Saturday, May 8, 2010
Summer Break
I hope all the Resolvederines have a great summer break. I'll be seeing some of you around this summer. I'll see the rest of you (except for a few graduates) back this fall. Stay safe.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Skepty McSkeptertons
John 9 Skepty McSkeptertons.
Jesus is often at war with scribes and Pharisees. Jesus sets up situations with them that will spark moral, ethical and didactic wars. We see this here. The war Jesus is fighting here is legalism. The battlefield is the Sabbath.
Legalists like to add their own rules to God’s word. They say, or at least imply that God’s word isn’t sufficient as it is. It doesn’t tell us enough, it isn’t complete, it needs help. For them, rules are everything; to the point that they say, “Even if my heart is cold and lifeless I’m good because I’ve kept the rules.” The thing is their rules aren’t just for them. They think everyone has to follow their rules too, or they are sinning. Legalists say, “Obey me, not God”.
Legalists take good and beautiful spiritual things and make them burdensome and deadly. The issue here is Sabbath. Simple, God said take a day off from work. It’s just simple and good, like fudgerounds. You don’t need rules to enjoy them. Saying “eat a fudgeround” is plenty. But the Jews came along and added rules to eating fudgerounds and in doing so they made the fudgerounds not enjoyable. So let’s look at the encounter.
Vs 8-12 The change in this guy was so great that his neighbors questioned if this was the same man. I know this is easier to understand thinking about a lame dude walking for the first time, or a blind man seeing for the first time, but the question remains; is there anything so different about your life that people around you would notice? Is the difference Jesus makes in your life enough to make you seem like a different person?
The progression here is amazing: Are you the same person? What happened to you? Well, where is this Jesus, I want meet him too. I’m all for Christians being normal in one sense. I hate the cheesy bubble we’ve created to exist in. But the fact remains, if people never notice anything different about us something is wrong.
Vs 13-16 They bring the man to the Pharisees. Some suggest this was good intentions, trying to show the religious scholars that this man Jesus truly is a prophet from God. It clearly doesn’t work. The Pharisees don’t see this healing as a good thing because it happened on the Sabbath. Jesus seems to do things from time to time just for the sake of annoying the religious leaders.
He often healed on the Sabbath. When doing so, He often incorporated some odd thing in the healing which He knew would get to them. When He healed the lame man He didn’t just heal him, He said “carry you mat.” In this case He heals the man by making mud or clay. Working clay was prohibited by the 39 categories of work in Rabbinic Judaism. Why would Jesus do this? Most likely to show owner ship of the day. The Pharisees had basically claimed authority and taken ownership of all things religious; Sabbath was an obvious one Jesus could make a point of. Jesus would not yield ownership of the things of God to anyone, especially those who love traditions more than they love God.
We see here how petty we can be about things we see as religious. They should have been in wonder and amazement and congratulated the man. Instead they harp on things that are so meaningless. Things haven’t changed much. “You have to use KJV! You have to dress like this! Old time religion! Worship has to look like this!” I’ve even heard a preacher preach on the wickedness of men having long hair. Do these things really matter?
Some of them wanted to believe, but it’s so hard to get past traditions and expectation. So, they were divided.
Vs 24-34 They ask the parents to explain what happened. They tell the Pharisees to ask their son since he is old enough to respond for himself. So they call him back a second time. They try to pressure him into saying Jesus is bad by starting their question with “Give glory to God.” In other words, “We are the pro’s here. We know this Jesus guy is wrong. It would please God for you to agree with us. You want to please God….right?”
The man’s answer is amazing. He basically says, “Look, I’m new. I don’t know all the doctrines. I don’t know much about this Jesus guy. But here is what Jesus did for me.” We could take such a lesson from this. I’ve heard so many people say they want to share Jesus with their friends and people around them only to fall back on the cop-out “But I don’t know that much about the Bible. What if they ask me something I don’t know?” You don’t have to have all the answers. You never will have all the answers. It’s good to want to learn them, but if you wait until you have them you will never talk about Jesus with anyone.
After they tell him to recount the event again he gets smart with them. This sets them off and they start throwing insults at the guy. They claim superiority by the fact that they follow Moses (which in fact they didn’t, they followed their own laws which they added to Moses). So far they’ve tried everything to intimidate this guy into saying Jesus is a sinner. They’ve tried appealing to their traditions, they’ve tried intimidating his family, they’ve tried fear of being against God, and now they insult him. When none of this works they call him names and throw him out. “I’m very professional. You’re fired.”
Vs 35-41 Jesus didn’t correct the man for worshiping Him. This is a passive claim to deity. Any Jewish dude who did think he was God would have screamed “BLASPHEMY!” and stopped the false worship immediately. The fact that Jesus allows the man to worship Him shows Jesus thought Himself to be of the same essence as God.
Jesus is often at war with scribes and Pharisees. Jesus sets up situations with them that will spark moral, ethical and didactic wars. We see this here. The war Jesus is fighting here is legalism. The battlefield is the Sabbath.
Legalists like to add their own rules to God’s word. They say, or at least imply that God’s word isn’t sufficient as it is. It doesn’t tell us enough, it isn’t complete, it needs help. For them, rules are everything; to the point that they say, “Even if my heart is cold and lifeless I’m good because I’ve kept the rules.” The thing is their rules aren’t just for them. They think everyone has to follow their rules too, or they are sinning. Legalists say, “Obey me, not God”.
Legalists take good and beautiful spiritual things and make them burdensome and deadly. The issue here is Sabbath. Simple, God said take a day off from work. It’s just simple and good, like fudgerounds. You don’t need rules to enjoy them. Saying “eat a fudgeround” is plenty. But the Jews came along and added rules to eating fudgerounds and in doing so they made the fudgerounds not enjoyable. So let’s look at the encounter.
Vs 8-12 The change in this guy was so great that his neighbors questioned if this was the same man. I know this is easier to understand thinking about a lame dude walking for the first time, or a blind man seeing for the first time, but the question remains; is there anything so different about your life that people around you would notice? Is the difference Jesus makes in your life enough to make you seem like a different person?
The progression here is amazing: Are you the same person? What happened to you? Well, where is this Jesus, I want meet him too. I’m all for Christians being normal in one sense. I hate the cheesy bubble we’ve created to exist in. But the fact remains, if people never notice anything different about us something is wrong.
