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Thursday, January 8, 2026

393 Bomb Cyclone

   (Note: This blog entry is based on the text for “Bomb Cyclone”, originally shared on January 8, 2026. It was the 393rd  video for our YouTube Channel, Streams of Living Water (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7KnYS1bpHKaL2OseQWCnw), co-produced with my wife, Rev. Sally Welch.)

    Bomb Cyclone, right? Today we’re going to see how one changed everything.

   It’s only the eighth day of the new year and we’ve already had crazy wind and rain in Southern California bringing mudflows, hydroplaning cars, and flooded homes and businesses. Weather reporters sometimes refer to the conditions for our recent storms as Bomb Cyclones.

  And the United States invaded Venezuela and captured its (democratically illegitimate) president and took him into custody for trial in the U.S. Bombs were deployed, setting off a cyclone of response, both pro and con, within our country and around the world. Russia, China, and Iran have all been setting up facilities and are heavily invested in Venezuela, and Cuba has an interest. How will they respond to a blockade? Complex issues and colliding values swirl around us like another kind of Bomb Cyclone. The only group that seems to be almost universally happy, though cautious, is the Venezuelans!

   And, this coming Sunday, the vast majority of churches throughout the world will be marking a controversial event that changed more than all the bomb cyclones, meteorological or metaphorical, that have ever shook the foundations of the world: The Baptism of Jesus!

   How could that be important?

   I read a story posted from the Facebook group “The Two Pennies” the other day about a NASA engineer, an African American man who had grown up in legally segregated Alabama. In 1982, he was working, in his free time, on a new kind of heat pump for refrigerators.

   Lonnie Johnson was working at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena on the Galileo mission to Jupiter during the day. He worked on nuclear power sources for spacecraft and stealth tech for the Air Force.

   One night, the heat pump experiment he had been working on at home in his bathroom shot out a stream of water like a gun, and he knew that he was about to pivot to a different application: water guns.

   He had shown his engineering gifts from his childhood. In high school he won the science fair. He was the only African American student in the competition.

   Now, he was going to try to sell a toy to an industry notorious for its preference for cheap components, high profit margins, and in-house engineers.

   He had built a high-pressure air chamber separate from the water, into his water gun prototype and he called it the “Pneumatic Water Gun”.

   He took it to a picnic and the children lined up to try it.

   For the next seven years he took it to toy manufacturers and heard “No” from every single major toy company.

   He refocused and devoted himself to the development of this water gun full time, until the money ran out and he had to go back to work part-time.

   He gave it one more try at the American International Toy Fair in New York in 1989, when the vice-president of a company called Larami saw his demonstration, and his response was “Wow!”

   He simplified the plans and the toy hit the market in 1990 as the “Power Drencher”. It sold pretty well.

   The next year, they named it the “Super Soaker”, and it became the must-have toy of that summer. It sold 2 million units.

   Last year, it had produced over $1 billion in sales.

   Mr. Johnson used his Super Soaker money to build his own laboratory: Johnson Research & Development. He has held over 100 patents and worked in the development of advanced battery technology, solar energy conversion, and new types of engines.

   But to millions of children who grew up in the 90’s and early 2000’s, he was the man who gave them one of the best summers of their lives.

   That’s what the Baptism of Jesus is. Baptism is a super soaking that is a gift from God, modeled for us by Jesus, giving billions of people their eternal lives.

   How can that be?

   I read about a pastor once who was a passenger on an airplane talking with a seatmate when she asked him what he did for a living. He said, “Well, I work for a global enterprise.”, She said. ‘Do you?’ He said, “Yes, I do. We’ve been established for 2,000 years and we have outlets in nearly every country in the world, with over a billion workers every day. We’ve got hospitals and hospices and homeless shelters. We do marriage work. We’ve got orphanages and feeding programs, and programs to relocate the displaced. We have colleges and universities, we do leadership development, and facilities construction and management. We do all sorts of justice and reconciliation things, and basically, we care for people from birth to death. But our primary work is in the area behavioral alteration and life transformation.”

   “Wow!” the woman said. “What’s it called?” He said, “It’s called the Church.”

   But the Church didn’t begin with immediate acceptance. In fact, it began in fear on the Day of Pentecost. The rejection and crucifixion of Jesus was followed by the violent persecution of his followers for hundreds of years before the Church began to be somewhat accepted. And that persecution continues in some places to this day.

   Its foundation is the Sacrament of Baptism, God’s Super Soaker, and Baptism is rooted in the great unnecessary baptism modeled in the Baptism of Jesus Christ.

   This coming Sunday is the first Sunday after the day of the Epiphany.

