Builder's Brew

Arthur Brooke introduced Manchester to its Pre-Gest-Tea in the 1930's. It was distinguished for the snooty quality of using only the top two leaves and bud of each plant. I had my first true cuppa last night complements of Jonathan, my British brother-in-law. The robust zest is referred to as Builder's Brew, reflective of its perky boost for early risers.

My youngest sister's husband is father to three adorable little princesses who are constant reminders that simple moments need not be ordinary.

I have met a few good intellectuals but Jonathan's inference on most things is deeply impressive. Young as he is, he serves as SVP for one of our trending DigitalTV stations. Our chats hover from kick-boxing to in-depth political musings. The best conversations however are the unspoken ones that articulate his organic commitment to serve his family with nothing more and nothing less but with his top two leaves and buds.

When the Lord redirected me from business to ministry, my initial trepidation came from my commitment to help out my aging parents to proceed support for my younger siblings. We were six children and finance was tight. It was difficult to live out the vow of simplicity somehow knowing of my responsibility as eldest son to augment help.

Thus, my only true contribution were spoken prayers. I was redundant in asking for a deal. I say yes to His bidding. He foots the bill for my siblings. 

My present vocation is currently at prime metrics. As I ponder the inventory of what God has done, I am so convinced of His impeccable brew.

Jonathan's supreme blend: three minutes of seeped tips + a hint of milk underscores the gravitas of succulent grace.

Builder's Brew, Anyone?


This Crying Lady

Rocelyn attends the church I pastor. If one craves for a shot of unabridged smile, she serves as repository. If there is one person I know whose life has been a narrative of exquisite challenges, it has got to be this saint.

Being an artist, her craft serves as vehicle of praise to the One source of our sightings of pulchritude. She is a professional esthéticienne. Whenever some celebrity visits Dallas for a session, she is the usual choice for styling preparation. There has yet to be an appointment where her client got spared from her contagious glee. A few times, I have gone for haircut, I come home glee-embellished.

Not a lot of people know her secret. She weeps quite frequently.

Her tears are different. She has discovered the depth of Christ's loyal love in its capacity to sabotage her most furious complaints. In her silent corner, she is quick to claim the power of God's available mercy in her life journey. Her husband shines because of this incredible support. Her children soar because of this immutable anchor. All these, while joyfully trusting her Lord with profuse tears.

I have learned deeply from this crying lady. Not all tears swell from toxic brutalities. There are times of weeping that are so deeply spiritual: they produce the pearls of Christ's abiding beauty.


The Heed for Speed

No. I am not quite past the default of my ultra-careful demeanor. This is Michael’s Ducati. My fast and furious cousin roams Manhattan with blaze.

But I do have a brewing urgency to break off from my turtle-paced orientation. And so, I gravitate towards the fantasy of speed.

It does not take much reflection to sense the advantage of those who are quick. They build their stacks in volumes, heaving sighs of triumph. The losing field is left to watch their climb while settling for acquired indifference.

I’ve always wanted a bicycle. I was eight years old, when my uncle handed me a used one. Oh, the experience of learning the intricacy of balance was invigorating!

I rode and rode and rode.

It was my version of world exploration. I took on every road-less traveled.

It seemed like I started the trend for bikes in our neighborhood. All the kids were suddenly on wheels. It was fun and grand until it evolved towards spotting who’s got the best fixie.

I took the challenge seriously. I stripped the original red paint and sprayed it bold-blue. The chrome was whistling. The saddle was taut. I was ready to run.

It was no longer about looks but velocity. A race was set one Sunday morning. It was a gathering of at least twenty. The route was just about a circular mile around the neighborhood on gravel and dust but it approximated the hype of le tour de France.

The chase went wild. As I pedaled to exhaustion, I somehow wondered why I was being driven towards the tail end. As I proceeded with leftover adrenalin, I hit the accelerator while hitting a loose rock causing me to fly up and down a ridge. My bike got snapped!

When the dust settled, the boys gathered in some post-race huddle. One smart aleck jeered: “How can you win? Have you not realized that you are actually riding a girl’s bike?”

The sad realization that one’s inferiority has been sealed by way of acquiescence is most cruel. My uncle, of course, was clueless of my peloton dreams. All he did was pass on his wife’s leisure bike to a nephew.

If such was the rule of life, I am dead finished. I imbibed multiple handicaps that hinder me towards haste. I am slow to act. In the field of faith, this is most fatal.

Life in Christ is trail-blazing fast. It moves alongside the speed of light. When Jesus declared that he is the light of the world, he was not kidding. He meant to demonstrate this claim through radical obedience. Living well is not for the faint-hearted. It is earmarked for those who are willing to run with tenacious hope.

That expectation is not towards winning. The race is over. Christ already finished. The struggle is no longer towards the pedal but towards the will to believe that He will push us to where there is tetelestai (consummate victory).

In my present crawl, I find much reflective reminders whenever I spot appearances of speed. I am compelled to seize moments of grace and mercy.

My zoom must come from the Lord who covers the blitz of our rising sun from both ends of the earth with fleeting splendor.

Why No One Came to my Father's Funeral

It was Tuesday morning of August 17, 2010, when my father died.

He was a most unusual man. So gifted, yet so deprived. He skipped his adolescence in lieu of a coerced maturity during World War II. He served as kid-help to some American GI's in war-torn Bamban, Philippines. Story has it that he barely escaped the bayonet if not for his father's hand gestures distracting the Japanese soldier to look at the sky. Being a pastor's kid, he played the organ, taught Sunday School, and swept the sanctuary floor.

