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Peter Gowesky

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We boast about a lot of things.

  • our football team
  • how skilled we are at sudoku (okay, maybe not that one…)
  • culinary skills
  • our children’s abilities
  • our income
  • the stuff we’ve got
  • what we drive
  • our wardrobe

and many other things not on this list…

I read this today and it has been in my head all day.

But may it never be that I would boast, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.  ~Paul, from his letter to the Galatians, 6:14

Here’s an excerpt from a a book I’m reading on Galatians, “The New Interpreters Bible Commentary“.

It is an acute paradox to speak of boasting in the cross, for the cross is precisely the place where all human effort and pride come to an end.  The cross is God’s deed, not ours.  To “boast” in the cross, then, is to acknowledge that our efforts only lead to death and that our confidence can rest only in God’s grace, which rescues us…

It really isn’t about anything I’ve done.  I don’t have two legs to stand on.  It is only what Christ has done.

Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord     ~Jeremiah 9:24

What have you been boasting in lately?

~Peter

This is an unbelievable video.  It’s video’s like this that make YouTube worth it.

Here’s the story…  About three months ago, this woman who was born deaf, gets her hearing back through the form of a hearing implant.  The video shows it all.  As you watch it, what strikes you about this video?  There is something incredible about this that stirs me.

I’d love to hear your reactions.

~Peter

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LsOo3jzkhYA]

It is cold.

The ball has dropped.

Time Square has been cleaned up and has returned to the normal hustle and bustle as usual.

The fireworks have been lit.

The food has been put away.

Work has resumed.

It’s the beginning of a new year.

At the beginning of a new year we go into this panic mode where we realize that there are 57 different things that we want to change in our life.  In reality there are a zillion different things that should be changed in our life, but right now all we can focus on are the 57.   We focus on them because it is January.  It is the time to do such things.

My question for you is, what is different between January and December?  Really, what is different between December 31st and January 1st?  If I listed all of the food I ate between December 23rd and December 31st at 11:59 you would first call me disgusting and then you would fear for my arteries.  So, why then on January 1st am I all of a sudden concerned with what I eat?  There is nothing about January 1st that is different than the day before it.  There are still only 24 hours in the day.  The sun rises and sets in much the same way as the day before it.  I wake, I eat, I work, I play, I sleep- the day is over.  Repeat the next day.

The reason I think about eating healthy, and crafting “resolutions” is because everybody else is doing it.  The twitter sphere blew up on New Years Eve and New Years day with all of the lists of things that were going to be done, or not done by each one.  Even now, salads are being bought by the thousands (out of season none the less, but that’s a different soap box).  Runners are donning spandex in the hopes of becoming magically fit.  Gym memberships are hitting the visa card like my kids hit fruit snacks.  Everybody is doing it!  Therefore I feel as if I must too.

We don’t just do this with our waistline, or exercise habits.  We do the same thing with our spirituality.  We jump on some ridiculous routine of reading the bible in 15 days, or we say that we’ll pray 2 hours a day.  We’ll go hard after our convictions for about two weeks to a month and a half, but then we fade back into the mindset of before.

The problem with this is, even though it is a good thing for me to eat better, it’s a good thing to exercise more, it’s a good thing to read through the Bible in a year, BUT if I am not convinced in my head that something needs to change, then lifelong transformative change will not take place–  my waistline will continue to fluctuate, my exercise habits will remain the same and life will go on as usual, my relationship with God will remain mostly the same.  I must be convinced in my heart that something needs to change before I can expect to see my habits and such follow suit.

I was pretty sure I wasn’t going to make any resolutions this year because I knew that I would break them.  But peer pressure has gotten the best of me.  Everyone else is doing it, so I thought I should too.  The problem is that I realize that there are a zillion things that need to change in my life…  I may as well focus on 57 of the zillion this year and set some goals.

The most encouraging thing I read in the last 3 days was from a good buddy of mine, J.R. Briggs.  He tweeted this the other day.  (follow him on twitter @jr_briggs)

“Great advice I heard for this first week of January: Don’t try to boil the ocean. Just get a few things done before Thursday.”

My goal this year is to be faithful in all of the areas of my life.  I’ll make mistakes along the way, for sure, but I want to be faithful to work through them and find myself on the other side of it even just one step closer to being more like Jesus.

