Sin

A Grain of Sand

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For several nights in a row I had felt a slight pain in my stomach while I was preaching. I didn’t think much of it—chalked it up to be something I ate or perhaps the early symptoms of the flu. It was Saturday night, and I was exhausted from driving just over a thousand miles to a church where I would be privileged to speak all day on Sunday. I went to bed around ten and fell asleep instantly. Ten minutes later I was awakened by a sharp pain in my stomach! “It had to be those chicken McNuggets I had eaten at McDonalds for lunch,” I reasoned. I tossed and turned for the next hour and a half but the pain only grew worse. Barely able to stand, I got dressed and awakened my son-in-law with whom I was staying.

As we made our way to the hospital, my eyes were closed while I winced in pain. I knew we were going faster than the speed limit since I noticed several red lights blur past us. Once inside the emergency room the nurses hooked me to some intravenous medicines and pain killers, and I began to feel some relief. The hospital was busier than usual that night, but finally around four in the morning, a doctor ordered a CAT scan to determine the problem. A few moments later, he informed me that I was passing a kidney stone. I have some good friends that have had this experience, and I had heard that it was like having a baby. My mind began to imagine this giant orange-sized rock that needed to pass through my system. Suddenly, I hurt all over again.

The doctor ordered a heavy dose of morphine and shared with me that the stone was in a good position and should pass soon. I could get dressed, go home, and wait. I said, “Doc, how big is this thing?” “Oh,” he said, “It’s not very impressive…about the size of a grain of sand.” A grain of sand! I was dying over a grain of sand? How could something so small cause so much agony? If this was like having a baby it was a record midget! Read more »

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Broken Bones

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There is nothing quite like a college football game under the lights on a Saturday night. While most college football is played in the afternoon, there are those rare occasions when the schedule shows a night game. The importance of the game seems to elevate with the passing hours of the day. Your pre-game routines are altered as you count down the moments until “game time.”

It was a cool and crisp Saturday night in the Midwest. The lights were on, the fans were filling the stands, the band was playing, and we were ready for some football! From the opening kick-off the game was intense and neither team could get any momentum. With the clock ticking down toward half-time, the opposing team decided to “go for it all.” The quarterback took a seven-step drop while his lineman formed a pocket around him. As an outside linebacker, I read his eyes, saw the play developing, and dropped deep into my zone of coverage anticipating that the tight end would run an out pattern into my zone.

The play developed much as I thought, but instead of throwing to the tight end, the quarterback heaved the ball as far as he could down the sideline toward his wide receiver who was sprinting toward the end zone. Our defensive back was stride for stride with him and the ball came spiraling down near the sideline at about the fifteen yard line. Both players leaped high in the air to try to catch the ball and as they did, made contact with each other. As I sprinted toward the play, I saw the ball being tipped away at the last moment by my teammate and fall harmlessly to the ground. Almost instantaneously, however, I heard a scream! Read more »

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No Sin through Security

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An 8:00 am flight out of Detroit, through Phoenix to Los Angeles seemed simple enough. The airport was only fifteen minutes from the hotel, and after returning my rental car, I was two and half hours early—just like I had planned. The check-in area was unusually busy and airline agents were everywhere barking orders and handing out white sheets of paper. Police with sniff dogs were walking at a brisk pace through the crowds.

Upon finding the e-ticket line at my airline, I secured one of these leaflets. It was obviously printed hurriedly, but the message was clear: No liquids or gels of any kind were being allowed on the airplanes. Toothpaste, eye-drops, perfume, and deodorant were all banned from carry-on luggage.

Yes, it was Thursday, August 10th and earlier that morning a terrorist plot to blow up ten airplanes over the Atlantic through liquid bombs was foiled in Britain. As a result, the nation was under high-alert and new security measures were being implemented. I thought quickly about what was in my carry-on and knew that there was nothing in there that would be a problem. I do have several sermons that have “bombed,” but I was pretty sure I had left those at home! The majority of people in line were very nonchalant about the leaflet being distributed. One lady in front of me asked to see mine and said, “Oh, is this that liquid thing?” After glancing at it, she handed it back as if it had nothing to do with her. Read more »

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Search or Surrender

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Most of you can remember what life was like in America before what has simply come to be called 9/11. And while we have become accustomed to living under a constant threat of terrorism, our lives are different since that infamous day. Nowhere is this more evident than at an airport. Long lines at security check points have become common place. After spending hours packing our suitcase, we now spend another hour unpacking it for intolerant people in TSA uniforms. “Take your lap top out of your bag…remove your shoes and jacket…take everything out of your pockets…have you boarding pass in your hand…etc.” You do meet a lot of new and exciting people as you put yourself back together on the other side of the conveyer belt!

Recently in Los Angeles, as I was approaching my opportunity to place all of my dangerous possessions into a plastic container, a lady in front of me called one of the security people over to where she was standing. As the TSA official approached this lady in her twenties, she reached into her purse and pulled out a metal contraption that had every kind of gadget you could imagine. It was something only a woman would think to have with her! It had a knife, a finger nail file, scissors, a screw driver,and a cork screw. I was thinking, “If our soldiers had had these things in Vietnam, history might have been different!”

The lady handed the “gadget” to the agent willingly and said, “Here, I know this won’t be allowed on the plane, please dispose of it for me.” The man looked at her rather quizzically realizing that this item was probably quite valuable. He kindly asked if she wouldn’t like to “check” it with her luggage. She said, “No, I shouldn’t have brought it —I knew better—just take it, it’s okay.” Read more »

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Last Chance!

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Recently I had the wonderful privilege of holding a revival meeting in the city of Las Vegas. Since it was only four hours from our college campus, I was able to teach class each morning, drive to the meeting in the afternoon, preach, and then return later that night. The interstate heading into Las Vegas is lined with billboards advertising any number of attractions in “Sin City.”

As I would make my journey up I–15, the first billboard I noticed each day was bright yellow with a very frightened woman pictured. Her hair was standing straight up, her eyes as big as saucers, and her mouth opened as if she were screaming. In big black letters was the word “FEAR.” (I think it was advertising some ride at a theme park or casino.) I couldn’t help but think how ironic it is that the world tries to allure us toward something as negative as fear! As a four-year-old boy I recall being afraid of the dark. (In those days we didn’t have night lights, and if you turned on the big light or got out of bed you got a spanking.) So I would just lie there and be afraid. But my mother had placed a glow-in-the-dark plaque on the wall that said: “The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want.” I would look up at that plaque and even as a little boy, I knew that God was with me. While I have outgrown my fear of the dark, there are things in life that can be pretty scary. I am thankful for 2 Timothy 1:7 that says, “For God hath not given us a spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.” Read more »

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