He had a brilliant mind. He took up law at the University of the Philippines. He joined the Upsilon Sigma Phi, the oldest fraternity in Asia. He worked for the government diligently and with much pride. He did his best to elude the seductions of power and corruption.

When he met the beautiful Carolina Carlos-Manalili,  a University muse and pharmacist, life took on a fascinating hue. Being a simple man, he had to measure up with the natural flair of my mother for social concourse. Papa was a very silent man. After work, he would always rush home. His passion was chess and a bottle of beer. His life was rather monotonous to a fault. But he was always there, dependable to the bone.

He was well loved for his simplicity. He was iconic in faithfulness until an invitation from the local Lions Club turned his wheels somewhere.

I guess he reinvented himself and turned into some crowd favorite. The nightclubs, the secret flings, the one-night stand, became frequent. With his troops, he would come home early, at 3:00 in the morning. My mother went down the wire to bear this but the fury of a darling turning into a disaster was just too much.

My mother left for the States. That was when I witnessed my father's withering. He kept a mistress, whose name was unsurprisingly, Carol. Every single day, his deterioration went South. Through the deep canyon, I knew he was trying to creep out and reset. He was no match to the combination of loneliness and the offer of a drunken bliss. There was one night I had to fetch him from town, in an accident, drunk and out.

He had esophageal cancer and emaciated to a scary 80 pound frame. He was pronounced dying. It was rather awkward for him to ask me, if I could pray and ask God for a few years of extension. He was granted 8 more years.

The piercing hits of chemotherapy were unforgiving. His cognitive and affective nerves were shot. He acquired Alzheimers overnight. It was surreal looking at him. The congruence of his speech was gone. He would come up with wild stories like having been appointed as the head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers. He would curse at my Mom like she was some junk. I have lost my bearings several times, reprimanding him for his insanity.

I was all too ignorant of the barbaric nature of Alzheimer's disease.

I could have decked him with a punch had it not been for some hard restraint. He was most of the time angry and incoherent. To avoid harm to our mother, we decided to take him to a care facility. There, nestled in paid-attention, he lived quietly but totally detached.

One day, I was alerted to what seemed like a miracle. Papa suddenly became lucid and well versed. He talked to me about his wife and how beautiful and kind she was. He was just wondering where she is. He ended our spell-binding conversation with: "Son, please tell my beautiful wife to come home now, I need her here." 

A week after this conversation, he succumbed to coma. My mother flew in from New Jersey and as we gathered around his last few moments, there was a most unusual spark in his countenance. I have never seen such deep peace laced within. When we all whispered our final affections to him, my mother was most eloquent in affirming her life long vow.

The funeral was well attended. I just observed that none of his friends were there. Of course, I understand. It is quite difficult to plan to attend the wake of a monster.

In tears, I repented. My father was never a savage beast. He was ravaged by the true nemesis. Sin was too luridly delicious for him.

In all these, there was one thing that was left untouched. One day, somewhere back in time, he turned his life over to Christ for pardon. Although most of his years where served in his prison of lust, the outstanding grace of Christ halted his descent.

His death was actually a gift. His true nature as God's saint was set in order. Although not a single buddy showed up, the most resplendent of heavenly beings carried him to the bosom of his loyal Father.



My Hideous Meekness

I got introduced to the cruelty of peer-pressure at an early age. For some clearly practical scheme, I was enrolled first grade at age 4. Don't do the math, I thought it was merely a joke. My mother had quite a clout in our school system and so I got in without proper evaluation. 

The exposure to big boys and sassy girls was disconcerting. They were brash and downright ethnocentric. I felt marginalized each time I tried to enter their clique. In my solitary trail, I stumbled upon a most potent weapon: I hid my true rambunctiousness and assumed meekness. It was marvelous how this got me empowered subversively. In my deliberate distancing, I found a way to control the stupidity of aggressors preying around me. I simply played dumb sheep. 

As I went along in years, I discovered that my cover was not original. I met all sorts of masked men and women, all seemingly timid but undeniably, wild at heart. The pretensions are both funny and nauseating. I know this because of my own disposition: I walk in and out of social intercourses leaving a self-effacing impression but insidiously marking my territory with impunity. I have learned a way to get what I want by appearing to be saintly unprotesting. There is no holiness in this. It is self-absorption at its best disguise.

It has been a most tiring existence to say the least. Duplicity never produced rest. And thus I get what it means to spin unceasingly.

It was until my attention was halted by a quake. The redemptive weight of Christ not only dislodged my camouflage but utterly demolished it. He saw through my veneer of shyness and undressed it for its blatant sin. It is truly nothing more but one more weapon in my armory of fear.

When I understood the holiness of Christ and took on faith to enter in, I was stripped with all pretensions. I was revealed for who I truly was: a dark sheep with a foul breath. The deep gorge of my self-esteem is merely a by-product of my delusion to create my own holiness. This was of course, a colossal exercise of futility. I am chief of sinners.

When one faces the true HOLY, HOLY, HOLY, the soul breaks to a point of disintegration. I chose headlong to run towards repentance and claim God's reasoning over mine. As a result, I found my shyness resected and replaced with a boldness, so humble and devoid of guile.

This miracle cascaded through the initiative of the True Meek Lamb who alone is able to uproot my hideous lie and usher me to His righteous tie.

 I am becoming gentle and true because of Christ.

