Pickle Heaven Press-James R. Johnson

something to help you laugh and think about life with Christ

destined for dog food!    — May 28, 2025

destined for dog food!   

Harry de Leyer was on his way to the horse auction.  He needed an additional steed for the use of his riding students.   But, due to a vehicle breakdown, the auction had closed by the time he arrived.

This had been the last hope for the horses.  The unpurchased leftovers had already been loaded and were bound for a Pennsylvania slaughterhouse where they would be processed into dog food. 

Harry rapidly surveyed the neglected animals.  He spied a bulky, broken down, white horse who had spent his life pulling an Amish plow.  He pulled him out of the truck and walked him around.  They seemed to connect. 

Harry bought the horse for a meager $80.00 and gave him the apt name Snowman.

Snowman found new life on Harry’s farm.  Without the burden of a plow, the horse took to the air.  He loved to jump.  Harry recognized his talent and cultivated it.   With Harry in the saddle, they made their way to competitions and were soon beating out horses who had been bred to be jumpers.  

By 1958, Snowman had become a champion, winning the Triple Crown of jumping.  He continued to beat out his competition for many years after.

Like Snowman, we Christians have been plucked out of an auction of sorts.  The Bible portrays an unsaved person as being a slave to be sold.  The Scripture employs the word “redemption” to describe the process, using three different Greek words that help us to understand what it means to be redeemed.

Our journey begins at the slave market.   My only exposure to a slave market has been through the movies.  I remember seeing, half naked people, with an emptiness that seemed to seep through their eyes.  They possessed nothing, not even control over their own bodies. 

It’s a gruesome but fairly accurate picture of our situation.  Potential bidders poke and prod us hoping to take possession of our souls.   But Jesus sees us and decides to buy us.  This is the first word for redemption, “agoradzo” which means to buy.   It is found in 1 Corinthians 6:20, “For you were bought at a price.”  Jesus gave His life blood on a cross to purchase we who were formerly slaves to sin. 

The second word is “ekagoradzo” which mean “to buy out of.”  This word is used in Galatians 3:13, “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us.”   This carries the idea of first buying and then removing us from the market.  Once Jesus purchased our souls, we would always remain His, never to become available to be resold to another.

The third word translated as redemption is the word, “lutroo.” This carries the idea of removing the chains from a slave and then giving the slave their freedom.  This word is used in Titus 2:14, He “gave himself for us to redeem us from all wickedness” NIV.

Snowman was destined to become dogfood.  We also were headed to the slaughterhouse, to spend an eternity in the unquenchable fires of hell (Mark 9:43-45)

Snowman was overlooked by every other buyer at that auction.  Likewise, Jesus saw us not for who we had been but who we could be. 

Snowman was acquired for $80 when the average cost for a jumping horse at that time ranged from the thousands to the tens of thousands.  But Jesus paid even more – the ultimate cost – His laid down His very life to save us. 

Liberated from the plow, and saved from the slaughterhouse, Snowman was then free to do what he enjoyed the most, running and jumping with His Master in tow.   And we the redeemed are also free indeed (John 8:36).  We have the privilege of joyfully serving and doing life with the sweetest, kindest, most benevolent Master ever.

– a way better destiny for us than dogfood!

A PRAYER: Lord, help us to better understand what it means to be redeemed.

This has been Jim Johnson and pickleheavenpress.com

May the grace of our Lord Jesus be with you

Scripture passages are taken from the NETBible ®

Photo by VentnorNJ – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=107870915

oops! — May 21, 2025

oops!

The street crew may have started well but then fell asleep on the job.  The center line they left painted on the street looked like the work of a myopic monkey or by me.

There are two things I want etched into my headstone.  The first is, “I should have gone to the doctor when my wife told me to.”  The other is, “I hate to paint.”   

I start a painting task with the very best of intentions.  I move the brush slowly and carefully.  And it doesn’t look half bad.  But I am not a slow and careful person, and the job quickly becomes tedious for me.  So halfway through I am painting quickly and sloppily – leaving more paint on the carpet than the wall.

