Category: Discipleship (Page 24 of 30)

Not Far From The Kingdom Of God

You Are Not Far From The Kingdom Of God

Mark 12 – Jesus is debating with the chief priests, the teachers of the Law, and the elders. They’re walking through the temple courts. I imagine they’re somewhere on the South side of the temple, probably on the huge steps that led up to the Huldah gates and the temple’s main entrance. If not, they were probably somewhere in the maze of courtyards below, the busiest and most crowded area of the temple grounds. They’re going back and forth on all kinds of things: Jesus’ authority, the rejection of the Messiah, politics and taxes, marriage and the resurrection.

Then one of the teachers engages our Savior in a topic that really matters. This question counts. “Of all the commandments, which is the most important?”

Jesus answers with what he always said perfectly summed up every word of the Law and the Prophets: Love God and love neighbor. “There is no commandment greater than these.”

The teacher of the Law agrees. In a humorous way, only because we know Jesus’ true identity as the holy Son of God, he actually commends Jesus for his wise and true answer. “Well said, teacher. You are right.” (Duh! Jesus was there when the commands were given!) But he takes it a step farther. In fact, this teacher of the Law, a comrade of those who were questioning Jesus and attempting to trick him and trap him and get him out of the picture, takes it one huge, giant, leap forward. He makes the bold claim, to Jesus and in front of all his cohorts, that loving God and loving neighbor is “more important than all burnt offerings and sacrifices.”

I imagine this teacher actually pointing to and gesturing toward the people and the animals and the altars, the priests and the books and the chants, that surrounded them in this scene. Loving God and loving neighbor trumps all of this, he says to Jesus. Loving God and loving neighbor means more, it is more, than anything that happens in here!

And our Lord — does he smile? Does he wink? Does his face break out in a massive ear-to-ear grin? — looks this teacher right in the eye and says, “You are not far from the Kingdom of God.”

I often wonder what Jesus was thinking at this point. “This man gets it! Here’s a guy who really understands! He’s in the middle of all the trappings of the religious establishment, he’s being blocked and detoured and slowed down and held back by all the rules and regulations and rituals and ceremonies, but he understands it’s not about any of these things! He gets it!”

“You are not far from the Kingdom of God.”

When people asked Jesus about the Kingdom of God, not once did he ever say, “It’s that group over there that meets on Sundays for worship and Bible class.” When Jesus explained the Kingdom of God, he never once said, “It’s identified by those who take communion once a week on the Lord’s Day and sing acappella.” Jesus never told a story about the Kingdom of God and interpreted it by claiming, “You’ll know the Kingdom when you see two songs and a prayer and announcements either at the beginning or the end. Or sometimes both.”

No.

Jesus always says the Kingdom is about hurting people being comforted. It’s distressed people being encouraged. It’s cold people being warmed. It’s the outcasts being brought in and made a part of the family. It’s God using his people to help other people.

The true marks of the Kingdom have very little, if anything, to do with what happens inside your church building between announcements and prayers. Instead, the Kingdom of God is grounded firmly in the weightier matters of justice and mercy and love and faithfulness. The requirements of living in the Kingdom are not keeping the rules as much as they are about acting justly, loving mercy, and walking humbly before God.

Maintaining our institutional status quo is not necessarily the same as being faithful to Jesus and his mission. Being a member in good standing or a middle-of-the-road church is not necessarily the same as living under the reign of God.

Our King came into this world to sacrifice and to serve and to save. And that is the business of his subjects, too. When we get it through our heads that this calling trumps every other calling we think we might have as children of God and followers of the Son, then we are not far from the Kingdom of God.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Carley’s 10! 

Carley’s ten. Or at least she will be Thursday. We had her party at the house Saturday. A whole bunch of silly 4th grade girls. Kate won the limbo contest. Elizabeth took the hula hoop prize (although Carrie-Anne beat her later in a head-to-head). And then Whitney and I beat it for the new Cowboys Stadium in Arlington and the OU-BYU football game.

At BYU-OUOur great friend Glenn Branscum set up a bunch of guys from Legacy with seats in his suite for the game. And when I say seats in his suite, I mean huge, fat, oversized, reclining leather seats with armrests and cupholders. Most every one in the room was a big Sooners fan. That’s why they were invited. Of course, most every one of the 80,000 in the stadium were Sooners fans. And everything Norman Southwas great.

