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Monday, January 3, 2022

Decades and Differences (Reflections and Perspectives)

 Day 1

IN 1972, 50 years ago, I was a boy growing up in Canton, Ohio.  I still have, somewhere, a picture of Mrs. Matthews who was my second grade teacher.  She was the one that convinced that I was smart and had a big future ahead. Life was simple then.  I road my bike up and down Monica Ave, often to Gary’s house after school.  On Mondays, Wednesdays,  and Fridays we watched Ultra Man as he saved the world those days. On Tuesdays and Thursdays we watched as Giant Robot and the forces of Unicorn fought against the Gargoyle Gang and the Emperor Guillotine in the same time slot with similar results.

(As an aside, some 50 years later, I am pleased to say that I own all the episodes of both shows, either on DVD or digitally.)

School was fun and came easily.  Prairie College Elementary still existed in those days, and we often had arguments in class, and at recess, and at lunch,  over who ruled the playground, the boys or the girls. I still remember one day working out a compromise with Lynda Steckman, who represented the girls, after a week of discussion and multiple notes in class, that would allow us to take turns ruling. Everyone agreed it was a great plan.

(Another aside, Congress today could learn a lot from us about how to negotiate things to everyone’s benefit.)

Of course, I also found out in 1972 that I was incredibly stubborn and determined. One day at lunch they served us tomato wedges.  I had never eaten tomato wedges, and they did not appeal to me at all, so I decided I would not eat it.  Mrs Matthews insisted that I would.  I insisted I wouldn’t.  We had a standoff.  She then told me if I didn’t take at least a bite I would not be allowed to return to class.  Talk about motivation to not eat a bite.  They left me in the cafeteria.   She came back and I was still sitting there.  She took the fork, sliced of a piece put it on the fork.  I covered it with my napkin.  I never went back to class that day.  I still have never eaten a bite of a tomato wedge

The summer of 72 I was going to play baseball on our little league team based out of the school. The start of a Hall of Fame baseball career was in the making.  I can still remember how excited I was that I was going to play second base.  I wasn’t the most athletic guy in the world then, and I knew it, but somehow, I had made a team and had a place and it was the beginning of something great.  That dream fell apart when someone (an adult) forgot to turn in our team roster, and we were not admitted to the league.  I think my major league career was totally derailed in that time. 

The fall of that year I started third grade.  Mrs. Phillips was the teacher.   On our street some important things were happening.  We had always ridden old bus number 18 to school, but that bus was being phased out and new bus number 28 was brought in.  I remember the first day on that busy and how new and modern it was, and how thick the seats were compared to the old one.  I shared the bus stop with the three girls from next door and the two from across the street.  For a couple weeks we had serious discussions about who was in charge at the bus stop each morning, and we finally agreed it should be in age order.  I was fourth on the list, so I was prepared to bide my time to be in control, not even aware that a year later we would be moving away.

My parents had multitudes of friends it seemed, and on Fridays and Saturdays would take us in the car and we’d go to one of their friends’ houses, have supper, hang out with their kids,  and then they’d put all us kids to bed around 8 pm.  They would warn us not to get out of bed and to go sleep, and they would always separate us into different rooms.

Then they would go to the other room, or downstairs, depending on the house, get out the card table and play cards for hours, making so much noise we could never sleep.  They’d check on us every now and then to make sure we were where they put us.  Often, we were at the house of mom’s lifetime school friend Deloris.  They had grown up together and gotten into trouble together for years. She and her husband Jim were great friends with mom and dad, and their kids were fun to hang out with.

(Aside number three, Mom and Deloris both passed away a little over a year ago just a few months apart, friends for almost 70 years)

So in 1972, 50 years ago, I learned things about heroes saving us from monsters and heroes, and about  teachers who had lifetime impact. In that year I learned about compromise and working together.  I see now that I learned that being a guy meant I had to respect girls.  I learned that some friends last a lifetime, like mom and Deloris.

One other thing happened in 1972 that changed my life.   Dick Carpenter was Minister of North Industry Christian Church.  As he was speaking one day, the truth of Jesus hit my young heart.  On May 7 of that year I was baptized as a believer.  Over the years I’ve failed to live up to the faith confession more times than just about anyone I know.  I’ve often struggled with doubts, even in years in ministry. Yet, here I am 50 years later, and I am even more sure than I was that day in 1972.  Thing is, God has never faltered in that time. 

Fifty years later, I am beyond grateful for 1972.

Monday, December 25, 2017

There was room...


