Ah, the songs that have been written about that big ball of warmth in the sky.
The aforementioned Beatles tune that titles this week's column. "The Warmth of the Sun", "Sunshine Superman", "Sunny Days", "We'll Sing in the Sunshine", and on and on and on.
As I get older, the more I'm learning that I can't ignore the healing power of sunblock or tanning lotion.
I was reminded of this last Saturday when I was home alone that afternoon. The backyard hammock, which has been little more than a playground for my soon-to-be-three year old daughter, was beckoning me to seize the moment.
"C'mon Ken...you know you want me!"
Oh, yes...and I would do it again!
Having finished mowing the grass, and my wife and daughter were still out shopping, I had nothing pressing that needed attended to at the moment, and I had to assist at a promotional event for the radio station I work for in a few hours later that day. Surely I could lay out for a little bit?
Just a little bit.
Sunscreen? No need...they'll probably be home in the next five minutes and my efforts will have been in vain.
I couldn't have possibly been out there more than an hour tops.
All I can remember is thinking that perhaps I should be next to that selection on the restaurant menu that says "Market Price".
O...M...G.
Ow.
This was just a preview of what was yet to come for the week.
The next day, I felt a soreness in my throat. Margie had relapsed from a bout of strep throat Memorial Day weekend.
But I brushed it off as just another sore throat. The following morning, I felt it intensifying, I had problems swallowing, and learned to like soup, as it went down pretty painlessly.
Much to my wife's chagrin, I might add. She hasn't been able to stomach the smell of broth since her pregnancy.
My wife urged me to go to the doctor Wednesday after my energy was all but sucked dry. Remembering that George Washington died of a simple bout of strep throat, I gladly called my doctor.
Fortunately, our family doctor is my age, so I have an appreciation for his dry humor.
"Ugh, it hurts just to look in there," he said into my gaping yap.
Uh, thanks???
He wrote me a scrip for Amoxycillin that he told me to get filled immediately and to take one as soon as I had it in hand. I snatched it from his hands with a ravenous greed that would likely raise the eyebrows of a heroin addict. That's how badly I wanted this out of me.
I got all three doses for the day in by bedtime.
Thursday I started to feel better.
Friday, I felt it was out of me.
Saturday, it was like nothing happened.
But now I have a toothache and a couple cold sores on my lips.
However, I can still get out of bed, I have ibuprofen, Orajel, and Campo-phenique as my besties for now.
NEXT WEEK: Uh, didn't you read the last columns? I'm off next week!
A weekly warbling of drivelous diatribe that for whatever reason has kept my MySpace and Facebook followers glued to their monitors since 2006. Welcome to my lair.
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Sunday, June 10, 2012
The List
Craigslist.org.
It's the best thing since sliced bread if you're looking to buy or sell something.
However, I would advise against personal ads or help wanted ads on this particular internet vehicle. Google these keywords with craigslist. You'll see what I mean.
They say one man's junk (by that I mean unwanted possessions) is another man's treasure. As I get older, more and more things in my home are finding their way out via Craigslist.
I hate just throwing things away arbitrarily. It goes against everything I believe in.
When my paternal grandfather was still alive, he often worked as a neighborhood handyman. Anytime something broke, he could fix it.
This was long before the whole 'green' thing became chic.
If someone junked a car, threw out an old automatic washer, or TV set, he was on it and stripping out any salvageable parts for future use, for himself or a neighbor in need.
It was a community service in a sense. He saved a lot of people a lot of money by not having to call a repairman or buying something new.
We've become a throwaway society. TV sets and other major appliances were only discarded when a vital component broke on it and parts were no longer available or the repair costs would almost render buying a replacement a better value.
Clothes were mended, not simply thrown away because of one little hole or threadbare spot.
This wasn't just because the value system was different, but simply because we were more careful with our money back then.
It was most often a single-paycheck household. Dad went to work. Mom did not work outside the home. Her business was raising the family, making sure the bills got paid, and everything else that Dad didn't have time to worry about.
The money Dad earned went further when not a single penny was taken for granted, and 'waste not, want not' was the order of the day.
And the day was LONG, I might add.
