All posts by Frank Becker

Archaeological Discoveries

September 13, 2025

Top 10 New Testaament Archaeological Discoveries: #8, The Erastus Inscription

It sure looks to be him! He has the same name. He did the same job. He’s from Corinth, and he lived during the middle of the first century during the ministry years of the Apostle Paul. In 1929 near the ancient theater in Corinth, Greece, archaeologists uncovered a pavement stone with a Latin inscription that reads, “Erastus, in return for his aedileship, laid this pavement at his own expense,” and Paul, writing from Corinth, writes, “Erastus, the treasurer of the city, greets you” (Romans 16:23).

Erastus was an uncommon name in Roman times, which in itself adds weight to the potential connection between this pavement stone and Paul’s Christian friend and colleague (2 Timothy 4:20; Acts 19:21-22). But there’s more! Written in Greek around 57 A.D., Paul calls Erastus a city manager or city steward. Written in Latin and dating to the middle of the first century, the Corinth inscription, carved with seven inch tall letters that were originally filled with bronze, calls Erastus an aedil, what we might call a public works commissioner, an elected official responsible for maintaining public buildings, keeping the streets in working order and overseeing the market.

Not everyone will agree, but to me it sure looks like the same guy! Once again archaeology and the Bible converge harmoniously. I look forward to meeting my brother, Erastus, one day, but not in a city with streets paved with stones. Instead, we’ll meet in a city with streets paved with “pure gold” (Revelation 21:21).

— Daniel McCabe

Our Community Seminar Series for Fall 2025

Hi, everyone! Thanks to those of you who have already signed up for the Fall seminar! At this time we have five registered, which is still five short of our desired minimum. Do you know of any others who you can recruit to join us? This is arguably my favorite seminar to teach, and it’s been super well-received in the past, so I think you’ll really like it too. But who else do you know who might like to attend? If you have been thinking about registering, please consider doing so now. I look forward to reaching our goal this week. Feel free to share this post or click on the picture below to reach our registration form.

–Daniel McCabe

Trivia

According to livingcost.org, a meal at McDonalds in the US costs about $11.00, but in Israel the same meal will cost WHAT? (Answer at bottom of page.)

Life in the Land: Sitting Shiva

As a pastor I have sat many times in homes, churches, hospitals and funeral parlors with individuals or families who have lost a loved one, and it’s been my privilege to provide a steady presence, to pray with them or to attempt a timely word of encouragement. But once the memorial service, the graveside service and the church-hosted meal for the family have all come to a close, the family quietly returns to their home to grieve alone. Sure, church members or friends may organize a meal train over the next two weeks, but even then they usually just drop off their meals at the front door without entering. Is it possible that we have forgotten how to “weep with those who weep” (Romans 12:15)? Have we forgotten even how to weep?

Shiva means “seven,” so sitting shiva is the Jewish practice of receiving guests into one’s home for seven days following the funeral of a close relative. The family stays home and doesn’t work or participate in social activities so that they are free to receive guests who come with food and flowers. Most will stay to pray, to share memories or perhaps just to sit together in a show of support, ensuring that the family isn’t isolated while they process their grief. Sometimes a shiva candle is lit for all seven days to symbolize the soul of their loved one. Sometimes the family covers the mirrors in their home to avoid any preoccupation with personal appearance; tears a small piece of cloth or a black ribbon to symbolize their heartache; or sits on the floor or perhaps on low stools in a show of humility while they mourn.

I like the practice of sitting shiva. It gives permission to grieve whereas too often we feel an unspoken pressure to return to work, to move on or to be strong when in reality grief takes time. Admittedly grief lasts more than seven days, but sitting shiva might just slow us down long enough to realize that we need the Lord and others during such difficult times more than we might think.

–Daniel McCabe

The Apostolic Fathers: Papias of Hieropolis, part 4

So far we’ve met Ignatius who was fed to the lions, Polycarp who was burned at the stake, and Clement who rubbed shoulders with emperors in Rome. Next up, Papias, the bishop or pastor of Hieropolis, a city not mentioned in the Bible, but one which often comes up in sermons on Revelation 3 when describing the location of the lukewarm church, Laodicea, which is situated in biblical Asia Minor between Colosse, known for its cold springs, and Hieropolis, known for its hot springs.

Born in 60 A.D. shortly before the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans in 70 A.D., Papias evidently knew both Polycarp and the apostle John, but he’s especially known for some early statements that he made about the compilation of the Bible. In his five-volume work, “Exposition of the Sayings of the Lord,” Papias argues that of the four Gospels—Matthew, Mark, Luke and John—Mark is the earliest and that Mark drew his information from the Apostle Peter (cf. 1 Peter 5:13, “Mark, my son”). Given that 93% of Mark’s Gospel is included in both Matthew and Luke, Markan priority is still the prevailing theory held by modern Bible teachers. Papias is also known for his statement that the disciple Matthew, whose Gospel targeted a Jewish audience, had previously recorded many of Jesus’ teachings in Hebrew, which he later used as a resource when writing his Greek Gospel, the one included in our New Testaments. Lastly, Papias believed that Jesus would return to earth one day to physically reign for one thousand years, a view that I hold and one which follows quite naturally from a normal reading of Revelation 20:2-7, where John repeats this number six times in six short verses. Maranatha!

Nothing is known of Papias’ death in the early to mid-second century, but along with Ignatius, Polycarp and Clement he rounds out the Hall of Fame of men known to history as the Apostolic Fathers, men from the first century who knew and learned from one or more of the twelve apostles, but particularly Peter and John. These men showed a remarkable faith in Jesus and a resolve to make his name known to their congregations and to the world. May we too live with that same resoluteness for the Lord all our days.

— Daniel McCabe

The High Priestly Prayer of John 17, part 4

Jesus says in v. 12, “While I was with them, I kept them in Your name, which You have given Me. I’ve guarded them and not one of them has been lost.” They are unified now at this point “except the son of destruction.” There was one who was always in God’s sovereign plan to have been lost “that the Scripture might be fulfilled” and, of course, that’s Judas Iscariot, the one who would betray Jesus. You’ll remember that in the garden Judas leads a contingent of soldiers to come and arrest Jesus. He’s the one who was determined to be “the son of destruction that the Scripture might be fulfilled.”

But what Scripture might this be? While Jesus doesn’t specifically say, a couple of strong contenders come to mind. We have Psalm 41, for example, where David describes the betrayal of his close friend, Ahithophel, who later hangs himself. There are correlations between Ahithophel’s betrayal of David and Judas’ betrayal of Jesus.

Also, perhaps Psalm 109, which again talks about a betrayal of David. Here David wishes essentially that the betrayer would have no more posterity, that he would be replaced, and that his office be filled by another. As you may know Peter cites this psalm as a reason for replacing Judas with Matthias in Acts 1. So Jesus knows that Judas Iscariot was always going to be lost. He’s the son of destruction. Other than Judas, Jesus has lost none. None whom Jesus was supposed to keep have been lost.

Now Jesus again turns in prayer to what’s coming next. He says in v. 13, “But now I am coming to You, and these things I speak in the world that they may have My joy fulfilled in themselves.” The disciples faced a tough future, so they better buckle up because what they’re about to live out will be very tough. Even so they would have Christ’s joy fulfilled in them if they stayed unified as they were supposed to and as they lived out the life of ministry before them. Nothing would make Jesus happier than for them to live that out.

He says in v. 14, “I have given them Your word and the world has hated them because they are not of the world just as I am not of the world.” So how can Jesus say that the disciples are not of the world just as He was not of the world? We can certainly understand how Jesus wasn’t of the world. After all, He’s God and He descended into the world and walked around it for about 33 years. But the disciples were born in sin and they’re fully human and only human. However, since we have been adopted as God’s sons and daughters, then we can say that the world is no longer our home or even our origin. Being of this world then is no longer our nature, therefore the world will hate Jesus’ disciples. Because Jesus is not of the world, neither are the disciples anymore, and the world hates that which is not its own. So the disciples will have a tough time “because they are not of the world just as [Jesus] is not of the world.”

Jesus is obviously realistic, however. He says in v. 15, “I do not ask that You take them out of the world,” for if God just took them home at that point, they would have no ministry before them. They couldn’t testify to Jesus. They couldn’t go on to proclaim His name and see more people saved. If God snatched us out of this world as soon as we’re saved, then there’s no one left in the world to testify for Him. After we’re saved, it’s natural to all want to be home. We want to be in heaven, but we have work to do, and God lays before us many great tasks that He will work through us for His glory. The disciples had especially great tasks ahead of them, so Jesus prays for them. He’s not asking that the Father take them out since they have to be in the world, but “that You keep them from the evil one.”

Jesus does care for them and He does want to protect them. The devil would certainly be after them. He would prowl about like a roaring lion seeking to devour the disciples, so Jesus prayed for their protection.