Vs 13-16 They bring the man to the Pharisees. Some suggest this was good intentions, trying to show the religious scholars that this man Jesus truly is a prophet from God. It clearly doesn’t work. The Pharisees don’t see this healing as a good thing because it happened on the Sabbath. Jesus seems to do things from time to time just for the sake of annoying the religious leaders.
He often healed on the Sabbath. When doing so, He often incorporated some odd thing in the healing which He knew would get to them. When He healed the lame man He didn’t just heal him, He said “carry you mat.” In this case He heals the man by making mud or clay. Working clay was prohibited by the 39 categories of work in Rabbinic Judaism. Why would Jesus do this? Most likely to show owner ship of the day. The Pharisees had basically claimed authority and taken ownership of all things religious; Sabbath was an obvious one Jesus could make a point of. Jesus would not yield ownership of the things of God to anyone, especially those who love traditions more than they love God.
We see here how petty we can be about things we see as religious. They should have been in wonder and amazement and congratulated the man. Instead they harp on things that are so meaningless. Things haven’t changed much. “You have to use KJV! You have to dress like this! Old time religion! Worship has to look like this!” I’ve even heard a preacher preach on the wickedness of men having long hair. Do these things really matter?
Some of them wanted to believe, but it’s so hard to get past traditions and expectation. So, they were divided.
Vs 24-34 They ask the parents to explain what happened. They tell the Pharisees to ask their son since he is old enough to respond for himself. So they call him back a second time. They try to pressure him into saying Jesus is bad by starting their question with “Give glory to God.” In other words, “We are the pro’s here. We know this Jesus guy is wrong. It would please God for you to agree with us. You want to please God….right?”
The man’s answer is amazing. He basically says, “Look, I’m new. I don’t know all the doctrines. I don’t know much about this Jesus guy. But here is what Jesus did for me.” We could take such a lesson from this. I’ve heard so many people say they want to share Jesus with their friends and people around them only to fall back on the cop-out “But I don’t know that much about the Bible. What if they ask me something I don’t know?” You don’t have to have all the answers. You never will have all the answers. It’s good to want to learn them, but if you wait until you have them you will never talk about Jesus with anyone.
After they tell him to recount the event again he gets smart with them. This sets them off and they start throwing insults at the guy. They claim superiority by the fact that they follow Moses (which in fact they didn’t, they followed their own laws which they added to Moses). So far they’ve tried everything to intimidate this guy into saying Jesus is a sinner. They’ve tried appealing to their traditions, they’ve tried intimidating his family, they’ve tried fear of being against God, and now they insult him. When none of this works they call him names and throw him out. “I’m very professional. You’re fired.”
Vs 35-41 Jesus didn’t correct the man for worshiping Him. This is a passive claim to deity. Any Jewish dude who did think he was God would have screamed “BLASPHEMY!” and stopped the false worship immediately. The fact that Jesus allows the man to worship Him shows Jesus thought Himself to be of the same essence as God.
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Loogies and Healin's
John 9 Loogies and healin’s
Read John 9:1-7
John is very purposeful in showing Jesus’ strategy. In John Jesus’ teachings, specifically the I Am statements, and miracles are intertwined. “I Am the living water” spoken to the woman at the well, followed by healing the handicapable man at pool of Bethesda. Jesus feeds 5,000 then says “I Am the bread of Heaven”. In chapter 8 Jesus said “I Am the Light…” and now He heals a blind man.
We’ll come back to the phrase “as he passed by” at the end.
-Jesus takes note of a blind man. His disciples automatically assume this calamity is punishment for some great wickedness, either his or his parents. This was a common believe of the time also reflected in the rabbinic saying from around 300AD, “there is no death without sin, and there is no suffering without iniquity” (b. Shabbat 55a). Instead of asking “can we help this” they treated this man’s misfortune as a theological puzzle. There is nothing wrong with theological discussions. But this was not the time for such a discussion; this was the time to do something to relieve this man’s suffering.
-Jesus says the man’s blindness is nobody’s fault. Some suffering is due to sin, some due to bad choices, but other is due simply to the fact that we live in a broken world. Some things just suck. This man’s blindness can’t be tracked to something he or his parents did wrong. It just is, and God allowed it to be so that on this day God could show His power and love. God allowed him to be blind for many years just for this one day. How difficult is it to keep trusting when the answer of solution doesn’t come immediately, or when the situation is something that has “just always been this way”?
-Jesus says He (some mss say we) must work while it is day for night is coming. This is a reference to the fact that Jesus had limited time on earth and therefore had no time to waste. He could not afford to overlook one opportunity to do the work of the Father because the night, death and 3 days in the tomb (see 12:35, 13:30), was getting closer.
-Jesus spits, makes mud and smears it on the guy’s face. Gross. Why such an odd means? Jesus could have, and did in other cases, simply say “boom, healed.” There are 2 possibilities, one is more probable than the other.
1. Both spit and clay were common to pagan healing myths of the time. Remember Asclepius from the study in John 5? Asclepius, the god of healing, had a temple in Jerusalem. This temple, or Asclepeion, was near built in the first century BC near the Pool of Bethesda. Worshipers and believers of Asclepius thought there was special healing power in saliva. The symbol of Asclepius is a rod with a snake. Being bitten by certain snakes was thought to have power. In some temples they would bring in dogs to lick wounds. Certain clay utensils were also very important. By using spit, to make muddy clay, Jesus is again setting Himself up as superior to Asclepius as the true Physician.
2. It’s likely that the focus on Jesus’ action here shouldn’t be on the spit, but on the mud. These people would have been intimately familiar with the creation account in Genesis. We know from that account that God formed man from the dirt. Irenaeus (130-200AD) said “the work of God is the fashioning of man...that which the artificer, the Word, had omitted to form in the womb, [namely the blind man’s eyes], He then supplied in public, that the works of God might be manifested in him” (Against Heresies 5.15.2). Jesus is still revealing His divine nature, but in a very creative way. Just as an artist or a craftsman fixes a damaged product with original materials, Jesus reveals His deity by using mud to fix the man.
-But the actual healing doesn’t take place until the man goes to wash in the Pool of Siloam. Obviously Jesus could have healed him on the spot. The washing wasn’t to finish or help Jesus’ power. It’s simply an issue of obedience. If you notice, most of the people whom Jesus heals on the spot seek Him out showing they already have a level faith. This man did not seek Jesus out, Jesus noticed him. The instruction to go and wash and be made whole is simply allowing the man to show faith and God and obedience to Jesus.
