Monday Memories: Milk Tea Cups

Some years ago, in Calcutta, India, an old woman sold milk tea on a sidewalk, along a busy street. Her stand was a block or so from the Salvation Army Youth Hostel, and on the way to Mother Theresa’s home for the dying. Many of the young folks staying at the hostel would also visit the home, to offer help or just to see it. On their way, these visitor often stopped for milk tea.

The old woman poured the tea into cups that looked a bit like small bowls. These cups were made from clay. They had no glaze on them, rather just a the rough, porous surface.

An old man sitting near the woman made the clay cups. He’d gather a handful of wet clay, crudely form them into the tiny bowls, and put them next to a fire, which hardened the clay. Once hard, they were ready for use.

Once a customer was finished drinking the tea, the cup was thrown next to the old man’s pile of clay. Every so often, as needed, the old man would crush the used clay cups, add some water to it, and put it in his pile of clay. It was the ultimate recycling program.

It’s hard not to think about Bible verses comparing us to vessels made of clay, and our Heavenly Father as the Master Potter. Yet there is a crucial difference between the old man and woman selling mild tea and our Creator.

The milk tea sellers illustrate the way the world so often sees human beings—GOD’s creation: Unfinished and useless, discarded and reformed into more useless creatures.

We who are Believers in Jesus know that in our life as sojourners on Earth we often feel like those milk tea cups. We feel rough, crudely formed. We feel like we’ve been set in into flames and hardened. We feel used, discarded, broken. In Jesus we are never simply discarded, thrown into a pile with broken pieces. Once our time is complete on Earth we are transformed into a finished product, glazed and beautiful—we will be like The Master Potter.

We will be in our true and permanent home, then. We will be in a settled place with King Jesus in His Kingdom.


Jeremiah 18 This is the message that came to Jeremiah from the Lord: “Jeremiah, go down to the potter’s house. I will give you my message there.”

So I went down to the potter’s house and saw him working with clay at the wheel. He was making a pot from clay. But there was something wrong with the pot. So the potter used that clay to make another pot. With his hands he shaped the pot the way he wanted it to be.

Then this message from the Lord came to me: “Family of Israel, you know that I can do the same thing with you. You are like the clay in the potter’s hands, and I am the potter.” This message is from the Lord. “There may come a time when I will speak about a nation or a kingdom that I will pull up by its roots or tear down and destroy it. But if the people of that nation change their hearts and lives and stop doing evil things, I will change my mind and not bring on them the disaster I planned. There may come another time when I speak about a nation that I will build up or plant. 10 But if I see that nation doing evil things and not obeying me, I will think again about the good I had planned to do for them.

11 “So, Jeremiah, say to the people of Judah and those who live in Jerusalem, ‘This is what the Lord says: I am the potter preparing troubles for you and making plans against you. So stop doing the evil things you are doing. Each person must change and start doing good.’ 12 But the people of Judah will answer, ‘We don’t care what you say. We will continue to do what we want. We will do the evil our stubborn hearts want.’”


Friday Notes: Building Blocks, Lincoln Logs, Erector Sets

Like children playing with wooden blocks, we stack them according to our own imagination; we build a world around us, at our whim and fancy.

As a kid there were also Lincoln Logs. I remember building houses and wooden castles. There were also Erector Sets. With lots of metal pieces assembled with nuts and screws, I build windmills and strange-looking things that looked ahead to the robots we build today.

Yet with His Hand, our Creator sweeps away our contraptions, our fanciful towers. He says He has a place for us, and it isn’t of our making. It’s not even of Earth.

We are called to sojourn here for time, always looking beyond to the Eternal City of GOD.


LORD Bless, Keep, Shine. . .

Monday Memories: San Jose

San José. Being young. Lisa. Love. Living in my trailer behind a fruit stand in a field. Being a Psych EMT at San José Ambulance. A preacher’s suit. Bostonian dress shoes, now forty years old still occasionally worn. Church at Calvary Community. The pier at Santa Cruz. A Preacher’s Conference. Praise songs and camp fires. Good people. Denny’s Restaurant at 2 am.
That Was Then!

Timber Creek. Feeling older. Sitting in the keeping room on a leather chair. View of the garden, with the woods and creek beyond. Early morning fruit. Then prunes Ten prunes, brought almost to a boil. Taylor’s English Breakfast tea, with raw sugar and milk. Reminds me of being Welsh. Granola and yoghurt with turmeric. Inflammation fighter. Green tea with honey. Noisy joints complainin’. Prayer at 2 am.
That Is Now!

