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  • Faith: Time spent with my brothers special gift

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Oct 25, 2023

    I spent most of last week in Robert Lee, Texas, with my three brothers at our maternal grandparents’ old home place. It was a good week. Those weeks always are. Granddaddy Key built that little house in 1928, so it’s approaching a 100th anniversary. I hereby propose to the guys (two are not all that far off from their own centennial) that we plan ahead and extend one of that year’s stays to a month or, at least, two weeks. Anything less would be disrespectful. For around 40 ye...

  • Faith: Old photo contains a lot to consider

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Oct 17, 2023

    I’m looking at a picture of an old house. A very old picture. A very old house. It’s the house my mother, Wilma Jean Key, was born in on Aug. 15, 1915. I assume the picture of the house was probably taken a year or two later because another picture, just beside it in the album, is of my Grandmother Key holding my mother in her arms, and Mom is (maybe) a little less than 2 years old. The photo album was created by Grandmother; my oldest brother just found it, scanned the pag...

  • Faith: Love and trust Jesus and he will be more than enough

    Curtis Shelburne, Local columnist|Updated Oct 10, 2023

    We’d not often put it this way, but I’m afraid that most of us live way too much of our lives afraid. When you boil down what bothers us—reduce it to its essence—at the bottom is almost aways fear. Analyze it even further, and at the root of most of our fear is this: we’re afraid we won’t have enough. And then what will become of us? In John 6, Jesus and his disciples have just sailed across the Sea of Galilee and landed, probably, near Bethsaida. What they’re looking for i...

  • Sharing a few thoughts about martyrs, martyrdom

    Curtis Shelburne|Updated Oct 4, 2023

    According to Merriam-Webster.com, “martyr” most commonly refers to “a person who voluntarily suffers death as the penalty of witnessing to and refusing to renounce a religion.” I recently read an article that asserts as many as 160,000 Christians each year give up their lives because of their allegiance to Christ. Dan Wooding, journalist and co-host of the “Window on the World” radio show went on to write that “according to current rates, one in every 200 Christians ca...

  • Good to take a golden Saturday for rest

    Curtis Shelburne|Updated Sep 27, 2023

    If you’re perusing my column today for some sort of deep spiritual lesson, I warn you up front that I’ll be surprised if you find much. Wisdom and I may not, I’m afraid, sit on the same couch as often as we should anyway, but today … For one thing, there’s not much room on the couch. It counts as a somewhat flat surface. If my main goal in life were to fill up flat surfaces with all manner of junk and debris, I could hardly be more successful. Worse than any woman’s p...

  • Faith: Living in hope to be cooler by time you read this

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Sep 19, 2023

    G. K. Chesterton writes: “An inconvenience is an adventure wrongly considered.” I suppose, then, that I must be in the midst of an adventure. I’m writing on a Sunday evening. On Friday afternoon, my wife discovered that the air conditioner was not conditioning. Please note that I am not in the least blaming the messenger for imparting negative news. It is just a fact that she usually notices inconveniences of this sort before I do. If one of our vehicles is making a bit of a...

  • Faith: Don't dread - focus first on God and his kingdom

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Sep 12, 2023

    I’m sitting at a table as I write, breathing mountain air and relishing delicious silence. Until 10 minutes ago, I’d been spending the morning out on the deck of the cabin, bestirring myself only to move my chair to chase cool shade as the sun began its march. Ponderosa pines barely move in the almost non-existent breeze. This is good. A week ago (where did the time go?) we left home with another couple, some of our dearest friends with whom we’ve shared every stage of life. N...

  • Faith: I come to the garden, but not alone

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Sep 5, 2023

    I was sitting on the patio on a recent evening and enjoying some quiet time. It was almost cool, by which I mean it was mercifully less than 100. I’ve got some plants out there that seem to be doing well — considering the oppressive heat and drought. A couple of Mandevilla plants are blooming nicely. A pomegranate plant (believe it or not) is filling in well. Not sure yet what it will need to really bloom, but I need to do some research. I’ve got two or three hibiscus plant...