-John 8 ends with the Jews picking up stones to kill Jesus. In the Greek John 8:59 and 9:1 are joined by the word “and”. Look at Young’s Literal Translation: “58Jesus said to them, `Verily, verily, I say to you, Before Abraham's coming -- I am;' 59they took up, therefore, stones that they may cast at him, but Jesus hid himself, and went forth out of the temple, going through the midst of them, and so passed by. 1And passing by, he saw a man blind from birth,”
I saved this for the end even though it is the first part of the verse because I think it may be the most powerful thing about what’s happening here. Jesus is literally escaping from being stoned to death when He notices this man. Jesus is in the process of slipping out of a crowd trying to kill Him when He sees this man and stops everything to notice this person in need.
This is a crazy event. The majestic Son of God puts a lung butter mud pie on a guy’s face to heal him, while escaping from a crowd, and in doing so shows Himself to be not only the messiah, but YHWH in the flesh. The question now is, “How do we apply this to our lives?” Several ways.
1. Is your life too busy to help or minister to others? If you think it is, you are wrong. Never be so busy with your own life that you can’t see the needs in other’s lives.
2. Don’t get so fixated on discussing a problem that you don’t solve the problem. The disciples had no need to know why the man was blind, all that should have mattered to them was that he was blind. There are times to address causes and making better decisions. Then there are times to act.
3. Never presume to know how God will answer a prayer of move in a situation. Really, who saw the spit thing coming?
4. Don’t be surprised if God’s answer to your prayers or solution to your problems involves you doing something. Too many Christians think God only answers prayers in mystical ex nihilo ways. Many times God’s answer sounds more like, “Ok, here’s what you need to do…”
Read John 9:1-7
John is very purposeful in showing Jesus’ strategy. In John Jesus’ teachings, specifically the I Am statements, and miracles are intertwined. “I Am the living water” spoken to the woman at the well, followed by healing the handicapable man at pool of Bethesda. Jesus feeds 5,000 then says “I Am the bread of Heaven”. In chapter 8 Jesus said “I Am the Light…” and now He heals a blind man.
We’ll come back to the phrase “as he passed by” at the end.
-Jesus takes note of a blind man. His disciples automatically assume this calamity is punishment for some great wickedness, either his or his parents. This was a common believe of the time also reflected in the rabbinic saying from around 300AD, “there is no death without sin, and there is no suffering without iniquity” (b. Shabbat 55a). Instead of asking “can we help this” they treated this man’s misfortune as a theological puzzle. There is nothing wrong with theological discussions. But this was not the time for such a discussion; this was the time to do something to relieve this man’s suffering.
-Jesus says the man’s blindness is nobody’s fault. Some suffering is due to sin, some due to bad choices, but other is due simply to the fact that we live in a broken world. Some things just suck. This man’s blindness can’t be tracked to something he or his parents did wrong. It just is, and God allowed it to be so that on this day God could show His power and love. God allowed him to be blind for many years just for this one day. How difficult is it to keep trusting when the answer of solution doesn’t come immediately, or when the situation is something that has “just always been this way”?
-Jesus says He (some mss say we) must work while it is day for night is coming. This is a reference to the fact that Jesus had limited time on earth and therefore had no time to waste. He could not afford to overlook one opportunity to do the work of the Father because the night, death and 3 days in the tomb (see 12:35, 13:30), was getting closer.
-Jesus spits, makes mud and smears it on the guy’s face. Gross. Why such an odd means? Jesus could have, and did in other cases, simply say “boom, healed.” There are 2 possibilities, one is more probable than the other.
1. Both spit and clay were common to pagan healing myths of the time. Remember Asclepius from the study in John 5? Asclepius, the god of healing, had a temple in Jerusalem. This temple, or Asclepeion, was near built in the first century BC near the Pool of Bethesda. Worshipers and believers of Asclepius thought there was special healing power in saliva. The symbol of Asclepius is a rod with a snake. Being bitten by certain snakes was thought to have power. In some temples they would bring in dogs to lick wounds. Certain clay utensils were also very important. By using spit, to make muddy clay, Jesus is again setting Himself up as superior to Asclepius as the true Physician.
2. It’s likely that the focus on Jesus’ action here shouldn’t be on the spit, but on the mud. These people would have been intimately familiar with the creation account in Genesis. We know from that account that God formed man from the dirt. Irenaeus (130-200AD) said “the work of God is the fashioning of man...that which the artificer, the Word, had omitted to form in the womb, [namely the blind man’s eyes], He then supplied in public, that the works of God might be manifested in him” (Against Heresies 5.15.2). Jesus is still revealing His divine nature, but in a very creative way. Just as an artist or a craftsman fixes a damaged product with original materials, Jesus reveals His deity by using mud to fix the man.
-But the actual healing doesn’t take place until the man goes to wash in the Pool of Siloam. Obviously Jesus could have healed him on the spot. The washing wasn’t to finish or help Jesus’ power. It’s simply an issue of obedience. If you notice, most of the people whom Jesus heals on the spot seek Him out showing they already have a level faith. This man did not seek Jesus out, Jesus noticed him. The instruction to go and wash and be made whole is simply allowing the man to show faith and God and obedience to Jesus.
-John 8 ends with the Jews picking up stones to kill Jesus. In the Greek John 8:59 and 9:1 are joined by the word “and”. Look at Young’s Literal Translation: “58Jesus said to them, `Verily, verily, I say to you, Before Abraham's coming -- I am;' 59they took up, therefore, stones that they may cast at him, but Jesus hid himself, and went forth out of the temple, going through the midst of them, and so passed by. 1And passing by, he saw a man blind from birth,”
I saved this for the end even though it is the first part of the verse because I think it may be the most powerful thing about what’s happening here. Jesus is literally escaping from being stoned to death when He notices this man. Jesus is in the process of slipping out of a crowd trying to kill Him when He sees this man and stops everything to notice this person in need.
This is a crazy event. The majestic Son of God puts a lung butter mud pie on a guy’s face to heal him, while escaping from a crowd, and in doing so shows Himself to be not only the messiah, but YHWH in the flesh. The question now is, “How do we apply this to our lives?” Several ways.
1. Is your life too busy to help or minister to others? If you think it is, you are wrong. Never be so busy with your own life that you can’t see the needs in other’s lives.
