Boy I needed this today…

Wish good for those who harm you; wish them well and do not curse them. Romans 12:14

It would be hard to find someone worse than Judas. Some say he was a good man with a backfired strategy. I don’t buy that. The Bible says, “Judas… was a thief” (John 12:6). The man was a crook. Somehow he was able to live in the presence of God and experience the miracles of Christ and remain unchanged. In the end he decided he’d rather have money than a friend, so he sold Jesus for thirty pieces of silver… Judas was a scoundral, a cheat, and a bum. How could anyone see him any other way?
I don’t know, but Jesus did. Only inches from the face of his betrayer, Jesus looked at him and said, “Friend, do what you came to do.” (Matt 26:50) What Jesus saw in Judas as worthy of being called a friend, I can’t imagine. But I do know that Jesus doesn’t lie, and in that moment He saw soemthing good in a very bad man…
He can help us do the same with those who hurt us.
-Max Lucado (Just Like Jesus)

I think the other thing is… Jesus sees the good in us too. No matter how wretched we might be, Jesus still loves us and wants to spend eternity with us.

This weeks column: Eyes of a child

Well the first good cold front has hit and I’m a bit excited about it. I’m always a big fan of fall. As far as I’m concerned, it can come twice a year if it likes.
Fall reminds me of being a young and not having a care in the world.
Yes, even I was a child once. Not much shorter, just a lot skinnier.
I remember the piles of leaves in the front yard, the Papa Smurf and Pirate Halloween costumes.
I even vaguely remember a trip to East Texas where I accidentally pulled the hand off a scarecrow and freaked out.
Along with the cooler fall weather, I was also reminded of childhood again last week.
I went and visited Sydney Joyce Skaggs for the first time on Thursday.
She’s right at two-weeks old now.
It’s amazing to think that at some point I was her size. That almost blows me away.
Her parents, B and Sara Skaggs (and her grandparents, aunts and uncles) are all very proud, as you can imagine.
But I began to wonder, “When she’ll lose her innocence?”
I hope she never does, but we all know one day it will come.
I wonder when she’ll join the ranks of sarcasm and cynicism that has overtaken the rest of us.
Where is that certain point where suddenly we lose that childish imagination — where a light bulb doesn’t fascinate us, or a ceiling fan or us draw us into a trance?
Where do we lose the point where we start doubting, “Jesus loves me this I know, for the Bible tells me so?”
When do we stop really believing Jesus is the only answer to all the questions?
And once it’s gone, can we ever go back? Once the world has beat us down and up, and black and blue, can we ever go back to that childlike innocence again?
Right now Sydney doesn’t care who holds her or whose finger she wraps her tiny hands around — but one day she will.
One day she’ll learn, “Don’t talk to strangers.” “Don’t associate with the ‘wrong’ people.”
And her world of innocence will begin to fade away.
She’ll begin to join the rank and file of the rest of us and then the cycle will continue.
I talked about this with my friend Aaron, who has two wonderful children of his own, Amelia and Wilson.
Amelia, age 3 1/2, hasn’t seen me in several months, but when I visited her last, she exclaimed loudly, “Mommy – it’s my friend!”
She doesn’t even remember my name, but she knows I’m her friend.
And Wilson, age 2 1/2, is always more than willing to come give me a hug every time I show up and lets me throw him as high as I can over and over again.
“The great thing about children is you get to see the world through their eyes,” Aaron said. “My kids do things all the time that bring back memories I forgot I had. I’ll never forget the expression on Amelia’s face on her first Christmas when she opened up a present and saw this big bright red teddy bear.
“I knew I had lost the joy in Christmas years ago as a teenager. But when I saw that face, I had it back for the first time since I was a child myself.”
Oh, if only we could all return to that innocence.
Before our first heartache, our first rejection, our first missed-bill, our first car accident, our first experience with death.
Sydney, Amelia and Wilson have their entire lives before them. And as friends of their parents, I’ll do everything in my power to make the world a little better for them.
And hopefully along the way, I’ll get to see the world through their eyes and remember what it was like to be young again.
“For an answer Jesus called over a child, whom he stood in the middle of the room, and said, ‘I’m telling you, once and for all, that unless you return to square one and start over like children, you’re not even going to get a look at the kingdom, let alone get in. Whoever becomes simple and elemental again, like this child, will rank high in God’s kingdom. What’s more, when you receive the childlike on my account, it’s the same as receiving me.
“‘But if you give them a hard time, bullying or taking advantage of their simple trust, you’ll soon wish you hadn’t. You’d be better off dropped in the middle of the lake with a millstone around your neck. Doom to the world for giving these God-believing children a hard time! Hard times are inevitable, but you don’t have to make it worse–and it’s doomsday to you if you do.’” – Matthew 18:2-7