There was room…
Dr. David A. Baillie
December 24, 2017

If we’ve ever been in a church for a Christmas Eve service we’ve seen it happen at some point in time. You know how churches always try to do these adorable children’s Nativity recreations, and parents and grandparents turn their cell phones into cameras to capture the moment.  There is always this seen where there is a solitary prop on the stage, a door, usually a leftover home depot one with a nice turning nob.  We watch as the neophyte actors portraying Mary and Joseph knock on the door and an equally young boy turns the nob and opens the door with a very stern face, shakes his head, and points the couple in another direction.
We smile and nod as the dejected Joseph leads Mary away because, “there was no room for them in the inn (Luke 2:7).  Our minds quickly interpret this action and these words to mean that even before he was born Jesus was being rejected.  Yet, that interpretation my not be entirely accurate. 
We make that interpretation in light of our own cultural assumptions.  We are used to travelers making their way to places where there are multiple lodging options.  A Marriot is here, a Hilton there, and even Motel 6 is leaving the light on for us.  We have come to see the lack of room as the lack of “a room” and a frustrating thing.
When we look a little closer however, we see something entirely different.  Bethlehem, the “House of Bread”, was a small place.  At the time of Jesus’ birth there were maybe a hundred or two hundred people who resided there.  Surely a multitude of inns was unlikely.  What was more likely was that there was a house or two in town that might provide some space to travelers as they came through.
Joseph was there with Mary for a simple reason, Caesar had issued a decree that everyone should pay taxes, and to pay those taxes each person had to go to their home town.  Joseph was betrothed Mary, which basically means they had said the bows, they had done everything they need to do to be married accept one thing.  After the vows Joseph had to wait a year then go surprise Mary and take her home. He was originally from Bethlehem, or his father was, and was living in this seemingly forsaken disconnected little town of Nazareth, but the decree said he has to go home.
Joseph surprises Mary, quite possibly completely their marriage arrangement in the process, and takes her on a trip, by donkey for at least four days, to Bethlehem.  We don’t know for sure how long the trip took with the pregnant Mary, but when they got there they may have been a little exhausted. 
When they got there this little town of a 100 or so is filled with people coming to register for the tax, and they are all related.  Everyone had to come back home, and it’s like a big family reunion with a bunch of people really not too excited about being taxed, or traveling.  There is no place to move.   No place to lay down.  All the beds and floor space are gone.
Yet somewhere in the midst of all this stress, someone, we do not know who, looks at Joseph and Mary and has mercy for them.  Someone says, wow, what a hard journey.  We have to find space for you, and the inn has nothing, but you Joseph are family, and because of that you, Mary, are also family, so let’s get you away from these people.  We have a stable and place you can stay.  The animals may make some noise, but they won’t be pushing and shoving and they’ll smell better than these travelers.
So Joseph and Mary came to Bethlehem and in the midst of the noise and confusion, the found family, and acceptance, and a place that suited their needs.  We have no idea how long they were there before Jesus was born, but what we know, if we really read what the story says, is that when Jesus came he was not rejected, that would come years later when people heard his message of love. 
For one night, in the midst of the storms of life, there was acceptance, and security and love, and Jesus entered this world safe, accepted, and protected by family, by his father and mother, and by those who knew them.  In the town of Bethlehem there was room and the heavens rejoiced.

Sunday, July 16, 2017

Beauty in the Brokenness

     Every year around this time my daughter and I work through her photos to see what she is going to enter in the Indiana State Fair.  Two second places and a third the last couple years have convinced me of the gift she has with her eye and the lens.
     The picture here is one that has just missed the cut for the 2017 State Fair, but one I love still.  (We'll share this year's entries in a couple weeks).  As I looked at this picture I felt compelled to add the text about beauty in the brokenness.
   I have become more and more convinced as the years have passed that we are all broken in some way.  The struggles of this life chips away at all of us.  The butterfly in this picture is a majestic reminder of that.  As it emerged at an earlier stage of life it was a beautiful and whole creature.  The life unfolded and pieces of the wings were chipped away by reasons we cannot even know.  They may simply have become brittle and broken or they may have broken in some collision or storm or even been taken away by an attack from another creature.   Yes this butterfly has persevered, has continued, and the wounds that we see on it do not detract from its beauty but rather they enhance it.
     As people the struggles of life chip away at us all.  Our wounds may be inflicted on us by circumstance, or by others, and sometimes even by ourselves.  We carry on on our bodies and in our souls the scars of these wounds.  Yet we press on.   We are reminded in Hebrews that there is a cloud of witnesses all around us, people who have run this race that we are running.  We are reminded that we are not alone, but that there is a place in front of us, a person in front of us, on whom we can fix our eyes.  When we do realize this truth we go toward Jesus, eyes fixed on him,  wings spread wide, and he calls us to a place where we can land safely. In our brokenness we find the beauty the he intended for us from the beginning.

Sunday, July 9, 2017

FRESH PAINT

 I am excited about the way my new office has come together.  A few days ago it was a mess, stuff everywhere, the walls sanded down and the blue dust from them all over the room and the empty shelves.  Then it began to change.  A fresh coat of paint was applied.  The shelves were re-arranged.  The mementos were added and the lighting was put in to place, and suddenly the place looks very different than it did for my predecessor.  After reworking the office is not set for me to use in the ways I can and I am excited
 about that.

Still, no matter how good it looks on the outside, if the underlying supporting structure isn't solid, all the fresh paint in the world can hold up for the long term. The outer appearance of this office is only as good as the structure that lies beneath.  If the framing of behind the dry wall is rotted, the walls will not hold up.  If the foundation of the building is not firm everything in the room will eventually come crashing down. We are only as good and strong as our foundation. 

 So as I embark on this new journey in Dayton, Indiana, I am reminded of two things by my new office.  First, I am reminded that now matter how dirty and beaten something is, it can be given a fresh coat of paint and renewed.  Second, I am reminded that no matter how good something looks it is no stronger than its foundation.  If the fresh paint is point on a strong foundation it will draw people to it.  As Christians may our foundation be strong, and may what people see when they look at as be something they would see and say, that's good.





Sunday, April 2, 2017

Amazing....Grace

I am amazed by the talent God has given my son

First Baptist Church
Morristown, Tennessee
April 2, 2017