The Days Are Getting Shorter

How much longer to the end?;
Will a Prius Win at Indy?

The Days Are Getting Shorter
How much longer to the end?

The days are getting shorter.*
It’s amazing. Quite absurd.
And all because of Chile
and the earthquake they endured..

That 8.8 explosion
deep within our planet’s crust
was so strong its axis shifted.
And you wonder why the fuss.

Less daylight in just an instant.
Kind of scary, don’t you think?
Could these natural disasters
mean that we are on the brink…?

The frequency with which we hear
of earthquakes, floods and war
gives us pause to humbly ponder…
“In God’s game plan, what’s the score?”

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-03-01/chilean-quake-likely-shifted-earth-s-axis-nasa-scientist-says.html

Will a Prius Win at Indy?
Toyota’s problems are really accelerating

Will a Prius win at Indy?
They accelerate so fast.
Those hybrids are a safety risk 
(although they’re great on gas).

“Give us a break!” Toyota pleads,
“We really aren’t so bad.
Our cars (in time) will finally stop.
There’s no use getting mad.”

You kidding me? That car’s unsafe.
You certainly recall
the countless vehicles at risk.
Too many hit the wall!

So, Mr. T, you’d best think fast
(just like your unbraked cars).
If you don’t steer your company,
you’ll end up behind bars.

Winter Blues

Color me ready for Spring;
The Teams of Winter’s Other Games

Winter Blues
Color me ready for Spring

Hoping that the dirty piles of snow will melt away.
Waiting on the green of spring to overcome the gray.
Anxious for the unclothed trees to dress in bright array.
I can’t wait for winter to be gone.

Tired of the temperatures that freeze you to the bone.
Stressed-out by the icy roads you drive from work to home.
Done-in by brownish landscape by which March is known.
I can’t wait for winter to be gone.

Looking past March Madness to the thrill of Opening Day.
Having practiced golf on Wii I’m psyched to really play.
Ready to be done with Lent and roll the stone away.
I can’t wait for winter to be gone.

 
The Teams of Winter’s Other Games
Celebrating the sled dogs of the Iditarod

While the teams have left Vancouver
with their medals and gone home,
we can’t forget the other Games
and the teams that mush for Nome.

I mean those teams who pull a sled
along a windswept trail,
those on a gold rush of their own
in blinding snow and hail.

They test their mettle in the cold
beneath a silvery moon
while bronze-furred parkas warm the bones
of mushers night and noon.

These teams do not give interviews
or weep when anthems play.
They simply race to reach their goal
and hear their master say,
“Well done!”

An Audience of One

An Olympic ice skater grieves her mother’s death

She got the unexpected news.
Her precious mum was dead.
Olympic hopes and wide-eyed dreams
became nightmarish dread.

What should she do? Drop out? Go home?
There’s no way she could skate.
To take the ice would be so cold.
It would be a mistake.

Or would that be the greatest gift
a mother could receive
from one she taught to give her all
when prone to quit or grieve?

So skate she did (with broken heart)
before a nervous crowd
who held their breath (with fingers crossed)
for one who cried out loud.

She faced the music all alone
in spite of full house
who saw her face and cheered her on
while quiet as a mouse.

It was Joannie’s finest hour
though weak, in-shock and numb.
Her dance on ice was for her mum…
an audience of one.

Can’t we relate when life is hard,
when ice we skate is thin?
When we’re alone, afraid or lost
and want to cash it in?

In times like that it makes much sense
(although it may seem odd)
to block out those “up in the stands”
and focus just on God.

Just think of it. He sees our need
and knows why we feel done.
So we can “skate” for Him alone…
our audience of One.

* Figure skater Joannie Rochette was born in MontréalQuébec, and raised in Île Dupas. On February 21, 2010, two days before the beginning of the ladies event at the 2010 Winter Olympics, her mother, best friend and most ardent supporter died unexpectedly of a heart attack while in Vancouver to watch her daughter. Despite the loss Joannie continued in her commitment to compete. In the Olympic short program, Rochette recorded a personal best of 71.36, the third highest score of the night. In the finals, she took third place and a bronze medal. Truly an inspirational story.

O Canada (revisited)

A tribute to a gold medal nation;
Lessons of Life from Team USA;
Grace is Free But Never Cheap

O Canada (revisited)
A tribute to a gold medal nation

O, Canada,
(my best friend’s native land)
your beauty beckons,
your nature calms
your Whistler’s haunting melodies
hypnotically inspire.

O, Canada, I salute you.
Your royal history
(do-right proud)
is saddled on a mount.
Your provinces
(quite rightly)
bow and curtsy to the Queen.

O, Canada, I thank you.
You gave me my wife
and her uncle gave a grateful nation
a heritage of Haida art
unhidden and unsurpassed.