2. Don’t get so fixated on discussing a problem that you don’t solve the problem. The disciples had no need to know why the man was blind, all that should have mattered to them was that he was blind. There are times to address causes and making better decisions. Then there are times to act.
3. Never presume to know how God will answer a prayer of move in a situation. Really, who saw the spit thing coming?
4. Don’t be surprised if God’s answer to your prayers or solution to your problems involves you doing something. Too many Christians think God only answers prayers in mystical ex nihilo ways. Many times God’s answer sounds more like, “Ok, here’s what you need to do…”
Friday, March 5, 2010
John 6, Feeding 5000
Here are some notes from last week's Resolved Bible study. When I started working on this study I didn't intend it to be a critique on "Prosperity Theology". In studying I found out this a favorite passage to use within the Prosperity movement. They love to use it to teach that if you have adequate faith God will mulitply your money just like Jesus multiplied the fish and loaves. However, when you look at it honestly Jesus seems to be teaching principles contradictory to this movement's theology. This is seen even more clearly when you put this miracle in the context of what Jesus said in did in the days after it happened. Enjoy.
John 6: Feeding 5k/Bread of life.
Interesting note, this is the only miracle recorded by all four gospels.
1 After this, Jesus crossed the Sea of Galilee (or Tiberias ). 2 And a huge crowd was following Him because they saw the signs that He was performing on the sick. 3 So Jesus went up a mountain and sat down there with His disciples.
(What motivated most to follow Him? The same thing that motivates many today. Too many Christians/preachers/teachers focus only on miraculous prosperity and never take the time to look at Jesus’ other teachings. “Christ’s miracles drew many after Him that were not effectually drawn to him.” Matthew Henry. It almost sounds like Jesus wants to get away from the people who are only there to see what they can get and be with the people who want to know Him.)
4 Now the Passover, a Jewish festival, was near. 5 Therefore, when Jesus looked up and noticed a huge crowd coming toward Him, He asked Philip, "Where will we buy bread so these people can eat?" 6 He asked this to test him, for He Himself knew what He was going to do.
(He asks Phillip because Phillip’s home town is near here. So Phillip would most likely have known many in the crowd and been more worried about their hunger than the other disciples. Phillip was also one of the earliest followers of Jesus and had seen all of His miracles. Jesus was not only giving Phillip a chance to show he had faith in the abilities of Jesus, He was giving Phillip a chance to let that faith help his own community. Sometimes God lets a tricky situation come in just to ask you “what are you going to do?” This question must have freaked Phillip out. “What are you doing asking me?!!! I’m following you here!” God is never caught off guard or at a loss for what to do.)
7 Philip answered, "Two hundred denarii worth of bread wouldn't be enough for each of them to have a little." 8 One of His disciples, Andrew, Simon Peter's brother, said to Him, 9 "There's a boy here who has five barley loaves and two fish—but what are they for so many?"
(How ridiculous this must have sounded. I wonder how dumb Andrew felt just saying this. But that was all they had, so they brought it to Jesus to see what He would have them do with it. Barely loaves were seen as less quality than the wheat loaves they were used to on the other side of the lake. Some insist that the only provisions God is involved in are Rolls Royce’s and $4K suits, etc. Yet here Jesus looks at the most ordinary, humble meal there was and says, “This will do.” He teaches us here not to demand the finest of everything but to be content with whatever God provides, even if it is more humble than we expected.)
10 Then Jesus said, "Have the people sit down." There was plenty of grass in that place, so they sat down. The men numbered about 5,000. 11 Then Jesus took the loaves, and after giving thanks He distributed them to those who were seated and; so also with the fish, as much as they wanted. 12 When they were full, He told His disciples, "Collect the leftovers so that nothing is wasted." 13 So they collected them and filled 12 baskets with the pieces from the five barley loaves that were left over by those who had eaten.
(Let nothing be wasted. How does that compare to some of the teachings popular in some circles today?)
14 When the people saw the sign He had done, they said, "This really is the Prophet who was to come into the world!" 15 Therefore, when Jesus knew that they were about to come and take Him by force to make Him king, He withdrew again to the mountain by Himself.
(When you follow God only because of miracles, or when the only thing that excites you about serving Jesus is what magic trick He will do for you, there is a problem.)
25 When they found Him on the other side of the sea, they said to Him, " Rabbi, when did You get here?" 26 Jesus answered, " I assure you: You are looking for Me, not because you saw the signs, but because you ate the loaves and were filled. 27 Don't work for the food that perishes but for the food that lasts for eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you, because God the Father has set His seal of approval on Him."
(They were following Jesus not because they were in awe of the power and love of God, but because Jesus did something that made them feel good. The signs Jesus performed didn’t cause them to understand the true identity of the Messiah, as was intended. The signs gave them a full belly and they wanted more of that. Their devotion to Him was based on “what can I get out of you?” It was self seeking devotion.)
28 "What can we do to perform the works of God?" they asked. 29 Jesus replied, "This is the work of God: that you believe in the One He has sent." 30 "What sign then are You going to do so we may see and believe You?" they asked. "What are You going to perform? 31 Our fathers ate the manna in the wilderness, just as it is written: He gave them bread from heaven to eat. "32 Jesus said to them, " I assure you: Moses didn't give you the bread from heaven, but My Father gives you the real bread from heaven. 33 For the bread of God is the One who comes down from heaven and gives life to the world." 34 Then they said, "Sir, give us this bread always!" 35 "I am the bread of life," Jesus told them.
(The Jews had become very works oriented. Pleasing God was all about doing the right things. So their question was their way of asking, “How are we to interact with God?” Jesus’ answer seems overly simple: Believe in the One God sent. Asking what sign He would perform to prove He was from God took an incredible about of guts, or stupidity, since this is the same group He miraculously fed the day before. And then, to show Him what a “real” sign would look like they recall how Moses prayed and God sent bread from heaven. It becomes clear quickly that they were following Jesus to see what the magic man would do next for them. What does Jesus mean by “I am the bread of life?”)
41At this the Jews began to grumble about him because he said, "I am the bread that came down from heaven." 49Your forefathers ate the manna in the desert, yet they died. 50But here is the bread that comes down from heaven, which a man may eat and not die. 51I am the living bread that came down from heaven. If anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever. This bread is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world."
