What is it about nice people that attract total idiots?Nice people are martyrs. Idiots are evangelists.

SOCK IT TO ME BABY!!!

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Wisdom Truck 23

 


Today we look into Psalm 36.  This delightful little song, subscribed as, To the choirmaster. Of David, the servant of the LORD, is made of 5 little stanzas our church would call 'sandwiches' (because the meat is in the middle), but I prefer 'pyramids' because they build towards the peak in the middle.  Our concentration is with the first set:

Psa 36:1  To the choirmaster. Of David, the servant of the LORD. 

Transgression speaks to the wicked deep in his heart; 

there is no fear of God before his eyes. 

Psa 36:2  For he flatters himself in his own eyes that his iniquity cannot be found out and hated. 

Psa 36:3  The words of his mouth are trouble and deceit; 

he has ceased to act wisely and do good. 

Psa 36:4  He plots trouble while on his bed; 

he sets himself in a way that is not good; 

he does not reject evil. 


One commentator points out that this is someone who USED to act wisely and do good. What turned him? As we work this from the outsides, we can see that it breaks down to: first the thought, then the deed.  As a guide to this, we can wrap this as, "How did David get to the point that he would do the whole thing with Bathsheba and Uriah?"  

First thought: There is no fear of God.  In the second stanza, David starts right off with praising God, as was- repeat, WAS- his habit every morning.  But now, he is in a different structure of his days; his army has bid him to stay home after all the years of fighting have weakened him, and he's almost killed by Ishbi-benob, a giant of the line of Goliath (2 Samuel 21:16-17).  Stuck in Jerusalem, he has taken to rising in the evening, and this puts his opening the day with praise in the dumpster.

First deed: He doesn't reject evil.  Once again, if you look at second stanza, you see the results of rising early and praising:

Psa 36:9  For with you is the fountain of life; in your light do we see light. 

We need to be IN God's light to SEE true light.  Without it, our judgments turn inward, and become darkened.  We stop rejecting evil as it comes at us, we stop seeing evil for what it is.  Thus, when David saw Bathsheba bathing, he failed to avert his gaze... he stared.


Second thought: He thinks about how, being king, he can get away with anything. When he was in the Lord, he would have would have been angered at someone thinking as he was- just look at his reaction to Nathan's story that showed his guilt in 2 Sam 12 5-6- but now, he toys with the thought.

Second deed: He sets himself in a way that is not good.  He sends out to MULTIPLE people (2 Sam 11:3-4) to find out who she is, and has her summoned to him.  Not giving a thought to that his actions are making several people unwilling accomplices in- what?


Third thought: The words of his mouth are trouble and deceit.  He starts to transition from thought to deed.  Maybe along the way, he tells himself, ' 'She's not as beautiful close up as she appears, this will quiet me', or, 'I'll just rebuke her for putting herself in my line of sight.'  In other words, de deceives himself about what will happen- he lies to himself.

Third deed: He plots trouble while on his bed.

...and she came to him, and he lay with her. (Now she had been purifying herself from her uncleanness.) Then she returned to her house. 

2Sa 11:5  And the woman conceived, and she sent and told David, “I am pregnant.” 


he has ceased to act wisely and do good. 


And that's how he got there- little thought to little deed, bigger thought to bigger deed.  In the second stanza, we are little birds sheltering under the Father's wings.  But for David, there is no shelter:

2Sa 12:7  Nathan said to David, “You are the man!"


So what started the chain?  Getting out of good habits when the circumstances changed.  Remember two things I have said in the past.  One, there are three definitions of wise/wisdom the Truck is looking at: simple discernment, learning about God by fear of Him (The fear of God is the beginning of Wisdom), and acting wisely.  Secondly, there are three kinds of man who are not wise: the simple, who know nothing; the fool, who says in his heart, 'there is no God'; and the scoffer, who cares little if there is a God or not.  The first two can be saved, the third, not so much.

David went from the simple discernment he had as a child tending Jesse's sheep to someone who gets tripped up by 'innocently' going for a walk on the roof. Then he went from actively seeking God to saying, "God's not hear to see".  Finally, his actions, quite simply, reversed.  He did what he knew was wrong, even though he knew it was wrong.

There are steps up to ultimate wisdom, and we have to work at them. There are steps down to ultimate failure, and all we have to do is stop being aware.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Pictures again

 Tuesday had TWO walks... First, just after breakfast...

Actually, first yesterday, some cuteness from Scamper...



Now, this morning...

After a rain last night...



This time, I saw the froggies, but they didn't register on Misty's radar


Just a nice shot of the Swamp

In the distance...