Stop trying to boil the ocean.  Let’s start with enough for a french press.

~Peter

rain

It’s true.  I’m more of a Rain-x guy.  I prefer to have the water bead up and just move off the window.  Wipers make so much noise!  They never seem to be timed right,  and overall there is something wimpy about turning them on.  When Tiffany and I are driving together in the rain I can tell that it is time to turn on the wipers when she gets a little squirmy in her seat.  It is a bit of a game, see how long I can go without turning on the wipers.

I was on the phone with my mom yesterday and she told me that she used her wipers for the first time yesterday since May!  Take that…

Now, she lives in the Dallas, Texas area (Outside of the arms of Irene).  They are experiencing a really dry season right now, which is actually quite dangerous.  Fires are erupting and causing intense damage in their region.

The northeast region of the United States has received more rain in the last few weeks than has been on record for a long time.  The one thing that I notice about all of this rain is that it invades every space exposed to it.  In our region, the rain has been so abundant that our ground is saturated and cannot handle anymore rain.  The excess water is flowing right over the ground, not being able to penetrate it anymore, filling up our streams, creeks and rivers.  We are experiencing high levels of water and flooding like we don’t typically see.

While this can be a terribly devastating physical reality, in another sense it is a beautiful picture of the spiritual reality of a relationship with God.

What if there was no layer of our life that God’s power, conviction and grace didn’t invade?  What if the soil of our lives was saturated with the presence of God?  What if our lives were so saturated that there was no where for the power and presence of God to go in your life BUT to spill over into the lives of those around you?  What would the trickle down effects look like?

I want that.  I want that for myself, and I want that for you too.

Can you imagine having a relationship with God like this?  How do you think this would change our Churches and our cities?

Wipers are for wimps!  Embrace the rain, and ask God for more of it in your life!

~Peter

What are you scared of?  Noah has been lately saying that he sees things crawling out of the heat vent on the floor.  I’m pretty sure that nothing is crawling out of there, but it is his mind that is saying, what if something crawled out of there?  And I agree, what if something creeped, crawled or slithered out of the heat vent.  That would be pretty scary.

Fear is that thing that creeps into the back of our mind and offers up the idea that something unsettling might, could or will happen.  Fear is felt at all ages and in someways it grows with you.  The older you are the more there is to fear.

As a child I never feared that we would have enough money for the necessities of life.  I never feared that our cars would break down.  I never feared that my home would catch on fire.  I never feared for anyone else’s safety.  As a college student I didn’t fear that I would hurt myself when playing sports.  I didn’t have any fear that the cafeteria meal was heathy enough.  As an adult we have a whole new level of fear.  In this economy there are many people who are deathly afraid of job loss, market shares dropping, and mortgage payments being made.  Fear is everywhere.

Fear is not uncommon.

The Old Testament shares a story about Isaac’s son Jacob.  Jacob had tricked his father into giving him his brother Esau’s blessing.  Jacob had previously purchased Esau’s birthright for a bowl of soup.  This made Esau very angry, to the point that he was ready to kill Jacob.  Check out more of this story in Genesis 25, 27-28.  With fear for his life, Jacob fled from his father’s country.

Many years later Jacob is living with his father-in-law, Laban.  The time comes for Jacob to leave Laban and he becomes fearful of seeing his brother again.  His fear of Esau is building.  Jacob sends some messengers to his brother to let him know of his intent to return.  The messengers return with this message, “We came to your brother Esau, and furthermore he is coming to meet you, and four hundred men are with him.”

I love that last part.  I can almost hear it.

Messengers: “Yeah Jacob, we saw Esau.  He said that he is coming to see you.”

Jacob: “Oh, cool.”

Messengers: “Um… Yeah, about that.  He is also bringing 400 men with him.”

Jacob: “Gulp…”

It is right there, in the four hundred men, part that Jacob’s fear grips him and grows within him.

I love what Jacob does.  Jacob prays.  Jacob speaks to God and says,

‘O God of my father Abraham and God of my father Isaac, O Lord, who said to me, Return to your country and to your relatives, and I will prosper you,’  … Deliever me I pray, from the hand of my brother, from the hand of Esau; for I fear him, that he will come and attack me and the mothers with the children.’