He says again in v. 16, “They are not of the world, just as I’m not of the world,” and then in v. 17 he prays what He wants for them, “Sanctify them in the truth. Your word is truth. As you sent Me into the world, so I have sent them into the world, and for their sake I consecrate Myself that they also may be sanctified in truth.”

That is a prayer that we all must have for ourselves. How are we to be sanctified? How are we to grow in our holiness and be further conformed to the likeness of Christ? How is it that any of us are sanctified? It’s by the truth, which is the Word of God. That’s the only way that we can truly grow closer to God, by knowing Him more, by being in the Word of God. Only as we know God more and learn more of the truth and of His will for our lives can we have hope to ever be sanctified.

–Adam Keim

Answer to the Trivia

C. $15.40

WAIT!

The Lord is my light, so whom should I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life, so whom should I dread? (Psalm 27:1).

Recently on a sojourn along the coast of Maine, we docked in the little harbor town of Searsport, population 2,649. We wandered through the doors of The First Congregational Church, established in 1815 and meeting every Sunday since then—that’s some 210 years of worship.

As we walked down the aisle, arriving at the altar, I noticed an open Bible, opened to Psalm 27:

1 The Lord is my light and my salvation—
whom shall I fear?
The Lord is the stronghold of my life—
of whom shall I be afraid?
2 When the wicked advance against me
to devour me,
it is my enemies and my foes
who will stumble and fall.
3 Though an army besiege me,
my heart will not fear;
though war break out against me,
even then I will be confident.
4 One thing I ask from the Lord,
this only do I seek:
that I may dwell in the house of the Lord
all the days of my life.

One of the most beautiful of the Psalms, I stood before the altar and read its words, from beginning to end. I read the many verses that decry the enemies we will fight and the trauma we will experience, but the very end—the final summation—is a crescendo that ends on a positive note, saying: “Wait for the Lord; be strong and take heart and wait for the Lord.”

No matter what difficulties we are facing and how bleak the future may seem, we need to wait for the Lord. He will not forget us, and He will walk with us through any affliction, as we dwell in His house all the days of our life.

Wait upon the Lord. Wait upon the Lord!

Sometimes True Stories

10 SIGNS OF A HEART ALIGNED WITH GOD

A heart that repents quickly

A heart that forgives easily

A heart that loves lavishly

A heart that gives generously

A heart that believes unwaveringly

A heart that praises continually

A heart that serves humbly

A heart that trusts completely

A heart that obeys willingly

A heart that longs for His presence

– 0 –

A famous movie line in the 1973 film Magnum Force, Clint Eastwood stated “A man’s got to know his limitations.” Blaise Pascal stated “There are two kinds of men, the righteous who believes themselves sinners: the rest, sinners, who believe themselves righteous.” The righteous understand their limitations and accept the gift of Grace. The others exalt themselves and stumble. Don’t be a stumbler!

– 0 –

The gospel transforms who you are and why you’re here—proclaim it boldly, even when it costs you. God uses unexpected people to build His Church. Take risks on others for the sake of the gospel. Jesus still works through His people to bring hope and salvation. Set your hope on the resurrection and point others to Christ. Andrew Evans

Quotes You Can Use

Just a handful of mistakes will take you from fellowship and lead you to denial. Dan Shock

In everything the middle course is best: all things in excess bring trouble to men. Plautus

The benefit of accountability is evident throughout scripture. Tony Ferguson

Never try to have more faith – just get to know God better. And because God is faithful, the better you know Him, the more you’ll trust Him. John Ortberg

Don’t spin your wheels and stress. Take a deep breath, center yourself and make a plan. Douglas Adams

When people live life like the gambler who knows when to hold and when to fold, they learn too quickly that without God, they will be losers no matter how much you rake in from the world…it will all disappear someday. Dwight Short

And whenever you stand praying, if you have anything against anyone, forgive him, that your Father in heaven may also forgive you your trespasses. (Mark 11:25). Resentment is destructive.

One important key to success is self-confidence. An important key to self-confidence is preparation. Arthur Ashe

The question is this… what are we doing with the gifts that we have been given? Old Lazy Dog-Marty Stubblefield

What fruit is coming from your life? Dan Shock

Peace is the presence of God, not the absence of conflict. Tony Ferguson

Being a Christian isn’t always easy, but it’s worth it. Andrew Evans

When there is something I don’t like in the Word, the problem is not with the Word. It is with me!!! R.C. Sproul

How a person handles trouble will reveal where his or her faith is living or dead, genuine or imitation, saving or non-saving. John Macarthur.

Your feedback is welcome and if you want to contribute your ideas and thoughts, address all items and comments to [email protected].

© Thoughts on Life Copyright 2025

Sufganiyot

September 6, 2025

Life in the Land: Sufganiyot

My favorite doughnuts are the jelly-filled and cream-filled. I also like blueberry cake doughnuts! So one day I’m walking through the famous Jerusalem Market, Machane Yehuda, and I see a corner shop with trays of a Jewish dessert called, sufganiyot. I immediately thought, “Doughnuts! Yum!” but then I’m told that sufganiyot are different from doughnuts.

The Hebrew word, sufganiyah (the singular form of sufganiyot), essentially means “sponge” and refers to the airy texture of the fried dessert. I’ve heard and even read attempts at differentiating between a sufganiyah and a doughnut, but for me it amounts to a difference without a distinction though a few Jewish flavor combinations of a sufganiyah may be new to you like the ones filled with lychee cream, halva or the savory ones filled with shawarma.

Israelis especially enjoy sufganiyot at Hanukkah whether they purchase them at local bakeries or make them at home. In the 1920s the Israeli Labor Federation declared sufganiyot the official food of Hanukkah, and along with other fried foods, such as latkas (potato pancakes) and schnitzel (thin, boneless cuts of meat), they remind the Jews of the miraculous multiplication of oil in the temple during the time of the ancient Maccabees.

Which sufganiyah do you want to try?

– Daniel McCabe

Check out YouTube!

Our New Community Seminar Series for Fall 2025

We still need a few more to register for our Fall seminar before we can launch! You’ll not only profit from it, but you’ll really enjoy it! Register and invite others to join you.

Topic: “The Greatest Biblical Archaeological Discoveries of All Time”—our weekly multimedia presentation will cover such finds as the Dead Sea Scrolls, Hezekiah’s Tunnel, the Pilate Stone and more.

Teacher: Dr. Daniel McCabe, MACE, ThM, DMin—Executive Director of Shalom Y’all Ministries, former Instructor at the College of Biblical Studies and Pastor of Cullman Bible Church

Location: Golden Corral at 1720 Cherokee Ave SW in Cullman, Alabama

Time: Mondays, 6:00-7:15 pm, starting September 22, eight weeks

Cost: Free—you can attend the seminar without purchasing a buffet or you can choose to enjoy a meal before, during or after the seminar. All ages are welcome to attend.

To Launch: We need a minimum of 10https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wt7GBTksUYY people to sign up for the seminar before we can launch, so please let us know of your interest by clicking on the attached link.

Trivia (Answer below)

Approximately how many Jews living in Israel today have accepted Jesus as the Messiah?

A. 200

B. 2000

C. 20,000

D. 200,000

The Apostolic Fathers: Clement of Rome, part 3

I bet you couldn’t tell me even one thing that John Tyler did during his presidency. Did you even know that the United States had a president by that name? I’m one of those who did because my high school football team played the Lions of John Tyler High School every year, but John Tyler only became president because William Henry Harrison died thirty-one days into office after catching pneumonia at his inauguration.

So I wouldn’t be surprised or the least bit offended if you didn’t know the name of Clement of Rome. History variously lists him as either the second, third or fourth bishop of Rome with Peter being usually listed as the first. Apart from a questionable account of Clement’s martyrdom which claims that he was tied to an anchor and thrown into the sea, not a lot is known of his personal life unless, of course, he is one and the same with the Clement mentioned by Paul in Phil. 4:3 who labored alongside him. Paul’s letter to the Philippians almost certainly originated in Rome, so it’s a reasonable possibility.

Some argue that Clement was a Roman Jew connected with the distinguished Flavian family, the dynasty of three emperors—Vespasian, Titus and Domitian—and thus with the imperial household within which Christianity found an early foothold, according to Phil. 4:22. Most sources date Clement’s time as bishop to approximately 92-99 A.D., perhaps even a little later, and during those years he wrote a letter to the church at Corinth. Showing knowledge of Paul’s earlier correspondence with the Corinthian church in which Paul addressed serious internal problems, including sexual sin, the misuse of spiritual gifts and infighting, it’s both ironic and heartbreaking that decades after Paul’s first letter, Clement addresses ongoing problems in the church, particularly internal division centered around the deposition of the church’s elders by a younger faction.

All this leads to the truth that if sin is left unaddressed, it will not right itself. May we humble ourselves in the face of our own personal and church challenges and consider others more highly than we do ourselves so that we may find a personal peace that secures for us a reputation of godliness rather than a reputation for being selfish and power-hungry.

