The Power of Teamwork

 barn

In 1981, Herman Ostry and his wife, Donna, bought a farm a half mile outside of Bruno, Nebraska, a small community sixty miles west of Omaha. The property had a creek and came with a barn built in the 1920′s. The barn floor was always wet and muddy. When the creek flooded in 1988, the barn ended up with 29 inches of water covering the floor. That was the last straw. Ostry needed to move it to higher ground.

He contacted a building moving company and was discouraged by the bid. One night around the table, Ostry commented that if they had enough people they could pick the barn up and move it to higher ground. Everyone laughed.

A few days latter, Ostry’s son Mike showed his father some calculations. He had counted the individual boards and timbers in the barn and estimated that the barn weighed approximately 16,640 pounds. He also estimated that a steel grid needed to move the barn would add another 3,150 pounds, bringing the total weight to just under 10 tons. He figured it would take around 350 people with each person lifting 56 lbs. to move the barn.

 

The town of Bruno, Nebraska was planning its centennial celebration in late July of 1988. Herman and Mike presented their barn moving idea to the committee. The committee decided to make it part of their celebration.

So, on July 30, 1988, shortly before 11 a.m., a quick test lift was successfully made. Then, as local television cameras and 4,000 people from eleven states watched, 350 people moved the barn 115 feet south and 6 feet higher up a gentle slope and set it on its new foundation.

The reason most people think that something cannot be done is because they know that they can’t do it by themselves. But impossible things can be done if we join together in the task. Working together, we can not only move barns, but change the world.

Are You Kin To Jesus?

 grandmother and child

There was a small boy whose mother took him to Sunday school for the first time. When they got home, his mother asked him, “Who was your teacher?”

“I don’t remember her name,” he answered, “but she must have been Jesus’ grandmother because she didn’t talk about anyone else.”

Sometimes I wonder, if after talking to me, would others think I was related to Jesus? Would they believe I was a child of God? Would they even think that I knew this Jesus fellow first hand or had just read about him?

I believe our conversations reflect our love, or the lack of love, for Jesus. Our words do give us away. People know who you belong to by the way you talk.

Listen to yourself talk sometime. Do you hear the words of a relative of Jesus or just an acquaintance?

New God & Guinness Video Update

Thomas Nelson redid the video. I think much improved. 

Christian Illiteracy

 Express Lane (2)    Some time ago, I was involved in that great American pastime, standing in line at Wal-Mart, when I heard two women’s voices above the rest of the noise. The two ladies were not very complimentary of each other. At first I thought they were friends who were joking with each other. But, when I saw their eyes and heard a few more remarks, I knew immediately that they were not friends.What led to this exchange of remarks was the fact that both of them were in the express line and one of them had more than stated number of items, a lot more. The other lady was calling into question the intelligence and reading ability of the first. The first lady was questioning a lot more of the other. It was an almost welcome diversion to help pass the time. This was especially true since the second lady was saying things I would have loved to say when I have been in the express line behind others who cannot read, but am too polite and too well mannered to voice.
 
However, as I reflected on that experience, I came to the conclusion that the majority of the human race cannot read. I mean we have raised generation after generation of illiterates. How else can you explain people who get in express lines with more than the maximum number of items or people who cannot read directions or countless other signs.
 
But I think the most convincing argument for the fact that people can’t read is the extraordinary number of good church people who seem completely unaware of the many, many claims and promises of the Bible. I mean how else can you explain it? God repeatedly expresses His love for us through the Scripture and we go on from day to day as if He didn’t exist. He promises us abundant life and we are content to play with the toys of this world instead of reaching for the Glory of God’s Kingdom. It baffles me.
 
I’m really not sure what the problem is. I think it is a reading deficiency, but Jesus said it was a matter of the heart. If that’s the case then it will take more than reading lessons, it will take a great physician.
 

 

 

 

 

 
“For this people’s heart has become calloused; they hardly hear with their ears, and they have closed their eyes. Otherwise they might see with their eyes, hear with their ears, understand with their hearts and turn, and I would heal them.”       Matthew 13:15
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

God and Guinness?

An intriquing book. I believe I will have to read this one.

Did You Know?

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Looking For A Bargain

The problem with many Christians is that they too often seek God’s hand instead of His heart.

What Breaks Your Heart?

brokenheart_red   I was reading the book of Nehemiah this week. It is an exciting book. Exciting plot.. Good guys. Bad guys. Drama. All the elements for a good story.

But something struck me this week as I read the first chapter. Nehemiah asked his brother who had just returned from Jerusalem how things were with everyone. His brother replies that the people there were in great trouble. He says that the wall of Jerusalem was broken down and the gates destroyed.

When Nehemiah hears this, he sits down and cries.

Wait a minute, I thought, Jerusalem had been destroyed some 140 to 150 years before. It dawned on me that Nehemiah had probably never lived in Jerusalem. Why would he care about that city? Why would it matter to him?

As I continued to read chapter one, I read Nehemiah’s prayer and the answer hit me.
Nehemiah cared about Jerusalem because God cared about Jerusalem. Jeremiah’s heart was broken by what broke God’s heart.

How do we know this? Read Nehemiah’s prayer. It is not God’s will that His people are scattered. It’s not God’s desire that His people are disobedient. God wants His people to live with Him. God wants His people to delight in worshiping Him.

I think this was the source of Nehemiah’s strength. He was able to look beyond himself and see through the eyes of God.
This will be the source of our strength as well. As long as the only things that break our hearts are what bother us, we’ll live lives of frustration and disappointment. But if we see our world and our churches as God sees them, we, like Nehemiah, can change the world.

What Kind of Scale Do You Use?

fish catchWhen President Cleveland’s second child was born, the doctor asked Cleveland for a scale to determine the baby’s weight. Cleveland searched through the house without success. Finally, he remembered that he had an old scale in the basement which he always used on his fishing trips. He got it and brought it upstairs. Carefully, the doctor placed the infant on the scale and was amazed to learn that the newborn weighed 25 pounds.
We all like to use measurements that are to our advantage. After all, using scales like President Cleveland’s make for a better story.

Too often we like to use other human beings as our scales or rulers. As long as we can find someone who is worse or mixed up more than us, then we are Okay. (Perhaps that is why reality tv shows are so popular. )
But the real danger we face is when we establish our own standards, especially when it applies to our Christian faith. When we decide for ourselves what is acceptable Christian behavior, or what is God’s standard, we put ourselves in a risky position. Basically we are trying to be God and that could be deadly to our faith.
Wouldn’t it just be easier to drag out the real source of measurement. One that never changes and that is always accurate. God’s Word, the Bible is a scale that always reads true. It might not always read what we want to read, but it will always be what we need.

“All Scripture is inspired by God and is useful to teach us what is true and to make us realize what is wrong in our lives. It corrects us when we are wrong and teaches us to do what is right.” – 2 Timothy 3:16 (NLT)

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