Archive for November, 2006

The Unwilling Warrior November 25th, 2006

Phil Martin

I thank the hardcore bloggers of Star Wars.com, for their heartfelt encouragement. They don’t know me and I don’t know them, but they write and it soothes my heart. For my readers, I echo a sentiment from the mission field but with a twist: I’m a Star Wars fan, you wouldn’t understand.

This post is inspired by my SWblog friends, and a product of my melancholy state, but the truth is still there

 

The Jedi stood, abandoned in a universe of dark, alone and afraid. All that he had fought and bled and cried for had been cruelly snatched away and destroyed. His way of life was outlawed. Devastation was visted upon his family, and only one other had survived. The other, the most ancient, frail, and powerful was walking into the heart of darkness to do battle. Alone. Always now they would be alone, the Jedi felt it in the currents of the Force. His light was dim, and flickering, and fueled only by his discipline and quiet grace. The Jedi was a man beaten, crushed down, and uncertain. He was a shell of the man he had been; all that he was, stripped away, all that he hoped to be, vanished away. Some wounds cut too deeply to ever heal, some scars define who you will be, some betrayals never are forgotten. Espcially when they come from a friend, particularly when they are dealt by a brother.

The Jedi sees his brother, listens to his words. Or rather, the animal that was his brother. It is only a twisted fate and horrible irony that this destroyer wears the face and form of the brother. It would be easier were this creature of hate and rage behind a mask, obsucured. A simple thing it would be if the voice was different, if the eyes could not be looked into. How convienent his task if with every guesture, word, and movement the monster did not resemble the brother. The Jedi watches as his former brother destroyes the very reason for which the betrayal was done, and he is sick. He cannot watch it happen.

“Let her go!”

The command is difficult to voice. Once the sonic waves emanate, they are ignored. The Jedi tries to reason with the creature, and only succeeds because he distracts it. The evil one stalks and spouts forth things the Jedi never thought he could hear that voice say. The pain roars in the darkness, and the Jedi cannot silence that shout. Not with his training, not with what he knows to be true: none of that is a help to him. There is only the Jedi and the pain.

The Jedi makes the decision to ignore the pain, to disregard the hurt, and to lay aside his love. He is still a Jedi, and a thing remains that needs doing. He hates the universe for forcing this upon him, he hates the Force for keeping him alive to face this destiny, and he hates the Dark Side for being the mirror of the dark, though in this shrouded, hateful moment, the Dark Side is much with him.

“I will do what I must.”

Those words spoken by him echo the unwillingness of this warrior to fight. But mere fractions of a moment later, that fight is forced upon him, and he is the embodiement of defense. He is unwilling to be more, and cannot be less. They are more than brothers, the Sith and the Jedi, they are twins, halves of the whole, mirror images. The Sith is feral, raging, and powerful; the Jedi is calm, peaceful, and powerful. In this fight now the Force flows into him, and its presence brings a centre to the storm that brews. The Jedi is able to accept his destiny, and release his hate, his doubt, his disbelief. He releases attachment and his will, and follows the will of the Force.

The fight never seems to end. One blow and parry, one block and thrust, one leap and chase after another. From landing platform, though a hall of dead, to a gantry, to lava flow, and repulsor platform. Impacts of lightsabers clash like shards of hate, the Force is formed as weapons. The Jedi no longer feels the Dark Side within himself, only without. He no longer feels hate, only pity and sorrow. The pain is still there, and always will be. He disengages, and prays that this will be the end.

“Don’t try it!”

He pleads with love, and foreknowledge. The Sith is deluded, and does not listen. He leaps, trying to gain a higher position, but is blinded in his self-importance. The leap is not enough, and the Jedi is horrified to see his lightsaber sweep through both legs and an arm of the Sith. The Sith tumbles down towards the lava flow, and becomes again the brother, if only for a minute.

“You were my brother, Anakin! I loved you!”

The Jedi’s heart is breaking, torn to shreds and ribbons by the pain. The brother becomes again a Sith. The force whispers of what must be done, but the Jedi is unwilling. For the first time in his life, he rebels, he disobeys, and walks away. He will not kill his brother.

