman who died tragically in a house fire at age 46. He was living proof that you could be successful and a good human being, too. His business mantra was, “I want to deliver happiness.” It’s a good mantra for any of us as we go through life. ;-) Jack
FROM ER IN SKO: For better or worse, that's my moto, too. Unfortunately, I
think it's gotten me into a little trouble. ===JACK: During times when I am conducting a wedding, I wonder if the people know what they are promising. Life has a way of making it hard for two people to live together with a real COMMITMENT to do their best, for better or worse.
FROM HONEST JOHN: That's very biblical.===JACK: Does everything have to be biblical: ===HJ: No...but for the Christian it means that a saying that is to
guide our life’s activities ought not be antithetical to the Biblical
understanding of life....and this one is.===JACK: There's a certain satisfaction that comes from knowing that you are a child of God...and that's not limited to Christians.
FROM FACEBOOK LIZ: it’s
a good shoe website.===JACK: .In the olden days when I was growing up, "a good ole
shoe," meant a good and reliable friend.===LIZ:like you and me!
.FROM KLM: Hi, I enjoy reading your winning words. Thanks for all your
efforts in writing and sending them. Sure has been a challenging year with
Covid. I have 7 siblings and have not seen much of them, or rather not as much
as I normally would and would like to. But I have been able to see my 2
sons often and grandkids and daughter in law and husband, of course so I am
grateful for that. Hope you and loved ones are doing well. ===JACK: I see the year 2020 as a time for reflection and resolve. We can (and must) do better in caring for God's creation and the gifts that are ours.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: Anyone who has had A near-death experience comes back with the resolve to spread love, and to love all people. That is what they learned while in their view of "heaven"...My friend in Elgin who experienced
this out of body event, came back saying she wanted to stay, but did not want to leave her children motherless..She said she would never fear death, but felt such love, and knew that was the way we were to live. So many NDE fascinating stories! Live Love!===JACK: I. too, had a member who experienced a "life" after death experience. Hers was a remembering of the doctor swearing when she (the patient) had died on the opering table. She was floating above, watching what was happening below.===OAKS: I read a poll (I think was in the book Life after Life, that
said one in ten people have these experiences. I think they are more rare than that..===JACK: I would agree..
Tuesday, December 08, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
12/8/20
“Make money your god, and it will plague you like the
devil.” (Henry
Fielding) Fielding was a famous novelist known for his satire. IMO,
he was a realist in writing that choosing money as a god is like choosing to
worship the devil. In theology, God is a word representing the ultimate
good. Devil represents ultimate evil. Given that we are born
with free-will, the choice is up to us, good or evil. ;-) Jack
Monday, December 07, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words 12/7/20
“December 7, 1941, a date which will live
in infamy.” (President FDR) Most people living today
“Remember 9/11.” Some are smart enough to “Remember the Alamo” and
why? As long as I live I’ll remember where I was when I heard about Pearl
Harbor and the start of WW 2 for America. Is there a date that you
especially remember? BTW: Infamy means “a collection of evil
deeds,” or something like that. ;-) Jack
FROM BLAZING OAKS: I think we all remember that day; I was just in High School, but some of our classmates lost their lives in WW2, so it had tough consequences. I especially remember the day Pres. Kennedy was shot and killed. I was broken hearted at the time!! My wedding date is a pleasure to remember,
too, after all these years ! (70) ! I wish we had been able to
share all 70, but 51 were a blessing...===JACK: Life does not always turn out the way we want it...but my satisfaction is to be able to celebrate the good times and know that God goes with us all the way.
FROM GUSTIE: I
too remember Pearl Harbor Day. I was 6 years old. My Mom and Dad
and I sat around our radio (only 1 in the house) listening to Pres. Roosevelt.
Scary.===JACK: Many
things scare us...both young and old. I get frustrated when we seem not
to learn how to live at peace with each other, even in the USA. ===G: Part
of the problem is that they do not teach American History in the schools
anymore. And now we are trying to change it. That means it will
happen all over again. Those statues they are tearing down is part of our
history. ===JACK: A bigger problem is a failure to understand that "history" is how a particular writer put it into a book. To understand history, we have to be able to read more than one account...and somewhere between the different accounts is the truth. I fwe are smart, we continue to learn, even in our old age.
FROM RS IN TEXAS: 9/11 and JFK’s assassination.===JACK: I remember where I was...and the time of day, when I heard of the assassination, but I can't recall the date, as I can, "the day shall live in infamy."===RS: Yeah....November 22, 1963....I was a freshman in college.