Until about halfway through the second quarter when it became obvious that OU has some serious offensive line problems and some major gaps in the secondary. It got really quiet in there when Sooners quarterback Sam Bradford went down with his injury near the end of the first half. Whitney was excited (“Darling, you can’t cheer an injury. He’s a real person” “But, dad, this is good for BYU!”), but most of the rest of our crew spent the last two hours of the evening in a dark, dark, depression. Brandon didn’t say anything or look at anybody. Paul chewed off all his fingernails and then started working on the coasters. Dillon was in a catatonic trance. Ken and Ada prayed the whole second half (I’m sorry, God is NOT an OU fan). And I spent those last two quarters trying to keep Whitney from rubbing it in.

Words can’t describe this stadium. I have a lot to say about it. Maybe nothing you haven’t already read somewhere else. But I’ll save it for later. My sincere thanks to Glenn and Karen and the Branscum family for setting us up with a fantastic evening together. Thank you, thank you, thank you!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Jimmy Shay MitchellAlways a blessing to see great friend Jimmy Mitchell. He and his youth group and sponsors from the Northside Church in Benton, Arkansas worshiped with us at Legacy yesterday after a weekend at Six Flags. “Hi” to Elizabeth and Jenniva. We wish we could have seen y’all, too.  And update your blog, Jimmy!

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Tim SederJust six more days until the Cowboys kick off their season against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. And the second-best player in Cowboys history to ever wear #6 is Tim Seder. He was a kicker from Ashland who played two seasons in Dallas (2000-2001). He converted 72% of his field goals (36/50) during his tenure here and never missed a PAT (39/39). The interesting thing about Seder, though, is that he scored rushing touchdowns on fake field goals twice, once in each of his two years. I don’t have time to look them up. Who cares?

Yesterday’s #7 is quarterback Chad Hutchinson. Sorry, I just can’t go with Randall Cunningham, just like I couldn’t give Red Ribbon Review #7the nod to Harold Carmichael a couple of weeks ago. Hutchinson entered the picture during Jerry Wayne’s brief period of fascination with baseball-playing quarterbacks. He preceded Michigan’s Drew Henson in Dallas by a season.

Hutchinson had played the 2001 season as a reliever for the St. Louis Cardinals where he appeared in three games, allowing 16 baserunners on nine hits and six walks and a hit batter in a total of four innings of work. He gave up eleven earned runs and completed his MLB career with a 24.75 ERA.

Chad HutchinsonAnd he didn’t fare much better with the Cowboys. Following a four-interception performance in a loss to Arizona, Jerry pulled Quincy Carter and handed his team to Hutchinson, promising that this pitcher from Stanford was the future. However, his first ever start, at Texas Stadium against the Seahawks on October 27, was overshadowed by Emmitt Smith’s historic breaking of Walter Payton’s all-time rushing mark. The Cowboys, as you recall, lost that day. And Hutchinson went 2-7 in his nine starts that year, completing 51% of his passes for seven TDs and eight interceptions. The second-best #7 in Cowboys history is just another mediocre quarterback in a revolving door of them since Troy Aikman stepped down nine long years ago.

Peace,

Allan

Not Far From The Kingdom Of God

You Are Not Far From The Kingdom Of God

Mark 12 – Jesus is debating with the chief priests, the teachers of the Law, and the elders. They’re walking through the temple courts. I imagine they’re somewhere on the South side of the temple, probably on the huge steps that led up to the Huldah gates and the temple’s main entrance. If not, they were probably somewhere in the maze of courtyards below, the busiest and most crowded area of the temple grounds. They’re going back and forth on all kinds of things: Jesus’ authority, the rejection of the Messiah, politics and taxes, marriage and the resurrection.

Then one of the teachers engages our Savior in a topic that really matters. This question counts. “Of all the commandments, which is the most important?”

Jesus answers with what he always said perfectly summed up every word of the Law and the Prophets: Love God and love neighbor. “There is no commandment greater than these.”

