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Popeye Theology: A New Year's Meditation

Michael Ireland

ASSIST News Service

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA -- I admit it, I stole this idea from my pastor's New Year's Eve sermon this morning. But it's a great idea and needs to be shared.

How many of you remember the Popeye the Sailor Man cartoons? Well, my pastor preached on the topic of "Popeye Theology" this morning and I thought it worth sharing with a wider audience.

He started his message with a clip from the popular TV cartoon. Then he asked the question, How many of you feel like Popeye in the cartoon when he reaches for his can of spinach and says, "That's all I can stands, coz I can't stands no more!"?

Pastor Joel told the story of Bob Pierce, founder of World Vision, who in 1947 went to visit a school in China and was confronted with a young, battered and bruised child. That experience prompted Pierce to start his ministry, "coz I can't stands it no more!"

Pierce said that he prayed: "Dear Lord, let me be broken by the things that break the heart of God."

My pastor then illustrated the same principle from the life of Moses, where he couldn't stand the sound of the mistreated Hebrew slaves in Egypt anymore; by the example of Fern Nichols who founded Moms In Touch in 1984; from the life of Nehemiah and his sorrow over the broken walls of Jerusalem; and from the story of David, who couldn't stand Goliath's ungodly taunts anymore.

Pastor Joel asked us: "Where in your world and daily life do you see what breaks the heart of God?" and: "Are you ready to say, 'That's all I can stands, coz I can’t stands no more!' " ?

Let me interject a personal example here. Last year in June I attended the annual D.A.R.T (Disaster Assistance Response Team) training held by Strategic World Impact (SWI) in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. My heart already being tender from several years of writing about the Persecuted Church, I was ready to 'jump ship' at ASSIST and follow a different entrepreneurial leader. I wanted to go where I felt the Lord needed me most, get stuck in, and get my hands dirty for Him, wherever and whenever.

Now Pastor Joel very wisely said that some people are stirred to action all the time, while others are like mountains and do not move at any of God's promptings. I identified with the former, and on Labor Day this year I formally started working with SWI. My Life Coach was very helpful in helping me to identify and answer the most relevant questions I needed to face in making this move, and I gave it my best shot.

However, it didn't take long for me to realize that while I may have had the passion, I didn't necessarily have the right skill-set or workstyle to do the job. In Pastor Joel's words, I had gotten my toes wet, but the water was too hot for the rest of my foot!

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