   The Day of the Epiphany of our Lord is fixed at January 6th every year. In some places around the world, it is just as big a holiday as Christmas. In some places it is Christmas.

   It marks the event when the wisemen from the East came to worship Jesus. It is the first manifestation of Jesus to the gentiles, the non-Jews.

   Epiphany means “manifestation”. The season of Epiphany is a season of reflection on what the birth of Jesus means, and the first Sunday after the day of the Epiphany of Our Lord marks the day at the beginning of Jesus manifestation to the world, at the start of his public ministry, when Jesus was baptized. It is the Sunday of the Baptism of Our Lord.

   Here’s how Matthew describes it in Matthew 3:13-17,

13 Then Jesus came from Galilee to John at the Jordan, to be baptized by him. 14 John would have prevented him, saying, “I need to be baptized by you, and do you come to me?” 15 But

Jesus answered him, “Let it be so now; for it is proper for us in this way to fulfill all righteousness.” Then he consented. 16 And when Jesus had been baptized, just as he came up from the water, suddenly the heavens were opened to him and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and alighting on him. 17 And a voice from heaven said, “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.”

   The Baptism of Our Lord was an epiphany!

   Have you ever watched or read a cartoon where a character is facing some dilemma? They think about it. Hard. Then what happens? Poof! A burning light bulb appears over their head!

   What was not clear is now seen clearly. Light has shined in the darkness. They have had an epiphany! Something longed for has become real, it has become manifest.

   How does that manifestation happen in the Baptism of Jesus? The answer to that question can be seen in the “Bomb Cyclone.”

   The volume of the recent rain we have had was unexpected.

   We were supposed to have another year of the La Nina weather pattern based on rotating ocean temperatures, bringing light rain at best. But we’ve been pummeled with rain over the last couple of weeks. We’ve been waiting to feel confident that the drought we had for a few years is over. Is it?

   The people of God had been waiting for the promised Messiah (the anointed one, the chosen) for 1,000 years and received nothing but some encouragement from the prophets for the first 700 years. Then, there was no word from God through the prophets for the final 300 years.

   Then John the Baptist shows up with a word from the Lord. The Messiah was close by!

   And then, the Messiah shows up where John was baptizing people in the river Jordan and requests baptism.

   What? Why does Jesus need to be baptized? What is he doing there? John says that he is the one who should be seeking baptism from Jesus!

   Jesus says that John should baptize him, “for it is proper for us in this way to fulfill all righteousness.”

   John immediately consents.

   What is Jesus talking about? He is the Messiah, the Son of God, fully God and fully human being? He lived a sinless life. Why does he need to be baptized?

   The answer is, “He doesn’t.” At all.

   Jesus seeks to be baptized as an example, as a great unnecessary. Like dying on the cross, it is a gift of grace.

   Jesus is baptized to show us who He is. He is doing something physical to show us the lengths He will go to make a way for us to be reconciled to God.

   And then God is present in all three persons, One God, in the atmosphere of heavenly glory.

   Jesus is being baptized, the Holy Spirit is “descending like a dove and alighting on him,” and the Father speaks from heaven, “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.”

   It’s the atmospheric river at Jesus’ baptism, coming unexpectedly and bringing the blessing of the manifestation of God. God with us.

   All of that, swirling together? That’s a Bomb Cyclone! And it changes everything.

   Why? What is this baptism that Jesus extravagantly models for us? Unnecessary for him, but necessary for all humanity?

   Martin Luther, the 16th century Church reformer, describes it in his short manual with the basics of the Christian faith, “The Small Catechism”, from which come these five FAQ’s (Frequently Asked Questions):

1.   What gifts or benefits does Baptism grant?

It brings about forgiveness of sins, redeems from death and the devil, and gives eternal salvation to all who believe it, as the Word and promise of God declare.

2.   What is this Word and promise of God?

Where our Lord Jesus Christ says in Mark 16:16, “The one who believes and is baptized will be saved; but the one who does not believe will be condemned.”

3.   How can water do such great things?

Clearly the water does not do it, but the Word of God, which is with, in, and alongside the water, and faith, which trusts this Word of God in the water. 

4.   What then is the significance of such a baptism with water?

It signifies that the old person in us with all sins and evil desires is to be drowned through daily sorrow for sin and repentance, and that daily a new person is to come forth and rise up to live before God in righteousness and purity forever.

5.   Where is this written?

St. Paul says in Romans 6:3-4, “Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death?  Therefore we have been buried with him by baptism into death, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, so we too might walk in newness of life.”

   I read a little book once on the psychology of swimming called, You Only Feel Wet When You’re Out of the Water, when I was an adult competitive Masters swimmer, pre pandemic. The most memorable part of it, for me, was the title.