The teacher of the Law agrees. In a humorous way, only because we know Jesus’ true identity as the holy Son of God, he actually commends Jesus for his wise and true answer. “Well said, teacher. You are right.” (Duh! Jesus was there when the commands were given!) But he takes it a step farther. In fact, this teacher of the Law, a comrade of those who were questioning Jesus and attempting to trick him and trap him and get him out of the picture, takes it one huge, giant, leap forward. He makes the bold claim, to Jesus and in front of all his cohorts, that loving God and loving neighbor is “more important than all burnt offerings and sacrifices.”

I imagine this teacher actually pointing to and gesturing toward the people and the animals and the altars, the priests and the books and the chants, that surrounded them in this scene. Loving God and loving neighbor trumps all of this, he says to Jesus. Loving God and loving neighbor means more, it is more, than anything that happens in here!

And our Lord — does he smile? Does he wink? Does his face break out in a massive ear-to-ear grin? — looks this teacher right in the eye and says, “You are not far from the Kingdom of God.”

I often wonder what Jesus was thinking at this point. “This man gets it! Here’s a guy who really understands! He’s in the middle of all the trappings of the religious establishment, he’s being blocked and detoured and slowed down and held back by all the rules and regulations and rituals and ceremonies, but he understands it’s not about any of these things! He gets it!”

“You are not far from the Kingdom of God.”

When people asked Jesus about the Kingdom of God, not once did he ever say, “It’s that group over there that meets on Sundays for worship and Bible class.” When Jesus explained the Kingdom of God, he never once said, “It’s identified by those who take communion once a week on the Lord’s Day and sing acappella.” Jesus never told a story about the Kingdom of God and interpreted it by claiming, “You’ll know the Kingdom when you see two songs and a prayer and announcements either at the beginning or the end. Or sometimes both.”

No.

Jesus always says the Kingdom is about hurting people being comforted. It’s distressed people being encouraged. It’s cold people being warmed. It’s the outcasts being brought in and made a part of the family. It’s God using his people to help other people.

The true marks of the Kingdom have very little, if anything, to do with what happens inside your church building between announcements and prayers. Instead, the Kingdom of God is grounded firmly in the weightier matters of justice and mercy and love and faithfulness. The requirements of living in the Kingdom are not keeping the rules as much as they are about acting justly, loving mercy, and walking humbly before God.

Maintaining our institutional status quo is not necessarily the same as being faithful to Jesus and his mission. Being a member in good standing or a middle-of-the-road church is not necessarily the same as living under the reign of God.

Our King came into this world to sacrifice and to serve and to save. And that is the business of his subjects, too. When we get it through our heads that this calling trumps every other calling we think we might have as children of God and followers of the Son, then we are not far from the Kingdom of God.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Carley’s 10! 

Carley’s ten. Or at least she will be Thursday. We had her party at the house Saturday. A whole bunch of silly 4th grade girls. Kate won the limbo contest. Elizabeth took the hula hoop prize (although Carrie-Anne beat her later in a head-to-head). And then Whitney and I beat it for the new Cowboys Stadium in Arlington and the OU-BYU football game.

At BYU-OUOur great friend Glenn Branscum set up a bunch of guys from Legacy with seats in his suite for the game. And when I say seats in his suite, I mean huge, fat, oversized, reclining leather seats with armrests and cupholders. Most every one in the room was a big Sooners fan. That’s why they were invited. Of course, most every one of the 80,000 in the stadium were Sooners fans. And everything Norman Southwas great.

Until about halfway through the second quarter when it became obvious that OU has some serious offensive line problems and some major gaps in the secondary. It got really quiet in there when Sooners quarterback Sam Bradford went down with his injury near the end of the first half. Whitney was excited (“Darling, you can’t cheer an injury. He’s a real person” “But, dad, this is good for BYU!”), but most of the rest of our crew spent the last two hours of the evening in a dark, dark, depression. Brandon didn’t say anything or look at anybody. Paul chewed off all his fingernails and then started working on the coasters. Dillon was in a catatonic trance. Ken and Ada prayed the whole second half (I’m sorry, God is NOT an OU fan). And I spent those last two quarters trying to keep Whitney from rubbing it in.

