Category: Faith

  • Adorning the Dark

    Adorning the Dark

    In a year known for its unexpected events, there is one certainty, 2020 will be a year remembered primarily as the Year of the Pandemic when life became more about surviving than living. How much longer this lasts remains to be seen.  We yearn to return to normal.  Or, as one Facebook post shouted: “2020…

  • Supper’s Ready

    Supper’s Ready

    The power of words to change hearts is something I will never fully understand.  Appreciate?  Yes.  Understand?  No. A certain survey asked Americans what they longed to hear someone say to them.  Three answers stood out.  The first one is no surprise.  “I love you.”  The second one you might have guessed.  “I forgive you.” …

  • A Real Superhero

    A Real Superhero

    What is it with children and superheroes?  It has become a normal, if not natural part of childhood to become fascinated with mythological caped crusaders who lead exemplary lives, fight evil, and seek to save the world.  Who from my generation cannot remember the opening line from a popular television series of the 1950s —…

  • God Helps Those Who…

    There are a number of enduring images I will remember from the Pandemic of 2020 —  Healthcare workers wearing their full-body protective gear, people wearing gloves and homemade face-masks as if they were normal wardrobe attire, and empty grocery store shelves void of certain items like beef, chicken, Lysol spray, and, of course, toilet paper.…

  • I Am A Poppy And I Am Not OK

    Time for me to fess up.  I have recently been diagnosed with a malady that is becoming increasingly common among people my age. During this pandemic, there is more than one virus with which to be concerned.  Apparently, I have been infected by it. It’s called Grand-Sep-A-20 or GSA-20 for short. A few weeks ago,…

  • In Search of Perfect Vision

    In Search of Perfect Vision

    They thought she was standoffish, at the very least anti-social.  They would smile at her, but she was unresponsive.  It was as if she was blind.  She nearly was.  She wasn’t being rude or unsociable.  She was just extremely near-sighted. My grandmother, born in 1897, had poor vision.  But in the early 20th century, it…

  • Every Day is Yowza Day

    Every Day is Yowza Day

    Today, according to news reports, is National High Five Day.  Typically held on the third Thursday of April, this day recognizes how this unique hand gesture is used to otherwise greet, congratulate or celebrate.  A high five, you may know, is accomplished by pushing, sliding, or slapping the flat of one palm against the palm…

  • A Time to Read, A Time to Behave

    By the sounds of this day, you would think it is just another typical April Saturday in Augusta, Georgia.  My neighbor is cutting grass, kids two houses up are playing on their swing-set, and the UPS and FEDEX trucks compete for how many stops they have to make.  Normally, the Masters would be in full…

  • It’s Friday But Sunday’s Coming

    It’s Friday But Sunday’s Coming

    We find ourselves in the most unpredictable and perilous of times.  To label it unusual and uncertain is an understatement.  Living through a pandemic, or as a friend recently dubbed it, a “dam-panic,” is a scary, unsettling, and fearful experience.  Doubtless, it won’t be long before EVERY American knows someone with the Coronavirus, and it…

  • Deathbed Regrets?

    As I have grown older, I have found certain seasons of the year like Advent, Christmas, New Year’s, and Lent to be times to reflect upon the things that truly matter. Now, in the midst of a worldwide pandemic, I have paused, once again, to ponder the significant rather than the superficial.  This week, my…