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Father and Son Ltd John 5:19-20

No Comments 03 August 2007

familyfight.jpg

My brothers and sisters gathered to celebrate my Dad’s 80th birthday in November 2003. This is a picture of our “family feud”!

Scripture
I tell you the truth, the Son can do nothing by himself. He does only what he sees the Father doing. Whatever the Father does, the Son also does. For the Father loves the Son and shows him everything he is doing. John 5:19-20

Our family reunion in July 2006.  There are 43 in our family now, so not all could come.Our family reunion in July 2006. There are 43 in our family now, so not all could come.

Observation
We can push, we can prod, we can placate, we can persuade, but in the end the only life that leaves a dent in eternity is one that finishes what God has already begun. Works that begin with me will end with me. But when I take the time to discover where God is already at work and add on to what he has started then my works eventually end in him.

The choice is simple. I can have a made-up life, where I stumble along the road looking for the map, or I can have a God-made life that begins by asking, “What is he up to today?”

God loves interdependence. The Christian faith started as a Father & Son business, and at its simplest and best it is the same for each of us. My life is a partnership of Father & Son. What matters most is not what we achieve but the relationship we develop in the working.

In the summer of my first year in college I came home to find my father framing a wall in the family room. Dad and building bonded together like hammer and nails. I usually tried to be as invisible as possible lest I would be “invited” to help. I have vivid memories as an eight year old of hiding under the basement stairs while Dad packed tools hoping he’d never find me. It never worked. Dads have radar.

In the summer of 1980 I took a different trajectory. I offered to help. Over the nights and weekends of the summer we built his home office. The walls were lined with floor to ceiling walnut-toned bookcases. We wrapped the rest of the room in a wainscot of woody tones. At the end of that summer I think I remember asking not to be paid in cash. Instead I asked for a pocket watch that I still treasure. The permanent mark of the whole experience was learning to cooperate, work willingly, follow the plan of another, and to enjoy many deep conversations along the way. These were principles that would guide the rest of my life.

At some point we have the opportunity to choose to work along side of the Father. Sure we can out smart him, out maneuver him, and do our own thing…for a moment. But soon ahead we discover that the God we left behind is in fact one step ahead of us. There is another workshop ahead. Again we see him in a pool of lamplight bending over the workbench, his tool belt laden with worn tools, and shaving curls of wood giving way to his sharpened chisel. We stand silently in the doorway, but he hears us. Father’s can feel the presence of their children. He turns and lights the room with his smile. He steps back from the workbench, proffers a chisel and invites us to have a turn with the tools for ourselves. The Father is at work and he is inviting us to work with him. What happens next is our choice.

My parents, Charles and Roberta McCallumMy parents, Charles and Roberta McCallum

Application
Yesterday I read a snippet out of the book The Heart of the Pastor¸ where H.B. London and Neil Wiseman remark that as pastors our love for Christ is proved by feeding and caring for the sheep. That means that a pastor’s form of devotion is not just with a Bible in hand in the morning hours, but in the face and heart of each person he serves. The work of pastoral ministry is an act of devotion to Christ. Caring well for the saints is my way of expressing love toward him. The depth of my love is proved in the quality of my care for the sheep. Shepherding is the family business.

Me and my folks at Dad’s 80th November 2003Me and my folks at Dad’s 80th November 2003
Prayer
Father, I’ve been here before, but how often I try to make up what’s next rather than to follow the sawdust to where you are working. Show me the place in the workshop where you are. Help me to be of help in your workshop. I’ll start with sweeping the floor. And if there are other works to do I’m willing. Amen.

My five brothers and sisters gathered for my Dad’s 80th birthday November 1, 2003My five brothers and sisters gathered for my Dad’s 80th birthday November 1, 2003

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Marriage Bubbles John 2:3, 7, 10

No Comments 31 July 2007

Here’s part of our family in January having dinner at Waikiki. We rushed through traffic to get to the resturant by sunset.

