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Archive for June, 2009

You Set the Clock

There is nothing in the universe that you cannot do or be if you are mentally ready. People speak of golden opportunities but what we call opportunity is really our own mental readiness. Napoleon said, “Opportunities? I make opportunities”; and while this would be merely a vainglorious boast for one who is not on the spiritual basis, yet when you do understand the Truth of Being, it is simply a statement of fact. The Romans could have had the telephone; the Greeks could have had the cinema; the Babylonians could have had the automobile—had they been mentally ready. The laws of nature were the same in those ages as in ours, the same materials were in the ground—but the minds of the Ancients were not ready for those things, and so they had to go without them.

Supply the necessary mental condition, and the demand, the opportunity, or the occasion, will present itself automatically.

Whenever you are ready you will find that everything else is ready too.

Take ye heed, watch and pray; for ye know not when the time is (Mark 13:33).

This is what the bible means when it says the old person will die and a new person will be born. When we make the mental and spiritual changes necessary to follow the will of God, we are creating a new mentality and a new way of living. As in most tasks, all the hardest work is in the preparation.

Let’s say we want to sell our house but it is too run down to present an opportunity for the sale. Just as a painter must repair, scrape, sand and prime an old house before applying the new outer coat, so we must remove the flaking and deteriorated outer shell in order to find the good wood underneath. Then when we strip sand off our old ways, remove and replace the useless and deteriorated habits and structures of our lives and seal the renewed structure with our faith, we can then apply the new outer coat that radiates beauty, protects our new selves20and prepares us to benefit from every opportunity that our new life presents to us.

Being ready,

Z gardener

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Confusion of Duties

It cannot be your duty to do anything that is beyond your reach or your strength at the moment.

It cannot be your duty to do anything that sacrifices your own integrity or your own spiritual development.

It cannot be right to be hurried, or sad, or discouraged, or angry, or resentful, or antagonistic, under any circumstances.

If you have not time for prayer and meditation, you will have lots of time for sickness and trouble.

Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God, and keep his commandments: for this the the whole duty of man (Ecclesiastes 12:13).

The real question is “what is truly beyond our strength and reach”. There is much beyond our reach and strength when we act as mere humans without being attuned to God. But when we are following God’s will in thought, word and deed, all things become possible. Then the message above fully applies. It simply means that when we follow God’s way, we can accomplish all that is good for us without all the negative circumstances listed above. It reaffirms that if we are too hurried to pray, too weak to maintain our integrity or too negative in our reactions to the world, then we will make time for sickness and trouble. It is with God’s help and guidance that we overcome the pressures of the world and find peace, joy and wellness in our lives. If we respect and obey God, we will know our duty clearly and will be given that which we need to discharge our duties faithfully and fully in a way that is loving and joyful.

On joy duty,

Z gardener

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Holy Cows

Most people have certain sections of their lives where, for various reasons (mostly unknown to themselves), they do not wish to make any change. These places are set aside and surrounded with an aura of spurious sanctity like the sacred cows of the East, which are considered too holy to be touched. But if you really mean business about regenerating your soul and body, there must positively be no sacred cows in your life.

Nothing is truly sacred but your own Indwelling Christ and the process of His awakening.

…Awake thou that sleeepest, and arise from the dead, and christ shall give thee light (Ephesians 5:14).

If there is a part of our lives that we refuse to change, regardless of20how many problems it causes us, then chances are that this is the area that needs changing the most. This sacred cow could be nurturing resentment from an old injustice, hatred that seems justified, personal coping behaviors that damage our lives or health, guilt from past wrongs that trap us in a cycle that seems to repeat itself or just stubbornness about accepting the true impacts of our refusal to let go of these sacred cows. Regardless of their nature, justification or perceived benefits, refusal to let go of these activities will block us from communion with God and from the rebirth promised to those who “let go and let God”. The good news is that God will give us everything we need to free these sacred cows and by so doing, free ourselves from the yoke they place on our necks.

