Monday Memories: Incredible!

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Autumn fills with sounds of cheering fans and the excitement of Friday night high school football games.  We pick up the action with play-by-play announcer “Cato the Cat” Johnson as he calls the final seconds of the game between the undefeated Valley High Bulldogs and the lowly Vernon High Bengals.

Welcome back football fans as the undefeated Valley High Bulldogs are poised to garner their 10th division championship in a row.  The winless Bengals of Vernon High have put up an incredible fight against overwhelming odds tonight, but their time in the limelight is about to be extinguished by the mighty Bulldogs.

The Bulldogs are poised to add to their lead with the score at 7-2.  The stingy Bengals have only yielded one score, and its defense has scored their only points with a safety back in the first quarter.

From the Bengals’ five-yard line, the Bulldogs are facing a second down and goal.  They line up in their favorite power run formation.  The ball is snapped.  But wait . . . fumble!

The Bengals have recovered!  Oh my, what a turn of events.  However, the Bulldogs still hold the lead, and the game clock only shows enough time for one more play. 

The Bengals face nearly the entire length of the football field—95 yards to be exact.  With only one more play, it appears their woeful season will end on another sour note.  At least the marching band has performed quite well this season.

The Bengals line up in a spread formation.  The Bulldogs’ defense sets up in a prevent mode.  They only need to stop the Bengals here, and their string of championship crowns will continue.

The ball is snapped.  Instead of passing, the Bengals hand the ball off to their speedy halfback Kurt Warner.  With a power sweep to the right, the Bengals are pushing the ball up the sideline.  There is a phalanx of blockers in front of Warner. 

Only two players stand between the Bengals and a touchdown.  One blocker takes out a defender, and Warner fakes left and hustles right, leaving the last tackler humbled on the ground.

Nelson is on his way . . . to the 30, the 20, the 10 . . . touchdown!

The Bengals score, and the game is over.  Vernon High 8, Valley High 7. 

Oh my football fans!  We have seen an incredible finish for the ages.

Life isn’t always as basic as a seemingly simple high school football game.  Just as Vernon High comes into the game as a hapless underdog, Jesus Christ is perceived to be a loser and an underdog when he is taken to Calvary and a cruel Cross.  Football fans underestimate the resolve of the Bengals, just as people underestimate Christ’s real purpose.

The Vernon High team experiences an unbelievable moment, but it pales in comparison to the stunning moment when Jesus’ followers find the empty tomb. 

Incredible!

 

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Benjamin Franklin Quotes

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Who is wise?  He that learns from everyone.

Remember not only to say the right thing in the right place, but far more difficult still, to leave unsaid the wrong thing at the tempting moment.

Much of Franklin’s wisdom was shared in his published pamphlet, “Poor Richard’s Almanack,” which appeared continually from 1732 to 1758. He adopted the pseudonym of “Poor Richard” or “Richard Saunders” as the publisher and author. 

Hope in Christ

From Isaiah 64:8:  “Yet, O Lord, you are our Father; we are the clay, and you are our potter; we are all the work of your hand.”

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Spiritual homelessness

Forcing hope’s darkest setbacks

With every passing day

Time stops, frozen in its tracks

 

How long will God stand silent?

Fading lives, like autumn’s leaf

Among earth’s darkest shadows

Hope’s flames, drowned by a sly thief

 

Expectations growing dim

Praying, Savior’s light to come

God’s love, molds life’s foundations

Our hope, plays its steady drum

 

Coming Spiritual light

Transforming power from God

Iniquities to be paid

Shepherd’s hope, His staff and rod

 

Hopeful world watches and waits

Appealing to God, save us

Hungry flock’s burdens cry out

God remains faithful, hear us

 

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From Psalm 80:1-3:  “Give ear, O Shepherd of Israel, you who lead Joseph like a flock!  You who are enthroned upon the cherubim, shine forth before Ephraim and Benjamin and Manasseh.  Stir up your might, and come to save us!  Restore us, O God; let your face shine, that we may be saved.”

