Thought to Ponder

This wasn’t going to be my original Thought to Ponder for today; but I think it’s worth the read.

Allah or Jesus

By Rick Mathes, prison ministry leader

Last month I attended my annual training session that’s required for maintaining my state prison security clearance. During the training session there was a presentation by three speakers representing the Roman Catholic, Protestant and Muslim faiths who explained their belief systems. I was particularly interested in what the Islamic Imam had to say. The Imam gave a great presentation of the basics of Islam, complete with a video. After the presentations, time was provided for questions and answers.

When it was my turn, I directed my question to the Imam and asked: “Please, correct me if I’m wrong, but I understand that most Imams and clerics of Islam have declared a holy jihad [Holy war] against the infidels of the world. And, that by killing an infidel, which is a command to all Muslims, they are assured of a place in heaven. If that’s the case, can you give me the definition of an infidel?”

There was no disagreement with my statements and without hesitation he replied, “Non-believers!” I responded, “So, let me make sure I have this straight. All followers of Allah have been commanded to kill everyone who is not of your faith so they can go to Heaven. Is that correct?” The expression on his face changed from one of authority and command to that of a little boy who had just gotten caught with his hand in the cookie jar. He sheepishly replied, “Yes.”

I then stated, “Well, sir, I have a real problem trying to imagine Pope John Paul commanding all Catholics to kill those of your faith or Pat Robertson or Dr. Stanley ordering Protestants to do the same in order to go to Heaven!” The Imam was speechless. I continued, “I also have problem with being your friend when you and your brother clerics are telling your followers to kill me. Let me ask you a question. Would you rather have your Allah who tells you to kill me in order to go to Heaven or my Jesus who tells me to love you because I am going to Heaven and wants you to be with me?”

You could have heard a pin drop as the Imam hung his head in shame. Chuck Colson once told me something that has sustained me these 20 years of prison ministry. He said to me, “Rick, remember that the truth will prevail.” And it will!”

The patient has died.

I may be about to go to bed, so don’t hold me to it, but I think I’m going to say something. Something beyond the standard “sorry it’s been 300 years since I posted last.”

I wrote a while ago that my job was in crisis, the medical definition of crisis being the point at which it will be determined if the patient will live or die. As of last Monday, it was official: the patient died.

It was a bad ending. I don’t want to go into a round of finger pointing, partly because I think I have co-workers who read this site, and partly because that’s just rude. Essentially, there was a difference of opinion between my boss(es) and me about how much a person could accomplish in a single day. My estimate was significantly lower than theirs. I tried my best and squeezed what I was told should be a painless 40 hours worth of work into about 45 hours, on average. If work was really really slow, I could get it all done without overtime, but at anything resembling a normal level of work, I couldn’t keep up.

In my mind there were three possibilities for what was wrong: Either the parameters for one person’s work was wrong, or there was some missing technique to getting it done that I couldn’t find out, or the worker was incompetent. I was under the impression that the parameters were wrong, but obviously, my employers decided that the worker was incompetent.

I don’t really have any hard feelings. I was getting pretty close to quitting anyway. How important, really, is a temp job? The thought of spending the next couple of years of my life under the pressure I felt for a measly $12 an hour was becoming less and less appealing.

The trouble is that, with temporary employment, that whole “two weeks notice” thing doesn’t really work. My original contract for that job was for two weeks. If I called in to my agency and said “hey, I don’t like this job any more. Can you get me a new one?” I would be gone the next day. Which would have been really bad for the people at work because I was the only one who knew how to do my job at all, and it had to be done on time every day. If I just up and quit one day, they would have been in some real hot water, and it just wasn’t the Christian thing to do.

So they hired me a replacement, and I trained him, and they let me go. Everybody’s happy. I’m now unemployed, but everybody’s happy.

My only real problem was that, two weeks ago when they brought in my replacement, I knew he was my replacement, they knew he was my replacement, but what I was told was that he was supposed to be my long asked for second person. This completely confused me. They just let somebody go the week previous because we weren’t allowed to have so many temps when business was so slow. I trained for a week, and the next Sunday I got a phone call that my contract had been terminated.

I am simply amazed at the massive lack of trust they communicated to me.


I’m not very good at picking favorites, so I don’t have a favorite bible verse, but one of my favorites is Romans 8:28—
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“We know that all things work together for good for those that love God, who have been called according to His purpose.”

