Pardon Me, Your Chad is Hanging (Part One)

For those who are interested in such things, we are now, finally, in the so-called new millennium.out to lunch

We normally start counting things at 1, not 0, so the start of the next thousand years is 2001, not 2000, which was actually then end of the last thousand. Not only that, but the experts also say that 2001 is not truly the start of the third millennium, because roughly two thousand years ago we started counting at the wrong place.

Apparently Jesus Christ was born about for years earlier than we initially thought, so that 1997 was actually 2001.

Oh, well. Now, on to more important matters: chads.

It should come as no real surprise that if we can’t count years correctly, we were bound to have some trouble counting ballots.

I realize that everyone has just about had their fill of this, but I have yet to put in my two cents’ worth on the subject. And, after witnessing the parade of experts, opinion gurus, political pundits and talking heads who got way more than their allotted fifteen minutes of fame during ELECTION CRISIS, I think that my two cents is worth much more than theirs. Consequently, I’ve also decided to take up television journalism.

I say ELECTION CRISIS because the television reporters like to devise ominous sounding titles for every news event, and I have better start toeing the media line if I am to have a chance of unseating Tom Brokaw.

For instance, a tornado in south Alabama becomes DESTRUCTION IN DOTHAN. Floods in Colorado: DENVER DROWNS. Mad Cow Disease in Massachusetts: BOSTON BOVINE BELLIGERENCE. And their propensity for excessive dramatization is not limited to large-scale disasters. HANGNAIL IN HAWAII, FRANKFURT FENDER-BENDER, and SCHOOLBOY MISSES BOWL, FORCED TO SCRUB BATHROOM FLOOR are the types of riveting stories of worldwide import about which we are treated to round-the-clock coverage, commentary, and concomitant commercials.

Which brings us back to ELECTION CRISIS.

If you’ll recall, the Florida presidential election processes gave us chads. Scads of chads. Gads! at the chads. There were Swinging Chads, Hanging Chads, Dimpled Chads, Pregnant Chads, Perforated Chads, Glad Chads, Mad Chads and Very, Very Bad Chads. Where is Dr. Seuss when we need him!

Enough I think, is what I’ve had

Of all these very Ugly Chads

They’re Very Bad

They Make me Sad

I think I’m Mad at Scads of Chads

They Swing, they Hang, these Dimpled Chads

Pregnant, Perforated, Vote-Clad Chads

I hope there is no Plaid Chad Fad

Enough, I think, is what I’ve had.

Well, you get the picture. By the way, will the pregnant Chads give birth in August?

Unfortunately, THE 37 DAYS OF CHAD (a subset of ELECTION CRISIS), did, in fact, create a Chad Fad, however brief. I say THE 37 DAYS OF CHAD, because this significant phase of American history occurred during the yuletide season when we were all beginning to hear the familiar refrains of The 12 Days of Christmas, and, of course, I’m still angling for Brokaw’s anchor job.

I’m working on a jingle of the same name, sung to the tune of The 12 Days of Christmas, which will serve as an emblem for the era. “On the first day of Chad, Al Gore gave to me, a recount in Broward County,” and so forth. I’ll let you know when it’s finished.

THE 37 DAYS OF CHAD FAD spawned jewelry that mimics the shapes of Chad (that’s anchor talk for more than one Chad), and portraits of Al Gore made with Chad-shaped flakes. And, speaking of flakes, any day now I expect to see boxes of Chad Flakes gracing the shelves of the cereal aisle. No Sugar-Coating Added Chad Flakes for those who like unadulterated voting, and Frosted Chad Flakes for youngsters and chafed adults, with a Secret Vote Decoder Magnifying Glass in each box.

THE 37 DAYS OF CHAD also had profound effects on infant nomenclature. No self-respecting parent would dare name his son Chad, until long after the painful memory of the experience has faded from our collective consciousness.

For much the same reason, it has been quite a few years since we heard of any children named Bell Bottom, Shag Carpet, or Disco.