FOR YOU SAID, ‘I will surely propser and make your descendants as the sand of the sea, which is too great to be numbered.’

Do you see what he did there?  He remembered God’s promise in his life.  See, God had previously promised Jacob that he would be a great nation.  So far he was not a great nation.  I guess it means that Esau was not going to kill him.  If God said it, it was sure to happen.  Jacob clung on to that hope.

In the times of your most intense fear what do you do?  Do you cling to the hope that you have, or do you throw up your hands and grasp at the wind looking for answers or any ear that will listen to you whine?

Have you ever been in a situation where like Jacob you had to cling to the promises of God’s word?  

I have.  It has been a scary but safe ride.  Fear cripples, but faith clings!

~Peter

A Russian iconic depiction of Jacob

Does anyone else have a problem when someone is talking with you and they say, “Sure, I’ll do that but only after you do ____________.”

That drives me crazy.

I feel like saying, “well, are you going to do it or not?  Yes or no.  It is rather quite simple.  Just make up your mind.”  But, I don’t.

We see this all the time.  It seems to show up in every area of life.  This mentality pops up in our relationships with one another, in the work place, in our neighborhoods, and in every other corner of life.

It may look like this:

  • I’ll mow the lawn when you make dinner.
  • I’ll play baseball with you when you clean your room.
  • I’ll listen to you after you drop me off at the movies and let me spend the night at my friends house.
  • I’ll tolerate you if you keep your dog off my lawn.
  • I’ll be your friend only as long as the popular people approve of it.
What would you add to that list?
In Genesis 28, Jacob adds one more to the list.  This one drives me crazy.  It just irritates me.  Check out what he says,
Then Jacob made a vow, saying, “If God will be with me and will keep me on this journey that I take, and will give me food to eat and garments to wear, and I return to my father’s house in safety, then the Lord will be my God.”
That seems to be a tall order!  I want to be comfortable on my trip.  I want my clothes to be provided, and I don’t want to experience any problems in travel.  These three items are no small task.  Think about the time in which Jacob lived.  That would be no small thing.  I’m in no way challenging the power of God, but why does Jacob feel it necessary to?
It seems to me that there are times when we put stipulations on God.  We say, God only when you do this, that, or the other thing will I turn to you and acknowledge your plan for my life.  In my opinion this is a dangerous way to live life.  This is a dangerous way to set up your relationship with God, one based solely upon stipulations.
What do you think?
~Peter

The other day I took Noah out and he shed the training wheels on his bike.  He was a bit nervous at first, but then he was totally excited.  What a day!  He said it was like recess without the training wheels, “because I could go wherever I wanted!”  It was a monumental moment in his life.

What monumental moment in life have you had recently?

~Peter

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8vXnJhC66mo]

This morning I read an interesting article over at Catalystspace.  The title was, “A Lifestyle Of Enough” by Eugene Cho.  In it he writes:

In our hope to honor a conviction of the Holy Spirit to give up a year’s salary, we had begun the two year process of saving, selling, and simplifying in 2007. Our goal was to come up with our then year’s wages of $68,000 – in order to launch One Day’s Wages. With only a few months left to come up with the total sum, we were a bit short and decided to sublet our home for couple months and asked some friends if we could stay with them on their couches or their guest room.

I still remember crying the night I told our kids of our plans. This wasn’t what I had signed up for; This was by far more difficult that I had imagined. Had I known, there is no way in Hades I would have agreed to this conviction.

This made me think about our habits of desiring more and more.  We live in a culture that screams the more you have the happier you’ll be.  Our culture bases success on how much you have, how many you manage, and how big of a salary you receive.  We are taught from a very young age that newer is better.  Just about every eight months a new edition of that ‘thing’ that you desperately longed for has come out.  Now it is mandatory that you have the newer version.  This is a marketing ploy, playing on the conditioned American response to long for more!

We easily form habits of desire.  The problem is that we are also a culture that does not celebrate in any form or fashion denying yourself anything.  It is no wonder that when our habits of desire meet up with our habits of satisfying our longings we end up in great financial ruin.  Our homes are feeling too small.  Our attics are buckling in the middle from all of the weight up there.  And our garages no longer house cars but extra stuff!

