09.26.2025 – What Language Shall I Borrow?

Becky and I were at the county fair last weekend. A warm Saturday afternoon with our daughter and her family – what could be better? Midwest Americana. Our granddaughters tested some of the carnival rides and all of us rode the Ferris wheel to high above the midway.  There was even a trained sea lion show – what else would you expect in Saint Joseph County, Michigan? And, of course, the 4H kids with their displays of rabbits, pigs, sheep, goats, and cows.

We dined on corndogs and Polish sausages with sauerkraut, but declined the deep-fried delicacies – elephant ears, funnel cakes, cookie dough, cheesecake, Oreos, and Twinkies.

In a week we head off on a long-anticipated trip to Brazil where, among other things, we will spend time with good friends we have known for many years. We can hardly wait. We test as intermediate Portuguese speakers and will be able not only to make our way through airports, but enjoy good, even deep, conversation with our friends. We will talk about life and faith and tell stories as we catch up with one another.

I am not sure we will be able to talk about the deep-fried Twinkies at the county fair. Google Translate says we could say “Twinkies fritos.” But how might we explain this American phenomenon? Continue reading

09.19.2025 – Of the Stating of Opinions There is No End

Earlier this week I went to our local pharmacy for a tetanus vaccine booster. All went well, and I am good for another ten years. Bring on the rusty nails.

By the time I arrived home fifteen minutes later, an email from the pharmacy asking for some feedback on my experience was in my inbox. How likely am I, they wanted to know, to recommend the pharmacy to a friend or family member? Probably very unlikely. Not that there were any problems. It’s just that, first, I can’t recall a time when I have recommended a pharmacy to a friend or family member, and I can’t imagine such a time coming any time soon. Second, I don’t think my opinion matters much.

Of course, we all know the ratings game. It’s big business. Freelancers make good money writing 5-star (or 1-star!) Amazon reviews for products they’ll never use. This past week we’ve seen businesses and professional practices on the wrong side of the partisan divide inundated with negative Google ratings. Christians were called to leave their church based on whether or not the pastor gave sufficient sermon time (or too much sermon time) to the events of the week.

Everyone has an opinion, and CVS wants mine. Everyone has an opinion and thinks they need to post it, podcast it, TikTok it, scream it to passing traffic, or hit those with an opposite opinion over the head with it. Continue reading

09.12.2025 – Being a Pastor Isn’t All That Bad

St Sebastian, Pietro Perugino (1446/1452 – 1523), Borghese, Rome

In preparation for some presbytery work, I recently came across a form used in the process of receiving new pastors into our denomination. The form is to be signed by a physician who must examine the candidate and then certify that they “will be able to sustain the physical and emotional demands of full-time professional ministry.” As it should be, we don’t see blood pressure or cholesterol numbers, just the certification that the candidate is good to go. But to help the physician in making the determination of fitness for ministry, the form provides eight points to consider:

  1. The average pastor works 50-plus hours per week.
  2. He/she normally works at least part of every day each week, at least one full day every weekend, and usually at least two evenings per week.
  3. The average pastor trains and manages the responsibilities of numerous volunteers and, in most cases, at least some paid staff.
  4. A ministry professional’s capacity to fulfill his/her ministry responsibilities is dependent in part upon his/her physical condition, and his/her body’s ability to handle stress and long hours of ministry.
  5. It is common for a ministry professional to place a higher priority on the health of others, rather than on his/her own health.
  6. The average pastor deals with constant gossip, regular conflict, higher unrealistic expectations than almost any other profession, and is often underpaid for his/her education and experience.
  7. Every person who attends a church — whether they contribute financially or not — considers himself an expert on the pastor’s “performance” and usually expresses that opinion to others … but not to the pastor.
  8. The emotional stress of being responsible for the satisfaction and well-being of anywhere from one hundred to several thousand people is much like your medical profession, except a pastor has to socialize with all of them after work.

Continue reading

09.05.2025 – The Real Reason You Should Read This

I suppose it has been a decade or more since “The Real Reason. . .” became so commonly used by headline writers. You see it used in what could be regarded as the most respectable media and by the bottom feeder rags. We might call it the Buzzfeedization of journalism. A quick search of Google News produced these examples (you can do your own investigation):

  • The Real Reason Chick-fil-A’s Chicken Is Better Than All Others
  • The Real Reason American Socialists Don’t Win
  • The real reason Trump is deploying the National Guard across America
  • Karl Urban Explains the Real Reason Behind Mortal Kombat II Delay
  • The Real Reason Men Should Read Fiction
  • The real reason Meghan Markle and Prince Harry quit royal life

Taking a cue from an opinion writer who argues “Political Gnosticism Is a Modern Sickness,” we might simply say “Gnosticism is a modern sickness.”  The “Real Reason” headlines are just one symptom of our sickness. Continue reading

08.29.2025 – Happy Anniversary to Me


I am writing this on Tuesday, August 25, 2025, an appropriate day to reflect on 25 years of posts to an internet platform. Yes, exactly 25 years ago I sent the first of what would become the weekly E-pistle to the  members of Park Presbyterian Church in Beaver PA. We were just a little over two years into our time in Beaver. Not all the members received email (do you remember something called WebTV?) and those who did had to use some awful dial-up modem to get online but it was a start. Those were the days.

Blogging was to 2000 as podcasting is to 2025. Back then every pastor thought he needed to be a blogger. Today they want to be podcasters. The worldwide web is littered with the dry skeletons and decaying corpses of what were intended to be pastors’ blogs – and podcasts.

I wonder if my greatest success as a blogger has been in my persistence. I have posted week in and week out for 25 years. I took the E-Pistle with me when we moved to Langhorne on the other side of Pennsylvania, and for twelve and a half years it was the LPC E-pistle.  And now for five years of retirement in Indiana, “Observations.” Over a thousand, maybe 1,500, posts. Or maybe my greatest success is in the grace of readers, who for 25 years, week by week, have read what I post. Perseverance of the saints, they call it.

Happy anniversary to me. Continue reading