Fort Wayne from Mushroom Ridge

Note: the one in the middle with the striped worm

Second walk, after a nap (and another shower)

Grapes coming in, hopefully won't be fried and ruined like last year

Heading to the Duck Pond... a bit sloppy

...but some of us like that

Really surprised they haven't mowed back here yet

Can't get to the river

Darn near can't get away from it, either



Let her have some fun in the creek


"Get that dog outta here!"


The totally unneccesary hockey post

 So last night another hockey season for the Family League ended with Laurie's Carolina Hurricanes taking the Stanley Cup.  As per tradition, I'm putting up the year in brief so I have an electronic record.

We play for 'crowns'.  A crown is a division, conference, and/or league regular season title; a playoff championship; a win in an outside-the-season tournament; and the best record overall.  Laurie racked up 16 to Misty's 7, me and Shenan's 6, and KC's 4.

The only thing more lopsided was the hat trick chart.  Yes, I kept track of hat tricks for 88 different teams across North America and Europe- but the fun kinda got deflated by the Romanina League.  You see, they have an under-18 team that plays with the 'big boys' to get experience- AKA get whipped nightly. This year, their average score in 28 games was 18-1 against.  Several of their games were against my Steaua Bucharest, with the result that that one team recorded 33 hats (in 28 games!) including games of 10, 7, 6 (twice), 5(3X), and 4 (9X).  Which makes it no surprise that our European leading goal scorer was Steaua's Maxim Aschulov at 45.

The next most lopsided was the race for the best record; Laurie's Herning (Denmark) swept to a 60-7 overall record, 8 games clear of Shenan's Storhamar (Norway, 55-18) and the aforementioned Hurricanes (69-32).  Before you ask, yes the leagues are not so neatly comparable in real life, but it's just for fun.


Outside of Aschulov, the league's award winners were: North American goals (North America including the Canadian juniors, the NHL, the Fort Wayne Komets- and next season, the AHL):Marek Vanacker of Laurie's Brantford (OHL), 55; North American points was Jason Robertson of Shenan's Dallas Stars (NHL), 96.  Both these numbers far short of our since-2018 records of 82 and 131.  In Europe, the points leader was Misty's Vladimir Tkachev of Magnitogorsk (KHL) with 71, again far short of the records of 53 goals and 87 points.  Top goalies were a tie in North America between Misty's Tobias Tvrznik of Wenatchee (WHL) and KC's Jack Lisson of North bay (OHL) at .913 save %; Matija Pintaric of KC's Grenoble (France) was the Euro champ at  .934.  The  shutout  king this year was my Lokomotiv's (KHL) Daniil Isayev with 10, with  my NY Islanders' Ilya Sorokin (NHL) tops here with  6.


Worst team this year goes to my Polish entry Sanok, who was 0-34 with six games left before they went out of business.  Worst teams that actually finished included KC's Fife (UK) at 15-51, Laurie's Gap (France) at 6-36 (and relegated!), Shenan's Punks  Vilnius (Latvia) at 7-33, and Laurie's DAB  (Hungary)  at 6-26.

So who claimed league championships? Shenan claimed Romania with Gyergoi, Norway with Storhamar, and poland with Tychy.  KC picked up Austria with Graz and Switzerland with Fribourg. Misty grabbed another Latvian title with Mogo; I got the most important one to me with Lokomotiv winning the KHL; and Laurie... sigh... Zhlobin (Belarus), Pardubice (Czechia), Herning (Denmark), and Carolina (NHL).

Then, add on the other-cup winners: Herning (Danish Cup), Rouen (My French guys, with the French Cup), Tychy with the Polish Super Cup, Poprad (KC's Slovak team) with the preseason Tatra Cup, and Laurie's Frolunda (Sweden) winning the Champions League.

And a shout out to the teams that lost in their finals: My Trinec in Czechia, Shenan's Herlev in Denmark, Shenan's Kookoo in Finland, KC's Grenoble in France, Misty's Brasov in both Hungary and Romania; Laurie's Zemgale in Latvia, Laurie's Katowice in Poland, Shenan's Slovan Bratislava in Slovakia, my Sheffield in the UK, And Misty's Merano in the Alps League.