The next day four of us got in a car and drove nonstop to D.C. for the
funeral. The impetuousness of youth.===JACK: The loss of impetuousness makes the world a stodgier place.
FROM MY LAWYER: Two
events come to mind. My
first recollection as a child was in April, 1945. My mother and I we walking my
younger brother down the street in a stroller When a neighbor lady ran towards
us yelling that President Roosevelt had just died. My mother began to cry. I
had never seen her cry. That event is the first recollection I have. Secondly,
like you I’m sure, I vividly recall November 22, 1963, the day President
Kennedy was assassinated. The whole world seemed to stop that day. I was in
college at the time.===JACK: Thanks for reminding me of the death of FDR. I remember it, but not specifically. The year of assassinations was unbelievable. Strangely, I recall the day (a Sunday) and the time (around noon) when I heard that Malcolm X had been shot. Those were violent days.
FROM SHALOM JAN: The day President Kennedy was assassinated. ===JACK: Those were tumultuous times.
FROM THE FISH IN NOVA SCOTIA: I was born on 14 August 1942...a bit overdue...just about
exactly 9 mo later :-) my parents never discussed it with me. We lived in Charleston SC at the old Citadel fort which was
by then faculty housing--my dad was a prof at CMA--and my first memories
include riding my tricycle (under supervision of my mother) through Spoleto
Square and being given Cracker Jacks and chewing gum by the many sailors, who
were probably missing their little brothers at home. I remember sitting with my
parents in front of the big brown radio with the round dial and listening to
the news about VJ Day (I don't remember VE Day). Later, we moved to the
Charleston Navy Yard when CMA ran short of students and my dad took a civilian
job with the Navy. He and my mom and I went and toured the German U-Boat which
had recently surrendered and is now at the Field Museum in Chicago.===JACK: VE and VJ days were important to me, because I was a graduating high school senior at the time, and it meant that I and my friends would not being off to fight in that terrible war. Those German U-Boats were scary vessels. I did see the one at the Chicago museum,.===FISH: my wife and brother-in-law and sister-in-law experienced WW
II more directly. Some of the houses in Hannelore's neighborhood in
Schwanheim (no part of Frankfurt) turned into craters, and she remembers
watching old Frankfurt burn one night in 1944 across the river. My
brother-in-law joined the army at age 17 and was sent down to Italy in a unit
of 110 men, just before the withdrawal began. They left Italy with maybe 18
(figures by memory). He was then deployed to the Eastern Front, shot and
captured by the Russians, and spent until around 1949 in Russia as a POW,
finally logging in Western Siberia. He is now 95, which would have been great
and surprising news to him during some of those years. My other brother-in-law
was wounded next to the gates to Moscow and was lucky to be evacuated to
Estonia (then in German hands) by a Junkers cargo plane bringing supplies to the
tank units. He never was a prisoner and still had his officer's sidearm when he
died in his 90s. My sister-in-law always hated having the gun around the house
(next to their bed), and after his death she called the police and told them
she wanted to turn it in. They told her which building to go to. She wrapped it
in a towel and put it in a shopping bag and went to the police HQ (in
Dusseldorf, I imagine) and went up to the correct floor without telling anyone
she had a weapon (she must not have had to pass through a metal detector).
There she sat in one of the chairs surrounding a waiting room. She took a
number and when her turn came the officer was horrified; she was possibly the
only one in the full waiting room who was not there at police request. She got
a receipt which she later threw away. A few days later there was a knock on the
door, and it was a policeman to collect the weapon. She said she already turned
in in; he demanded to see her receipt. Somehow, it all got straightened out.===JACK: Thanks for "the rest of the story." One of my former church members was a former German soldier who lost his eye in o0ne of the Italian battles. "We were just kids. We believed that what they told us was true." The bombing of Germany, while it helped end WW 2, must have been terrible for the innocents on the ground. I believe that I did have an occasion to meet yout mother-in-law.
