If you want to get more information regarding my Aunt Dorcas’ book
Ordinary Days, go here: www.ahqt.com/dorcas.
I guess you could call it Byran-runs-across-critters Day. I was jogging to work early in the morning (4:50ish) and it was still dark, though the moon was providing a little illumination. Then all of the sudden on the path in front of me was this critter. And what’s more, as it shuffled away I think it stuck its tail in the air. So that scared me, a skunk in the dark. I skirted wide and he shuffled along parallel with me on the path for a little while but eventually he must have turned into the brush. I escaped, unharmed.
Then I got to the mill, walked in the door, and a wild cat scrambled up and fell all over itself as it wildly dashed out of the building. Then I saw a mouse out of the corner of my eye as I was cleaning off the magnet. I was too slow to kill it. Then I saw another mouse while I was out on the loader. I didn’t even try to kill this one.
I wonder where the original York, Jersey, and Delhi are.
On Tuesday I talked to a salesman for awhile. I knew where I wanted to steer the conversation, I wanted to come to the question of purpose from an experiential standpoint and then see if I’d have a chance to say what gives me my purpose. Or something like that. We talked for awhile and I asked a couple of leading questions, I thought. He obviously wasn’t a Christian, he was the type that says “do whatever fulfills you, whatever gives you a purpose.” I loved where the conversation was headed, but we were waiting for dad to arrive to talk to the guy and he showed up just as were talking about truth and different religions and moral standards. I hope it got him to thinking.
But I’m not positive that’s the right approach. It felt right, it was certainly a whole lot more comfortable that forcing Jesus Christ into the conversation from the outset. I was reading the first two chapters of 1 Corinthians, and in Paul’s case it evidently would have been the wrong approach, because he mentions speaking with man’s wisdom negatively multiple times and that he came to them speaking Christ and the cross only. It made me wonder if perhaps I should be quicker to introduce Christ Himself into the conversation.
Problem is, I really feel that would be a quick turn-off to most people. They hear “Jesus,” they think “Bible-thumpers” or “religious fundamentalists” and may promptly shut their minds and hearts. Also, it almost seems like Paul himself used the philosophical approach at Mar’s Hill. It wasn’t quite the same, as he basically started with the Christian view of God before moving on to the resurrection (which some laughed at, by the way), but it wasn’t just getting up there and speaking of Christ right off. And then, things were different in Paul’s time. Most people that he talked to had probably never even heard of Jesus, while most people today are turned off by a serious mention of that name. I think it’s a matter of situation. The important thing is to get to Jesus at some point, because without Him it’s ultimately pointless.