What if God had approached His work with such a warped work ethic?  What if God had been impatient or careless or even lazy with creation?  What if He had made the earth but didn’t set it to spinning – no sunrise – no sunset.    

What if He spent all His energy on making Adam, leaving nothing left over for Eve?   Where would we be?  Well, we wouldn’t!

If God had not been diligent, we might have three seasons instead of four.  (However, losing a Texas summer may not be so bad)

But that’s not God, is it?  He was thorough with every detail to the end, leaving us with a marvelously balanced, beautifully detailed and self-sustaining world. 

We see this quality in Jesus as well, His peers considered Him and said, “He had done everything well” – Mark 7:37.  Everything that Jesus did, He did really well.  I wonder if He ever had to paint? 

And the Lord continues to work with such diligence today especially when it comes to you and me.  Paul wrote, “For I am sure of this very thing, that the one who began a good work in you will perfect it until the day of Christ Jesus” – Philippians 1:6.   That’s good news.   He has grown me much, but there is still lots of ground to cover.  I am so glad that He is committed to seeing it through.  He finishes what He starts.

Now, as a person made in His image, I am thinking He would have me to do as He does.  In fact, I am sure of it.  God through Solomon had this to say in Ecclesiastes 9:10, “Whatever you find to do with your hands, do it with all your might…”    That is God speaking to us.  “Work with all your might,” He says! – everything you got.

Diligence is a quality that God expects of us.   To be diligent is to be careful and conscientious with the work that we do.  We are exhorted in the New Testament to be diligent about various things approximately 10 times.

And then there is this truth that Paul left us that in Colossians 3:23, “Whatever you do, do your work heartily, as for the Lord” (NASU).

We are to work, being motivated from the heart, regarding every task as an assignment from the Lord. The idea is to offer Him our very, very best – to give attention to every detail, to do it skillfully, and to finish the task in a timely way, and to do it with a good attitude.  It is to do the kind of work that causes those who watch us to direct their attention to the God we serve.

We need to bring these qualities to bear on our occupations and marriages, and parenting and certainly our service to the Lord.   “Whatever we do,” says Paul.

When we work in this way, we have something satisfying to look upon with a sanctified sense of pride.  Others find value in it as well.  Proverbs 22:29 says, “You have seen a person skilled in his work, he will take his position before kings…”

Wow, I feel like I need to go and repaint that wall. 

A PRAYER: Lord, help me work better, to better please You.

This has been Jim Johnson and pickleheavenpress.com

May the grace of Lord Jesus be with you

Scripture passages are from the NETBible.com unless otherwise noted.  

who tempted the devil? — May 14, 2025

who tempted the devil?

Lucifer was created as a beautiful holy angel, but he sinned and fell from his lofty position and became Satan the diabolical tempter.  But who was it that tempted Lucifer to sin? 

There was not an evil entity that preceded him – no one to poke and prod him to sin.  Evidently, it was his own independent self-will that set itself against the Lord.  The devil made the devil do it!

This caused me to wonder about Gethsemane.  There, Jesus asked God to remove the cup He was expected to drink.  The cup was a metaphor that represented the trauma that was to quickly come.

There would be the betrayal, the mockery of a trial, the whip lashing, the crown of thorns and the nails in his hands and feet.  On the cross He would suffer an insatiable thirst and find it extremely difficult to catch a breath.  Only then would He die.

Worst of all – the sins of the world, past, present, and future would be piled upon Him so that for the first time in eternity the Father would turn away from His Son causing Him to cry, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” – Matthew 27:46.

Jesus knew it was coming, and he dreaded it. Three times He prayed, “My Father, if possible, let this cup pass from me!” – Matthew 26:39.

He was honestly struggling.  Should we call it temptation?  It seems like it, but is this the devil’s doing?   Maybe not?

In the Gospels, we find Satan and his crew showing up on many occasions.   He took center stage when he tempted Jesus in the wilderness (Matthew 4).  Jesus often interacted with demons who opposed Him (Matthew 8:31-32; 9:32; 12:22).

When Peter defied the Lord, Jesus recognized the influence of the evil one and said, “Get behind me Satan” – Matthew 16:23.  And then in John 13:27, we find Satan actually entering Judas.