FROM WILLMAR REV: My
wedding anniversary has been a challenge for me of late...July 25 or 27...my
birthday in March is the 27th and our daughter’s birthday in September is the
27th...for some reason I am found floundering when July rolls around...I had to
look up my daughter’s actual date when
posting my comments this morning! 0;-/===JACK: I have a special feeling of sympathy for people who are afflicted with dementia. What a blessing from God is the ability to remember. What if we couldn't remember Bible verse or song lyrics?===REV: My
Mom walked through that for five years before passing...it worked out that I
brought her to Willmar the last year as my sister wanted to move to Arizona
from KC where Mom was being kept...Special for me to be able to stop in 2-3
times a week for a few minutes and basically hold her hand or watch Bonanza
with her. When she passed, the funeral home embalmed her, placed her in a
casket we had picked out and allowed me to rent a van as if I was their
employee and take her body to the funeral home in our hometown town in Kansas.
I preached her funeral, stayed a couple of nights before heading home. I
mentioned this because we were able to cover all these expenses from the
funeral money she had set aside from Medicaid...Very thankful for the local
funeral home for giving me the privilege and blessing I received in honoring my Mother in this way.
0;-)===JACK: Your story brings to mind the song, "Precious Memories."
FROM ST PAUL IN ST PAUL: who can forget JFK and MLK's assassinations? or
9/11/01? or the Challenger blowing up on lift off in 1986? or the
day you got married or ordained? also, the birth of your first
child.===JACK: We each have our own memory bank. I wonder if God keeps a book of memories? I'm sure that there are some pages in it with your name on them.
FROM HONEST JOHN: I will never forget beating Moline in a tennis match....1957===JACK: That probably helped get you an Augie Tennis Scholarship.
Friday, December 04, 2020
Jack's Winning Words 12/4/20
“Simple rule in
life: If you wouldn’t like it done to you, don’t do it to others.” (Sent by Lauren A) I like this clever version of
the Golden Rule. This “rule” is included as part of most major religions,
and even by the atheists. In searching for “A Global Ethic” the Golden
Rule was agreed upon by 143 leaders of the world’s major religions. In
what ways have you seen the Golden Rule being practiced? ;-)
Jack
FROM EDUCATOR PAUL: I don’t like colonoscopies and I promise not to do one on
you.===JACK: The promise includes the prep, too..I hope.
FROM WILLMAR REV: "tongue in cheek" . . . Washington,
DC!!! They remind each other, depending which party in in power-- "It was
okay back when you were in charge?!" 0;-)===JACK: I actually know one of the 100 seators in DC. If all politicians were like him we'd be in good hands. When you get to know people, you get to understand people. That works in the Church, too. ===REV: I
know of a few like that as well, from both parties...Back in my college days
and I was being recognized as one of the up and coming young bowlers while
attending Bible college, a sports writer did an article on some of my
accomplishments at that time. He titled it “Good Men Don’t Always Finish Last”.
He of course was equating the future minister competing in bowling alley’s, as
some would look upon negatively in the Bible Belt states. That’s
the way I feel about many of our politicians, both men and women. A great many
of them are fine examples of successful pursuit, but few ever seem to be
recognized or placed in the spot light. Or if they are, downed played for their
faith, good morals or fairnesses. It saddens
me. 0:-/ ===JACK: Immorality (or amorality) turns me off...politician, pastor or anyone who would. Let them do it by example. (or bowler,too)
FROM RS IN TEXAS: Hopefully masochists are the exception.===JACK: There always seems to be an exception to the rule. That's why there are disclaimers.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: That is a neat paraphrase of the rule we try to live
by! I didn't know the 143 leaders who chose it for the
"Global Ethic", How nteresting! My best friend just had the
person ahead of her at Walmart pay for her groceries! By the time
she realized this the person had trundled out the door with her huge basket loaded to the top; So I told her to
"pay it forward" and she wrote a ck for the price she would
have paid, and sent it to "Friend Indeed", our City
fund to bring Christmas to the very poor and homeless! Kindness begets kindness! There are still so many good people in our world!===JACK: Something like that happened like that to my granddaughter. Instead of saying, "No, no!" she said "Thank you" and promised to do something similar for someone else. I fins it really hard to accept a gift that I don't deserve. A wise person explained to me, "Just smile, say Thank you." Pastors often receive gifts that we3 feel we don't deserve.
FROM ER IN SKO: I love this version for the
simple fact that you aren't "impressing upon others" (like The Golden
Rule would have you do) your likes, but refraining from doing onto others
personally distasteful acts. I had a college professor (1993) who was an open
lesbian. Very progressive lady at that time. I respected her immensely. Plus
she was from Africa and had an amazing accent. Anyway, her thoughts on the
implications of The Golden Rule have always stuck with me. Her stand was, as a
lesbian, she didn't necessarily want to be treated the same way that I, a
heterosexual woman, would want to be treated. Dr. Helen R. understood the good
intentions behind The Golden Rule; she just felt the way of thinking needed to be
tweaked. She taught secondary education classes. Her motivation behind breaking
down The Golden Rule was to use herself as an example of how not all children
in a classroom want to be treated the same, and that a teacher needed to
recognize and respect people's differences. Refraining from doing unto others
distasteful acts seems like an excellent way to start! Thanks, Lauren A and Dr.