Freeing cows,

Z gardener

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Flee Desolation

The moment you catch yourself thinking a negative thought, you should reject it instantly. Do not stop to say “good-by” to the error but immediately switch your attention to the presence of God. Indeed, we may say that when error presents itself to consciousness, the first five seconds are golden.

When ye therefore shall see the abomination of desolation, spoken of by Daniel the prophet, stand in the holy place (whoso readeth, let him understand:)

Then let them which be in Judea flee into the mountains;

Let him which is on the housetop not come down to take any thing out of his house;

Neither let him which is in the field return back to take his clothes(Matthew 24:15-18).

Jesus teaches this lesson in his own graphic way. The holy place is your consciousness, and the abomination of desolation is any negative thought, because a negative thought means belief in the absence of God at the point concerned.

It is impossible to forget this illustration once we have taken it in.

When we entertain negative thoughts, we give them a place to settle and grow. When we reject them and commune with God, they dissipate like the dew. It is separation from God that exposes us to these negative thoughts. When we put ourselves before God we create this exposure. When we engage in negative thoughts, we turn away further from God and are then subjected to the results of harboring and engaging these thoughts. This results in causing the words, thoughts and deeds by us that hurt us and others. So, when a negative thought occurs, we must turn our thoughts to God and say “get thee behind me Satan, I live by every word of God”. Then continue to think of God and we will be guided and protected by our communion with and obedience to God.

Think God,

Z gardener

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Consistent Building

…be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind…(Romans 12:2).

This is Paul’s admonition.

Many people understand this in principle, but they fail to demonstrate because they do not carry it out logically in practice. During prayer, they carefully build up the new mental structure, but as soon as their time of prayer is over, instead of faithfully preserving that structure intact they promptly knock it down again by negative thinking. Obviously, a bricklayer could work hard in this fashion year after year without ever accomplishing anything.

If you are failing to demonstrate, it is probably due to the same cause—building followed by wrecking. We are transformed by the renewing of our minds.

When we open our eyes after prayer, do we see a new world filled with God’s promise that yields to God’s will, or do we see the same old tired world that appears immune to God’s primacy as well as our thoughts and prayers? If, when we finish our prayers, we return to the latter world view, then we are not putting our faith into practice. Prayer is the real world and God’s will is the true reality. If we accept the perceived reality thrown at us by the physical world, we will never demonstrate God’s power and the demonstration of that power through us. Each time we open our eyes from our prayers, let us view the world anew as if through the awe-filled and promise laden eyes of a child. Then we will exist in a world filled with potential, girded by faith and empowered by God’s infinite capability. Then each day will be an experience of hope, love and confidence in the future. To quote the great Sachmo song, “What a wonderful world’ it would be.

In wonder,

Z gardener

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Priming the Pump

An Understanding faith is the life prayer. It is a great mistake, however, to struggle to produce a lively faith within yourself. That can only end in failure. The thing to do is to act as though you had faith. Act out what you wish to demonstrate, and you will be expressing true faith. This is the right use of the will, scientifically understood.

…Verily I say unto you, if ye have faith, and doubt not, ye shall not only do this which is done to the fig tree, but also if ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea, it shall be done (Matthew 21:21).

This statement of Jesus is perhaps the most tremendous spiritual pronouncement ever made. Jesus knew the law of faith and proved it many times. W e shall move mountains when we are willing to believe that we can, and then not only will mountains be moved, but the whole planet will be redeemed and re-formed according to the Pattern in the Mount.

This passage accurately describes a “leap of faith”. That is when you act as if that which you desire is true. It is not called a thought of faith or a wish of faith or even a desire of faith. True faith implies action. That is not to say that one would leap off a cliff with faith that God will reverse gravity. It is to say that we must take the actions dictated by our faith even when the universe doers not appear to allow it or likely to sustain it. It means doing (as in leaping) what is right and following God’s will regardless of the apparent outcome or consequences. When we act according to our faith and God’s will, the universe will yield to that act and produce the result God intended for us that would not have happened without the leap of faith. This was true in Jesus’ acceptance of his sacrifice, and it is true of each decision we make to accept and follow God’s will. There is no path to our true destiny but that one which follows God’s will as revealed through prayer and faith.

