Sunday, January 20, 2013

2012-13 New Year’s Letter


Family and Friends;

Greetings!  We hope you’ve had a wonderful Christmas and holiday season.  2012 was an eventful  year to say the least.  It’s been a challenge for us to even get this letter out!  Yet we wanted to try to sum up the way each of us experienced these past 12 months and, in some way, to say thank you to all who have been a part of it with us – through your prayers, help, encouragement, and thoughts.  We’ve appreciated each one of you through both the dark times and the highlights.  Thank you all!

                        TIM’S CORNER
The Miller School of Chivalry
As I write this (Jan 2nd), I recall a year ago at this time when Daniel was suffering daily, horrible head and body aches, frequent fevers, and I was in near panic searching for any possible forms of treatment - traditional, chiropractic, holistic, or faith healing for some kind of answers for  Daniel.  The events that followed in the next few days changed our lives forever.

Page Training
For the past couple years, I’d been designing a program to be more “intentional” in my father-son time with Daniel.  It would focus on activities ranging from Bible study, to learning crafts & trades, to P.E., to developing character virtues and manners using the theme of “chivalry” to progress through ranks from “Page” to “Squire”  to “Knight”.  On Jan 1st, 2012 we inducted Daniel into the “Miller School of Knighthood and Chivalry” after taking his oath and signing his “Page’s Pledge”.  He received an honorary dagger and a “Certificate of Induction”.  (See picture links at the end)

An Unexpected Change in Character Development Curriculum:
However, we had no sooner gotten started when my curriculum took an unexpected detour.  On 1/5, we had a doctor's appt. at Riley hospital.  I’d been extremely frustrated with previous doctors’ inaction and expressed to her the seriousness of Daniel’s symptoms.  She listened to me and we began with some blood tests   The appointment ended and I went back to work.  A few hours later, she left a message telling me that she was concerned about the test results and had scheduled an appointment the next morning for a bone marrow biopsy.  I was pleased that she was being “proactive” but I’m glad I didn’t understand the implications of her ordering that test or I wouldn’t have gotten any sleep. 

The next morning, we were back at Riley for a bone marrow test.  The doctors met with us in the recovery room and broke the news ... Daniel had Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (A.L.L. for short) – cancer of the bone marrow.  It was similar to Andrea’s C.M.L. diagnosis from a couple of years prior, but the treatment would be very different – full blown chemotherapy.  He was immediately admitted to the hospital and surgery was planned for the following morning to install a “port” (an under-the-skin pin cushion) in his chest through which they would administer the hundreds of injections and blood draws over the coming months along with the first spinal tap. 

We cried – all of us.  Our world stopped, spun backward awhile, and then flipped upside down.  Breathing became a labor-intensive process.  We phoned, texted, and emailed family and friends.  And I wrote my first blog entry on http://timmillersblog.blogspot.com titled “Jan 6, 2012 - A Date of Infamy”.  The doctors told us how he would be “immune compromised” for the next 3 years or more and we began to learn the lingo, process, and what our lives were going to look like for a long time.  We learned how to monitor his health, about new diets and drug restrictions, and how to protect him from infections … especially molds & fungi.  I instantly thought about the lousy old carpets in our house that we hadn’t yet been able to afford to replace.  More than once, I’d discovered mold hiding under it during repairs.  So I decided I would rip them out now and just put sealer on the underlayment until we could replace the actual flooring later when we had the time and money.  I wouldn’t allow Daniel into the house until everything was at least sealed.  But I knew tearing out all that carpet, cleaning, and sealing was going to be a huge job – especially while trying to keep up at work and spending huge amounts of time at the hospital.

God Comes Through:
Daniel at Riley Hospital
God showed up early in all of this though.  Of course, He’d never really left!  We were immediately surrounded by family, friends, and a constantly growing army of people willing to help.  My folks volunteered to let us stay at their place until I deemed the house safe enough for Daniel.  We were admitted to the hospital on Fri 1/6.  On Sunday morning (1/8), I made a brief Facebook petition for volunteers that afternoon to help me start pulling up carpet – I would be home by about 2:30.  Most people I knew were at church and unlikely to see the post until much later.  I headed home about 2p.  By the time I got there, my driveway and entire front yard was filled with cars.  I never counted, but figure about 20-30 people showed up - one even drove up from Kentucky to help!  When I walked in, the job was nearly done.  They boxed up our Christmas decorations, moved the furniture from 3 rooms, and tore up the carpet, padding, and tack strips from every room.  Already home, Andrea was overwhelmed with trying to direct the work, or answer many of the questions.  I left instructions, and scrambled to the store to pick up enough sealer to do the whole 1st floor.  Andrea ordered pizzas, and then headed back to the hospital to be with Daniel. By the time I returned almost everyone was gone and all the carpet, pad, and tack strips were loaded into my trailer.  “Awesome” doesn’t cover it.  A job I expected to take at weeks was done in a couple hours.  It was only the first of MANY blessings God would be sending our way.

With the help of other great friends over the next 2 weeks, I was able to purchase and install laminate flooring in most of the first floor (all except the hallway & entry which will require some repair first).  I blocked off the Family room from the dogs, bought a special air purifier, and made it Daniel’s room for the foreseeable future.  With the new easy-to-clean laminate flooring, no stairs, and immediate access to a bathroom and small entertainment center, it was a much better choice for him than his bedroom.  This set up remained largely unchanged throughout 2012.

A Very Long Year:
Daniel & Papaw after the State Fair
The year has consisted mostly of innumerable trips to Riley Hospital, mid-night ER visits with fevers, many scheduled & unscheduled hospital admissions, learning to give chemo drugs at home, and my working some horrendous hours at work trying to make up for all the time at the hospital.  But through what can only be described as another miracle of God’s timing and providence, my employer has been wonderful.  Not only has the work been mostly enjoyable, but the insurance is considerably better than any of my previous employers, and my boss and team have been incredibly accommodating with my work schedule.  It’s meant precious little time at home with the family in the evenings and that’s been hard on everyone.  Daniel complains he never sees me anymore even though we’ve probably actually spent more time together this year than several previous years – it’s just all been in hospital rooms on fold-out chairs, often with him asleep.  My clearest memories of this past year revolve around endless hours of research; long sleepless nights of alarms, and nurses, and urinals, back massages, endless McDonalds food, uncountable Facebook/CaringBridge/blog entries; and prayer … lots and lots and lots of PRAYER.  