Helen, for reframing my thinking, and thanks, Jack, for sharing. ===JACK: We owe much to those who have taught us...whenever the opportunity has presented itself. To have learned from the teacher is important, too. It seems as though you paid attention (most of the time).
FROM ST PAUL IN ST PAUL: Barry Anderson sits
on the MN Supreme Court and is a good of mine. he thinks you are
quite profound at times:):):) Here's what he had to say about your Winning Words: This is actually quite profound. I agree 100%"===JACK: It sometimes amazes me...to realize how God has used me in retirement..
Thursday, December 03, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words 12/3/20
“God enters, by a private door, into every
individual.” (Emerson)
I can hardly imagine that God has His own door which allows Him access to
what’s going on in my life. Does He actually care? Do you ever feel
that way? With all that’s going on in the world…with all of the needy
people? But, strange as it may seem, I do feel His presence (even as I
write Winning Words). I do sense that He is listening and caring as I offer
prayers. Do you feel the nearness of God? ;-)
EROM HONEST JOHN: Somehow, I have ended up as an odd combination of
objectivist and mystic...so, yes, I do feel God knocking every now and then.
It’s a knock that you can’t refuse!===JACK: Somehow, I have ended up as an odd combination of
objectivist and mystic...so, yes, I do feel God knocking every now and then.
It’s a knock that you can’t refuse!
FROM HUMBUG JOHN: Pastor
Jack, I feel the nearness of God in the work of our church food pantry trying
to meet a growing need for food, in creative online worship, coffee hours, and
bible studies, in three promising vaccines, and in zoom calls planning new
projects for our ministry. I feel God at work and this gives me comfort and
hope. Peace, John===JACK: The saving of Humbug, to me, has been a miracle of God, using your help...or has it been the other way around.
FROM KITTY B: Today’s message feels like you wrote it for me. Thank
you ===JACK: Our paths crossed for a relatively short time...but, Oh, the memories and good that came from that.===KB: Our physical paths for a short time. You impact my spiritual
side 5 days a week. Thank you===JACK: There's a poem/hymn, "God moves in mysterious ways, His wonders to perform."
FROM ER IN SKO: Always! I always feel like God is with me and listening, but
I can honestly say that it wasn't until my dad passed away that I felt God's
presence. As you know, God has been supporting me in the most positive ways in
the last year. I am constantly overwhelmed that he finds the time to watch over
little old me. He has so many bigger issues to handle. However, I am not going
to question. I am so very thankful that he does! I am also very thankful for you and your unwavering
support!!!!!!===JACK: There's an old saying..."When God seems far away, who do you think has moved?" I need to rethink the idea that God is always near, always ready to answer my needs in a way that is to my benefit. I believe that God opens doors and leaves it to us to walk through them.===ER: I see your point, but speaking from recent experiences,
I would highly vouch that encouragement and gentle pushes from loved ones
grease one's wheels.===JACK: Who are we to place limits on how God works...The fact is that He works, often in mysterious ways.
FROM JJ IN SJ: Jack, if God has a private door in which
She is near to me it is through the Great Mother Earth. A friend gave me a
book, The Dream of The Earth, by Catholic Theologian, Thomas Berry. It still
resonates with me. Thanks for asking.===JACK: I remember a time when people discussed the gender of God. I don't know that there was a resolution...and I don't care. Now, we have to ask, Does God have to L,B G,T or Q, L, to understand all? It's enough that God has given each of a spirit to communicate with the Holy Spirit. You give goood food for thought.
FROM NORM'S BLOG: There was a popular TV game show that presented contestants with
3 doors, behind which were hidden either great prizes or great disappointments.
Contestants were asked to choose a door. Life can seem like that sometimes.
