Friday, July 31, 2020

The Faith of Christopher Hitchens

I recently finished a book by Christian author, Larry Taunton. He wrote a book about his relationship with notorious atheist, Christopher Hitchens, who died of cancer in 2011. Here's the review I wrote on Goodreads:
This is an excellent book. I followed Hitchens' relationship with Doug Wilson and it seems like Taunton had a very similar experience. Hitchens was a performer, but this book (and Wilson's writings) point out that he was also a human being. Sometimes we forget that even our enemies are frail human beings, sinful and frail. It's so refreshing to see how two people with such different worldviews can get along and, more than that, be friends. This is so rare. I learned a lot from Taunton; most importantly, that the goal is to glorify God and act as a redemptive agent for him. Taunton always kept the main thing in front of him, not knowing if Hitchens was one of God's chosen people, but assuming he could be, doing all that he could to preach the gospel to this man and help save his eternal life. The debates, the disagreements, and even the agreements and friendship did not distract him from preaching Christ crucified.
I admire Taunton and his commitment to God's work. You should read this book. Not only is it a good story, but it is also very well written. Taunton has a gift with words and humble insights into the human condition.

Monday, July 27, 2020

Taking Some Time

After posting 500 entries, I'm taking a little break! I'm reflecting on the future of GBM. If you have any comments or suggestions, please let me know.

Thanks for reading my blog.

Thursday, July 16, 2020

GBM - The 500th Post!

Wow! It's hard to believe that it's been about 2-1/2 years since the first post on GBM on February 18, 2018. This is the 500th post. When I started it, I was posting almost every day, but over the past year or so, I've been posting twice a week, generally on Sundays and Thursdays.

I started the blog to offer encouragement, encouragement to seek light in the darkness. Sometimes, I just posted stories or brief passages from a book, article, or essay as light-hearted distractions. I hope it has been helpful.

I'll end this 500th post where the 1st post ended with a quote from one of my favorite Bible verses, Philippians 4:8:
Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things.
Please continue to seek the virtuous in your life, the higher things, the better things...the Light. 

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

In God's Time

As I have mentioned, my wife and I are reading a devotional by Jon Nielson called The Story. Related to the reading of 1 Samuel 24, Nielson describes how David - while ordained by God to be the future king of Israel - waited patiently for his time to succeed Saul. This wasn't easy. Saul was hunting David with the intent to kill him. For many of us, it would have seemed easier for David just to kill Saul and take his place on the throne. But David was a man after God's own heart and he knew it was not his time yet. Nielson writes:
By the time the events of 1 Samuel 24 take place, it has been many years since Samuel's covert anointing of David as the king of Israel. David - wanted by King Saul - is a man on the run. Surely there were times when David was tempted to hurry things up a bit in terms of God's plan for him. If ever there was a chance - and seemingly a God-given chance - for David to bump off Saul, and take over the kingdom, it was now!
Nielson recounts the scene where David could have killed Saul in a cave, but instead just cuts off a piece of his robe:
Even after merely cutting a bit off Saul's robe, in fact, David is stricken with remorse. He wishes he could take back even that small action - that tiny affront to the king who had been once anointed by God through the prophet Samuel. This is the rightful king, the man after God's own heart, the man who will not grab for himself the crown, but will wait for his God to deliver it to him in his time and in his way.
Patience. Waiting on the Lord. Most of us are not good at this. We want to get married (or want our kids to find wives); we want the next best job or the next best place to live; we want that illness to subside or that virus to disappear; we long for the parent, son, daughter, aunt, uncle, sister, brother, niece or nephew to know God. Sometimes we want these things so badly, we act in less than righteous ways to try to make them happen. We want to move things along. When our hearts are like this, we would have killed Saul instead of cutting off a piece of his robe.

For believers, waiting on the Lord can be excruciatingly difficult. At the moments when we just can't seem to wait any longer, we risk exchanging God's will for our own. We proclaim in our hearts, "God, you don't know what you are doing."

But through the mercy of the Holy Spirit, we can stand down and recall His promises:
Likewise, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. For we do not know what to pray for as we ought, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words. And he who searches hearts knows what is the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the will of God. And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose. - Romans 8:26-28
Nielson ends his devotional with this; good words to live by in impatient times:
"Pray today that your heart would be like David's heart. Pray that you would trust God to work his will in your life, in his time and way. Pray that you would work with all your strength for the cause of Jesus Christ, trusting that his power will accomplish his purposes as he has planned it."