On the path,

Z gardener

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Register Joy

The principal revelation of the Jesus Christ teaching is the omnipresence and availability of god, and the belief that God not only transcends His universe but is everywhere immanent in it—that He indwells in it.

If you really believe in the existence of God you should be happy and cheerful. God has all power, and God is Good; so life must be good too.

Meet the world with a smile. You owe this to God, to your fellows, and above all, to yourself. If you go about with a face like an east wind, what can you possibly expect to attract from the world? We all know people who carry a fixed, frozen, mirthless, almost profession al, smile. Such a smile is just a permanent wave in the face.

Smile, even if it takes a little effort, and keep it up until it becomes spontaneous, as it will. In the graphic language of Hollywood, register joy, and hold it!

For ye shall go out with joy… (Isaiah 55:12).

That which we express (press out) is that which shapes our existence. When we press out our hope, joy, confidence and faith, our world becomes the Garden God created for us. When we press out fear, hate, cynicism and doubt, our world becomes a prison from which we are helpless to escape because we create it around us like the cocoon spun by the caterpillar. Today, let us spin an Eden and press it out so that all around us may experience life in the Garden with us, created by us, through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Spinning Heaven,

Z gardener

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Gerald Wayne Collums

A Friend’s Tribute
To Love’s Prince

July 31, 1950 – May 18, 2009

Supplication

May the words of this mouth and
The Meditations of this heart
Find Favor in your sight, oh, Lord.

It is a true honor and great privilege to share some memories in celebration of the life and home going of Gerald Collums,
our beloved friend, son and brother. Gerald was my roommate, business partner and pal who it was my great pleasure to know for thirty eight years.

To his father Curtis; brothers Carl, Hal and Larry; and all who love Gerald, we his Pascagoula “family” extend our prayers and love in this time of grief and loss.

Yet with all our heartache, we should know that Gerald is in the arms of the angels today, and he would say to us all, “Now, don’t be sad about me. I am doing fine and am waiting for you just down the road”.

Allow me to share a few stories with you about “Ger”, “Big G” or “Waldo” as he was lovingly referred to by those of us who were fortunate enough to have adopted him into our Pascagoula family. (It seems one of our group thought Waldo sounded better than Wayne, go figure).

Gerald was a big mountain of a man with an even bigger heart. Like a mountain he was solid, stable and sure. Everyone who ever met Gerald loved him. In fact, I can’t remember ever having an argument with Him in all our years together as friends, partners and roomates.

He told me of his late Mother Kathleen taking care of kids when he lived at home and how he loved them and they loved him. He loved animals, cool weather, hot music and good food.

Above all, Gerald loved his family and friends. We know from his own words that love, family and friends were the very last things on his mind when he shuffled off his mortal coil and left this world with its pain and suffering.

Gerald had great strength, but even greater gentleness. His broad back and huge arms could hold up our friend John’s car when it fell off the jack, yet those massive hands could fashion a delicate design from a string of nylon.

Gerald loved large, yet he lived small. His life he lived on his own terms, just as he took on this horrible disease on his own terms. Gerald never compromised his unhurried, unhassled and “Take it easy”, approach to life. And if you ever tried to rush Gerald, you would have found it easier to push a rope.

To Gerald, life was like a canoe trip; going with flow, taking the time to smell the roses as he placidly steered through life’s snags and rapids with ease and grace. After canoeing with Gerald in the river and in life for nearly four decades, it was a sublime experience (and one in which my shirt tail never got wet).

Here are a few things about Gerald you may not know.