(Jesus points out that God used Moses as a tool to do a miracle, but Jesus is the miracle. As with pretty much everything in OT, the manna in the desert was a foreshadowing of the real deal; Jesus.)
52Then the Jews began to argue sharply among themselves, "How can this man give us his flesh to eat?" 53Jesus said to them, "I tell you the truth, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. 54Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day. 60On hearing it, many of his disciples said, "This is a hard teaching. Who can accept it?" 61Aware that his disciples were grumbling about this, Jesus said to them, "Does this offend you? 62What if you see the Son of Man ascend to where he was before! 66From this time many of his disciples turned back and no longer followed him.
(What happens to a faith based on prosperity and parlor tricks when life gets messy and real? What happens when our genie requires more of us than making wishes? Following Jesus is free, but not always easy. The character of the “miracle chasers” is revealed by their leaving when Jesus’ teachings become less fluffy.)
John 6: Feeding 5k/Bread of life.
Interesting note, this is the only miracle recorded by all four gospels.
1 After this, Jesus crossed the Sea of Galilee (or Tiberias ). 2 And a huge crowd was following Him because they saw the signs that He was performing on the sick. 3 So Jesus went up a mountain and sat down there with His disciples.
(What motivated most to follow Him? The same thing that motivates many today. Too many Christians/preachers/teachers focus only on miraculous prosperity and never take the time to look at Jesus’ other teachings. “Christ’s miracles drew many after Him that were not effectually drawn to him.” Matthew Henry. It almost sounds like Jesus wants to get away from the people who are only there to see what they can get and be with the people who want to know Him.)
4 Now the Passover, a Jewish festival, was near. 5 Therefore, when Jesus looked up and noticed a huge crowd coming toward Him, He asked Philip, "Where will we buy bread so these people can eat?" 6 He asked this to test him, for He Himself knew what He was going to do.
(He asks Phillip because Phillip’s home town is near here. So Phillip would most likely have known many in the crowd and been more worried about their hunger than the other disciples. Phillip was also one of the earliest followers of Jesus and had seen all of His miracles. Jesus was not only giving Phillip a chance to show he had faith in the abilities of Jesus, He was giving Phillip a chance to let that faith help his own community. Sometimes God lets a tricky situation come in just to ask you “what are you going to do?” This question must have freaked Phillip out. “What are you doing asking me?!!! I’m following you here!” God is never caught off guard or at a loss for what to do.)
7 Philip answered, "Two hundred denarii worth of bread wouldn't be enough for each of them to have a little." 8 One of His disciples, Andrew, Simon Peter's brother, said to Him, 9 "There's a boy here who has five barley loaves and two fish—but what are they for so many?"
(How ridiculous this must have sounded. I wonder how dumb Andrew felt just saying this. But that was all they had, so they brought it to Jesus to see what He would have them do with it. Barely loaves were seen as less quality than the wheat loaves they were used to on the other side of the lake. Some insist that the only provisions God is involved in are Rolls Royce’s and $4K suits, etc. Yet here Jesus looks at the most ordinary, humble meal there was and says, “This will do.” He teaches us here not to demand the finest of everything but to be content with whatever God provides, even if it is more humble than we expected.)
10 Then Jesus said, "Have the people sit down." There was plenty of grass in that place, so they sat down. The men numbered about 5,000. 11 Then Jesus took the loaves, and after giving thanks He distributed them to those who were seated and; so also with the fish, as much as they wanted. 12 When they were full, He told His disciples, "Collect the leftovers so that nothing is wasted." 13 So they collected them and filled 12 baskets with the pieces from the five barley loaves that were left over by those who had eaten.
(Let nothing be wasted. How does that compare to some of the teachings popular in some circles today?)
14 When the people saw the sign He had done, they said, "This really is the Prophet who was to come into the world!" 15 Therefore, when Jesus knew that they were about to come and take Him by force to make Him king, He withdrew again to the mountain by Himself.
(When you follow God only because of miracles, or when the only thing that excites you about serving Jesus is what magic trick He will do for you, there is a problem.)
25 When they found Him on the other side of the sea, they said to Him, " Rabbi, when did You get here?" 26 Jesus answered, " I assure you: You are looking for Me, not because you saw the signs, but because you ate the loaves and were filled. 27 Don't work for the food that perishes but for the food that lasts for eternal life, which the Son of Man will give you, because God the Father has set His seal of approval on Him."
(They were following Jesus not because they were in awe of the power and love of God, but because Jesus did something that made them feel good. The signs Jesus performed didn’t cause them to understand the true identity of the Messiah, as was intended. The signs gave them a full belly and they wanted more of that. Their devotion to Him was based on “what can I get out of you?” It was self seeking devotion.)
28 "What can we do to perform the works of God?" they asked. 29 Jesus replied, "This is the work of God: that you believe in the One He has sent." 30 "What sign then are You going to do so we may see and believe You?" they asked. "What are You going to perform? 31 Our fathers ate the manna in the wilderness, just as it is written: He gave them bread from heaven to eat. "32 Jesus said to them, " I assure you: Moses didn't give you the bread from heaven, but My Father gives you the real bread from heaven. 33 For the bread of God is the One who comes down from heaven and gives life to the world." 34 Then they said, "Sir, give us this bread always!" 35 "I am the bread of life," Jesus told them.
(The Jews had become very works oriented. Pleasing God was all about doing the right things. So their question was their way of asking, “How are we to interact with God?” Jesus’ answer seems overly simple: Believe in the One God sent. Asking what sign He would perform to prove He was from God took an incredible about of guts, or stupidity, since this is the same group He miraculously fed the day before. And then, to show Him what a “real” sign would look like they recall how Moses prayed and God sent bread from heaven. It becomes clear quickly that they were following Jesus to see what the magic man would do next for them. What does Jesus mean by “I am the bread of life?”)
41At this the Jews began to grumble about him because he said, "I am the bread that came down from heaven." 49Your forefathers ate the manna in the desert, yet they died. 50But here is the bread that comes down from heaven, which a man may eat and not die. 51I am the living bread that came down from heaven. If anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever. This bread is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world."
(Jesus points out that God used Moses as a tool to do a miracle, but Jesus is the miracle. As with pretty much everything in OT, the manna in the desert was a foreshadowing of the real deal; Jesus.)