Sometimes we make the wrong choices and open the door to disappointment or
worse. The choices that we are faced with in life can seem both scary and
mysterious. We really can’t see what’s behind the doors. However, over in the corner, maybe just out of our vision, there
is another door and that door is clearly marked – “God is here”. We know that
it is there, but our own ego sometimes stubbornly prevents us from opening that
door. We keep trying to do it alone, to face our challenges on our own, and to
exert our free will. What we fail to realize is that same free will is what
allows us to open that fourth door and seek God’s help. When God gave us that
free will he also put that door there in our lives. He put it there for two
reasons – 1. Just in case, we needed to open it and get his help and 2. To give
us a direct way to communicate with and worship Him.===JACK: In a way...a scary thought...that God is ALWAYS there is hear what we say and observe what we do. A loving thought to know that God is a God of grace.
FROM WILLMAR REV: Another of my choruses that have blessed me over
the years-- "Standing
somewhere in the shadows you’ll find Jesus. He’s the Friend who always cares
and understands. Standing somewhere in the shadows you will find Him, And
you’ll know Him by the nail-prints in His hands." 0;-) ===JACK: He may be in the shadows, but He is always there. Perhaps you also know this chorus: "Oh, yes, He cares, I know He cares. When the days are weary, the long nights dreary, I know my Savior cares."===REV: Oh yes! A George Beverly Shea favorite at the
Billy Graham Crusades!! 0;-)===JACK: "Bev!" is an all-time favorite of mine. How would you like to go through life with Beverly as part of your name?...almost as bad as, "A Boy Named, Sue."===REV: Harry for my first name wasn't always easy to
work with in grade school-- "Hairy! Hairy!" I've always went by H
Paul McCullough . . . but in more recent times, the first name is always asked
for placed on official documents. 0:-/===JACK: They'd have a hard time referring to you as "hairy" these days. Right now you are "pastor" and "friend" for how you impact people.
FROM BB IN CHGO: Yes
I do – there was an interesting book review in the New Yorker about how such
feelings are cultivated (especially in the born-again churches) where people
pray for God to help them choose their shirt in the morning. I’ve read
other studies – Rutgers I think, that say people who are ill respond positively
to prayer even when they do not know people are praying for them.
Hmmmm. Our God is transcendent and imminent? Something like that….===JACK: Transcendent or imminent? He is both; he is beyond comprehension...except as we know Him in the human form of Jesus.
FROM EMT SINGS IN TC: Very often!===JACK: Not often enough, for me.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: Definitely. Sometimes more than others, but I converse with him throughout the day! When I have felt his
presence powerfully, it has been the feeling of waves and waves
of Love enfolding me. Once I even heard a voice, "Dont'
worry;I have called you, and I will care for you!", That was
from Isaiah, but I didn't know my Bible that well, at the time! I was wrestling with our decision to go to seminary and become clergy! We had two little boys and a very comfortable life at the time....===JACK: Many people have said that they have "heard" the voice of God...Who am I to deny. Once a church member called me close to his side as he lay in a hospital bed. "Pastor, Jesus stood at the end of my bed last night and said that everything's gonna be all right." I believed him and treasure that story.
FROM EILEEN WIDEX: I feel him, sometimes when I least expect, sometimes when I
want, but mostly when I need. Hope you are well🙏===JACK: There's a poem, set to music: "God moves in a mysterious way, His wonders to perform." Hearing is better since broken hearing aid tube was replaced.
Wednesday, December 02, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words 12/2/20
“How’d you like to take a rollicking journey in the footsteps of
history’s greatest thinkers to discover practical lessons for today’s unsettled
times?” (Book Review) Eric Weiner’s new book, The Socrates
Express (Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers) might be the one for
you. It takes Epicurus to Gandhi and Thoreau to Beauvoir and has them
take on new life…and, it’s not bubblegum philosophy, either. ;-)
Jack
FROM WILLMAR REV: Curious...was
Jesus mentioned as one who presented a life appealing philosophy of life...you
and I looked at Him through His deity as others only his philosophy of life? By
the way...because of your acknowledgment of “National Giving Day” yesterday, I
was moved to help to help a mother ===JACK: I don't believe that I've seen Jesus listed among philosophers in my studies (maybe in a broad listing). What I have come to see...Jesus as God's creation of a human form to show us the perfection that humans can live...to show us, in a human form, what God is like.
FROM EDUCATOR PAUL: Fun!!!! Added to my book list. Thanks===JACK: So many books...so little time...so, we make lists of what to get to, sometime. ===EP: I’m into audiobooks now.
I can do stuff around here and get educated at the same time. Right now
I’m listening to Obama narrate his new book A Promised Land. So interesting!!!