Some FUN Along the Way:
Daniel's 1st Small Plane Flight
There were of course MANY other things happening this year too –there were also good times & fun activities.  In Feb and March, I taught a class in Genesis at a local Bible college and currently teaching a class in Systematic Theology in the evenings.  In March a number of our musician friends put on a benefit concert for Daniel to raise awareness and money to help with his medical bills.  We were blown away at the response and the generosity of those who performed (some coming from other states!) and those who attended.  In May, Rolls-Royce sponsored several cancer patients at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway for Carburetion Day. It was Daniel’s first time to the Track!  He was given a huge duffle bag filled with gifts, and visits from the drivers and the Mayor.  In June, Daniel & I visited the Air Force Museum in Dayton.  In July a friend from work, and fellow pilot, flew us to Greensburg for dinner – it was Daniel’s first flight in a small plane (since Daniel’s own dad hasn’t been flying since he was born!)  In Sept, I was invited back to Lawrence United Methodist Church, for their 175th anniv. (I had been a Youth Pastor and on several committees & boards there for many years).  In Oct, we attended two Renaissance Faires – and in Nov, Andrea put together a wonderful surprise birthday party for my 50th.  She also collected nearly 50 personal notes from friends and family and put them into a binder for me.  It’s one of my most prized-possessions.

Joey:
Daniel & Joey Keller at Joey's 9th bday pty
In July, we attended the 9th birthday party of a very dear friend of ours named Joey Keller.  Daniel and Joey had met in our homeschool co-op.  Joey had been battling a very serious form of brain cancer for the past couple of years and so they became much closer when Daniel was also diagnosed with cancer.  Over the past year, our paths crossed frequently with the Kellers and we often exchanged experiences and MANY prayers for one another.  We got to know one another much better.  Joey became markedly worse in October and we began praying very often for them as a family.  I felt led to set up some on-line prayer vigils to schedule people to pray around-the-clock for the Kellers during some of the worst times.  Joey recovered briefly and our hopes soared. But after a couple of weeks his cancer returned and his condition deteriorated rapidly.  He went home to be with the Lord on 11/18 and we were all absolutely devastated.  Having fought constantly against this very nightmare ourselves for the past 11 months only to watch it happen to our friends Nick and Elizabeth cannot be expressed in words.  We continue to solicit your prayers for them and Joey’s grandparents as well.

Thank You!
There are many more people to whom we owe a debt of gratitude than I could ever write thank you notes to this year, but again here I will express my deepest and most sincere gratitude to the many who have come alongside us this year.  From helping with the house, to bringing food, to financial gifts, to going shopping with or for us, to the fathomless amounts of prayer which has gone up on our behalf … thank you!  And may the Lord richly bless you as only He can in the coming year.

ANDREA’S CORNER
As you have seen, this year has been one of stretching, growing, crying, and above all else, trusting in the Lord.  Never in a million years would I have thought our son would get Leukemia also.  Tim and I have both frequently said that if we could trade places with Daniel we would in a heart-beat!  But, for whatever reason, this is the road we are on.  

Our new “normal” has been changed for years yet to come.  I never expected to spend Valentine’s Day, Easter, and Mother’s Day at Riley hospital with either clinic appointments, or admissions due to fevers.  Nurses, needles, hospital lingo, etc. have all become common-place for us now.  I still remember walking through a grocery store once, looking at the “healthy” kids, and wanting to scream inside, “it’s not fair!”  But, if I am honest with myself, I have to admit I have seen our family draw closer, and grow more this year than ever before.  The outpouring of love and help from our brothers and sisters in Christ has been overwhelming!  All the meals, help with cleaning, running of errands, financial help, and especially the prayers have been our life-line this past year.  The growth and maturity I have seen in our son as he gone down this path has been humbling, and makes this momma’s heart swell!  

I’ve struggled with my own health issues during all this too.  I started seeing a new holistic Dr. and he has me taking a fistful of vitamins now daily.  Some have helped, but I struggle daily with low energy levels, body aches and pains, and stomach issues.  A lot of it may be side-effects of the oral chemo drug I take, and will be on the rest of my life. This year I became a distributor for Young Living Essential Oils, and have found some to be helpful at helping me keep from catching bugs so easily.  I had a sleep study this spring and was also diagnosed with Fibromyalgia, and Sleep Apnea.  I still haven’t done much to address these issues.  This spring I developed a bad case of Planter Fascitis in my left heel, and am seeing a podiatrist.  Walking is very painful most of the time now.  

But despite of all the health issues, we’ve managed to have some fun this year!  We had play days, trips to the park, and pool days this summer.  In the Spring my cousin Ed from Tampa was here a couple of times on business, and one of them both he and my cousin Kammie and her family from Evansville were over for dinner.  I was so happy to get to spend time with them!  We finally made it to the State Fair with the Grandparents and cousins and Daniel had a ball. Unfortunately shortly afterward Daniel got the flu (probably at the fair) and ended up back in the hospital for several days.  We spent Labor Day weekend at Turkey Run Inn while friends from church camped.  We were giving Daniel his last at-home IV chemo treatments in the hotel!  In spite of the heat and rain we had a great time.  Daniel also had fun dressing up for Halloween this year as a character from one of his video games.  He looked great, and had fun trick-or-treating with our dear friends the Loobies.  We also got in our annual trip to the pumpkin patch, and Daniel and I went to the Headless Horseman hayride at Conner Prairie for the first time. We had hoped to spend Thanksgiving in Iowa, but with the sad news of the passing of our dear friend Joey Keller, attending his Celebration service the day after Thanksgiving had to be our priority.  We still enjoyed a delicious meal with Tim’s family and extended cousins at a local restaurant.  In mid-December we celebrated our 23rd anniversary in Nashville, IN and enjoyed walking around town, touring Oliver Winery, and seeing “The Hobbit.”  Daniel and I both had pretty bad colds, but we still had a great Christmas with the family.  