The Jedi stood, abandoned in a universe of dark, alone and unafraid. He has faced again the Sith that was his brother, so long ago. The son of the father watches this drama he cannot comprehend. He sees emotions that he does not understand, and hears words without meaning. He cannot, for he does not know his past. The Jedi could not tell him, the pain is still to near, even this twenty years later. And the Jedi was wrong. It is no easier to obey the whisper of the Force. His foe is masked, and the voice is different. He moves and guestures differently, but still the Jedi sees his brother, half a man and burning. He always will, just as there will always be pain. The Jedi has grown, and the Force has matured him. He still has the strength of discipline and quiet grace, but though the opportunity is there, he disobeys a second time. The Jedi raises his lightsaber in salute, and is cut down by his brother’s blood-tinged blade. The Jedi is no more.

The Jedi, the Unwilling Warrior, Obi-Wan Kenobi, is dead.

But that is not the end. The Jedi becomes the Force, and time is meaningless. In the next thought he sees his companion, the once ancient Yoda now ageless, and there appears his brother. The pain he has lived with forever fades and disappears. Anakin has done the impossible and turned from the dark path and joined his soul to the light. Redemption is bought in the salvation of the son. These three, the Jedi, and the Force, appear and look to the son. He is the future now, and they smile upon him.

Light returns to the galaxy of night and the night flees away.

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The Skies Cry For Me November 25th, 2006

Phil Martin

Happy Thanksgiving.

I am at the Pfaff’s for Thanksgiving, and am grateful that they let me invade their family time as a stranger. It was a good time, and I liked their family tradition of singing Christmas carols as a family at the end of the day.

It rained alot of the day, but it was ok, because we were indoors alot.

I don’t have real steady access to a computer, so I feel a little disconnected. You can still email me though. Not much else going on, so I will sign off for now.

 

Peace from God be to you.

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Deep Hurt November 21st, 2006

Phil Martin

“The king was deeply moved and went up to the chamber over the gate and wept. And thus he said as he walked, “O my brother Absalom, my brother, my brother Absalom! Would I had died instead of you, O Absalom, my brother, my brother!”

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Thoughts on Communion November 20th, 2006

Phil Martin

So we had Communion tonight at the campus “church”.

I believe the ceremony is coming to as close to meaningless as you can get.
I just don’t get it. Every single time they read the same passage of Scripture from 1 Corinth, and they act like its a funeral. And like, its so solemn I want to scream. But its almost laughable now.

They have solemn serious singing bleeding slow. And then a serious message about something, then, “Turn to 1st Corinthians…’On the night the Lord was betrayed..’”

And they read it, you get real quiet and examine your heart for sin so you don’t partake “unworthily” (if you can’t think of something, you feel guilty, so you tend to make something up, or confess generally). Then you eat your piece of cracker or bread (or in my church it was something unidentifiable that looked like styrofoam). And then the same with the “cup”.

We don’t believe in sacrements, but we make this one darn close. A holy solemn rite.

I personally believe it was done at a meal (Passover), and is a sign to “As often as you do this, remember me.” IE, every time we eat, remember our Savior. The reference to “unworthily” I thought pointed to the druken orgies the messed up church in Corinth made Communion. Sure, we don’t want to have sin in our lives, but we should deal with that constantly, not a “confession” time before we quietly munch a bit of cracker.

I personally want to rejoice and be happy about what Jesus did, and remember that over a feast, which is always an awesome time of fellowship. Sharing the blessing of God in food form is a great thing, and one time where people come together, and holidays is when we have feasts, so I think Jesus was thinking ahead when He instituted the Remembering at a feast on a holiday.

So yeah, I don’t like the dead “Lord’s Supper.” What a joke. And I think unBiblical.

If you feel I am unBiblical, feel free to comment or email me. I am willing to alter my thinking if you can show me from the Scripture. So there.

But the serice was still good tonight, right up to the part when the LS started. I can appreciate the sentiment, but really.

Ah. I will probably get flack from my family for this. Oh well.

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Hungary Missions Reality, Part One November 20th, 2006

Phil Martin

From 13 April 2007 – 23 April 2007 I will be going, via Word Of Life, to Hungary on a short term trip.

