2 Timothy 1:3-7 Click here to listen Billy Joel’s “We Didn't Start the Fire” is basically a rapid-fire history lesson. It's filled with famous headlines. Wars. Scandals. Cultural upheaval. And everyone I know in my generation has heard that chorus before: "We didn’t start the fire." The world was already burning when we got here. That's always true when it comes to politics and world events. But it's also true when it comes to faith. Paul tells Timothy to “rekindle the gift of God that is within you.” Notice that he didn't say that Timothy should start a fire. He says, "Fan it." It was already there. Of course, neither Paul nor Timothy started the fire. God did. Timothy's faith had already been lit by the Spirit, by the laying on of hands, and by the quiet faith of his grandmother and mother. The spark was handed to him. His responsibility wasn’t to ignite it, but to steward it faithfully. The same is true for us. You didn’t invent the gosp...
Just for funsies, I asked ChatGPT, Claude, and Google Gemini this question: If you didn't know anything about America politics, what would you notice about this state of the union speech? Here's what ChatGPT said: 1. It’s intensely self-centered The speech is heavily built around “I” language : “I secured…” “I ended…” “I deployed…” “I negotiated…” “I rebuilt…” “I designated…” “I will…” Even major national actions are framed as personal accomplishments. The presidency is presented less as an office and more as a singular force of will. The country’s success is rhetorically fused with one person. 2. It relies on extremes Almost everything is described in superlatives: “biggest in history” “strongest ever” “lowest ever recorded” “colossal victory” “no one has ever seen” “never happened before” There’s very little moderation in tone. The language lives at the edges — worst ever, best ever, total disaster, total success. 3. It mixes ceremony...