I got on the social media trend this week and asked ChatGPT to create an image of me based on everything it knew about me. My Eagles affiliation didn't come through! Maybe ChatGPT roots for another NFC East team? Now, I've written hundreds of sermons, over 1,500 daily devotionals, and thousands more text messages. If I had created my own picture, I don't know I would have made justice an important part of it. In this picture, it appears twice. There's the "Justice and Jesus" nameplate that might become a new t-shirt and the scales of justice in the background. That got me wondering about what we pay attention to in other people. How do we view others and how much is what we see different from what they see? And vice versa. And then an old high school friend gave me the idea to make these. Stay blessed...john
Psalm 37:7-17 Listen to today's devotional Somehow we keep allowing injustice to be called “politics.” I wonder if that's so we don’t have to call it sin. But sin doesn’t hide behind political jargon or even ballot boxes. Our overly personalized view of sin numbs us to the reality of how it impacts real lives. Epstein files. Broken and biased systems. Greed at the top. Children left behind. God help us not forget that when we shrug and say, “That’s just politics,” someone else is paying the price. A cartoon brought tears to my eyes this week. The cartoon has a group of children holding signs that say, “Pleez Stop herting us!” and “Violence against children not nice.” The children have bandages over their heads, arms and legs. One child doesn't have legs. There looks to be an explosion behind them and a group of adults beside them. The adults have this to say: "Poor kids just don't understand politics." How we would like to think that is only a cartoon. Our c...