Thursday, January 22, 2009

Poem about current event

This commercial airline story is the image of raw fear.
It began with passengers only a mile from the site of the crash.
Only then did they realize that almost certain death was near.
On January 17, 2009 a dramatic photo was taken,
Capturing US Airways Flight 1549's sudden end,
Damaged by birds, the flight suddenly had to descend.
Down it came toward the frigid waters off West 69th Street.
All 154 souls aboard started getting ready, their Maker to meet.
Then Pilot C.B. "Sully" Sullenberger III, called for a special act.
Calmly, but with authority, he commanded, "brace for impact."
A command he had long ago been trained to deliver,
Just before the miracle landing on the Hudson River.
Seconds later, the plane made the unprecedented water landing,
Becoming the stuff of legend, called "outstanding."
After hero Captain Sullenberger, known as "Sully",
Turned the Hudson river into a runway, his co-pilot proclaimed,
"No one has ever pulled this off," Jeff Skiles joyfully exclaimed.
In the rescue the co-pilot, looking at Sully, couldn't stop gazing,
Jeff said his pilot, "You've done something amazing!"
With the praise, Sullenberger did not seem all that impressed,
His satisfaction comes, not from glory, but from passing the test.
When passengers thanked Sully for saving their lives,
"You're welcome," was the response of Flight 1549's chairman.
Such humility was not surprising to friends this airman.
Kitty Higgins, a NTSB board member, was overheard saying,
"This is the most successful ditching in aviation history."
But to Sully and his the pilots, it is no extra ordinary mystery.
Even after Sully had more time to reflect on being called heroic,
He is more comfortable with the role of an unemotional stoic.
"He seems overwhelmed by all of this hero talk,"
Said a spokesman for the US Airline Pilots Association.
"Captain Sully prefers to just a pilot, and is pleased,
His passengers are well and death has been appeased."
In his silent way, "Sully" is rejoicing all are safe and sound,
Having escaped the the icy water, making it to solid ground.
Fighting tears, Sully's wife, Lorrie, said: "We are proud of him.
However, it's 'a little weird' hearing the world calling him a hero."
His friends say, "He is just a professional who does his job well.
He wants to be seen as a family man and a pilot, not a masahiro!"

Friday, January 16, 2009

The Shot Heard Round The World


He stood with those who had gathered to honor heroes past.
Who at Concord continued a celebration that had no end.
It was a victory that Americans were sure was going to last.
Ralph Waldo Emerson was their poet and every man's friend.
It was his honor to write for the occasion a memorial hymn,
To be sung in celebrating their ancestors revolutionary win.
They were on Concord ground made sacred by shed blood.
It was a special moment, celebrating the birth of nationhood,
Dedicated first in 1775 by tears for the wounded and those who died.
Celebrated in cheers by heirs on April 19, 1836. We had survived!
All stood in silence before him as Emerson said,
"By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
Their flag to April's breeze unfurled,
Here once the embattled farmers stood,
And fired the shot heard round the world...
To truly celebrate the victory won, we must recognize,
The God, who answered the prayers of the victorous ones.
Today we need God's Spirit who inspired the heroes to care,
Enough to dare to risk all for freedom to come and to expand.
Expand for their children and those still unborn who will come,
To settle and continue to develop this wonderful land.
May Time and Nature gently spare, their memories we treasure,
Symbolized by this memorial we lift as high as we can.
Fill us, O Lord, with the strength the Spirit of God does give,
So that with our ancestors' gift we might faithfully live."
Then Emerson paused briefly with a gleam in his eye,
And with a strong cry, he concluded with a great truth as a plus:
"What lies behind us, and what lies before us are a valuable trust,
But they are small matters compared to what lies within us."

Friday, January 2, 2009

Remembering Life Experiences

As we begin to live out January of 2009, most of us not only dream about experiences we hope to have in the new year, but we also spend some time thinking about how we got here. What experiences influenced what we are today? All of us have had some good and some bad experiences that continue to influence us today. Life has been exceedingly good to me. I've listed several in my notes. Then I began to think about how God has used some hard experiences to be a blessing for me. One of those experiences it took me some time to understand. It was the last day of Spring football practice in 1954, my junior year in high school. I had been so excited all Spring as our team prepared for the Fall season. In the first part of Spring practice Coach Rotella had been allowing me to alternate with Eddie Murry with the first team backfield. I had been used to Coach praising me in front of the other players for my efforts. But on this last day of Spring practice when Coach said, "we are going to see what each of us is made of, today." there was no way I could please him. It seemed that on every other play he found something wrong with my play. Finally, he said, "Curt, what is wrong with you today?" Then he put me with the defense team, and put Eddie, my competition, with the offense for the rest of the day. That is the way I finished Spring practice. It was a long hard summer for me.

All summer where I worked at the local golf course, the men of town would talk with me about their expectations for fall football. They talked with me as if it was certain that I would be on the starting team. I thought I would be too, until that last day of Spring practice. So all Summer I feared that come September that I would be embarrassed in front of the my friends and the entire community. But my fears were unfounded. Because after two weeks of practice in August, just before our first game with Carter High, a newspaper reporter showed to write a story. To my great surprise when Coach Rotella lined us up for pictures of the staring backfield, there I was on the front of the sport page.


It was then that I remembered that often in practice he had frequently singled out one of our best players and gave him a "hard time." He used this method to fine tune the best of the best. Most of the players were honored by his giving them that very special attention. From that day on I truly enjoyed the season, even when he disciplined me before the whole team.