So annoying…

So I woke up this morning at 6:30 because I had to be in Copperas Cove at 8:30. I was at the Journal at 7:30. I waited for a co-worker till 8. He arrived and I headed to Harker Heights so we could ride from Harker Heights to Cove together. When he got here we called Cove and said we were on our way. Before we were 5 min down the rode, Cove called and said, “Stand down. We’re not ready for you.” We turned around, headed back to our office and 5 minutes later we get another call saying the meeting’s been cancelled and Mike’s supposed to go back to Belton.
Does anyone have their head screwed on in this company?

Some things to make the world better

I’ve been thinking lately of some things that I know would make the world better… maybe someone can help me on these.

A work around pre-pay gas pumps – 99.9% of the time I use my debit card to pay for my gas. Sometimes I want a certain amount, other times I want to pre-pay. But along with gas I occasionally like to go inside and get a drink or a snack. But I don’t want to have to pay at the pump and then walk in and do another transaction. I’ve tried going in, getting my goodies and paying for it all together, but some stations won’t let me do that. I have to go pay for the gas, then come back in and do another transaction. What’s really annoying is when I have cash, I want a fill-up and I have to pre-pay. I have to walk in, pay my cash, then go pump – and then go back inside to collect my change. There’s got to be an easier way. It would be nice if someone could set up a store database at the pump. You slide your card, tell the pump how much gas you want (if necessary) then select your items from an on screen menu. When you finish pumping your gas, you simply walk to the counter inside and it’s all ready for you. Now that would be service.

A way to find plants visually online – I read someone else talking about this for something he was looking for. What if I could just type in, “It looks like a giant feather duster” and get the million matches for things that look like a giant feather duster. There are several times I want to find something and I have no clue what it’s called, but I know what it looks like and can’t find it because there’s no good visual search.

Well… that’s about all I have now. Oh, except maybe an alarm that actually wakes me up and gets me out of bed. I think I’m sleeping too soundly now. Before I had trouble waking up throughout the night, and now I sleep so soundly that my alarm takes forever to actually wake me up.

What things would you make to make the world a better place?

UMHB loses against HPU

UMHB (3-0) loses with less than 2 minutes remaining.
Howard Payne (1-3) marched 93 yards with 1:30 remaining and did a major upset against UMHB 24-20. Wow. Our offense only scored one touchdown the whole game.
Two more Top 25 teams were upset earlier this afternoon, as Kenyon, which had lost eight in a row to Wooster, the last six by an average of 42.5 points, got 176 rushing yards and two touchdowns from Alby Coombs in upsetting the No. 24 Scots 24-21. Gettysburg continued McDaniel’s woes, edging the No. 19 Green Terror 20-19.
Well… let’s wait. UMHB is getting another play after the kick return. A penalty against HPU on the final kick off.
A couple latterals and that’s it.
UMHB was ranked 2 and 3 before the game and now they’ve been beaten by an unranked team. It will likely knock UMHB out of the top 10.
Because UMHB passed up the game against Lousianna College this might be a big upset when playoff picks are being chosen. They’ll be half-a-game off on win percentages.
It will be interesting to see how the rest of the season plays out.

But UT won. Romance Taylor (from Belton) scored the first passing TD by Texas against OU since 1999.