All posts tagged blessing

Revolution

RevolutionRecently I had the great good fortune to hear a sermon by the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States, the Most Rev. Michael Curry.  We were in St. Augustine Episcopal Church in Gary, Indiana.  Bishop Curry is a humble man who exudes joy and love.  If you ever have the chance to hear him speak, do it!

Bishop Curry’s sermon was on one of his favorite themes: the Jesus Movement.  He shared with us that Jesus didn’t come to start a church or a religion.  He came to start a revolution.  He said that the revolution is based on two commandments: Love God and Love Your Neighbor as Yourself.  He said that if we did those two things, God could change the world.

I’ve been thinking about that since I heard him speak.  I think that no matter what religion a person is, or even if a person ascribes to no faith tradition at all, this is a message for all humanity.

What would that look like?  What would it look like if each of us committed to loving the person we were with in each moment?  Now, I didn’t say “like” the person we are with or “agree” with the person we are with.  I said “love.”  To love someone is to wish him well; to want good things for her; to recognize God reflected in his eyes.

[To like someone, I would argue, means to want to spend time with that person.  There are plenty of people I love with whom I don’t necessarily want to spend time, nor with whom I agree, but I do wish them well and want good things for them.]

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Making a Difference

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Sometimes when I’m brushing my teeth before bed I think, “Wow, it feels like I just did this.”  It’s true.  As we age, the days feel like they are rolling by faster.  Sometimes I wonder what happened to the day.  Do you ever feel like that?

Then I wonder what I did during the day.  Was I just a slave to my schedule?  Did I do anything that really mattered?  Did I make a difference?  Or was I just taking up space today?

(Now, I realize that I matter to my family and friends, of course, but I’m talking about something bigger.)

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Insurance: Bane or Blessing?

I don’t know whether to bless it or curse it.  I bless it when I need it and it covers a medical/dental procedure.  I curse it when it doesn’t and when I pay my monthly premium.  Now, what am I getting, exactly, for this big chunk of change?  Sometimes I think I would be better off to buy disaster insurance and take my chances.  Because that’s what the insurance game is all about: taking chances.  It’s legalized gambling.  What I’m gambling on, though, is my and my family’s health.

I’m not a gambler; have no interest in Las Vegas, casino boats, and the like.  I work too hard for my money to see gambling as a form of entertainment.  I have no problem with other people gambling.  It’s just not for me.

I suppose, then, it should come as no surprise to me, that I gamble very conservatively with my health.  I assume that at some point in the year I or one of my family members will need the E.R., an ambulance, an unexpected trip to the doctor, etc.  What if it’s more serious, though?  Am I willing to have disaster insurance that will pay everything after $100,000?  Nope.  That’s too much for me to risk.  So I gripe and complain every month as I pay my ridiculous premium.

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Happiness

What keeps us from happiness?  We do!  Each day is a gift to enjoy any way we want to.  Even if we are in prison; even if we are in the intensive care ward; even if we are experiencing loss of a loved one, we have the choice to drink in that gift and savor its goodness.

Have you ever thought about what a gift hot and cold running water in the house is?  (Have you ever been camping?  Camping will make one appreciate running water!)  The problem is our expectations.  We expect to have water at our convenience.  It’s only when it isn’t working properly that we notice it.

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Upcoming Move

I want to tell you why I’m so excited about our upcoming move.  At Advanced Dental we are all about giving our very best to each and every patient – one patient at a time.  For years I’ve been dissatisfied because we have outgrown our current location.  Because of that I feel like we’ve fallen short on delivering our very best to each patient.  Space is limited, resources were unavailable, the waiting room cold in the winter.

In our new location, we will have everything we need in abundance to deliver on our mission: our best to each patient, one at a time.  We will be expanding to 6 dental chairs with monitors in every operatory for patients to see images of their teeth, both from the digital x-rays and from the intraoral camera.  There will be a dedicated sterilization area that, while visible to the patients, will be protected from traffic. We will have a private operatory for patients requiring extra privacy; sedation and implant patients, for example. The inside entrance will allow people to wait for loved ones in a comfortable setting with a coffee bar to treat themselves.

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