Words can’t describe this stadium. I have a lot to say about it. Maybe nothing you haven’t already read somewhere else. But I’ll save it for later. My sincere thanks to Glenn and Karen and the Branscum family for setting us up with a fantastic evening together. Thank you, thank you, thank you!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Jimmy Shay MitchellAlways a blessing to see great friend Jimmy Mitchell. He and his youth group and sponsors from the Northside Church in Benton, Arkansas worshiped with us at Legacy yesterday after a weekend at Six Flags. “Hi” to Elizabeth and Jenniva. We wish we could have seen y’all, too.  And update your blog, Jimmy!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Tim SederJust six more days until the Cowboys kick off their season against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. And the second-best player in Cowboys history to ever wear #6 is Tim Seder. He was a kicker from Ashland who played two seasons in Dallas (2000-2001). He converted 72% of his field goals (36/50) during his tenure here and never missed a PAT (39/39). The interesting thing about Seder, though, is that he scored rushing touchdowns on fake field goals twice, once in each of his two years. I don’t have time to look them up. Who cares?

Yesterday’s #7 is quarterback Chad Hutchinson. Sorry, I just can’t go with Randall Cunningham, just like I couldn’t give Red Ribbon Review #7the nod to Harold Carmichael a couple of weeks ago. Hutchinson entered the picture during Jerry Wayne’s brief period of fascination with baseball-playing quarterbacks. He preceded Michigan’s Drew Henson in Dallas by a season.

Hutchinson had played the 2001 season as a reliever for the St. Louis Cardinals where he appeared in three games, allowing 16 baserunners on nine hits and six walks and a hit batter in a total of four innings of work. He gave up eleven earned runs and completed his MLB career with a 24.75 ERA.

Chad HutchinsonAnd he didn’t fare much better with the Cowboys. Following a four-interception performance in a loss to Arizona, Jerry pulled Quincy Carter and handed his team to Hutchinson, promising that this pitcher from Stanford was the future. However, his first ever start, at Texas Stadium against the Seahawks on October 27, was overshadowed by Emmitt Smith’s historic breaking of Walter Payton’s all-time rushing mark. The Cowboys, as you recall, lost that day. And Hutchinson went 2-7 in his nine starts that year, completing 51% of his passes for seven TDs and eight interceptions. The second-best #7 in Cowboys history is just another mediocre quarterback in a revolving door of them since Troy Aikman stepped down nine long years ago.

Peace,

Allan

As I Have Done Unto You

As I Have Done Unto YouWe’ve all heard humorous distortions of the Golden Rule. We’ve seen bumper stickers that say “He who has the gold makes the rules.” We’ve heard people say, “Do unto others before they do unto you.” Those twists on Jesus’ eternal words are funny because, generally speaking, we’ve experienced or, in some cases, acted on those realities.

I like what I see in Scripture as God’s even higher calling. What the Bible lays out, from start to finish, is the mission from our God to “do unto others as I have done unto you.”

God says forgive others as I have forgiven you.

Christ says love one another as I have loved you.

Paul says accept one another as Christ has accepted you.

This guiding principle — this foundational truth — shapes us and forms who we are and what we do as God’s children and followers of his Son. It’s so much bigger. And broader. And deeper. Richer. Universal. Eternal.

It takes a rich understanding and appreciation for what our God has done for you. It takes an awareness of who you are next to the holy and righteous Creator of Heaven and Earth. It takes a gratitude for his mercy to do unto others as God has done unto you.

May we be a people who do everything we can for one another and others because God in Christ Jesus has done everything for us.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

No cell phoneThe great state of Texas has outlawed the use of cell phones in active school zones. Effective yesterday — this is so unbelievable to me! — drivers cannot talk on a hand-held cell phone while driving through a school zone. Thankfully, the law is only being enforced in zones where new “No cell phones” signs are in place. And currently none of the school zones in North Richland Hills are affected. But I’m sure it’s only a matter of time.

I’m not a conspiracist by nature. Myles Brand, then President of the NCAA, once told me in between press conferences at a TCU event to be a critic, not a cynic. But I wonder why cell phones are being outlawed in our cars and not the other things that have been documented and proven to cause more accidents?

According to a National Highway Traffic and Safety Administration study that was released this past July, driver inattention is the leading cause of all traffic accidents. But you may be surprised at where cell phones fall on the list of those driver inattention issues. Would you believe it’s sixth?