My wife Margie often threw things away without giving it a second thought. But then I would say 'let me see if I can sell it on Craigslist.' Or even eBay.
She agreed. She knows what kind of family I come from...so she had no problem with it.
Thus far, I've sold water-skiis, old kitchen cupboards, an Intex pool kit, two old bathroom mirrors, and gave away a bathroom countertop after I had no luck selling it for cash.
I don't make a fortune by doing this, nor a living for that matter. But if what I can turn useless junk into cash, hey...why not?
I myself have bought an amplified DJ speaker system, workbench, a baby swing for my daughter, another one for when my in-laws watched her shortly after she was born, just to name a few.
Not everything I own has to be brand-spanking out-of-the-box new. I can get 'like new' for much less, and have more money left for other things.
I personally would rather see something of no use to me get used by someone who would have a use for it. It's always better than ending up in a landfill.
And not only that, it's better to save money by choice, rather than necessity.
Thanks, Grandpa.
NEXT WEEK: Getting my burn on
It's the best thing since sliced bread if you're looking to buy or sell something.
However, I would advise against personal ads or help wanted ads on this particular internet vehicle. Google these keywords with craigslist. You'll see what I mean.
They say one man's junk (by that I mean unwanted possessions) is another man's treasure. As I get older, more and more things in my home are finding their way out via Craigslist.
I hate just throwing things away arbitrarily. It goes against everything I believe in.
When my paternal grandfather was still alive, he often worked as a neighborhood handyman. Anytime something broke, he could fix it.
This was long before the whole 'green' thing became chic.
If someone junked a car, threw out an old automatic washer, or TV set, he was on it and stripping out any salvageable parts for future use, for himself or a neighbor in need.
It was a community service in a sense. He saved a lot of people a lot of money by not having to call a repairman or buying something new.
We've become a throwaway society. TV sets and other major appliances were only discarded when a vital component broke on it and parts were no longer available or the repair costs would almost render buying a replacement a better value.
Clothes were mended, not simply thrown away because of one little hole or threadbare spot.
This wasn't just because the value system was different, but simply because we were more careful with our money back then.
It was most often a single-paycheck household. Dad went to work. Mom did not work outside the home. Her business was raising the family, making sure the bills got paid, and everything else that Dad didn't have time to worry about.
The money Dad earned went further when not a single penny was taken for granted, and 'waste not, want not' was the order of the day.
And the day was LONG, I might add.
My wife Margie often threw things away without giving it a second thought. But then I would say 'let me see if I can sell it on Craigslist.' Or even eBay.
She agreed. She knows what kind of family I come from...so she had no problem with it.
Thus far, I've sold water-skiis, old kitchen cupboards, an Intex pool kit, two old bathroom mirrors, and gave away a bathroom countertop after I had no luck selling it for cash.
I don't make a fortune by doing this, nor a living for that matter. But if what I can turn useless junk into cash, hey...why not?
I myself have bought an amplified DJ speaker system, workbench, a baby swing for my daughter, another one for when my in-laws watched her shortly after she was born, just to name a few.
Not everything I own has to be brand-spanking out-of-the-box new. I can get 'like new' for much less, and have more money left for other things.
I personally would rather see something of no use to me get used by someone who would have a use for it. It's always better than ending up in a landfill.
And not only that, it's better to save money by choice, rather than necessity.
Thanks, Grandpa.
NEXT WEEK: Getting my burn on
Sunday, June 3, 2012
The People's Voice Needs to Shut Up
AUTHOR'S NOTE: "Old School Dad" and "Ken's Korner" will be on hiatus the week of June 24th.
DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions expressed in this week's column are strictly that of the author.
I'm not going to single this guy out by name. Or anyone else for that matter. We all know the players in this ongoing game.
"I represent the working class," the man says. "Not the country club class."
Look pal, I'm part of the working class. You don't speak for me.
Not now, not ever.
"The man" is a one of the top elected officials in our county's government.
He campaigned on a platform of governmental transparency, accountability for taxpayer dollars, tax fairness, and support of social welfare programs, to name a few.