   It’s true, isn’t it? You don’t feel wet when you’re in the water. It’s your environment, it’s everything, it’s your atmosphere. You only feel wet when you are out of the water. But you will eventually dry off if you stay out.

   You got wet in baptism. But you got away from the water and the water dried off. But the baptism didn’t. And it never will.

   You don’t notice your baptism when you’re living in it. You only notice it when you’re not.

   You can dry up spiritually, but you will always be baptized. Are you feeling a little dry today? Does the living relationship with the one true living God restored in your baptism seem far away? Does your faith seem distant, or dry, or yet to come?

   Do you feel disconnected from the Church? Disappointed? Do you know someone who needs to be reconciled with God?

   How can that sense of the Baptized life that really is life be restored emotionally, even when we know intellectually that it has never left us?

   Well, it can and it can’t, and either one is OK.

   First, the good good news. You connect with God by connecting with God.

   Sally and I are at an age where the programs we watch on legacy TV tend to advertise pills you can take to improve your memory, like Prevagen. 😊

   I asked my primary care doctor once if he thought they would help me.

   He answered that the best way to improve your memory is to exercise it. And I think that that’s true. I’ve been trying to learn Mandarin Chinese over the recent  years, for example, and I believe that that has improved my memory.

   The same is true of our Christian life. The best way to improve your sense of being a Christian is by being a Christian! Study your Bible, pray regularly during every day, serve others sacrificially, think about what is good and honorable, work on yourself so that you are a good instrument, and then forget yourself so that you can do the will of God.

   Second, the good bad news. You may never have an emotional sense of connection with God, but what you have will be much deeper than what you can feel.

   Mother Teresa was an Albanian nun who established an order of nuns who cared for the poorest of the poor in Calcutta, India. She left instructions that when she died, her journals were to be burned. They were preserved and published, nevertheless.

   The world was shocked when her innermost thoughts came to light. Her journal was filled with her feelings of spiritual emptiness, a longing for something from God.

   Some read that and said, “See. She was a fake!”

   Others read that and said, “What a saint, to be obedient and faithful while getting nothing in return!”

   Some people say that there is no such thing as altruism, of selfless service to others. They say that when we do good, we feel good and that that feeling is our reward and the reason we do the good that we do. Mother Theresa got nothing while spending her life doing what is universally recognized as saintly service to the poor.

   We too sometimes feel the same in our lives of service, in the life of faith.  Sometimes we just put our heads down and keep chugging ahead and, only later, maybe, realize that the Holy Spirit was there within us all along, giving us a deeper sense of joy. We just didn’t have a word for it.

   In the same way, we receive everything important in life, forgiveness of sins, redemption from death and the devil, and eternal salvation given to all who believe it through our baptism. Baptism is a spiritual Bomb Cyclone. It isn’t the most important thing, it’s the only thing that makes a real life real. It is a gift from God. It’s the water in which we live!

   Imagine a clear glass filled to its midpoint with water. Is it half full or half empty?

   I would argue that it is completely full, half with water and half with air that contains water vapor.

   We are spiritually completely full through the presence of the Holy Spirit even if we may feel half empty. The Holy Spirit was given to us at our Baptism. It doesn’t matter what we feel if we are walking in the wetness of our Baptism.

   Find some water right now and make the sign of the cross on your forehead. Make the sign of the cross and say to yourself, “Remember, you are baptized!” Or find some others and remind each other.

   God was manifest in the baptism of Jesus Christ in the river.

   Seek your baptism if you haven’t yet received this sacrament, this sacred event.

   You can’t earn it, you will never fully understand it, you certainly don’t deserve it. It’s a one-time, non-repeatable action of God. And, it can happen at any age.

   If you are baptized, you are a child of God. You are a new creation. You who were once a part of no people are now God’s people. You have been transformed, given the living relationship with the one true living God for which you were created, you have been restored and made new.

   Walk wet if you have been baptized, if you have experienced the Bomb Cyclone, the Super Soaker, of God’s grace.

   The great unnecessary Baptism of Jesus is a sign of God’s grace for you. The grace of God changed everything.

   Live every day in its blessing, in daily repentance, in newness of life.

   You’re ready. You have everything you need to walk wet.



Wednesday, December 31, 2025

392 Things You Can Do (In The New Year)

   (Note: This blog entry is based on the text for “Things You Can Do (In The New Year)”, originally shared on December 31, 2025. It was the 392nd  video for our YouTube Channel, Streams of Living Water (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7KnYS1bpHKaL2OseQWCnw), co-produced with my wife, Rev. Sally Welch.)

   God became human flesh to die for us. What can we do in 2026 to live that gift? Today, we’re going to find out.