It surely seems that if Satan was responsible for the traumatic struggle at Gethsemane, it would have been apparent.  But the narrative mentions only Jesus.

What was going on?  Well, the beauteous mystery of Christ is His incarnation, where Almighty God took on human flesh while remaining 100% God.

Paul described it this way, Jesus “who, though he existed in the form of God, did not regard equality with God as something to be grasped, but emptied himself by taking on the form of a slave, by looking like other men, and by sharing in human nature.  He humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death—even death on a cross” – Phil 2:6-8.

This was an incredibly unselfish act and very necessary.  The holiness of God was needed to atone for man, but an eternal God could not die to provide it.  A man, however, could die, but had no holiness to offer.  So, God emptied Himself and took the form of a bondservant to redeem us.

Gethsemane then was the supreme test of His humanity.  He became flesh to redeem man, but when the time came, would He in His humanity choose to freely suffer to make it happen?

He didn’t need the devil to manipulate him, He had His own flesh to contend with.  Ironically it was during this test that He found His disciples sleeping instead of watching and He reminded them that “the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak” – Matthew 26:41. Could Jesus have been speaking out of His own struggle?

How glad I am that His threefold plea to the Father was also underlined by His submission.  He prayed, “My Father, if possible, let this cup pass from me! Yet not what I will, but what you will” – Matthew 26:39.

He defied His very human inclination for self-preservation and humbly submitted Himself to the severe will of the Father.  Shortly thereafter, He peacefully surrendered to those who would crucify Him.  How fortunate for us that He did!

A PRAYER: Lord – thank you for freely grasping that cup and drinking of it for us

This has been Jim Johnson and picklheavenpress.com

May the grace of our Lord Jesus be with you always.

Scripture passages are from the NETBible.com

bluebell and the blues — May 7, 2025

bluebell and the blues

Solomon once wrote, “There is nothing better for people than to eat and drink…” – Ecclesiastes 2:24.  So what did he think was so great to eat?  Dates and figs?  I don’t know, but, if he were alive today, he might revise his words to say, “There is nothing better for people than to eat ice cream, especially Bluebell.”  Amen!

OK – maybe we need to back up and understand the context of Solomon’s words.  The brutally honest book of Ecclesiastes was written to help us live meaningful lives.

He argued that many of us strive our way through life, and this striving is folly.  Some labor to be rich, but are never able to enjoy their money (5:10-12); Some wrangle their way to fame, and yet the humble still seem to outshine them (10:6-7).

Others strive to have power and yet the very powerful king of Israel went on record saying, “Vanity of vanities; all is vanity.”  (1:2) Some strive for security, but Solomon reminds us that naked we came, and naked we will go. (5:15)

And then there are some that are obsessed with our health and long life, but Solomon said, “youth and the prime of life are fleeting.” (11:10)  He often emphasized the fact that we are all gonna die (5:16). 

He sums up all our striving with the word, “vanity,” which he repeated 38 times in the book.  All is vanity

When we strive for things that we never really obtain, it is a pointless, painful experience.  Even when we do obtain them, we are stunned by the pointlessness of it all.

I was voted senior class president in high school.  I was jubilant for a day or two until I found out that honor was outweighed by the onerous responsibility.

Now before you look for Xanax, you need to know that Solomon was not depressed.  He was quite upbeat and hopeful.  The one word Solomon used in his book more than the word vanity, is God (40 times).

He tells us to consider God’s works (7:13)  to listen to His words (5:1) to fear Him (5:7) to please Him (7:26) and to remember him (12:1)   He described life “under the sun” as vanity (4:7), but He knew that we are headed to that place above the sun, in the presence of God where hope abounds (12:6-8).

Which means that the person who is rightly related to the Lord can cease to strive and enjoy being alive.  In fact, we should strive less and savor more the blessings He gives.

He encourages us to enjoy our mate (9:9), food and drink (5:18) and every fruit of our labor (5:19) When God has the proper place in our lives, we are free to do that.  