  • Faith: Caught the political bug from my sister

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Aug 29, 2023

    In my email recently was a survey from the U.S. congressman from the district where I live. One of the main questions had to do with the first Republican presidential debate that was held Aug. 23 in Milwaukee. Of course, a basic question was (I paraphrase): Did you watch the debate, the rival interview offered at the same time, or neither? I watched the debate. I couldn’t not; I’m interested. I’ve said before that the day I look forward to a repeat of the choice we faced...

  • Faith: Every time we read Bible, God opens our eyes to new truths

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Aug 22, 2023

    I’m stuck. Stuck in a reading rut. And I really don’t mind. A good many years ago, I found myself hooked on the A&E Network series “Nero Wolfe.” It was a great series with some fine actors. The casting, I know now, was perfect. But producing it was expensive, cheap “reality” TV was beckoning, and it was canceled after two seasons, making way for more of the mind-numbing fare we now expect. That TV series introduced me to Rex Stout’s “Nero Wolfe” opus. Over the years, I’ve r...

  • Faith: 'Grand' moments a beautiful gift from God

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Aug 15, 2023

    The most important things in this life are the small things. To be blind to those is the worst sort of blindness. If you’d come to our house on a recent Saturday in the midst of a very hot August, you would have noticed something large in the back yard. Rising high above the back fence, easily seen from the street in front, was a “blow up” water slide. The thing was huge, taller than our house. And it was loud. The blower fan was making its presence known, but louder still...

  • Faith: Looking forward to something that is more after this life

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Aug 8, 2023

    I probably shouldn’t wax lyrical about how much I love naps. You might get the idea that I’m not one of those people who take the view, “I can sleep when I’m dead.” And who believe that people who truly love naps will probably never lead Fortune 500 companies. Well, as to the latter, I very much suspect that leading a Fortune 500 company is incredibly overrated. Happiness is worth far too much to me to pay the price for that sort of gig, even if it had ever been a realistic...

  • Faith: Firmly believe altitude is one of God's greatest gifts

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Aug 1, 2023

    I am writing this column a bit early this week — mostly as a defensive measure. As long as I’m writing, I’m under air conditioning. And I’m not mowing the second half of my yard. I mowed the first 5,000 square yards of my yard this morning, but then I had a noon meeting. Since it’s 103 degrees now, I’m willing to wait until later to finish. The legendary David “Davy” Crockett had already served in the U.S. Congress (from Tennessee), but he lost the 1835 election and fa...

  • Faith: You can always find a nugget of truth with a good column

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Jul 25, 2023

    I enjoy reading, and I particularly enjoy reading good columnists. “Good” may mean that I agree with them. I can be narrow that way. But “good” also means that they make me think. I do that rarely enough that I appreciate the help. My favorite columnists are my favorite columnists in large part because they’re good at wielding words to cut through fog and haze and mental mushiness. At least, they help me see what’s going on around us all through the eyes of someone I’v...

  • Faith: To avoid cynicism, disappointment - keep on praying

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Jul 18, 2023

    I’m OK. I’m just tired. I don’t know what you usually say if you’re ever a bit tired and down and, truth be told, as you look around at our world and society, deeply disappointed. But that’s what I say. To others and to myself at those times. I hope most folks don’t think of me as being depressive and depressing. I hope my tombstone has something engraved on it pointing to the real hope I absolutely believe is ours in Christ. But, yes, on some days, I figure that stone will sa...

  • Faith: God's works are beyond condemnation

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Jul 11, 2023

    When I was a much younger preacher, I was occasionally asked to offer an invocation, a prayer, at the opening of my hometown’s City Commission meetings. Once my part was done, I often stayed around for a while just as an interested citizen to see what was going on that might be interesting. On a few rare occasions, I found myself at a meeting where “condemnation hearings” were on the agenda, and they were indeed interesting. The city couldn’t condemn (and order torn down) s...

  • Faith: Nothing in all creation can take away our victory in Christ

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Jul 3, 2023

    When St. Paul stakes with words God’s claim of sovereignty over the circumstances of our lives and proclaims the Almighty’s promise of ever-present and never-failing love, the great apostle does so with his eyes wide open. “What can separate us from the love of Christ?” he asks, and when he lists among the weapons of the enemy, “trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword,” his list is much more than hypothetical. These are the words of a...