Corn chips, car starters, and cats in reverse

Having reviewed my finances and been reminded therein of the vast wealth I have relinquished in out to lunchexchange for an endless array of pet supplies, I lounge on my couch and gaze in resignation at my two domesticated animals.

Why “domesticated”? They don’t do dishes, nor windows, nor, for that matter, do they even clean up after themselves.

I consider that even as they draw each breath, they are depositing more hair on my carpet and furniture, digesting more food which need only be replenished later, developing maladies which will result in large veterinary bills, and generating the main course for some future tick, flea, mosquito or other vermin which will require more fiscal expenditures to combat.

The dog (a German Shepherd Dog named Roger), has just been to the vet, in fact. He had developed an irritation on his mouth, and I was instructed to apply Vaseline to the affected area until it healed. For your information, it takes quite a bit of Vaseline to grease down a German Shepherd Dog’s considerable mouth, and I expended no small some to have the vet tell me the he had what amounted to little more than chapped lips.

Roger digests his expensive food with a look of mild bemusement, inwardly laughing at his servile owner for worrying with such nonsense as coat sheen and proper stool.

He stares at the cat, Malachi (the last book of the Old Testament…long story) and calculates whether he could leap forward and wrap his teeth around Malachi’s skinny neck before I regain consciousness and intercept him. He considers the amount of cat hair that would be deposited on his tongue and considerable lips, and decides that he’d rather have ear mites.

Malachi has just concluded one of his feline chirping episodes, wherein he perches on a window sill and salivates over a cornucopia of airborne prey protected only by the intervening window, all the while producing an “ack-ack-ack-ack” noise resembling something akin to the defective starter on a ’72 Javelin.

I have just concluded the consumption of a bag of chips, and for now, leave the bag on the floor.

Malachi shows some interest in the bag, or the contents thereof, and attempts to insert his nose for closer inspection. Of course, the bag has virtually no weight, and Malachi succeeds only in pushing the bag around the floor. This is slightly amusing.

Malachi pushes the bag against the wall, and manages to get his head insight. This is somewhat more amusing.

Malachi discovers that there is nothing but barbecue residue at the bottom of the bag, and begins to back out of it. But lo! his head is not so easily extracted. The same lightness which made the bag difficult to enter makes it difficult to exit, and this begins to cause Malachi some concern.

After some half-hearted shaking and tail-twitching, Malachi reaches the most amusing of stages — feline panic. This is getting much better.

I am reminded of the time that Malachi interrupted one of my frequent interludes of mental hibernation by racing out of the bedroom, followed closely by what I could only identify at the time as a grey blur. Thinking he had disturbed a rogue rat, I leaped, as best one can when emerging from hibernation, to investigate and to procure appropriate rat-killing gear.

Malachi was behind the couch, having deposited his assailant on the floor. The “rat,” I discovered, was a pair of my cut off sweat pants. Emerging quickly now from post-hibernation mental fog, I quickly deduced that Malachi had managed to get the draw-string stuck in his teeth, inducing the aforementioned feline panic that is so amusing, and causing him to race madly about the house in an attempt to be rid of his newly-acquired parasite.

My flashback, however, does not help Malachi extricate himself from the corn chip bag.

In a feat of locomotion of which only cats are capable, and with the bag still attached to his head, Malachi races all about the room, IN REVERSE. Malachi’s speed is not restricted by the apparent physical impossibility of such motion, nor by his obscured — indeed, nonexistent — vision.

Malachi continues bouncing around the room, resembling a fur-covered, fish-eating, furball-coughing neurotic pinball, until by sheer violence of motion he is freed from the bag’s bondage.

Malachi casually licks a paw as if nothing has happened, and I laugh aloud. Roger, the German Shepherd Dog, thinks now that fur on his tongue and considerable lips would have been a small price to pay…

All I want for Christmas is a cat-free shoe

Christmas is especially conducive to reminiscing; recalling past Christmases, contemplating better times, out to lunchbeing thankful that difficult times are past. Something in the eggnog makes us weepy and sentimental.

