Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Good Health is a Pro-Life Issue


Good health is the will of God for each and every one of God’s children and is the most basic tenets of being truly pro-life. Death, disease, and pain did not exist in the garden of Eden, and Revelation tells of a “new heaven and new earth,” where once again they will not exist.

In the fallen world in which we live, injury and sickness are a fact of life; physical death on this earth will never be overcome. But scripture paints a clear picture that health was God’s intent from the beginning and will be the goal once again in the end. This means that on a personal, national, and global level the physical well-being of all God’s children is close to God’s heart -- and should be close to ours as well.

There is no religious mandate for a specific, God-ordained system of health care or insurance. No amount of biblical exegesis will lead you to a policy conclusion about health care savings accounts, personal versus employer-provided insurance, single-payer public systems, or private insurance plans. Luke might have been a physician, but he never commented on whether or not computerizing medical records should be a national priority.

But these policy questions are still of vital importance. And, as they will be debated in the coming months at the White House, in Congress, and in the press, they should also be discussed in our churches. With an issue like health -- deeply personal but of great public concern -- the faith community has a unique and important role to play: to define and raise the moral issues that lie at the root of the policy debate.

There will be much heat, and maybe even a few fires, over policy specifics. The church has the opportunity to remind our political and national leaders about why these issues are so important -- why they speak to our Christian values.

There are a myriad of special-interest groups who will be promoting their own agendas during this process. The Christain community has the opportunity to step in and advocate for the common good and those who would not otherwise have a voice. We also have a vital role to play in reminding our elected officials that health care is not just about dollars and cents, but is a profound moral issue of life and death. It is fundamentally about whether we are a community that values the life of each person -- poor, rich, or middle-class. The health-care debate is the most basic of pro-life issues...it is the church's duty to be the conscience of our society and to remind our leaders what is really important in the health-care debate.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

More Healthy Kids Praises


From Thursday, June 4th through last Friday, August 7th, a total of 29,561 hot, delicious, and nutritious lunches were served to the children of the greater Granbury area!

A very sincere and heartfelt thanks to all of you and your volunteers who worked to deliver and distrbute the lunches, to Alicia Hernandez and her amazing Child Nutrition Department at Granbury ISD, and to all the rest of you who supported the effort through your prayers.

Many of our churches have committed to the extended summer program and will be preparing their own lunches and delivering them to their respective lunch sites for the next two weeks before school starts. Please pray for these churches and their volunteers as they continue the work of Healthy Kids. God bless.

Here are the final numbers for each of our four Healthy Kids lunch sites for the "official" Healthy Kids Summer Lunch program:
Brazos River Acres (Triple Cross Church) 5,081
City of Granbury City Beach (St. Francis Cabrini) 1,475
Oak Trail Shores Pool ( First Baptist Granbury) 1,759
Oak Trail Shores Ruth's Place (FUMC Granbury) 2,226
Montego Bay (Acton Baptist) 1,268
Sky Harbor (First Baptist Granbury) 983
Whippoorwill Bay (First Baptist Granbury) 846
Arrowhead Shores (FUMC Granbury) 1,416
Rancho Brazos (Acton UMC) 2,311
Sandy Beach (Acton UMC) 746
City of Granbury City Park (Granbury COC) 1,631
Lake Granbury Harbor (Granbury Baptist) 3,843
City of Granbury City Beach (First Presbyterian) 1,039
Indian Harbor Teen Center (Lakeside Baptist) 937
Comanche Harbor (Lakeside Baptist) 1,548
Canyon Creek (Lakeside Baptist) 1,382
Indian Harbor Pool (Lakeside Baptist) 1,070

If you or your church would like to volunteer to work with Healthy Kids this summer, you can contact Micky Shearon at 817-408-5273, or Norma Wright at 817-279-0313, and for further information you can visit the Granbury ISD web page or the Love Granbury home page.

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Redemptional Wisdom

Then Jesus said to his followers, "If any person wants to follow me, he must say 'No' to the things he wants. That person must accept the cross (suffering) that is given to $him, and he must follow me. The person that wants to save his life will lose it. And every person that gives his life for me will save it. It is worth nothing for a person to have the whole world, if he loses his soul. A person could never pay enough to buy back his soul." -- Matthew 16:24-26 (ERV)

Up is down. Down is up. The high cost is cheap. The cheap cost is high. First will be last. Last will be first. The least will be greatest. Jesus preached an upside down Kingdom. In many ways, his values are against "Conventional Wisdom." Instead, Jesus teaches a "Redemptional Wisdom" -- a wisdom that calls us to surrender our lives to the will of God, live for him, and serve others. It is in giving up our lives for something and Someone greater that we truly find life.

There are so many things we can invest our lives in that ultimately become our masters. The harder we work to attain them, the more we find we have lost that vital essence of living that is God's gift to us. The radical example and call of Jesus is to follow him in laying down our lives to honor God and redeem others -- there are no short-cuts.

Monday, August 3, 2009

Tell It Like It Could Be

"Then he touched their eyes and said, ‘According to your faith will it be done to you;' and their sight was restored” (Matthew 9:29–30 NIV).

You can set people up for success or failure by your expectations.

People tend to become what they think we expect them to be. If you communicate to the people around you that you expect them to be lazy, uncreative, and negative, that’s probably how they will respond to you. On the other hand, if you treat people like winners, they’re likely to become winners. In the same way, if we treat people like they are unimportant and don't matter, they will respond in that manner. Psychologists call it “The Pygmalion Effect.”

• The best salesmen expect customers to buy their product.
• The best executives expect employees to have creative ideas.
• The best speakers expect audiences to be interested.
• The best leaders expect people to want to follow.
• The best teachers expect students to learn.

Would you like to bring out the best in those around you? Here's the key: Treat them the way they could be! Don’t just “tell it like it is.” Tell it like it could be.

Jesus said, “According to your faith it will be done to you” (Matthew 9:29 NIV). What are you expecting this week from yourself . . . from others . . . from God?

Adapted from Rick Warren's "Purpose Driven Life" devotion

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Think About It

There are only 2 reasons everyone is not a christian: 1) They do
not know a Christian or... 2) They do.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Sunday

Sunday...assemble...Body of Christ...the Church...Sunday...worship...discipleship...service. This Sunday, as we assemble as the Body of Christ...the Church...may we focus on our corporate worship of the God who loved us so completely that He literally laid down His own life for us. May the realization of that great love move us to a deeper level of discipleship-desiring to know more intimately this God who so passionately and radically loves us. And as we come to know him more intimately, may we be moved to a life of service to others as we realize that God's most intimate desire is to love others through us...so that they will come to know Him. Enjoy your Sunday!

Friday, July 31, 2009

Capitalize What We Prioritize


Have you ever wondered (like me), why the English language capitalizes the word "I" and lower-cases the words "you" "they" "we" "us"? Could it be that we capitalize what we prioritize? Just sayin'. :-)