Friday, July 10, 2020

God, Leave Me Alone

"When I say, ‘My bed will comfort me, my couch will ease my complaint,’ then you scare me with dreams and terrify me with visions, so that I would choose strangling and death rather than my bones. I loathe my life; I would not live forever. Leave me alone, for my days are a breath. What is man, that you make so much of him, and that you set your heart on him, visit him every morning and test him every moment?" - Job 7:13-18 

I read this passage a few weeks ago, wrote it down, but didn't know what to say about it. I still don't. I've been thinking about it: What would my life look like if God left me alone? I guess it is what life in hell is like. What would the universe look like if God left it alone? I picture some kind of alternate universe movie, A World Without God. I don't know. But this passage and the Book of Job says one important thing about God: A man can tell God - the Lord of the Universe - to go away and instead of doing that, He blesses him immeasurably and demonstrates His love, generosity, and mercy: 
And the Lord restored the fortunes of Job, when he had prayed for his friends. And the Lord gave Job twice as much as he had before. Then came to him all his brothers and sisters and all who had known him before, and ate bread with him in his house. And they showed him sympathy and comforted him for all the evil that the Lord had brought upon him. And each of them gave him a piece of money and a ring of gold. And the Lord blessed the latter days of Job more than his beginning. And he had 14,000 sheep, 6,000 camels, 1,000 yoke of oxen, and 1,000 female donkeys. He had also seven sons and three daughters. And he called the name of the first daughter Jemimah, and the name of the second Keziah, and the name of the third Keren-happuch. And in all the land there were no women so beautiful as Job's daughters. And their father gave them an inheritance among their brothers. And after this Job lived 140 years, and saw his sons, and his sons' sons, four generations. And Job died, an old man, and full of days. - Job 42:10 - 17
Please Lord...never leave me alone.

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Joshua Did More Than Conquer Jericho

I may have mentioned this already, but I'm reading through the Book of Joshua. Joshua is a very important figure in the Bible, but we don't hear much about the book's namesake. We hear a lot about Abraham, Moses, David, Solomon and others, but Joshua...not so much. But Joshua was used by God to fulfill the promises he gave to Abraham and Moses: he led God's people into the Promised Land! The trajectory of the first five books of the Bible is the establishment of the Promised Land and Joshua led the Israelites there. Quite an accomplishment! One could say that the book of Joshua could be accurately named "Eisago," the Greek word for "enter," just as Exodus is the Greek word for "exit."

Perhaps Joshua is not celebrated - at least in modern times - because of the violence and destruction that Joshua applied to the inhabitants of Canaan. It is well-documented that God required Joshua to completely conquer the territories and in the process kill many men, women, children and animals. What is less documented is the level of depravity that had overcome the Canaanites and the other inhabitants. These people were participating in idol worship, child and other human sacrifices, murder, and other deep offenses to God. They had become so depraved that their destruction was necessary. 

Still...that was the Old Testament and not something that Jesus Christ would participate in or condone. After all, he came to bring peace to the world. Well, yes...and no. God the Father and God the Son are one God, with identical wills and purposes. God the Son does not argue or disagree with God the Father and vice versa; the same, of course, applies to God the Holy Spirit. The Second Person of the Trinity agreed with the destruction of Canaan. As a matter of fact, he led the charge:
When Joshua was by Jericho, he lifted up his eyes and looked, and behold, a man was standing before him with his drawn sword in his hand. And Joshua went to him and said to him, “Are you for us, or for our adversaries?” And he said, “No; but I am the commander of the army of the Lord. Now I have come.” And Joshua fell on his face to the earth and worshiped and said to him, “What does my lord say to his servant?”And the commander of the Lord's army said to Joshua, “Take off your sandals from your feet, for the place where you are standing is holy.” And Joshua did so.
According the Reformation Study Bible, "The commander is evidently an appearance of the pre-incarnate Son of God, The Divine Warrior and His army are prepared for war." In this passage, the commander of the Lord's army tells Joshua to remove his sandals, just as God told Moses to remove his because Moses - like Joshua - were in the presence of God. The same imagery is reflected in Revelation 19 when Christ returns as a warrior in the final acts of establishing his kingdom: "Then I saw heaven opened, and behold, a white horse! The one sitting on it is called Faithful and True, and in righteousness he judges and makes war."