The entire second year class is going to five different countries, included Quebec, Philippines, France, and Portugal. With me are about 30 other students. We will be going for the purpose of evangelism, and helping the missionaries with what they do.

To that end, I have sent out some 37 support letters, and will be praying for God to provide the $1500 needed to go.

More posts will follow as this trip gets underway, and more stuff starts happening.

I can’t wait to see what God will do, and how He provides.

-the StormRider

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Time for Leaving November 20th, 2006

Phil Martin

Well, folks, its almost over. That is, my first quarter of second year. It seems like this year just started, but now its over, well, almost.

We had class today, and have class tomorrow, and tomorrow night, and tuesday, and our final exam is on wednesday morning, and then we are FREE!!

Its awesome.

I will be staying with the Pfaff’s, a family I know from PNG, and then I will be flying to Wisconsin to hang out with my brother Joe.

It will be a nice 6 weeks or so of break.

Be praying for my school funds, not sure where they are coming from.
And I still need to work out some more details for my break, travel stuff and whatever.

But, this weekend, from Friday afternoon at 1230 to Saturday at 1500 I did a WOL Superbowl in Phillydelphia. A SuperBowl, for non Word Of Life people, is an all night event where churches bring their youths and unsaved kids from the area to a sporting event (we went to a Phantoms (AAA hockey) game). After the event we have a salvation message, counsel those that come foward, and then we hang out all name at some place and play games. At 6am we make the kids go home, and we clean up, and go home ourselves.

We had over 176 salvation decisions, and I got to lead 3 of those kids to the Lord. It was awesome!

So I have been doing really well, more later!

-Peace-

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Abyssina November 20th, 2006

Phil Martin

A hand
A fist
Broken glass and a bloody wrist
Hollow tears that pour like rain
And bloodshot eyes never stop the pain

A prayer
A cry
A joyful song always once fell shy
Reading the words that are meant to heal
And an aching sense that its not real

Angrily
Hopelessly
I say
My God is near, my God here,
I say,
I say my God is near

Set in stone is my belief
But cut in flesh my doubt and grief
Along with all my fears, conviction
A gnawing fear that hope is fiction

Jesus Christ the same yesterday
Today forever and every day
Jesus Christ mighty to save
Glory, blood, and greatness gave

I need hope
I need light
For the desperate, raw and numbing fight

Angrily
Hopelessly
I say
My God is near, my God here,
I say,
I say my God is near

My God is near (my God is here)
(I say, I say) I can barely say
I say
I say my God is near

-Zachary Smith Ferris

….says it all….

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Explanations November 8th, 2006

Phil Martin

Ok, so you may be lost, having read my last two posts. What is this guy going off about?

Well, I will tell you.

Last Monday I went with my PE group (the RockWalkers) to a series of caves. Usually our leader lets us walk around whatever site we are at (usually a cavern or gorge or something). In the past I had carried my iPod so that I could listen to music as I appreciated God’s creation. So it was this time. But this time we went on a guided tour. So I was not listening to music.

We went through the entire cave, and came back topside and sat down for lunch, when I noticed something. My iPod was missing. It was not at the picnic tables, nor in the visitor centre. I had no idea when or where or how it became detached from my belt, but the simple fact was that it was not with me.

I registered it with the front desk as lost, and went my way.

Momentarily (ok, for the ride home and that evening) I was distraught in mind. Outwardly, I accepted it. I was cool. I have learned too much to sink into despair. I knew that God gives, and He takes away, blessed be His Name. But I couldn’t quite bring myself to believe.

The next day I wrestled, until I finally realized what it was God wanted. Surrender. Absolute, total, unconditional surrender. So I did. God gave me the way to purchase the iPod. If He wanted to reneg, who was I to question Him? And it wouldn’t be reneging anyway. God has absolute rights over my life.

So I went my way free indeed. I considered buying a new iPod, but have no money. I had a little, so I considered an iPod shuffle, just to get by, but felt not that it was to be done, so I did not. God must not want me to have a way of listening to music, I reasoned.