Gerald loved the outdoors, whether fishing, hunting, canoeing, riding horses or motorcycles.

Gerald was fast, both with his hands and on his feet. Few made the mistake twice of challenging Gerald to a foosball game for money or playing hand slap with him. Everyone who did lost. And when I gave him a love tap in the groin after a concert, he chased me down and put the death grip on this scrawny neck just enough to evoke a quick “Uncle” from his antagonist.

However, unless one was foolish enough to try the behaviors discussed above, one would rarely witness this lightning speed because Gerald was a master of “motion efficiency”. He never wasted a move or expended any unnecessary effort to accomplish the objective at hand. This even applied to Gerald’s unique speech pattern called “Gerish”.

He created his own language which contracted entire sentences down to two words. One morning we waited for our business partners who were late for a 7:30 AM breakfast. Gerald was no fan of early anything and in his frustration said “Shey’ed c’mon”. The English translation of this Gerish phrase was “I wish they would come on.” Or if Gerald was trying to help you he might ask, “Need ‘n nang?” This meant “do you need anything?’ As said, he was a genius of efficiency.

Gerald was an extraordinary craftsman who could make anything and had an engineer’s insight into how things work.

Gerald was an adventurer. There was the day that we drove to Pensacola to meet our business partners who had drove down the night before after concluding a successful “rock and roll night” at Flick’s, the college age beer bar we owned together In Pascagoula.

We all ended up in Disneyworld that night with two girlfriends, one toothbrush and my dog which we smuggled into the room. Four days later we returned after one of the best trips we ever had together. Even the girls who both got fired said it was worth it. I agree.

Gerald loved to laugh, tell and hear stories and he loved to haggle on EBay. Although my brother Ronnie swears that Gerald never sold any of the stuff he bought. So Ronnie ribbed him saying Gerald wasn’t really a trader but a customer only. I know that was not true because Gerald’s last mission we went on just before he died was to pack and ship an electric guitar to an EBay customer who was waiting on it.

Ronnie was one of our partners at Flicks and worked and played with Gerald in Mandeville where they both lived for Gerald’s last eight years. Ronnie found Gerald while picking him up for another round of interminable doctor’s appointments. Ronnie cared for Gerald after he got sick, helped Gerald plan his funeral and coordinated his affairs in the aftermath of his passing. Thank you, Ronnie for taking care of our Prince.

Gerald was a healer who always wanted everyone to get along without conflict or problems. Even when Gerald had been stabbed by a local thug from a bad family that we had banned from our bar, it was Gerald who kept my brother Kenny from rounding up his old scrapping buddies to “go teach these punks that no one hurts Gerald!” Of course, Gerald would have nothing of that and talked Kenny out of it by saying. “That kid didn’t hurt me and I don’t want you getting in trouble over me”. That was that.

Gerald loved large. His capacity for love was greater than his considerable size or his powerful strength. Gerald demonstrated both his love and his strength to the very end. As stated in a poem he put in his senior english poetry notebook, Gerald “Refused to go gently into that good night”. In so refusing, Gerald knew he would prevent countless heartache and suffering by those who loved him, as this scourge ravaged his body.

Beloved friends of Gerald, there are some other things you should know about our brother.

Gerald knew God and God knew Gerald. In our last visit we prayed together and talked about God and miracles. Gerald believed in God and miracles and he had his Bible close by his beloved chair. In John’s first letter to the early Christian church he wrote,

“Everyone who loves has been born of God,
And knows God.
Dear friends, no one has ever seen God;
But if we love one another, God lives in us,
And his love is made complete in us.” I John 4; 7,8,12

Fortunately, Gerald wrote his feelings about God in a card he made for his father. The following scriptures from John’s gospel were typed in red. Once a person has communicated these essential tenets of the Christian faith, God never throws them back or abandons them.

“For god so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son. That whosoever believeth in him shall not perish, but have everlasting life. For God did not send his son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.”