It is no different in the Faircloth household. For us, merely one year has seen remarkable change, and things are much different now than they were last Christmas. For instance, this year our nine year old cat, Malachi, will celebrate Christmas our of doors. This is due to the fact the Malachi came to consider orthodox feline waste elimination a restriction on his liberties. That is, he quit using the litter box. He didn’t quit going; he just quit using the box.

While we are thankful that our remaining cat, Zino, is quite satisfied to have her liberties restricted and confine her activities to the litter box, Malachi reminisces about better times, times when he could go in my shoe, in the dirty clothes hamper, or even on the dog, if he were dumb enough to remain motionless for more than a couple of minutes, which, for Roger, the German Shepherd Dog, occurs quite often.

Our joy is Malachi’s lament. But, as C S Lewis once remarked, hell for people and heaven for mosquitoes could very well be the same place.

At Christmas last year, our son, Brooks, was merely fourteen days old. His capacity to appreciate his first Advent was limited to spitting up and requiring diaper changes at the appropriate times. What a difference a year makes. Brooks is now chattering away (in an alien tongue, probably Chinese, from the sound of it), drinking from a straw, and walking quite well.

This means that he knows when silence is appropriate, and can even motor over to the Christmas tree without making a sound, grasp an ornament, and celebrate his defiance of the parental units by appropriate proclamations in fluent Alien while motoring back over to hide behind Roger, the German Shepherd Dog, who has been lying motionless for quite some time.

You’ve heard of stealth planes, stealth candidates, stealth ships. Brooks is the stealth baby. He moves in to the target undetected, and makes his strategical strike.

By the way, Roger, the German Shepherd Dog, is also thankful that Malachi is not without the house, since he no longer wakes to find he has been used for a toilet. His canine joy may be short-lived, however, as I understand that potty-training toddlers can do some very interesting things.

Christmas of 1997 Carrie and I were dating. Granddaddy was still alive for Christmas of 1993 and Grandmother for 1988. Just a few years before I was still in high school at Charles Henderson.

I can remember staying up late in our old house on Elm Street in order to catch a glimpse of Santa Claus coming down the chimney with all my presents. In keeping with young sibling rivalry, I had requested Santa not bring my sister anything good, and was sure he would take my word that she had been naughty and only deserved a lump of coal and a bag of switches. Little did I know our fireplaces were gas and no longer accommodated the girth of one whose belly shook like a bowl full of jelly.

Grandmother was also wise to our childhood attempts to discover package contents by carefully opening the wrapping, then taping it closed again. She always kept a couple of things hidden, for surprises, and I never caught on that the only presents I ever found were the underwear and socks.

I remember one Christmas so warm I could go outside in my shirt sleeves and kick around the brand new football I had gotten. It promptly became lodged in a pine tree. Another Christmas was so cold (four or five degrees) that we all just stood as close to the space heaters as social convention and body odor would permit, being sure to remind each other to rotate occasionally so that no one caught fire.

Christmas always included the traditional hymns and carols, the church special programs, and Christmas Eve serves. It included the annual trip to the attic for decorations and untangling of lights, and my favorite decoration, the nativity scene that consisted of a manger Granddaddy made and people and barnyard animals from one of my early toys. And it included the Christmas morning reading of the Christmas story.

I enjoy all the childhood memories, the traditions, the eggnog, mistletoe, carols and candy. I am thankful for my growing family, good health, and close friends.

But I am truly and especially thankful for the purpose of Christmas: the celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ.

6 Practices to Help Put Off Sin

We are told in Ephesians 4 that if we have received Christ we will put off sin, be renewed in our mind, and put on righteousness.

This Put Off/Renew/Put On pattern has been in use among biblical counselors for some time, and is of great help in thinking through the spiritual disciplines, as well. We will consider the personal spiritual disciplines in light of this pattern.