Don't get me wrong. These elements by themselves aren't bad. It's good to stir the pot every once in a while. It keeps everyone on their toes.
What is bad, however, is when this same individual, a Democrat, uses this agenda to get himself elected to office, and then performs a series of deeds that have made even the most liberal of liberals say "what just happened?"
Racking up a laundry list of expenses that he said he would fight to control, yet vehemently protested when his two fellow board members successfully voted to make his (and their own) expenses more readily available to public scrutiny.
This came after he singled out a department head for overspending for hotel accommodations at the state capital for a recent conference.
I will also point out that this man also accused one of those board members of using his connections to cover up a drunk driving charge by granting a substantial raise to another department head, whose husband just happens to be a state trooper that was investigating said incident.
In Pennsylvania, with the exception of juvenile court, all criminal records are open to the public, whether they're summary or felonious in nature.
Those of you who know what I do for a living, know that I know how to find out these things.
I have to this date, found no evidence of a DUI arrest against the accused. Nor any of a cover-up.
Now he's been sued in civil court by his fellow board member and the second department head for his very public accusations.
And he wants the taxpayers to pay for it. The very same taxpayers to whom he promised accountability for their tax dollars.
But it's not his fault, so he says.
"I'm entitled," he went so far to say in a public meeting.
He says his remarks were part of his official job duties, while not keeping in mind that these remarks, when unfounded, are libelous and actionable.
"They want to sue me and take my house and everything I worked for away," he complains bitterly.
And they shouldn't? Because you singled them out by name and sullied their otherwise-clean reputation and put their integrity in question?
Public officials have a hard enough time keeping constituents happy as it is. The last thing they need is one of their own making unfounded statements that not only hurt them, but the board's reputation as a whole.
The man complains about everything and advocates nothing.
The accused has helped raise money for a World War II monument honoring local Merchant Mariners, and while voting in favor of only half the man's request amount of money to pay for a police dog, the accused has pledged that he would again help raise money to make it happen.
And a week later it did happen.
The man makes no effort to be friendly with his associates or fellow board. The other two men on the board are a different matter.
The accused..."Hey Kenny...how's that little girl of yours?"
The chairman...."Good morning, Ken. How are you?"
And I get a handshake from both. I don't even get so much as a 'by-your-leave' by the man. Neither does anyone else.
Social ineptitude doesn't cut it in public service.
Someone in the county's upper ranks once summed up his feelings on what recent public meetings have become.
"It's a circus now," he said.
I would have to disagree. I say this because the accused volunteers as a clown for Shriners Hospitals for Crippled Children.
Proof that even clowns have class to some degree.
Thus I digress. No circus.
We're in freak show mode.
Whatever the case, it's not a laughing matter.
NEXT WEEK: Ken's List
DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions expressed in this week's column are strictly that of the author.
I'm not going to single this guy out by name. Or anyone else for that matter. We all know the players in this ongoing game.
"I represent the working class," the man says. "Not the country club class."
Look pal, I'm part of the working class. You don't speak for me.
Not now, not ever.
"The man" is a one of the top elected officials in our county's government.
He campaigned on a platform of governmental transparency, accountability for taxpayer dollars, tax fairness, and support of social welfare programs, to name a few.
Don't get me wrong. These elements by themselves aren't bad. It's good to stir the pot every once in a while. It keeps everyone on their toes.
What is bad, however, is when this same individual, a Democrat, uses this agenda to get himself elected to office, and then performs a series of deeds that have made even the most liberal of liberals say "what just happened?"
Racking up a laundry list of expenses that he said he would fight to control, yet vehemently protested when his two fellow board members successfully voted to make his (and their own) expenses more readily available to public scrutiny.
This came after he singled out a department head for overspending for hotel accommodations at the state capital for a recent conference.
I will also point out that this man also accused one of those board members of using his connections to cover up a drunk driving charge by granting a substantial raise to another department head, whose husband just happens to be a state trooper that was investigating said incident.
In Pennsylvania, with the exception of juvenile court, all criminal records are open to the public, whether they're summary or felonious in nature.
Those of you who know what I do for a living, know that I know how to find out these things.