Finally, the top 20 (based on overall season/playoffs/cups games, OT wins=win OT loss=loss, by winning pct.):

1- Herning (Denmark, Laurie)                  60-7

2- Storhamar (Norway, Shenan)                55-18

3- Carolina (Laurie, NHL)                        69-32

4- Lokomotiv (Chris, Russia)                   62-28

5-Brantford (Laurie, OHL)                      57-24

6- Magnitogorsk (Misty, Russia)             58-25

7- Mogo (Misty, Latvia)                          45-15

8- Graz (KC, Austria)                             46-16

9- Fribourg (KC, Switzerland)               51-23

10- Rouen (Chris, France)                      39-14

11- Angers (Misty, France)                     45-20

12- Grenoble (KC, France)                     50-25

13- Windsor (Chris, OHL)                      53-28

14- Gyergoi (Shenan, Romania)             30-6

15- Kookoo (Shenan, Finland)                51-27

16- Tychy (Shenan, Poland)                    41-19

17- Belfast (Laurie, UK)                         49-27

18- Valerenga (Misty, Norway)              39-18

19- Frolunda (Laurie, Sweden)               45-24

20- Slovan Bratislava (Shenan, Slovakia) 46-25


The local Fort Wayne Komets get their best ranking ever at 22 (54-34).

Monday, June 15, 2026

Pictures- but first, a story

 


So here I am on this week's unplanned staycation.  Why unplanned? This is a story of God's grace.

It starts with Laurie getting scheduled for whatever reason with a Friday to Tuesday vacation (IOW, not scheduled).  I had been mulling over whether to take some of this time off too, but never did.  I thought about it again last night before dozing off.

Waking up Monday, I went through the usual garbage where the Devil tries to tell me God isn't real, and I tell him back, "I know He is because of what He's done for me."  Off to work I go, and suddenly my "brake fluid low" light comes on.  With my vastly outdated knowledge of cars, I thought I'd just stop at the gas station, pop a pint into the reservoir, and off I go.

But God blessed me in that the lady running the station was A) not busy and outside having a smoke, and B) was far more knowledgable about these things than myself. After explaining to me that I was an idiot on the road to disaster (In other words, it don't work like that anymore), I called off work, and let Laurie know I was coming back home.

God blessed me a second time then in that once home and while waiting for my mechanic to open, I went back to bed and listened to David Jeremiah- who "just happened" to be talking about how, God doesn't protect you from tribulation, but stands with you through it.  Just what I needed.

Flash ahead to the service shop, where I found out that I had a rear cylinder leak that basically ruined both drums.  The estimate was such that my next choked words were, "We're going to have to talk financing..."

He sent me a link to their financing company, which after making me go through about a half-hour of hoops, said, "I'm sorry, you don't qualify. We'll send you a letter in 7-10 business days explaining why." Which, I believe, was another saving from God, because if I read the terms and conditions right, it was going to come with a 39% interest rate.

So while Laurie called our financial people to retrieve some more retirement money (you know, retirement, that thing that will never happen for me?), I got with the shop, told them the situation, and they said, "Okay, we'll go ahead and get it done, and when you get the money, come get the car."  That will be at least Wednesday, so I called my boss and told him I needed vacation this week- because, God said, "No, you will take vacation NOW!"  And here we are.

Now, onto a great morning walk!

Misty chooses Groundhog road

Breakfast #1- wild strawberries.  Misty won't try them, they are essentially little bites of water with very limited flavor.


Scrunchy, anyone?

Good morning, Big Guy

Stop for a drink #1.  Because muddy water is so much better than slightly flavored berries.

While Misty hoofs it, this doggie tours the woods on a chauffered cart!

Someone lost a lens from their glasses- right in plain sight, if you haven't lost a lens

I bet you can't guess where the water from the last rain stopped

Approximately our 1-mile mark

Doggie meets dragonfly

We took a slight detour to track down better breakfast- Raspberries!  Now these, Misty loves.

Misty finds a frisbee- again, in plain sight

We stopped off at the creek...

...and there was a deer in the water, down by the bridge!  I've wanted a shot like this forever- but the only chance I ever had, the old camera decided to malfunction


On the way back to our regularly scheduled walk- more raspberries!

Then it was time to hunt froggies at the Alumni Pond

Which got interrupted when we both saw a varmint running down the way!


See him a little clearer there, but not much

Misty, though, tracked down where he went

The view from the Big Hill

We reach the river- and Misty debates whether to jump in right there

A few feet ahead, a froggy

and a teeny minnow riding the surface, so as to be eaten by something more efficiently



Meanwhile, at the Swamp- more froggies!


They were little, post-tadpole buggers- sorry, you need Clark Kent's glasses to see them

But Misty had a blast- almost caught a couple!

This guy serenaded us

Approximate 2-mile mark


Tiger lilies on the rampage

More raspberries!  For a minute, I thought Misty was gonna pick her own...

Lots of mini socceristas out

And the 2 1/2 mile mark- almost home!