My Great Grandaddy, Hamp Richardson

I’ve recently had an opportunity to scan a picture of the 1901 Sumter (S.C.) baseball team.  My Great Grandaddy, Wade Hampton “Hamp” Richardson, was the pitcher.

People often ask me if I’m related to Bobby Richardson, the N.Y. Yankee great.  I am.  My Great Grandaddy was Bobby’s uncle.  Wade Hampton’s brother, Robert Richardson, was Bobby’s Dad.  So Bobby and my grandad are first cousins which makes Bobby my 3rd cousin.  We had Bobby come preach at our church a few years ago and I asked him if he had any memories of his Uncle Hamp, my Great Grandaddy.  Regrettably, he did not.

Regardless, there seems to have been some baseball talent in my family…but it all stopped with Bobby!

Anyway, I love this picture.  My Great Grandad is on the back row of the group photo, second from the right.  He’s number 13.  My Grandaddy wrote in the book that his dad (“Papa”) was the pitcher and, to quote my Grandaddy, “A mighty good pitcher he was!”

 

Fred B. Craddock’s Craddock Stories

It is very hard not to like Fred Craddock, one of today’s great homileticians. Craddock Stories is a fascinating collection of many of Craddock’s famous tales, anecdotes, and stories that will be as interesting to preachers who want to study how to tell a story as they will be to all readers who simply want to hear some great stories from a man who loves the gospel and the church.  This collection is edited by Mike Graves and Richard F. Ward and they are to be commended for doing a wonderful job.

Sermon illustration books are a dime a dozen, and I am pretty skeptical of most of them.  This work, however, along with R. Kent Hughes’ wonderful collection, is well worth having.  I have used stories from this book, never without saying, “Fred Craddock tells the story of…” first!  (I do believe it was Craddock who tells about going to a church to hear a student preach and hearing the student present one of Craddock’s life stories as if it were his and not Craddock’s!  If I recall, Craddock shook his hand afterward and commended the young man on his message, much to the minister’s embarrassment.)

Craddock is a master of understatement and of subtle illustration.  Oftentimes you hear a Craddock story and it grows more profound as it sinks in.  His stories are usually folksy, colloquial, and earthy.  They deal a lot with the church as a family, the radical forgiveness one finds in Christ, and our all-too-current church prejudices and foibles.  Craddock is a master or putting his finger on the blind spots of church culture yet he is never elitist or snobbish in doing so.  Rather, he can be brutally honest about his own contribution to these shortcomings.

If you would like to read a collection of fascinating, intelligent, thoughtful, provocative, and oh-so-interesting stories that will stir your heart and convict you over and over again, get Craddock Stories!

On Summarizing “The Gospel”

Update: I’ve reworked the definition in light of some helpful feedback.

The New Testament offers numerous descriptions of the nature of the gospel, of its implications and its importance, and of its effects on and in and among the people of God and the world.  I’ve recently finished working through every New Testament reference to “the gospel” and have been looking closely at these various descriptions.

There are a number of good summary definitions of “the gospel” out there, and, insofar as they harmonize with the witness of Scripture, they are good.  It is helpful, though, to summarize “the gospel” yourself, if only because it challenges us to think through our own assumptions about the gospel and to hold them up to the judgment of Scripture.

So, after having just finished this study, I’ve been trying to hammer out a definition of “the gospel” that does justice to the New Testament picture.  I’d love your thoughts, suggestions, and feedback, as well as any summaries of “the gospel” that you have come up with.

I more than realize that it is not for us to define the gospel.  It is of God.  He has defined it.  But we must proclaim it, and this involves being able to say what it is without quoting verbatim the many, many NT references to it. 

Here’s my best shot at it.  Share yours.

The gospel is the eternal good news that through the person, death, resurrection, and promised return of Jesus Christ, sin, death, and hell have been defeated and all who come to Christ in repentance and faith receive salvation, eternal life, hope, the blessings of God, strength for right living, and a place in the body and ongoing mission of Christ on earth, the church, through the ministry of the Holy Spirit.”

The Alexamanos Graffito

Last Sunday morning I mentioned in my sermon how God uses the “foolish” things of the world to shame the wise.  In the context of Genesis, I was talking specifically about God’s penchant for making great mothers of women with barren wombs (Sarah, Rebekah, et al.).  But this also works as a general principles, as the beginning of 1 Corinthians and numerous other texts and examples make clear.

As an aside, I mentioned “The Alexamanos Graffito.”  This ancient graffiti is one of the oldest depictions of the cross, and it is not a flattering depiction.  In fact, it is a piece of anti-Christian mockery in which a young man, Alexamanos, is seen worshiping before a cross on which is crucified a man with the head of a donkey.