Notes to Self: 1

“Dag Hammarskjöld’s posthumously discovered journal was first published in 1963. The original manuscript consists of a collection of brief typewritten statements placed in a loose leaf folder. Hammarskjöld, it appears, from time to time typed out his journal entries and placed them in the folder. Nothing indicates that he considered the journal completed, or that he was not intending to continue it.” –Dag Hammarskjöld Foundation

This is a book of personal devotions which compels a deep searching of one’s inner life. Dr. Baillie has written each prayer so that it has that rare quality of seeming to have been written for the reader personally, to fit his own special needs.

Here is an understanding or the aspects of GOD’s relation to man and man’s relation to GOD through prayer. Adoratioin, meditation and intercession are mingled witha strong sense of the social needs of the world as well as the needs of the individual-all done with that perfect taste and feeling for worship for which D. Baillie is so widely recognized. –from the inside cover.

Baron von Hügel said about thoughtful reading: “That daily quarter of an hour, forty years or more, I am sure has been one of the greatest sustenances and sources of calm for my life.”

Dr. Bailie, in this book, has selected 365 reading from the main stream of devotional writing, one for each day of the year. These are chosen for their value in stimulation serious thought and contemplation and are not the trite, familiar sayings that one usually associates with anthologies. Many have the quality that made A Diary of Private Prayer so popular. –from the inside cover.

And then there’s my Notes to Self. In a Bible, on scraps of paper, and somehow lately in a notebook, they track my passage sailing an Abundant Life in YeshuaJesus.


Priestly Blessing

Psalm 24: Welcoming The King

Lift up your heads,
O gates!
And be lifted up,
O ancient doors,
that the King of glory
may come in.

King David may have thought this Psalm might be used in the inauguration of the Temple. The final verses being a welcome for The King of the Universe to enter the city of Jerusalem.

Pastor Barnes’s Notes describes these gates to be like “some of the old ruins of castles in Palestine there are still to be seen deep grooves in the “posts” of the gateway, showing that the door did not open and shut, but that it was drawn up or let down.”

There’s much more in Psalm 24 to be considered. I’ve only scratched the surface, so to speak. My thoughts are simple notes that I can refer to from time to time, and perhaps add to as I delve into a particular verse that catches my attention when I recite this Psalm. Various writers have offered their commentary, from their point of view. Some write a short summary, while others offer more exhaustive analysis. All of their comments help open up the Psalm to me.

LORD Bless, Keep, Shine. . .

Psalm 24: Bearing Away a Blessing

He will receive blessing from the LORD and righteousness from the GOD of his salvation.
Such is the generation of those who seek him, who seek the face of the GOD of Jacob. Selah

In this next section of Psalm 24, King David speaks of receiving a blessing from GOD. Pastor Albert Barnes states that receiving blessings from the LORD literally is “bear away a blessing.”

King David says of those who are allowed to ascend the Holy Mountain and stand before GOD must have “clean hands, and a pure heart; who hath not lifted up his soul unto vanity, nor sworn deceitfully.” They must already be Righteous Ones. I think of Esther’s fear—in the Book of Esther—of approaching the king. If she did so unbidden, the king could either invite her in or have her killed. This same fear prevented the people of Israel from approaching Mount Sinai in the desert after their rescue from Egypt.

To ascend to the Temple, to bear away a blessing from GOD, we must be pure. Again, Apostle Paul plainly states we are not at all, in any way, righteous.

Before the destruction of The Temple, we could offer a sacrifice. Annually the Chief Rabbi offered sacrifices for the people during Yom Kippur. It was all a little like wrapping a leaking pipe with tape. Works for a minute, then fails.

GOD has a plan. He had it before creation. He knows, as the Scriptures state, the heart of humankind. He provided a way. The only way to the Father is through His Son, Jesus. We, through Jesus, are now pure and are entitled to stand before GOD. We take away a blessing.

That blessing, wrote Pastor Barnes, is to “be welcomed and treated as a friend of God. The wicked and the impure could not hope to obtain this; but he who was thus righteous would be treated according to his real character, and would meet with the assurances of the divine favor. It is as true now as it was in the days of the psalmist, that it is only the man who is in fact upright and holy that can obtain the evidences of the divine approval. God will not regard one who is living in wickedness as a righteous man, nor will he admit such a man to His favor here, or to His dwelling-place hereafter.”

Thanks be to GOD our Father, and to His Son, our Savior.

LORD Bless, Keep, Shine. . .

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Psalm 24: Climbing up the Mountain

Who shall ascend
the hill of the LORD?

And who shall stand
in his holy place?

