Take a look around.

All the world’s a stage,
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts, — Shakespeare in “As You Like It”

I am a curious person. I wonder what others see when they look around. The world around me is an ocean of challenges, hardships, and possibilities. Each person responds to it individually as each is a unique creation, the only one of their kind. We are similar but unique, isolated but communal, selfish but occasionally selfless, adventurous but clinging to comfort and security. We are strange creatures filled with gifts, talents, and troubles. We live for ourselves, but our lives perform on the stage for others to see. What do we see, and what do our lives say in the grand performance of things?

I’ve heard frustrated people blame Christians and the Ten Commandments, and things like that, as the religion of “no’s” and “don’ts” and take offense. Yet, the world around them tells them “no” and has done so before the Ten Commandments were written down in concise form. Cultures around the world have been saying that stealing, adultery, and the like are wrong, long before, and ever since, the Exodus. One might be bold enough to say that it was written into creation and that all willing men can see it.

The proof is in the outcomes. What is the outcome of adultery? Good or bad? What is the outcome of theft? Good or bad? Why would someone be offended by a warning of their own impending harm? I think one answer is cruelty. The motive behind the warning might be the answer. My mother used to scold me for reading her feelings instead of listening to what she said. I think people feel the heart of the person warning them instead of the warning they offer. It could also be because people have a knack for being stubborn and unwilling to listen to an inconvenient truth until the inevitable hardship lands. I wish I had listened and obeyed my parents’ many warnings when they were fighting for my safety, and I was engaged in doing the ridiculous. One sometimes wonders how anyone outlives their youth.

The truth is right in front of us and all around us all the time. We can see in Hollywood that money, power, fame, and attractiveness aren’t any guarantee of happiness. People who win the lottery are often end up worse than they were before. We can see the price of selfishness. There is always a cost. At the very least selfishness isolates, victimizes relationships, and fails to see the benefits of loving and sharing with others. People tend to automatically sing the ballads of heroes, people who are courageous, caring, and sacrificial. That also seems to be written into the creation. They don’t create awards for the most selfish or narcissistic.

The evidence of the truth of the gospel is not in the Bible but written on the lives of all the people in the world and the creation we live in. The Bible is just the explanation for how and why it works. We can look at the sea of humanity and see that all God tells us in scripture is true and accurate, just like He said.

A few reminders

Reminders for health and well being.

Recently I’ve been involved in several different discussions with friends and family who were feeling overwhelmed. They had so much to do with so little time. The world is a pretty overwhelming place which is putting tremendous pressure on each person.

I ended up trying to find a short way to encourage them without adding to the sense of being overwhelmed. Here is a quick list. I know God is taking care of you and bringing you into a deeper relationship with Him. Sometimes it helps just to have a few reminders.

1. Remember who you are. Never allow all the pressures around you to cause you to lose yourself. At the end of the day, when all else is gone, you will still be with you. Make sure you can live with that. All the things you do are only a reflection or an artifact of who you are. Don’t give room to confusion. You have the power to decide who you are and what you do. God is on your side. He is growing and teaching you and won’t let go of you.

2. Remember your purpose. You have a purpose as a Christian. You were created as a one of a kind creation to benefit others as God blesses you. Keep your relationship with Jesus healthy. Don’t worry about failure. All men fail. It is not about how many times you fall, but how many times you get up. Build health and well being into your community, family first, church and work next. Be God’s workman.

3. Remember to be a good steward. God has invested in you and your life. Be the best steward of what He has given you as you can. Continue to allow God to grow His investment in you. Remember — no one is perfect. Don’t get crazy judging yourself. You are human.

4. Remember your faith. You can only do so much. God has to do the rest. You are not in control of anything except, at times, your stewardship. You are in a vast ocean of problems and possibilities. God put you there. He can keep you there and lead you into fulfilling your purpose. Learn and practice listening. God talks and communicates in people, through others, and especially in scripture.

5. Remember God’s timing. God doesn’t have the same sense of urgency you do. His plan takes on contingencies that you haven’t or couldn’t consider. God makes all things beautiful in His time, not yours. Don’t get distracted by the world around you. God is on the job and is faithful. Everything on this planet may fail, but God won’t.

Tarawa, an image of war

Documentaries can be fierce beasts. They can portray extremely intense and long events in a short period of time. The documentary about Tarawa is an example. The documentary explains the Japanese fortifications that were built on a small atoll to the point that the Japanese believed 100,000 men could not take it. America sent over 10,000 men who took it in four days. The destruction to man and property is/was beyond description. 