“Behold the lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world”.

“Except a man be born again, he can not see the Kingdom of God.’

“But as many as received him, to them gave he the power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name”.

And so I close by sharing with you the conviction that Gerald is free now and waiting on us in the arms of the angels just down the road. My eleven year old son Chance also believes that, and wrote a prayer on Gerald’s behalf to God. Chance did not know Gerald, but gained his insights through the many stories about our times together.

“Dear God, please be with Jerold. Let him be in heaven doing whatever he wants. Thank you for taking him out of his pain. Now he isn’t sad or scared. He is up in heaven with you. Please keep everyone strong through this time. Amen.” Then say, “God is great”.

Finally, Gerald was a prince of a friend, who carried himself with a regal humbleness. He was and remains our Prince as best described in another poem from his booklet.

How sweet I roamed From field to field
And tasted all the summer’s pride.
Till I, the Prince of Love beheld
Who in the sunny beams did glide.’

So, roam sweetly, our gentle and precious Prince of love, until in those sunny beams we again glide with you and God.

We love you “ger”.

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Bear Hugs Kettle

There is an anecdote of the Far West that carries a wonderful lesson. It appears that a party of hunters, being called away from their camp, left the campfire unattended, with a kettle of water boiling on it.

Presently an old bear crept out of the woods, and, seeing the kettle with its lid dancing about on top, promptly seized it. The boiling water scalded him badly; but instead of dropping the kettle instantly, he proceeded to hug it tightly—this being a bear’s idea of defense. Of course, the tighter he hugged it the more it burned him; and the more it burned him the tighter he hugged it; and so on in a vicious circle to the undoing of the bear.

This illustrates perfectly the way in which many people hug their difficulties to their bosoms by constantly rehearsing them to themselves and others.

Whenever you catch yourself thinking about your grievances, say to yourself sternly: “Bear hugs kettle,” and think about God instead. You will be surprised how quickly some long-standing wounds will heal.

Mine eyes are ever toward the Lord… (Psalm 25:15).

This story also illustrates our need to “let go and let God”, handle our grievances. The more we struggle with the wrongs we have endured, the more we think about them, the more we ensure they remain in our lives. It is only when we release them that we are released from them. This is not accomplished by our fixing the problem, but by letting it go and by trusting God to exert dominion over it. The formula is simple yet difficult. Forgive the offense, bless the offender and then turn away from it and toward God. Then we will begin to experien ce the peace that surpasses all understanding and enter the gate to our gardens.

From the garden,

Z gardener

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Change From Within

Man is a mental being, and to know this is the first step on the road to freedom and prosperity, for as long as you believe yourself to be primarily physical, a superior kind of animal, you will remain in bondage—in bondage, that is to say, to your own habits of thought, for there is no other bondage.

Since you are a mental being, you will see how foolish it is for you to endeavor to improve your conditions by altering your environment while leaving your mind unchanged. To attempt this is to foredoom yourself to disappointment. Mind is cause, and experience is effect. If you do not like the experience or effect that you are getting, the obvious remedy is to alter the cause and then the effect will naturally alter too.

Thou blind Pharisee, cleanse first that which is within the cup and platter, that the outside of them may be clean also. (Matthew 23:26).

If we were to be magically transported to a place that is free from all our earthly concerns, but did not change the thoughts and habits that created those concerns, in a very short period of time,we would find ourselves surrounded once again by the same problems. If we do change the thoughts and habits that create our problems, then we will transform our existing place so that our concerns and problems would be resolved. This is not magic. It is simply adopting and applying the principles stated above. While this sounds simple, it is very difficult. It is so difficult that we can not do it without God’s help. If we obey God’s will and follow his laws, we will tap into God’s infinite power and will be able to transform our thoughts, words and deeds to be in harmony with God. Then we will be “new creations”, empowered by God to become the people God intended us to be. Then we will abide in the Garden God created for us.

As within, so without,

Z gardener

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