Labor Day 2019

cffblog6.jpgSeptember 2, 2019 (Monday)

It’s Labor Day and most people get off work today. The Rockport Beach has been crowded all summer long, but today’s crowds will outdo any record set so far this year. It always does.

It’s another anniversary as a preacher of the gospel for me–71 years of preaching.

The industrial revolution brought about the employment of  many people in factories and businesses.  Conflicts developed about working conditions and wages. When I worked for General Motors at Arlington in 1955-1956, I saw how management dealt with labor, and how the labor union leaders worked with the employees who joined the union.

I was a department clerk–a white collar worker.  I had access to management and lesser contact with labor. Every morning I prepared a “manpower” report, showing how many people had reported for work and were on the assembly lines. Texas was fairly new to “labor vs management” scenarios, so the atmosphere was almost cordial among people from both sides.

Texas was different from other parts of the country where long-standing grievances of the employees were being dealt with by management with participation from the union leaders. In our Texas plant, we functioned mostly as a team, but in other parts of the country the situation was more like two competitive teams.

As manufacturing grew, Communism was eager to win the hearts of workers in the U.S.A. but I believe the Unions working in behalf of the labor force kept Communism from having any appeal to most workers. So we have Labor Day each year to remind us that everyone is needed and we depend on each other as Americans.

Labor Day used to be the last day of summer as far as Public School was concerned. We always started classes the next day every year. Nowadays you must obtain a school calendar to know what’s on the docket for faculty, administration, other workers and students.

I started school in 1937. The New London school disaster had taken place six months before and was still on the minds of people. The town is in East Texas near Tyler, Kilgore and Henderson. A gas leak caused an explosion that killed almost 300 students and teachers. Perhaps more.

Twelve years later I was attending college classes with a friend who grew up in New London, Texas. One day we drove there and visited with some of his family members. Even today, 82 years later, the subject keeps coming up. It certainly did on that visit in 1949, although few people seemed to want to talk about it.

The disaster is still the 3rd worst in Texas history, with the Texas City explosion and the Galveston hurricane and flood leading the list.

To reduce the damage of future leaks, the Texas Legislature began mandating within weeks of the explosion that thiols (also known as mercaptans) be added to natural gas. The strong odor of many thiols (stinky stuff)  makes leaks quickly detectable. The practice quickly spread worldwide. If the smell of fuel gas makes you sick, just thank the Lord and the Texas Legislature of 1937.

O, How He Loves You and Me

cffblog6.jpgSeptember 1, 2019 (Sunday)

Kurt Kaiser was born Dec. 17, 1934, in Chicago. He studied piano from age 4, and he gave his heart to Christ at the age of 7. He held degrees from the American Conservatory of Music and Northwestern University. He and his wife Pat and their family moved to Waco in 1959. They were longtime members of Seventh & James Baptist Church before they helped to start Dayspring Baptist Church in Waco. Kaiser was instrumental in the launch and growth of Word Music, where he was vice president and director of music. He composed more than 300 songs, including “Pass It On” and “Oh How He Loves You and Me.” He and Ralph Carmichael pioneered Christian youth musicals such as “Tell It Like It Is” and “Natural High” in the 1960s and 1970s. He was soloist George Beverly Shea’s accompanist at Billy Graham Evangelistic Association crusades. He developed the habit of writing down things he heard people say and filing them away to be reviewed later. One such phrase was “O, How He Loves You and Me.” He wrote the song in ten or fifteen minutes in 1975. He received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers and was elected to the Gospel Music Hall of Fame. He was a longtime supporter of Baylor University, which all four of his children attended, and the university awarded him its Pro Ecclesia Medal of Service in 2017. He died in 2018 at the age of 83.

I never met him but I met his daughter, Mrs. Kris Olson, a lovely lady who loves the Lord, when we served together on the Christian Life Commission of the Baptist General Convention of Texas.

O, HOW HE LOVES YOU AND ME
Kurt Kaiser
1975

O how He loves you and me, O how He loves you and me,
He gave His life, what more could He give?
O how He loves you, O how He loves me,
O how He loves you and me.

Jesus to Calv’ry did go, His love for mankind to show;
What He did there bro’t hope from despair:
O how He loves you, O how He loves me,
O how He loves you and me.


LISTEN (Studio Musicians)

Looking Ahead

cffblog6.jpgAugust 31, 2019 (Saturday)

Can it be the last day of August? Is summer really over? Labor Day, the closing curtain for summer activities, is set for day after tomorrow. Wow.

This used to be the signal to get back in school, but that schedule changed years ago. School has already started in most places. Professional, college and public school sports schedules are active.
Goodbye, August. Hello, September. Welcome to a new day. Every school now has taken steps to increase security. Churches are doing the same. But those who target groups of people have attacked many different kinds of groups. Wherever people get together in close-knit activities, they become potential targets of shooters.