52Then the Jews began to argue sharply among themselves, "How can this man give us his flesh to eat?" 53Jesus said to them, "I tell you the truth, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. 54Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day. 60On hearing it, many of his disciples said, "This is a hard teaching. Who can accept it?" 61Aware that his disciples were grumbling about this, Jesus said to them, "Does this offend you? 62What if you see the Son of Man ascend to where he was before! 66From this time many of his disciples turned back and no longer followed him.
(What happens to a faith based on prosperity and parlor tricks when life gets messy and real? What happens when our genie requires more of us than making wishes? Following Jesus is free, but not always easy. The character of the “miracle chasers” is revealed by their leaving when Jesus’ teachings become less fluffy.)
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Christians and grieving
Below is a blog I wrote for my friend Erica. Enjoy.
I had just gotten back from Iraq. I met my son who was born while I was deployed. My wife and I were amazed at how great it felt to hold each other after months apart and were more in love than ever. Everything was perfect…mostly. All these things were truly great and I relished these moments. Life really was good. But there were some parts that didn’t seem right. There were times when I felt depressed. Sometimes I would close my eyes and all I could think of were my brothers who didn’t make it home. I felt guilty.
Then there were new issues I didn’t expect. I constantly felt nervous. I couldn’t sleep. I couldn’t drive down to Wal-Mart without thinking something was going to explode beside the road. One night I woke up unaware of where I was with my wife in an arm-lock because I thought she was trying to kill me. Needless to say, after that I slept even less. I was grieving and I felt so ashamed about it.
Why in the world am I sharing these very intimate details of my life? What does this have to do with a blog about grieving and spirituality? Everything. You see, as a Pastor (yes, I’m a Pastor who joined the Marine Corps infantry, that’s a whole other blog topic) I felt like something was very wrong with me. After all, Christians are happy. Christians have the joy of the Lord. Being a Christian, and especially a Pastor, means you have everything together. I started thinking things like, “I’m not spiritual enough. If I were close enough to God I could just pray about this and be better. I must not have enough faith.” I was so embarrassed that I was dealing with these things that I didn’t tell anyone. Obviously my wife saw it, but that was it. I didn’t want to get counseling or talk to another Pastor. I didn’t want to talk to anyone about it because then they would know I was grieving on the inside and that would be a bad witness. I couldn’t have that.
Over time, though, I started to realize that this idea that Christians have everything together and are happy all time is a big steamy pile. The crucial question I was wrestling with was this, “Is it ok for a Christian to go through a grieving process, or should they just pray and instantly be better?” I wanted God’s help. I wanted to be better. So I started studying what the Bible had to say about grief and suffering. I couldn’t find any passages where God was angry with the brokenhearted or the downcast. I couldn’t find any scriptures that shamed the grieving. What I did find was amazing, and beautiful, and encouraging. What I found is that the Bible is full of real people, who lived messy screwed up lives and grieved and struggled and cried. That’s not the beautiful part. The beautiful part is how concerned God is with our suffering. Instead of being offended or annoyed by it, as I had assumed, the Bible reveals an amazingly merciful God who grieves when we grieve. So, with all of that said, I would like to share some of what the Bible teaches about God’s people and grieving.
Suffering is part of being human. It’s part of living in this world that’s broken and tainted by sin. It’s unavoidable. Because it’s so common to the human condition the Bible talks about grieving quite a bit. There are some well known verses I found that were comforting. Verses like Psalm 34:18 which says God is close to the brokenhearted. And Ecclesiastes 3:1 and 3:4 says there is a proper time for everything. A time to weep and a time to laugh. However, where I found the most healing and comfort was in Jesus. I don’t mean that in a generic bumper sticker “Jesus is my co-pilot” way. I mean when I read the gospels and looked at the actual life of Jesus, His words, His actions, how He interacted with people, how He showed compassion to the hurting and how even He was moved to tears at times, it gave me hope. A light bulb came on and I realized that grieving is not sin. Being sad does not mean I’m not spiritual. Suffering does not mean I have no faith. My savior, the God-man, the perfect and spotless Lamb of God had bad days. As Isaiah said, He was familiar with suffering and had many sorrows.
There are two accounts from the life of Jesus that have shed a great deal of light on this subject for me. The first one is found in John chapter 11. This is the account of Lazarus. If you’re not familiar with the story let me give you the quick version. Lazarus was a good friend of Jesus. He got sick and died. The interesting thing is that when He found out Lazarus was sick Jesus was in a town nearby and could have made it to Lazarus in time to heal him. Instead Jesus stayed in that town a few more days before going to Lazarus’ hometown. By the time He got there it was too late. As Jesus got close to His friend’s house He was met on the road by Martha, one of Lazarus’ sisters. They had a really neat conversation then she went to get her sister Mary. Jesus stood there on the road just outside the town and watched the devastation death brings to those left behind. The next few verses are truly powerful and comforting. It says that as Jesus saw these sisters mourning “He was deeply moved in spirit and troubled.” Then it says “Jesus wept.”
Did you catch that? JESUS WEPT! He didn’t get misty eyed and a little downcast. He wept. Jesus sobbed. I learned a few things from this story. By doing this Jesus gives us permission to grieve for others. Jesus was so moved by seeing Lazarus’ sisters’ brokenness that He couldn’t go on without weeping. Saying “It’s ok to sympathize and grieve for others” may seem really obvious to you, but let me assure you not all Christians are aware of this. A few years ago my grandmother died and my mom had a really hard time with it. They loved spending time together, talked on the phone every day, they were very close. A few weeks after the funeral my mom was at church one day, and was still clearly broken and sad. A lady, whom my mom considered a friend, came up to her and rebuked her for still grieving the loss of her mother. She told my mom she just needed to pray and have the joy of the Lord and get over it. All that accomplished was adding guilt and judgment to suffering. Too many Christians are under this same false impression that grieving is a sign of spiritual deficiency.
Jesus didn’t tell Lazarus’ sisters to just pray and get over it. He sat in the middle of a dusty road and cried with them. Amazing. Paul reiterates this idea in Romans 12:15 saying it is good to “rejoice with those who rejoice, and weep with those who weep.” My father-in-law is amazing at this. He has been through a great deal of suffering and grieving in his life. He can meet someone for the first time, find out they are going through something horrible, and just sit and cry with them. When I see him sympathize with others who are suffering I think of Jesus and it is a beautiful thing.