Once King David in writing Psalm 24 establishes the supremacy of GOD over all He created, he turns to GOD’s dwelling place on Earth.

Who shall ascend the hill of the LORD?
And who shall stand in his holy place?
He who has clean hands and a pure heart,
who does not lift up his soul to what is false
and does not swear deceitfully.

According to Jewish tradition, Psalm 24 was composed by King David when the site of the Temple, the House of GOD, was revealed to him as being Mount Moriah. It was not, however, until after King David’s death that this Temple was actually built.

From King David’s house, he would walk up to Mount Moriah. He’d no doubt been there before, and knew the walk up there well. Now King David must now think differently about the hill and the house for GOD that he desires to be built atop the mountain. Perhaps he goes up there often to pray, to think about what the Temple could look like.

No doubt his thoughts turn to who would have the right to actually ascend that hill to come into our GOD’s presence. After all, as King David declares, the hill is the LORD’s and it is a Holy Place.

The answer is straight forward. People who have clean hands, pure hearts, desire truth, and are honest. Only four things are required, according to King David, to come into the presence of GOD. Pretty simple.

It gets complicated, however. Clean hands and pure heart means that a person’s actions and heart must be righteous. Apostle Paul, writing to the Romans, tells us that no one is righteous, that “all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of GOD” (Romans 3:23).

Mount Moriah looms above us. GOD is enthroned there. Within humanity there is a longing for GOD, from Whom we’ve become estranged. The Temple on Mount Moriah gleams in morning’s light. It beckons us. GOD beckons us to come up the hill. But we know within us, whether or not we care to admit it, that we harbor all sorts of impure thoughts, that we’ve done things we know we ought not have done. We may say we are good people, but inside we know we are not; we know we are dirty, inside and out. Who will make us clean?

There is a “righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe.” (Romans 3:22)

It is through this righteousness that we are now justified to ascend the mountain, to come into the presence of the Living GOD, our Creator. This righteousness is freely gifted to us; GOD’s grace is receiving that which we didn’t merit.


LORD Bless, Keep, Shine. . .

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Sunday’s Psalm: 24

“In the beginning, GOD created
the heavens
and the earth.”

Genesis. “In the beginning, GOD created the heavens and the earth. The earth was without form and void, and darkness was over the face of the deep. And the Spirit of GOD was hovering over the face of the waters. And God said, ‘Let there be light,’ and there was light. And GOD saw that the light was good. And GOD separated the light from the darkness. GOD called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And there was evening and there was morning, the first day.”

Psalm 24 is a Psalm for Sunday Celebrating GOD, Creation, Righteousness, and the Blessings of GOD.

A Psalm of David
The earth is the LORD’s and the fullness thereof,
the world and those who dwell therein,
for he has founded it upon the seas
and established it upon the rivers.

Who shall ascend the hill of the LORD?
And who shall stand in his holy place?
He who has clean hands and a pure heart,
who does not lift up his soul to what is false
and does not swear deceitfully.

He will receive blessing from the LORD
and righteousness from the GOD of his salvation.
Such is the generation of those who seek him,
who seek the face of the GOD of Jacob. Selah

Lift up your heads, O gates!
And be lifted up, O ancient doors,
that the King of glory may come in.
Who is this King of glory?
The Lord, strong and mighty,
the Lord, mighty in battle!
Lift up your heads, O gates!
And lift them up, O ancient doors,
that the King of glory may come in.
Who is this King of glory?
The Lord of hosts,
he is the King of glory! Selah

The first stanza affirms that GOD is Creator of the Universe, and calls to mind the first day of creation. In his Notes, Pastor Albert Barnes wrote: “It belongs to Him in a sense somewhat similar to our right of property in anything that is the production of our hands, or of our labor or skill. We claim that as our own.” For Pastor Barnes, if we think we have complete right to our property, its usage, its disposal, and I might add its protection, then think how much greater is GOD’s right to what He designed and created. Our Creator has “right to direct man in what way He shall employ that portion of the productions of the earth which may be entrusted to Him,” wrote Pastor Barnes.

There are absolutely no limits to GOD’s ownership and authority over “The earth. . . and the fullness thereof, the world and those who dwell therein.” GOD has a claim upon everything from the beginning up to this present moment and into the future. GOD, however, allows us to use what is His. Along with the privilege to “own” property, including animals and plants, we have obligations. As Pastor Barnes put it, GOD has “the right to direct man in what way he shall employ (what) is entrusted to him. What we think of as our property is a trust. Ultimately we are accountable to our Creator for the way we use His property.

LORD willing I’ll share some thoughts on the second stanza soon.

LORD Bless, Keep, Shine. . .