My wife and I watched a chick-flick the other night.  The romantic male character challenged the lead female to think about what she would grab if her home were on fire and she had 60 seconds to get out.

Pretty fair question if you ask me.

It makes me wonder if my desires and focus are in the right direction.  Believe me I like my toys and my luxuries like the rest of you.  I can’t wait for the iphone 5 to come out.  The problem lies right in front of us when our balance is off and we long for those things more than we long for Jesus.  Can we say along with Paul that we want to know Christ, and experience the mighty power that raised Him from the dead?  Do I want to suffer with Him, sharing in His death as Paul writes in Philippians 3:10?  Or am I more consumed with my expressions of wealth and comfort?

This is what the LORD says:  “Don’t let the wise boast in their wisdom, or the powerful boast in their power, or the rich boast in their riches.  But those who wish to boast should boast in this alone: that they truly know me and understand that I am the LORD who demonstrates unfailing love and who brings justice and righteousness to the earth, and that I delight in these things. I, the LORD, have spoken!

Jeremiah 9:23-24

It is time for our posture to change from that of comfort to that of a disciple’s.

So, what would you grab if your house was on fire and you had 60 seconds to do it?

~Peter

In preparation for Irene, last night we, along with the rest of the world, picked up some food items and started thinking about what we may need to do to prepare.  However, we are in a world of pain right now.  I didn’t realize till this morning that we are almost out of coffee creamer.  And we didn’t get any last night.  This could be a tragedy.

As the east coast hunkers down this morning to weather what may be the largest storm to hit the east coast I felt it only necessary to respond.

I give you : Hurricane Irene

And on the serious side,

Here are some cool sites to check out with info on Irene:

So, let’s share… What are some of your storm essentials?  What did you run out to the store to stock up on before you head inside for the next 36 hours?  

Trying to stay dry,

~Peter

There are texts that you love to get from your wife.

Like:

  • I love you
  • I just made a steak dinner for you, hurry home
  • I was thinking you needed some alone time, go to starbucks for a while
  • You’ve been working really hard, let me give you a back rub
  • There is extra money in the budget this month
Then again, there are things that you never want to hear from your wife.  

Like:

  • I Think there is a squirrel in our wood stove
  • There is a mouse in our heating vents- COME HOME NOW
  • A possum just declared war on the trash bag by the back door
  • There is water pouring out of the light in the family room ceiling.  I need you here.
Yesterday was the day that I received the last one.  Sure enough I came home to find one of the lights in our ceiling dripping a fair amount of water.  In case you have never experienced this, it is a really great feeling.  Or not.  Here’s another clue, water and electricity go together really well.  No really they do.
I climbed up into the attic and located the drain/light and much to my shock found this:MY ROOF LEAKEDYes, that is a lovely source of water leaking in through the roof.  It has come through the shingles, and then the plywood underlayment, running down the joyce to the drywall ceiling below upon which it finds it’s drain through the can light in the ceiling.  Fabulous!  TADA… I had found the source of the problem, now to figure out the fix.
For this I would need to leave the ‘comfort’ of the 24 whole inches of clearance in the attic and clamor up on the roof in the rain.  I headed over to about where I thought the light was and I found this… Thumb size hole in the roofFor those of you who are just like me, NOT ROOFERS, what you are looking at is a thumb size hole in the shingle.  It went through two layers and was a beautiful little entrance site for water to begin it’s decent down through the roof and ultimately into a bucket on my family room floor.  So being the weekend warrior that I am, I gathered up the essential tools and headed back up onto the roof to fix it.
Weekend Warrior Fix for a hole in the roofThat’s right, a blow torch, and some caulk.  That should solve every problem.  I torched the roof and then smeared some silicone in the hole.  Take that Norm Abrams.  You should come and check out ‘This Old House’ here.  I’ll teach you a thing or two about patching a roof.
So there you have it.  Next time your wife texts you something like, “There is water pouring out of the light in the family room ceiling.  I need you here.”  you’ll be totally prepared.
You can thank me later,
~Peter
P.S. we’ll have to see how my patch job stand up to our lady friend Irene who will be staying with us Saturday and Sunday.