Recently I became curious about trends in mass murders. I found several sites on the internet that displayed statistics. I was shocked to discover that gun violence has a face that most of us have not given a lot of thought. And that is the matter of suicide by firearms. We are shocked by the numbers of innocent people being killed senselessly by mass murderers, but, if you are like me, you are shocked to find out that although gun homicides get far more attention in the popular press, most gun deaths are the result of suicide. In 2016, the last year for which the CDC provides numbers, 22,938 people (62 every day) committed suicide by firearm, while 14,415 (40 every day) people died in gun homicides. Historical data shows it’s been this way for a while.

We are unnerved, shocked and dismayed by the number of shootings in which a person with firearms enters a place where many people have gathered and randomly takes the lives of innocent victims. We need to make whatever changes we can that will reduce the number of these senseless massacres. We also need to remember the constant threat of terrorism, international and local. But surely the suicide rate should alarm us all.

What’s Old? What’s New?

cffblog6.jpgAugust 30, 2019 (Friday)

I have been looking at a picture of a new car.  As I looked at a photo of its sleek interior, it made me think of a spaceship. Then another picture came to mind, that of Henry Ford’s first car, a “quadricycle,” manufactured in 1896. They called it a “horseless carriage,” and indeed it looked like one.

280px-FordQuadricycle.jpgThere’s quite a difference between the horseless carriages and the 2019 models.

Cars have changed.  And so have churches.  I can’t help but think of the differences in churches from 1896 to 2019.  People choose different kinds of churches. For many reasons.

We drive the kind of car we like, and we leave it to others to choose their kind.  Many people like to do church that way, too.

How do we choose a church?  Paul’s measuring rod for a church was simple: “Is Christ being preached?” And not just anybody’s own idea of what Christ is like. He wanted to hear about Jesus’ death, burial and resurrection.

The big difference in churches today is the song service.  There are many new songs and sometimes the old hymns are arranged in a contemporary style.  There are many new translations of the Bible, and I enjoy reading all of them. But there is only one gospel message and that is Christ crucified and risen; He is our Savior. That central message is far more important than whether we observe traditional worship, contemporary worship or blended worship.

Some churches, such as the First Baptist Church of Rockport, Texas, have separate worship services for preferred worship styles.  That policy seems to be working fine for them.  But not all churches are equipped to do it that way.  Let us pray for each other that we may find a way to worship together, build up each other, glorify Christ and stand strong with the message of salvation by grace through faith.  Jesus Christ seemed to have a favorite description of His Church as “The Bride of Christ.”  His bride has a husband who always does the right thing.  He deserves a bride who does the same.

Related image
(This blog is an updated version of a 2009 blog)

http://charlesfake.com/index.php/2009/08/28/get_a_horse_1/

Prayer Changes Things

cffblog6.jpgAugust 29, 2019 (Thursday)

Does prayer change anything? God may or may not answer your prayer in just the way you want, but prayer does change things. Jesus said we should always pray and not give up (Luke 18:1)

Prayer always changes us. Prayer keeps us tapped into a spiritual dimension, and lifts our thinking to a higher plane. Our lives are renewed, our faith is increased, and our focus is shifted from ourselves to the world around us and others who are in need of help.

Prayer frequently changes others. God works in the lives of those for whom we pray. When we pray for others, we tend to become involved in small or great ways in their lives. When people know that someone is concerned about them, the knowledge of that lifts their spirits and gives them incentive to keep pursuing their goals.

Prayer sometimes changes circumstances. We are told in the Bible that nothing is impossible with God. An example of that truth is described in the Book of Acts when Peter was released from prison against all odds, in answer to the prayers of the church. Miracles sometimes happen. Even when they don’t, we learn to trust God in hard times when we never give up on prayer.

God answers prayer. Sometimes His answer is, “Yes;” at other times it may be, “No,” or “Wait.” Keep on praying. Keep on trusting the Lord. May our prayer be, “I trust in you, O LORD; I say, ‘You are my God.’ My times are in your hands” (Psalm 31:14-15).

PRAYER CHANGES THINGS
B.B. McKinney

Chorus:
Prayer changes things,
Prayer changes things,
When the world is cold and blue,
Trust in Jesus, pray it through,
Victory will come to you,
For prayer changes things.

Verses:
When the dark shadows come over you,
Bringing troubles you never know,
Trust in the Savior and pray it thro’,
For prayer changes things.

Prayer will bring peace when the days are long,
Turn your sighing into a song,
It will bring victory over wrong,
For prayer changes things.

Pray for the wanderer at your door,
Pray for lost ones the wide world o’er;
Jesus will save them forevermore,
For prayer changes things.

Pray and take courage thro’ weal or woe,
In life’s battles on earth below;
Pray with a faith that will not let go,
For prayer changes things.

This is an outline of a sermon I have preached many times (most recently August 11), with repeated presentations in the same churches. It became a blog in 2008. Recorded music of this song doesn’t appear to be available on the internet, but the verses make up a beautiful poem nonetheless.