  • Faith: Mondays make a good day off - except for that deadline

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Jun 27, 2023

    It’s just a sad fact that for a decade or two, the deadline for this column to be sent to the not-even-close-to-100 newspapers that publish it is, Monday, each week, at noon. A sad corollary to the sad fact above is that I seem to be completely incapable of writing the column early (unless an editor makes a cogent plea for such). When I say that I tend toward procrastination, what I mean is that procrastination tends to permeate every cell in my body. I doubt I will ever k...

  • Faith: God's children much more alike than they are different

    Curtis Shelburne, Local columnist|Updated Jun 20, 2023

    Garages are like dogs. All dogs are descended, canine genetic researchers tell us, from wolves. (A canine genetic researcher is not, I should mention, a dog who does genetic research. “Genetic canine researcher” is nonsensical. “Researchers who study canine genetics.” There ya go.) No, your garage has nothing to do with wolves. Be patient. Chihuahuas are dogs. Weimaraners are dogs. Pomeranians are dogs. My garage is a garage. My friend’s garage, down the street, is a garage....

  • Faith: Fathers asking the Father for his aid would be positive change

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Jun 13, 2023

    Change. What we need is change! That word and sentiment, or a jillion variations of them, work well as political campaign slogans. Toss the rather plastic word out there, and most folks immediately think of some fairly solid and even specific improvements in their circumstances, though slick politicians usually get away with mouthing “change” in vaporous terms. Of course, there’s always an exception. Something really specific. Chickens. I found myself thinking of the old p...

  • Faith: Bowed to pressure of a good zero-turn lawn mower

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated Jun 6, 2023

    I bowed to peer pressure recently. Ironically, the pressure came from the very offspring I’d always sternly counseled to avoid peer pressure. Yes, and I’d also taught them to resist blaming other people for their own actions. None of this, “He made me mad, so I decked him.” Nope. You let the kid punch your buttons and you — yes, son, you! — chose to deck him. You made the choice. Now, own it, and deal with the consequences. Whether or not you’re taking the jerk down a notch...

  • Faith: Beauty in Christ's commandment to love one another

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated May 30, 2023

    If Jesus had done no other miracle (and he did many), I wonder if getting the 12 guys we now call apostles to spend time in the same room and not kill each other might not be a pretty impressive feat. OK, let’s go ahead and take Judas out of the mix. But still ... Maybe it’s not terribly surprising that the fishermen would get along. Two pairs of them were brothers, of course. Generally, that helps. Except when it really, really doesn’t. I think it did. (And, by the way,...

  • Faith: Long list of people put Jesus on the cross

    Curtis Shelburne|Updated May 23, 2023

    Who put Jesus on the cross? That’s a question one of my favorite Bible professors liked to ask when he wanted to make his students’ brains bleed. And it’s a question with a hook in it. So, what do you think? If you answered, the religious authorities who were in power, you’d be right. The most overtly religious folks of Jesus’ day. Folks who fancied themselves the most “spiritual” of all people killed the Son of God. Now, by the way, if you think I’m leaning toward any kind of...

  • Faith: Time to lay a longtime friend to rest

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated May 16, 2023

    Sad and glad. At this moment, I am both. Last week I completed the editing and page creation for the final issue of The Christian Appeal devotion magazine. I’ve served as the managing editor for the little monthly magazine for almost 40 years. A very little math is the only kind of math I ever do, but I’m pretty sure that, when I sent the files to the printer for the June issue, it was Issue #472 for me. That’s quite a run, though it’s less than the 60 years this issue m...

  • Faith: Susannah Wesley great woman of faith and discipline

    Curtis Shelburne, Religion columnist|Updated May 9, 2023

    No doubt, among the most influential Christian leaders who ever lived was the amazing John Wesley who, along with his brother, Charles, founded the Methodist movement within the Church of England. And John Wesley writes simply, “I learned more about Christianity from my mother than from all the theologians in England.” If you read even a little about Susanna Wesley, you’ll get a picture of an incredible lady of faith. The quality of Susanna’s and John’s relationship is portra...

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