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Saturday, February 21, 2009

The Best of Intentions


My wife Carol and I recently watched a TV documentary about three African-American fathers who were filmed in 1996 telling of their plans to be good dads.

The program, hosted by Al Roker, followed up a “Dateline NBC” report from 1996 that recorded several births among black women at a Newark, N.J., hospital and interviewed the unmarried fathers of the children as they vowed to be there as their babies grew up.

“I’m gonna be there when you graduate,” one videoed father said to his newborn.

The program tracked down the three “babies who’d become youngsters” (two boys and a girl who were 12 years old at the time of the second filming) and the fathers who promised to stand by them. Jail, joblessness, depression and irresponsibility had intervened – none of those fathers had “been there” for their children.

Each youngster seemed well spoken and well cared for – their mothers deserve credit – but their lives “could go either way, and soon,” someone said. One boy called his father “evil.” The girl, cuddling a cat, said she would never marry. She learned her father was in prison before her mother could snatch away a newspaper telling of his plight.

We sometimes express the best of intentions but often don’t deliver.

Connie Smith commented on some marriages when she intoned these words from a country song: “The wedding bells have barely stopped their ringing / But already all your love for me is gone / On the day that we were wed / Well, I guess we should have said / ‘For better or for worse, but not for long.’”

Travis Tritt in a song called “Best of Intentions,” crooned these lyrics: “Never could build you a castle / Even though you're the queen of my heart / But I've had the best of intentions from the start / …Now some people think I'm a loser / Cause I seldom get things right / …Please tell me you will remember / No matter how much I do wrong / That I had the best of intentions all along.”

Randy Travis sang “Good Intentions,” a song containing these words: “Mama always prayed I’d be a better man than Daddy / And I determined not to let her down / Deserted by the man she loved and left to raise four children / We were the local gossip of the town / …There’s lots of things in my life I just as soon not mention / Looks like I’ve turned out like all the rest / But Mama, my intentions were the best.”

Israel’s King Solomon began his reign with humility and dedication. In Gibeon, God appeared to him in a dream and invited Solomon to ask for anything he wanted. Solomon pleased God by saying, “Give me wisdom to rule your people well.” God gave him wisdom and blessings. The Bible records that God said, “There will not be any among the kings like you all your days, if you walk in my ways, keeping my commandments and laws” (1 Kings 3:13). Solomon later failed to live up to his good intentions.

Before his crucifixion, Jesus celebrated Passover, and then he and his disciples “went out” into the Mount of Olives (Mark 14:26). Jesus said to his inner circle, “All of you shall be offended because of me this night: for it is written, ‘I will smite the shepherd, and the sheep will be scattered’” (Zechariah 13:7).

Peter said, “Even though they all desert you, I will not!”

Jesus said, “Even this very night, before the cock crows twice, you will deny me three times.”

Peter insisted that even if he had to die with Jesus, he would not deny him. The King James Version of the Bible translates Peter’s vehement response as: “If I should die with thee, I will not deny thee in any wise.” All the disciples standing near Peter agreed with his pledge of loyalty unto death. The KJV translates their response: “Likewise also said they all” (Mark 14:31). They sounded forth with their best intentions. Before that night ended, Jesus’ disciples left him standing alone, and Peter had denied him three times.

Since the day I accepted Jesus as my Savior, I’ve often fallen short in maintaining my relationship with God and “missed the mark” in loving people. I’m glad God’s grace can save repentant sinners – and cover the confessed sins of believers who fail to live up to the best of their intentions.

1 comment:

Sarah said...

Several years ago, when my Grands were in elementary school, one of their teachers said that out of a class of 24, only 8 were living with both parents. This included all races in the class, not just Blacks. It is not a race problem. It is a morality problem - or a lack thereof! I dare say those 8 kids are in different household situations now. I hope NOT! That is, in a nutshell, the entire problem with our society, our government, and, yes - US! None of us is perfect, and that is getting worse daily! We absolutely HAVE to get back to walking with our God, and doing it all the time, and doing it SOON, or else we as a nation are going to be completely doomed to failure all the way around. Our kids already show signs of dumbing up because there is no parent home to insist they learn, no teacher allowed to insist they learn, no Bible around in school OR at home in many cases, from which TO learn, and no Sunday School Classes attended, to gain wisdom from. And look at our role model -- he is President Obama, reared Muslim, joined a racist church just so he could say he is a Christian, in order to gain popularity (NO, I do not believe completely yet that he is Christian!), whose church plainly states that its loyalties lie not to America where it is located, but to Africa where I feel they should all move! And so, on we go towards The Almighty Change, which Obama stands so mightily for. May God rescue us all - and soon!