FROM FACEBOOK LIZ: sounds interesting... have you read it?===JACK: No, I have not. I'm taking the word of a Princeton friend of mine who has read it and thought that I might enjoy iy, too. Bad eyesight limits my enjoyment of reading.
FROM GDJ IN THE WI WOODS: Thanks for the recommendation, think I'll give it a
try. Hope you are well and safe from The Plague as well as your
family. I continue to admire you and your ministry of positivity each morning.
Especially these past few months of American divisions. My mantra continues to
be Luther's insight that we "are in, not of this world." About a year ago I was told I had 3 major blockages and
should have triple bypass immediately. Fortunately, mainly because of my
daughter 's health care expertise and connections, I was spared the
surgery and with medication changes am living life fully. BUT, it puts me in
the stay away from Covid-19 exposure big time. So, God's kronos took over and in a confluence of divine
interventions my wife and I moved from a very urban and wonderful neighborhood
and neighbors, our kids and 4 grandkids (and 1 on the way) to the middle of the
woods, 150 miles north. We live on 10 acres of hardwood forest down a dirt road
south of Egg Harbor in Door County. The isolation is a gift. It has helped us
both embrace our inner introverts. After all those years as public personas as
teacher and pastor we are blissfully and peacefully living lives much more
authentic. Church in any conventional sense has disappeared. Luckily we
live in a cathedral of trees so we do have a church "building" to attend.
Granted, our fellow parishioners are of the furry and winged variety but they
bring us delight and joy without having to pass the peace. I do miss the holy moment of the sacrament when, shoulder to
shoulder we knelt with the humble and often desperate hope that bread and wine
were much more than bread and wine. The real presence of Christ "in, with
and under" the elements. But. I'll trade it for this life. For now. I celebrate our now long ago coming together as colleagues
and friends. With your gently mentoring my fear and anger as a
young pastor in a very challenging call. Starting every day with your almost monolithic hope is a
gift.===JACK: I am humbled...and then I remember that it's not me, but God working thru us. We had some good times in the presence of God.
FROM BB IN CHGO: Have
you read this one already or is it ia work in progress?===JACK: At this point in life, I find myself passing on recommendations from friends that I trust. There are many good lessons hidden in the words of dead philosophers.
FROM RS IN TEXAS: Now THAT would be interesting.===JACK: Speaking of being interesting...Joan's brother was VN vet and kept a diary while he was there. I've been reading it. He was a sgt in the middle of things. A "Honor Flight" to the Viet Nam Memorial in DC helped him comes to grips with what he had experienced.
Tuesday, December 01, 2020
Jack’s Winning
Words 12/1/20 “You can’t go through life with a catcher’s mitt
on both hands. You need to be able to throw something back.”
(Maya Angelou) Today is Giving Tuesday, a reaction to Black Friday and
Cyber Monday. As we spend for Holiday Giving, let’s not forget the charity
needs around us. Today I plan to write out a check to the Karmanos Cancer Research Fund
(Detroit). Karmanos helped “save” two friends of mine, and I shall be
forever grateful. What charity might you support on Giving Tuesday…and
why? ;-) Jack
FROM LEEEn MARIE: We run the food pantry out
of our church, so we give our time and monies for this. A much needed service
for the needy in our area.===JACK: Your church has always been known as a place where the hungrgy can come and get food. What a great reputation!
FROM RS IN TEXAS: My "go to" charity has become Lutheran World
Relief. There is so much need, but it seems that LWR has a big
focus on people that are literally starving to death. I'm pretty sure that
there is a match made for any contributions today, so will be making our
monthly donation to them today. Hopefully we can help save some
lives.===JACK: LWR Has been checked out and shown to be "the best bang for the buck." Administration costs are among the lowest.
FROM NORM'S BLOG:
It is easy to visualize people standing there with catcher’s
mitts on both hands. They are the “takers” of life who constantly accept
things from others, but who do not give back. You may know some people like
that. I prefer to think that we all are not just takers, but we give back in
different ways and to different causes. There has been much already written about the harsh impact
that the COVID -19 pandemic has had on charities and non-profits. The
financial impact on so many people from the actions taken to slow the spread
of the disease has been the subject of almost nightly news show coverage.