    We’ll be welcoming, or maybe tolerating with dread, the inevitable turning of time to 2026 tonight.

   Some new laws are coming tomorrow.

   Grocery stores will no longer provide plastic bags but will require people to bring their own reusable bags.

   Restaurants will be required to list major food allergens on their menus.

   Electric bicycle (Ebike) riders will have to use flashing rear red lights or reflectors with solid red lights at all times.

   Some changes may be made to our lives, not by the law but, solely at our own discretion, like the resolutions that will last no longer than Christmas wrapping paper. Some will resolve to eat healthier, commit to some cause, or work out more. In fact, gyms see a surge in membership at the beginning of every year and, I’m told, most of those new members drop off by April.

   What can we resolve to do that we actually will do? Well, we could start with Christmas.

   We’re still in the Christmas season, on the sixth day of the twelve days of Christmas so we, and the vast majority of churches in the world, will be looking at a familiar text about God’s gift of Himself next Sunday: John 1:1-18.

   It’s usually read on Christmas Day, after the most familiar and personal and detailed of the Gospel stories of Jesus’ birth, Luke 2:1-20, has been read on Christmas Eve. So, you may have missed it if your church didn’t have a Christmas Day service. Or if it did and you didn’t go. 😊

   Or, they did have one, and you did go, you may have had only the vaguest idea of what that reading was about, because John wasn’t likely written for you.

   The Gospel of John was written for a primarily non-Jewish audience among the newly converted Christians in the pagan districts of the Roman empire. They knew very little about Jesus and even less about anything that came before Jesus.

   Maybe they knew a little about Moses and the importance of the religious Law given to Moses, the Law that was so hard for the early Jewish Christians to see past.

   So, John used the Greek philosophical and cultural language that those new Christians would understand. (If you would like to see the Christmas story told in a totally different way, check out “Christmas According to Kids -Southland Christian Church”, on YouTube)

   In John, Jesus isn’t a cute little baby born in horrific circumstances. Jesus is the Word made flesh. That’s about it, as in John 1:1-5,

1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being. What has come into being in him was life, and the life was the light of all people. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it.

   The natural “chaos” of the world is overcome by the “logos”, the state of order that is the word, but with a capital “W”: “Word”. In fact, everything that exists came into being through the will of the Logos, through the Word, through a word. And now the Word was being made flesh in the same way, through a pure act of the will of God. Nothing, and no one else.

   In fact, the first words of both the book of Genesis at the start of the Old Testament and the fourth Gospel, at the start of the New Testament are the same, “In the beginning” and both describe the work of God’s Creation.

   John the Baptist is presented as a preparer for the Word and a witness to the Word, as in John 1:6-9,

There was a man sent from God, whose name was John. He came as a witness to testify to the light, so that all might believe through him. He himself was not the light, but he came to testify to the light. The true light, which enlightens everyone, was coming into the world.

   Then the abstractions gradually become more personal. The Word came to make those who believed in Him, in his essential self, recreated as the children of God, as in John 1:10-13,

10 He was in the world, and the world came into being through him; yet the world did not know him. 11 He came to what was his own, and his own people did not accept him. 12 But to all who received him, who believed in his name, he gave power to become children of God, 13 who were born, not of blood or of the will of the flesh or of the will of man, but of God.

   He is the Law given through Moses, and He is more than the Law. He has fulfilled the Law. He has come to bring grace and truth. The philosophy of God is that truth is not an idea to be debated. The Truth is a person. Jesus is the Truth. He is fully God and fully human being, and he has made God known, as our Gospel reading concludes in John 1:14-18,

14 And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth. 15 (John testified to him and cried out, “This was he of whom I said, ‘He who comes after me ranks ahead of me because he was before me.’ ”) 16 From his fullness we have all received, grace upon grace. 17 The law indeed was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. 18 No one has ever seen God. It is God the only Son, who is close to the Father’s heart, who has made him known.

   God has been made visible in Jesus Christ.

   How can we make him known in 2026?

   Bob Porter was a diabetic whose disease had taken his sight and one leg. He was confined to a wheelchair. He was all alone and feeling sorry for himself one night in an apartment near Christmas in 1969 when he remembered that he had known people for whom buying a Christmas tree at Christmas was an impossible luxury.

   He also knew that supermarkets had lots of unsold trees as Christmas approached. So he called around from his apartment to the supermarkets he knew in his Southern California neighborhood, and he asked them if they would be willing to donate the trees that, by a week before Christmas, they knew that  were not going to be able to sell. Some said yes.

   Then, he called places in low-income neighborhoods who agreed to pick up and distribute those trees.