– Daniel McCabe

Scripture Study: The High Priestly Prayer of John 17, part 3

Having prayed for Himself, Jesus now prays for His disciples. He says in v. 6, “I have manifested Your name to the people whom You gave Me out of the world.” Jesus is thinking of His eleven disciples, but also of every other disciple in His day who received Him, those whom God had elected and entrusted to Jesus “whom You gave Me out of the world.” Jesus manifested the Father’s name to those people. “Yours they were, and You gave them to Me, and they have kept Your word.”

V. 7, “Now they know that everything that You have given Me is from You.” Jesus revealed the Father to them. They have believed. They have followed Him even though they are far from perfect people. We know, for example, that Peter during a crisis of faith will deny Jesus three times in Caiaphas’s courtyard. None of these people are perfect, but they have dedicated their lives to following Jesus, except for Judas, of course, and they know that everything is ultimately from the Father.

Jesus continues, starting in v. 8, “For I have given them the words that You gave Me, and they’ve received them and have come to know in truth that I came from You, and they have believed that You sent Me. I am praying for them. I am not praying for the world, but for those whom You have given Me, for they are Yours.” This doesn’t mean that Jesus didn’t care for the rest of the world, but only that in this specific prayer, in this specific moment, He is uttering words for His disciples.

V. 10, “All Mine are Yours and Yours are Mine and I am glorified in them.” Jesus will pray for the unity of His followers soon, but here He gets to the basis for their unity in describing the unity that He has with His Father. Jesus is inextricably linked with the glory of the Father, yet while He walked around on earth, He didn’t receive the divine glory that was rightly His, and that’s the fault of mankind. That’s our fault, not His. But He’s looking forward to that glory which He will share again. While He was on earth, He revealed the truth from the Father to His disciples, and His disciples did receive it. They belong to Him as much as they belong to God the Father.

Next, Jesus says in v. 11, “I am no longer in the world, but they are in the world and I am coming to You now.” In a couple of days He’ll no longer be in the world, so He’s anticipating what’s coming next. He basically says, “I’m as good as out of it now because of what’s going to happen in the next couple days.” But the disciples are still in the world. They still have a mission and a life here for years or perhaps even decades following the departure of Jesus, and so in several of the chapters leading up to this chapter, He is getting them ready for the very hard life and ministry that they’re going to face. They will be rejected by the world at every turn, but they will be stalwart and loyal to the mission that they’ve been given by God, and they will testify to the Messiah, Jesus Christ, for the rest of their lives. I believe this to be Christ’s main concern here in these chapters and in this High Priestly Prayer.

“They are in the world,” v. 11, “and I’m coming to You, Holy Father, keep them in Your name, which You have given Me that they may be one even as We are one.” Notice Jesus’ request here, what He wants for them and, by extension, what He wants for us as well, meaning all believers in the church. But, of course, specifically for what He wants for the eleven disciples, that “they may be one even as”—look at the comparison here—“even as We are,” the Father and the Son. He wants for the disciples the perfect unity of the Father and Son, an unbreakable unity. He desires that Peter, James, John and all of the disciples be so united and so one that it would produce success and effectiveness in their ministry as they testify to the glory of God in the years to come. Can you imagine having a unity with believers that’s of the same type that Jesus has with the Father? That would be transforming. It would transform all our relationships!

– Adam Keim

My Favorite Places in Israel: #6, Tower of David

“[Sabinus] did himself get up to the highest tower of the fortress Phasael, which had been built in honor of Phasael, King Herod’s brother, and called so, when the Parthians had brought him to his death” (Josephus, The Wars of the Jews, 9.2).

Today’s entry of my favorite places in Israel is the Tower of David, which, funny enough, has nothing to do with David. Perched on the western side of Jerusalem’s old city, the remains there actually belong to Herod’s palace. Stout stone towers mark the site, and it is unmistakable as you walk anywhere near it.

Byzantine Christians began calling the structure “David’s Tower” in the 5th century AD when they mistook it for the legendary king’s own palace. But this portion of the city was not yet settled in David’s day. Instead it is where Herod dwelt in the New Testament era and where Jesus was examined separately by both Pilate and Herod during his trial.

The remains of the most notable tower on the northeast corner of the ruins are from Herod’s original construction. That tower he named Phasael in honor of his brother. Today the grounds house the Tower of David Museum – a stop which is well worth your time (as well as your entrance fee)!

The museum is a walk-through tour of different eras in Jerusalem’s history. Not only are you walking through Herod’s old palace itself, but you are learning about Jerusalem’s life in chronological order. There is even an augmented reality virtual tour available so you can “see” Jerusalem as it was at Herod’s palace through time. On several nights the museum is part of a fascinating light and sound show. Learn more and plan your visit at https://www.tod.org.il/en.

You can scale to the top of a rebuilt tower that rests on the base of Phasael, and from there you can take in a wonderful panoramic view of Jerusalem’s entire old city. Nearby, be sure to drop in on my favorite coffee shop in Israel – the Christ Church Coffee Shop. How I long to return there to enjoy a latte or Turkish Coffee and to sit at one of the streetside tables, watching Israelis and pilgrims alike meandering through the enchanting city!

– Adam Keim

Answer to the Trivia

C. 20,000

THE PAINTING

Week Thirty-Six, 2025

If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved; for with the heart one believes and is justified, and with the mouth one confesses and is saved (Romans 10:9-10).

Each United States president has an official portrait. Some were reluctant to take the time to sit for theirs. Such was Theodore Roosevelt. The portrait painter, John Sargent, kept following him to pin him down to a time and place. Finally caught on a staircase, Roosevelt, known for his restlessness, was reportedly frustrated with the process. Sargent is said to have responded by implying that Roosevelt didn’t understand what was involved in posing for a portrait. Roosevelt, then on a staircase landing, swung around, placed a hand on the newel post, and retorted, “Don’t I!” and reportedly said “do it here and now.” Thus, his is the only presidential portrait painted on a stairway.

When I read this in a book I was recently reading, it led me to a spiritual application. Christian teaching emphasizes the urgency of accepting Jesus as Lord and Savior. The Bible states, “Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation” (2 Corinthians 6:2). This verse highlights the importance of making this decision without delay, as life is uncertain and tomorrow is not guaranteed.

The renowned wrestler, Hulk Hogan recently gave his heart to the Lord and was baptized. Shortly thereafter, he suddenly and unexpectedly fell over dead. You never know when your number will be called.

Have you ever gone to a doctor who diagnoses you with a certain need and says it has to be taken care of now and cannot wait because you can’t risk what may happen tomorrow. The same with your salvation. Jesus is open for business 24-7, but so is the devil. So, make sure you get with the former before you deal with the latter.

I am dealing in my profession with a man who came home for lunch and was instantly killed on the way back to work. You never know what change in your life may happen even in the next hour.

Humanity is understood to be inherently sinful and separated from God due to sin, and salvation offers reconciliation and eternal life. It is time to confess and be saved.

Be like Roosevelt and don’t wait. Do it now! Repent and be saved!

Sometimes True Stories

DON’T DO ANYTHING. JUST REST.

Don’t fall into the trap of believing that doing nothing… means doing nothing for yourself. We’ve been conditioned to believe that not being productive is somehow a failure. That if it doesn’t have a visible outcome, it doesn’t count. That rest is wasted time.

We’ve become so used to being busy — to checking off boxes, to tracking our progress, to measuring worth in output — that we’ve forgotten something essential: Rest is productive.

It’s the moment your body heals. Your mind exhales. Your soul whispers. Reading a magazine. Taking a long shower. Sitting in the garden with a warm cup of coffee. None of it is a waste.

Because time spent resting… is time well spent. We’re not machines. We’re not meant to hustle 24/7.

We are human beings. And sometimes, we just need to be.

– 0 –

Seven secrets of life:

Make peace with your past so it won’t disturb your present.

What other people think of you is none of your business.

Time heals almost everything. Give it time.

No one is in charge of your happiness, except you.

Don’t compare your life to others and don’t judge them, you have no idea what their journey is all about.

Stop thinking too much. It’s alright not to know the answers.

Smile. You don’t own all the problems in the world.

– 0 –

The “woke” word police are at it again; you can’t call someone lazy anymore. We now have to refer to them as “temporarily idle.” We can play games with words, but being lazy has its ramifications. When we continually delay things that should be done, we are lazy. In today’s world, too many people want to blame their failings on parents, employers, circumstances, or anything else that absolves them of responsibility.

The truth is we can do something about our circumstances, but we have to take responsibility and act. This proverb tells us that procrastination, playing when we should be working, will lead to poverty. A lazy mind can become the devil’s workshop, but focus, diligence, and hard work will beat laziness every time. Tony Ferguson

Quotes You Can Use

What has God put in my keeping that He will someday require an accounting for? Dan Shock

Wisdom always makes men fortunate: for by wisdom no man could ever err. Plato

Happiness comes when we test our skills towards some meaningful purpose. John Stossel

A blind person asked St. Anthony, “can there be anything worse than losing your eyesight?” St Anthony replied yes, “losing your vision!” When we fail to trust the Lord, we lose our vision of eternity.