Thankfully, this is still OK. For now.Drivers talking on cell phones is causing fewer accidents than drivers 1) drinking and/or spilling drinks; 2) changing radio stations or CDs or adjusting the climate controls; 3) reading; 4) eating; or 5) shaving or applying makeup. Cell phones are number six on the list of things that cause accidents. Yet our cell phones are being outlawed.

There’s not even enough research yet to guess where GPS systems and screens are going to eventually factor in to these causes. Fiddling with those things is at least as distracting as anything else.

According to this same report, 80% of all accidents involve driver inattention, 50% involve alcohol, 30% involve speeding, and 70% involve driver aggression. So, you can see, we have more causes than we have accidents.

I don’t see how outlawing cell phones — or trying to force us to purchase and use hands-free devices (not on your life!) — solves the problems. The same logic would require that the government first outlaw food and drink, radios and CD players, talking to passengers, and reading while driving. But who says logic is being used at all?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Eleven more days until the Cowboys regular season begins against the Bucs in Tampa Bay. And we’re counting down the Red Ribbon Reviewdays by recognizing the second-best players in team history according to jersey number.

In Dallas, the number eleven belongs to backup quarterbacks.

Don Heinrich in 1960. Buddy Humphrey in 1961. TCU’s Sonny Gibbs wore #11 as a Cowboy in ’63. Bob Beldon, Danny White, Wade Wilson, Mike Quinn, and Drew Bledsoe all wore #11 in Dallas. Only two non-quarterbacks have ever donned the double-ones: current wide receiver Roy Williams and the second-best #11 in Cowboys history, kicker/punter Danny Villanueva.

Danny VillanuevaVillanueva was acquired from the Rams in the Tommy McDonald trade before the 1965 season. For three years he handled both the punting and the kicking chores for a team that was making the transition from expansion franchise loser to America’s Team. His best year was in 1966 when he finished second in the NFL in scoring with 107 points. He made 56 of 56 extra points that season. And he was in the top ten in the league that year in total field goals made, field goal percentage, punting yards, and yards per punt. It was the Cowboys’ first ever winning season.

Villanueva tells a great story about what he feels like was his finest moment as a Dallas Cowboy. They were playing the Redskins at old RFK when Washington, nursing a 30-28 lead late, nailed a punt inside the Cowboys five. Don Meredith miraculously drove Dallas down the field with passes to Pete Gent and Pettis Norman and Danny Reeves. And with eleven seconds remaining, Meredith was tackled out of bounds, a late-hit penalty was assesed, and Villanueva was set up for a 30-yard field goal attempt to win the game.

It was only 30-yards. But Villanueva says it looked and felt like 80. Reeves bobbled the snap and so Villanueva had to wait on it. There was no timing or rhythm on the kick at all. It was awful. But it sailed over the cross bar, giving Dallas the dramatic 31-30 victory. Pete Richert, the former Dodgers and Washington Senators pitcher, had been sitting in the end zone with his son and actually caught the ball as it went into the stands. He gave it to Villanueva in the locker room. And it’s the only game ball this #11 ever kept.

The win launched the Cowboys on a season-ending run that saw them take five of their final six games, finish the season at 10-3-1, and make it to the playoffs for the first time in franchise history. It started that historic and still unequaled feat of 20 consecutive winning seasons.

When asked years later what he would have done had he missed the field goal, Villanueva replied, “We were already in Washington, so I would have just taken a taxi to the Mexican Embassy and asked for immediate asylum.”

Peace,

Allan

As I Have Done Unto You

As I Have Done Unto YouWe’ve all heard humorous distortions of the Golden Rule. We’ve seen bumper stickers that say “He who has the gold makes the rules.” We’ve heard people say, “Do unto others before they do unto you.” Those twists on Jesus’ eternal words are funny because, generally speaking, we’ve experienced or, in some cases, acted on those realities.

I like what I see in Scripture as God’s even higher calling. What the Bible lays out, from start to finish, is the mission from our God to “do unto others as I have done unto you.”

God says forgive others as I have forgiven you.

Christ says love one another as I have loved you.

Paul says accept one another as Christ has accepted you.

This guiding principle — this foundational truth — shapes us and forms who we are and what we do as God’s children and followers of his Son. It’s so much bigger. And broader. And deeper. Richer. Universal. Eternal.