He put it this way in his book, “What does a man acquire from all his labor and from the anxiety that accompanies his toil on earth?   For all day long his work produces pain and frustration, and even at night his mind cannot relax.  This also is futile!  “There is nothing better for people than to eat and drink, and to find enjoyment in their work.  I also perceived that this ability to find enjoyment comes from God. For no one can eat and drink or experience joy apart from him.”  (2:22-25)

I am embarrassed by the phrase, “and even at night his mind cannot relax.”   It has been my experience much too often. 

What took Solomon a whole book to say, the apostle Paul said in one sentence “Command those who are rich in this world’s goods not to be haughty or to set their hope on riches, which are uncertain, but on God who richly provides us with all things for our enjoyment.” –  1 Timothy  6:17

So, strive less, serve the Lord more and savor the blessings He gives.  Seriously, it is impossible to wear a frown while enjoying a bowl of Bluebell.  

A PRAYER: Lord, I need your help in this area!  Help me to rest in You!

This has been Jim Johnson and pickleheavenpress.com

May the grace of our Lord Jesus be with you

Scripture passages are from the NETBible ® 

all authority — April 30, 2025

all authority

We finally reached the age where we needed a large-print edition alarm clock.  The numbers on it were 2” tall and it was loud too.  I awakened to the sound of garbage-truck backing into my bedroom.  It was an annoying authority.  It told me when to go to bed, and get up, and leave the house for an appointment.

There are annoying authorities but then there are beneficial ones as well like the policeman who protects us and the doctor who helps to heal us.

Jesus, however, is the ultimate authority – of the best variety.  He demonstrated it over three very different but important realms in Mark 1.

“Then they went to Capernaum. When the Sabbath came, Jesus went into the synagogue and began to teach. The people there were amazed by his teaching because He taught them like one who had authority, not like the experts in the law” (vrs. 21-22).

There in Capernaum, He spoke with authority.  His words were powerful, accurate and penetrating, issued from the author of all truth.   He often said, “You have heard it said….but I say to you.”   His words corrected falsehood and could be fully trusted.

There was a sign on the hand dryer in the restroom at work.  It read, “Push here for a word from the boss.”  Maybe, but when Jesus spoke, He wasn’t blowing hot air.  The people understood the difference.

We find another demonstration of His authority in verses 23-28.  There was a man in the synagogue who was indwelt and controlled by a demonic power.  When Jesus arrived, the demon spoke through the man – opposing Jesus and everything He stood for. 

Then this happened, “But Jesus rebuked him: “Silence! Come out of him!” After throwing him into convulsions, the unclean spirit cried out with a loud voice and came out of him. They were all amazed so that they asked each other, “What is this? A new teaching with authority!” (vrs. 25-27).

There was a time when ignorant people would drill a hole in the skull of a living person who was suspected of being possessed – an escape hatch through which to expel a demon.  Foolishness for sure.  Jesus on the other hand, by His authority alone, as the Son of God, could speak a word and the forces of evil were vanquished.

There is yet another evidence of Christ’s authority in Mark 1. 

The Sabbath service was completed, and instead of heading to the Olive Garden for lunch, Jesus and crew went to Peter’s home.  There they found his mother-in-law suffering with a fever.  Jesus responded, “He came and raised her up by gently taking her hand. Then the fever left her, and she began to serve them. (vs. 31)

When Jesus acted, the feverish sickness instantly subsided. He demonstrated His authority over sickness and disease.

The people of Capernaum recognized and were amazed by Jesus’ authority when He spoke and when He cast out demons.  But when He defeated illness,

They were prompted to submit themselves to His authority.  Mark wrote, “When it was evening, after sunset, they brought to him all who were sick and demon-possessed. The whole town gathered by the door” (vrs 32-33).

Jesus’ authority is not limited by place, or time, or by the size of the problem.   He said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me” – Matt. 28:18.  When I need to get up in the morning, I heed the authority of my alarm clock.  With every other problem, I need Jesus.

Does Jesus have the authority to help me with my problems? Can His servants give me counsel that will make a difference?  Can His Word give me some clear instruction?  Is He able to supernaturally intervene to help? The answer is yes to all the above. 