So, whoever knows the right thing to do and fails to do it, for him, it is sin. Tony Ferguson

Reconnect with Jesus, the friend who died for us what no other could or would. A friend like no other. Old Lazy Dog, Marty Stubblefiled

Today, with our enemy the devil waiting to devour and destroy, we need to prepare our minds and hearts for action. We need to put on the full armor of God. We need to choose now how we will think, act and react. Tony Ferguson

Jesus sums up this portion of Scripture with a single word: Watch! Dan Shock

Never go out of your way to demean and mock others. Jim Daley

Integrity without knowledge is weak and useless, and knowledge without integrity is dangerous and dreadful. Samuel Johnson

Jesus’ death on the cross is the pivotal event in God’s plan for redemption. “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and all are justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.” Through His sacrifice, Jesus pays the penalty for sin, offering salvation to all who believe.

__________________

Your feedback is welcome and if you want to contribute your ideas and thoughts, address all items and comments to [email protected]. © Thoughts on Life Copyright 2025

Dough Offering

August 30, 2025

Life in the Land: Dough Offering

Only three commandments in Jewish law and tradition are explicitly required of women: 1) to light the candles at every Sabbath meal on Friday night (a rabbinic tradition); 2) to maintain proper menstrual purity (e.g., Leviticus 12:1-8; 15:19-33; and 3) to give a dough offering when baking in fulfillment of Numbers 15:17-21 (cf. Nehemiah 10:37).

You may be familiar with classic challah bread, a staple in Jewish homes on the Sabbath and holidays, but before making this bread, many Jewish women perform Hafrashat Challah, which means in Hebrew, “the separation of challah.” This commandment requires women when baking to set aside for the priests a small lump of kneaded dough. This action is seen as a way to invite blessing into the home and to thank God for his provisions. In the absence of an active priesthood, the women are permitted instead to burn the separated dough or to throw it away in a double-wrapped container, but not before reciting a blessing like the following:

“May it be Your will, Eternal, our God, that the commandment of separating challah be considered as if I had performed it with all its details and ramifications. May my elevation of the challah be comparable to the sacrifice that was offered on the altar, which was acceptable and pleasing. Just as giving the challah to the priests in former times served to atone for sins, so may it atone for mine, and make me like a person reborn without sins. May it enable me to observe this holy day with my husband and our children and to become imbued with its holiness. May the spiritual influence of the command of challah enable our children to be constantly sustained by the hands of the Holy One, blessed is He, with His abundant mercy, lovingkindness and love. Consider the command of challah as if I have given the tithe, and just as I am fulfilling this command with all my heart, so may Your compassion be aroused to keep me always from sorrow and pain. Amen.”

Some women even carry a large pot of dough to the women’s section at the Western Wall in Jerusalem where they knead it, separate a piece of the dough, lift it up and pray for their family, loved ones or a specific need for themselves or for others. Last year one woman decided to visit the wall every Thursday night to fulfill Hafrashat Challah, publicly reciting the names of the Israeli hostages taken by Hamas on October 7, 2023. A single woman I witnessed in an online video approached one of the ladies performing Hafrashat Challah at the Wall and requested prayer for a future husband in a very touching display of unity between two strangers.

–Daniel McCabe

Our New Community Seminar Series for Fall 2025

Topic: “The Greatest Biblical Archaeological Discoveries of All Time”—our weekly multimedia presentation will cover such finds as the Dead Sea Scrolls, Hezekiah’s Tunnel, the Pilate Stone and more.

Teacher: Dr. Daniel McCabe, MACE, ThM, DMin—Executive Director of Shalom Y’all Ministries, former Instructor at the College of Biblical Studies and Pastor of Cullman Bible Church

Location: Golden Corral at 1720 Cherokee Ave SW in Cullman, Alabama

Time: Mondays, 6:00-7:15 pm, starting September 22, eight weeks

Cost: Free—you can attend the seminar without purchasing a buffet or you can choose to enjoy a meal before, during or after the seminar. All ages are welcome to attend.

To Launch: We need a minimum of 10 people to sign up for the seminar before we can launch, so please let us know of your interest by clicking on the attached link.

Trivia (Answer below)

To what does the Hebrew word “apple of the earth” (tapuah adama) refer?

A. Beet

B. Onion

C. Potato

D. Watermelon

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History: The Apostolic Fathers

Polycarp of Smyrna, part 2

Born in the very year that Jerusalem fell to the Romans in 70 A.D., this man with the funny name is perhaps my favorite leader in the early church. You might recognize the name of the city where he pastored, for Smyrna is one of seven churches addressed by Jesus in Revelation 2-3. I’ve always called this church, “The Persecuted Church,” for after speaking of their tribulation in 2:9, Jesus ominously prophesies even more persecution in v. 10, “Indeed, the devil is about to throw some of you into prison that you may be tested, and you will have tribulation ten days. Be faithful unto death, and I will give you the crown of life.”

Historical accounts in the first and second centuries suggest that Polycarp knew many contemporaries of Jesus and that he had been taught and personally appointed as Bishop of Smyrna by none other than John the apostle, the writer of the book of Revelation.

As a young man Polycarp likewise met Ignatius, Bishop of Antioch, on his way to Rome where the emperor fed his body to the lions in the coliseum. Little did Polycarp know that one day he too would face a martyr’s death for his faith in Jesus.

Here is B. K. Kuiper’s account of Polycarp’s martyrdom in The Church in History:-

“Since there were no images of the gods in the houses of worship of the Christians, the heathen rightly concluded that Christians did not believe in the existence of the gods; and so they accused them of being atheists (people who believe there is no God). The proconsul reminded Polycarp of his great age and urged him to show his penitence by joining in the cry, ‘Away with the atheists!’ Polycarp looked straight at the excited crowd, pointed his finger at them, and cried, ‘Away with the atheists!’ Then the proconsul said, ‘Revile Christ and I will release you.’ But Polycarp answered, ‘Eighty and six years have I served Him, and He has never done me wrong; how can I blaspheme Him, my King, who has saved me? I am a Christian….’

Wood was collected and made into a pile. Polycarp asked not to be fastened to the stake. ‘Leave me thus,’ he said. ‘He who strengthens me to endure the flames will also enable me to stand firm at the stake without being fastened with nails.’ The wood pile was lighted. While Polycarp prayed with a loud voice, ‘Lord God Almighty, Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, I praise you that you have judged me worthy of this day and of this hour to participate in the number of your witnesses and in the cup of your Christ,’ the flames consumed him. Polycarp’s martyr death took place in the year 155.”

Wear your crown well, Pastor Polycarp, or better yet, lay it at Jesus’ feet as you hear him say, “Well done, faithful one”! May the Lord find us faithful too whether our death be at the hand of an earthly executioner or whether we will pass from this life into the next at the coming of our Savior.

Daniel McCabe

The High Priestly Prayer of John 17, part 2

This chapter is commonly known as the High Priestly Prayer because the Lord addressed the Father on behalf of Himself, His disciples, and even us today. The only worthy mediator between God and man cared deeply enough to intercede for us in prayer.

So let’s start at John 17:1, “When Jesus had spoken these words,” and these are all the words from chapter 13 up to this point, “He lifted his eyes to heaven and said, ‘Father, the hour has come. Glorify Your Son that the Son may glorify You.’”

Now Jesus was of course anticipating all the events that would happen through His rejection, crucifixion, death, burial, resurrection and ascension, all the things that are about to happen over the next several days, weeks and even months that would bring glory to the Son.

He says, “That the Son may glorify You,” and, of course, simply put, the meaning of life and the purpose of all existence in the universe is ultimately to bring glory to God. That’s what Jesus has on His mind here.

He says in v. 2, “Since You have given Him authority over all flesh to give eternal life to all whom You have given Him.” You can easily get lost here in the pronouns of Him and You and all that’s going on here, but remember that this is the divine Son talking to the divine Father, and, of course, we can never fully comprehend the complexities of the Trinity until we’re in heaven. I think we’ll get it more then, but even there we’ll never fully comprehend God in His totality. We can’t. It’s something that we can never comprehend, but we apprehend it and trust it. We believe God is one God in three persons or subsistencies, if you will, and there’s many different ways to approach the topic. But this is the divine Son addressing the divine Father. Again, as creatures we will never fully comprehend it, but the Father has entrusted authority over all flesh to the Son just as we learn in John 1 that “all things were created through Him” and in this verse that He gives “eternal life to all whom You have given Him.”

Jesus has authority over all creation in a special way. He says in v. 3, “This is eternal life, that they know You, the only true God and Jesus Christ whom You have sent,” and that really sums up the gospel in a unique way.