Given my uncanny propensity to perceive this whole worlds-realm as a kind of glorified game, my spin on “all things work together for good” comes out something along the lines of “all things work to my advantage,” or “no matter what happens, I win.” I made a friend really angry once, by playing this game—I forget exactly the circumstances, but I had just gotten done explaining that everything always plays into my hand, when she either did something really rotten to me, or she described something really rotten happening to me. I laughed and mildly adjusted the definition of “to my advantage” (that is to say, I turned common sense on its head).

See, the problem is we all think we know what is to our advantage. In fact, I’d bet that most of us put more faith in our knowing what is and what isn’t to our advantage than we put in the goodness of God. So when something truly awful comes along, we reflexively question the goodness of God, when in reality we ought to be questioning whether we know what is really to our advantage.

For instance: Jesus died on the cross. I think most of us can see why the disciples thought that was a bad thing. But I’d also like to think most of us can see how that actually worked out to everybody’s advantage.

So me: I just lost my job. Bad thing. But really, how bad is it? I’m no worse off than I was six months ago. In fact, I’m almost exactly in the same financial position I was in six months ago. Actually, I’m richer by three pairs of pants, two pairs of shoes (really nice ones), new silverware, a trip to my sister’s wedding, and a fish tank. (God forgive me for the fish tank). What’s more, I am now more than ever sure that I do not want a career in the mortgage industry. I’ve never seen a business that was so highly regulated by the government in all my life. Plus, I’ve learned a lot about business management (both good and bad), and the importance of distributed responsibility. I’m now used to working a solid 8-hour shift working on one thing, and despite whatever the news people are saying, the job market is much better now.

Probably the biggest advantage, honestly, is that I feel I’ve gotten a pretty clear sign to wait on the whole seminary thing. If my job hadn’t been so stressful, I might have been able, just barely, to stay in school. But His yoke is easy, and His burden is light.

So I’ve lost my job, and it was a bad break, but I have no doubt that somewhere along the line, this plays directly into my hand. My mom is convinced that God forced me out of my job precisely at this time because he had a better position immediately available for me somewhere else. That sounds good to me, but I’m not quite ready to jump for joy over a job I don’t quite have yet. I know this works out to my advantage, but I can’t guarantee that I know what my advantage is.

Thought to Ponder

My two devotionals for today overlapped a bit, or at least they did in my mind. One verse came from Matthew 12:13, “Then he (Jesus) said to the man, ‘Stretch out your hand.’ So he stretched it out and it was completely restored, just as sound as the other.” The second verse was from Isaiah 6:8, “’Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?’ Then said I, ‘Here am I; send me.’”

Both of these verses, while in very different contexts, require faith. If we listen to the undercurrent of God’s voice in our lives, we realize that God is not pleading for our help but is asking for people to stretch out to him in faith for personal restoration and through that restoration of those around us.

When we stretch out in faith towards our source of life, we become filled with that source and can affect others by supplying for their needs. The question is are we stretching enough?

Thought to Ponder

I’m trying to get back in the habit of reading my Bible daily again and have decided to also read two daily devotional books, or “dailies,” simultaneously. One of the dailies is the well know book My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers. The other daily is A Gentle Spirit: Devotional Selections for Today’s Christian Woman which is a compilation of several inspiring women such as Joni Eareckson Tada, Sheila Walsh, Twila Paris, Amy Carmichael, Elisabeth Elliot, Ruth Bell Graham, Corrie ten Boom, etc. So far everything is going well.

Today’s thought comes from My Utmost for His Highest. The verse was, “And [he] pitched his tent, having Bethel on the west and Hai on the east; and there he builded (sic) an alter.” – Genesis 12:8

Oswald went on to discuss worship and how we are called to give back fully the things he has blessed us with as a love offering. When we give back the blessing it’s a deliberate act of worship that can be used to bless others. If we insist on hoarding the blessings he’s given to us, the blessings will become dry and will be like the manna that rotted when the Israelites tried to “save some for later” instead of depending on God to replenish their supply.

Oswald then continued to discuss the verse reminding that Bethel was a symbol of communion with God and Hai is a symbol for the world. The only way we can honestly do any good in this world is to have communication with God. It’s true that we “cannot live by bread alone” and must consume the “word” of God thought our communion with him, but we must also remember that we cannot be effective tools for his glory and purpose if we completely divorce ourselves from the world by trying to set up our tents solely on the ground of Bethel. We can’t sit there and say, “Ok this is God’s spot in my day and that’s when I’ll have my quiet time.” Instead we should work towards having a continuous quiet time/communion despite the constant batter of noise that we receive from the world. We need to quite jumping around in our lives like “spiritual frogs” from worship to waiting to work and let God create in us an ever bubbling fountain of life to fuel our worship and work.