Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Happy New Year 2009!


As we prepare to "ring out" the old and "ring in" the new, I'm praying that you have a healthy, happy and spiritually prosperous new year!

While none of us fully knows what the future will hold, we DO know the One Who holds the future. And that makes all the difference in the world.

Because of His presence in our lives, we can face the coming year with confidence and assurance. For He has promised to never leave us nor forsake us.

May God bless you richly throughout this coming year
of our Lord two thousand and nine.

Pastor Danny

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Nativity Scenes: For God So Loved the World...

Sandy and I have always had nativity scenes in our home. At least one larger set on a table or mantle and a few smaller ones on our Christmas tree and/or scattered elsewhere throughout the house. Gradually, we started collecting them, one by one. And over the years, the number of our nativity sets has increased. We didn’t really intend to start a collection. It just sort of happened.

Our international mission trips became the primary impetus for this "hobby". We've always liked bringing back articles of remembrance from places we visit. And we've found that nativity sets are among the most meaningful items we can obtain.

It all started back in 1988. While in Tanzania (Africa) I happened upon a wood carver who was making and selling large nativity sets made out of dark, heavy ebony wood. The sets were quite impressive. The pieces were very large, the tallest human figures rising to about 10 to 12 inches in height. And there were 13 figures in all—shepherds, wise men, Mary and Joseph, baby Jesus, animals, and an angel. So it was a massive set, once arranged and displayed.

What most intrigued me about this work of art was the ethnicity of the figures. They were clearly African. An African Mary and Joseph, African magi and sheepherders, and an African baby Jesus in a manger! Typically, people have always tended to visualize Jesus through the lens of their own culture. For many Americans, that means seeing Jesus as a fair-skinned North American or European-looking male. And many of our manmade depictions of Jesus indeed render him that way. But Jesus actually came in the flesh as a Middle Eastern/ Jewish male. So our typical American perception of Jesus is no more accurate than that of the Africans. (Hence, we shouldn’t be so arrogant as to think we got it “right” and they got it “wrong”!)

But right then and there, in Tanzania some 20 years ago, was when I first started considering how intriguing (and precious) it was for various peoples of the world to envision the birth of Jesus against the backdrop of their own familiar cultural context. Because the Savior of the world indeed came for ALL of us.

I bought two identical ebony wood sets from the African vendor. After packing all of those heavy items and bringing them back to the States with me, I gave one of the sets to my parents as a gift. But the one we kept was destroyed when our home burned a few months later. So we lost it before we ever got to use it. Then, several years later, when my parents were downsizing and moving to a new home, they gave their set back to us. (They had tried to give it back much earlier, but we repeatedly had refused their offer.)

With the passage of time, Sandy and I collected other nativity scenes. A set from Honduras made out of brightly colored cornhusks. A simple three-piece, hand-painted wooden set from Ecuador. A beautifully crafted three-figure set from the Dominican Republic. (All of these reflecting a distinctive Spanish or Latin American flavor.) There’s also a simple olive wood nativity set from Israel. Plus, from Israel also, an olive wood Mary and child riding on the back of a donkey during their flight to Egypt. Sandy and I even have an unusual set we brought back with us from predominantly-Buddhist Cambodia, made by local Christian craftsmen there. All of these sets are hand-made. And each holds special meaning for us. For every time we look at them, we are reminded of the global scope of Jesus' redemptive mission.

The Bible frequently talks about the “nations”. When it does so, it’s not speaking of nations as we typically think of nations, i.e., political states. Rather, it’s referring to the various language groups, people groups, ethnic groups and racial groups that populate this planet. Jesus commissioned us to “Go and teach all nations…” And Jesus told us that before He comes again the Gospel “must first be preached to all nations.” So, God wants every unreached people group of the world to hear the good news of salvation in Christ prior to Jesus returning to gather up His own. Because someday, in Heaven, the Bible tells us that people from every tribe and every tongue will gather to worship the King of Kings and Lord of Lords. I truly look forward to that great day with anticipation and joy!

Whenever I look at our various nativity sets from around the world, it reminds me that Jesus came for people from every nation. It also reminds me we have a responsibility to take the Gospel to people of every nation. And it also reminds me that someday, around the Throne of God, we will worship together with Christian brothers and sisters representing every nation. Hallelujah! What a kaleidoscope of color and symphony of praise that will be! And what a beautiful testimony to the greatness of our God!

Hmm. When you think about it, it’s quite amazing what a little nativity set can teach you.