It takes a rich understanding and appreciation for what our God has done for you. It takes an awareness of who you are next to the holy and righteous Creator of Heaven and Earth. It takes a gratitude for his mercy to do unto others as God has done unto you.

May we be a people who do everything we can for one another and others because God in Christ Jesus has done everything for us.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

No cell phoneThe great state of Texas has outlawed the use of cell phones in active school zones. Effective yesterday — this is so unbelievable to me! — drivers cannot talk on a hand-held cell phone while driving through a school zone. Thankfully, the law is only being enforced in zones where new “No cell phones” signs are in place. And currently none of the school zones in North Richland Hills are affected. But I’m sure it’s only a matter of time.

I’m not a conspiracist by nature. Myles Brand, then President of the NCAA, once told me in between press conferences at a TCU event to be a critic, not a cynic. But I wonder why cell phones are being outlawed in our cars and not the other things that have been documented and proven to cause more accidents?

According to a National Highway Traffic and Safety Administration study that was released this past July, driver inattention is the leading cause of all traffic accidents. But you may be surprised at where cell phones fall on the list of those driver inattention issues. Would you believe it’s sixth?

Thankfully, this is still OK. For now.Drivers talking on cell phones is causing fewer accidents than drivers 1) drinking and/or spilling drinks; 2) changing radio stations or CDs or adjusting the climate controls; 3) reading; 4) eating; or 5) shaving or applying makeup. Cell phones are number six on the list of things that cause accidents. Yet our cell phones are being outlawed.

There’s not even enough research yet to guess where GPS systems and screens are going to eventually factor in to these causes. Fiddling with those things is at least as distracting as anything else.

According to this same report, 80% of all accidents involve driver inattention, 50% involve alcohol, 30% involve speeding, and 70% involve driver aggression. So, you can see, we have more causes than we have accidents.

I don’t see how outlawing cell phones — or trying to force us to purchase and use hands-free devices (not on your life!) — solves the problems. The same logic would require that the government first outlaw food and drink, radios and CD players, talking to passengers, and reading while driving. But who says logic is being used at all?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Eleven more days until the Cowboys regular season begins against the Bucs in Tampa Bay. And we’re counting down the Red Ribbon Reviewdays by recognizing the second-best players in team history according to jersey number.

In Dallas, the number eleven belongs to backup quarterbacks.

Don Heinrich in 1960. Buddy Humphrey in 1961. TCU’s Sonny Gibbs wore #11 as a Cowboy in ’63. Bob Beldon, Danny White, Wade Wilson, Mike Quinn, and Drew Bledsoe all wore #11 in Dallas. Only two non-quarterbacks have ever donned the double-ones: current wide receiver Roy Williams and the second-best #11 in Cowboys history, kicker/punter Danny Villanueva.

Danny VillanuevaVillanueva was acquired from the Rams in the Tommy McDonald trade before the 1965 season. For three years he handled both the punting and the kicking chores for a team that was making the transition from expansion franchise loser to America’s Team. His best year was in 1966 when he finished second in the NFL in scoring with 107 points. He made 56 of 56 extra points that season. And he was in the top ten in the league that year in total field goals made, field goal percentage, punting yards, and yards per punt. It was the Cowboys’ first ever winning season.

Villanueva tells a great story about what he feels like was his finest moment as a Dallas Cowboy. They were playing the Redskins at old RFK when Washington, nursing a 30-28 lead late, nailed a punt inside the Cowboys five. Don Meredith miraculously drove Dallas down the field with passes to Pete Gent and Pettis Norman and Danny Reeves. And with eleven seconds remaining, Meredith was tackled out of bounds, a late-hit penalty was assesed, and Villanueva was set up for a 30-yard field goal attempt to win the game.

It was only 30-yards. But Villanueva says it looked and felt like 80. Reeves bobbled the snap and so Villanueva had to wait on it. There was no timing or rhythm on the kick at all. It was awful. But it sailed over the cross bar, giving Dallas the dramatic 31-30 victory. Pete Richert, the former Dodgers and Washington Senators pitcher, had been sitting in the end zone with his son and actually caught the ball as it went into the stands. He gave it to Villanueva in the locker room. And it’s the only game ball this #11 ever kept.