What is eternal life? Well, it’s really knowing God. There are many different ways in which the Bible talks about the different aspects and facets of what it means to be saved. I’ve often said that if you ask different believers, “What does it mean to be saved? What is the gospel? How do you have eternal life?” then they might give you different answers. Their answers wouldn’t be wrong. They’d just be different facets of the answer.

What does it mean to believe in Jesus Christ? In John 17 we see one aspect of this—to know God personally. Of course, Jesus Christ is God whom the Father has sent.

What does it really mean to have faith? It means loyalty. It means obedience. It means love. It means faith. It means all sorts of things. But Jesus describes it here in v. 3, “This is eternal life that they know You.” We must truly know God, the only true God. Jesus continues thinking back to His earthly ministry in v. 4, “I glorified You on earth, having accomplished the work that You gave Me to do.” Jesus revealed the truth of God. He put on display the signs of the kingdom—healing people, giving sight to the blind and giving life to people, and all that He did in His earthly ministry, He glorified the Father with it.

Next, He says in v. 5, “And now, Father,” and this is His request, “Glorify Me in Your own presence with the glory that I had with You before the world existed.”

I’ve written previously about Philippians 2 which, like here, discusses Jesus leaving the glory of heaven, coming down and then eventually going back up to be given the name that is above all names. Jesus thinks back to the time before the incarnation and to the perfect glory that He received in the presence of the Father all time. Naturally He’s looking forward to going back to that state, if you will, as He completes His earthly mission.

Adam Keim

Name That Fruit (Answer below)

I have two for you today.

1. This fruit looks like a green pine cone or perhaps like a cross between an artichoke and an alligator. On the inside it has creamy off-white pulp and chunky dark seeds. It’s a bit grainy, but very sweet and rich in iron. Do you know the name of this strange Israeli-grown fruit.

2. This beautiful fuchsia (sometimes green) fruit looks like a tropical flower. Sometimes categorized as a super fruit, it’s low in calories, but high in nutrients, including Vitamin C, antioxidants and calcium. Some say it tastes like a cross between a kiwi and a pear. The pulp can be either white or red. Do you know it?

Daniel McCabe

Answers to the Quiz:

1. Annona–also known as the sugar apple;

2. Dragonfruit—also called pitaya in Israel

Answer to the Trivia

C. Potato

m

LABOR

Week Thirty-Five, 2025

Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men (Colossians 3:23)

As we gather to celebrate labor, let us remember that it is not just about parties and fun, but a day dedicated to honor those who work—not only by tilling the fields but in all aspects of life.

Labor Day is a day of the year that honors the social and economic achievements of American workers. It’s a day to recognize the contributions of the workforce to the country’s strength, prosperity, and well-being. The holiday has its roots in the late 19th century labor movement, which advocated for a federal holiday to acknowledge the hard work and sacrifices of the working class.

The Bible is not silent about labor. It is mentioned 186 times, and its mention begins with Adam tending the garden.

The beginning of work is from the beginning of time. God Himself worked for six days and rested on the seventh. When God completed Creation He called it “very good”. We are created in the image of God and are designed to experience success and fulfillment through hard work.

As Christians, we should view our jobs as an opportunity to serve God through perseverance and patience and serve others through a Christ-like attitude.

The Bible presents a multifaceted view of labor, encompassing both its challenges and its potential for blessing. It acknowledges labor as a consequence of humanity’s fall from grace, yet it also emphasizes work’s inherent value as a gift from God and a means to honor Him. The Bible encourages diligence, responsibility, and a focus on serving God through work, while also recognizing the need for rest and recognizing the limitations of earthly pursuits.

Proverbs 14:23 says: “In all toil there is profit, but mere talk tends only to poverty.” Proverbs 16:3 says: “Commit your work to the Lord, and your plans will be established.”

As we celebrate this day, we Americans call Labor Day, let us do so by committing our life and our work to Him who is the Master of us all.

Don’t minimize your daily work in the market place – it is nothing less than a Holy Calling.

Happy Labor Day!!

Sometimes True Stories

Reading the Bible: A Healthy Habit

When we talk about self-care, we think about things we can do to take care of our physical, mental, emotional, social, and spiritual well-being. Let’s look at some of those activities against measures of well-being (stress, anxiety, loneliness, and hope) and make the case for Bible engagement as a healthy habit to add to your daily self-care routine. It not only refreshes the soul, but it also reconnects us with the God who made us and cares for us.

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Law of Physical Appearance – If the clothes fit, they’re ugly.

The 50-50-90 Law – Whenever there’s a 50-50 chance of getting something right, there’s a 90% probability that you’ll get it wrong.

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We all have those days where we feel a little distant from wholeness, certainty, and hope for the days ahead. While we also are feeling all alone. Distant from family and friends. Even distant from God. Yet as God’s children, we never walk alone. His Word promises us that He is always there. But do we even notice, believe, or claim that He is there?

As God’s children we are never alone. Never separated from His love. I wonder if we remember that, and if everyone else knows that, believes that, and claims that. I wonder what you and I can do.

Margaret Mead shared this truth for all the world years ago, when she said, “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.” I wonder what God expects of you and me.

Here’s a thought—I wonder if God expects you and me to be His hands, feet, eyes, ears, and heart in the world around us. So that no one, anywhere, will ever walk or feel alone. And maybe, with God’s touch, love, and hope through us, they will begin to live the lives He created them to live. And maybe in doing that, we will begin to also live the lives He created us to live. Scott Whitaker

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Law of Commercial Marketing Strategy: As soon as you find a product that you really like, they will stop making it OR the store will stop selling it!

Quotes You Can Use

You can’t give away a used mattress, but somehow, we’ll pay three hundred bucks a night to sleep on one at a hotel.

God’s silence doesn’t always mean “no.” Dan Shock

Everyone in the world knows how to seek for knowledge that they do not have, but do not know how to find what they already know.

Education… has produced a vast population able to read, but unable to distinguish what is worth reading. G. K. Chesterton

When we die our possessions do not go with us. The question becomes, were they really ours to begin with or were we just granted stewardship for a short while? We really don’t own anything except our souls, that is the only thing that goes with us into eternity!!! Tony Ferguson

A little misery, at times, makes one appreciate happiness more. Frank Baum

The world can’t continue on much longer the way things are, which are spiraling ever downward. Dan Shock

The devil gives Adam and Eve “the fruit”, but takes away paradise. So in every temptation, don’t consider what is offered, but consider what will be lost.

The Bible never once says “figure it out.” But over and over it says… “trust God”. He’s already got it all figured out.

The opinion of 10,000 men is of no value if none of them know anything about the subject.

No matter how good or bad your life is, wake up every morning and be thankful that you still have one.

No amount of evidence will ever convince an idiot. Mark Twain

Hold loosely to the things of this life, so that if God requires them of you, it will be easy to let them go. –Corrie Ten Boom

Your feedback is welcome and if you want to contribute your ideas and thoughts, address all items and comments to [email protected]. © Thoughts on Life Copyright 2025

Our New Community Seminar Series

Scheduled for Fall, 2025

“The Greatest Biblical Archaeological Discoveries of All Time”

August 23, 2025

Topic: “The Greatest Biblical Archaeological Discoveries of All Time”—our weekly multimedia presentation will cover such finds as the Dead Sea Scrolls, Hezekiah’s Tunnel, the Pilate Stone and more.

Teacher: Dr. Daniel McCabe, MACE, ThM, DMin—Executive Director of Shalom Y’all Ministries, former Instructor at the College of Biblical Studies and Pastor of Cullman Bible Church

Location: Golden Corral at 1720 Cherokee Ave SW in Cullman, Alabama

Time: Mondays, 6:00-7:15 pm, starting September 22, eight weeks

Cost: Free—you can attend the seminar without purchasing a buffet or you can choose to enjoy a meal before, during or after the seminar. All ages are welcome to attend.

To Launch: We need a minimum of 10 people to sign up for the seminar before we can launch, so please let us know of your interest by clicking on the attached link.

***

Jesus by the Lake: Part 9

Questions and Faith Lessons from Luke 7:11-17

I. Questions:

Why did Jesus travel to Nain in the first place?

If only to raise the man, then why? Might he have known the woman and her son? Is it a random act of kindness or might there be some greater significance?

What might the young man have said after being raised (“he began to speak,” v. 15)?

What does it mean that Jesus “presented him to his mother”?

Since the miracle took place in Galilee, why does it first mention that the news spread to Judea?

II. Faith Lessons:

#1: Jesus cares about you when you grieve.

#2: God graciously intervenes in our lives on many occasions without even being asked. Jesus traveled to Nain without any evidence that he had been requested to come.

#3: If Jesus can raise the body of a dead man, then he can certainly raise the soul of all men “who were dead in trespasses and sins” (Eph. 2:1; John 5:21).

#4: When we see God at work around us, let us never hesitate to worship him and tell others. Like the people here (v. 16). Like the shepherds at Jesus’ birth (Luke 2:9, 20).