The battle does not end when the guns stop firing. The battle includes the horrible scars done to the insides of the men who fought there and could never forget what they saw, and all the other horrors of the aftermath. This was just one piece of a much greater war.

Over 4,600 Japanese defenders and 978 Americans died in four days of fighting over an area of land that was less than one square mile in size. You could walk the full circumference of the island in less than four hours.

 Saying they died does not do justice to how they died, what was done to their bodies, and what was happening to the men as they killed each other or what impact the event had on those who survived. The amount of shells and powerful equipment destroyed was in like proportion. The bombing and shelling of the island was the most ever done to that point and occurred before the men reached the beach. The island and all its structures were plowed by the bombing and shelling. 

So, why bring this up? Because it is an image, a powerful image, that can be related to the damage done inside the soul of a suffering human in a battle in this war we call life. “If I have told you earthly things and you do not believe, how can you believe if I tell you heavenly things?” John 3:12 ESV.

How big and complicated are the insides of a human? How many worlds are carried in one life if you include the thoughts, emotions, beliefs, dreams, and experiences each human has? How much territory is covered on the insides of a person when it includes even the element of time, making all times and territories covered within relevant to the current experience? Their current moment includes all their past and present, and to some degree, their hopes/plans for the future. Each person is like the Tardis from Dr. Who. They are much bigger on the inside than they are on the outside.

We have oversimplified people to the point that we can excuse our lack of compassion, our lack of love because we only see them in this moment without all the details. We have no knowledge of the horrible damage that has been done to any small atoll in the broad expanse of their life and the pain there that may be active in their actions today. We are all at war spiritually.

It may seem reasonable to excuse unforgiveness because we don’t know and possibly don’t want to know that the pain inside them may be far worse than the pain they have caused us. We do not see the war going on in them as the Lord wars against the principalities of darkness that would consume their souls. Compassion is the ability to see internal wars and be able to care for people as they fight their internal wars. Failure to have compassion and to forgive is a failure to see that the Lord is at work on that soul for its healing and redemption — even as He is at work for our soul’s benefit.

Tarawa was a pin point in a greater event. It was life changing to those involved. It was life changing beyond its small place and time. It consumed the location and the people involved, but not the whole of all things taking part. It was one place for nations and economies to be involved. How much is any part of our life worth? How much does any part of our life influence and shape the rest? We are too big to understand and too much with which to grapple.

It takes the Lord in our lives for us to begin to see in and beyond our limitations. It is the Lord in our lives who teaches us to care for others beyond the superficial things which are easy to see and not a true image of the whole person. Learning to love is hard work, a battle, a freedom, a connection to the purpose of Jesus.

Warning signs

My wife scanned this post and pointed out it was a little harsh. I had to agree. She is an example of getting good feedback from primary sources the Lord provides. This blog is a continuation of the “Symptoms” blog with the only difference being one of severity. The last blog might be more medicine cabinet emergency. The items here are more “call the ambulance” level symptoms.

Unforgiveness is wrong. No matter what someone has done to you, unforgiveness only adds pain and suffering. Unforgiveness harms the person who has it, not the person who may deserve punishment. Unforgiveness is a clear signal that something in the heart is broken.

Defensiveness is a clear indication that you have something that you feel the need to protect. Depending on the circumstance, this may be a signal of insecurity or fear in your life. Insecurity and fear are emotions that cry out for healing.

Anger can be one of the most brutal emotions available to humans. The newspapers are full of reports regarding rape, murder, and other horrors performed by people who have given themselves to the extremes of anger. It doesn’t always start at the extreme end. It can begin small with a slight or embarrassment and grow larger, possibly to an extreme. Anger usually portrays itself in harsh language or actions, but can also be expressed through devious manipulation and/or subversive or subtle forms of cruelty.

Bigotry, racism, and factionalism are ways humans put others into good or bad preferential treatment zones. Corrupt politicians have used this natural human tendency to create wars and every other type of division they feel they can use to their own personal advantage. It always tends to end up working both ways because the original victim of this type of treatment will respond in kind. It can injure others by keeping them away from the click of best friends or by demeaning or hurting those considered to be, in any way, less than the friends in the comfort zone. History is replete with examples about how this type of behavior works to deny God and destroy people at every level of society and between countries or cultures. The level of division is the measure of the amount of harm it will cause.