We must first recognize that these aren’t discrete steps of our spiritual walk, like rungs on a ladder. That is, we don’t first establish ourselves in our walk with Christ by putting off, complete that task, and then move on to renewing our minds. Instead, we should be continually putting off sin, continually renewing our minds, and continually putting on righteousness, at least until we die or the Lord returns.

The Bible speaks often of this aspect of “putting off” sin.

The believer is told to “deny himself” in order to follow Jesus (Luke 9:23); to “abstain from every from of evil” (1 Thessalonians 5:22); to “flee from youthful lusts” (2 Timothy 2:22); and to “put away” specific numerous sins in light of our redemption in Christ.

“Putting Off” Practices

There are as many opinions about what constitutes a “spiritual discipline” as there are authors who write about them. What I have attempted here is to include those things that relate to the major sin groups to avoid, and which correspond to or facilitate the opposite “Putting On” practice.

Simplicity. The practice of simplicity is not Luddite in its anti-technology, nor romantic in its view of the “simpler” times of life on the prairie before cell phones and the Internet. Instead, it is “austerity in embellishment” (American Heritage College Dictionary), and reflects Jesus’ admonition that “life does not consist in an abundance of possessions” (Luke 12:15), or, as it were, power, influence, reputation, meetings, and so on.

Simplicity is the practice that puts off such things as pride, greed, covetousness, and haste.

Frugality. To be frugal is not to be Scrooge, pinching every penny in order to store it somewhere of no use to anyone. Frugality avoids wasteful spending, either on oneself or others. The point in being frugal is not to spend less in order to hoard more, but to spend less in order to give more.

Frugality is the practice that puts off pride, profligacy, and greed. It leads directly to giving and stewardship.

Chastity. Chastity is living in sexual purity, whatever the circumstances we’re in. It is to find sexual fulfillment and gratification, whether in the actions or in the thoughts, in only those ways that the Lord has approved.

Chastity is the practice that puts of gratifying sexual desires in pre-marital or extra-marital relations, adultery, or the sexual fantasy life of the thoughts and imaginations including porn and “soft porn” and all sexual immorality.

Solitude & Silence. In today’s world we seek out diversions of all kinds in order to avoid being alone with our own thoughts. These diversions usually include noise from TVs, computers and phones, as well as the company we find in kids’ sports, recreational events, moms’ groups, and so forth. Jesus’ example is that he often withdrew from the noise and company to be alone, usually to pray. The believer should join solitude and silence with things like learning, self-examination and prayer so that his silence and solitude does not come to resemble the Near Eastern meditation goal of emptiness.

Solitude & Silence is the practice that puts off the distracted, hurried, un-examined life.

Fasting. Fasting is the believer’s intentional abstention from food (or other things) for a certain period of time in order to focus on communion with God. We fast from food in order to feast on the Lord. The believer should always accompany fasting with Bible study and prayer, and perhaps other practices as well.

Fasting is the practice that puts off the flesh’s demand for priority over the spirit.

Repentance & Confession. Repentance is the believer’s continual turning away from sin and self and toward holiness and Christ, including the “mortification of the flesh”. Confession is saying what God says about sin, not what the compromising world or excusing flesh would say. Repentance & Confession go right along with rehearsing the gospel, “preaching the gospel to ourselves,” and what I call “Gospel gazing” (which we discuss in the article on “Putting On” practices.)

This is the practice that puts off pride, self-righteousness, indifference, and apathy.

Remember that Putting Off is only part of the process. We talk about the other parts — Mind Renewal and Putting On — in upcoming posts.

Dorito’s is Now “Anti-Choice”

I must say that I am imminently relieved that they gave up on the Roman numerals. Super Bowl letter-1084819_1280XXXVIII just seemed wrong, somehow. And, this year’s moniker under the old system would have been Super Bowl L. Enough said.

My personal (partial) viewing of the event was made considerably more pleasant by my discovery of the CBS app for Amazon’s Kindle Fire television.

