Gratuitous Cat Post #4

Thursday, November 05, 2009


This is Lulu, who is one of the most awesome felines ever to walk on four legs. She's also a very gentle critter, unless you happen to be a chipmunk or a mole or some other small rodent who lives in our neighborhood. She's got just enough of her predator instinct to be bad news for those guys. But hey, we live in a fallen world.

If you haven't ever done so, check out John Wesley's sermon, "The General Deliverance." It has a beautiful expression of hope for the final redemption of all God's creatures.

Cats included, of course.

[Update on 11/5/09: CNN is reporting the first cat to have contracted the H1N1 flu virus. See this link for the story.]

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Swine Flu fears

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Apparently, the fears over a swine flue epidemic are really affecting relationships down at Pooh Corner.

I wrote not long ago about my own thoughts on how we react to looming threats. You can find that story at this link.

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Looming Threats

Saturday, July 18, 2009

I'm taking a one-day break from blogging about the Duke Youth Academy. In the mean time, check out my new column in the Reporter, which is on the power of looming threats.

Remember the swarm of killer bees that was down in Texas back in the '80s, ready to wipe out the entire continental United States?

(Okay, so I may be dating myself for some younger readers.)

Remember the Y2K bug that was going to bring all our computers crashing down?

That stuff was scary because it was "out there" somewhere, and we had no control over it. We could only wring our hands nervously and hope the threat didn't affect our town.

Now there's swine flu. That's the looming threat these days. The mass panic that swine flu has caused is touching my own life through the daily regimen we have to follow at DYA and at all of Duke University's other summer camps. Every camper and staffer must be asked everyday whether he or she is experiencing symptoms of a cough, runny nose, or fever. Hand sanitizer dispensers have seemingly sprouted on every door frame on campus, with earnest instructions to use them as much as possible. If a camper is suspected of having contracted H1N1 he is immediately quarantined until his parents can come and get him.

The difference between killer bees and swine flu is that swine flu is a real killer whereas those bees never did much but make honey. Then again, by all accounts, swine flu isn't near as dangerous as the plain ol' seasonal flu that we contend with every winter. It's scary because it's new, it's named after an animal, and we have no control over it. But you know what? It's still a heck of a lot more dangerous to get in your car and drive down the street than it is to skip the hand sanitizer after turning a doorknob.

I suggest in my column that our baptism should help us put all those looming threats out there in perspective. Our fears are just little expressions of the One Great Fear we all have: Death.

But Jesus has been raised from the dead, and that means that, for those baptized into his death, our own inevitable, earthly deaths do not have the final say over our lives. God has that say, and God's word is a word of life.

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