The
Wonder Springs Chronicle
Blessed
are the Elastic
24
November 2010
Volume
12, Issue 46
Access
now the fresh insights of ÒThe Wonder
Springs ChronicleÓ Front Page. Be sure to check out the grizzly times wisdom
and fresh insights of BruteÕ Griz every Friday and our Monday Cult Football
series article was, ÒThe American
Insurgency Humint (HUMan INTelligence)Ó This column also now appears each
Wednesday on Deep Woods Moola, Redux Rendezvous and ÒThe Creation Leadership CenterÓ.
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Yesterday the
North and South Koreans exchanged about 200 artillery rounds in a confrontation
centered on a small South Korean island just south of the Northern Limit Line
that divides the countries since the end of conflicts in the 1950s. Stock
markets around the world reacted adversely to these hostilities.
Today we will
see if the donÕt mess with my junk TSA airline screening pat-down protest will
amount to much.
Tomorrow in
the United States we celebrate our annual Thanksgiving holiday. What started
out, as a solemn day to thank God for his tangible and intangible blessings, is
becoming a festival of gluttony and cult football.
We live in
such a boring world in which not much happens anymore.
When we
listen to Glenn Beck, he asks us to, ÒThink outside the box.Ó Seems to me that
begs the question — what box? Taking it a little farther, thinking
doesnÕt change anything, in order to make changes; boxes seem to be the place
where you put your junk until such a time as you can either use it again, or
more likely just keep it stored in boxes and let your heirs sort through it
all.
Chuck Smith,
the founder of the Calvary Chapel evangelical movement, has a saying, ÒBlessed
are the flexible — for they shall see God act in their lives.Ó There is
another ÒWhere God leads, God provides.Ó I think I am beginning to understand
the latter statement. The problem is GodÕs provision almost all of the time is
so complex that my simple desires stretch me, rather than providing the
security I had hoped for.
For
Thanksgiving this year I think I have come up with a concept that encompasses
all of the above. That statement is, ÒBlessed are the elastic, for they will
begin to understand GodÕs grace.Ó
You can find
this elastic concept with the Apostle Paul, he was stretched, but returns to
his original state, and that stretching doesnÕt make him weaker, but stronger
in the Grace of God, for the enhancement of his ministry.
Below are
some examples of elastic from the dictionary, notice the duality of nature:
Able to
encompass variety and change — flexible and adaptable.
Springy
and buoyant — an elastic step.
Between
economic supply and demand — elastic prices.
The times in
which we live really are not elastic, but quite rigid. Therefore any elasticity
has to come through us.
No matter
where we live on this big blue globe suspended in space, for we mortal humans
it is a time where elasticity is needed. We are surrounded by noise, literally
and in every other construct we attempt to construct. Much of it comes in the
form of regulations that we are told will make our lives better. The problem is
we have to pay someone so that we can reap the benefits.
The snag is
there is not an opt-out provision; pretty much the only option is to drop out,
but that provision is soon to be regulated, if not so already. For instance, as
Homeland Security and the TSA say, if you donÕt like what they are doing at the
airports, you donÕt have to fly. Then we are told that these same
provisions are coming to trains, boats and metro transport.
All the
enlightened elitist powers to boot, donÕt seem to understand is that we are in
the early stages of a redux of culture. This is the second decade of the
twenty-first century and we humans are supposed to behave like it is 1984, the
book title included.
What is truly
amazing is the power that we individual humanÕs have at our control. For a
couple of thousand dollars, any person, anywhere in the world, has access to
computing power that the National Security Agency was stretched to provide in
1984. The problem is that we use most of that to play games and drop out. The
major driver behind this frivolity is that we can.
Using that
same concept of ÒweÓ used above, what we are beginning to necessarily become
elastic enough to use fruitfully is ÒYes we can!Ó This however is a very
different application of the term than Barack Obama used when seeking the
presidency. His slogan finds itÕs meaning in the New Deal, with ties back to
ancient Babylon.
In this
developing elastic light we are beginning to make some significant changes here
at the Chronicle. By the first of the year we will probably be able to announce
these changes publicly. The best way to describe it today is moving towards a
diversified but consolidated focus.
I am in
Spokane for the Thanksgiving holiday. There were a number of things I wanted to
get done, in the time leading up to the feast, but an early winter arctic
outbreak has sent the temperatures to well below zero Fahrenheit, this after a
very pleasant, almost Indian Summer season lasting until basically last
weekend. My trip to the big city Monday, basically led the first of the
seasonÕs significant snowfall.
Elasticity
however has provided the opportunity to remain in Spokane for at least an extra
week, so that I can truly get the business I need to do done, without the
stress of a pending holiday.
When my
mother died in 2002, after almost five years in a nursing home with
AlzheimerÕs, as we were working out details of her funeral, we learned that
while she still have all her mental facilities she had chosen three songs that
were not what was on the funeral homeÕs normal playlist. The first was ÒOne Day
at a Time, (Sweet Jesus).Ó The second was, ÒWhen We All Get to Heaven, (What a
Day of Rejoicing That Will Be.)Ó The third was the traditional hymn, ÒHow Great
Thou Art.Ó
My mother was
the oldest child in a family of five children. She entered her teenage years at
the depth of the Great Depression. Coupling the two, she had a very strong
attachment to many things, with emphasis on the many. The comment at the
beginning of the article about letting your heirs sort through your junk, I
understand by first hand experience. While I now have gotten through it all at
least once, my current living situation really hasnÕt let be truly get rid of
the stuff I donÕt want to keep. Then there is also the junk I have collected
all on my own, that needs to be downsized, so that I can elastically upsize for
this elastic world.
The important
thing about becoming able to handle this event we call life, forces us into
elasticity as not just a coping means, but also the way to put true meaning
into what we do. I donÕt know the specifics of how my mother made her song
selections, but this I know, each day, the good, the bad, and the ugly, are
elastically manageable through the grace of God made available to all through
Jesus Christ. This life is not all there is, but our trials and tribulations
are only gifts for our future home.
O
Lord my God,
When
I in awesome wonder
Consider
all
The
works Thy Hand hath made,
I
see the stars,
I
hear the mighty thunder,
Thy
pow'r throughout
The
universe displayed;
Then
sings my soul,
My
Saviour God, to Thee,
How
great Thou art!
How
great Thou art!
Then
sings my soul,
My
Saviour God, to Thee,
How
great Thou art!
How
great Thou art!
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