We continue to homeschool Daniel, and that has been a huge blessing with our schedule now.  Daniel would have missed so much time if he were in public schools, but finished 4th grade just a couple weeks past our normal time. So far 5th grade hasn’t been far behind normal, and Daniel is doing well with his studies.  Having had to miss most of the second semester of co-op and AWANA 2nd semester last year, it’s been nice to be involved again this school year.  He’s missed some meetings due to low blood counts, and the bugs going around, but has been able to participate a little more recently.  We got rid of our chickens and miss the fresh eggs, but couldn’t keep up with their care with all going on this past year.  We still have our two dogs, Diezel and Samson, who have lovingly been by our sides through thick and thin.  This year has been a stretch for them as well!  We briefly had a pet garter snake, but released her this fall back to the woods.  Our newest family member is Daniel’s Leopard Gecko named Draco. We’re hoping and praying that 2013 will be a “healthier” year for the Miller family, and that we will continue to grow ever closer to the Lord and to each other as we continue this journey together.

DANIEL’S CORNER
This past year has been the most intense year of my life.  The worst things were being diagnosed with A.L.L., which was the worst of all, and all that came with it – getting the port installed, all the shots, spinals, chemo drugs, bone marrow tests, being admitted to the hospital so many times, not being able to have play days (because of low counts or having to stay away from others who might be sick), and not being able to eat many of the foods or places I like to eat, and losing my hair.  Although they were very hard, tough, intense, and stressful, I’ve made it through, I’m OK, and now that I’m in the Maintenance phase, things should go smoothly.  

Christmas at Tim's folks'
Other than all the bad things, I’ve had a fairly good year.  I’ve gotten many presents and surprises, such as my Nintendo DSi (which Dad would have NEVER let me have if it wasn’t for Riley), my “small” Make-A-Wish Foundation gift (a giant LEGO Star Wars ship with an eight-legged tank), making several new friends in the cancer ward at Riley, getting to know Joey Keller better, and the nurses – some of whom I’d almost consider to be close friends now, and many new LEGO sets.  We had a great Christmas this year, and I can hardly believe I’m 11 years old now.  I actually feel older this year – taller, stronger, and more mature.  I always remember looking up to others who were 11 years old, and now I’m 11 and I want to be the kind of person I most appreciated in older boys when I was young.  I remember certain friends who never left me out or walked away from me when I was littler than them and I remember how that made me feel. 

This year, I’ve also learned a lot spiritually.  I’ve learned a lot about spiritual warfare, and my dad taught me how to visualize Jesus sitting next to me and I use that a lot when I’m fighting depression or feeling anxious, or sometimes just to have Him with me.  I look forward to my hair coming back in to be as long as it was before.  I hope everyone else had a good year last year and will have a great year in 2013.  I’d like to say a big thank you to everyone for all the great presents, cards, games, visits, and those who looked after me (especially the one who brought cookies!)   Thank You!

Wishing you all the very best in 2013,

Tim, Andrea, Daniel,
(Samson, Diezel, and Draco)


To see our "Best of 2012" Photo Album, please visit one of the following links:

Facebook: (small size. No account needed)

Picasaweb:(full size. No account needed)


Other Miller Links: 
 
Daniel’s Caring Bridge site here:
 
Tim’s Facebook page:
 
Andrea’s Facebook page:
 

Saturday, January 5, 2013

Remembering A Year Ago Today

It's hard to believe.  It seems at once like it was only a month ago and also like 10 years ago.  But exactly one year ago on this day (the 5th as I write this), Daniel went in for a scheduled doctor visit to a specialist at Riley Hospital for Children.  He'd been having a lot of awful symptoms for a month or more and I had had it with waiting around on doctors to take us seriously.  I let this doctor have an ear full of my frustration and she patiently listened to me and, thankfully, took me seriously.  She ordered an immediate blood test and called me back within a few hours after I'd returned to work.  She said she'd taken the liberty of scheduling another appointment for us the following morning for a bone marrow biopsy.  I was happy she was being so proactive.  Little did I know what she suspected.

The next day, Friday 1/6/2012, the biopsy test came back positive for leukemia and our entire world stopped cold.  My first blog entry here tells the story, titled, "Jan 6, 2012 - A Date of Infamy".  What a year it's been.  We're still trying to put together our "Christmas Letter".  I guess it's a "New Year's Letter" now, but it'll be out soon I promise.  (I'll post it here as well).

Tonight as I tucked Daniel into bed, I'm still checking his temperature, asking how he feels, and find myself fighting the urge to panic at every cough, or ache,  or decision to go to bed early.  I do my best never to show TOO much concern and to temper it with a few "manly" father-to-son responses such as: "Ahh - suck it up boy", or "Walk it off - you'll be fine".  But if I'm candid with myself (and you: my dear blog readers), the truth is it's a constant battle with anxiety and fear.  Watching the Kellers go through the hell they endured has certainly had an enormous effect on me as well.

This year has been filled with MANY lessons - most of which I'm probably not even aware of.  But if I were to name the single, greatest, most persistent challenge that's plagued me (and I presume Andrea as well, but I'll only speak for myself here) it's been the control of FEAR. 

Fear is the enemy.  Fear is a sin.  Fear is our mind saying to God, "I don't trust You with the future. Deep down I think You either can't or won't do what's best for me".  The Bible has a great deal to say about Fear.  It is insidious, and must be stopped at its very onset, for the longer it continues, the tighter its hold becomes on your soul ... I know.  When the Word instructs us to "take every thought captive unto the obedience of Christ" (2 Cor 10:5) it's providing us with very specific and practical instructions for dealing with such thoughts as Fear and Anxiety that can ensnare us.  I'm not here to tell you I've become good at this.  I haven't.  But I'm better than I was a year ago today and I thank God for these lessons along the way. 