I have to this date, found no evidence of a DUI arrest against the accused. Nor any of a cover-up.
Now he's been sued in civil court by his fellow board member and the second department head for his very public accusations.
And he wants the taxpayers to pay for it. The very same taxpayers to whom he promised accountability for their tax dollars.
But it's not his fault, so he says.
"I'm entitled," he went so far to say in a public meeting.
He says his remarks were part of his official job duties, while not keeping in mind that these remarks, when unfounded, are libelous and actionable.
"They want to sue me and take my house and everything I worked for away," he complains bitterly.
And they shouldn't? Because you singled them out by name and sullied their otherwise-clean reputation and put their integrity in question?
Public officials have a hard enough time keeping constituents happy as it is. The last thing they need is one of their own making unfounded statements that not only hurt them, but the board's reputation as a whole.
The man complains about everything and advocates nothing.
The accused has helped raise money for a World War II monument honoring local Merchant Mariners, and while voting in favor of only half the man's request amount of money to pay for a police dog, the accused has pledged that he would again help raise money to make it happen.
And a week later it did happen.
The man makes no effort to be friendly with his associates or fellow board. The other two men on the board are a different matter.
The accused..."Hey Kenny...how's that little girl of yours?"
The chairman...."Good morning, Ken. How are you?"
And I get a handshake from both. I don't even get so much as a 'by-your-leave' by the man. Neither does anyone else.
Social ineptitude doesn't cut it in public service.
Someone in the county's upper ranks once summed up his feelings on what recent public meetings have become.
"It's a circus now," he said.
I would have to disagree. I say this because the accused volunteers as a clown for Shriners Hospitals for Crippled Children.
Proof that even clowns have class to some degree.
Thus I digress. No circus.
We're in freak show mode.
Whatever the case, it's not a laughing matter.
NEXT WEEK: Ken's List
Sunday, May 27, 2012
Cruise on Over
Next month, my wife and I will be taking our very first cruise trip.
Through the generosity of my in-laws, they recently announced that they enjoyed their own trip so much that they wanted to share it with their children and grandchildren.
Probably more for the grandkids, but that's beside the point.
We were all pleasantly surprised when they informed us that they would treat us all to a cruise trip to Bermuda. Outside of Canada, I have never left the good ole U.S. of A.
I have flown multiple times in my life, taken bus trips, and local riverboat cruises that stayed close to port, but a trip being surrounded by nothing but open sea I find rather intriguing.
The excitement over getting a passport for the first time in my life was an experience in and of itself. Not just that, but watching my daughter get hers.
I have always found it strange that the older some people get, the less likely they are to leave their comfort zone.
I have Benjamin Button syndrome. My mindset is working in reverse.
When I was younger, I was pretty stubborn and not likely to leave the waters (pardon the pun) that I was familiar with, but as I grew older, my mind started opening to trying new things, the opinion of others (no matter how much theirs differed from my own) and seeing potential experiences with new eyes.
Because what this life offers is a chance to experience the newness of life.
New perspectives. New people. New sights.
A world outside your own seems a lot bigger.
But for some, it's less friendlier.
Nonetheless, it should never be a deterrent to what's important.
We are not alone in this world.
We are without a doubt, as I've written before, the most powerful nation on Earth. We set the tone for the rest of the world.
What we do impacts other countries, other societies, other cultures.
And we should never fight it or not make an effort to understand, if not accept, what is outside our borders.
We often fear what we don't fully understand.
But we should never allow fear to govern our lives.
We can look back at the events of September 11th as an example.
Many people of Middle Eastern descent, most of whom had become naturalized U.S. citizens, gave up their citizenship and returned to their homeland.
Because of one word...persecution.
This country was formed by people of many races, cultures, and ethnic groups that fled their homeland for that very same reason.
And we should be ashamed of ourselves for becoming the society that struggled to build the image that America was different than any other country on Earth.
The attitude we need to take as a society can best be described by a teen drama canceled not so long ago, with this motto:
"Clear eyes, full hearts, can't lose."
Let's start winning again...with a new kind of weapon.
Not the kind you hold in your hands.
But in your heart and mind.
Can't lose.
