Dear Children and Grandchildren,

I have enjoyed the Word of God more than I ever have since I am no longer preaching 3 or 4 times a week and am not pressed for time. Some times I find things I'd like to share with all of you, or some of you individually. With your mother's encouragement I'd like to start a "Bible Blog" and share some of my thoughts with you. Last night I told Joanna that I opened a can of "Pork and Beans" for supper, (your mother is in Arizona helping Becky while Adam recuperates from a serious operation) but I found no pork so I renamed it "Beans and Beans". With a hearty laugh she wondered if I had "looked under every bean?' I trust what I send you will have some "pork" but if you find it to be only "beans" just push the delete button.

Ps.119:168 "I have kept Thy precepts and Thy testimonies: for all my ways are before Thee," As you were growing up one of the things I was careful to emphasize in our daily devotions was that the time would come when you would no longer be under the eye of Mom and Dad but you would never be out of sight of God's eye. What an encouragement we find here to keep God's Word. "all my ways are before Thee,"

"Experience makes many a paradox plain, and this is one. Before God we may be clear of open fault and yet at the same time mourn over a thousand heart-wanderings which need his restoring hand."--C.H. Spurgeon

"I may hide Thee from my eye, but not myself from Thine eye."--Wm. Gurnall

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Was It Worth It?


Dear Children,
Last week I received a beautiful book in the mail: KOREA REBORN-A GRATEFUL NATION HONORS WAR VETERANS FOR 60 YEARS OF GROWTH.
The Korean War Veterans Association stated:
 “This book is as a gift from the people of Korea to Korean War Veterans and their families in commemoration of their service and sacrifice. The Korean War was one of the bloodiest wars in American history. The total American casualties were 36,516 killed, 103,516 wounded and 8,177 missing in action. Over 5 million Americans would serve in the war that lasted 37 months.”
This made me think of North Korea and the price paid to free the people of South Korea from that bloody dictatorship so I sat down and wrote the following:
WAS IT WORTH IT?
It was called “The Korean Conflict” and “The Forgotten War,” but it was really the "Forgotten Victory." The mothers and fathers, wives and children, and relatives and friends of the more than 36,000 young men who died fighting to free a nation from a Godless Communistic regime did not call it a “conflict” nor had they “forgotten.” When the flag draped boxes holding the remains of their loved ones who had laid down their lives to free a nation most of them had never heard of, they wondered if the price paid was worth it? They wept with broken hearts as coffins were lowered into freshly-dug graves. Some lifted their tear-filled eyes to the heavens when they heard the chaplain or minister quote, “I am the resurrection and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live and whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die.”
Others, when they heard those words wondered what they meant? We don’t know what took place in the hearts of those young men when they faced death at the hands of a cruel enemy, but we do know a merciful Savior could hear their cry just as he heard the cry of a thief hanging on a cross beside him and answered, “Today thou shalt be with me in paradise.”
Was the war worth the loss of the lives of more than 36,000 young men? Who am I to say? I do know that 50 million South Koreans are free today to worship as they please in the midst of a free and prosperous nation, while just a few miles to the north 25 million people in North Korea are living in poverty and starvation enslaved by an unbelievably cruel dictator. A place where people watch in horror while new mothers are forced to drown their own babies. A place where any who would dare to proclaim the name of Christ as their Savior are subjected to unbelievable torture and death.
WAS IT WORTH IT?
DAD