The Christian season of Advent begins with this final Sunday of November.  For myself, this will bring a time of meditation and prayer . . . filled with the hope, peace, joy, and love of Christ, the Messiah.

Charles Stanley Quote

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This coming week, take time to remember what the Lord has done for you, and express your thanks.  Be creative and try different ways to show gratefulness–sing, praise, and joyfully worship Him.

From Psalm 92:1-2:  “It is good to give thanks to the Lord, to sing praises to your name, O Most High; to declare your steadfast love in the morning, and your faithfulness by night.”

Witnessing the Underdogs

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Life stories fill with the forgotten

Overlooked by the small world at large

Overcoming, life’s spirit takes charge

 

Victims of ridicule and slander

Entering life’s game as underdogs

Trailblazing amazing monologues

 

Asking, “Do you believe in miracles?”

 

Orchestrating man’s quest for a cause

Representing smallest underdogs

Breathing life into new dialogues

 

Dealing with dark, social injustice

Led by a resolute man, named King

Peacemakers marching, civil rights rings

 

Daily life recalls profound upsets

“David versus Goliath” contests

Lessons taught from these demanding tests

 

Smallish Texas Western steps forward

Meeting great Kentucky on the court

Historic win transcends college sports

 

Never dismiss the ugly duckling

Therein lies a most beautiful swan

Beauty, from deep inside, to act on

 

Crippled at birth, yet strong in spirit

“Forest Gump” defies the odds on his way

Encouraging us on life’s highway

 

Holding underdogs close to our hearts

Feeling lost, little to celebrate

Beating back the odds, changing life’s fate

 

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Three different events are highlighted in this poem, with each one claiming a distinct place in America’s cultural perspective of life.  The civil rights movement is greatly influenced the leadership of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.  One of the greatest college sports upsets takes place in 1966 when Texas Western upsets Kentucky.  While civil rights continues to move forward, the racial landscape of college basketball is forever transformed as Texas Western’s all-black line-up outplays Kentucky’s all-white line-up.  The film “Forest Gump” touches countless hearts with its inspiring story.

Resilience (Elfchen Series #35)

Fortitude

Courage

Nation’s challenges

Continue tackling them

Grit will bring success

Doggedness

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Planting

Sowing

Unity’s seeds

Harvest precious time

Blessed corner of faith

Patience

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Healing

Challenges

Country faces

Finding common ground

Working together as one

Compromise

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This series of poems (written in the German-inspired style of Elfchen or Elevenie) shares a total of eleven words in each poem, with a sequence by line of one, two, three, four, and one words.

Charles Swindoll Quote

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No greater compliment can be given than this one:  “When I am with that person, it’s like I’m in the presence of Jesus Himself.”

From 2 Corinthians 8:21:  “For we intend to do what is right not only in the Lord’s sight but also in the sight of others.”

Thanksgiving at Home

From 1 Chronicles 16:34:  “O give thanks to the Lord, for He is good; for His steadfast love endures forever.”

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Another Thanksgiving

Patiently waits on deck

Staying safely at home

Asking for a rain check

 

Missing our family

Sending our blessed love

Watching over our home

Holy God, high above

 

Remember gatherings

From numerous years past

Memories still linger

Let us not be downcast

 

Past months filled with darkness

Yet, family stands strong

Boosting one another

Faith in God, sings along

 

Chairs around our table

May look empty this year

But, God’s blessings offer

Love, filled with grace sincere

 

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While my wife and I will be celebrating the blessings of Thanksgiving at a table for two, we will still be thinking of our family in both Ohio and Montana.  We have much to be grateful for.

Thanksgiving Blessings

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English author, Charles Dickens

Reflect upon your present blessings–of which every many has many–not on past misfortunes, of which all men have some.

 

German-born poet and theologian, Johannes A. Gaertner

To speak gratitude is courteous and pleasant, to enact gratitude is generous and noble, but to live gratitude is to touch Heaven.

 

American poet and humorist, Wilbur D. Nesbit

Forever on Thanksgiving Day, the heart will find the pathway home.