NEXT WEEK: Freak Show
Through the generosity of my in-laws, they recently announced that they enjoyed their own trip so much that they wanted to share it with their children and grandchildren.
Probably more for the grandkids, but that's beside the point.
We were all pleasantly surprised when they informed us that they would treat us all to a cruise trip to Bermuda. Outside of Canada, I have never left the good ole U.S. of A.
I have flown multiple times in my life, taken bus trips, and local riverboat cruises that stayed close to port, but a trip being surrounded by nothing but open sea I find rather intriguing.
The excitement over getting a passport for the first time in my life was an experience in and of itself. Not just that, but watching my daughter get hers.
I have always found it strange that the older some people get, the less likely they are to leave their comfort zone.
I have Benjamin Button syndrome. My mindset is working in reverse.
When I was younger, I was pretty stubborn and not likely to leave the waters (pardon the pun) that I was familiar with, but as I grew older, my mind started opening to trying new things, the opinion of others (no matter how much theirs differed from my own) and seeing potential experiences with new eyes.
Because what this life offers is a chance to experience the newness of life.
New perspectives. New people. New sights.
A world outside your own seems a lot bigger.
But for some, it's less friendlier.
Nonetheless, it should never be a deterrent to what's important.
We are not alone in this world.
We are without a doubt, as I've written before, the most powerful nation on Earth. We set the tone for the rest of the world.
What we do impacts other countries, other societies, other cultures.
And we should never fight it or not make an effort to understand, if not accept, what is outside our borders.
We often fear what we don't fully understand.
But we should never allow fear to govern our lives.
We can look back at the events of September 11th as an example.
Many people of Middle Eastern descent, most of whom had become naturalized U.S. citizens, gave up their citizenship and returned to their homeland.
Because of one word...persecution.
This country was formed by people of many races, cultures, and ethnic groups that fled their homeland for that very same reason.
And we should be ashamed of ourselves for becoming the society that struggled to build the image that America was different than any other country on Earth.
The attitude we need to take as a society can best be described by a teen drama canceled not so long ago, with this motto:
"Clear eyes, full hearts, can't lose."
Let's start winning again...with a new kind of weapon.
Not the kind you hold in your hands.
But in your heart and mind.
Can't lose.
NEXT WEEK: Freak Show
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Know Your Limits
Public service.
It's one of the most thankless careers in this country.
And that's the problem.
The fact that it is in fact a career.
Here in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, members of the House of Representatives and the Senate can hold their seats for life if they so desire.
And collect a very attractive pension if they have enough time in.
Unfortunately, in the political world, the more time you put in, the more corrupt you become.
One of many examples have recently been made in Harrisburg, as Pennsylvania's Office of the Attorney General has been cracking down on many capitol cash-grabbers using their taxpayer-paid resources to perform duties for their own benefit, most namely, staying in office.
Most legislators enter office with the best intentions in mind...to help people. But after awhile, and after being presented with bankroll offers from corrupt organizations, the fine line that separates black and white begins to blur into shades of gray.
It stops being about helping others and becomes more about getting re-elected.
As they say, the ends justify the means.
Virtue stopped being its own reward. After all, virtue doesn't pay the bills now, does it?
Perhaps not in the short term. And maybe that's one of society's problems...we don't think about the future often enough.
Several members of Pennsylvania's House of Representatives are learning the values of virtue over the corruption of cash. And a few Senate members as well.
Many of our elected leaders in Harrisburg have been carted off to jail, with their legacies of the good they did do now being overshadowed by their corrupt acts.
It's a shame when a legislator fights hard for their constituents, but the legacy they struggle to build, often taking years, can be gone in a matter of mere seconds.
Next month, Senator Jane Clare Orie will end her 15-year career in the legislature, first in the House and then in the Senate, as she is sentenced on criminal charges of which she was recently convicted, in a second trial after her first one last year ended in a mistrial over doctored defense documents.
An attorney by education, her felony convictions cost her her license to practice law in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
Ms. Orie was convicted of using her state-paid staff to perform political work on state time, and at the request of her older sister, to perform political work on behalf of another sister who holds a spot on the bench for Pennsylvania's Supreme Court.