   The first year, he distributed 1,500 trees. Sixteen years later, by 1985, when he died, he had developed the Bob Porter Christmas Tree Project into a nearly year ‘round effort, all of which he did by placing phone calls from his wheelchair, in his apartment, to retailers and pick-up truck operators, and then to wholesalers and trucking companies throughout California and beyond.

   By then, he had given away 150,000 trees to low-income families. The growers, the truckers, and the lot operators all got a write-off. Poor people got a Christmas tree. Win-win-win-win!

   I met Bob several times as the church I served in Compton was one of his distribution sites. I think that a community group kept the project going for a short while, but then it ended. There are no photos if him that I can find online today. He’s been pretty much forgotten. I’ve often wondered “why?”

   Every one of us has a particular spiritual gift given to us at our baptism to build up the Church, the body of Christ. They have nothing to do with our skills or talents, or our jobs. They are gifts given to us by the Holy Spirit to build up the Church. And we don’t use them so that we will be remembered.

   Each of us is equipped to do something to make Jesus Christ known in some way through the whole Body of Christ so that people are transformed into a new Creation in a living relationship with the one, true, living God.

   How can we do something that will last? How can we make the eternal God known among all people?

   Every congregation already has all the gifts that they need to do what God has called and equipped it to do. Some people have the gift of Evangelism, but all of us have been given the role of evangelist.

   I’ve accumulated ideas over the years of ministry that I used to present with the announcements in a church a served before Sally and I retired. Here are seven small things that the Holy Spirit can use as the means to move within people you know and care about to bring about life-transformation.

   They are ideas from others’ experience that I have seen online and revised or accumulated from reading books and articles and have revised, or things that I’ve heard about and revised, though with no source that I can find or remember, but for whose inspiration I am grateful. I came up with many of them from my own experience.

1.             Wear a Sign

   You don’t have to put on a sandwich board and walk down the street. A sign is something that points to something else. Wear your mother’s gold cross necklace, your father’s fish pin, or buy your own. Wear a t-shirt or a polo shirt with your church’s name on it or with a Christian message. They can create opportunities to share Jesus. 

    In my experience, it’s mainly existing Christians who will respond, but you never know who will see them, or who will comment.

2.             Text Somebody

   Text them from church: “Guess where I am.” It’s really good.” “Come with me next Sunday”.

3.             Forward Announcements from Your Church to Somebody

   Include an encouraging message to people who feel estranged from the church and, when the time is right, invite them to come to church with you. As Paul writes to the church at Corinth, in 2 Corinthians 5:18-20,

18 All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ, and has given us the ministry of reconciliation; 19 that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting the message of reconciliation to us. 20 So we are ambassadors for Christ, since God is making his appeal through us; we entreat you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God.

4.           Mail the Good News

   Did you get a Christmas Card from someone? Did it have a stamp with a Christian message on it? It created an impression, didn’t it? Did you send them?

   Stock up on greeting cards with a Christian message and send them for holidays, birthdays, to say “thank-you”, in times of sadness or celebration, etc. State your faith.

5.             Strengthen your Faith

   Work on yourself, not on your witness. Relax. The Holy Spirit will give you the appropriate message to share and speak through you. Make yourself a good instrument and listen to God.

   Isn’t the new year a time to “turn the page?” Read your Bible, pray, read Christian books, web sites and blogs, serve others in the name of Jesus. You can’t give away what you don’t have, but you can share what you do have. Develop that. Always be ready to be the means by which the Holy Spirit acts.

   As Peter counsels in 1 Peter 3:14-16,

14 But even if you do suffer for doing what is right, you are blessed. Do not fear what they fear, and do not be intimidated, 15 but in your hearts sanctify Christ as Lord. Always be ready to make your defense to anyone who demands from you an accounting for the hope that is in you; 16 yet do it with gentleness and reverence. Keep your conscience clear, so that, when you are maligned, those who abuse you for your good conduct in Christ may be put to shame.

6.             Listen for an Opening

   “I don’t know what to do…” “I feel so stretched…” “Everything has changed, etc. all could be openings for empathetic listening. Listen. Share your experiences and your wisdom. Listen some more. Share what your faith has meant to you.

7.             Witness When Eating at a Restaurant

   Pray before your meal just like at home, not to show your righteousness but to be visible and unashamed. Let your light shine. And leave a big tip. Show your server that Christians can be grateful and generous. 😊

   It’s not easy to be a Christian. It never has been. Be faithful and grow in your faith.  That is, be open and receptive to God’s working in you. As Jesus said, in the context of the first Christians, in Matthew 10:16-20,

16 “See, I am sending you out like sheep into the midst of wolves; so be wise as serpents and innocent as doves. 17 Beware of them, for they will hand you over to councils and flog you in their synagogues; 18 and you will be dragged before governors and kings because of me, as a testimony to them and the Gentiles. 19 When they hand you over, do not worry about how you are to speak or what you are to say; for what you are to say will be given to you at that time; 20 for it is not you who speak, but the Spirit of your Father speaking through you.