Pastor Danny

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

A Politician in a Pear Tree

It all started back in 1968. That was the first presidential election I really focused in on. I was an 11-year-old boy at the time, and it was that year that I became thoroughly enamored with the whole electoral process. While other kids my age were out enjoying the summer sun, I remember watching gavel-to-gavel coverage of both national nominating conventions on our black-and-white television. Later on in the fall, I began frequenting the local political campaign headquarters in my hometown. The Republican headquarters was a large storefront building, well supplied with buttons, brochures, posters, bumper stickers, and other essential campaign materials. I dropped by there several times. The young female volunteer that ran the place got so tired of seeing me. Finally, the weekend before the election, she told me that I had come in enough and she basically invited me not to come back. But, for all my efforts—I was there every time a new shipment of campaign materials came in—I came away with several different Nixon-Agnew items which I have to this day, including—my pride and joy at the time—a full-color reflector button that alternately displays Nixon’s smiling face and the memorable slogan “Nixon’s the One!” On top of everything else, I even signed up to be a Nixon volunteer! Ironically, I wouldn’t even be old enough to vote in a presidential election until 1976! But just prior to Election Day, I received a letter from the future president himself, thanking me for my vital support. You would have thought I was a key player in Nixon's great political comeback! (All of this was pre-Watergate, of course.)

The Democrat headquarters in our town back in ’68 was run virtually out of a shoebox in the tiny front lobby of a local business establishment. (There were only a handful of Democrats in the whole county then. Not nearly enough to fill a phone booth. I’m not being critical. That’s just the way it was.) After being interrogated—er, questioned thoroughly—by the local Democratic Party Chairman as to who my parents were and why I really wanted a Hubert H. Humphrey campaign button, I finally received from him a little star-spangled “HHH” pin, which I still have. I was grateful for it, but I never attempted to go back for more. That man just made me too nervous. I felt like I’d been to the principal’s office.

About that same time, my parents showed me an ad in a magazine wherein a political button collector was offering a special deal for anyone who wanted to get started in the hobby of collecting — 25 authentic presidential campaign buttons for just $5 (in 1968 dollars, of course). My dad ordered me a set. And that’s where it all started for me. Since then, sporadically, I have been a collector of political campaign memorabilia. In addition to visiting various campaign headquarters during election cycles, there were always flea markets, antique stores, and political collector conventions—yes, there are such things—not to mention the kind generosity of persons through the years who were cleaning out their attics and remembered that I had this bizarre hobby. (Incidentally, back in the late 1960s, some kind older gentleman that I never actually met gave me some of my oldest buttons—William McKinley and William Jennings Bryan buttons from the 1896 and 1900 campaigns, as well as an 1898 “Remember the Maine!” button, which was in reference to the sabatoge of a U.S. ship in Havana’s harbor that triggered the Spanish-American War. I also received an 1896 Joshua Levering photo button. Those of you that voted in that election will remember that the bald but mustachioed Levering was the Prohibition Party candidate for President that year. He didn’t win, by the way, in case you forgot.)

In the year 2000, my hobby took a new turn. In December of that year, Sandy and I found ourselves living in temporary housing for a few weeks, having just sold our first Florida home, while waiting to close on another. Thus, a lot of our Christmas decorations were packed away. So—with chads hanging all over Florida and the Bush-Gore presidential battle still undecided after Thanksgiving—it seemed like a novel idea that year to put up a political Christmas tree (bipartisan, of course) adorned with various buttons from my collection. That began a Davis family tradition that has continued to the present day. Since that time, we have always had a political tree in addition to our regular Christmas tree.

Along with its numerous presidential campaign buttons, our political tree is adorned with a number of other patriotic trimmings, as well as our growing collection of White House Christmas ornaments. (The White House Historical Association started issuing these ornaments on an annual basis in 1981, the year of our son Jordan’s birth, and we have all 28 of them to date.)

So, this blog is fair warning to you when you come to visit us during our Open House this Christmas. The first tree you’ll see when you enter our home will feature a whole lot more red, white & blue than it will red & green. And it won’t be adorned with traditional-looking angelic beings (unless you count the winged “Betsy Ross”-like figurine who sits at the top). Nor will it be decorated with images of tiny elves (unless you count my Dennis “Keebler” Kucinich buttons). Instead, you’ll see images of prominent political personalities as diverse as George Washington, George Wallace, and George W. And you’ll read colorful (if not exactly memorable) political slogans such as “The Grin Will Win!” (Jimmy Carter), “A Buck for Huck” (Mike Huckabee), and “You Go Girl!” (Sarah Palin). Not to mention the image of a smiling Santa Claus saying “Ho! Ho! Ho! Happy Howard Days! Dean for America” (Howard Dean). So, if after this excruciatingly long 2008 presidential race you feel like you can still muster up enough strength to endure all of these Ghosts of Presidential Campaigns Past, I hope you’ll elect to come and celebrate Christmas with us presidential style.

Pastor Danny

P. S. I'm Danny Davis and I approve this message.