–Daniel McCabe

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Check this out! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wt7GBTksUYY

***

Trivia

(Find the answer below)
According to the book, Genius and Anxiety: How Jews Changed the World, what was the first modern Hebrew word created by Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, the Father of Modern Hebrew?

A. Apple

B. Bathroom

C. Coffee

D. Dictionary

***

Life in the Land: A Jellyfish Invasion

Crawfish season in Louisiana runs ideally from March through May, and duck season in Alabama runs from late November through January. That’s some good eating, y’all, and sandwiched between the mudbugs and water fowl is jellyfish season along the Mediterranean coast of Israel. I can’t say that I’ve ever tried jellyfish gumbo or jellyfish stew, but the word on the street is that nomad jellyfish taste like chicken. Seriously, I’ve heard that they don’t have much taste at all, but still I think I’ll pass.

Millions of jellyfish assemble off Israel’s coastline from Ashkelon to Haifa each year from late June until the beginning of August, so before you get into the water on your next visit to one of Israel’s beautiful beaches, look for the purple flags that warn of increased sightings of jellyfish. Thankfully, nomad jellyfish only tend to swarm in water temperatures of 85 degrees and above, so most don’t stick around through the Fall.

The medium-sized, translucent-white, nomad jellyfish have long thin tentacles, and their venom can produce swelling and even second-degree burns. Their sting is commonly likened to an electric shock or the prick of a nettle.

Nomad jellyfish have migrated to Israel from the Indian Ocean through the Suez Canal, and they create significant problems each year for the electric power stations and desalination plants that line the coast of Israel, so their migration patterns are watched closely by both surfers and engineers. Fortunately you can check the online jellyfish map before planning your next beach trip to Tel Aviv. Click on the link below.

–Daniel McCabe

The Apostolic Fathers–Ignatius of Antioch, part 1

The Apostolic Fathers are those men taught or discipled by one or more of the twelve disciples of Jesus. In this short four-part series we’ll meet four of the Fathers—Ignatius, Polycarp, Clement and Papias.

First, Ignatius, who pastored in Antioch, arguably the second most important early church next to Jerusalem. You’ll remember that it was at Antioch where followers of Jesus were “first called Christians” (Acts 11:26). The site of the biblical city of Antioch is located in modern Turkey, due north of Lebanon and only about twelve miles from the Syrian border as the crow flies.

Said to be a close friend of the Apostle John and appointed as bishop of the church in Antioch by the apostles, Ignatius had a stellar reputation in his day, serving his congregation faithfully for forty years or more, beginning around 70 A.D. Some have even suggested that Ignatius was one of the children who Jesus took up in his arms and blessed as recorded in the Gospels.

Accused late in life of being a Christian during one of the many seasons in the history of the Roman Empire when Christians were often targeted for persecution, he was arrested and taken in chains under guard of ten soldiers from his church in Antioch through Asia Minor and on to Rome. During that trip he wrote seven letters, six to various churches and one to a young pastor in Smyrna named Polycarp. Upon hearing the news that Ignatius was being transported to Rome, the Christians there planned to use their connections, some perhaps of the “household of Caesar” (Phil. 4:22), but Ignatius reportedly rejected any attempt at intervention, saying, “I am the wheat kernel of God. Let me be ground by the teeth of wild beasts that I may become the pure bread of God.” As he faced the lions in the Roman Coliseum, witnesses recalled his final words, “I am made happy by these wild beasts.”

–Daniel McCabe

The High Priestly Prayer of John 17, part 1

John 13-17 is a long discourse that Jesus had with His disciples in the Upper Room. Movies about the Gospels often portray this section of Scripture as taking place in the Garden of Gethsemane or on the way to the garden, and it’s possible that Jesus talked with the disciples as He walked, but when Jesus lifts His eyes to heaven in 17:1, we tend to picture the outdoors, but really this just means that He lifted His eyes upward towards heaven. So I think He’s actually uttering these words inside the Upper Room. I’ve been to the location of the original house. Longstanding tradition states that it was the home of Mark’s mother and that she was a wealthy woman in the first community of believers. That’s why, for example, one of the two competing sites, the Syrian Orthodox Church in the Armenian Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem, calls their Upper Room location, the Church of Saint Mark.

It’s interesting to conjecture where all this happened. Of course, it doesn’t ultimately matter where it happened. It doesn’t matter where Jesus physically spoke these words. What really matters is what He said and what His words mean for us. Also, we need to remember whom He’s speaking to in chapters 13-17. He’s speaking to the eleven disciples. As believers it’s tempting to look at every word of this passage and say, “Oh, this applies to me directly.” Well, not necessarily! Now I don’t mean to imply that many of the things that Jesus says can’t apply to us, but we just have to remember that He’s speaking specifically to His disciples. He’s preparing them for the difficult lifelong ministry that awaits them, and He needs to prepare them for this ministry since He won’t be there physically with them.

Now we get to chapter 17 which I want to walk through very carefully. Often in our studies I select chapters of Scripture that have many hard things to understand, and I try to unpack them for you, but chapters 13-17 don’t contain a lot of deep, complex mysteries even though the teaching of Jesus here is profound and very meaningful. Even though it’s simple, it’s so beautiful! It’s a very meaningful and impactful chapter that is good for all of us to walk through together.

–Adam Keim

Answer to the Trivia

D. Dictionary (The Hebrew word for dictionary is milon.)

SERVICE ABOVE SELF

Week Thirty-Four, 2025

Be devoted to one another in love. Honor one another above yourselves (Romans 12:10).

Rotary is a global network of more than 1.2 million neighbors, friends, leaders, and problem-solvers who see a world where people unite and take action to create lasting change – across the globe, in our communities, and in ourselves.

Solving real problems takes real commitment and vision. For more than 120 years, Rotary’s people of action have used their passion, energy, and intelligence to take action on sustainable projects. From literacy and peace to water and health, they are always working to better our world, and we stay committed to the end.

Rotary members believe that they have a shared responsibility to take action on our world’s most persistent issues. The more than 45,000 clubs work together to promote peace, fight disease, provide clean water, sanitation, and hygiene, among other things.

We provide service to others, promote integrity, and advance world understanding, goodwill, and peace through our fellowship of business, professional, and community leaders.

I am proud to be a Rotarian and have been for many years. One of the reasons that caught my initial interest was their slogan of Service Above Self. This is a biblical concept—to put others above self.

When the Methodist missionary E. Stanley Jones met with Mahatma Gandhi, he asked him, “Mr. Gandhi, though you quote the words of Christ often, why is that you appear to so adamantly reject becoming his follower?”

Gandhi replied, “Oh, I don’t reject Christ. I love Christ. It’s just that so many of you Christians are so unlike Christ. If Christians would really live according to the teachings of Christ, as found in the Bible, all of India would be Christian today.”

The goal of every Christian is to become like Jesus. The very term, “Christian,” means “little Christ,” and being a Christian means being like Christ. Each of us should use whatever gift we have received to serve others, as faithful stewards of God’s grace in its various forms. Do not be slothful in zeal, be fervent in spirit, serve the Lord. Romans 12:11

Do you place serving others above serving self?

Sometimes True Stories

IRS SAYS CHURCHES CAN NOW ENDORSE POLITICAL CANDIDATES

The Internal Revenue Service announced that it will allow churches to endorse candidates for political office without jeopardizing their tax-exempt status.

An IRS court document filed yesterday revealed their new position.

In a defensive political move in 1954 to suppress opposition to his reelection, Texas Senator Lyndon Baines Johnson maneuvered the IRS into inserting a provision in the U. S. tax code referred to as the Johnson Amendment that said that churches and other non-profit organizations could lose their tax-exempt status if they participate in, or intervene in “any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for public office.”

Credit goes to the National Religious Broadcasters and a host of churches that filed suit with the IRS over the long-standing rule, successfully making the case that the rule infringes on their First Amendment rights to freedom of speech and the free exercise of religion.

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What seems important to you these days? Where are you looking, to try to fill your life with meaning? Do you have a sense of joy? A sense of purpose? Do you have a sense that your life has meaning? What is it? Do you feel a sense of real fulfillment and satisfaction? This should be a sense from within and from above—that is not determined by the selfishness and standards of the world around you.

What do you seek after, to fill your life, to find your purpose, to claim or reclaim any joy in your life? Is it aligned with God, or with the world?

Take an honest look at your priorities. Are they about making money, acquiring stuff, wins, championships, seeking recognition, increasing your image or position? Or are your priorities aligned with adding value to everyone around you, sacrificially as Christ did? Lifting others who come before you to a better day. Sharing the love of Christ with your words and actions.

Is your life about you, and your priorities? At what cost so far? Or is your life about others? About lifting all others—all—God brings before you.

Here’s a helpful place for us to start to find the best answers for your life and mine, to all those questions, and those moments of uncertainty we all experience. Those best answers God would smile upon until we took our last breath on earth – Turn around. Want to find true meaning, purpose, fulfillment, satisfaction, and joy for your life? Turn around—Look at Him.