Scribbled beneath are the words, “Alexamanos worships his God.”  The graffiti is dated to around 200 AD.  Here is a picture of the original (discovered in Rome in the mid-19th century), with a pencil or pen rubbing beneath it making things a bit clearer.

So when we talk about “the new atheism” or speak about what seems to be increasingly hostile attacks upon Christ and His people, remember that there is truly nothing new under the sun.

The world has always mocked the cross as absurd and God’s people as fools.  But may we never forget:  the foolishness of God is wiser than the wisdom of the world, and it is through the foolishness of the cross that we are saved.

What My Dad Taught Me Yesterday

I tried to get his attention a couple of more times with no success, and then realized what had happened.  He obviously had tried to silence his phone but had somehow cut on the speaker instead.  I could hear him and the people he was talking to crystal clear, but he couldn’t hear me.

So I decided to hang up.  Just before I did, though, I hesitated and listened to what he was saying.  He was talking about a trip that he and my mom and our daughter and two of her cousins had just taken to D.C.  He described the National Cathedral:  where it was located, what it looked like, how much they enjoyed it.  I could hear the lady and her husband asking questions.  He told them about a trip that they are about to take the rest of the grandkids on in a few weeks.  Then he talked to them about what they needed in their store.

My dad is a hardware salesman.  He has been since before I was born.  For my entire life I have known that he was traveling the eastern part of South Carolina selling the countless little hardware stores that dot the state.  His is a life of travel, conversation, and sales.  I guess he’s logged more miles than any human being I’ve ever known, and he’s sold a whole lot of hardware along the way.

As I listened to him talk it occured to me that I was getting a glimpse into something I had always knownbut never really known:  what my dad does and who he is during the week.

So I listened.  I sat at my desk and listened to every single word.

I listened to my dad talk for 28.5 minutes…and he never knew I was listening.

And this is what I learned:

My dad loves his family, particularly his grandchildren.

My dad loves to laugh.

My dad is good at his job and wants to work with his customers.

My dad doesn’t use profanity.

My dad doesn’t stand around the hardware counter telling crude stories.

My dad is the same man in a hardware store in rural SC on a Wednesday afternoon that he is in church on Sunday morning at 11 a.m.

My dad has such integrity that he can cut his cell phone on and let you listen in and you won’t hear anything that will make you ashamed.

We are indeed formed by little scraps of wisdom.  And yesterday my dad gave me maybe the greatest gift he’s ever given me:  a 28.5 minute scrap of wisdom, imparted to me without him knowing it, that I’ll remember for the rest of my life.

So thanks, dad.  Thanks for being who you are.

I’m proud to be your son.

 

Stephen Scaer’s “Time Management”

Time Management

Luther in the year he spent
as Junker Joerg in Wartburg towers,
translated the New Testament
to pass the everlasting hours.
Though living as a refugee
Erasmus wrote his tour de force.
In Praise of Folly’s said to be
the product of a trip by horse.
With dinners late, D’ Aguesseau saw
an opportunity to write
his sixteen-volume work of law
in fifteen minutes every night.
Today I slept late, took a walk,
sipped coffee on my ragged lawn,
checked the mailbox, saw the clock,
and noticed half my life was gone.
[Stephen Scaer, “Time Management.” First Things, no.194(June/July 2009), 19.]

Thomas B. Allen’s George Washington, Spymaster:

I’ve just had the most delightful and informative reading experience that I’ve had in a long time:  Thomas B. Allen’s George Washington, Spymaster: How the Americans Outspied the British and Won the Revolutionary War.

My daughter has just returned from a week in D.C. with her grandparents and a few of her cousins.  This book comes to me as a gift  from my mother, purchased on that trip (at Mt. Vernon, of course).  I suppose this would be called a children’s book, but not necessarily so.

Published by National Geographic, this wonderful piece of writing is an attractive hardbound book with 148-pages of text, some wonderful drawings of Washington and others, some very informative appendices including espionage terminology, some 18th century American code keys, and things like that.  Sprinkled throughout the text and on the front cover, back cover, and lower edges of the book are some codes that you can de-code using the provided key (did you know Washington’s spy name was Agent 711?).

As for the content, it is very accessible, informative, and easy to read.  (I just read the whole thing in a 6-hour bus ride on the way home from camp.)