The Poorest Engagement Party

Six months before the actual endowment of wedding rings, the story of my engagement ushered me into a humbling brokenness that ironically took me to God's supreme opulence.

How can a man so poor propose to a woman so rich?

Inconceivable as it is, my identity as a child of God took its rubber to the dirt road when one foggy night I just had to trade my puny concept of God with His promised reality.

Maria Danielle came to my life like a psalm. I have no words to describe her introduction but in silent joyful hums. I knew it was the right time to ask if she was just as crazy to marry me. We were hand in hand in conversation around a secluded tennis court atop a hill. The chat was gloriously redundant. It was all about the dream of living life together. 

An hour into the rendezvous, I knew I just had to say it.

I could not say it. I had no diamonds to show.

Having turned my life over to God, life in the seminary was lavish with trained wisdom but fueled by disciplined poverty. I never got hungry, but I just did not have money. And so, there was no ring for the night of disclosure.

And so, I just circled in some confused intention. I was half-praying and half-improvising on how one gets things done without the necessary engagement accessory.

Without any sort of warning, she paused her steps, looked at me in the eye and said: "I know you are about to say something important and I also know why you are taking so much time."

She then did the most emancipating gesture I have ever witnessed: she removed a most beautiful turquoise ring with six shimmering diamonds from her finger. She took my palm, dropped the jewel and said:

"Now ... you can speak."


A Complete List of My Ex-Friends

Friendship is perhaps the most notorious of all undertakings. One gets ushered into its arrangements with so much hidden agenda devoid of any warranty of permanence.

Our list of enemies has more stability. These remain unmoved in our social embargo.

Thus two distinct lists are made and migration from either side moves quite rarely.

I have been ruminating lately about my Facebook alliances. Like most, I often wonder about the significance of the Add Friend/Accept/Remove exercise. I somehow detect a semblance of rising power when I get accepted but the inverse of sadness when my request for ingress is made to wait. When I get un-Friended, that's when it turns ugly. I retrieve my list and implement life long sanctions against the idiots.

That is perhaps the reason why God is not into social media.

God's version of relationship is summed up in a most alien term: incarnated. He is all in and all out with the people He pursues. They can do whatever they want and His love stays unmoved. He offers the invitation of true friendship until we run out of hiding space. 

He has no buttons that shuts down his site just because of any cookie jar theft. Actually, there is nothing that can unmake His determination to stay on, not for life though, but forever.

Three years ago, when I went through my deepest valley, I noticed the remarkable trending of my personal contacts. There was a corporate withdrawal of posts. It was perhaps my own doing. It was so dark where I was and I could not even see most faces. The chats were frozen silent. I guess, my appearance of gloom was no longer vogue in someone else's list.

No one is to blame. I am guilty of that myself. I tend to gravitate towards certain categories: I keep only the ones I can use. This is not friendship. It is nothing more, nothing less but market-place transactional circus.

And this is the reason why Jesus Christ came. To offer a relationship unknown to humanity. It is a friendship that is sourced from an intentionality that exudes from the depth of His wonder. 

It has a tag: agape, unconditional love.

I read from Scriptures that it is God's desire for all to be on His list. But, most choose to ignore the one offer that can change all our imaginary scripts. We'd rather choose sophisticated human moorings and shun what is perceived as moronic faith.

I am on His list not because I deserved it. It was determined by His pursuit which incidentally found a heart craving for true love.

Lately, I turned to my secret list of Ex-Friends and was roused to the incongruence of my favored status. I have tasted the most succulent of affections in Christ, why am I keeping such a repugnant inventory?

Alas, I have decided to follow my True Friend's lead: I threw the book to the fireplace. 

My site has just been opened for all.

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The Letter I wrote to Manny Pacquiao

It was December 8, 2012. The Fight of the Decade at MGM Grand stirred the pulse of the world of sports.

The illustrious Pacquiao suffered a stunning loss to the legendary Juan Manuel Marquez. With a second left in the sixth round, the perfect punch careened the champion to the canvas to sleep.

I remember feeling a sense of kindred loss while jotting down these thoughts for him to ponder:

My Brother Manny: (Kapatid kong Manny:)

I am but a small voice amidst the oceanic murmurs, yet I feel compelled to share a few thoughts, just because you are my brother in Christ.

(Ako ay iisa lang na titik na nais magbahagi ng iilang palaisipan, bilang kapatid mo kay Hesus.)

When God's children are knocked out, either literally or metaphorically, although I find myself still at a loss for words, the aftermath of humiliation when it turns into humility astounds me, even more.

(Kapag tayo ay lugmok sa pagkatalo, yung kahihiyang dala nito ang siyang lubusang nagbibigay ng pagkamangha sa aking kaisipan.)

I seek to follow Christ, myself ... and like you, I am faced with the dilemma of wondering and wandering why God allows unseen punches to knock me out. I won't go into the details of my personal travails, but the more I seek intimacy with Christ, the more I get introduced to suffering's embrace. People who are not quite versed in the ways of God may be too quick to judge the ineptness of my faith, and at times, they turn to mythologizing the deity of my Lord.

(Tulad mo, ako ay masugid na taga-sunod ni Kristo. Kadalasan ako ay litong-lito sa mga debuho ng malulungkot na kamalasan sa aking buhay. Kaya nga lang, kapag ka itong aking mga pagkatalo ay dinudulog ko sa Kanya, ako ang nalulula sa Kanyang mapagpalang yakap at pagmamahal.)

