Author: Daniel Westfall
Ep.335: Makeover.
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.
John predicts our place in the future saying,
We are children of God,
and it is not yet apparent what we will be,
but we know when Jesus appears
we will be like him,
for we will see him as he is (1 John 3:2).
I have three comments on this amazing promise about our future makeover.
First, we don’t know what Jesus looked like 2,000 years ago, or what he looks like today, or what he will look like when we see him at the end of the age.
We do know that after his resurrection he had an almost-normal body: he walked, and talked, and barbecued fish on the seashore, and ate it. But other things he did weren’t so normal–like beaming himself away from his friends at Emmaus, and beaming himself into a house where the disciples had locked the doors.
Forty days after his resurrection, Jesus said goodbye to the earth and sailed up to heaven and hasn’t been seen since. Unless you count the bright light that blinded Paul a sighting of Jesus.
So I wonder: is Jesus still living in an almost-normal human body? Is his part of the Trinity confined forever to a house of flesh?
My second comment is that Paul cautions against imagining what a resurrection body might look like. He emphasizes how different my new body will be, saying:
The body that is sown is perishable,
it is raised imperishable;
it is sown in dishonor,
it is raised in glory;
it is sown in weakness,
it is raised in power;
it is sown a natural body,
it is raised a spiritual body (1 Cor 15:42-44).
Looking at my classic 1954 vintage body to predict what my resurrection body will be like, is like predicting an oak tree by looking at an acorn. A small brown nut, rotting on the ground, becomes a magnificent tree. What begins as squirrel food becomes an elevated playground for birds and insects.
As the Apostle’s Creed says, I believe in the resurrection of the body. When this body is consumed by maggots or cremated with fire, Jesus will be preparing a new life and a new body for me.
John says Jesus is the pattern of our newness. We will be like Jesus when we see him as he is. I add, we will see him with new eyes, not with these cataract-distorted eyes that send imperfect images to a dying brain.
My third comment is to agree with John’s statement, “Whoever has this hope purifies himself, just as Jesus is pure” (1 John 3:3). In our bodies of dust, we do daily deeds of prayer and worship and good works that prepare us for a new body and a new vision of Christ and a new life in his kingdom. Welcome to the future.
Let’s pray.
O Jesus, John’s promise resonates in our hearts. We want to see you and to be like you.
Meanwhile, as Paul says,
Outwardly we waste away,
but inwardly we are renewed every day (2 Cor 4:16).
O Jesus, renew our hope. Teach us to be faithful in this flesh-bound body, so that when at last we see you face to face, we may receive new life in a new body.
Amen.
I’m Daniel, on the channel “Pray with Me”.
YouTube channel: Pray with Me – YouTube
Ep.334: How Do We Know We Know? Podcast.
Ep.334: How Do We Know We Know?
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.
I like the stories John tells about Jesus. But when John launches into philosophy as he does in 1 John, or into descriptions of a dystopian future as he does in Revelation, he often loses me.
Listen to him in 1 John 2:3:
We know that we have come to know him
if we keep his commandments.
How’s that again? How do we know that we know Jesus?
The problem of how we know is one of the most complex questions in philosophy. How do we know that we know anything? But John, the fisherman-turned-evangelist, tosses off a simple answer, a simple test: Do we keep Jesus’ commands? If we do, we know that we know him.
John doesn’t share Paul’s angst over bad behavior. Paul said, “The good I want to do, I don’t do; and the evil I abhor–that’s what I do” (Rom 7:19). John, in contrast, prescribes simple obedience: just keep Jesus’ commands. That proves we know him.
In my experience, John’s simple, black and white perspective gets lost in the convoluted grays of my life. Am I keeping Jesus’ commands? Well . . . I keep some of them, some of the time. I love my neighbors–occasionally–but more often, I just ignore them.
I support the church and Christian causes. But do I give generously enough?
I pray, but am I honest and fervent enough? As singer-songwriter Paul Simon said, “The awkwardness was, I don’t know whether my honestly was really honest enough” (Paul Simon, “Paul Simon Contemplates Faith, Death, and the Existence of God”, June 20, 2023, Interview with Tom Power on Q, YouTube, 11:15-12:05. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bi6NFPhsGyM&t=2s&ab).
But as honest as I am able, my life direction is to listen to Jesus and do what he says. Perhaps that’s enough for John.
Let’s pray.
O Jesus, do I really know you? John says the answer is not in introspection and self-examination. The answer is evident in my behavior.
O Jesus, help me to live like the stories John tells of you. To sit like Mary at your feet. In Martha’s kitchen, to hear you question my values. To confess with Peter, “Where else can I go? You have the words of eternal life.”
Help me be like Thomas, who put his hand into your wounded side, and believed that the impossible was real
Help me by good works to know that I know you.
Amen.
I’m Daniel, on the channel “Pray with Me”.
YouTube channel: Pray with Me – YouTube
Ep.333: Jars of Clay. Podcast.
Ep.333: Jars of Clay.
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.
The laminate tiles on our kitchen floor are full of dents and gouges from dropped knives and pans. I repair the damage with porcelain paint or colored wood filler.
Steel knives and kitchen scissors survive falling to the floor. But ceramic plates explode and send shards jetting all over the kitchen.
Which reminds me of 2 Corinthians 4, where Paul says:
God . . . has shone in our hearts
to give us the light of the knowledge of the glory of God.
But we have this treasure in jars of clay” (vv. 6-7).
Our bodies, these fragile jars of clay, made from the dust the earth, are so easily damaged. They age and fall on the floor and shatter. I don’t store my valuable stuff in flimsy clay containers. I keep it under my mattress.
So why does God store his valuables in breakable jars?