Scriptural Guide for this new year:
"My son, do not despise the Lord's discipline...for the Lord reproves those whom He loves, as a father the son in whom he delights"(Proverbs 3:11,12)

Thursday, December 11, 2008

The Contemporary God Issue

In Memory of the late G.K. Chesterton

No matter what you say, you cannot evade the God issue.
It is much more than crying in church and using up tissue.
Even the modern secularists and professing atheists are not exempt.
It is true! The God issue is not only for those who worship in church,
But for those, as well, who focus on God in contempt.
Both sides have leaders who are emotionally and intellectually involved,
As persons who have a calling; as ones who have been sent.
Both seem to be addicted with the God as an issue to be solved.
Some tend to camouflage their interest in God by faulting believers.
Yet, if there's no God, why are we concerned about God's non-achievers.
If you had no interest in their case, why are you giving them space?
A teacher from our past used to say,
Whether we like it or not we will talk about God today.

For some the subject is cheery; for others it is weary.
But the God issue is involved and can't be easily solved,
Whether we talk about pigs or the binomial theory,
We are still talking about the active Creator of all.
Now if Christianity be a fragment of metaphysical nonsense,
Invented by a few misled people with a false sense of call.
Then, of course, defending it will simply mean talking "spin,"
Metaphysical nonsense over and over again.
But if Christianity should happen to be true,
Then defending the Faith will mean talking,
About anything or everything, exciting and new.
Some issues can be irrelevant to the proposition that Christianity is false,
But nothing can be irrelevant to the proposition that Christianity is true.
Therefore, talking about God is not living with irrelevant views of the past.
The worship of idols, not being grounded in reality, does not last.
But contemporary persons of faith look at life from a whole different view.
In talking about and with God, they are climaxing the past into something new.
Because the prophet says, "The revealed God from the past is still with us,
Because the Word of all creation and redemption comes to us,
Not totally from experiences from the past, but also from out of the future too".

Friday, December 5, 2008

Faith Story - Chang Pharm

It was March 15, 1981. It was the anniversary of the Chang Pharm family's coming from Vietnam to make their home in the United States. The celebration was taking place with their extended family in America, Trinity Church. One year before, on March 23rd, Chang and his wife and children and relatives arrived in Knoxville, a total family of twelve.

It all started two years before when Azalea Grissom called her pastor. The pastor went over to her home to find that she was watching a news documentary of the "Boat People" from Vietnam. Hundreds were fleeing Vietnam in small boats. Some, who were rescued, somehow were making it to refugee camps, and were now waiting for someone through a refugee service to bring them to a new home. Many of them were being placed with Christian families in the United States. Mrs. Grissom asked her pastor, "Would you work with me to bring a family to our community?"

Within six weeks some strong leaders organized to sponsor a family. Carolyn Fuller, a new member of the church, found her voice, calling for the church's help. The social concerns committee, led by Gail Vanderver and Beverly Reed, worked with the family life committee to create a Trinity Refuge Committee. When the members of the Pharm family arrived, a fully furnished four bedroom home was ready for them. The children were placed in public schools. Some men of the Church made sure all the adults of the Pharm family had income producing jobs. Within three months, the members of the Pharm family were enrolled in a Confirmation Class for Church Membership, led by the pastor and an interpreter.

One year after their arrival, twelve members of the Pharm family were baptized and became full members of Trinity United Methodist Church. Chang, the leader of the family stood at the altar of the Church and said, "We appreciate all you have done for the Pharm family. When we arrived here we had no home. We had left all we had when we fled the Communists. But when we arrived you had a beautiful home for us. We had no income, but within a week after we arrived you had jobs for us. We had no place to train our children, but you put our children in school and provided transportation for them. We had no family here to support us in a strange land, but you became our family. We have been so pleased how you loved us from the very beginning. We did not understand your faith, but you prepared a class every Wednesday night to teach us from the Word of God, and today we have accepted Jesus Christ as our Savior and been baptized and joined this family. Thank you for teaching us the Word of God. Thank you for the special freedom you have in America to teach the Word of God. Please pray for other members of our family who have lost their freedom in Vietnam."

A leading member said, "Pastor Curt, you know that I have not always agreed with you in your bringing in so many new people. It has made many of us who have a long history in this church very uncomfortable. But what we are experiencing today, I truly affirm. I am so proud today to be a member of this Church whose people have truly discovered what being a disciple of Jesus Christ is all about."

POEM - "The Advent Gift"


Both darkness and conflict are always present,
but they never over-shadow the great Advent,
Displayed for us when God sent His Word;
when a new born Baby's cry was heard.
God provided for His special One an emcee,
by sending a chosen voice from the Hebrew Klan.
The voice came through a witness named John the Baptist,
Who was the Child's special agent man.
A second John introduced the Christ Child as the eternal Word,
Who reveals our value through His amazing insight.
Through Him we learn we can live victoriously and joyfully,
even when we can not see the future in our blackest night.
Through Him we overcome our strife and terrible loneliness,
being healed of our fears, coming from our paralyzing fright.
From the two Johns we learn to trust in Jesus, God's only Son.
Whom we discover as the eternal everlasting Light.
From Jesus' life we hear God's assuring Word.
As He reveals to us the Creator as seen and heard.
Also through His life of compassion and care,
there is a mighty Presence of which we become aware.
In the Birth, the Cross, the Empty Tomb and Pentecost
God comes into our lives with prime time accent.
Then we begin to understand the Great Advent,
happening when angels sang at the first Christmas event.

Monday, December 1, 2008

New Book Featured in Newspaper

My new book "Into All The World" was featured in the Chattanooga Times Free Press on Saturday, November 15, 2008. The on-line article also includes an audio clip of my interview with the journalist. To read the article and/or listen to the interview, click on this link.