Note to Self

June 11, 2026

I must take care to not lose equanimity when I see messages from someone purporting to speak for Jesus that contradict everything I’ve learned from studying the Gospels.

Just today I saw another social media post passing along blatant lies. This has become a regular occurrence. I don’t know what has so riled up the person to repost stuff from unknown sources. I wrote an extensive reply. Then I deleted it. Then I muted the person such that I will no longer see these things.

Even social discussions when someone blathers a rude opinion rarely deserves a reply. Maybe a “not everyone agrees with that.” And let it drop.

When called upon, it is my duty to defend Jesus.

My first job, according to Jesus, is to love those who oppose me—and Jesus.

I’m improving—but still trying.

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Like a Child; To a Child

June 10, 2026

Jesus’ followers asked him about greatest in his kingdom. They were constantly confused between what they had been taught about a coming kingdom on earth where the king of Israel would rule and what Jesus seemed to be teaching about a new kind of kingdom.

At that time the disciples came to Jesus and asked, “Who, then, is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?”

Jesus answered a couple of ways. He first addressed what ancients have called the “beginner’s mind.” In other words, we must clear our minds of preconceived ideas and opinions to accept Jesus’ teachings.

He called a little child to him, and placed the child among them. And he said: “Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. Therefore, whoever takes the lowly position of this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. And whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me.”

He did not stop there. Taking a second look at the relationship of children to us, he said,

“If anyone causes one of these little ones—those who believe in me—to stumble, it would be better for them to have a large millstone hung around their neck and to be drowned in the depths of the sea.”

That means people such as I who write these blogs and others who teach others no matter where and what bear significant responsibility for what we teach. Are we passing along misinformation and ill-formed opinions we’ve picked up from spurious sources? Are we studying and meditating and trying to pass along spiritual truths compatible with Jesus’ teachings?

It’s worth pausing to reflect periodically assuring we’re keeping to the path.

Enter email address on the right and click follow to receive updates via email. I will never spam you. I’m not in that business! Thank you. You can also check out my book list and my 10-part video series on Romans as a Guid to Spiritual Formation.

Will Jesus Know You?

June 9, 2026

“Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons and in your name perform many miracles?’ Then I will tell them plainly, ‘I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!’ “

The constant stream of people I see in the news and people I meet otherwise who proclaim “Christian Values” astound me.  I wonder…does Jesus know them? To my observation (decidedly less valid than that of Jesus), doing the will of God seems to be somewhat lacking.

But then I reverse the lens of the camera kind of like camera mode on my iPhone to selfie mode. I wonder how I look to Jesus. Does he know me?

What about you?

Enter email address on the right and click follow to receive updates via email. I will never spam you. I’m not in that business! Thank you. You can also check out my book list and my 10-part video series on Romans as a Guid to Spiritual Formation.

AI, God, and the Pope

June 8, 2026

Secularist, scientism proponent, rationalist Richard Dawkins wants to end any influence of “religion.” In doing so, he actually tries to start a new religion. This new secular religion most likely began with French philosopher and mathematician René Descartes. The coterie of Silicon Valley Generative AI leaders follow those unfortunate footsteps.

American Christians, hardly a unified voice, have responded without cohesion and with some uncertainty. Pope Leo XIV unhesitatingly issued a 42,000-word encyclical, ”Magnifica Humanitas,” in response to the challenges of artificial intelligence.

Cultural technology critic and professor of computer science Cal Newport wrote, “Last week, Pope Leo XIV released  I’m still digesting the full document, but early summaries indicate that the Pope is not ready to meekly acquiesce to the AI future that we’ve been told is inevitable.”

Leo wrote, “With the heart of a shepherd and a father, I ask everyone to abandon the construction of yet another Tower of Babel and to join forces in building up the common good, so that humanity will never lose its beauty, and the world once again will come to recognize the human heart as the place where God desires to dwell.”

I’ve been involved with automation for more than 40 years. Its value has always been as a tool to remove humans from dangerous jobs, enhance consistent quality, and eventually providing necessary data to feed business systems. They are best when used to build up the common good.

I wrote a longer philosophical piece last week on the subject. I continue to caution us as Jesus followers not to be distracted by the hype. We must continue to focus on what Jesus told us to do—Love—God and one another. Do not become distracted or distraught by momentary whims in media or by “influencers.”

Newport adds his observation, “When AI leaders resignedly shake their heads, and talk about the need for the government to provide guaranteed income once their AI models automate all work, or eagerly describe a future in which we live happily alongside ‘machines of loving grace,’ this is not forward-looking pragmatism; it’s hubris. A new Tower of Babel built out of GPUs.”

Just as I wrote last week about how I’d love to see a huge outbreak of humility amongst us.

Is there some hope in the discourse? Newport concludes his essay this way.

“Thankfully, in recent weeks, there has been a marked shift in how technology executives talk about AI. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang called BS on executives claiming they’re laying people off due to AI, calling the excuse ‘lazy’ and ‘just a way for them to sound smart.’ Perhaps even more surprising, just last week, Sam Altman admitted he had been ‘pretty wrong’ about his previous predictions that AI would automate large numbers of jobs.”

Enter email address on the right and click follow to receive updates via email. I will never spam you. I’m not in that business! Thank you. You can also check out my book list and my 10-part video series on Romans as a Guid to Spiritual Formation.

Disciplines and Practices

June 5, 2026

Jim Collins researches people and companies to discover patterns of success and failure. He likes to discover what makes people and organizations tick. I’m finishing his latest book, ten years in research—What to Make of a Life: Cliffs, Fog, Fire and the Self-Knowledge Imperative

I highly recommend this book to anyone curious about living a life.