All Fall I lamented our decision to forego cable television in favor of a combination of broadcast antenna reception and program bundling services. Rooting for the Alabama Crimson Tide was made considerably more difficult since CBS carried most games, and I would have needed the Space Needle to pick up its nearest relay tower. Attempting to stream games only served to increase my blood pressure, because the inevitable “gaps” in streaming seemed to occur only at times of live action. I was able to watch huddles flawlessly, but glitches seemed to always strike right at the snap and then “catch up” when the play was over.

In all aspects, the Super Bowl is an amalgamation of cultural and societal passions and influences. Here are a few of my takeaways from yesterday’s game:

Halftime Shows are Lame

Generally, the halftime show is a good time to make a snack run. Or visit the dentist. Or do your taxes.

Role Models are Rare

Social media was full of the expressions of “disappointment” with various sports figures following the game, most notably Cam Newton and Peyton Manning.

Newton had, for most of the season, been the ebullient, child-like enthusiast of the game who lifted others’ spirits as he excelled and made opposing teams look foolish. But after Denver’s Orange Crush defense made him look like the court jester, he took on the persona of petulant child upset that he couldn’t have a fourth bowl of ice cream. His demeanor in post-game interviews was deplorable.

Not that this should be surprising to any of us. Not because it is Cam Newton, but because a twenty-something handed millions of dollars, fame, and seeming invincibility is bound to suffer deflation when he is made to take a dose of reality.

Peyton Manning, with plenty of reason to celebrate being in the game at all following normally career-ending neck surgery and a season that was less than stellar, was mobbed by media after he won his second Super Bowl. Manning said, among other things, that he was planning to “drink a lot of Budweiser” and later “thank the Man Upstairs.”

He was criticized for promoting alcohol consumption and for using an unbiblical euphemism for God.

Christians know that all men are sinners, even us Christians. I don’t know Newton’s profession of faith, but his behavior should reinforce to us that we all tend to be fair-weather glory agents, “rejoicing always” but especially when everything is going our way. And, we tend to expect ivory-tower theological prowess and social savvy from Christian celebrities, when, well, we shouldn’t.

Fundamentalist Abortionism is Vacuous

My laugh-out-loud advertising moment came in a commercial from Doritos, which portrayed a baby in utero reaching for his dad’s Doritos during an ultrasound procedure (view it here).

The National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL) referred to this as an unfair “tactic of humanizing fetuses.” (See the good National Review article here.)

The intellectual and philosophical emptiness of zealous abortionism — which calls truth a “tactic” and considers babies to be in need of “humanizing” — is on display here, brought to the forefront by no less likely a protagonist than a tasty nacho cheese chip.

For me, the Super Bowl, as usual, seemed to have a bit of everything. Except streaming gaps.

Spouse-Cam Reveals Mysteries of Universe

Camcorders have become almost as ubiquitous as personal pagers, beepers and cell phones.out to lunch

It should be readily apparent to everyone that you’re not on the cutting edge of society unless you’re selling beepers or cell phones. Notice that I didn’t say you’re behind the times if you don’t own a beeper or cell phone; simply owning one is now passe, old hat, tire, dated and definitely not hip.

To be cool, you have to be both a beeper owner and a beeper dealer. If you deal both beepers and phones, all the better. This is patently obvious upon a mere cursory examination of the yellow pages. There you will find Joe’s Pool Hall & Beeper Wholesale, Johnson’s Carpet Barn & Cell Phone Emporium, and Ed’s Hot Wings & (Hot) Beepers. And let’s not forget the most infamous of the bunch, Ed’s Woco Pep & We Fix Cell Phones.

Camcorders are next. Just about everything that occurs in the universe has probably been recorded by some would-be cinematographer and sold to America’s Funniest, Most Redundant, Home Videos & Beeper Kiosk. So, that time you “spilled” coffee on the squad car when you thought no one was looking…tune in to see yourself on next Tuesday’s episode. It will play right between Dad Gets Hit In Face with Soccer Ball and Unidentified Stranger Gets Blindsided by Skateboarding Teen Wearing Beeper and Cell Phone.