The win launched the Cowboys on a season-ending run that saw them take five of their final six games, finish the season at 10-3-1, and make it to the playoffs for the first time in franchise history. It started that historic and still unequaled feat of 20 consecutive winning seasons.

When asked years later what he would have done had he missed the field goal, Villanueva replied, “We were already in Washington, so I would have just taken a taxi to the Mexican Embassy and asked for immediate asylum.”

Peace,

Allan

Love Each Other

“My command is this: love each other as I have loved you.” ~John 15:12

“Love each other as I have loved you.”I’m blown away by the fact that Jesus showed his apostles how much he loved them by washing their feet the night he was betrayed. The Lord and Master of all got up from the meal, took off his coat, wrapped a towel around his waist, poured water into a bowl, and washed their feet.

He washed their feet.

The King of the Universe knelt down and scrubbed 120 filthy, stinky, sweaty, dirty, disgusting toes. And all the stuff in-between the toes. He even washed the feet of Judas.

Knowing what Judas was planning to do — what he was about to do — Jesus still humbles himself and washes his feet. Jesus loves Judas that much. And then hours later he dies for Judas, this one who betrayed him. He dies for Peter, this one who denied him. He dies for all the apostles who fled and disowned him. He dies for the Jews who demanded he be killed. He dies for the Romans who carried out the execution. He dies for me, who’s just as guilty as any of these men in Scripture.“Love each other as I have loved you”

That’s a Savior’s love. No ifs, ands, or buts. Jesus never says I’ll love you if you treat me right. He doesn’t say I’ll love you when you get your act together. He doesn’t say I’ll love you when you grow up. Jesus’ love is not conditioned by right behavior or a good performance. It’s not based on your IQ or money or skin color or clothes or education or bloodline or status. Jesus actually says I’ll die for you when you’re my enemy. I’ll serve you while you’re sinning against me. I’ll give my life for you when you’re only thinking of yourself.

Because I love you this much.

And then he says, “Love each other as I have loved you.”

We don’t think about that enough. We don’t take it seriously enough.

Paul tells us in 1 Corinthians 13 that love is more important than preaching and giving and good works. Incredibly, he even says love is bigger than faith and hope. And if love is really more important than those things, then our conclusion must be that love is more important than everything. Love trumps our worship assemblies and worship styles. Love is bigger than our business meetings and budgets. It’s bigger than our doctrine and our tradition. Love is bigger and more important than any thing else out there that could ever possibly divide us.

“Love each other as I have loved you.”If so — and I believe it with all my heart — then why aren’t we as committed to loving each other as we are to those other things that divide us and lead to arguing and fighting? Seriously. If love is the most important thing — and if you don’t believe that, then we’re not reading the same Bible — why do we fuss and complain?

As children of God and disciples of his Son, we must place unconditional, God-ordained love in the supreme position of our hearts and our minds and our church. All of our time and energy and strength should go into loving each other as Christ loves us.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Red Ribbon Review52 days until the Cowboys begin their 2009 regular season against the Bucs in Tampa Bay. Of course, training camp and pre-season games are right around the corner. But, honestly, who can watch that? We’re all pointing to Sunday September 13. And to help us get there, we’re recognizing the second-best players in Cowboys history according to jersey number.

Today’s #52 is tiny linebacker Dexter Coakley.

Dexter CoakleyOK, he’s not exactly tiny. 5’10” and 236 pounds is good for a small 1-AA school like Appalachian State. And despite setting all kinds of national tackle and interception records there and winning every defensive award there was, Coakley slipped all the way to the Cowboys in the third round of the 1997 draft.

And they got a steal.

Coakley wound up starting in his rookie year and played eight seasons in Dallas before giving way to Bradie James and Bill Parcells’ 3-4 defense. He was named to three Pro Bowls playing on a Cowboys defense that was built on speed and pursuit. And he wound up all over the Cowboys team record books. Coakley racked up a team record seven consecutive seasons of at least 100 tackles. He’s got the fourth highest total tackles record in team history with 1,046. And he’s tied with Dennis Thurman for the most defensive TDs in a Cowboys career with five.

