
Thought for the Week: Choose to Believe in Free Will

Thought for the Week: Choose to Believe in Free Will

What Is Faith?
Once, all of the villagers decided to pray for rain. On the day of prayer all the people gathered, but only one little boy came with an umbrella. That is faith.*
One of the least understood teachings of the Bible is the relationship of faith versus works (good deeds). Yes, faith is trusting God for his free gift of salvation (we truly can’t save ourselves). But faith without deeds is simply not real faith. Or at best it’s an infantile faith. Which is fine at first. But we’re not meant to stay infants. God is in the business of making disciples, not toddlers. We’re called to become mature followers who walk by faith, and in the process, show a desperate world how it’s done. So, want to live a life of faith?
After watching a family working in their garden, this tiny fox “adopted” them (boredpanda.com)Click on any image to enlarge it, to read caption, or to begin slide show.
Image by Johannes PlenioThere are only two kinds of people in this world:
those who know they’re broken
and those who believe they aren’t.
It’s the latter who keep this world from healing.
I know because I was once among the latter.
I loved Momandad and my “daymom” Frieda and all of her animals. But it was the spring of my fifth year, and I was starting to feel the need for something, or rather someone, different. I didn’t know it yet, but I was about to make my first real human friend.
Apart from a few orange trees and a trash incinerator, our back yard was barren. Our trees were toddlers, too young to climb, and I’d already checked the incinerator for buried treasure. Now what?
It was the sleekest thing I’d ever seen. If other animals were sedans, it was a sports car! “Hi!” I shouted. It instantly took off like the furry roadster it was. An offer to play? Maybe. I chased after it. Past the side of our house and across the street, into an overgrown lot. Through the weeds it raced, and then into a tunnel of wooden arches thickly choked with dead vines.
The weasel was gone by the time I climbed out the end. But instead, I found something better: a human who needed a friend as much as I did. “Tea?” she said in a tiny voice.
That was what the humans on our side of the street called her. Dressed in a raggedy frock, and as skinny as that weasel, she led me to her cottage. No, there was no furnace for cooking wayward children. She didn’t want to eat me. Alice simply wanted to serve me watery tea, and show me the big bronze soldier statue that dominated her little living room. She spoke very little and mumbled when she did, so it remained a mystery. There was almost no furniture other than the statue.
Then we went outside, and Alice showed me her rabbits. “Easter Bunnies!” I thought. They lived in hutches and loved attention, so I began visiting Alice and her bunnies almost every day. Only gradually did I realize: I was Alice’s only friend.
I always brought carrots for the rabbits, and one day I caught Alice taking their carrots! I told her it was wrong to steal, especially from Easter bunnies. But she continued to do it.
A few weeks later, I was climbing through the overgrown arches, when a tall, scary man suddenly lifted me up by my shirt collar. He shouted, using all kinds of bad words, and told me he’d kill me if he ever caught me there again!
That night, I dreamed I was climbing through the vine-choked arches. Only now the vines were electrical wires, and the scary man was at the end of the tunnel, laughing gleefully. Then I accidentally touched a wire, and instantly fell to the ground…and died! The people I loved circled over me, weeping, their tears striking my face as I released my final breath.
The next day, I told my parents about Alice and the Easter bunnies, and about the man who’d used bad words and threatened to kill me. They were stunned, and went straight over to Crazy Old Alice’s cottage.
Alice, the widow of a decorated war hero (the soldier statue), was only in her late 40s, but she’d had a stroke. She lived on a hero’s pension, but it was regularly cashed and pocketed by her son, the tall scary man. As her legal guardian, he provided her with tea, a few meager canned goods, and an occasional cheap smock. She was starving and alone.
But no more. The neighbors had Alice’s son arrested, cleaned up her house, and showered her with food and clothing.
I was no longer her only human friend.
Photo by Aaron Burden*Note: Jesus used the Greek word for “actor”
Photo taken just as a bubble was beginning to burst – boredpanda.comClick on any image to enlarge it, to read a caption, or begin slide show.
“Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.” ~Albert Einstein
“In nature, nothing is perfect and everything is perfect. Trees can be contorted, bent in weird ways, and they’re still beautiful.” ~Alice Walker
“On earth there is no heaven, but there are pieces of it.” ~Jules Renard
“It is not light that we need, but fire; it is not the gentle shower, but thunder. We need the storm, the whirlwind, and the earthquake.” ~Frederick Douglass
“Sunset is still my favorite color, and rainbow is second.” ~Mattie Stepanek
“For in the true nature of things, if we rightly consider, every green tree is far more glorious than if it were made of gold and silver.” ~Martin Luther King Jr.
“A leaf of grass is no less than the journey-work of the stars.” ~Walt Whitman
“The best thing one can do when it’s raining is to let it rain.”
~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Underpinning the encouragement in a previous Tips for Writers, is the fact that a leap of faith is involved in believing you’ll have any idea what to write once you begin. This isn’t about choosing a topic—there are lots of writing prompts available for that. But once you have a topic, what are you going to say about it? Sometimes your leap will be a mere hop over a crack. Other times it’ll be a daredevil Evil Knevel dive across the Grand Canyon. I call it a leap of faith because it means trust.
But trust in whom?
Youm.
…that desire comes from somewhere. And that same somewhere holds the key to what to write. Sometimes you’ll have notes and ideas up the ying-yang (oh, your poor aching ying-yang). Other days you’ll have nada, zilch, squatarooney.
I’m pretty sure I just made that last word up. But wait–that’s my point! I made it up on-the-spot. As in, I had no idea I would come up with it until I came up with it. As in, when I started writing the sentence I suddenly decided to be silly (a congenital affliction of mine) and write multiple synonyms: nada, zilch, squat. And then it occurred to me to make it even sillier by adding “-arooney.”
Yeah, I know, it’s not really all that clever. But it does illustrate my point: I didn’t come up with it until I showed up.
The worst that can happen is you’ll plunge to your metaphorical death, and plunging to your metaphorical death isn’t really all that bad. Trust me, I’ve done it many times. In fact, when I do, I always seem to come up with a way to survive. But only once I’m there.
So just show up!
I loved them, but there was something of a communication barrier. The trees were great listeners, and happy to cradle me in their arms all day, but they said very little. And the farm fowl were frequently in a fowl mood (sorry, it was just there for the picking). I was fascinated with insects, but they were indifferent. Mice were fraidy cats, or rather afraid of the many cats that called Frieda’s Magical Garden home. I didn’t realize it yet, but I was looking for my first real friend.
I was almost five and needed someone to play with. For a while, I hung out with a horny toad, but after a month or two he disappeared. I suppose he’d met some cute horny toadess and moved away to start a family (they grow up so fast).
…raised and sold parakeets. They lived in a big walk-in cage off the back porch. I’d let myself in and stick out my arms, hoping they’d land on me and nibble affectionately at my ears. But they mostly just wanted out.
So I set them free!
I watched with delight as half of Frieda’s 200 or so budgies flew out the door and into the orange grove behind the house. It felt good. I was the Great Liberator of Keetkind!
Frieda didn’t agree.
That was the only time I recall ever hearing her yell. Over the next few days, she and her husband Alfred plucked most of the compliant critters out of the trees and returned them to their home, where Good Ol’ Frieda cared for them and gave them three square trays of seeds a day.
Two feral ranch cats wandering about in the unplanted field next door. They were fresh out of kittendom like me, but didn’t immediately see me as a kindred soul.
So I captured them and trapped them under a milk basket on Frieda’s front porch, putting a brick on top for good measure. When Mom came to pick me up I insisted they’d “followed me home.” So that night, she and Dad agreed to let me keep my furry new black and grey friends. I gave them the wildly inventive names of “Blackie” and “Greyie.”
Blackie and Greyie liked to eat. That was pretty much it. A month later, they ran away. What can you say? The gypsy life was in their blood.
So, once again I had no friends, or at least not the interactive type. Then, a few months later, I spotted a weasel in our back yard. No, it wasn’t my first real friend, but…
It led me to her.
To read My Real Memoir from the start, click here. To read the next episode, click here.