Manny, when you are in the depths of your faith, remember that even your present humiliation is God's gift (Psalm 139). We are sometimes allowed to go under, so that we might experience the incredible commitment of our Lord to be with us, especially when we are down and out.

(Ang mangangawit ay nagpapatutoo na tunay nga ang katapatan ng Diyos lalung-lalo na sa mga siglo ng ating kahinaan. Siya ang tapat na nagmamahal.)

I leave you with Proverbs 24:16:

(Sa iyo ang Kawikaan 24:16;)

"For though a righteous man falls seven times, he rises again, but the wicked are brought down by calamity." 

(Kahit ilang knock-out ang ikabagsak ng kanyang mga anak, dadamputin at iaangat sila mismo ng kanilang Ama. Ang mga taliwas ay mananatiling lugmok sa kanilang mapagkunwaring kumunoy.)

This is perhaps, your first real fall. You have more to come. But be of good cheer.

(Heto marahil ang una mong tunay at mahapding pagkatalo. Marami pang darating na kabiguan. Huwag kang malilinlang: ngumiti ka at magtiwala sa bagsik ng pagkupkop ng ating Diyos!)

God wrote these words for you and me. He knows that we will fall, seven times seven. But He also knows that each time we fall, He will pick us up, cause us to rise again and in humility, I pray that you and the rest of us will declare who is truly the Hero and the Champion: Jesus, the Suffering Servant and Victor.

(Ang mga katagang ito ay para sa ating lahat na nananalig. Tayo nga ay makakaranas ng pagbagsak, at marami pang pagkatalo. Subalit, dahil sa pangako ni Hesus, Siya ang tunay na Kampeon at Manunubos na magdudulot ng ating panghabangbuhay na kagalakan at tunay na pagwawagi!)

Soli Deo Gloria! (Sa Diyos lang ang Papuri!)

Dr. Russell Diwa
Senior Pastor (tumatandang katulong ng ating Dakilang Amo)
Biblical Community Church

 

(Translations in broken Tagalog)


The Night the Bimmer Left

I got married in 1988. The air we breathed was Rick Astley's Never Gonna Give You Up. Every young man dreamt of driving the BMW 325is. Back then, it remained a fancy yearning, I had to settle for a 1969 VW Beetle and a new wife.

Two decades later, I was working on an incredible project. A dear friend gave me the exact car I drooled for. It was of course, used (perhaps, over-used is more apropos). The paint was oxidized. The wheels were gunk-grey. The engine was at least half an inch grime-coated. Rather surprisingly, there was no ding or rips inside out. It was just dirty and about to die. The restoration took on quite a toll.

Since I am a die-hard purist, I only used OEM parts from Munich. Of course it also took on my heart's unguarded devotion. It was almost back to its mint condition except for a leak on its power-steering receptacle. None of my cheap mechanics had a clue on the drip.  I had no choice but inquire from BMW. The manager was naturally awed by the old steed. When he saw the issue, I caught his grin: "What fluid are you using?" "premium Power Steering fluid, of course!" His retort was: "Bingo! If you read your manual (I had none!), you would have known that this one only uses the specified Dextron/Mercon. We sell them here for $45. That will fix it!"

The miracle was cheap.

But the seeping continued somewhere else. I began developing an unusual swag when I drove her around. It doesn't take much to detect the idolatry that was slow but surely involved in my little hobby. Just as the bimmer's soul was determined by the accurate diagnosis of its engineer, I knew mine needed an MRI.

Once in your life, you get to do something truly scandalous to save your soul. It happened when I met a Dallas cop who was so kind to the bone. I discovered that he too is a pastor, happily married to a school teacher. We became good friends. He drove a dilapidated pint-sized Mazda. Once I asked him what I can pray for, his answer was quick: "Hey Bro, just pray for another whip, my wife and I just share this lil' champ."

Through my developing inner tension, I don't know where the strong impetus came from but I found myself calling him one day saying that a car has been graciously provided. That Wednesday night I handed him the keys and title.

There was a brief hand-off. I was too scared to change my mind. I had to dismiss him rather abruptly.

He told me the following day, that he with his first lady drove around their neighborhood beaming praises to their incredible God up until the wee hours of dawn.

They thought they had the best gift.

The deeper beam was on me: I experienced the genuine exegesis of a true grant. The Bimmer never left. The True Owner just rolled it nicely to the next guy.

Why Pitbull Rocky is Color Blind

That's not quite accurate.

Dogs are perceived to see only black and white but they do have limited photoreceptor cells that allow them to see the world through yellow, blue and gray hues. Not as colorful, but clear enough for committed devotion.

I was born to a regional culture that promoted indifference towards dogs. Repulsive as it is, the poor mongrels were victims to provincial gourmet. I remember the horror of witnessing the killing of our guard dog to rustle up Azucena during the feast of San Fernando to augment the traditional banquet. I had a standing nightmare that day.

But dogs are the kindest. It remains a mystery how these creatures imbibe a loyalty beyond compare. You kick them, you starve them, you curse them ... their loyalty remains. It takes a dead person not to feel this crazy fidelity.

The Oscar Awards has trended quite a protest. Jada Pinkett Smith and Spike Lee registered their disdain over what they perceive as a clear lack of diversity among nominees. All 20 contenders in the acting category are all-white.

I see much dog connection in the way our world sees humans these days. No wonder, the LORD of Redemption spoke about a day when color-marks will lose their curse. If you care to read the prophetic freedom of such generation, go read the high definition from Genesis to Revelation.