Make an appointment with Him today.  Bring your issues to Him in prayer.   He has the authority to make a difference and He will do it for you.

A PRAYER: Lord, You are a great God, greater than all our problems.

This has been Jim Johnson and pickleheavenpress.com

May the grace of our Lord Jesus be with you.

Scriptures passages are from the NETBible.com ®

teenaged mutants — April 23, 2025

teenaged mutants

It was as black as night in there as we sloshed through knee deep water that had the sour smell of a sewer – maybe because it was.  We were traveling underneath my hometown through a storm sewer system.  I am sad to report that we did not locate the lair of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

It was a dumb thing to do.  We walked into the darkness of those pipes, inhaled the gases and were oblivious to any drop-offs that might be ahead.  We also brought home a petri dish full of bacteria.  We were dancing with danger.

But this was not the first time.  I remember waiting for the school bus on wintry days, while standing in the exhaust of a car to keep warm.   This did not improve my report card. 

Often, we would scream downhill on bicycles at a good 30 mph, praying we could make it across the narrow bridge at the bottom of the hill.  Miss it and your name was mud, which was also where you ended up.

It was our practice to shatter thermometers and take the mercury and roll it around in our hands.  I once rode on top of a car traveling 60 mph while frantically trying to maintain my grip on the trim around the windows.  I toyed with most every danger back then except to run with scissors.

Every bit of it – dumb and dangerous stuff.   But it wasn’t till I got older that I realized that the greatest dangers to me were not without, but within me,

In Mark 7:20-23 Jesus said, “What comes out of a person defiles him.  For from within, out of the human heart, come evil ideas, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, greed, evil, deceit, debauchery, envy, slander, pride, and folly.  All these evils come from within and defile a person.” 

To defile something is to corrupt and destroy it.  The human heart is like a boiling volcano that erupts and spews scalding lava and toxic ash leaving barrenness behind.

The list of offenses reads like my autobiography. Sexual immorality – check.  Theft – guilty on multiple counts.  Murder, Adultery – Hey there’s a couple I didn’t do.  Greed – yep.  Evil – well yes.  Deceit – I was a chronic liar.  Debauchery – not totally sure what that is so I’ll just say no!  Envy – mm huh.  Slander, Pride, and Folly – Guilty as charged.

These things are dangers for sure for they are the kinds of things that send us to hell.  Jesus warned us, “Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Instead, fear the one who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell” –Matthew 10:28.

Breathing the carbon monoxide from that snow covered car could have killed my body, but the sins of my heart result in God’s judgment – the destruction of my body – and my soul in hell. 

Fortunately, God is in the business of dealing with ugly hearts.  He once said to His people, “I will give you a new heart, and I will put a new spirit within you” – Ezekiel 36:26.

As a young adult, I began thinking, “Hey life is tough enough.  I sure don’t want my defective heart to condemn me to an eternal hell.”   So, one night I said to Jesus “I am sorry.  I have offended You and rejected Your way.  You once volunteered to suffer the consequences of my sin.  I accept Your offer.  And I want to do life with You from this point on.” 

He accepted my apology and has given me that new heart of which He spoke.

These days, the most dangerous thing I do is to postpone my colonoscopy.  I am safe with Jesus!  Are you? 

If you have not yet asked Jesus to forgive you and give you a new heart, you should seriously consider it.  You are welcome to contact me if you want help with this. 

A PRAYER: Lord, please continue to sculpt my heart so that it mirrors yours.

This has been Jim Johnson and pickleheavenpress.com

May the grace of our Lord Jesus be with you always.

Scripture passages are from the NETBible ®

the Big Tex tragedy — April 16, 2025

the Big Tex tragedy

Big Tex is the king-sized animated cowboy who has welcomed people to the State Fair of Texas since 1952. He was born in Kerens, TX as a 49-foot Santa Claus but later was reconfigured as a cowboy. In 1951, he became Big Tex.

He was clad in blue jeans and a plaid shirt and wore the face of Will Rogers. He would greet fair visitors with a wave and a wink and a booming HOOWDEEE, FOOLKS!!!”   The two million annual visitors to the state fair made it a priority to do a selfie with the icon.