   It is very rare to see instant results when sharing your faith. Be patient. Let things happen in God’s time. You are not in control. God is. You never know when people might respond to God’s activity through one of these means.

   Maybe these 7 ideas will stimulate your own thinking about how you can share the faith that God has given you.

   We received some Christmas cards this year that were made by the Hallmark company. Their slogan, since 1944, has been, “When You Care Enough to Send the Very Best!”

   It’s a very good message for this Christmas season, as we start a new year.

   God sent us his very best. He sent himself. And now He sends us as his friends, His Body, and as His witnesses, and as His ambassadors.

   You may ask, “Who? Me?” But remember, you’re ready. God has given you everything you need to share the good news in your witness and in your actions.

   You’ve probably already participated in, or at least heard of, community toy drives, food banks, backpacks at the beginning of the school year, and lots of things that we do for others in the name of Jesus Christ?

   I heard of a new one the other day: wood banks.

   They mostly happen in rural areas where people depend upon wood burning stoves and heaters to cook and stay warm in the winter.

   Some people can’t afford to buy wood, or are not able to chop it into a size that a stove will burn. So people are cutting and chopping the wood, then stacking it for people to pick up, and even delivering it to people who need it, free of charge.

   That’s both a statement against our current economy and a testimony for the work of people who do what needs to be done for people who are in need.

   It’s a metaphor for what we do.

   God has provided the fuel and built a fire of the Holy Spirit under us and within us. God has equipped us and sent us to reflect the light and the heat that is God at work in the world through us.

   We have something good to share, the best news in the history of the world, given to us at Christmas. God has called, equipped and sent you to share it with people you know.

   Be a Christmas blessing. Share the Good News! 



Saturday, December 27, 2025

391 The More Things Change

   (Note: This blog entry is based on the text for “The More Things Change”, originally shared on December 26, 2025. It was the 391st  video for our YouTube Channel, Streams of Living Water (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7KnYS1bpHKaL2OseQWCnw), co-produced with my wife, Rev. Sally Welch.)

   The world is a mess. Christmas changes that. Today, we’re going to find out how.

   We’ve been getting some weather this week.

   We’ve been experiencing what meteorologists called the Pineapple Express, an atmospheric river, a potentially disastrous rainstorm producing floods, blocked roads, and mudflows. LA got ½ of its normal annual total rainfall in 72 hours!

   Sally and I got an alert here on our phones and we were told to be ready to get out in a moment’s notice.

   But we had just been standing outside looking at the rain from our garage, and it didn’t seem too bad. It was raining, but I wasn’t thinking about packing up the car.

   It was coming down hard enough, though, that I had already been outside in the rain to do some storm damage repair. Did you have to go outside in the rain to fix something?

   It happens. You think you are ready, that nothing bad will happen, and then it does.

   And this weather has been more than a nuisance for some. It has been a calamity. But they too had been warned.

    This coming Sunday is the day in the Christian Church year that we remember the Slaughter of the Innocents.

   Christmas is celebrated in the context of an atrocity for which there was a prophecy, but no warning. And we don’t hear about the atrocity until after Christmas.

   Sally and I hope that you had a wonderful Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. 

   We celebrated Christmas with a bi-lingual Christmas Eve worship service in Monterey Park. Trinity-Faith Lutheran Church, the Mandarin-speaking church using the facilities of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, an English-speaking congregation, worshiped together with them in Mandarin and in English. I was given the opportunity to preach in English. I don’t think that happened in very many places in the world on Christmas Eve!

   Sally and I celebrated Christmas Day with worship at our nearby Catholic Church because they had a service on Christmas Day and we have a good relationship with them. We shared gifts among ourselves in the afternoon and went for a walk around our neighborhood. Later we had a festive meal with friends at their home and shared gifts there, as well.

   But there were many places in the world that were struggling with the weather, in wars, in persecution, and in poverty. The Christmas story is a story of struggle that continues in this coming second Sunday of the Christmas season.

   For an increasing number of people in our world. though, it’s over. Their presents are opened and put away. Some are already broken. Their tree seems a little out of place, and Christmas will be gone by the end of New Year’s Day, if it’s not gone already.

   For many, Christmas ended on Christmas Day.

   Christmas is over for others when the season of commercial preparations ends, and when it’s done, it’s done.

   In fact, some businesses and TV programs marked the 12 days of Christmas as a countdown to Christmas. So, when they’re over, they’re really over.