Hatred is always wrong. Disagree – yes; hatred – no. Check out Jesus and the martyrs. They disagreed, stood for what they believed, were not swayed, but did not hate. Hatred is a soul killer, killing the soul of the person hating. Disagreements don’t have to be filled with hatred.

Bitterness is a poison. Bitterness is a destroyer to the already injured person. It fails to ever have any positive effect on anyone, no matter how terrible the cause. It is like the wisteria vine that climbs the pine tree and kills it, leaving the dead top and branches to hang as decorations in the living vine which murdered it.

It is important to be alert to these symptoms because of the harm they cause to us and those around us. You may get a clue from your own thoughts or feelings. You may have to get clues from your friends, family, or the stranger on the street to signal warning for you. I’m sure any reader can come up with a much longer and thoroughly developed list than I’ve given here.

Harm is not what the Lord wants for us because He is the author of life, the victor over death. It is no surprise that the cross is the center of the Christian faith. The cross is the point in time where humanity gathered up all the worst it had to offer and poured it all over Jesus. It is also the point in time when Jesus gave us the gift of heaven through the forgiveness only God could provide by doing what only He could do.

Being a Christian is realizing that we live in a life-long war every day. Our worst and humanity’s worst constantly meet God’s best on the battlefield in our lives. “Jesus saves” is the short phrase that means that He is alive every moment of every day rescuing us from ourselves and the damage of this world. The wisest thing we can do in life is to open our lives to Jesus, let Him show the damages of sin in us and in the world, and cooperate with His plan for healing and redemption. See the signs/symptoms. Accept the truth. Turn to Jesus and get the life that overcomes death.

Symptoms

Don’t let the enemy sneak in the back door and have coffee in the kitchen while you’re entertaining visitors in the parlor. Carelessness can be expensive. I love the horror shows in which someone is left alone after tons of danger warnings, which they don’t follow. Then they hear a noise. Then they call out. The camera has already told us – they are not alone, and the script writer has decided that they have fullfilled their part in the movie. The only question left is how messy the final moments will be. We live in a dangerous world surrounded by warnings. 

Stressors that gather in a person’s life can become an excuse to loosen personal self-discipline and do things thought or known should not be done. We leave doors open and windows unlatched. Do we hear the spooky music in time to latch the windows and lock the doors? What are the signals that we are being careless? Life has symptoms like any kind of illness.

I can tell stress, frustration, or some other form of weakness is beginning to get to me. There are tell tale signs. Sometimes it is the little to large self indulgences that are symptoms. I’m wanting things to make me happy when things never really work that way. You can be thrilled by anticipation on Christmas eve, covered in presents on Christmas, and back to unfulfilled by Christmas afternoon or the next day. Things are stalls and symptoms. Things do not fulfill.

Guilt is a great symptom. It is a clear indication that something isn’t right inside your own heart whenever you immediately defend yourself or take offense at something another has said or done. The reaction of guilt is to attack the other instead of examining the inner working of the self. Guilt is a good symptom of some unresolved issue which should be identified and examined. Anger and other negative emotions can work the same way, as indicators of how the inner life is functioning. Guilt, anger, and other unresolved negative emotions create all kinds of horrifying outcomes, messy, and devastating. The enemy can empty the entire refrigerator and pantry in the kitchen while you put on appearances in the parlor for the public.

Many of these life indicators or symptoms are really a clear indication of the current relationship with the Lord. The symptoms become stronger the more distant someone gets from the Lord or the more impatient someone is while waiting for Him. Life symptoms become indicators that a person has grown sloppy in self discipline because they are being sloppy in discipleship.

The indicators are like a small child’s temperature and lethargy. They are the things that show the need to face the possible illness before it gets out of hand. Life symptoms are the warnings and the “tells” that let us know something is wrong or getting wrong. They are the creeking door and wind slapped window shade. They are the smells of someone cooking in the kitchen when no one should be in there.

Symptoms say it is time to be accountable and accept that something isn’t working exactly correctly inside. It is time to turn and face the Lord with all the hurts and needs, big and small. It is time to be mentored and corrected by those the Lord has given to be shepherds or under-shepherds.  It is time to draw close to the Lord and get in His presence. He came to rescue. He is available. The worst mistake we can make is believe we can or have to do it on our own.

Stranger danger or growth opportunity?

I have been an informal life-long student of relationships. Sometimes I am truly surprised by how limited I am in understanding others. I have to be shocked into awareness because I assume too much empathy and understanding on my part. Face it, I like to think of myself as a good guy who is thoughtful instead of a limited guy who is restrained by his physical being, which is tied to a specific culture, training, and experience of being one person in one place at a time during a specific span of history. Since I know all that I know, it seems to be the whole world until I come face to face with what I don’t know or understand.