So, what seems important to you these days? Where are you looking to try to fill your life with meaning, purpose, and joy? Try by starting here—Turn Around and Look at Him! Then, follow Him. Scott Whitaker

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When most of us think about being a witness we think of testifying in a court of law or some legal situation, but what about testifying for the Lord? One of the most famous witnesses for the Lord was Luis Palau, who is credited for witnessing and teaching God’s word to more than a billion people. Mr. Palau worked for and became a protégé of Billy Graham. Mr. Palau died on March 11, 2021.

Christian author Lee Strobel interviewed Mr. Palau on his deathbed. Some of the last words Mr. Palau spoke to Mr. Strobel in the interview were these words, He said “Lee, you will never regret being courageous for Christ”. Everyone will have a final day, but before that day comes, we must live each day with courage and never miss an opportunity to be a truthful witness.

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America’s over 80 population will jump to 18.8 million in just the next five years, a jump of 4 million.

Quotes You Can Use

Either you run the day or the day runs you. Jim Rohn

If you find yourself in a place where you feel like you’ve lost hope… Reach out. People care. People love you. The world is not better without you. There is Hope… His Name is Jesus. Marty Stubblefield

God doesn’t want you to worship or serve Him out of pressure or emotional frenzy. Dan Shock

The patient must combat the disease along with the physician. Hippocrates

Our salvation is not tied to a denomination, but rather our belief in God and acceptance of His Grace. If we say we believe in God, that is not enough. The demons believe in God because they have a firsthand account, yet they are doomed. It is simply not enough to believe in God; we must accept His gift of Grace, and then will we become a child of God. Tony Ferguson

Your pastor cannot help you grow if you are not in church. A fish out of water will soon die.

True Disciples will love one another. If we have experienced love, then we can give love. You can’t give away what you have never experienced. Pastor Tony Walliser

The opposite of patience is impatience. The opposite of peace is anger, frustration, being non-content. Peace and Patience seem to be tied closely together. Old Lazy Dog.

A man who is born-again does not use the world’s opinion as his standard of right and wrong. J. C. Ryle

In 100 years, we have gone from teaching Latin and Greek in high school to teaching remedial English in college. Joseph Sobran

A Bible that’s falling apart probably belongs to someone who isn’t. Charles Spurgeon

Abortion is when a baby gets the death penalty for the actions of someone else!!!!!

Don’t give up. It is often the last key on the ring that opens the door.

Society has become so fake that often truth actually bothers people!

There is no excuse for not teaching kids to say please and thank you! Manners are free!

Never argue with someone whose TV is bigger than their bookshelf. Emilia Clarke

It cannot be emphasized too strongly or too often that this great nation was founded not by religionists, but by Christians, not on religion, but on the gospel of Jesus Christ. Patrick Henry

As long as we are blessed to live, it’s our duty to make our life useful for others’ welfare than ours. And to showcase the image of Jesus, to honor God, our Father, who loved us by giving His life for us. Stephen Bernard

The world will stop and listen when they see and hear someone whose heart and life model what they profess. How are you doing on that measurement? Dwight Short

The task of the modern educator is not to cut down jungles, but to irrigate deserts. C.S. Lewis

The magnetic compass is a simple device that has provided direction and is credited for saving thousands of lives. The Lord is the magnetic compass for our souls, and when we follow the direction of the Lord, we are always pointed in the right direction. Tony Ferguson

To live by faith isn’t the absence of fear. Faith is trusting God in the face of our fears… We are so gripped by fear that we forget our faith and go back to being enslaved by what God has released us from. Pastor Matty Finlay

Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves. Carl Jung

The only difference between the saint and the sinner is that every saint has a past, and every sinner has a future. Oscar Wilde

Your feedback is welcome and if you want to contribute your ideas and thoughts, address all items and comments to [email protected]. © Thoughts on Life Copyright 2025

Take the History Quiz

August 16, 2025

A Quiz on the History Between the Old and New Testaments

1. Approximately how many years transpired between the end of the Old Testament (Malachi) and the beginning of the New Testament (Matthew)?

2. What nation ruled the land of Israel at the end of the Old Testament period?

3. What man conquered the Persians in 333 B.C.?

4. What empire ruled the land of Israel from 333-167 B.C.?

5. During this period the predominant language of the Jews in the land of Israel changed from what language to what language?

6. Following the sudden death of this empire’s leader in 323 B.C., the empire was divided between four of his generals who founded four dynasties with what dynasty controlling Egypt and what dynasty controlling Syria?

7. During this time the land of Israel was sometimes controlled by the one dynasty and sometimes controlled by the other until an ultimately successful 26-year struggle for Jewish independence began in 167 B.C. and was led by what family?

8. Descendants of this family began to rule as Jewish priest-kings over the land of Israel from 141-63 B.C. and are commonly known by what dynastic name?

9. In 63 B.C. what Roman general conquered the land of Israel, ending Jewish sovereignty?

10. In 31 B.C. Caesar Augustus defeated General Mark Antony, transforming the Roman Republic into the more autocratic Roman Empire, and then Augustus installed what family of Idumean descent to govern much of the land of Israel?

(Answers to the quiz found below)

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Jesus spoiled every funeral that He went to.” (Dwight L. Moody)

Jesus is the life-giving antagonist of death.” (Alexander Maclaren)

With this deed, Jesus made good on a claim given in Jerusalem not long before.” (William Schlegel)

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Trivia

Which one of these does not belong?

A. The Dead Sea

B. The Salt Sea

C. The Sea of Galilee

D. The Sea of the Arabah

(Answer to the trivia question is below)

Book Review:

The Holy Land, by Jerome Murphy O’Conner

Yes, it’s dated, given its original release in 1980, but to be fair, like new cars driven off the lot, every guidebook is dated the day after it’s published, for the field of archaeology changes constantly. However, if you enjoy archaeology (and I’m on a quest to convince everyone that archaeology is less like eating your vegetables and more like the surprising taste of pineapple on pizza), then the latest edition of this book, its fifth, still deserves a place on your shelf.

Two features that I find particularly helpful are the author’s historical outline of the Holy Land (though admittedly I squirm at his dating of the “Stone Age”) and his section on the “Walls and Gates” of Jerusalem, but the heart of the book is broken into two sections, “Part 1: The City of Jerusalem” and “Part 2: A-Z Guide to the Land,” which together cover approximately 250 sites.

The author, an Irish Dominican priest, taught New Testament at the École Biblique in Jerusalem from 1967 until his death in 2013 at the age of 78. Having lived in Jerusalem for almost fifty years, his knowledge of the Holy Land is considered elite.

My original copy of the book is now so battered from use that I recently purchased a second copy. Admittedly a Jerusalem fanatic, I credit this 550-page book with first igniting my now decades-long fascination with both the Temple Mount and the Church of the Holy Sepulcher.

–Daniel McCabe

Scripture Study: King Hezekiah, part 3

Isaiah 37:30 records God’s words of hope to Hezekiah when he faced the terrifying threat of an Assyria army, “And this shall be the sign for you”—this sign is for Israel. “This year you shall eat what grows of itself, and the second year, what springs from that. Then in the third year, sow and reap and plant vineyards and eat their fruit, and the surviving remnant of the house of Judah shall again take root downward and bear fruit upward.”

This really is an amazing prophecy because Assyria had taken over the whole land. They now ruled the roost. They owned everything. The Israelites cannot go out and plant vineyards and eat their fruit because the Assyrians are there, and nobody can dislodge them because they’re too powerful. But God promised that the Israelites would farm their own land and that they were gonna be just fine.

V. 32, “For out of Jerusalem shall go a remnant and out of Mount Zion a band of survivors. The zeal of the LORD of hosts will do this. Therefore, thus says the LORD concerning the king of Assyria, ‘He shall not come into this city or shoot an arrow there, or come before it with a shield or cast up a siege mount against it. By the way that he came, by the same he shall return, and he shall not come into the city,’ declares the LORD. ‘For I will defend the city to save it for My own sake and for the sake of My servant David.’” Essentially he says that the Assyrian king is going back the way he came. He won’t be able to conquer Jerusalem and then simply move on as he had done with previous cities.

Then we read something astonishing in v. 36. It’s literally said in passing without providing further details, “And the angel of the LORD went out and struck down one hundred and eight-five thousand in the camp of the Assyrians, and when people arose early in the morning, behold, there were all dead bodies.”

Think about that! 185,000 people just pop up dead. You wake up as a Jerusalemite one morning and the Assyrian army has been destroyed. I wish we had more details. What was that like? What happened? How did that happen? What was the aftermath of that? How long did it take for the Israelites to carry off all the bodies? This would have required a major effort, taking weeks, months and perhaps even years, yet we don’t read anything about it. Of course, this is not the focus of the passage. Instead, the main point is that the Lord intervened and saved His people against impossible odds.