That following day, Jan 6th, was easily one of the worst days of my life.  I'm not sure it tops the list, but it's in the top 3 for sure!  Yet God was with us every step of the way and He remains with us today.  As we settle in to sleep tonight, our lives are no more or less secure than they have been on any other day.  Our sense of "security" and "normalcy" is a complete illusion except insofar as it is based in the faith that God controls all things.  Some of what God brings to us we enjoy, some we do not, but we can be sure ... we MUST be sure ... "that ALL things work together for good" (Rom 8:28) when we give our lives to Him.  This year has seemed like one gigantic test of whether we truly believe that to be true.  Some days have been better than others to be sure.  But we do know, that only when we rest in Him is there any real and lasting peace, joy, comfort, rest, or security. Gradually, I'm learning to do this.  Learning to trust God in ALL things - even with the life of my only son - is among the most challenging tasks I've ever been given, yet it is also clearly among the most important and eternally significant lessons any of us can learn ... ever.

We will be "celebrating" the completion of the first and, we pray, the hardest year of Daniel's chemotherapy on Monday.  It's been a difficult road, but we've been amazingly, astoundingly blessed over and over and over by God's grace, His providence, His comfort, and His love directly to us as well as through so many of His wonderful people who have gathered around us.  We thank you all and we thank God for all He has done, and all He continues to do.

Grace and peace to all;

- Tim -



Saturday, December 22, 2012

Our Desperate Need for Christmas

America's current state strikingly illustrates our desperate need for Christmas.  Let it not be lost on us this season, as the very tragedies we are reeling from as a nation are precisely the reason why there is a Christmas.  For if we continue to fail to make that connection, we are lost ... as a nation, and as individuals.  The stakes could not be higher.

As my recent Facebook posts illustrate, I am NOT a fan of gun control.  I believe very strongly that we have enough gun control laws already ... far too many actually.  What is needed is not more controls (which have no effect upon criminals anyway), but rather internal controls ... aka "SELF-control" ... and self-control will never come through governments or laws.  Self-control only comes through good parenting and the development of sound inward convictions - both of which must be based on a solid moral foundation and upon the principle of personal accountability for one's actions. 

Ultimately, this means the Judgment of God ... in a word: HELL.  Without understanding that there exists a Holy, Perfect, All-knowing, and All-powerful Judge and that there are eternal consequences to our behavior ... sin ... there will never be any basis or motivation for personal responsibility (not to mention a defendable basis for our legal system) or self-control. 

Despite what our children are being taught today, our nation was in fact conceived, founded, built, and administered upon the moral code of God found in the Judeo-Christian Scriptures.  It is the basis for our Declaration of Independence, our Constitution, our Legal System, and even the very "triune" structure of our government.  For nearly 200 years, America was run in such a way as to recognize and magnify God as our Creator, Judge, and Provider.  We taught our children the moral laws of God in public schools (and spanked them when they misbehaved!); we held our citizens accountable to them through our legal system; and our churches openly and clearly taught the Biblical foundations of accountability and consequence both in this life and the next for our choices - as individuals and as a nation.  This is not to say that people weren't allowed to practice the religion of their choice, they have always been. But our laws and culture are based on the Bible. Period.  The practice of other religions has always been free only insofar as it has not contradicted the laws of America - which are based on the Law of God.

Today however, in a staggeringly rapid and accelerating fall from all that once made us great, our government, schools, and even churches have walked, nay RUN, away from even acknowledging, much less teaching these values and principles.  We have eradicated them from our schools, stricken them from our laws, reinterpreted our own Constitution, and banned the public display of even the symbols of these great principles and truths.

Yet, God's laws have not changed, for they are based on His nature and character which is immutable and timeless.

Sin is still sin.

Judgment is still Judgement.

Hell is still Hell.

And it awaits all those who do not surrender their lives to God's will and control as it always has.

I personally harbor no further hope that our government is capable of saving our nation from its ongoing decay and coming destruction.  Sorry if that sounds overly pessimistic. I would call it "realistic".  Our lawmakers are indeed a primary source of this decay and daily demonstrate that they have no grasp of the root problem, thus no solution will be forthcoming from that quarter.  If our nation has any hope of even slowing its headlong rush into oblivion (much less recovery), it lies not in the election process (recent events have demonstrated this beyond argument), but in calling its people back to God ... to a knowledge of sin and our personal (and national) responsibility and accountability for it, and thus need for a Savior/Messiah both personally and nationally - which can be filled by Jesus Christ Who was sent specifically and uniquely for the purpose of saving us from the consequence of sin.

As we reel from recent and ongoing tragedies that have rocked our nation, we are brought face-to-face with the very problem I speak of - the black, ugly, evil of sin that pervades the human soul.  The Evolutionists, Humanists, and Post-Modernists try their best to deny its existence teaching than Man is inherently good or at least neutral, and that evil acts such as school shootings must be the result of some kind of external corrupting influences.  They therefore look to external means to try to control them - gun control for example.  But attempting to control the inward evil of sin in a heart by external means is like the proverbial act of gold-plating a turd (please forgive the vernacular, but the analogy is appropriate).  For God's Word describes the condition of the human heart apart from Him in this way:

"Then the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually." -- Genesis 6:5

"All we like sheep have gone astray; We have turned, every one, to his own way; And the LORD has laid on Him the iniquity of us all." -- Isaiah 53:6

"But we are all like an unclean thing, And all our righteousnesses are like filthy rags; We all fade as a leaf, And our iniquities, like the wind, Have taken us away." -- Isaiah 64:6 

"... For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God" -- Romans 3:23  

"So then, those who are in the flesh cannot please God." -- Romans 8:8  

"...Without Me you can do nothing." -- John 15:5  

Outward controls will never change the inward sin nature from which the evil originates.  Indeed, God Himself demonstrates that His own outward Law can never fix the problem of sin.

"For when we were in the flesh, the sinful passions which were aroused by the law were at work in our members to bear fruit to death." -- Romans 7:5  

"The sting of death is sin, and the strength of sin is the law." --  1 Corinthians 15:56  

 For the purpose of even God's Law was never to "fix" men's hearts, but rather to spotlight sin and hold them accountable for it.

