Saturday, December 31, 2016

New Hope


To me, this verse means time is nothing to God. He exists in our past, present, future, and beyond the confines of time itself. Yet, here we are at the cusp of a new year, according to the Gregorian calendar. Not so for most calendar types, and there are hundreds of calendar types throughout the world with variants of each one going back into ancient history. They tell dates with different methods, including solar, lunar, lunisolar, and fixed length. Oh, but it's 2016? Yeah, that depends:

Gregorian calendar 2016
MMXVI
Ab urbe condita 2769
Armenian calendar 1465
ԹՎ ՌՆԿԵ
Assyrian calendar 6766
Bahá'í calendar 172–173
Bengali calendar 1423
Berber calendar 2966
British Regnal year 64 Eliz. 2 – 65 Eliz. 2
Buddhist calendar 2560
Burmese calendar 1378
Byzantine calendar 7524–7525
Chinese calendar 乙未年 (Wood Goat)
4712 or 4652
— to —
丙申年 (Fire Monkey)
4713 or 4653
Coptic calendar 1732–1733
Discordian calendar 3182
Ethiopian calendar 2008–2009
Hebrew calendar 5776–5777
Hindu calendars
- Vikram Samvat 2072–2073
- Shaka Samvat 1937–1938
- Kali Yuga 5116–5117
Holocene calendar 12016
Igbo calendar 1016–1017
Iranian calendar 1394–1395
Islamic calendar 1437–1438
Japanese calendar Heisei 28
(平成28年)
Javanese calendar 1949–1950
Juche calendar 105
Julian calendar Gregorian minus 13 days
Korean calendar 4349
Minguo calendar ROC 105
民國105年
Nanakshahi calendar 548
Thai solar calendar 2559
Unix time
1451606400 – 1483228799

My personal favorite is the year of the Wood Goat.

So, if time doesn't matter, then what's the point of celebrating an arbitrary day?

Hope.

Humanity yearns for renewal of hope, to clean the slate, and to move onward to greater things than before. Yet, again and again, God tells us in his Book that every moment is a new beginning:

Lamentations 3:22-23 “The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness”

Isaiah 43:19 "Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert."

2 Corinthians 5:17 "Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come:The old has gone, the new is here!"

2016 hasn't been the easiest year for most of us, and many are looking ahead to 2017 with hope that the world and life will be better. It all begins with you.

So, this year, if you "fail" your New Year's resolution, remember this moment (and this one, aaaand this one too) is a good time to begin again - and celebrate the new beginnings God gives you every day. 

Sunday, December 25, 2016

What Are You Celebrating?


I have a confession. I've been overwhelmed the past few days. Instead of sugarplums, there's been visions of chores, errands, and bills dancing in my head. I want our house to feel homey this season, there to be lots of good food on the table, and plenty of presents for my daughter to bring smiles and laughter.

There's something about nature that makes me feel closer to God. I was driving to my parents' house in the country during an awe-inspiring sunset spread out above a glowing field. That was when it hit me: what are you celebrating? I've learned to recognize God's voice, though I'm not always good at listening. This time, it felt like a gut-punch.

Are you celebrating cleanliness, materialism, or how others think of you? Then, why are you stressing about it? Christmas for me is about God's grace, love, and blessings. His son was born in a lowly manger, lived in a poor carpenters home, and never accumulated many material things as His purpose was to teach others of God's love while on the road. Are you much better than Him?

This Christmas, let's celebrate the true meaning of Jesus' birth. Let's experience joy over the things we have and not the things we want. Let's spend the holiday getting closer to each other and not showing each other up.

What are you focusing on this Christmas? Whatever it is, I pray it is on God and the Prince of Peace.

As Jesus and his disciples were on their way, he came to a village where a woman named Martha opened her home to him. She had a sister called Mary, who sat at the Lord’s feet listening to what he said. But Martha was distracted by all the preparations that had to be made. She came to him and asked, “Lord, don’t you care that my sister has left me to do the work by myself? Tell her to help me!”"Martha, Martha,” the Lord answered, “you are worried and upset about many things,but few things are needed—or indeed only one. Mary has chosen what is better, and it will not be taken away from her.” Luke 10:38-42

In Hebrew, one would say Shalom, peace be unto you this season.

Saturday, December 24, 2016

To Christmas or Not to Christmas



That is the question.

For much of my childhood, my family celebrated Christmas. We did the whole Santa, reindeer, lights, cookies and milk, gifts, tree thing. My parents even wrote a letter to me in calligraphy as if it were from Santa (cute!).

Then, around when I was seven, they decided to move away from that celebration. There are, as most people know, roots of the holiday in paganism, and they felt it didn't honor God. So, I was enlightened as to the nature of Santa (which I had already suspected by then), and eventually we stopped observing that holiday completely.