My mind goes back to the courtroom of Judge Gregory Olson of Indiana County.
Above his bench, in large letters, reads the following:
"No man is above the law, and no man is beneath it."
No woman, either.
Despite Orie's conviction, she has had an exemplary record with veterans and senior citizens, and had brought funding to her district to create good-paying, family-sustaining jobs. She also co-chaired a committee dedicated to preventing child and elder abuse.
This record made her one of Pennsylvania's most powerful, and until recently, most respected lawmakers.
I hope that Ms. Orie will use her time in prison to reflect on what got her into trouble, and what she can do to repair her soiled reputation and rebuild her life.
Some good can still come out of this.
Perhaps another lawmaker not yet caught will think twice the next time he or she bends the rules.
At least we can only hope so.
NEXT WEEK: Cruisin'
Sunday, May 13, 2012
The Family Stone
No, I'm not talking about the 60's soul group.
But rather, the cornerstone of every family.
Mom.
Sure, Dad was the one who more often than not, worked outside the home to provide a living for the family.
The money he earned is what Mom used to provide the food on the table, pay the bills to make sure the phone and lights stayed on, and bought the clothes on your backs.
But everyone remembers Mom.
And Dad is OK with that.
Well, he's learned to be, anyway. But don't worry, he's fine.
Because Mom provided everything I just mentioned...plus more.
She was the first person you went to for comfort. Whether you scraped your knee in the driveway, or even more complex matters when you arrived with a suitcase, saying your spouse told you over dinner that he or she wanted a divorce.
Dad can't compete with that.
We're the problem solvers. We don't have the patience to simply listen, and not offer any input unless specifically asked. We're just not wired that way.
And when Mom is gone forever, we feel a huge hole in ourselves with a stinging pain that just won't go away.
We still rely on Mom. Even though we may grit our teeth and complain about her later on in life.
She calls and interrupts you at work for something that could have waited until later that evening.
Or she plies your kid with treats when you come over, about an hour after they picked at lunch and ate almost nothing.
She may pick at how you raise your child, why you don't call or come over more often, your relationship with your siblings, how you can leave the house practically naked, why you chose the not-so-lucrative career path you did, why you can't seem to manage your finances to save your life, and even why you chose the person you married.
But you still need her. Whether you'll admit it or not.
Even those with stormy childhoods, sometimes at the hands of an abusive mother, still feel that ache of what's lacking. And longing for it.
This person carried you in her body for nine months. Possibly nursed you afterwards. Spent the majority of time with you in your youngest years.
And tolerated your teenage rebellion with the patience of a saint. Whether you sneaked her debit card out of her purse to pay for those concert tickets she wouldn't buy for you, wrecked the brand-new family car less than a week after getting your driver's license, 'borrowed' her best dress to wear to school that day and permanently stained it, or complained about her to your friend on the phone, and within earshot.
Mom was, and still is, a three-letter word for unconditional love.
On this Mother's Day, I ask that you take the time to celebrate your mother. Give her a call or stop over. Let her know you care. And if you too are a mother, celebrate your motherhood.
If you're married to a mother, celebrate your wife and what she's accomplished as a mother.
If your mother has passed on, take some time to reflect. Think about how she made you the person you are today...whether it's good or bad. Don't be afraid to cry if it makes you feel better.
You're never too old to love your mother.
Or want her near.
You can reach for that box of tissues now.
It's OK.
Really.
NEXT WEEK: Legislative Term Limits
Sunday, May 6, 2012
Is the Right Wrong?
NOTE: The views and opinions expressed in the following are strictly that of the author.
The so-called Religious Right. Those that belong to it are pretty much a quick study.
They drive the minivans. They shop at warehouse clubs. Mom stays at home and tends to at least four kids. Most of them are Protestant and look down on those of more Orthodox faiths. They're the ones in church with their pretentious hands raised high during hymns. They also speak out against separation of church and state, abortion, same-sex marriage, and condemn those less fortunate as being at fault for their own troubles.
In God We Trust...it's on our money! Thou shalt not kill! The book of Leviticus says it's a sin to lay down with another of the same sex! Sloth is one of the Seven Deadly Sins!