Quite a few videographers use their camcorders to catch people doing things they shouldn’t, such as the babysitter raiding the wine cellar, throwing a pizza party on your Persian rug, and allowing the baby to fall headlong into the litter box while grasping your favorite beeper and cell phone.

For much the same purpose, I decided to install Spouse Cam in our house to uncover the truth regarding some of the most mysterious happenings of the known universe. What follows are transcribed excerpts from the Spouse Cam Tapes.

Monday, 9:36 am.

My wife, Carrie, peers out the front window, and apparently satisfied that I am not home, grins mischievously and walks toward the laundry room. The dryer beeps, indicating that the cycle is done, and she begins to unload dry clothes. She carefully separates all my socks, matches them into pairs, and stacks them neatly on the washing machine. Once the entire load has been removed from the dryer, she takes one sock from each pair and places them in the basket of clean clothes. The remaining socks she collects, carefully carries to the kitchen, and unceremoniously dumps into the garbage can. Universal Mystery #1 is solved.

Monday, 3:14 pm.

Carrie enters the master bathroom. “Master bathroom” is misleading, implying marbled floors, saunas, Egyptian linens. Carrie enters the lavatory. She retrieves the tube of toothpaste from the drawer. The tube appears neatly folded from the bottom. Carrie unfolds the tube, grasps it firmly in the middle, squeezes, and replaces the tube. Universal Mystery #2 is solved.

She then retrieves my toothbrush and uses it to remove debris from the bottom of her shoe. Universal Mystery #3 is solved.

Wednesday, 10:42 am.

On her way out of the lavatory, Carrie removes the toilet paper from its spindle and turns it so that the end of the paper falls to the back, instead of to the front. Universal Mystery #4 is solved.

Thursday, 4:27 pm.

The 13-month-old, Brooks, toddles into my library alone. “Library” is misleading. Brooks wanders into the coat closet where there happen to be some books. He pushes every book to the back of the shelf, then removes the contents of the trash can and distributes them randomly around the room. Universal Mysteries #5 and #6 are solved.

Friday, 11:03 am.

Roger, the German Shepherd Dog, enters the walk-in closet. “Walk-in closet” is misleading. Rogers enters the broom closet with the really wide door. He then brushes repeatedly against the previously clean and fur-less slacks and coats hanging there. On his four heels is Brooks, who takes one who of every pair, and those he doesn’t place in the bath tub he hides under the bed. Universal Mysteries #7 and #8 are solved.

Saturday, 6:47 am.

Carrie plays with the toddler in the living room. She retrieves the remote control, removes the fresh batteries recently installed by me, and exchanges them for batteries from the toddler’s well-used remote control car. Universal Mystery #9 is solved.

The unblinking eye of Spouse Cam will continue to report suspicious activity, so watch yourselves.


Rob Faircloth spends much of his time recovering socks from his children.

Come As You Are, But Leave as God Wills

The mantra of many a congregation is that everyone is welcome to attend their church just as they are. This usually — and rightfully — means that those outside the church should feel comfortable to attend without changing themselves to look like those inside. (One would hope that no one means, by come as you are, to invite people to arrive in the same condition as when they had just gotten out of the shower.)

We also say that God welcomes sinners just as they are. When this means that one need not become holy before coming to God, it is an accurate representation of biblical teaching, for no one can be holy without God, and everyone comes to God with only his sinful condition in hand. It is after one has come to God that God makes those changes, where necessary.

Frequently, however, what we truly mean when we recite these phrases, and what we are teaching those we attempt to invite by uttering them, is Come as you are, and leave as you came.

But the Bible tells us that if a man has actually come to God, he will leave a different man. Not necessarily different in his outward, physical appearance, but different either in that his standing has been confirmed in his rejection or acceptance of God, or different in the attitudes of his heart having met the living God.

Sure, “Come as you are,” but leave as God wills.