Sadly, I was there with my family the day that Big Tex died. We were near the midway when sirens began to wail. We had no idea what happened until 2 hours later we were forced aside to make way for a funeral procession.

A large tractor slowly and respectfully pulled an exceptionally long trailer. Big Tex was stretched out upon it. He was still and silent, and wrapped in a makeshift body bag.

As he passed, the cheerful sound of the throng fell to a whisper. Big Tex was dead! An electrical fire had started in his right boot and worked its way up throughout his fiberglass body.

There was genuine sadness among the fairgoers for their beloved Big Tex.

It was sort-of a silly and yet surreal experience. I thought about the irony of it all. The flesh and blood Jesus also died but received almost no sympathy from the crowd.

He had presented Himself to Israel as their Messiah, and His approval rating was stellar. For 3-plus years He had circulated throughout His homeland healing, delivering, and preaching a stirring message of hope. 

He acted selflessly, spoke courageously, and did harm to no one. If cell phones had been in existence, 99% of his contemporaries would have had a selfie with the Savior.

But He was opposed by a manipulative and powerful minority who arranged to have Him pinned to a tree. And there He hung, just outside the city, along a major thoroughfare.

Matthew’s Gospel described what happened, “Those who passed by defamed him, shaking their heads and saying, “You who can destroy the temple and rebuild it in three days, save yourself! If you are God’s Son, come down from the cross!” In the same way even the chief priests—together with the experts in the law and elders—were mocking him: “He saved others, but he cannot save himself! He is the king of Israel! If he comes down now from the cross, we will believe in him! He trusts in God—let God, if he wants to, deliver him now” – Matthew 27:39-43.  NETBible ®

There was little grief for Jesus, just cruel and heartless mockery. Jesus died! His adversaries assumed it was all over. His body was packed away in a cold stone tomb. But 3 days later, He shattered their foolish expectations.

They had said, “If He comes down from the cross, then we will believe in him.”  Well Jesus was still alive when they said that. Yes, that would have been somewhat of a miracle if He would have set himself free from the nails and escaped.

Instead, they made quite sure He had died and was entombed. He lay lifeless for three days – and only then – only then He set Himself free – from the graveclothes, and the tomb and the iron grip of death.

Texans also assumed that they had seen the last of our beloved Big Tex. But he was secreted away and made bigger and better. He gained 6,000 pounds and was strengthened to withstand 100 mile an hour winds.  He then took his rightful place at the State Fair in 2013.

Jesus is more than Bondo. He truly lives and is clad in His resurrection body and has taken His rightful place in heaven to one day judge the living and the dead (1 Peter 4:5).

Praise His mighty name!

A PRAYER: Lord, our present grief is for the many who do not acknowledge You!

This has been Jim Johnson and pickleheavenpress.com

May the grace of our Lord Jesus be with you!

why’d he do it? — April 9, 2025

why’d he do it?

Bob wanted some guidance from God, so he opened his Bible and let his eyes fall on the first verse he saw.  He landed on the story of Judas.  It said, “He went away and hanged himself” – Matt 27:5. (NASU)  Bob said to himself “This can’t be right!”  So, he tried again.  This time he landed on John 13:27, “What you do, do quickly.”

This is the time of year when we consider the story of Judas.  Ah sad Judas, the apostate apostle who has never had a child named after him. 

The forever unanswered Judas’ question is, “Why’d he do it?”  Why did he betray his Master?  There are two common theories. 

1. He was motivated by greed. 

When Mary anointed Jesus’ feet with oil, Judas said, “Why wasn’t this oil sold for 300 silver coins and the money given to the poor?”

The reason he said it, follows, “Now Judas said this not because he was concerned about the poor, but because he was a thief. As keeper of the money box, he used to steal what was put into it” – John 12:5-6.  He was entrusted with the apostolic group fund and helped himself to it.

So, there are those that argue that greedy Judas betrayed Jesus for 30 pieces of silver to line his own pockets.   But there is a second theory:

2. He was motivated by patriotic zeal. 

The prophets promised that the Messiah would restore the nation of Israel to the stature of David’s glory days.  The Jews of the first century were expecting it to happen in their day.