I used to ignore dogs but they persist in loving me. I did not realize that their lack of color perception was God's gift for my stupidity. I also woke up to my ignorance that these wonderful creatures are gifted with a sense of smell that is hinted to be 100 million times more sensitive than mine.

I will try not to boycott the Oscars. I will invite Rocky to watch it with me.

Credits: Rocky's Parents: Max & Paulina Citzman

Credits: Rocky's true parents: Max & Pau Roycroft

I was a Beggar

I was a beggar. I found bread.

Back in the early 80's, at age 18 I probably reached the heights of personal debauchery. The interesting nuance was that it went deliberately undercover. I was suave and religious. Being a Catholic, I went to mass everyday. But God knows, this was just another pawn I use for leverage. At the Benedictine School, my A's in Religion were trophies of irony. I would take holy communion with a predetermined plan to sin twenty minutes thereafter.

Hell was a death away. And so my regular attendance was actually more of a bribe.

I was a popular scholar and a social leech. I smoked two packs of Marlboro a day, partied like a beast, while silently smoke-screening my poverty.

Renchi was a senior stud. He was all the man that you hoped to be. Good looks, brains, finesse and spot-on braggadocio. One day I saw him uncharacteristically alone reading. This took on a troubling frequency as he lost his boisterous gait; There grew a saintly bearing that I couldn't quite understand. He turned different, with a most unusual air of splendor.

It was September 10, 1980 when I got pulled out from mendicancy. Renchi hosted a small forum to disclose the capstone of his own searchings. Setting the context of his life within the meta-narrative of Scriptures, he went on to present what I thought I already knew from years of catechism.

What truly struck me was the simple distinction he made about the ineptness of any human effort to define life and that of the foolishness of the message of the Cross, being able not only to define it but supply its essential resource.

The holy pitch was insulting my intelligence but somewhere deep in my soul, it was forcefully addressing with clarity my deepest puzzles. The way of Christ can only be accessed by faith not from any form of religion but toward the Person of the incarnated God, Himself. I cannot quite fathom why my surrender ensued without a fight. The beauty of what I beheld, overpowered all my cumulative defenses.

I am Christian not because I searched and found the jewel. While buried in dereliction, my homelessness was all too visible to our compassionate Deity. Just as Renchi was shown his utter dearth, my hunger was exposed while being ushered to a royal feast.

How can one resist bread after a life-long diet of crumbs?

Photography: Renchi Arce in Art and Soul / Vocation: Storyteller at Vineyard Community of Faith / Former status: Beggar / Current Status: Adopted son of the King of Kings

The First Cowboy

David is John Wayne to me. A seasoned Top Gun, he served as base commander in Asia while I was trying to grow some of my wings. I met him at church. The beauty of his family was magnetic. He spent most of his weekends seeking paths to assimilate his deep spiritual zest to his assigned cultural locus. He got adopted as son to one of Luzon's provinces as a validation of his sincere grit. I love this man. He was the first cowboy who loved me. I call him my second Dad.

It was during a most troubled time in my late adolescence when his bullets saved me. We had an excursion to some historical island in Luzon when we were caught in the fury of a menacing squall. The banca was no match to the pummel of 20 feet waves. While rain poured like leopards and elephants, our hapless condition hung by mercy's thread. While this giant calamity toyed with our puny boat, there was something more internal that seized my fright. I was in a state of deep sin. I was tired of God and was on detour of satiating my personal greed. Somehow, I knew, the storm was not some casual incident but His hoist of warning.

I was preparing to drown. While the frantic silence grew, I began untying my shoes, removing my watch ... I must travel light in water. It was then that I spotted David at the prow. He was as calm as an Oak . It was so disconcerting to spot the exact contrast of my internal convulsions. I overheard him say: "I've been through rougher waters."  

Who cares ... when my deluge was truly unseen. The storm grew wild enough to squeeze the sputtering motor to a halt. It was then that I imagined my day's end.

Not quite.

The cowboy's leadership was sterling. His quietude steered our motley crew to stay the course. It seemed like eternity being spiked up and spiralled down the chaos of China Sea. I kept my eyes on David for anchor. God was not in the boat. He chose to be in the eye of the storm.

It did not take much to surrender. When you are up against the God of Poseidon, any struggle is futile. I resolved to stop my defection that day. I prayed: God of the Seas, take me to your shore, I am yours again.

David is now retired but untiring in his quest for redemption. He may be clueless on how his mere posture saved me from drowning one stormy day.


The Face of Forgiveness

Celestin and I both went to Dallas Theological Seminary bridled by meager means. The witness of God's provision however was most lavish in our symbiotic friendship. Dr. Musekura has taught me deep forgiveness. The Rwandan genocide of 1994 handed him a curriculum that led to a groundswell of mercy in the African Great Lakes Region.

While he wrestles with his cultural affliction, I find myself pressed down by the mystery of forgiveness. I still carry some wounds that bleed from the muck of my own rejection of grace. There are many forgivers that I know, who are generous in releasing others but have not found strength to forgive themselves. And so while this seems strange, I look in the mirror and find a familiar countenance: have I really forgiven myself from my worst perdition?

The worst kind of un-forgiveness is that which is inflicted on oneself. I know of an elderly woman who still suffers from the ghost of quadruple abortion. She confesses of hell's incineration ever so often, but she will not let go. She just could not go past her transgression.