That impact has had the secondary effect of limiting the giving of those
whose own livelihood has been disrupted. Many small local entities like
churches, community arts associations and local museums have also been
devastated by the cancellation of all fund raising activities or suspension
of their services, due to the virus. Fortunately there is some relief
available to some of the non-profit organizations through grants. A less –well documented impact was the subject of the feature
article in this morning’s New York Times daily E-Newsletter – The devastation of small local newspapers
and the impact on their communities of the loss of their local news reporting
services. Many readers of this blog may already know that in addition to
being a Realtor®, I also work part-time for the Spinal Column, a small weekly
newspaper with editions for Milford, Highland, White Lake and Commerce
Township (including Wixom and Walled Lake). The Spinal Column has been around
since 1961 and its name reflects the belief of the founders (and the current
owners) that small, independent newspapers are the backbone of democracy in
their communities, thus the name. Indeed, our country might not have been
born were it not for the local pamphlets, such as James Otis’s Rights of the British Colonies(1764),
John Dickinson’s
Farmer’s Letters (1768), and Thomas Paine’s Common Sense (1776).
Many of those pamphlets were the equivalent of some or our modern day small
local papers. The Spinal Column Newsweeklies, like other small local papers
is dependent upon the revenues from advertising to support its free
distribution to homes in the communities that it serves. The current pandemic
has wreaked havoc on the local businesses that normally advertise in the
paper, especially local restaurants and small local stores. The revenue
needed to support the staff needed to put out the local papers are
drastically down. That is the reason that The Spinal Column is currently
seeking donations from its readers. There are certainly many worthy causes vying for any charity
dollars that are available this year. That makes it all the more important to
keep our local channels of communications viable. Yes, there will still be
the internet; however, the internet does not have reporters digging into and
reporting the stories of importance in your local neighborhoods. The internet
does not send people to the local Village Council meetings or the Zoning
Board meeting to report on issues of local importance only. The internet may
report the scores of your local high school games, but it doesn’t do the
post-game interviews or post the pictures of the game that your local
newspaper might. There might be a post on Facebook about an imagined
conspiracy behind a local school board vote, but only the local newspapers
actually have people out interviewing the school board members to report the
facts behind that vote. So on this Giving Tuesday, I’m asking you to take off the
catcher’s mitts and consider throwing something back to your local
newspapers, especially in this area to the Spinal Column. As the New York
Times reported, these are the backbones of democracy in our townships, towns
and villages You can go to our web site, http://www.spinalcolumnonline.com
and use the Donate to the Spinal Colum choice in the banner to make a
safe donation to keep democracy alive in this area. What will you throw back today?===JACK: Being involved in your community allows you to know the REAL needs and the best opportunities for giving back.
FROM SF IN FL: So many opportunities to help. My favorites are St Jude’s
and Gilda’s Club. Also, the Naples Therapeutic Riding Stables, which does
wonders for children with disabilities, esp autism.===JACK: "Giving people" know the needs and how each gift can make a difference.
FROM WILLMAR REV: Never thought if it prior . . . I'm going to
give it some thought and support one of your local 'Mom & Pop' eateries in
town with an extra-large tip! 0;-)===JACK: It's always good to remember Mom & Pop. Those little stores are often the backbone of a real community .===REV: ...a hardworking mother of three whose husband is
incarcerated for rape and robbery, leaving her to fend for herself. Their
marriage went astray when he became addicted to drugs. She just got home from
surgery and will be off work for awhile. Lovely young lady and mother who will
surely be blessed with a generous gift of money to help defray some of her
expenses currently. Thanks
for reminding me of the opportunity. 0;-)===JACK: Your ministry to people in need amazes me. God has certainly placed you in the right place at the right time.
FROM FACEBOOK LIZ: giving of myself starting today, giving tuesday... helping
poor kids complete their online lessons.===JACK: How do you do that? Face to face? or virtual? Who monitors your work, if it's done for school credit?===LIZ: face to face, w/masks... but within inches bc you have to be
able to see their computer screen. it involves helping them complete their online work. some
kids do not have internet at home, so they come here. face to face, w/masks... but within inches bc you have to be
able to see their computer screen. it involves helping them complete their online work. some
kids do not have internet at home, so they come here. had the most adorable 4th grade/9yo black boy. he showed me
common core math... “clustering” is the main concept. clusterf*ck is more like
it. education is failing kids miserably. he is a smart kid who is likely to be
lost to “the system.” we talked about being shy, how you grow out of it, and
trekked together to ask another tutor a question. i told him i was as shy as
he, but now i never shut up, and am afraid of no one. i taught him how to pinch a pencil and make a one continuous
line numeral 8. it was a good morning!===JACK: "Each one teach one; each one reach one."
