The Day After Election Day

Today is the day after Election Day.  Today is a day for many of great joy and for others great depression.  For some they feel crushed and worried because their hopes for our nation were defeated, for others there is celebration because their hopes carried the day.

For some “my guy” won. For others “my guy” lost.

To both sides, today, I offer these words as a Pastor and as a friend.

By the way, they’d be same words I’d have offered you yesterday and the day before.

It’s the same advice I will offer you tomorrow.

Pray.  Read your bible.  Go to church.  Love your families.  Teach your children.  Men, be the Godly spiritual leaders of your homes. Wives, be the Godly woman that God has created you to be, enabling your family to be the family God needs.

Teach your children the truth of God.  Value spiritual truth more than worldly truth.

Be salt and light.

Remember the words of Psalm 2 1:3:

Why do the nations rage
and the peoples plot in vain?
The kings of the earth set themselves,
and the rulers take counsel together,
against the Lord and against his Anointed, saying,
“Let us burst their bonds apart
and cast away their cords from us.”

If your guy won, remember that God is the true king.  If you guy lost, remember that God is the true king.  And true change for our nation starts in the home, in the families, in the churches.

Remember – pray.  Read your bible.  Go to church.

Be faithful.  Love God.  Love neighbor.

Be salt and light.  And remember John Wesley’s final words upon the earth -“The best of all is, God is with us.”

Don’t forget, you can click here to download Asbury’s mobile app and read these devotionals, as well as listen to my sermons on your smart phones.

Election Day

Today is Election Day here in America.  As citizens, it is our highest right and honor to vote.  I often think of what Thomas Jefferson said.  He was a man who achieved everything a man could achieve here in America.  He wrote the Declaration of Independence, was a diplomat, Secretary of State, Vice President, and President.

He did it all.

And he said that when he died, all he wanted on his tombstone was Thomas Jefferson – Citizen. Because, he felt like, there was no greater title to have.  Citizen.

Today, we are citizens. Augustine wrote about our citizenship in his book the City of God.  He said that as Christians, we are citizens of two cities. The city of God, our heavenly home, and the city of Man, our earthly one.  And, our responsibility as part of the city of Man is to work to make it the best it can possibly be.  We should not forsake or forget our duties.

So, today, vote.

Too many people have given too much for us to not take this vote seriously.  Today, vote.

But, remember 2 things. First, no matter how the election turns out, if your guy wins or loses, remember.  Jesus is King.  Remember that.

Second, I want to share some words that John Wesley wrote to his followers during an election in England.

I met those of our society who had votes in the ensuing election, and advised them
1. To vote, without fee or reward, for the person they judged most worthy
2. To speak no evil of the person they voted against, and
3. To take care their spirits were not sharpened against those that voted on the other side.

From John Wesley, October 6, 1774.

Vote today for the person that you think will best chart the course that our nation needs to be on.  No matter how much you disagree politically with the other person, do not despise them, or the “other side.”

Because as Christians, we are to love. Everyone.

Even “them.”  Whoever “they” are.  Because you know what? Christ died for “them” too.

So today, please go vote. Do you duty as an American citizen.  But, love everyone. Do you duty as a Christian.

Don’t forget, you can click here to download Asbury’s mobile app and read these devotionals, as well as listen to my sermons on your smart phones.

For God’s Glory

God has promised to take care of us. To give us what we need. To give us life, grace, and mercy.

To restore us. To give us a hope. To give us a future. To give us life and peace.

The word says that God will give us the desires of our hearts. Now first, through He must have our hearts. So, when He has our hearts, the changes them, and forms them in His image.

And then, as our hearts are drawn closer to His heart, we gives us the desires of our heart.

But does all this, not just for us. But, for Him. Listen to what it says in Ezekiel 36:23-24:

And I will vindicate the holiness of my great name, which has been profaned among the nations, and which you have profaned among them. And the nations will know that I am the Lord, declares the Lord God, when through you I vindicate my holiness before their eyes. I will take you from the nations and gather you from all the countries and bring you into your own land.

God will be at work in us, and for us, not just for us. But for His glory.

He is going to use all things in our lives in our lives and for His glory.

All things.

He is going to use you today in this day to bring glory to His name. You are His prized possession. You are the apple of His eye. He loves and adores you.

And He will give you life and grace and peace.

And He will use all of your life, all of your circumstances, all that you are for His glory.

Today, all things in life, they will work for our good. And for God’s glory.

All things will. He has promised us.

And so when life is hard, we don’t understand or question or doubt or are afraid.

Remember. It will work for our good, and for God’s glory.

Remember. All things.

Don’t forget, you can click here to download Asbury’s mobile app and read these devotionals, as well as listen to my sermons on your smart phones.

The Ghosts of Ole Miss, Race, and the South

I love Ole Miss sports.  Really.  I do.  I often joke that my top three loves in life are God, my family, and Ole Miss sports. And the Rebels climb the list, based off how they are doing.

Someone once told me that it looks like Oxford threw up in my office I have so much Ole Miss stuff in my office.

When I was ordained into ministry, Holly gave me a framed panoramic view of Vaught-Hemingway Stadium (for those that don’t know, Ole Miss’ stadium).