"For until the law sin was in the world, but sin is not imputed when there is no law." -- Romans 5:13  

No, the solution to the problem of sin is not more laws - either from God of from Men - but rather a new heart, and inward change of nature which can only be wrought by God Himself.
 
"For what the law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh, God did by sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, on account of sin: He condemned sin in the flesh," -- Romans 8:3  

THIS is reason that God sent His Son into the world - that the penalty for our own sin could be paid for by Someone other than ourselves

"For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord." -- Romans 6:23 

"For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.  For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved.  He who believes in Him is not condemned; but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.  And this is the condemnation, that the light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. " -- 
John 3:16-19

Without the life-changing power of God available through Jesus Christ, we would all not only be accountable for our sin but powerless to change ourselves or our destinies.  But in His love God gave us Christmas.  Of course I mean the advent of Jesus Christ (whatever time of year it was :) as the only true solution to the problem of sin and evil.  By extension then, it becomes also the only true solution to the problems facing our nation as well.

This Christmas season, as we wrestle with the long list of tragic events and difficulties we face looking forward, let us not only remember and reflect on God's "indescribable gift" (2 Cor 9:15), but let us also commit to doing all we can - as individuals, as families, and as citizens - of proclaiming the only True Solution to our problems. Teach your children and proclaim to those you know that America's future lies not gun control, or a balanced budget, or immigration reform or smaller government.  It lies where it always has - in Jesus Christ, and in making Him and His principles and His solution for Mankind's evil the center of our personal actions as well as those of our nation.

We must of course continue to do all we can as citizens to slow the tide of this decay through the legal and democratic means afforded us. We would be remiss to not.  But we must also recognize that these can only slow the tide we face until we restore our Nation to Godliness and her people to recognition of and accountability for sin.  When we have done that, we will once again rejoice to sing these forgotten verses of "America The Beautiful".

O beautiful for pilgrim feet,
Whose stern impassion'd stress
A thoroughfare for freedom beat
Across the wilderness!
America! America! God mend thine ev'ry flaw,
Confirm thy soul in self-control,
Thy liberty in law!

O beautiful for heroes proved In liberating strife,
Who more than self their country loved,
And mercy more than life!
America! America! May God thy gold refine
Till all success be nobleness,
And ev'ry gain divine!

To each and all, a very merry and blessed Christmas season in all the full meaning thereof,

- Tim -

I leave you with the words of the 3rd and 4th verses of "It Came Upon A Midnight Clear"


Yet with te woes of sin and strife
The world hath suffered long;
Beneath the angel-strain have rolled
Two thousand years of wrong;
And man, at war with man, hears not
The love song which they bring:
O hush the noise, ye men of strife,
And hear the angels sing.


For lo! the days are hastening on,
By prophet bards foretold,
When, with the ever-circling years,
Shall come the Age of Gold;
When peace shall over all the earth
Its ancient splendors fling,
And all the world give back the song
Which now the angels sing.

Thursday, December 20, 2012

On The End of the World ... "Apocalypse"? Not So Much

This post is somewhat of a rant, I'll confess up front.  I've actually been enjoying, in a somewhat perverse way, all the silliness about the end of the world tomorrow (12/21/12).  Most people that I know don't seem to be taking it seriously, but I know there are many who are.  And I suspect that a lot more are actually harboring some secret level of "concern" about it but not letting on.

Whatever. 

When much of the hubub started several months ago, I did about 10 minutes worth of digging and found enough evidence to recognize that the entire thing was based on a misrepresentation of the facts, even if you DID take the Mayan calendars & beliefs seriously. The Mayan's calendar system was, similar to most parts of ours in that it was based on "cycles" rather than "lines".  By that I'm referring to the portions of our calendar that repeats itself - seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months - they all run in cycles which repeat.  There are 60 seconds in a minute and then it starts over.  There are 24hours in a day, 7 days in a week, etc. etc.  To some extent, we even do this with years as we count numbers of centuries or millennia from a given point.  However, in general, our years run in a straight line though ... they'll just keep counting up until ... well until something really big happens. 

The Mayans did this too, but where are largest, named, repeating cycles are probably months, they included bigger cycles called "baktun".  Each baktun was 144,000 days in length (400 years with each year being 360 days in length - yes the Mayans used 360 day years as did most ancient cultures prior to a particular date - but that's another issue. ;-)  The "calendar" everyone is talking about "rolls over" or restarts at the end of each baktun in the same way our months start over at the conclusion of each yearly cycle.  Once you get to the end of December, we start back at January and increment the year.  The baktun cycle has started over 11 times since it was started and we are currently in the 12th baktun. The last time it rolled over (from the 11th baktun to the 12th) in the year A.D. 1618.  It's probably relevant to note that the world didn't end in 1618 ... as far as we know.

Tomorrow, 12/21/12, the same thing happens and the calendar will roll over from the 12th to the 13th baktun and start the counting over again.  That's it.  Nothing else.  About the same amount of excitement as watching the car odometer roll over from 99,999 to 100,000 miles.  Cool to watch, but then you move on.

I find it fascinating that people get so hung up about these kinds of "roll-overs" and believing that they're bringing the end of the world (note I'm NOT using the word "apocalypse" - I'll come back to that in a moment.  When the first millennium rolled over (the year 999 to 1000 back in medieval times, people went berserk too.  We saw some of the same thing at the end of 1999 for the end of the 2nd millennium.  There's probably much to be learned from the very fact that people seem to have a built-in expectation for the world to end at some point ... and they are afraid of it.  All kinds of lessons there, but that's for another post.