  The Christian Church, however, starts the Christmas season on Christmas Eve and celebrates it for 12 whole days, until January 6th, the Day of The Epiphany of Our Lord, as in the song “The Twelve Days of Christmas”!

   So now, on the upside, we have Christmas pretty much all to ourselves and those with whom we share it.

   There’s no more holiday stress. The long nightmare of excess and expectations is over. Now comes the Christmas blessing and we open our hearts to receive it for 12 whole days.

   BTW, the cost of the 12 gifts listed in the song “The Twelve Days of Christmas” went up 4.4% this year to $51,000! Or, if you bought the items over and over each day as the song suggests (that's 364 total gifts) they would cost you $218,542! 

   You know, those exotic pets like turtle doves, geese, and French hens are expensive, increasing the most largely because of increased labor and food costs, and the price of gold for the gold rings has skyrocketed. 😊

   So, continue to have a Merry Christmas and don’t be embarrassed for celebrating Christmas as a Christian. Be counter-cultural. Don’t take down your Christmas tree, your lights, or your decorations. Leave them up until January 6th, the day of the Epiphany (or inbreaking) of Our Lord, and be a witness when you are asked why you haven’t taken your decorations down or even when you just get funny looks. 😊  As Jesus said, in Matthew 5:14-15,

   14 “You are the light of the world. A city built on a hill cannot be hid. 15 No one after lighting a lamp puts it under the bushel basket, but on the lampstand, and it gives light to all in the house.

   Be bearers of that light, because there is plenty of darkness in this world. There always has been.

   It’s the subject of the reading from the Gospels that will be shared in the vast majority of churches in the world this Sunday, Matthew 2:13-23. It begins with a warning that came after the Wise Men had left, starting in verse 13,

13 Now after they had left, an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream and said, “Get up, take the child and his mother, and flee to Egypt, and remain there until I tell you; for Herod is about to search for the child, to destroy him.” 14 Then Joseph got up, took the child and his mother by night, and went to Egypt, 15 and remained there until the death of Herod. This was to fulfill what had been spoken by the Lord through the prophet, “Out of Egypt I have called my son.”

   Herod was the King of Judea who had been put and kept in power by the Roman Empire. The Wise Men had come to Herod first after they saw a star in the east that signaled the birth of a new king.

   Herod asked the Wise Men to come back and tell him when they had found this king, but the Wise men sensed that something was off and they left by another road, avoiding Herod.

   Herod, as brutal as ever, knew where but he didn’t know exactly when this birth had taken place so, just to be sure that he had eliminated any potential competition, he had all the male children 2-years-old and under killed, which we see beginning in Matthew 2:16,

16 When Herod saw that he had been tricked by the wise men, he was infuriated, and he sent and killed all the children in and around Bethlehem who were two years old or under, according to the time that he had learned from the wise men. 17 Then was fulfilled what had been spoken through the prophet Jeremiah:

18       “A voice was heard in Ramah,

wailing and loud lamentation,

Rachel weeping for her children;

she refused to be consoled, because they are no more.”

   Rachel was the symbolic mother of the nation of Israel through her husband Jacob, who had wrestled with God and survived, so whose name was changed to Israel, which means someone who strives with God and whose faith endures.

   It could be said that Herod was just the opposite.

   Herod was hated almost universally. But Herod was mortal and he died, as we see, starting with Matthew 2:19,

19 When Herod died, an angel of the Lord suddenly appeared in a dream to Joseph in Egypt and said, 20 “Get up, take the child and his mother, and go to the land of Israel, for those who were seeking the child’s life are dead.” 21 Then Joseph got up, took the child and his mother, and went to the land of Israel.

   Joseph went home, at least to his home country.

   As Herod was dying, he ordered that prominent Jewish leaders should be imprisoned and then be killed when he died so that some people in Israel, anyway, would mourn on that day. His sister seems to have disobeyed that paranoid and ruthless, though typical, command.

   Apples don’t fall too far from the tree, people say, and Jesus’ earthly father Joseph seemed to know this, as we see in the conclusion to this week’s Gospel reading, starting in Matthew 2:22,

22 But when he heard that Archelaus was ruling over Judea in place of his father Herod, he was afraid to go there. And after being warned in a dream, he went away to the district of Galilee. 23 There he made his home in a town called Nazareth, so that what had been spoken through the prophets might be fulfilled, “He will be called a Nazorean.”

   Jesus was born in danger, he and his family had to flee the country, pursued by powerful people, and he died in danger, crucified by…who?

   Well, here’s where it gets personal.

   The world is not the way it’s supposed to be. It’s not the way God created it to be.