Non-forgiveness insidiously paralyzes all peripheral relationships. The reason behind the impasse seems perfectly virtuous:  we forgive others, we forgive God, but ... we find the forgiveness of ourselves our deep enigma. We live through it, knowing that we are not at peace with our guilt. There is only one cure for this wound: it comes through the vehicle of praise.

I know from theology that my life was crafted to prize God above all. But do I really exalt the person of Christ with utmost regard or is He more like my genie bottle or the cosmic detergent that wipes my stain?  To praise God is to maintain exuberant boast in Him with no fleeting thoughts of competition from some nearby allegiance.

My attitude not to release myself from my own guilt reveals my juvenile faith. When I choose not to forgive myself, I unravel God's true rival in my heart. If I cannot take God's offer of forgiveness, it merely reveals my detour to another source of salvation. Not Christ's of course, but toward one that ironically puts me back in chains.

Celestin has forgiven entire villages as he leads a global arm of reconciliation. We are all called to take forgiveness seriously. Christ knows hell. He took its excruciating whip to spare us from even a second of woe. He who knew no sin became our quagmire. We are healed from the curse by His stripes.

And so I come to forgive myself. In song and in dance, I look at the face of sinful humanity and declare the liberation of God's Wonderful Arrival.

The face of Christ is seen in both our forgiveness toward others and to ourselves. The joy in Celestin's visage asserts this. I strive to imitate his lead.


I am Worth Less

All there is to life is determination of worth. We live to seek it. We strive to acquire it. We pray to maintain it. But it never stays. Human worth is prodigal. It always runs away.

Why this is so ought to grant us some hint that we were designed to cohabit with worth.

Our toys and accoutrements seem to upgrade our intrinsic value until someone comes along with more swag. We gather persons to induct them into our Facebook kingdoms, hoping that a few more hits might suit us up for even greater alliances. We buy into counterfeit gods to satiate our longing for direction while imbibing our idols with imagined implements.

And all these, to naught. Deep down, the gnawing sense of worthlessness rears its ugly head each time we declare our behoof.

There is however a way to find our true worth.

It is contingent upon discovering the necessity of praise in our lives. The reason for our identity-crash stems from our misguided delight in praising ourselves. We make up our own press releases and take selfies of manipulated angles. We know our pretensions as we feed our apprehensions. We are prone to praise: to lift the worth of someone, something, someplace. 

The proper recipient of praise is never towards anyone or anything that is merely created. To give worth to that which merely sprung from the genius of its Creator speaks of a terrible misreading of worth. The God who created all things demands praise not because he suffers from lack of esteem but precisely because He has infinite worth. To declare His worth is to be in touch with the most veracious declaration that awaits human articulation. To live a life devoid of praising God is to die into an existence deprived of true worth.

And so as we turn to God's Story, we are prompted to praise the LORD!

This is not some impassioned plea nor bargain but a sacred must. We are called to stew praise from all our being. The heavens become the limit to our boast. We are called to retrieve all of God's throwbacks not only on Thursdays but for all days. His surpassing greatness must flavor all our initial and final conversations. Since, our mental and affectional capabilities were generated for this singular purpose: we are to praise God at all times! Even our dance must follow His symphonic worth. We are called to loud praise. Not to a hush, but towards a holy rambunctiousness that shatters the glass of our abysmal worthlessness. ... ushering us to the newness of a life anchored to God's incomparable praise.

Through all our present darkness, we are shown the lumens of God's incomparable merit: the worth of Christ must be received.

As He is taken at His Word, worth takes on a most natural dwelling: our little lives magnified for His glorious Praise!


Tea, Yoga, and Me.

I am writing this blog while sipping the calming Teavana Jade Citrus Mint on Yeti cup. It has been my daily morning ritual. It is my Yoga pose.

My daughters and wife are into Vinyasa just as they are in yen for Rothschild Chateau Lafite (1982). I find myself on the qui vive for holy concern. I am allergic to wine and too stern for Adho Mukha Svanasana (Downward-Facing Dog).

I am often asked if Yoga and Wine are of the devil. My quick impulse takes me to the wedding at Cana and the garden of Gethsemane. There is wine. There is pose

I guess what applies to wine applies to yoga and all else.

My humanity has an uncanny propensity to judge and neatly stack my verdict to two unalterable cells: the sinful and the holy. I judge the moment I rouse. This tea I am drinking is actually too darn hot! 

I am made to wonder where and how I got this penchant. One thing I know, once I tag an issue, and in most cases, persons .... I derive a sense of orgasmic power. Of course, at the expense of my raped victims. I know ... it is wicked and definitely, not from God.

This is so true with Yoga and Wine. I used to disdain the yogi/yogini as well as oenophiles. That was until I stumbled upon the rooted rebuke of Psalm One. That was when I came to repentance and lost my blindness.

Truly, this world was designed for joy. But due to our present lack of bliss, we turn to all sorts of alluring fountains. We have been inflicted with deep amnesia. We ignore that this is God's World, all things have been crafted with a marked endowment.

What is revealed in creation is wild: the vines produce fruits that transform our evenings into jubilees of fellowship. The human pose is rediscovered for its capability to take in breath and posture to hush the stress. But then again, without The proper Guide, we turn all the good that God crafted into machinating idols. Instead of worshiping the God of the vineyard, we get drunk and gyrate to our lecherous raps. Instead of upward hands lifted to the Sovereign LORD, we chant the Sanskrit with Vedic mantras of nugatory worship.