I recently had to take a couple tries at listening to an individual’s video rant. I stopped the video to stop and pray. I couldn’t hear the person or what she was saying. I asked the Lord why. The answer was that I was a communication snob and a bigot. This person lived in my community, but we were worlds apart in culture, experience, and language. I was experiencing a full collision of my limitations and another person’s life. I had to put my culture and experience aside in an effort to hear this person from her point of view.

I have held nice views about the importance of each person and the respect each person is due. God created all persons, unique, gifted, amazing with the intent that each person would benefit others. His artistry in creation was to bless, not curse. Yet, humans often isolate, separate, and denigrate others who don’t fit their world view or who do not fit in their comfort zone. I had to realize that my nice thoughts had to quit being pie-in-the-sky and come to earth in concrete reality. I am drawn to those who fit my world view and are comfortable, and tend to avoid those who don’t. I tend to surrender to the comfort of my limitations. This person in the video really challenged that, and I realized God hears and knows all people for who they are with love and respect. I need to work to be more like Him.

I put aside my culture and bias and listened to the video. I was able to see the beauty of God in this person, the validity of her concerns, the honor in the way she was struggling to overcome the issue, and the love she had for those she wanted to protect. Nice views and philosophy, partnered with God’s design and purpose equals a change in Harry. As the Bible says let him with eyes see and ears hear. The video also taught me that I need people to teach me, people to hold me accountable, and an open door to allow the Lord to speak and to allow others access to my life.

I admire missionaries all the more because they open their lives to see God wherever they go, in whomever they meet, regardless of how foreign the life or culture. They open their hearts to be vulnerable to God and others. Love can be very frightening to those, like me, who have to be shocked out of our comfort zones.

Inspirational power

I love inspirational speakers. They always make you feel like you can do anything and do it with great success. They skillfully work on determination for weak-willed people and get-up-and-get-going for procrastinators. I fall into both categories. If the speaker is really good, he/she will do their inspiration without overworking the normal guilt response of those who aren’t determined or who do procrastinate. Inspirational leaders focus on human strengths and human abilities in the belief that right actions produce right results. In a perfect world, that might be true, but we live in a human world that is fraught with things like interdependence and deep seated levels of failure the Bible calls sin.

Stewardship is the area of life available to the inspired. We do the best we can in the best ways we know with the strongest determination we can muster in all the ways we have opportunity. At some point life brings each person to the point of recognizing that their absolute best isn’t enough. History is replete with great ones who did amazing things, far beyond their peers. History also records their failures and the problems which kept them from complete success or total respect.

Now, in our politically correct world, we are tearing down monuments to men and women who were great successes and great failures combined in an individual. Robber barons built great economic empires while being Hitleristic in the way they treated others to build their empires. They had skills to build, but not to maintain and grow in healthy ways. History proves with its continuing testimony that even the greatest among us are flawed.

How do or can humans deal with their humanity? They have to find someone or something greater to lead them. They find something greater in ideals, philosophies, or idols. Each of these are limited to human ability or insight. History also shows us that humanity has been searching with, and fighting with, their images of God throughout their time on planet earth. Gods come in all forms, religions, descriptions, philosophies, and things.

Humans have made religions related to man made objects in addition to all the non tangible things and ideas they can conceive. The first point of sorting comes down to man made and controlled or God made and only able to be controlled by God? To truly find something greater, they have to find God because only God can be greater than any human can be and greater than any or all humanity can provide and (most importantly) can communicate for Himself.

My opinion is that if man can make it or control it, it isn’t God. That creates a limitation for the inspirational speakers. They can only deal with the man side. They make errors if they inspire men to act in ways that will make God respond in a dependable way. Men controlling God by their behavior makes men god instead of God being God. Humans can be good stewards of their behavior, attitudes, and actions, but they can’t be God on their best day with their greatest skills and their hearts and attitudes as close to perfect as is possible for humans. God is beyond humanity. He is not manipulated by human behavior or attitudes.

The Bible is an amazing book. It shows humans in every state, from great to nightmarish, in connection with God. It can, to some degree, be summarized in one word, relationship. God wants and works to have relationship with mankind. He has a plan with or without man’s cooperation. The Bible shows that man is man and God is God, but there is a divine connection between the two created by and maintained by God who is the only one who can keep a relationship with humans who keep breaking it.