   God created us for a living relationship with God, and God created a perfect world for human beings, and He put us in charge. 

   And when we thought we could do a better job than God, and we disobeyed God, evil entered the world, as it still does, through our rebellion against God.

   And we continue to bring evil into the world by disobeying God. We cut ourselves off from a living relationship with God.  That’s why we need a Savior. That’s why we need the cross.

   Who killed Jesus? We did, by our continuing rebellion against God’s will.

   The slaughter of the innocents is nothing new.

   Our world is very different from the world of Adam and Eve, or of Moses, or Paul but the more things change, the more they remain the same.

   Innocents are still slaughtered by people who think that they could do a better job than God.

   One of the few things that I remember from a particular Philosophy class in college was the professor’s opinion that most of the world’s evil, and probably all of its really worst evil, is done by people who sincerely believe that they are doing good.

   The Bible says the same thing in Proverbs 21:2,

2        All deeds are right in the sight of the doer,

but the Lord weighs the heart.

   It is our hearts that must be transformed by God for us to do the good that comes from God. That’s a good lesson to take to heart as we approach a new year.

   It’s why we need a sense of morality that comes from God. And it’s why we need a Savior.

   New Year’s Day is coming next week. It’s a way we measure time, and with time comes change. Things change, but they don’t just change.

   Change requires an idea, and people who are willing to put that idea into action, or people who will just go along with it and won’t object. And then people who will just take it for granted. We get used to it and then accept it.

   That’s why, when people say they prefer traditional hymns and traditional worship, they are often saying that they prefer the hymns and worship that they grew up with, which people once said sounded strange and were hard to adjust to and they didn’t like them.

   That’s why most people’s favorite music is the music that they listened to when they were becoming adults.

   That’s why almost nobody knows that the square they click on to save a document on a computer is a picture of a 3.5” floppy disk, the storage media of the early days of computers.

   That’s why when people talk about a “standard” automobile transmission, they’re talking about a transmission that hasn’t come “standard” in cars for a very long time.

   That’s why “dropping a dime” on someone, or snitching, came from the cost of a phone call on a public telephone in a phone booth, neither of which are around now, but the expression still means the same thing.

   Things change, but they don’t just change.

   Evil, like the Slaughter of the Innocents and all sin, comes from the change human beings made to the way God intended them to be. And the more things change, the more they stay the same: we are naturally disconnected from God.

   We need a Savior, not only to be saved from the consequences of our Sin, but to live the new lives that the Savior brings!

   That’s how we change the world.

   The world isn’t the way it’s supposed to be, and the more things change the more they stay the same. Those things are true. But they don’t mean that we can’t make the world better.

   Within 18 months, my father’s life was turned upside down. His wife, my mother, died of breast cancer when she was 53. His father died. The family business had been overtaken by large corporations and was sold. His business partner, my uncle-in-law, committed suicide. My dad locked in on himself. He didn’t go out. Even his church and community volunteer work suffered. His family and his friends were worried.

   Then one day one of my father’s longest friends, a man whose work as a special agent for the FBI working against organized crime, whose work had taken him out of state, called my dad. He asked my dad to do him a favor, to make a hospital visit for him, something that my had done dozens, maybe hundreds, of times as a deacon in our church. He asked my dad to visit a woman who had bone cancer,

   My dad did. And that visit pulled him out of himself and into the needs of someone else. My dad left the darkness, and he reflected the light of Jesus Christ. Service to others in the name of Jesus Christ, in response to his gift of Himself at Christmas an on the cross, is what expressed his relationship with God, and that is what turned his life back around.

   How will we respond to Christmas?

   Margaret Meade, the anthropologist, said, “Never underestimate the power of a small group of committed people to change the world. In fact, it is the only thing that ever has.”

   So, who’s change will you be? The world’s or the Savior’s?

   The more things change, the more they stay the same. People are still people. People still do dark things.

   But we aren’t called to be the light in a world of darkness. We are called to reflect the light that is within us, the light of Jesus Christ, who said, in John 8:12,

12 Again Jesus spoke to them, saying, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness but will have the light of life.”

   Are you sometimes discouraged by the darkness of the world today, near and far?

   Have you had to go out into the world to find someone damaged by life’s storms?

   Have you been warned that damage could happen, and then you went out in the midst of the storm to find somebody damaged by life anyway?

   That is where we are in this week’s Gospel reading. We are the repairers of the breach (Isaiah 52:12), the reflectors of the light that is within us, the Savior, Jesus Christ.

   John describes it in terms of the birth of Jesus that we celebrate and reflect, in John 1:3-5,

3All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being. What has come into being 4in him was life, and the life was the light of all people.

5The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it.