Allen tells the story of the espionage antics surrounding the Revolutionary War and particularly of Washington’s keen interest in the spying enterprise.  He reveals a number of fascinating stories of spies, counter-spies, moles, sleepers, and a whole host of other espionage personages.  Some of the stories get humorously confusing and you have to read carefully to know who exactly this or that person was spying for at the time…because, of course, who they started out spying for wasn’t who they always ended up spying for!

The story of Benedict Arnold and Washington’s near obsession with kidnapping him back from the British so that he could hang him was fascinating.  The various ways that information was passed at the time and particularly the discussion of invisible inks was enthralling.  And Washington’s own deft skill at the espionage game is impressed on the reader in convincing ways.

A fantastic and fun read that was a sheer pleasure.  You will love this book, I have no doubt.  Older kids will love it as well.

 

What Christian Parenting Looks Like

The following letter from P.H. Mell’s mother to her then fifteen-year-old son was printed in the latest issue of The Founders Journal in a tremendous article on the life and ministry of the great Baptist statesman.  It is, in my opinion, a beautiful picture of what Christian parenting looks like…a picture that desperately needs to be recovered in the Church today.

My Dear Boy:

It is high time that you and I should communicate frequently and intimately and confidentially.  If this is not to be expected by the time you have arrived at fifteen when is it to be looked for?  On one account I have more anxiety, even dread on your behalf than for any of my children.  Earnestly as I wish a son of mine to be a minister yet I tremble at the idea of educating and devoting a son to the sacred profession without previously satisfactory evidence that his own soul was right with God…My heart burns to see you in every sense of the word a true Christian…You should exercise a jealousy over yourself lest the trifles of this world should deaden your feelings about the grand questions: what are the chances of my salvation – what have I done – what must I do to be saved?…remember they that are Christ’s have crucified their affections and lusts – crucify yours.

[C. Ben Mitchell, “The Life and Labors of Patrick Hues Mell.” The Founders Journal, 76 (Spring 2009), p.17-18.]

What God’s Love Looks Like

I noticed this in Charles Lowery’s article, “His Little Girl,” from the most recent SBC Life.  May it encourage you today!

In The Whisper Test, Mary Ann Bird writes:

I grew up knowing I was different and I hated it. I was born with a cleft palate and when I started school, my classmates made it clear to me how I looked to others: a little girl with a misshapen lip, crooked nose, lopsided teeth and garbled speech.

When schoolmates asked, “What happened to your lip?” I’d tell them I’d fallen and cut it on a piece of glass. Somehow it seemed more acceptable to have suffered an accident than to have been born different. I was convinced that no one outside my family could love me. There was, however, a teacher in the second grade whom we all adored — Mrs. Leonard by name. She was short, round, happy — a sparkling lady.

Annually we had a hearing test … Mrs. Leonard gave the test to everyone in the class, and finally it was my turn. I knew from past years that we stood against the door and covered one ear, the teacher sitting at her desk would whisper something, and we would have to repeat it back — things like, “The sky is blue.” or “Do you have new shoes?” I waited there for those words. God must have put into her mouth, those seven words that changed my life, Mrs. Leonard said, in her whisper:

“I wish you were my little girl.”

Shame on you, Wiley!

Wiley Drake, a former VP of the SBC, has applauded the murder of abortionist George Tiller and apparently is hoping that God will strike our President as well.  As Wade Burleson points out, Dwight McKissic is calling on the Southern Baptist Convention to censure Drake.

If any kind of resolution along these lines comes before the Convention, I will be voting for it.  Regardless, here is my censure.

Wiley Drake is, to many of us, a kind of Convention oddity:  a man who loves the microphone, loves bringing resolutions to the floor, and who, amazingly, was elected VP of the Convention.  But I can assure anybody who doesn’t know the SBC that Drake was elected because, at the time, he was seen as a funny, quirky, slightly irritating, but somewhat charming man who’s indefatigable microphone antics on the floor of the SBC over the course of many years had earned him a pat on the back.

He was not elected for his mind.  And these kinds of comments were not known (to me anyway) when he was elected.

But this is too much, and is not representative of the SBC, despite what non-SBC folks probably think (and, thanks to Drake, will continue to think).

I’m a Baptist by conviction.  I oppose abortion and think it should be made illegal.  I run in these circles.  It’s where I live and breathe.  But I have never heard anybody call for or defend the murder of an abortionist.  On the contrary, the vast majority of pro-life folks I know feel that murder is precisely the problem and not the answer.

As for praying for the death of our President, words fail.  I disagree with our President and frequently pray that God will convict him over this or that.  But what Wiley has done here is absurd and obscene.

Shame on you Wiley.  Step away from the microphone.