Now for my rant.  Whether the context is Nostradamus, or zombies, or Mayans, or any other non-Biblical reference to some end-of-the-world event, the use of the word "apocalypse" is wildly inappropriate.  When I hear it used in these contexts, it produces a strange mixture of annoyance and amusement.  The latter is because I'm pretty sure that if the people using it this way had any idea what it actually meant, they'd run away screaming hysterically, "NO! NO! THAT'S NOT WHAT I MEANT!!!"  And that makes me smile. :-)

The word "apocalypse" is a transliterated Greek word (meaning it's still pretty much the original Greek word, just "Englishized" in the way it's spelled) that literally means "unveiling" in the way an artist might unveil a newly finished statue or painting.  "Revealing" is a close synonym.  It is the first word of the first verse of the Biblical book of Revelation and, obviously, where the book gets its title.  However, what most people don't know (because they're only knowledge of the contents of the book comes from Hollywood) is that the "revelation" that is being referred to is NOT knowledge about how the world ends.  In fact, contrary to popular misconception, the world does not end in the book ... EVER!  It does go through some pretty rough events for a few years, but this is immediately followed by 1000 years of the greatest peace and harmony the Earth has seen since its creation.  Later, it is replaced by a new Earth ... in fact a whole new Universe, but it continues onward ... forever.

So what IS revealed in the book of Revelation?  Jesus Christ!  His true nature, mission, and glory are revealed - first to Him (by the Father), then to His disciples (us) through the writing and publication of the book.  The first line of the book is, "The Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave Him to show His servants--things which must shortly take place."  Although these events are referred to as "the End Times", they do not relate to the end of the world itself, but only the end of the reign of Men upon this planet - the "End of the Age" is a more appropriate understanding, or the end of God's tolerance and patience with Mankind's (and Satan's) rebellion.

So every time the word "apocalypse" is used in some relation to the end-of-the-world (zombies, Mayans, Mad Max, etc.) I have to chuckle because they are inadvertently referencing the "Revelation (apocalypse) of Jesus Christ" and the very idea that God's patience with our foolishness WILL run out.  There will indeed be a resurrection of the dead, but we can be sure that it has nothing to do with zombies! 

"Armageddon" is another one, but I'll not go into details here except to say that it is a Hebrew word which refers to the specific location (the Valley of Meggiddo in Israel) where the final battle will take place between Israel and the other nations of the world that initiates the Return of Jesus Christ (aka "Second Coming").  So here again, when secular people and media use the term "Armageddon" to refer to the end of the world, it's just another testament to their own ignorance as they inadvertently reference Second Coming of Jesus Christ to defeat those who have aligned themselves against Him and to usher in the Millennial age of His own Kingship over the planet Earth and all its peoples and nations. 

As Christians, while there is that certain "perverse" sense of amusement that comes with watching people who have no idea what they're talking about inadvertently bear testimony to the Bible's prophecies about the Return and Preeminence of Jesus Christ, it's also an incredibly sad testimony to the ignorance of the general population and the media in particular of God's Word and what the near future holds in store for Mankind.  We Christians should see this as opportunity to proclaim what the Bible teaches us about these things.  The next time you hear or see someone misuse "Apocalypse" or "Armageddon", you can jump in with a friendly, "I was just wondering - do you know what that word really means?"  After all, THEY brought it up! :-)

Grace, Peace, and a very merry Christmas to all;

- Tim -




Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Appreciating Christmas Hymns - Hark, The Herald Angels Sing

Hark! The Herald Angels Sing!

Since becoming a Christian as a senior in high school, I've held a deep appreciation for many of the great, classic hymns.  Those we sing at Christmas time are all the more special, not only because of the feelings and memories which which they are associated for me, but but also, like so many others, because of their profound theological content.  It is unfortunate in some ways that we know these songs so well because we tend to recite them without even hearing the words anymore.  Their meaning is reduced to traditional recitation because ... well ... "we always sing these songs at this time of year!"

Yet many of them hold deep, rich truths of our faith packaged up in their concise verses and are in fact a miniature theology lesson if we would take the time to reflect upon them - personally, or with our children.  I hope to comment on a few here in this blog before Christmas gets here, but I'm already late getting started as there are SO MANY that say so much.  So let me encourage you this season, as you sing or listen to these great traditional hymns of the season, to let your attention be drawn to the lyrics - and be blessed by them.

This year, I've been particularly taken (again) with the depth of the lyrics in the hymn / carol "Hark The Herald Angels Sing" by Charles Wesley.  Each verse is powerfully laden with Biblical Truth about the nature of the Kenosis and Incarnation of Jesus Christ.  Can you count the names of Christ, or His Godly "attributes" listed here?  The second verse especially is one of the most profound and concise descriptions of the "Kenosis" to be found anywhere in my opinion.  The "Kenosis" is the theological word given to the event of Christ "setting aside" some of his Godly attributes and "humbling" Himself to become (and remain) a human man.  It is taken from the Greek word that describes this in Philippians 2:7 - often translated as "emptied" in the phrase "but emptied himself by taking on the form of a slave, by looking like other men,and by sharing in human nature."

This concept is contained in the 3rd verse also as well as the concepts of Salvation, Regeneration, Sanctification, Justification, healing, Universal Atonement, Resurrection of the Dead, the Millennial Reign, the Trinity, the Incarnation, and the Kingship of Christ. We could also identify half a dozen or so attributes and names of Christ all in just the 3rd verse!  It turns out all of the Wesley brothers' hymns are this powerfully packed with doctrine as they found it was a powerful way to get it across to people and have them remember it!  Indeed, we remember their lessons to this day ... if we stop long enough to listen to what it is we're singing anyway.

Won't you join with me this Christmas season in really listening, appreciating, and perhaps even learning from these timeless classics we have handed down to us such as "Hark The Herald Angels Sing" ... and even better - make time to do it with your children to help them appreciate not only the wonderful traditions, beauty, and "magic" of the Christmas season, but also the "why".  Reading the "Christmas Story" from Matthew or Luke is good and right and most certainly should be done.  But take note that if our children only hear WHAT happened (the history part of the story) they may well still have no idea WHY it happened - the significance of the Incarnation.  And while there are many excellent resources and ways to communicate this, you might also find that our favorite Christmas Hymns are in fact powerful teaching tools that our kids may even already have memorized!!

If you're not familiar with some of these concepts, I encourage you to dig in.  There's lots and lots of great content to be found on the Internet (though it's sometimes difficult to separate it from the not-so-great content!), or of course I'm sure your pastor would be THRILLED to answer your questions :-).  Or (shameless plug here), I'll actually be teaching a 10 week introductory course in Christian theology this January for beginners if you'd really like to dig in!  (stay tuned for further details).