I think the most eye-opening part of this scripture is that Jesus knew the whole time He was going bring Lazarus back to life. Jesus didn’t weep because He had lost hope. His weeping didn’t signal a loss of faith in His Father’s plan. Jesus knew everything was going to end up alright, and He wept anyway. Jesus knew God was going to use this situation for His glory and that the day would end with laughing and dancing and rejoicing, and He wept anyway. Grieving does not automatically mean someone has lost hope. It is not a white flag signaling you’ve given up. It is possible to have great faith and trust in God and still grieve. Having real and genuine faith doesn’t mean you don’t suffer or feel the pain of living in a broken world. Real and genuine faith looks to God through puffy red crying eyes and says, “In the midst of my weeping, in the midst of my suffering, when I can’t even speak through the sobbing, You are still God and You will get me through this.”
The second passage that has taught me a lot is in Luke chapter 22. This is where Jesus prays in a garden moments before Judas brings a mob to arrest and eventually kill Him. Here we get a glimpse of Jesus being vulnerable, being scared, being human. Jesus knows what the next few days hold. He knows the agony of the cross is coming soon and Jesus grieves, this time for Himself. In fact the scriptures say He was so anguished that His sweat was like drops of blood. That’s not a poetic thing. There’s an actual medical condition where someone can be so stressed that the capillaries in the forehead burst and blood comes out in tiny droplets like sweat. Some people think going to the cross was easy for Jesus because He’s the Son of God. They haven’t read the Bible. I like that Matthew’s gospel includes Jesus saying, “My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death.” If you can’t make the connection I’ll help you out. That’s ancient verbiage for “I’m scared to death!” In short Jesus grieves for Himself. Jesus is real about His own suffering. He doesn’t sluff if off with cheesy patronizing sayings like, “Well, God’s got a plan” or “I guess I just gotta have faith.” Jesus is too real and not nearly annoying enough for that. Yes, faith is of the utmost importance and God does in fact have a plan in all things. But it’s ok to look at your situation and be real about it. This sucks. This isn’t fun. I hate this right now. I’m scared. I’m sad. I’m…whatever, you fill in the blank.
Let me pull all of this together really quickly. Many are under the impression that grieving is somehow unspiritual and reveals a lack of faith. However, you cannot read the Bible and conclude that is truly God’s view. Grieving is part of what it is to be human in this fallen world. Having faith doesn’t mean we no longer grieve. It means, as Paul told the Thessalonians, we don’t grieve like those who have no hope. In other words we can grieve and hurt and be honest about it and still have great faith in God.
Thank you for letting me share some thoughts with you. I focused this blog on answering the question “Is it ok for Christians to grieve?” My prayer is that this is helpful to someone. If you are suffering and for some reason feel guilty about it, don’t. Once I started coming to grips with the fact that my grieving wasn’t a sign of spiritual weakness I was able to talk about it with trusted friends and family, and then the healing really started.
Nick
I had just gotten back from Iraq. I met my son who was born while I was deployed. My wife and I were amazed at how great it felt to hold each other after months apart and were more in love than ever. Everything was perfect…mostly. All these things were truly great and I relished these moments. Life really was good. But there were some parts that didn’t seem right. There were times when I felt depressed. Sometimes I would close my eyes and all I could think of were my brothers who didn’t make it home. I felt guilty.
Then there were new issues I didn’t expect. I constantly felt nervous. I couldn’t sleep. I couldn’t drive down to Wal-Mart without thinking something was going to explode beside the road. One night I woke up unaware of where I was with my wife in an arm-lock because I thought she was trying to kill me. Needless to say, after that I slept even less. I was grieving and I felt so ashamed about it.
Why in the world am I sharing these very intimate details of my life? What does this have to do with a blog about grieving and spirituality? Everything. You see, as a Pastor (yes, I’m a Pastor who joined the Marine Corps infantry, that’s a whole other blog topic) I felt like something was very wrong with me. After all, Christians are happy. Christians have the joy of the Lord. Being a Christian, and especially a Pastor, means you have everything together. I started thinking things like, “I’m not spiritual enough. If I were close enough to God I could just pray about this and be better. I must not have enough faith.” I was so embarrassed that I was dealing with these things that I didn’t tell anyone. Obviously my wife saw it, but that was it. I didn’t want to get counseling or talk to another Pastor. I didn’t want to talk to anyone about it because then they would know I was grieving on the inside and that would be a bad witness. I couldn’t have that.
Over time, though, I started to realize that this idea that Christians have everything together and are happy all time is a big steamy pile. The crucial question I was wrestling with was this, “Is it ok for a Christian to go through a grieving process, or should they just pray and instantly be better?” I wanted God’s help. I wanted to be better. So I started studying what the Bible had to say about grief and suffering. I couldn’t find any passages where God was angry with the brokenhearted or the downcast. I couldn’t find any scriptures that shamed the grieving. What I did find was amazing, and beautiful, and encouraging. What I found is that the Bible is full of real people, who lived messy screwed up lives and grieved and struggled and cried. That’s not the beautiful part. The beautiful part is how concerned God is with our suffering. Instead of being offended or annoyed by it, as I had assumed, the Bible reveals an amazingly merciful God who grieves when we grieve. So, with all of that said, I would like to share some of what the Bible teaches about God’s people and grieving.
Suffering is part of being human. It’s part of living in this world that’s broken and tainted by sin. It’s unavoidable. Because it’s so common to the human condition the Bible talks about grieving quite a bit. There are some well known verses I found that were comforting. Verses like Psalm 34:18 which says God is close to the brokenhearted. And Ecclesiastes 3:1 and 3:4 says there is a proper time for everything. A time to weep and a time to laugh. However, where I found the most healing and comfort was in Jesus. I don’t mean that in a generic bumper sticker “Jesus is my co-pilot” way. I mean when I read the gospels and looked at the actual life of Jesus, His words, His actions, how He interacted with people, how He showed compassion to the hurting and how even He was moved to tears at times, it gave me hope. A light bulb came on and I realized that grieving is not sin. Being sad does not mean I’m not spiritual. Suffering does not mean I have no faith. My savior, the God-man, the perfect and spotless Lamb of God had bad days. As Isaiah said, He was familiar with suffering and had many sorrows.