Here’s part of our family in January having dinner at Waikiki. We rushed through traffic to get to the resturant by sunset.

Scripture

Jesus’ mother said to him, “They have no more wine.” John 2:3

Jesus said to the servants, “Fill the jars with water”; so they filled them to the brim. John 2:7

“…You have saved the best till now.” John 2:10

Observation

Today I’m staying in the home of friends, Phil and Betty Lou Harris. I met them 25 years ago when he was a zesty church planter in Kansas City . Phil has an infectious grin and Betty Lou sprinkles cheer where she goes. But Phil was more than just an entrepreneurial leader; he also took time for young pastors like me. Now, twenty-five years on friendships are renewed. They graciously opened their home for me to stay…even though they are away. The house is empty and still, but something remains here. It’s more than the showcase decorating and the scent of candles. Cheer is in this home even when the owners are not at home.

I found the secret in a kitchen cupboard. On the back of a wooden door are neatly taped small clippings. There are jokes, cartoons, and comics. Then tossed around the walls are little wooden stars with single word commands like “believe” and “rejoice”. After 40 years of marriage the bubbles are still in the Coke bottle. Joy is a choice, for there have been disappointing seasons for Phil and Betty Lou. But I’ve spent leisurely hours with them and those barely get a mention. Instead there is thankfulness for the present and hope for the future.

Jesus wants the bubbles to stay in the bottle that’s why he launched his ministry with the frivolous miracle of turning water into joy-giving wine. There were beggars in the streets, cripples behind closed doors, there were lepers outside of town and mourners at the cemetery. But Jesus visited none of these for his first miracle. Instead he chose a wedding where the fizz had gone flat. There were people, music, smiles, dancing but the power outlet of all that merriment was down to the last drop. The wine had run out and soon the party would be over.

Eventually the sparkle flattens in any marriage. For this couple it was on their third day. It can happen at year one, ten or twenty. As an elderly couple standing before the judge seeking a divorce explained, “We wanted to wait until the children were dead.”

Marriage is the center of all of God’s working. History started with the wedding of Adam and Eve and will end with the Marriage Supper of the Lamb. It was appropriate that Jesus started his ministry at a wedding feast. The hope of society is the joy of the home and family. He performed a miracle not just to save a party but to make a point. Every home needs a source of joy and Jesus stands ready to rejuvenate relationships so that laughing bubbles cheer all who walk in the home.

Jesus wants to bring joy into our homes. The jars were filled to the brim which indicates just how much joy he wants to bring. The wine was the best vintage which gives us a clue of the richness of the cheer he wants to release in every room of the house.

Application

Cheer is a choice. On the one hand we must scrub out sarcasm, put downs, and hopeless thinking. On the other hand we must be grateful, encouraging and full of faith in God’s good purposes. I remember looking through the picture album of one couple in ministry. The pictures showed a house full of laughter and joy, but I knew that had been a time when their church was passing through a split and they were in splinters over it all. The lady of the house explained to me, “We made a choice to not let that take our joy from us.”

Jesus wants to visit every marriage with new wine. We just have to invite him to the feast and let him in on our problems and let him touch them.

Prayer

Father, I want to thank you for the great wife and wonderful children you have given to me. Remind me constantly how to increase the joy level of our family. Most of all Jesus just as you were at our wedding continue to live in our marriage keeping the sparkle until the last tear of death that parts us. Amen.

I'm Phil McCallum, a husband, father and most of all one of the people Jesus loves. I'm privileged to serve Evergreen Community Church in Bothell, Washington as Senior Pastor where people love enough to believe "it's all about relationships." In 1982 I made a vow to read God's word daily and apply it to life. Each day I write out my reflections. Some days I post those on my blog. It's a little personal but it's my hope it will stir you to go deeper still. Learn how I do my devotions. These are my thoughts and not necessarily those of the ministry I serve. By the way check out the computer study Bible Glo. I highly recommend it.

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