There was even a political association called “zealots” that was determined to force the Kingdom into existence.   Simon, one of the twelve, was a zealot (Matthew 10:4).

And then came Jesus who presented Himself as Messiah.  His message was, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is near!”  – Matthew 4:17. His teachings centered around the Kingdom of God.  The disciples often competed for the positions of authority in it (Matt 20:20-24).

On one occasion the multitude got crazy.  John wrote, “Then Jesus, because he knew they were going to come and seize him by force to make him king, withdrew again up the mountainside alone” – John 6:15.

At His triumphal entry, the crowd was convinced that Jesus was coming to proclaim himself king.  But things were not progressing toward that end.  The entrenched leadership of Israel had rejected Him and Jesus was not aggressive about seizing leadership.  He had business at the cross to take care of first.

Some believe that Judas was also a zealot and that in betraying Jesus, he tried to create a situation where Jesus would be forced to confront His adversaries and establish His Kingdom.    

Why’d Judas do it?  Which one fits?  I wonder if both may be true. 

Judas was clearly motivated by greed.  He used his position of trust to steal funds from Jesus.  So, what if the Kingdom were to come?    The disciples were promised to rule with Jesus.  Judas probably expected to be installed as the royal treasurer of the Kingdom where he would have fantastic and unfettered access to wealth.

Who knows for sure why he did it?  Jeremiah wrote, “The heart is more deceitful than all else and is desperately sick” – 17:9 (NASU).

But what concerns me is the condition of my own Judas heart.  For I fear that I too may possess quirky motivations that obscure the truth and possibly spoil my love for Jesus? 

David felt the same, which prompted this prayer, “Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in Your sight, O Lord, my rock and my Redeemer” – Psalm 19:14.

He asked the Lord to do a heart procedure – to purify the meditations and motivations of His heart.  A perfect prayer for you and me, especially during this Easter Season.

A Prayer:  Lord, “Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart Be acceptable in Your sight…”,

This has been Jim Johnson and pickleheavenpress.com

May the grace of our Lord Jesus be with you

Scripture passages are from the NETBible.com unless otherwise noted.

the 12th man — April 2, 2025

the 12th man

I visited the home of what some consider a quirky crew – the campus of Texas A&M University.   It began as an agriculture school.  Some students still bring their own horses to college with them. I wonder if they get a free ride.  I attended Ohio State, also an Ag school.  They told me to hold my horses.

I was there at Kyle field to watch the Aggies play some football.  The stands were packed with ordinary students with some odd traditions.  They held out their fists with an upraised thumb and urged their team to “gig” their rivals.

Students would whoop it up when they were excited.  But they are not permitted to whoop until they become upperclassmen.  Is whooping class 301 a requirement?

When the team scored, the ecstatic students turned and kissed their dates.  If you didn’t have a date, you might get kissed anyway.  

And then there was the tradition of the 12th man.  It began in 1922 with an alum named E. King Gill.  He was a former member of the A&M football team and was in the stands to watch them play top-ranked Centre College.   It was a brutal game with nearly every Aggie sustaining an injury. 

The desperate coach summoned Gill down from the bleachers and told him to suit up.  Gill became the 12th man on the team, standing on the sideline waiting to be sent in.  The Aggies, however, prevailed.  So, Gill was not sent in, but he was ready. 

Soon after, the tradition took root.  Today the students stand the entirety of every football game.  They symbolically assume the role of the 12th man, ready for the coach to send them in for the win.

This brings to mind the 4th man tradition.  This one goes back a little farther than 1922, 540 BC to be exact.  Three brave young men were commanded to fall down and worship the image of an egotistical king.  If they defied him, they would be thrown into a blazing furnace. 

These men have always stood out to me as the most heroic of heros in the Bible.  Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego told the king, “We do not need to give you a reply concerning this. If our God whom we are serving exists, he is able to rescue us from the furnace of blazing fire, and he will rescue us, O king, from your power as well. But if he does not, let it be known to you, O king, that we don’t serve your gods, and we will not pay homage to the golden statue that you have erected” – Daniel 3:16-18. – NETBible®

What courage!   They knew that their mighty God could deliver them if He so chose, but even if He should not, they would not bow down and worship the king’s image. 