But yesterday, I got a package slip in my mailbox. I hadn’t ordered anything, and was not expecting anything, so what could this be? A voice in the back of my head whispered that it was my iPod, but I knew better. It was gone, lost forever in a dark corner, or picked up by somebody who thought themselves lucky. I would never see it again.

But today, when I went to acquire my package, the return address label left no doubt.

It was from the cave welcome centre, and inside, nestled gently amidst a bed of packing peanuts, was my iPod.

And I suddenly felt very foolish. And very thankful. And somewhat wildly, uncontainably, indefatigueably happy. It was a weird feeling.

But what God took away, a very week later He returned. I have learned my lesson, at least for now. The sad thing about being human is that we often require reminders of who God really is.

And He really is God.

(not because He returned my insignificant iPod, but because He didn’t have to, but did anyway)

“If it be so, our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the furnace of blazing fire, and He will deliver us out of your hand, O King. But, even if He does not let it be known to you, O King, that we are not going to [deny our God].” – Daniel 3:17-18

may I be like these three, Hananiah, Azariah, and Mishael

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God of my Father November 8th, 2006

Phil Martin

The stomach rumblings spoke
In eloquent tones
Elemental needs to be fulfilled
Fresh on the mind the wonders
Of the God of Creation
A cavern of beauty, hid by darkness
Absolute
A trek, a look, an appreciation
Forgotten
In a single moment
That stopped the heart
My hip, empty
My waist, devoid
The valuable there was gone
Lost
Unknown, unfelt, incomprehensible
“Why?” started to thunder
But repressed those thunderings were
What business had I to question?
A momentary rage, a flash of desperation
Nowhere
I searched, but it was not found
A test
Would I trust God? or descend to unfaithful despair?
My heart said, “Scream! There is no justice!”
“You have been wronged, He does not care!”
But I silenced the unbeliever, forced him to silence
Engraved, I remember the words
Certain I would read them no more,
“For the Lord God Helps Me”
Then went my way rejoicing.
Would I accept the good from God
And not the
Evil?
A week and more I went
Unknowing
When a package unlooked for came
I hoped against hope, reasoning
In unbelief
All logic was against me, but
God, it seems, is for me
“Therefore I will not be disgraced!”
StormRider
I rode this Storm, and God showed faithful
Returned what He took
No more no less
But what I have learned, far exceeds
That which I thought I had
And now possess.

Is there anything too difficult for God?

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Storm At Sea November 2nd, 2006

Phil Martin

The deck rolled beneath my feet like I was trying to walk on a barrel. The constant howl of the ice-cold wind and the slap and pummel of the frigid salt water didn’t help either. I ran from port to starbord trying to secure the ropes. It seemed for each one I tied firm, another ripped free, the frayed ends singing as the ripped back and forth.

Lightning crashed, thunder boomed, and I began to hear an ominous cracking sound coming from the mast. I had long since given up trying to control the rudder, it began to spin out of control. I wouldn’t let anyone else near it either.

The ship pitched violently, and I went down, sliding towards deck’s edge, about to plunge into the seething abysmal sea.

Suddenly, a strong arm grabbed me and I stopped sliding. I looked up into my Captain’s face. Pulling on His strength I stood up, still grasping firmly to His forearm.

“The ship is lost, Sir! What are we going to do?”

He gazed at me impassively, saying nothing. I began to get angry.

“Sir, I don’t understand why we are here! The signs of storm were clear! Your orders to sail in this direction must have been mistaken.”

I started to pull my hand away from His, but the bucking ship made me reconsider. My face was inches from His, yet I yelled to be heard.

“Captain, we must turn back. I see no way ahead! Sir, we must!”

A twinkle showed in His grim eyes, and grin pulled at His serious visage.

“Must we?” His words were quiet, but I could somehow hear them. “What’s your name, sailor?”

It was then I ceased to hear the storm, to feel the rocking beneath me, to heed the waves. I felt ashamed.

My Captain had named me StormRider. This is what I did. Why then should I be afraid? Why should I lose my faith in Him?

I heard Him again, He was asking me a question, gesturing towards the wheel of the ship.

“May I? Do you trust me?”

And I let Him, for I would trust Him to lead me anywhere.

allegorical story for recent happenstance

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