You have to be older than me

An old mountain man once told me a story that he thought was humorous. He told me about a young man and an ancient withered man riding in the same wagon. The young asked the old when he lost interest in women. The older responded, “You’ll have to ask someone older than me.” I chuckled appropriately as I was a young man talking to an old man who might be referring in some ways to himself. The quote, “You have to ask someone older than me,” has stuck with me.

I woke early from a series of rough dreams last night. In one of the dreams, I spent hours and hours working on a beautification project. Someone else came in at the last minute and took credit for all the work. I woke very frustrated. When do you quit fighting the challenge of personal vanity? I guess you have to ask someone older than me. I believe there are many challenges that we will face all the way to the last breath we breathe, no matter how old that might be. Personal vanity and the human tendency toward selfishness are two of them. The failures of man are many, so the list of challenges might be very long.

The availability for any failing anyone has ever committed is within me. I have experienced enough rage to cause me to wonder whether or not I would really commit a horrible act if I were to let my anger go unrestrained. The answer is yes, I could. So it is with other failings. Thank God I live in the restraints of my culture, my training, my experience, and the generosity of Jesus that many things on that long list are walled outside my experience. I have seen in the news and through history that the wall can be breached, and people you never suspect, or who had never failed before, can suddenly fall into devastating behaviors and thoughts. We are vulnerable and susceptible. There are no guarantees in life and the human experience. You never get too old to be part of the warfare that is life.

The holocaust was committed by people who left civilian life, entered the military, and became monsters they would have never been had they been living under normal circumstances at home with their families. It is horrifying to see that people who started out in need and working to help others could end up like they did, doing what they did in Jim Jones camp in Guayana. Those weren’t people we would have considered bad people until something happened. The wall was breached, and they became the worst version of themselves and a horror to the rest of us. I believe we are wrong when we think that couldn’t happen to us because we see miniaturized versions of those extremes happen every day, all around us. You never get too old for this battle.

Humans have a natural gift for belittling others and seeing others as less than themselves. I saw it in the clicks in high school. I see it in the clicks in church. I see it in the way we gravitate toward those who make us comfortable and away from those who make us uncomfortable. Within that natural, unthinking, sorting is the ability to see those different as less. There is an unspoken human trend to feel like people who are “less” can be treated as less to varying extremes of degrading thought and action. Follow the joke trends through the years. Who do we choose as targets for humor? How do we talk to or treat persons we think aren’t worthy of our respect or friendship. In extreme situations any of us might behave in extreme ways. I don’t think I’ll ever be too old to face this fight.

Is there a happy thought, as Peter Pan recommends, to help us take flight in this dire set of possibilities. Absolutely. There is a God who is far beyond the strength and temptation of man who has proven Himself victor over all the failings of man. Jesus faced everything we face and won the battle we continue to fight. The great joy is that He has not left us alone. He is with us every day, in every way to give us the resource and power to be what we would prefer to be instead of the worst we could be. You can see that in history too. There have always been the courageous who stood against the horrors of the overwhelming evils without wavering. We have tons of examples of people who loved when hating was the easier choice, who respected when degradation was the common way. Every generation has seen the face of Jesus among those who left us with the example we want through the strength He gave them. Jesus is alive, and He is here today with us. I’m not too old for that either.

War wounds

Jacob Miller is a powerful example of accountability and independence. September 19, 1863, Private Jacob Miller was shot between the eyes at the battle of Chicamauga. His picture comes up as one of the most common in medical searches related to the Civil War. He tried to push his eye back in place and the bones of his head together, tying them up with a bandana. He had to hold his eye open with his finger to see where to go. He was left for dead on the battlefield, got to the aid station on his own, and was left for dead again there. He left the aid station under his own power to follow the army because he didn’t want to be a prisoner. Two ambulances passed him by and a third picked him up. The ride in the ambulance was so painful that he got out and walked. Surgeons refused to help him until he finally convinced one. Buckshot fell out of the wound 17 years later and other debri fell out 33 years later. He lived to the ripe old age of 88. 

Why tell this story? This man is an example of independence, fierce independence. He needed help and pursued it. He went to the aid station and to the hospital beyond. He talked a doctor into working on him when others avoided the challenge. He did not operate as a self sufficient person who needed no one. He was independent.