The king was fit to be tied, so the men were tied up and the furnace was heated to 7 times its usual temperature.  It was so intense it fried the men who tossed them in. 

And yet the King was astounded to look into the oven and see the three walking about, unscathed by the flames – even more shocked to find that there was a fourth man present with them – one the king fearfully compared to a “son of the gods.” 

Who was that person?  That 4th man was more than a man.  He was in fact – a – rather THE – one and only Son of God. 

He was suited up and ready get into the fray to rescue His faithful ones.  But, in this case, the Father gave the order and sent Him into the game, and He used His miraculous powers to preserve our three heroes and help them to prevail.

The Son of God once said to us, “Let not your heart be troubled: believe in God, believe also in me” – John 14:1 (KJV) Jesus is still standing, waiting to be called in when needed.  So call!

A PRAYER: Lord, this is a tradition that I treasure – thank you

This has been Jim Johnson and pickleheavenpress.com

May the grace of our Lord Jesus be with you.

pick-me-up — March 26, 2025

pick-me-up

She was elderly, lived alone and felt quite lonely and depressed.  She didn’t want to be – but she was.  She was usually able to tread her emotional waters by thinking on her favorite verse of Scripture – Isaiah 41:10. 

The Lord said through the prophet, “Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be not dismayed; for I am thy God: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee; yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness.” – KJV

She was challenged by the words “be not dismayed.”  Hey, I will celebrate my birthday dis-May, but that’s not what this word means.  It carries the idea of being anxious.  The Lord tells us, however, that no matter our circumstances, we don’t need to feel that way.  

OK you cannot tell a person how they should feel can you?  I used to try that with my kids, “You will eat those Lima beans and be happy about it.”  It didn’t work.  But God can say such things to us, because He has His ways of dismantling dismay.

In this verse He promised to strengthen us.  A depressed person is locked into a diminished emotional state but the one who crafted us knows us and is able to address it.  He may not remove the underlying problem, but He lends His strength that we might bear it. 

Isaiah said He would uphold us by His right hand.  I was caring for a hospice patient recently.  He could not get out of his chair to get to the bathroom.   He asked me to put my hand on the small of his back and nudge him a little to get him up and out.  With trepidation I did it, and he made it. 

With my hand I strengthened his effort and that’s what God does for us.   

I have an old picture of my skinny 3-year-old nephew.  It appears that he had lifted a barbell with massive weights over his head.  The bar stretches beyond the borders of the picture. Impressive! But what you don’t see are my 2 brothers who are holding up each end. 

We may not always see God in the picture, but He is always there upholding us.

God said, “I will help thee.”   This is an all-inclusive promise of assistance.  Pick a problem – it doesn’t matter.  He promises to help.   Can he help with your finances?  Sure!  But can He pick us up from depression?  Yes, that too!  

The sweetest part of this passage is where He says, “I am with thee.”   

I was just with a clerk at the convenience store.  His presence didn’t do much for me.  If he were the last person on earth, we might hang out.

On the other hand, we find great satisfaction and comfort in being with people who we know care for us – a parent, a spouse, a child, a friend.  Those are the people we want with us when trouble comes.

But God, God cares for us like nobody else.  He has demonstrated that.  The fact that He is all powerful and all-knowing is a considerable bonus.

Isaiah 41:10 always helped my friend’s depression in the past, but not today.  She decided maybe she needed a distraction – a good novel to read.  She found one in the facility library that piqued her interest. 

She got it home and flipped over to page one.  She found a large bookmark stuffed there from a previous reader.

There were some words in a 24-point font printed on it – Isaiah 41:10, ‘“Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be not dismayed; for I am thy God: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee; yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness.”

God personally delivered His message to her.  She was not alone.  And the realization of it dissipated the fog in her heart. 

Hey – He is there for you too! 

A PRAYER: We don’t know how You do it Lord, but we are sure glad You do.

This has been Jim Johnson and pickleheavenpress.com

May the grace of the Lord Jesus be with you