He begins with the concept of encodings. He defines these as durable capacities of a person’s intrinsic construction that lie within, awaiting discovery through the experience of life.

He writes about many pairs of people (successful, because there’s enough data in the public domain). His team found three patterns to their lives:

  • Discover and display a set of encodings
  • Flip the arrow of economics to afford to follow the encodings
  • Focus inner fire

Among his pairs of subjects were the first two American women’s figure skating champions. These exemplify the “focus inner fire” part. But also these relate to my continual thoughts on spiritual (and physical and mental) practices. His comment caused me to revaluate the path I’ve been on.

Of all the sources of fire, I’ve concluded that perhaps the biggest is sheer unadulterated love of doing. If you discover something you’re encoded for and you love doing it, then you can’t help but want to do more of it.

  • Love is greater than discipline.
  • Love is greater than ambition.
  • Love is greater than ego.
  • Love is greater than fear.
  • Love is greater than achievement.
  • Love is greater than determination.
  • Love is greater than passion.
  • Love is greater than purpose.

I’ve read Charles Duhigg Power of Habits and James Clear Atomic Habits and Richard J. Foster and Dallas Willard on Spiritual Practices and even Arnold Schwarzenegger on setting up the day to do the first thing that will create momentum. 

Ah, but love. 

I’m not sure I could call it love…that I meditate almost every morning, that I go to the gym (and see familiar people), that I take walks.

But maybe. Maybe I love the feeling after?

What do you love?

Enter email address on the right and click follow to receive updates via email. I will never spam you. I’m not in that business! Thank you. You can also check out my book list and my 10-part video series on Romans as a Guid to Spiritual Formation.

Outbreak of Humility

June 4, 2026

While reading the opening of The Imitation of Christ, I had a sudden vision. Wouldn’t we love to see an outbreak of true humility among followers of Jesus?

Enter email address on the right and click follow to receive updates via email. I will never spam you. I’m not in that business! Thank you. You can also check out my book list and my 10-part video series on Romans as a Guid to Spiritual Formation.

A Way of Life

June 3, 2026

He stood and watched his small house burn to the ground in 19th Century rural Russia. He clutched his only remaining possession—a Bible.

Destitute and homeless, he set out on foot to experience Russia and its people. One teaching from Paul fired his life—pray without ceasing. How could he live that way?

What if we pursued prayer as a way of life?

It is impossible, of course, for a human to maintain 24 hours per day, seven days a week focus on prayer. Perhaps prayer could infuse our being? A chance meeting, a conversation,  a quiet walk—they could all be part of our way of prayer.

The book by an anonymous author, The Way of a Pilgrim, is worth a regular reading. Just as a reminder to keep us on the path.

Enter email address on the right and click follow to receive updates via email. I will never spam you. I’m not in that business! Thank you. You can also check out my book list and my 10-part video series on Romans as a Guid to Spiritual Formation.

Morals Revisited

June 2, 2026

The other day I reported a survey that revealed a new low in the public’s view of morality.

Thinking on that today, I had one of those flashbacks that annoy me. Do you remember late adolescence? The flashback returned me to the 60s. Perhaps you were one of those who thought the “morality police” were just closed-minded old people whose time had passed? Those thoughts occurred to me back then.

My typical adolescence thinking figured it was just a way to limit freedom and curtail our fun. Sort of a club wielded by hypocritical people to unjustly curtail our freedom.

Random thought—We seem to have many adolescents running around these days whose number of birthdays adds to far more than 21.

I love how often paradox reveals truth. Try this one on for size.

Yes, morality does constrain our freedom to do anything our whims would lead; yet, these very constraints actually set us free to become the fully mature people for which we were designed.

Video Course Exploring Roman As Spiritual Development Guide

June 1, 2026

I’m experimenting with YouTube.  I’ve been publishing my Gary on Manufacturing podcast both on the podcast feed and on YouTube for several years.

My 10-part course Exploring Romans as a Spiritual Formation Guide is now a series of videos on a playlist on my new Faith Venture YouTube channel. I published these earlier on the blog beginning here. Check it out and see if it’s something I could continue (until I get it right). It took a lot of figuring out.

I have plans for a couple more. I’m currently researching how Jesus handled conflict. I thought that might be a timely study.

Moral Low?

May 29, 2026

How would you rate the morals of our (your) nation’s leaders? Political (at all levels)? Business? Church? Community?

Let’s be honest for a bit. How are your (my) morals holding up in everyday transactions?

A record-high 56% of Americans say moral values in the U.S. are “poor,” according to a Gallup poll out this morning.

That’s up 12 points from last year.

80% say moral values are “getting worse” — 14 points higher than ’25.

Organizational psychologist and podcaster Adam Grant has lately talked of observing much of the Dark Triad—narcissism, Machiavellianism, psychopathy. The first focus only on themselves; the second manipulate others for their own advancement; the last have no empathy or feelings for others. Some psychologists I’ve heard consider these on a continuum where we all may exhibit a bit of each at times, but that some people slide all the way from an annoying amount to actual diagnosable disorders.

Grant lamented if only we could get leaders at all levels who were working for the good of everyone instead of exhibiting some or all of these traits.

When you are choosing leaders for your organization or even for voting, do you recognize these dysfunctional traits?

Perhaps an even more important reflection is to turn the mirror on ourselves. Where do we stand? Do we need to seek help? Maybe we need therapy? Mostly we need the usual spiritual formation route of recognizing where we fall short and seeking help. Then working on it day-by-day.

Gallup didn’t ask me. I’m not impressed with the moral fiber of most people I read about in the news or see on social media. On the other hand, most of the people I come into contact with through business or social or just casually are OK. I’ve dealt with people in the Dark Triad in my life. That’s not fun. I’m glad most people are not that way.