Grace and Peace to all in this wonderful season,

- Tim -


The following introduction was taken from http://www.carols.org.uk 

“Hark the herald angels sing” Christmas Carol was written by Charles Wesley, brother of John Wesley founder of the Methodist church, in 1739. A sombre man, he requested slow and solemn music for his lyrics and thus “Hark the herald angels sing” was sung to a different tune initially. Over a hundred years later Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847) composed a cantata in 1840 to commemorate Johann Gutenberg's invention of the printing press. English musician William H. Cummings adapted Mendelssohn’s music to fit the lyrics of “Hark the herald angels sing” already written by Wesley.


Lyrics:
Hark the herald angels sing, "Glory to the newborn King!
Peace on earth and mercy mild, God and sinners reconciled".
Joyful, all ye nations rise; Join the triumph of the skies.
With the angelic host proclaim: "Christ is born in Bethlehem".
Hark! The herald angels sing, "Glory to the newborn King!"

Christ by highest heav'n adored: Christ the everlasting Lord!
Late in time behold Him come: Offspring of a Virgin's womb.
Veiled in flesh the Godhead see; Hail the incarnate Deity.
Pleased as man with man to dwell: Jesus, our Emmanuel.
Hark! The herald angels sing, "Glory to the newborn King!"

Hail the heav'n-born Prince of Peace!  Hail the Son of Righteousness!
Light and life to all He brings, Ris'n with healing in His wings.
Mild He lays His glory by; Born that man no more may die.
Born to raise the sons of earth.  Born to give them second birth.
Hark! The herald angels sing, "Glory to the newborn King!"

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Learning About St. Nicholas Day


Happy Feast of St. Nicholas day!!  I'm just learning about this for the first time this year.  Apparently in many places around the world and even certain locations here in the U.S. this is a big deal - almost another "Christmas" for the kids.  As most (?) people know, Our Christmas legends & traditions derive from the real 4th century person named Saint Nicholas (=>"Santa Claus") who died on this day (6 Dec) in A.D. 343 and was later sainted by the Catholic church.  Below is some information currently being passed around regarding his legend and associated customs.

Regardless of how you interpret the various stories & legends surrounding Nicholas, we can be sure that he was in fact a very real person and a great man at that.  His reputation for compassion, helping those in need, and defending the Gospel is quite literally "the stuff of legend".  Personally, I consider it a very good thing to remember those who have gone before us that distinguished themselves by their example.  These are the men  and women who deserve to remembered as "heroes" and their stories passed on to our children.  And while I personally have no problem with the tradition of telling our children that Santa Claus visits us on Christmas Eve to leave presents, I also think it's important to distinguish between these fun festivities and the Real Reason for the Season ... which also happens to be the very basis for who the real Saint Nicholas was and why he did the things he did as well.  I find that discovering and emphasizing the connection between the two in this way has really helpful in establishing my own opinions on the proper place and appropriateness of "Santa" in conjunction with Christmas.  Admittedly, our modern U.S. celebration of Christmas is an enormously complex hodgepodge of different traditions and even different religions from around the world and more than 2000 years of history.  Some of it has decidedly non-Christian origins and an increasingly large portion in the U.S. is decidedly secular and (amazingly) even anti-Christian.  But I've made my own peace with how my family and I celebrate at this time of year and I hope each person will study these things enough to arrive at your own conclusions as to what you feel is appropriate and what is not.    I hope to find time this season to write a lot more on this topic, but then, it's already December 6th isn't it!?

However you choose to celebrate, I wish you all a very happy Christmas!

I believe the text I've included below to have originated at the following website - and though I am not Roman Catholic, I found the text to be well-written, very informative, and thought it worth sharing.
http://www.fisheaters.com/customsadvent3.html

Additional information about the historical Saint Nicholas can be found at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Nicholas.
    and:
http://www.cantius.org/go/liturgy_devotions/liturgical_seasons/advent_extraordinary/saint_nicholas/

The historical work quoted in the text below titled The Golden Legend can be found, as a free ebook here:
https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=UesOAAAAIAAJ&rdid=book-UesOAAAAIAAJ&rdot=1
   Or in HTML format, here:
http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/golden000.htm

Enjoy!

- Tim -

St. Nick is the Saint better known as "Santa Claus" (Sinterklaas in the Dutch whence "Santa Claus" comes). His image in America has been mixed up with a lot of traits and imagery from sources as disparate as the poetry of Clement Moore, pagan Norse mythology, and American advertising. In real life, though, St. Nicholas was a beloved and wonderful Bishop of Myra (in modern-day Turkey). He was born in Asia Minor in A.D. 260 and orphaned at an early age.

As a young man, he made a pilgrimage to Palestine and Egypt, becoming a Bishop upon his return. He was imprisoned during the persecutions of Diocletian, but was released after Constantine came to rule. According to legend, he was present at the Council of Nicaea and became so incensed at Arius -- the heretical Bishop whose denial of the two natures of Christ spread through the Church -- that he slapped him across the face. He intervened twice in cases in which innocent men were accused of crimes they did not commit, once appearing to Constantine and the local prefect in a dream, encouraging them to do the right thing in their regard.

Many stories about his life indicate his kindness and reveal miracles. The Golden Legend, written in A.D. 1275 by Jacobus de Voragine, Archbishop of Genoa, tells us how the Saint threw bags of gold coins to a man in order to provide dowries for the man's daughters and save them from lives of lechery:

"And it was so that one, his neighbour, had then three daughters, virgins, and he was a nobleman: but for the poverty of them together, they were constrained, and in very purpose to abandon them to the sin of lechery, so that by the gain and winning of their infamy they might be sustained. And when the holy man Nicholas knew hereof he had great horror of this villainy, and threw by night secretly into the house of the man a mass of gold wrapped in a cloth. And when the man arose in the morning, he found this mass of gold, and rendered to God therefor great thankings, and therewith he married his oldest daughter. 