My young friend Stephanie is into Vinyasa Yoga just as her father is steeped in mainstream Business. Her dad is my hero of a man whose opulence is subversively leveraged for God's kingdom. In a most wonderful ministry, she arranges her limbs in a special way to pray in order to demonstrate the rustle of God's ruach, just as her dad lines up his resources to exalt the One who owns the cattle of a thousand hills.

Stephanie is a tree planted by the streams of water. In her evergreen pose, she is a witness that holy silence can be most vocal in a world gone deaf.

When she is not in deep communion, ask her about her story. (follow@stephaniedan1 on IG; follow @stephanie1 on FB).

Photo Credit: Director Vince Salumbides III

Photo Credit: Director Vince Salumbides III

Porn to Die

I was five when I got introduced to porn. The indelible glossy image of Miss March had been archived in my head. All that it takes to pop it open is a blink. I had no clue what took off from those days of curiosity but a true monster held me hostage for years.

My father's skin collection, though well hidden, was no match to the pulsating craving that had me search every possible source for a few more peeks. The fix of pornography is wildly ethereal. Through my adolescent decrepitude I found a place of mirth. All these staggering women staring at me ... vigorously offering their virtual intimacy. it was a most emaciating arrangement. One dies a thousand death with porn. It never satisfies. It silently humiliates as it bullies the reality of one's hidden ineptness.

When I followed Christ, I was ushered into liberation. I discovered the cosmic insurgency of what used to be my fundamental preoccupation. If there was anything truly anti-Christ, it had to be porn.

In Christ, I see beauty from the grandeur of God's purity. I began to understand why I was created in flesh and in spirit. In creation, the reflection of deity was conceived. The human body was created with pristine beauty. The imago Dei was deliberately stunning.

But the fall ended this wonder.

Sin caused the need to provide coverings for our nakedness. We have become creatures of shame through the compliments of our own guilt. Whenever there is any un-dressing, our sensibilities run amok. We gravitate toward exposed flesh in search for some scent that provides the clue that there might be something in our sexuality that was stolen. Somewhere deep inside our conscience, we know there is inherent beauty in the flesh. But since we have become blind to these unseen realities, we experience flesh differently: our glands take over and lust intercepts our attention. We are no match against this invasion to our soul. We are porn to die.

The only way to regain the gift of original vision is to turn to the only One who vowed to destroy the virus. Christ took on flesh. Incarnation was his introduction to the Armageddon of our lustful existence. Carrying the form of our infected vessel, he went on to live the perfect life in the flesh. His perfect submission to His Father's will sustained his walk. As such, he showed the proper way of the flesh. Holiness is not only assimilated but imputed towards anyone who would dare to believe in Him.

It occurred to me that my resonant pleasure is in the discovery that my transformed flesh took on the form of a tabernacle. I have become a dwelling place for my God who radically transplanted His spirit into my flesh, causing it to burst forth in pure beauty. So exquisite is my physicality that is now able to cohabit with a divinity that harks back to imago Dei.

Every now and then, the haunting of lustful images rally for my affection. All I do is close my eyes, and with deep discerning breath, enter into the incomparable largesse of Christ's incarnated affection for me.

I have no more room for lust. All my chambers are now occupied with whoops of true ecstasy. 

The Sadness of Madness

H. L. Mencken, the influential sage of Baltimore, was on point in saying that before a man speaks it is always safe to assume that he is a fool. After he speaks, it is seldom necessary to assume it.

There is much to think about how much weight we invest upon our own thoughts. We live by maxims that somehow found their creep in our souls. And so we end up believing all our cogitation.

I am a thinker, but more often than not, I somehow discern dishonesty when I speak. I say a lot of things but these are mere migrated ideas I have purloined from someone. Nothing I think  is original, yet I am quick to the copyright. There is such madness in the arrogance of pretending to know life's rivets. It makes for a truly sad masquerade. 

The world we live in is protean. The incessant changes are too involved even to observe. And so at times, I find myself merely tolerating the cascading thrust of Mad Men. I am often lulled to the procession of naive victims duped by some calculating Pied Piper.

I am a pastor and so I listen to rumors of men. The plethora of scripts overwhelm but all carry a common line: the culprit is a lie.

The Psalmist locates our geographical struggle right where we live (Psalm 120). Our culture is wrong. The stories we read are stained with deep duplicity. Our attention is veered away from the true beginning. There is no hope of Shalom in this present land. Any promise of expectancy apart from the genesis of Eden will lead to a delusion nurtured by sadness. A cry for an egress is necessary.

I have written a book ( read Disconnect/ found in this site) on this matter as my way of hiking with each and every wanderer. There is no sense in pursuing a life promised by mere guess. A single step towards a thousand places is not required. All that is needed is a sincere thirst for the hilarity of gladness and the accompanying willingness to laugh with God alone.

In the peerless cinematography of Scriptural direction, I rediscover that I was never designed to live on sorrow's default.

I was uniquely crafted to demonstrate a certain resplendence unbeknownst even to the best minds of this exilic world.

Here then is where my life begins to speak: from the Gladness of Brightness.

What God does to Death

I will die.

A few seconds before this inevitable occurrence, all that I have measured by way of belief comes to a breath-taking curiosity. 

The subject of mortality runs every Philosophy towards utopian heights. Religion seeks to impose the ex cathedra of how one fights the quietus. Humanity subversively hides in denial resorting to divergent technological spas.

Christianity stands alone in its presentation of its prognosis.