Nowhere in his story did it indicate that he blamed anyone or felt sorry for himself. He was in the situation he was in and had to deal with it to the best of his ability. His ability, in my opinion, far surpassed anything I think I could do. I feel like I would have stayed on the battlefield feeling terrible and sorry for myself to a point that I might well have waited beyond any help anyone could provide. 

Entitlement is a terrible word in our country today. Entitlement and privilege are connected because both are the belief that someone is deserving of some kind of right or benefit for whatever reason, legal, emotional, social, financial, or other. Entitlement tends to put the belief on others to provide or give. It has a layer of helplessness in it because many who feel entitled have done nothing to earn it or deserve it. Many say that our students are acting as though they are entitled instead of being accountable. Accountable is the opposite of entitlement because accountable takes responsibility to itself instead of putting it on others. Miller was accountable, not entitled. He was independently motivated to go forward, not dependent to wait on others. 

Miller threw no pity party at the realization of his situation. He gathered himself to do the best he could and get the help he needed. Assessing a situation and choosing to take action without waiting on others or blaming others is a true act of independence and accountability. He is a great example for me.

Jesus gave us earthly examples we could relate to when He explained heavenly values and principles. He talked about sheep to shepherds. He gave common examples of prejudice and bigotry in ways that the bigots could understand, often making the most hated the example of good. Miller is a good story which truly exemplifies accountability and independence. It also is a great story of courage.

How does this relate to me? All of us have been wounded on the battlefield of life. I was an alcoholic. Until Jesus put me in the place where I had to accept accountability for my actions, I was dependent and lived as a slave to my addiction. Accountability freed me to be independent and move in the direction of the aid station and the hospital beyond. I am grateful every day for the freedom Jesus has provided for me. I highly recommend Jesus, accountability, and independence. 

Celebrate Freedom

I have friends who are historical experts and read books by well studied professional researchers. I am exposed to many truly knowledgeable people as a volunteer docent at a small local museum. I am amazed at the things our predecessors have gone through. They are a well of our experience which we can dip in to at any time we want.

Some nations around the world are controlled by terrible dictators who turn their country into total servitude to their personal will. Other countries have fought against those leaders to win freedom and democracy for their people. We can see, in these large events, the true war between good and evil that are large on grand scale of nations, but work the same on the individual scale of people.

Hitler and Japan wanted to enslave the world to their will. The rest of the world fought against that evil. We could easily see the evil in those countries during that time. They were barbaric to anyone who was not like them or disagreed with them. They would abuse or kill anyone who challenged them. They intimidated others into being lackeys to their will. We can see the same traits between individuals. I’ve met people I easily thought could be a “Hitler” if they had the control of a nation instead of just being a supervisor in a local store.

Humanity has all the traits of good and evil you could ever hope to experience. The traits have been played out many times in many ways through past generations. We celebrate our heroes and hate our demons from the past. Now those traits are being portrayed by this generation. Nations are simply groups that have come into agreement to stand together. Their stance as a nation comes as a collection of all the individual choices collected together. A stance will be established when enough choices agree.

Hitler could not have done what he did if the people of Germany refused to agree with him. He lied, manipulated, intimidated, and twisted the feelings of the people, and they were in enough of a struggle that they chose to overlook the truth to accept what Hitler pitched. Everyday of our lives, we face the same war on a much smaller scale.

Human appetites can dictate behavior and take on the traits of a dictator. The appetite for sex has drawn many otherwise successful and famous people down a completely destructive road. Did they overlook the truth of the danger to accept the desire? Yes. Addicts and alcoholics all know the danger and horror, yet they persist in the folly. Once a person has committed to the dictator, politician or appetite, backing out becomes increasingly hard as the lies become steel bars on a locked cage. Where is freedom?

For countries, freedom comes through the soldiers who are willing to fight and die for the right of their people to be free. An individual has to become a soldier to fight and die to the appetite or lies that hold them in bondage. We are all in a war.

The great hope is that Jesus has overcome this world and all the bondages in it. He is the personification of freedom. He was not bound by selfishness or any appetite like so easily ties humanity up in hardship. Jesus is a warrior like no other. He fought, died, resurrected, and continues to fight for each of us every day. He has set a standard that no bondage can cage. His standard is beyond what man can do or create without Him. Humanity has an image of perfection which only God can fulfill.

The great joy we have is that we are not alone. The Holy Spirit has been given to work with us as individuals, as groups, as nations according to how willing we are to accept and receive Him. He gifts us with the freedom Jesus won against all the failures of man. We only have one caveat. We must choose. We must choose Jesus and the Kingdom of God and its standards to have that freedom.