What's wrong with that, you say?
According to Dr. Anthony Campolo, EVERYTHING.
I had the pleasure of meeting this man recently at a fundraising dinner for a charity that also happens to own a nursing home and several other retirement communities.
"Jesus is neither a Democrat nor a Republican," Dr. Campolo told me in an interview before the dinner. "You have created God in your own political image. Is what I'm standing for politically in harmony with the Jesus I read about in the Scriptures?"
Creating God in your own political image.
I thought a lot about that.
And if you self-identify as a Christian, so should you.
Come to think of it, that would be idolatry, wouldn't it?
And we know the lessons that the Baal-worshippers learned the hard way.
Mary Magdalene was a prostitute. Noah was a fall-down drunk. There are others, I'm only recounting those at the top of my small brain at this moment.
The point is, God loves sinners. Why?
Because they're proof that even with free will, anyone can be saved from their demons. A broken person can be made whole. It may take a miracle to happen, but it can be done.
America is a country that the world equates with freedom. However, it's also equated with other things...greed.
Many conservatives, Bible in hand, always spew the state of Social Security and how much it costs our country. Yet no mention is made of cutting defense spending or other pork-barrel projects that cost this country dearly.
My Jesus didn't vote. Nor did He fight to cut social programs. To the contrary, He fed 5,000 people with two fish and five loaves.
My Jesus didn't cut Medicare. He healed the blind and lame. And He didn't ask who your insurance carrier was afterwards or ask for a deductible or co-pay.
He owned no sprawling suburban home, with summer residences elsewhere, personal luxury car, bulging bank accounts or assistants for his every need. He owned nothing but the clothes on His back and the sandals on His feet.
He also said "Judge not, lest you be judged".
NEXT WEEK: Mother's Day
The so-called Religious Right. Those that belong to it are pretty much a quick study.
They drive the minivans. They shop at warehouse clubs. Mom stays at home and tends to at least four kids. Most of them are Protestant and look down on those of more Orthodox faiths. They're the ones in church with their pretentious hands raised high during hymns. They also speak out against separation of church and state, abortion, same-sex marriage, and condemn those less fortunate as being at fault for their own troubles.
In God We Trust...it's on our money! Thou shalt not kill! The book of Leviticus says it's a sin to lay down with another of the same sex! Sloth is one of the Seven Deadly Sins!
What's wrong with that, you say?
According to Dr. Anthony Campolo, EVERYTHING.
I had the pleasure of meeting this man recently at a fundraising dinner for a charity that also happens to own a nursing home and several other retirement communities.
"Jesus is neither a Democrat nor a Republican," Dr. Campolo told me in an interview before the dinner. "You have created God in your own political image. Is what I'm standing for politically in harmony with the Jesus I read about in the Scriptures?"
Creating God in your own political image.
I thought a lot about that.
And if you self-identify as a Christian, so should you.
Come to think of it, that would be idolatry, wouldn't it?
And we know the lessons that the Baal-worshippers learned the hard way.
Mary Magdalene was a prostitute. Noah was a fall-down drunk. There are others, I'm only recounting those at the top of my small brain at this moment.
The point is, God loves sinners. Why?
Because they're proof that even with free will, anyone can be saved from their demons. A broken person can be made whole. It may take a miracle to happen, but it can be done.
America is a country that the world equates with freedom. However, it's also equated with other things...greed.
Many conservatives, Bible in hand, always spew the state of Social Security and how much it costs our country. Yet no mention is made of cutting defense spending or other pork-barrel projects that cost this country dearly.
My Jesus didn't vote. Nor did He fight to cut social programs. To the contrary, He fed 5,000 people with two fish and five loaves.
My Jesus didn't cut Medicare. He healed the blind and lame. And He didn't ask who your insurance carrier was afterwards or ask for a deductible or co-pay.
He owned no sprawling suburban home, with summer residences elsewhere, personal luxury car, bulging bank accounts or assistants for his every need. He owned nothing but the clothes on His back and the sandals on His feet.
He also said "Judge not, lest you be judged".
NEXT WEEK: Mother's Day
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