I (half-jokingly) tried to talk Holly into naming our son Thomas “Archie Eli” and then call him Deuce for short.  For some reason, she didn’t like that idea 🙂

So, as you can see, I love the Ole Miss Rebels.

I remember as a high school senior going with some buddies watch Ole Miss and LSU play in Tiger Stadium. I think it was 1993, and both teams were not very good.  Ole Miss was either going on probation, or coming out of it, I’m not sure, and LSU was the not the giant that they should have been, and are now.

LSU crushed us, by the way.  It was fun.  You haven’t lived until you’ve been cussed at by someone granny for bring your Ole Miss stuff into Tiger Stadium.

That’s what we did. We brought our red and blue, our hats, our colors, and our Rebel flags.

Yep, this was before Ole Miss banned the sticks that the Confederate flew on.  Not the actual flag, but the sticks that they flew from.

So, there we were, in the upper deck of Tiger Stadium, watching our Rebels lose, flying our flags, and pulling for the Rebels.

I really do love the traditions associated with Ole Miss.  I love “From Dixie with Love.”  I love Hotty Toddy.  I love hearing the band play Dixie after the game. Those things, even now thinking about them my heart race and make me excited.

But, I also understand the complications of things like the Rebel flag. And Dixie.  I understand it in a “big” picture level. And I understand it on a personal level.

I have many friends that are African-American (usually there is a but that follows that, huh?) and I understand the pain that mane of the symbols cause, even when 9 times out of 10, they are not invokes with any malice in mind.

And, even in my own life, I understand it.  The issue of race is never as it seems.  I am the son of a woman that was half white and half Hispanic.  My grandmother married a man from Ecuador  lived there for several years, and her two children (one of whom is my Mama Sarah) were born there.

After my grandmother divorced her husband, she returned to home, in the 1950s with two children of, yes, let’s say it, mixed race.  And she raised her kids, loved them, and taught them right from wrong.  Her daughter Sarah was my mother, who was murdered, and then I too, was raised by my grandmother, just as my mother was.

Race is a messy subject, isn’t it?  Things are never as they seem.

And so, even in my life, I understand my heritage  and understand where I came from, and understand than in matters of race, thing are often confusing and messy.

And because of my background, I understand, so some small extent, the pain that symbols can cause.  I had a friend that used to forward out racially charged emails about Hispanics, and one day I turned to Holly and said, they don’t realize it, but they are basically talking about me.

Because, my mama was was half Hispanic. And one thing a southern boy doesn’t take to is someone talking about his mama.  So, this friend simply thought he was forwarding on a email.

See that’s how it works. I’m a guy that’s a quater Hispanic  who’s grandfather (as best I know) is still in Ecuador somewhere. And I consider myself a southerner.

I have often wondered, though, if others would consider me southern, if they knew my family history.

And all that said, I still get misty eyed when Pride of the South Marching Band plays from “Dixie with Love.”  And I still love the heritage of my favorite school. And I hope (against their mom’s wishes I’m sure) that my kids will go to Ole Miss one day and we can all tailgate in the Grove together.

Race in the south is a complicated thing. As Falkner said, “the past is not dead, it’s not even past.”

And watching the Ghosts of Ole Miss brought all this back to me.

I don’t really know if there is a moral to these thoughts, or even a purpose.  I just know that for many of us here in the south, this is our story.  I am 36.  There has never been a time in my life where life hasn’t been fully integrated.  I have always, my entire life, had African-American friends.  I truly believe that my children are being raised by us (and our school, community, and church) not to see race. At Asbury (and all of my churches that I’ve servered) raise isn’t an issue, I truly believe that we do the best to love everyone, as Christ would have us to.

And for me, as a pastor, the issue of race is a hill that I’m willing to die on.

And, I still love “From Dixie with Love.”

That’s life here.  So, let’s love each other with the love of Christ.  Let’s treat each other with respect. And let’s do the best that we can to live by the word of Dr. King, “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.”

What Does it Look Like to be Holy

What does it mean to be holy? What does it look like to chase after God? What should that look like in the scope of our lives?

God calls us to follow Him, to become more like Him, and to live the life that He calls us to live, that He has created for us.

Ok, we all know that. That’s a given. But, once again, what should that actually look like in our lives? What should that cause to take place in our lives?

Listen to what Paul tells us today in Romans 13:9-10 for an answer.

For the commandments, “You shall not commit adultery, You shall not murder, You shall not steal, You shall not covet,” and any other commandment, are summed up in this word: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” Love does no wrong to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfilling of the law.

He tells us to fulfil the commandments this is what we do – love. Love fulfils the law.

He said if we love, we will not murder. We will not steal, we won’t break any of the commandments.

Love fulfils the law.

That is what it means to be holy. That’s what it looks like to be holy. To love.

Loving your neighbor equals being holy. Because when we love, as it says, we will fulfill these things.

So, how do we do that? How do we love our neighbor in that way?

We love God. We let God’s love fill us. We focus on Him, and His grace will call us to love each other fully and completely.

Today, be holy. Today, fulfill the law. Today, be obedient to what God would have you to do.

Today, love your neighbor. And in that, you will be fulfilling the law.

Don’t forget, you can click here to download Asbury’s mobile app and read these devotionals, as well as listen to my sermons on your smart phones.