There are two accounts from the life of Jesus that have shed a great deal of light on this subject for me. The first one is found in John chapter 11. This is the account of Lazarus. If you’re not familiar with the story let me give you the quick version. Lazarus was a good friend of Jesus. He got sick and died. The interesting thing is that when He found out Lazarus was sick Jesus was in a town nearby and could have made it to Lazarus in time to heal him. Instead Jesus stayed in that town a few more days before going to Lazarus’ hometown. By the time He got there it was too late. As Jesus got close to His friend’s house He was met on the road by Martha, one of Lazarus’ sisters. They had a really neat conversation then she went to get her sister Mary. Jesus stood there on the road just outside the town and watched the devastation death brings to those left behind. The next few verses are truly powerful and comforting. It says that as Jesus saw these sisters mourning “He was deeply moved in spirit and troubled.” Then it says “Jesus wept.”
Did you catch that? JESUS WEPT! He didn’t get misty eyed and a little downcast. He wept. Jesus sobbed. I learned a few things from this story. By doing this Jesus gives us permission to grieve for others. Jesus was so moved by seeing Lazarus’ sisters’ brokenness that He couldn’t go on without weeping. Saying “It’s ok to sympathize and grieve for others” may seem really obvious to you, but let me assure you not all Christians are aware of this. A few years ago my grandmother died and my mom had a really hard time with it. They loved spending time together, talked on the phone every day, they were very close. A few weeks after the funeral my mom was at church one day, and was still clearly broken and sad. A lady, whom my mom considered a friend, came up to her and rebuked her for still grieving the loss of her mother. She told my mom she just needed to pray and have the joy of the Lord and get over it. All that accomplished was adding guilt and judgment to suffering. Too many Christians are under this same false impression that grieving is a sign of spiritual deficiency.
Jesus didn’t tell Lazarus’ sisters to just pray and get over it. He sat in the middle of a dusty road and cried with them. Amazing. Paul reiterates this idea in Romans 12:15 saying it is good to “rejoice with those who rejoice, and weep with those who weep.” My father-in-law is amazing at this. He has been through a great deal of suffering and grieving in his life. He can meet someone for the first time, find out they are going through something horrible, and just sit and cry with them. When I see him sympathize with others who are suffering I think of Jesus and it is a beautiful thing.
I think the most eye-opening part of this scripture is that Jesus knew the whole time He was going bring Lazarus back to life. Jesus didn’t weep because He had lost hope. His weeping didn’t signal a loss of faith in His Father’s plan. Jesus knew everything was going to end up alright, and He wept anyway. Jesus knew God was going to use this situation for His glory and that the day would end with laughing and dancing and rejoicing, and He wept anyway. Grieving does not automatically mean someone has lost hope. It is not a white flag signaling you’ve given up. It is possible to have great faith and trust in God and still grieve. Having real and genuine faith doesn’t mean you don’t suffer or feel the pain of living in a broken world. Real and genuine faith looks to God through puffy red crying eyes and says, “In the midst of my weeping, in the midst of my suffering, when I can’t even speak through the sobbing, You are still God and You will get me through this.”
The second passage that has taught me a lot is in Luke chapter 22. This is where Jesus prays in a garden moments before Judas brings a mob to arrest and eventually kill Him. Here we get a glimpse of Jesus being vulnerable, being scared, being human. Jesus knows what the next few days hold. He knows the agony of the cross is coming soon and Jesus grieves, this time for Himself. In fact the scriptures say He was so anguished that His sweat was like drops of blood. That’s not a poetic thing. There’s an actual medical condition where someone can be so stressed that the capillaries in the forehead burst and blood comes out in tiny droplets like sweat. Some people think going to the cross was easy for Jesus because He’s the Son of God. They haven’t read the Bible. I like that Matthew’s gospel includes Jesus saying, “My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death.” If you can’t make the connection I’ll help you out. That’s ancient verbiage for “I’m scared to death!” In short Jesus grieves for Himself. Jesus is real about His own suffering. He doesn’t sluff if off with cheesy patronizing sayings like, “Well, God’s got a plan” or “I guess I just gotta have faith.” Jesus is too real and not nearly annoying enough for that. Yes, faith is of the utmost importance and God does in fact have a plan in all things. But it’s ok to look at your situation and be real about it. This sucks. This isn’t fun. I hate this right now. I’m scared. I’m sad. I’m…whatever, you fill in the blank.
Let me pull all of this together really quickly. Many are under the impression that grieving is somehow unspiritual and reveals a lack of faith. However, you cannot read the Bible and conclude that is truly God’s view. Grieving is part of what it is to be human in this fallen world. Having faith doesn’t mean we no longer grieve. It means, as Paul told the Thessalonians, we don’t grieve like those who have no hope. In other words we can grieve and hurt and be honest about it and still have great faith in God.
Thank you for letting me share some thoughts with you. I focused this blog on answering the question “Is it ok for Christians to grieve?” My prayer is that this is helpful to someone. If you are suffering and for some reason feel guilty about it, don’t. Once I started coming to grips with the fact that my grieving wasn’t a sign of spiritual weakness I was able to talk about it with trusted friends and family, and then the healing really started.
Nick
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Upcoming Blog
I'm working on an article for a good friend of mine who is a
phenomenal psychologist and counselor. She has asked me to contribute
to her blog dealing with issues of grieving and spirituality.
phenomenal psychologist and counselor. She has asked me to contribute
to her blog dealing with issues of grieving and spirituality.
I'm going to check with her and if she is cool with it I will post
that article here as well. Keep an eye out for it. This is a very
interesting subject and I think a lot a Christians are confused about
what the Bible really teaches about grieving.
I should be done with it in the next 3 or 4 days.
Nick
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Don't cry on Valentines Day
Valentines day is tomorrow. Some of you are getting over-sized cards and heart shaped boxes of cheap chocolate tomorrow. Some of you may be lonely tomorrow. I would love to say I'll hang out with you sorry saps tomorrow, but I'll be haning out with my gorgeous wife, you know, so.....
Anyway, I thought I would share this video to help you lonley hearted folks. And remember, don't cry. "Crying is letting your soul leak. And every time a soul leaks a kitten breaks a leg." That's a paraphrase of a Ben Franklin quote. I think the exact wording was, "A penny saved is a penny earned." Close enough.
Anyway, I thought I would share this video to help you lonley hearted folks. And remember, don't cry. "Crying is letting your soul leak. And every time a soul leaks a kitten breaks a leg." That's a paraphrase of a Ben Franklin quote. I think the exact wording was, "A penny saved is a penny earned." Close enough.
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