Paul explains ,
We have this treasure in jars of clay
to show that the power
is from God
and not from us (2 Cor 4:7).
I think this means God wants to preserve his reputation as the strong one, and my reputation as the weak ones. So he puts his strong message of salvation in these breakable, disposable jars.
Paul continues his description:
We are hard pressed on every side
but not crushed;
perplexed,
but not in despair;
persecuted,
but not abandoned;
struck down,
but not destroyed (2 Cor 4:8-9).
Struck down, but not destroyed? Like the bowl that took a dive off the counter and bounced instead of breaking to smithereens. But it was a close call.
Perplexed, but not in despair? Yes. What am I to make of life and cancer and climate change and war and church and politics? It’s all rather perplexing, as we hold it together in these jars of clay.
Let’s pray.
Our father, you made Adam from dust and loaned him your breath.
We sons and daughters of Adam are jars of clay, brittle and cracked. But you shine the light of your gospel in us.
O Father, we feel the weakness of these jars. We are hard pressed on every side, perplexed, struck down. May the light of your gospel shine through the cracks. May the grace of Christ escape into the world. May the plainness of the jar reveal the glory of the gospel.
Amen.
I’m Daniel, on the channel “Pray with Me”.
YouTube channel: Pray with Me – YouTube
Ep.332: Experiential Religion. Podcast.
Ep.332: Experiential Religion.
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.
I find the New Testament book of 1 John both comforting and discomforting.
It says “God is love”—a comforting thought.
And it says “God is light”—a disturbing thought. I’m not sure I want this searchlight focused on me.
Let’s start where John starts.
That which was from the beginning,
which we have heard,
which we have seen with our eyes. . .
and our hands have touched,
this we proclaim about the word of life (1 John 1:1-2).
John’s religion was based on his experience. He heard and saw and touched Jesus. He wants to draw us into his experience with Christ. We can’t touch and hear and see Jesus, but we can share John’s experience of Christ who lives in us by his Spirit.
In chapter 1, John describes this experience as truth, light, cleansing, fellowship, and joy. Quite a list.
Here’s my summary of what John is saying.
God is good, you are bad.
God is light, you live in darkness.
If you acknowledge your badness and darkness,
God forgives and invites you into his goodness and light.
So don’t be a poser, pretending you’re better than you are.
Instead be a confesser.
Shine the searchlight on yourself,
tell the truth about your sins.
Then you can step into a Christian community, a fellowship of truth and joy.
It’s a wonderful vision of Christianity.
As John says,
If we walk in the light
as God is in the light,
we have fellowship with one another,
and the blood of Jesus Christ cleanses us from all sin (1 John 1:9).
Let’s pray.
Our father, too often I find myself slogging through the spiritual life, wondering where I missed John’s glorious vision of light, truth, joy, and fellowship.
Shine your light on me, exchanging darkness for light. Help me trade my self-serving worldview for your truth. Help me abandon my isolation for the fellowship of your family.
Make my way like the dawn that gets brighter and brighter, until the full light of day (Prov 4:18).
Amen.
I’m Daniel, on the channel “Pray with Me”.
YouTube channel: Pray with Me – YouTube
Ep.331: Lessons Learned? Podcast.
Ep.331: Lessons Learned?
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.
You may ask what I learned from my journey with cancer and chemo. My heartful reply is, “Life is confusing. I’m never sure what I’m learning.”
Perhaps Pete Seeger was thinking of me in Where Have All the Flowers Gone when he sang:
When will they ever learn?
When will they ever learn?
However, since I do reflect on my life and my experiences, here are some thoughts.
First, life is fragile and uncertain. I was physically healthy for 68 years, until cancer swept that away and introduced me to surgery and hospital stays and chemo-sickness. It doesn’t take much to land me in pain and helplessness.
My health is better this spring, but age now speaks to me in aching muscles. And creaky bones. And a forgetful mind.
Moses said, “The length of our days is 70 years, or 80 if we have the strength. Yet their span is but trouble and sorrow for they quickly pass and we fly away” (Ps 90:10). I often think about flying away.
A second lesson. My faith is in God, not in the medical system. The psalmist said, “Some trust in chariots and some in horses, but we trust in the Lord our God” (Ps 20:7).
Yes, some trust medicine and some natural remedies, but I trust in God who watches over life and death. Last November in the hospital with chemo-caused sickness, the medical profession didn’t understand what was wrong with me. My comfort was the beauty of cold winter sunrises in hospital windows, and the Spirit’s witness that God was looking out for me.
My third lesson is endurance. Paul said, “We rejoice in our trials because we know that trials produce endurance” (Ro 5:3). I didn’t rejoice my way through chemo. But I endured it. I was miserable and fatigued, but I tried not to dump my misery on those around me, because God was teaching me Endurance 101. If I have passed that course, maybe I’m ready for Endurance 201. I think I’d prefer a lighter course. Does God offer basket weaving?
A fourth lesson is community. I’ve always been very private, but the Spirit prompted me to invite my community to journey with me. So I published a newsletter, posted on Facebook, and welcomed family and friends and visitors. During that chemo winter, I lost my spiritual disciplines—prayer and scripture and dog-walking. But the prayers and encouragement of the community supported me in some way I don’t understand.
Let’s pray.
O Father, I don’t look forward to Endurance 201. But I do look forward to the day I will fly away.
Thank you for lessons in endurance and community, for those who shared your love with me through the worst of my cancer winter.
Life is a mystery. Science studies it and doctors heal it, but no one really understands it.
Because life is your gift to us. You walk with us through the mystery we live on earth, into the mystery of eternity.
Teach me to walk with grace and patience and humor.
Amen.
I’m Daniel, on the channel “Pray with Me”.
YouTube channel: Pray with Me – YouTube