You gave me my favorite fish and chippery,
a cuppa tea at four,
a game of sticks and puck on ice
There’s all that and much more.

You gave us Tim Horton
(his donuts and joe).
My northernmost neighbor,
I’m hoping you know
how much I value the shared border
that unites our two nations in peace.

O, Canada, from coast to coast
you give your people cause to boast.
You’re a country that won’t quit.

From Lake Louise to the St. Lawrence Seaway
from a port called Prince Rupert
to an island called Prince Edward.
From New Westminster to New Brunswick,
from Spanish Banks to Hudson’s Bay.

From the Rockies to the prairies
to the Great Lakes to the sea,
you’re really quite amazing, eh?
I love how you say “Z.”

* My wife Wendy was born in and (though raised by missionary parents in Mexico City) graduated from John Oliver High School in Vancouver. Her mum’s oldest sister was married to the legendary Haida carver and sculptor Bill Reid. Bill’s The Spirit of Haida Gwaii sculpture is prominently displayed at the Vancouver Airport and at the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C.  (Oh, and by the way, the best fish and chips anywhere is a little hole-in-the-wall mom-and-pop place. It’s called Barb’s near the Inner Harbor in Victoria!)

Lessons of Life from Team USA
What can we learn from Shaun and Lindsey?

That red-haired kid named White won gold
He’s witty, coy and brashly bold.
This half-pipe king’s not bored with snow.
I love his “joie de vivre.”

And what about that Lindsey Vonn?
We thought her hopes for gold were gone.
But she proved when you push through pain,
it’s downhill all the way.

The spirit of Team USA
inspires us to “find a way.”
When circumstances spell defeat,
let’s choose another word.

Within God’s Word we read the same.
How faith can fuel a dying flame.
It gives us eyes to focus on
what others cannot see.

“Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see.” Hebrews 11:1 

Grace is Free But Never Cheap!
What are we to make of Tiger’s crocodile tears?

Mulligans aren’t for true players.
They are meant for me and you.
For professionals like Tiger,
mulligan means Irish stew.

But when he begs for forgiveness
for his infidelities
is he asking for a gimmie
from his fans and family?

Should we let him pick his ball up
or should he be forced to putt?
Should he wait in line to pay up
or are we to give him cuts?

If he’s starving for the status
that for month’s he’s been denied,
should we kill the fatted heifer
or let Tiger swallow pride?

Well, was Jesus only lyin’
when he said we must forgive
not just once or twice but always
when trust leaks as through a sieve?

No, he meant the words he uttered.
Yes, forgiveness is His call.
Maybe we should all remember
no one’s perfect… none at all.

All the same a trust once broken
by some fractured faith or tryst
will require time for healing
once the wrong has been confessed.

Grace is free but very costly.
There’s a price that must be paid.
Those forgiven can’t take lightly
those mistakes that they have made.

Unlike in Love

Could two Valentines be more different?;
We Are a Common Wealth!

Unlike In Love
Could two Valentines be more different?

I’m a messy. She’s a neat-nick.
I love Gaither tunes.
She can’t stand their Gospel music.
“Gag me with a spoon!”

I like movies that are poignant.
She likes comedies.
I insist on fresh-brewed Starbucks.
She sips Zen green tea.

She likes staying home and chilling.
I like going out.
I want steak and baked potato.
She prefers grilled trout.

When at home, I want darkness.
She must turn on lights.
I do well avoiding conflict.
She would rather fight.

Could two people be more different?
Are you kidding me?
I drive with the windows open.
She must have A/C.

While I’m quick to make decisions,
she’s inclined to wait.
I am rarely ever on-time.
She is never late.

When we’re tempted to believe
our vows have run their course,
she would probably opt for murder
while I’d choose divorce.

All the same, in spite of just how
different we may be,
God has given us each other.
On that, we both agree.

* Wendy and I met as 18 year-olds during freshman orientation week at Seattle Pacific University. We never went-out in college but proceeded to date each other’s roommates. Our paths crossed again a decade later when I was a bachelor pastor and she was teaching school. Did I ever tell you about how I proposed to her on a Scrabble board? We were married on May 29, 1982. Ever since we’ve been poles apart together… and loving it!

We Are a Common Wealth!
A truth the Olympic torch illuminates

The flame on that Olympic wick
is more than fire on a stick.
It is an element of earth
as old as time itself.

That blazing torch passed man to man
recalls a truth since life began.
What warms the world and lights the night
is shared by everyone.

That bluish sphere that spins in space
defines us as a human race.
We are related. We are kin…
a global family.

All nations (every tribe and tongue)
have equal worth. The world is one.
These Winter Games remind us all…
We are a common wealth!