“Bob Barker, Come on Down!”

Bob Barker, longtime host of The Price Is Right, dies at 99

Like a carnival barker, Bob called out to us
inviting us to test our mental math skills
and determine if the price was right
on items Barker’s Beauties pointed to.

Like other shows,
there were consequences if we failed to tell the truth.

It took concentration to play his version of The Match Game.
You bet your life it did.
And there was double jeopardy if
the wheel of fortune proved unfortunate.

Long before Richard Dawson and Steve Harvey
were arbitrating family feuds,
Bob was taking our minds off “Who Wants to be a Millionaire.”

And even though Monty Hall was tempting us with
“Let’s Make a Deal,”
Bob had enticing deals of his own.

But Bob was more than a game show host.
Much more.
He was an animal rights activist
who barked on behalf of canines who couldn’t speak for themselves.

Bob was the ultimate emcee
always at home in the warm glow of the spotlight.

And while his career was defined by game shows, I hope he came to understand that the Game of Life must be played by God’s rules.

That denying God’s truth has consequences.
That the price for eternal life is righteousness
that imperfect people can never attain on their own.
That when Jesus pondered “What’s My Line?” he promptly replied,

“I am the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me.”

I hope Bob came to realize that the only price that can make us right with our Creator was paid on his behalf by One who died that we might live forever.

I hope he heard a loving voice call to him the day he died saying…

“Bob Barker, come on down and enjoy the banquet I’ve prepared for you to enjoy with Me forever.”

Peace to his memory!

***Bob’s less-than-perfect life began in Darrington, Washington (about an hour from where I currently live). He attended college in Springfield, Missouri (the same town my mom did). He helped entertain my brother and me when we were in elementary school by hosting “Truth or Consequences” (which Marc and I were able to view as part of the studio audience on a family vacation in Hollywood).

Whatever the Weather

Al Roker’s weather map doesn’t tell the whole story

Drastic flooding in New England
scorching heat down in the South
wildfires in Hawaii and up north
weather patterns have been changing.
Global warming seems the cause.
And while some may plead the fifth, I’ll take the fourth.

Yes, the fourth psalm speaks of trouble
in a world that’s all a blur,
yet the psalmist pins his hope on One he trusts.
Though despair defines the planet,
he will rest in who God is
even when the world around him turns to rust.

A Lesson from the Banyan Tree

The famous banyan tree in Lahaina, Maui still stands following the wildfires

A banyan tree in paradise
stands charred with limbs outstretched
and pictures hope amid grave tragedy.
The spirit of aloha lives
in those who’ve lost their homes
and in the prayers of onlookers like me.

This banyan tree’s a metaphor
much like Christ’s parable
of one who builds their life on rock (not sand).
When trials come (and come they will)
that threaten to destroy,
a rooted life with faith will surely stand.

What stands is rooted neath the earth
where nourishment is found.
What we can’t see accounts for what is seen.
When gale-force winds and hungry flames
envelop us with fear,
what anchors us sustains our faith and dreams.

O God, please comfort those who grieve
the loss of homes and lives.
Provide them with the means to carry on.
And may the message of the tree
inspire us to see
that faith remains when what we loved is gone.

A Photographic Memory with Spiritual Implications

Lincoln Rock on Highway 97A near Rocky Reach Dam in Washington State

I’ve always been interested in taking photos. As a nine-year-old I took a picture of the partially constructed Space Needle. Impressed with the magnificent spillway, I aimed my Kodak Brownie camera at Grand Coulee Dam. The black-and-white snapshots were nothing to write home about, but I was hooked. Capturing “life as it happens” on film became a lifelong passion. Ask my family, I’m still taking more photos than most with my iPhone.

Shortly after our family moved to the Wenatchee Valley in 1964, I discovered something worthy of my camera’s lens. It was the outcropping of basalt rock in Swakane Canyon that bears a remarkable resemblance to our sixteenth President. All these years later, I still am fascinated by the natural rock formation. Most every trip we make to our lake house in Chelan, I quickly glance to the left to pay my respects to Honest Abe as we pass Rocky Reach Dam.

Recently I did some research to learn about this natural phenomenon unique to our area. What was created thousands of years ago by wind, weather and the intensity of geological activity captured the imagination of those who saw it. The indigenous peoples and Caucasian explorers in our region in the early 1800s identified the rock as resembling a human’s profile.

Speaking of taking photos of our famous landmark, just nine years after Washington became a state, a guy by the name of Charles Schoff took a photo of the rock formation from the deck of a Columbia River steamboat. Schoff was the engineer of the packet vessel named the Echo that ran between Wenatchee and Orondo. Curiously, a deckhand on the Echo by the name of Ed Ferguson was reading a biography of Abraham Lincoln at the time. Ed remarked to Charles that the face in the rock resembled the profile of the late President.

Schoff and Ferguson’s discovery caught on. The feature became known to crew members and passengers traveling down the Columbia River as Lincoln Rock. Four years later, the July 1902 issue of The Ladies Home Journal featured another photograph of Lincoln Rock. This one was taken by a photographer by the name of M. P. Spencer. His black-and-white headshot appeared as part of an article titled “Rocks That Have Faces on Them.” From that point on, the face overlooking the Wenatchee Valley had national recognition. It would take nearly eighty years, however, before Lincoln Rock State Park would be officially recognized as a tourist attraction.

What I find fascinating is that long before Abraham Lincoln was born in 1809, his likeness as an adult would be visible to inhabitants and passersby of our area. Half a century later in 1859, our beloved leader had no idea that his face was viewable on more than just printed campaign posters. When he died six years later, he was unaware that his profile would be the subject of amateur photographers like me a century in the future.

I also find it fascinating that Lincoln Rock pictures for me the process of spiritual maturity. Just as the image of Lincoln was created through extreme natural disasters like windstorms, seismic shifts and geologic trauma, so too my faith is shaped through hardships and heartaches. The God I worship is using the difficult circumstances in my life in constructive ways so that I will increasingly look like Jesus. And we all relate to the pain that accompanies spiritual growth.

In a letter to the early Christians in Rome, Saint Paul reflects on the purpose of suffering in the lives of believers. In that well-known passage where the Apostle talks about “all things working together for good,” he looks back to what God saw long before anyone else had a clue. Saint Paul asserts that those God foreknew He predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son (Romans 8:29).

In other words, God saw the finished result of our being shaped into the likeness of Jesus even before we were born. And whenever I pass Lincoln Rock on my way to Lake Chelan, I have a visual aid to remind me God is still at work in my life.

Remembering a Musical Legend

Tony Bennett was a multifaceted talent as illustrated by this painting

“Because of you, there’s a song in my heart…”

He left his heart in San Francisco.
He left his voiceprint in our souls.
His legacy of music struck a chord.
And it’s true that we are grieving,
having heard that he is gone.
The shadow of his smile has left us poor.

From Fitzgerald to Count Basie,
from Billy Joel to Elton John,
Tony paired his velvet voice with cherished chums.
But a singer known as Gaga
was the Lady for this Tramp
and together they performed his “number ones.”

There will never be one like him.
Master showman, Mister B.
was quite short but was a giant on the stage.
And we can’t forget his paintings.
There was beauty in his brush.
Tony Bennett was an icon of our age.

For Anthony Benedetto “The Good Life” was more than a song he loved to sing.
It is what he lived.

Peace to his memory!

https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/paintings-by-bennett-and-benedetto?fbclid=IwAR0_WF8R3GYczBzZHD5epCed-cxVACW4Pndp_zFmKp7TjKMiqEsmD0OYILY