Now, with a child and husband of my own, my little family celebrates Christmas. There is no tree, and I don't encourage the whole Santa & reindeer idea. Instead, I try to focus on Jesus as well as I can. We have a figurine set of the manger scene, and the Jesus baby is the only part that isn't stuck to it. Jesus is in the 25th tin of our Advent calendar, and my daughter gets to open it up and put the baby in His manger on Christmas. We read stories about God around that day. Our church has a Christmas Eve program, which reiterates the focus on the birth of Christ for even children with song, dance, and fake snow for the children run around in as it falls.

Our Christmas isn't very traditional, but it is perfect for us.

I honestly don't think either way is incorrect, and as Christians, we must make many decisions about life that may not conform to the ways of the world. As a friend of mine once said, there are closed-handed issues for Christians: those ideas which are essential for being a follower such as believing in God, His grace and salvation, and loving God and others. Then, there are open-handed issues for Christians: those ideas which must be made by each individual and are personal to the way he or she feels called by God. I personally feel Christmas is one of those open-handed issues. As long as you honor God, your Christmas (or lack thereof) is blessed.

Rom. 14:4-9 Who are you to judge someone else’s servant? To their own master, servants stand or fall. And they will stand, for the Lord is able to make them stand. One person considers one day more sacred than another; another considers every day alike. Each of them should be fully convinced in their own mind. Whoever regards one day as special does so to the Lord. Whoever eats meat does so to the Lord, for they give thanks to God; and whoever abstains does so to the Lord and gives thanks to God. For none of us lives for ourselves alone, and none of us dies for ourselves alone. If we live, we live for the Lord; and if we die, we die for the Lord. So, whether we live or die, we belong to the Lord. For this very reason, Christ died and returned to life so that he might be the Lord of both the dead and the living.

What do you think? Do you celebrate? Why or why not? Also, if you do, how do you keep Christ in Christmas?

Monday, December 19, 2016

My Crazy Testimony



I didn't grow up "in the church," so churchy terminology feels strange and archaic to me. For the longest time, I honestly didn't know I had a testimony.

So, for those, like me, who didn't know, this is the definition of testimony according to Google:

tes·ti·mo·ny


/ˈtestəˌmōnē/


noun

noun: testimony; plural noun: testimonies

•a formal written or spoken statement, especially one given in a court of law.

•evidence or proof provided by the existence or appearance of something.

•a public recounting of a religious conversion or experience.

What's interesting is the Bible and Torah has ideas that formed the backbone of many legal systems around the world. One of these ideas is the testimony. If you were pulled as a witness in a court of law and questioned as to the existence or the character of God, what would you say?

When I was 11, just about to turn 12, my aunt's boyfriend (who was Muslim) told me that Islam has something called "the age of accountability." Basically, this is the age people are old enough to be held accountable for their own actions. I may not have grown up in the church, but I grew up with very religious/spiritual parents, and I was very determined to be perfect for God.

I could envision a forest, each tree a person. In order to be noticed by God (whom I'd already fallen in love with), I needed to be the tallest one, and I figured the way to stand out for God was to be sinless. So, I'd been reading the Bible (understanding it in my limited way as a child), and in the old testament there are a heck of a lot of rules, laws, and ordinances. It was overwhelming for me at the time.

One night, I lie in bed and prayed to God. I needed something simpler I could remember, so no matter what I faced in life, I'd know I was doing the right thing.

Now, I was 11, remember, so I still believed in a magical God, in which many adults have probably lost faith. So, I expected to be answered, but not directly of course. Perhaps, He would communicate by way of a TV program or a song that would hit the right message.

I was hoping for a paragraph or something I could memorize. Surely, it would take at least a page to summarize the Bible's laws.

In the dark of my bedroom, I heard a single solitary word:

Love.

It was like a thought, but it also felt separate from me.

So, of course, I immediately started arguing with it. No way that was it. That was too easy to remember, too simplistic, idealistic, rainbow, unicorns ...

My mother once told me if I ever heard anything pertaining to God, to check the Bible before absorbing the message. If anything conflicted with what was said in the Bible, it wasn't of God. So, I turned on the light and went to my bookshelf. Picking up my Bible, I flipped randomly through. It fell open to a page in the new testament - Matthew 22:36-40:

“Teacher, which is the greatest commandment in the Law?”

Jesus replied: “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.' All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments."

I can't even explain how dumbfounded I was that night. I still argued with the word "love" for the rest of the night, tossing the idea to and fro in my mind until I fell asleep.

I have since realized this event was too coincidental to be anything but God answering my prayer, and nothing has conflicted with the idea that "love" summarizes all of God's laws. In fact, Love is the meaning of life, and as the Bible will also say, God is Love.

This is one of the reasons behind this blog. No one but God can be perfect, but we will always be loved. We are also called to love.

That moment has shaped the rest of my life, and I hope my testimony will shape yours.