FROM BLAZING OAKS: LOVE Maya Angelou!!! One of my favorites is Smile
Train, also I help support some AB missionaries:(some in
Africa are related to the missionaries Bill and I met and stayed with
when we toured Democratic Republic of Congo in 1970!) Habitat for Humanity, homeless meals, various local
agencies. And of course whatever causes my grandkids ask me to help with! There are SO many good ones, so one has to
choose wisely !!===JACK: So many needs. This year I chose to give several major gifts instead of many small ones...and I don't feel guilty about it, either.
Jack’s Winning Words 11/30/20
“He was the best friend anybody could ever have. “ (Holmes Hendrickson) H.H. said these words
at the funeral of Jim Nabors, 3 yrs ago. Not Gomer Pyle; not his
baritone singing voice…“He was my friend!” While I’m proud
of Winning Words and that ministry, I want to remembered for more than
WWs. “He was my friend” sounds good to me. Have you any
thoughts as to what is defining you as you live life? ;-) Jack
FROM JJ IN SJ: If being a best friend includes being a trusted
confidant, I'd go for that. ===JACK: Only you can determine who your friends are. Trust is an important component.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: What is defining me in my old age is of course
different than earlier days, but relationships with
family (close) and good friends remain! Many of these"old" friends
and family, are gone now; we who are given many years bear the
losses! But I maintain my interest in reading, keeping current on
gov't.and local issues and and socializing when time and
situations allow! I hope I'll be remembered as a loving and
caring friend and mom, aunt, cousin. etc! I feel blessed to have a good
sense of humor and enthusiasm for what life holds ! ===JACK: Do you remember the old saying, "To have a friend, be a friend?" You've got that one down cold.
FROM GUSTIE: You are my friend Jack. Winning Words is
just an added bonus.===JACK: We go far back, don't we? ===G: Many
years. Over Half a century!!!===JACK: My mirror tells the story.
FROM OUTHOUSE JUDY: I would like to be remembered for living my faith. ===JACK: I'd like to be remembered as a faithful person. Is that the same?
FROM BB IN CHGO: I
recall hearing Jim was a spiritual guy; not sure what faith/denomination but
not sure it matters at this point. Kindness is underrated.===JACK: I think that religious belief was part of his life.
FROM RS IN TEXAS: No worries, Jack.....those of us who know you know that WW
is just a part of who you are, and you will be remembered for ALL of who you
are, what you did and the lives you touched.===JACK: Thanks for the affirmatio
FROM ER IN SKO: Heart strings tugging message. Very powerful.===JACK: I didn't to play a self-serving emotional song....but, thanks.
FROM SHARIN' SHARON: "friend" sounds good to me. Especially it's so Biblical "I don't
call you servant, I call you friend" or some sort of words to that effect
quoted from Jesus. That old hymn
"What a friend we have in Jesus".
think I'll google "friend" later today and find out more about
the word but it certainly might be the best word to describe a treasured
relationship between two folks not married to each other or something. Well,
better get busy here. Thanks for the WW
to reflect upon again this morning. Best
wishes for a pleasant day. ===JACK: I like the hymn, What a Friend, because of the story of its origin.
FROM LS IN MI: I
consider you my friend. A friend means different things to different
people. For me, as I call you a friend……..Your
WW, I trust, your thoughts I appreciate, your commitment to your
community I admire and having met you after you delivered a meaningful
invocation at a dinner I attended I felt inspired to be the best person I can
be each day. I
hope you accept my considering you a friend honoring of the person you are.===JACK: Sometimes we have friends that we don't even know we have.
FROM GOOD DEBT JON: Nice message, my friend.===JACK: We have a one-time face to face meeting, and we are friends. I like that.===GDJ: I
learn quickly. I change slowly.
FROM WILLMAR REV: Picked up this catchy phrase a couple of years
ago now and use it on occasion-- "Pastor to some, friends of many!"
0;-)===JACK I'll have to meditate on that one fopr a while.
FROM FACEBOOK LIZ: she was a friend and a fighter. she spoke for those who
couldn’t or wouldn’t... and she helped people.” i start tutoring poor kids tmrw at broken down
church/community center. their school is closed for a virus w/a less than one
percent fatality rate... but they can still hang w/the other poors bc no one
gives a rat’s ass about that.===JACK: Who are you talking about? Is she a female Jesus?