V. 37, “Then Sennacherib, king of Assyria, departed and returned home and lived at Nineveh.” Sennacherib’s Prism is an archaeological artifact, discovered in 1830 in the ruins of Nineveh. It’s a six-sided prism with cuneiform writing all around it, and it records Sennacherib’s many exploits, including his boast that he shut up Hezekiah like a caged bird in his royal city. That’s quite the boast!

But notice that Sennacherib could not claim to have destroyed Jerusalem or captured Hezekiah, the two primary goals of that military campaign. On the prism Sennacherib does brag about taking Lachish, a significantly fortified city in Judah and one with strategic importance. But his boasting about Lachish was merely a public relations spin, given his failure to take Jerusalem. Even so Sennacherib’s words confirm the historical account in Isaiah 36-37 of God’s intervention to protect Jerusalem.

V. 38 adds, “And as [Sennacherib] was worshipping in the house of Nisroch, his god, Adrammelech and Sharezer, his sons, struck him down with the sword. And after they escaped into the land of Ararat, Esarhaddon, his son, reigned in his place.” This happened in 681 B.C. about twenty years after Sennacherib’s return from Jerusalem, and it fulfilled the prophecy of 37:7, “I will cause him to fall by the sword in his own land.” God said he’d be struck down, and though it took about twenty years, it still happened. This serves to remind us that although we may want things done quickly in our timing, God has his own timing to work all things together for good. What an amazing deliverance that God gave Hezekiah and his people that day! What a faithful man that he would turn to the Lord against all odds. He prayed, he trusted, and God delivered.

–Adam Keim

From the Archives: Shrine of the Book

August 23, 2022

It’s pretty much what its name suggests. It’s a shine or wing of the Israel Museum in Jerusalem that displays ancient Hebrew manuscripts of the greatest Book ever written, the Bible. In 1947 a Bedouin shepherd hunting his stray goat threw a rock inside the opening of a cave near the Dead Sea and the world has been abuzz ever since. Inside the cave the young shepherd found scroll jars filled with ancient manuscripts, many from the Old Testament, that date between the third century B.C. and the first century A.D.

The Shrine of the Book is dedicated to the preservation and display of these manuscripts found between 1947 and 1956 in eleven different caves. The hallway leading into the collection resembles a cave. The “cave” leads to a large exhibition room, which next creates the illusion that you have been miniaturized and transported inside one of the ancient scroll jars. A walkway around the circumference of the room is filled with display cases for the manuscripts, which are rotated every few months. In the center of the room, designed like a Torah scroll, is a facsimile of what the curator calls “The Mona Lisa” of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the “Great Isaiah Scroll,” a complete copy of the Book of Isaiah, discovered in Cave 1. The architecture is spectacular, but perhaps the greatest takeaway from the exhibit is how God has preserved his Word throughout the centuries.

–Daniel McCabe

Answer to the Trivia

C. The Sea of Galilee

The Dead Sea, the Salt Sea and the Sea of the Arabah are three different names for the same body of water (pictured below).

Answers to the Bible Quiz

1. Four hundred years

2. Persia, reigning until 333 B.C.

3. Alexander the Great

4. The Grecian Empire

5. Hebrew to Greek

6. The Ptolemies in Egypt and the Seleucids in Syria

7. The Maccabees

8. The Hasmoneans

9. Pompey the Great

10. The Herods

–Daniel McCabe

THE TRAILBLAZER

Week Thirty-Three, 2025

Prepare the way for the Lord in the wilderness; make a straight highway for our God in the desert(Isaiah 40:3).

With an interest in learning how the West was won, I have always had an interest in the westward expansion. Recently, we started in Idaho and traveled along the Snake and Columbia until we could dip our toes into the Pacific Ocean. We followed the path of explorers Lewis and Clark who found a way along the rivers to the great ocean in the West.

Lewis and Clark traveled across America, blazing trails, making maps and keeping diaries of what they saw. These two men made it possible for others to follow their trail and travel from one side of America to the other.

Madame Curie was another type of explorer. She discovered a way to look at our bones by taking X-ray pictures of our bodies. Because of her exploration, doctors now have a way to see the exact location of a broken bone and decide upon the best way to fix it.

Alexander Fleming is the man who first saw a certain type of blue mold growing that could kill bad germs. He explored the possibilities of making a medication called penicillin that would treat infections. Years ago, it saved my life as a little boy.

The Hebrew word for “trailblazer” is “סולל” (Solel), which translates to “pathfinder” or “trailblazer”. It refers to someone who opens up new paths or leads the way for others.

The prophet Isaiah prophesied to prepare the way for the Lord. John the Baptist prepared the way for Jesus by baptizing people and proclaiming the coming Messiah. He urged people to “make straight” the path for the Lord, highlighting his role as a trailblazer.

Paul, the apostle, is seen as a trailblazer in spreading the gospel to new regions and cultures. His travels and writings established the early church and laid the foundation for Christian faith.

In more contemporary times, after the winter snow has obliterated all the cross-country ski trails, trailblazers forge new ones for others to follow. The bottom line is this: Throughout history, trailblazers have set the trails for others to follow, and the world is better because of their blazing efforts.

Frank Laubach, who I met months before his death, was a Christian missionary who developed the “Each One Teach One” program. It was simple. If someone taught someone to read, they in turn taught another, and along with the Gospel, several mission people learned how to read and received the Gospel as well.

Now, apply that to the present. What if everyone who received the Gospel led someone else to a saving relation with Christ? What a wonderful world we would have.

Are you willing to be a trailblazer for Jesus?

Sometimes True Stories

Francis Scott Key, while a prisoner on a British ship during the War of 1812 praised the character of the “the land of the free and the home of the brave.” But, his final verse, seldom heard today also acknowledged the creator of that character, saying:

Blessed with victory and peace may the heaven-rescued land praise the power that has made and preserved us as a nation. Then conquer we must when our cause it is just, and this be our motto: In God Is Our Trust.

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Americans have always understood the generous blessings showered upon their republic as imposing special responsibilities rather than conferring special privileges. The intimate involvement of the Almighty in establishing and sustaining the United States confronted America with an obligation to conduct herself more nobbily than other nations, not an authorization to behave more selfishly or recklessly. Michael Medved

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Murphy’s Law of Lockers – If there are only 2 people in a locker room, they will have adjacent lockers.

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Therefore take up the whole armor of God, that you may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand firm. Ephesians 6:13

We all tend to do a lot of physical things to make us strong and fit, but are we strong and fit with God?

  • Do we daily put on the Full Armor of God? (Priscilla Shirer’s Bible study on THE ARMOR OF GOD is amazing ***interjected Beverley Grant.
  • Are we daily doing the things that we need to do to strengthen our walk and fight the good fight?
  • Do we love the Lord with all our heart, soul, mind and strength… and our neighbor as ourselves?
  • Are we power lifting the Bible or are we still working the 2-lb. dumbbells?
  • Do we do the hard work on the life-changing prayer cardio machine?
  • Are we eating the lean meat and drinking the water of the Living Word?
  • Are we stretching ourselves through faith-driven service and following in faith?
  • Are we running the race and in the fight… or are we driving by the parking lot amazed at the number of cars in the lot?

Are we God Strong?

It’s time to consult the Great Physician… and get started. Marty Stubblefield

Quotes You Can Use

In the morning when you awake, ask God to get into your head before the devil does.

An umbrella cannot stop the rain, but it allows us to stand in the rain. Faith in God may not remove our trials but it gives us strength to overcome them.

Electrician to apprentice: Remember to connect male to female wires. Apprentice: Why assign gender roles to electrical connections? Why not let the circuits decide their own identities?

Old keys in life do not unlock new doors.

God didn’t remove the Red Sea; He parted it. He won’t always remove your situation, but He will make a way through it.

God is always on time.

Boys are boys from the beginning and girls are girls right from the start. Only girls can be mommies and only boys can grow up to be daddies. Mr. Rogers

Stay away from negative people. They have a problem for every solution.

Instead of having a church to attract people, have one that attracts God and He will draw in the people.

If you want to reach a large audience, appeal to idiots. Arthur Schopenhauer

Next time you hear about something being “government funded”, remember that the government is 100% taxpayer funded.

Stay away from people that act like a victim in a problem they created.

The time to prepare the roof is when the sun is shining. Mark Twain

Real preaching will cause people to either hate their sin or hate the preacher.

There will come a time when your tears will fall, not because of your troubles, but because God has answered your prayers.

Paul had more joy in jail than some Christians have in church.

It is far better to be alone, than to be in bad company. George Washington

Starbucks is planning on selling beer and wine. Apparently, it’s getting difficult to sell people a $12 cup of coffee.

Having more years behind you than ahead of you makes you think differently about things!

Your feedback is welcome and if you want to contribute your ideas and thoughts, address all items and comments to [email protected]. © Thoughts on Life Copyright 2025