The Scriptural meta-narrative reveals death's character not as an anomaly but as the necessary consequence of our choosing to ignore the primary claim of life's creator that He is God.

Being God, he determines both the personality and functionality of all. To miss the mark of his inscrutable wisdom is to join the ranks of self-defined rebels. God calls this arrangement Sin. When this independence is imbibed, the consequential malignancy is earned. God cannot stop the justice of death, because He is God.

The story does not end though. Leveraged from infinite compassion, the impossible mission was conceived. God's incredible love takes on the fury of judgment upon Himself. His Son suits up in human form and battles death towards submission.

I almost had a son.

Luke was conceived with delight. I somehow knew what he'd be like. He will play good basketball and learn Economics. My third child would have been the recipient of learned parenting. I would have spared him from all my previous flub. While imagining a most ideal fatherhood, a drop of blood burst my dream. He died in his mother's womb.

I do not have any categories to grasp the abysmal conundrum and thus I turn to the unrelenting tenacity of Christ's claim. He alone claimed the true stare-down toward this nemesis: Oh Death, where is now your sting? In my oceanic distress, I hold to the anchor of the One who did something to resect my son's corpse.

God's story pulls me to believe where my unborn son now lives. In the meantime, I am granted the grace of hope that there is truly nothing that can ever separate me from his victorious grip. The story of gloom is displaced by his hopeful bloom. I am enabled to move on despite the temporal loss.

Last month, the young cavalier who is pursuing my youngest daughter came in to visit. He quickly disarmed me with his stellar charm. He played guard for Colgate University's Men's Basketball Team (NCAA Div. 1). Surprisingly, he too majored in Economics and currently works for a European Financial Group. I was not able to resist the shot to engage him in a game or two.

It was more of a wild circus. He was fiercely unforgiving in registering his depth and dominance. I was more watching than playing. More than once, he skywalks and flies over for a thunder.

While all this blur was taking place, it just occurred to me: his name is Luke. He plays basketball. He knows Economics. Truly, my Creator's wise humor blows me away.

After all, He is God.

Small wonder, I catch myself with a momentary beam when I think of my son's demise and that of my own future hop. Death is forever rendered benign by my everlasting Father: the true conditor of humans, basketball, economics and yes, of the insuperable gift of eternal life.


Despicable without Christ

My youngest daughter lives up to her name pure joy. If I am curious about her state of happiness, all I have to do is observe her wiggly feet. Gladness is somehow wired to the crescendo of her foot tremors.

When God sprinkled seeds of glee, she must have caught a ton. Sometimes one gets introduced to a remarkable person and their presence changes your mood with unexplained brisk. I just seek to be a better person when she is around.

I guess it's all about the essence of purity. When we behold what is pristine, our shadows somehow flee. That is probably why I miss her a lot. Who does not crave incandescence?

Her vocation is design. She is currently finishing school at FIT NYC, while working as artisan for a major fashion group. Etched conspicuously in both forearms is a lovely tattoo that betrays the vertical extent of her cover: I am Yours. You are Mine. (Isaiah 54:5)

Her love for Christ defines who she is.

Just this Christmas, she was in her usual cavernous chat with her Mom. The conversation took on a deep reflective trek. They both went rehearsing their stories of life and prequel. With casual poise, she told my wife: "Mom, you always see me as your perfect child. You need to know that I am not." Perceptively, she got this response: "Honey, you will forever remain a perfect child in our eyes. There is absolutely nothing that you do, will do, or have done that will ever change that."

The words of the prophet reflect the personal sting: "we are all unclean ... all we do are like filthy rags." But the news that shatter this stigma hauls all our every smut towards the unfathomable incinerator of Christ's available forgiveness. No wonder, as we receive this grace, we are enabled to experience unabridged joy.

This is so true in Kara's life. No wonder, I am always deeply honored each time she is joyfully around.


A Perfect Spiral

My eldest daughter was born with an ingrained passion for dress. The allure of enchantment that accompanies a laced goune has always enthused her joy. She would sleep in her flower-girl gown with glee. 

As time went by, her stirring for clothing held its ground. One day, she asked permission to leave Texas to study fashion in New York. With reasoned trepidation, I asked why. Her response was terse: "Dad, I will be the next Coco Chanel. but I will be different, ... God will shine through my work."

She finished summa cum laude when she graduated with a degree in Fashion Merchandising. She now manages the portal of an authenticated luxury consignment company in Manhattan. When she was an intern for Ermenegildo Zegna, she was asked why she starts her day by reading the Bible. When she was humored for her claim that it was her daily date with Jesus, she all the more disclosed that she likewise meets with Christ during daily lunch and dinner dates. She turns to the Master Cloth-Maker for current mentorship, with no apologies.

Nika's future follows the promise of a perfectly thrown anchor. In a world struggling to make its mark through bows and arrows, she has discovered the true way to prosperity: by standing firm on God's divine blog.

Just this past Christmas, she gave me a most unusual gift. It was an old Macbook with a worn-out case. I was kept intrigued until she flipped it open revealing the gift of a personal website: www.russelldiwa.com. She knew my love for diaries and blogs. I once told her that I started blogging when dinosaurs roamed the earth. I did not realize that my old blog somehow gained some following (28,000). Her acumen for metrics kicked in. She thought of my blog site and of its potential leverage to further advance the lumens of Christ. 

That is why this writing space seems rather trendy. The heart of a fashionable saint just threw in a perfect spiral.

Thank you Nika for quarter-backing my little thoughts about our Majestic God.