Despite his size, Coakley was durable, too. In his eight seasons in Dallas, he only missed one game. He started all 127 games he played for the Cowboys. None of those games, by the way, were playoff wins. But he’s still the second-best #52 in Cowboys history.

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I’m still looking for information regarding the commemorative patch the Cowboys are going to wear on their uniforms this season to mark their 50th year. Anyone with info on that?

I’m also thrilled to share this bit of news with you: the NFL is going to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the old AFL all Oilers / Titans 50 Year Patchyear long. The original eight teams of the old American Football League will wear 1960 throwback unis for three games this season, several of them matchups between AFL alums. Of great interest to me is the old Houston Oilers. Yes, the Titans are going to throw on light blue jerseys with light blue helmets and white derrick logos and gray facemasks for three games this season. Plus, they get the bonus game at the Hall of Fame on August 9. I can’t wait to see that.

The Original Eight AFL teams and their throwback unis for special games this season

Of course, the Jets will be sporting their New York Titans uniforms and logos this year. And the Boston Patriots will be giving us the classic triangle-hat wearing-Revolution-soldier-snapping-the-ball look on their helmets.

The Cowboys will also be involved in something pretty neat. When they travel to Kansas City to take on the Chiefs, they’ll actually be lining up against the old Dallas Texans. The Chiefs will be wearing bright red jerseys and helmets with the all-white Texas-shaped decal, including the gold star that designates the location of Dallas. Some Chiefs fans are upset that their team will be wearing a huge map of Texas on their hats this year, especially in a game against the Cowboys. But I think it’s super cool. The Cowboys and Texans never played a regular season game against each other before Lamar Hunt moved his team to Kansas City. Too bad this one’s at Arrowhead and not at the Cotton Bowl.

Peace,

Allan

Called To Be Free

Called To Be FreeHuman beings are created by God to live in relationships of love. God is love. God’s perfect law for his creatures is summed up by love. Love is what sets us free. It’s what makes us alive. Love is what gives us hope.

But love demands sacrifice and service. It calls for selflessness. It’s characterized by giving. It’s risky. Love is hard.

Strange, huh? Perfect life and perfect freedom is found in love. But love involves giving up freedoms and our lives.

C. S. Lewis, in his book entitled The Four Loves, describes this paradox:

Love anything, and your heart will certainly be wrung and possibly broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact, you must give your heart to no one, not even to an animal. Wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all entanglements; lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your selfishness. But in that casket — safe, dark, motionless, airless — it will change. It will not be broken; it will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable. The alternative to tragedy, or at least to the risk of tragedy, is damnation.

Our Christ tells us to throw away our lives and we’ll find them. make yourself last and he’ll make you first. Lose everything you have and he’ll save it.

Surrender and obedience to the Father and his perfect law. Only then will we realize our eternal calling to be free.

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Red Ribbon ReviewThere are 58 days left until the Cowboys kick off their 2009 football season. And our Red Ribbon Review is counting down the long summer days by honoring the also-rans, the almost-weres, the second-best players Dixon Edwardsin Cowboys history by jersey number. Today’s #58 is linebacker Dixon Edwards. A starter for Jimmy Johnson’s teams in the ’90s, Edwards was overlooked at times because he played next to Ken Norton and Robert Jones. But Edwards was good. He was taken in the second round of the 1991 draft out of Michigan State and wound up starting in three Super Bowl wins. He racked up 216 solo tackles during his five-year Cowboys career and then bailed for bigger money in Minnesota.

Bruce HutherIt’s going to be an incredibly busy weekend (maybe I’ll tell you more about it on Monday) so I’m going to give you tomorrow’s #57 today. It’s Bruce Huther. He was a backup linebacker on Landry’s Super Bowl teams in the ’70s. During his five years in Dallas, Huther only started one game. That was in his final season in 1983. But he wound up with playing time in three NFC Championship Games and two Super Bowls. Huther was an undrafted free agent out of New Hampshire. A perennial backup and special teams player on some pretty good teams. And the second-best to ever wear #57 for the Cowboys.

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 Happy Birthday, Popper!My dad’s birthday is Sunday. To celebrate, go to Whataburger and discuss gas prices and the weather together over a “senior Coke.” Then wrap it up with some bean juice and a straw. Happy Birthday, dad. I love you.

Allan

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