And a little while after this holy servant of God threw in another mass of gold, which the man found, and thanked God, and purposed to wake, for to know him that so had aided him in his poverty. And after a few days Nicholas doubled the mass of gold, and cast it into the house of this man. He awoke by the sound of the gold, and followed Nicholas, which fled from him, and he said to him: Sir, flee not away so but that I may see and know thee. 

Then he ran after him more hastily, and knew that it was Nicholas; and anon he kneeled down, and would have kissed his feet, but the holy man would not, but required him not to tell nor discover this thing as long as he lived."

Another tale from the Golden Legend explains how St. Nicholas saved sailors from a tempest:

"It is read in a chronicle that, the blessed Nicholas was at the Council of Nice; and on a day, as a ship with mariners were in perishing on the sea, they prayed and required devoutly Nicholas, servant of God, saying: If those things that we have heard of thee said be true, prove them now. 

And anon a man appeared in his likeness, and said: Lo! see ye me not? ye called me, and then he began to help them in their exploit of the sea, and anon the tempest ceased. 

And when they were come to his church, they knew him without any man to show him to them, and yet they had never seen him. And then they thanked God and him of their deliverance. And he bade them to attribute it to the mercy of God, and to their belief, and nothing to his merits. "

The Golden Legend also gives us the story of a Jewish man who was robbed, and how St. Nicholas used the event to imitate Christ, thereby not only bringing the Jewish man to Christ, but causing the thieves to repent:

"Another Jew saw the virtuous miracles of St. Nicholas, and did do make an image of the saint, and set it in his house, and commanded him that he should keep well his house when he went out, and that he should keep well all his goods, saying to him: Nicholas, lo! here be all my goods, I charge thee to keep them, and if thou keep them not well, I shall avenge me on thee in beating and tormenting thee. 

And on a time, when the Jew was out, thieves came and robbed all his goods, and left, unborne away, only the image. And when the Jew came home he found him robbed of all his goods. He areasoned the image saying these words: Sir Nicholas, I had set you in my house for to keep my goods from thieves, wherefore have ye not kept them? Ye shall receive sorrow and torments, and shall have pain for the thieves. I shall avenge my loss, and subdue my madness in beating thee. 

And then took the Jew the image, and beat it, and tormented it cruelly. Then happed a great marvel, for when the thieves departed the goods, the holy saint, like as he had been in his array, appeared to the thieves, and said to them: Wherefore have I been beaten so cruelly for you and have so many torments? See how my body is hewed and broken; see how that the red blood runneth down by my body; go ye fast and restore it again, or else the ire of God Almighty shall make you as to be one out of his wit, and that all men shall know your felony, and that each of you shall be hanged. 

And they said: Who art thou that sayest to us such things? And he said to them: I am Nicholas the servant of Jesu Christ, whom the Jew hath so cruelly beaten for his goods that ye bare away. 

Then they were afeard, and came to the Jew, and heard what he had done to the image, and they told him the miracle, and delivered to him again all his goods. And thus came the thieves to the way of truth, and the Jew to the way of Jesu Christ. "

Another famous story, this one not contained in the Golden Legend, tells how three children were killed by an innkeeper and put into a tub of brine. St. Nicholas, by the power of God, brought them back to life.

"When the great Saint died, he was buried in Myra, but the town was later taken by the Saracens in A.D. 1034. The Italians rallied to gather and preserve his relics from desecration, and in 1097, sailors brought them to Bari, Italy. A lovely church -- the Church of San Niccolo -- was built to house them, and tere they can be found today. A curative Oil of Saints -- "Manna di San Niccolo" -- is said to exude from them to this day."

St. Nicholas is the patron of children, sailors, and bakers, and is represented in art as a bearded, older man -- usually mitred -- holding 3 gold coins or a bag of coins, or three orbs. He is also often shown with children, and/or a ship.

Customs:
Today is, for many Catholics, the day for gift-giving (some do this on Christmas, some do this on the Feast of the Epiphany in memory of the gifts the 3 Kings gave to Baby Jesus, and some spread the gift-giving out on all these days). In some places, especially in the Eastern Catholic churches, "St. Nicholas," dressed as a Bishop, will show up and hand out presents to the little ones, and children put their shoes in front of the fireplace to be filled with candy and presents by morning. Because coins are one of the many symbols of St. Nicholas, chocolate coins are a perfect thing to put in the childrens' shoes. One can use Christmas stockings instead of shoes, or one can buy adult-sized wooden shoes, paint and decorate them, and bring them out for use just on St. Nicholas's Day.

In any case, an icon -- even a nice Holy Card -- of St. Nicholas should be visible today if at all possible. Surround it with greenery and candles, and tell your children the story of the Saint Nicholas behind the "Santa Claus."

On St. Nicholas's Feast Day, it is customary to serve Speculaas cookies, a spicy Dutch cookie, cut into shapes relevant to the life of St. Nicholas (coins, mitres, ships, balls, money bags), and painted with colorful icing:

Speculaas Cookies 
(makes 3 dozen depending on size)

Cookie:
1 Cup (2 sticks) sweet butter, at room temperature
2 cups dark brown sugar
2 eggs
Grated rind of 1 lemon
2 teaspoons cinnamon
1 teaspoon ground nutmeg or mace
1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
1/8 teaspoon ground ginger
1/8 teaspoon cardamom
1/8 teaspoon salt
4 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking powder

Icing:
Powdered sugar
Water
Lemon juice
A little beaten egg white for consistency, if desired
Food coloring

In a large bowl, cream the butter with the sugar until fluffy. Stir in the eggs one at a time, blending thoroughly after each addition. Stir in the lemon rind. Sift the spices and salt with the flour and baking powder, and stir gradually into the butter mixture. Wrap in waxed paper or plastic wrap and chill for several hours or overnight. On a floured surface, roll out the dough to about 1/8 inch, or for larger figures to about 1/4 inch. Cut into shapes (Bishop, Bishop's staff, Bishop's mitre, ship, coins, etc.) and bake at 350 degrees until lightly browned (don't overbake). When cool, mix together icing ingredients and paint cookies as desired.