The conquering of Canaan was a fulfillment of a promise made to Abraham and Moses, but it was also a judgment on the inhabitants of that land who had fallen into horrible sin and depravity. The final judgment of this world will be no different, led by the gentle Son of God filled with compassion and mercy for his people, and the fierce warrior filled with righteous judgment for those who refuse to bow the knee to Him. 

The book of Joshua can be a hard read, but it - like the rest of the Bible - reflects the true, unchanging nature and character of God.

Sunday, July 5, 2020

What's Your Fortune?

Last week, after a long day at work, we decided to order out for dinner and we decided on Chinese. Like the 100's of times before in my life, we got a bunch of fortune cookies with our meal. Most of the time the sayings are usesless or meaningless, especially when the fortune cookie company does literal translations from Chinese to English. ("Never drive a flat car with tires.") But once in awhile, the cookie crumbles and the little slit of paper offers some thought-provoking wisdom. I got one of those last week. Here's what it said:

"Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point."

According to medieval Cathlolic writings, there are four Cardinal virtues: prudence (deciding and acting wisely); justice (loving your neighbor); temperance (self-control or restraint); and courage (fortitude, bravery, valor). According to my fortune cookie (I think), when we are required in a given situation to act with prudence, or demonstrate justice, or respond with temperance, we will need courage to do those things. 

For example, when a teenager stands up to others who are bullying another student...that requires courage to act. Loving one's neighbor is easy to do in our minds, but acting on that virtue takes courage. Or in a situation where someone is asked by friends to do something destructive or plain stupid "just for fun", it takes courage to say 'no' and risk alienation. We've all been there. In many of those circumstances it wasn't knowledge of right and wrong that let us to the right or wrong actions, but the presence or lack of courage. 

I'm certainly not an expert on medieval notions of virtues and vices, but I guess I know enough to see the wisdom in this fortune cookie. 

I never know the source of my next blog post. Who would have thought that an order of lo mein and an egg roll would bless me with one.

Thursday, July 2, 2020

Even Hillbillies Can Change

I just finished reading Hillbilly Eligy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis by J.D. Vance. This book was a surprise best seller a couple of years ago. It's the story of the life of J.D. Vance, a hillbilly from a poor working class region of Western Kentucky, more commonly known as Appalachia. Vance's life could have become a tragedy: drug-addicted mother married five times; constant relocations, living with men his mother barely knew and he did not know at all; family alcoholism and abuse; on and on. Apparently, this is the story of most people in that part of the country - the plight of the vast majority of the white working class there. Fortunately for Vance - and he attributes some of his fortune on his loving, but often harsh grandparents, and his wonderful older sister - he manages to crawl his way out of that mire, attend Ohio State University and eventually earn a law degree from Yale University. An outcome that just does not happen for hillbillies from Appalachia. 

It's difficult to quote from the book or offer a brief summary. While the story of his life is linear, the circumstances (especially before college) are not, more swirling and chaotic, and his thoughts about that part of his life are the same. To take an isolated quote about his thoughts on government assistance, for example, may lead one to believe that he thinks that the government cannot help the poor. But that's not his position. He realizes that government programs (like Food Stamps) do help the poor, but he also acknowledges that those same programs have hurt the poor by creating a culture of dependence and, to be frank, laziness. A major theme of his book is that individuals have to take stock of themselves, look inward for the sources of their troubles and stop blaming the world. External circumstances can change and in many cases should, but if there is no introspection, if there is no responsibility taken for individual choices, then those external changes will ultimately not change an individual's disposition and, therefore, his situation. Again, single quotations from the book do not encompass Vance's entire position, but I think this one gets to his point:
Similarly, when people do fail, this mind-set allows them to look outward. I once ran into an old acquaintance at a Middletown bar who told me that he had recently quit his job because he was sick of waking up early. I later saw him complaining on Facebook about the “Obama economy” and how it had affected his life. I don’t doubt that the Obama economy has affected many, but this man is assuredly not among them. His status in life is directly attributable to the choices he’s made, and his life will improve only through better decisions. But for him to make better choices, he needs to live in an environment that forces him to ask tough questions about himself. There is a cultural movement in the white
working class to blame problems on society or the government, and that movement gains adherents by the day.
Vance's focus is on the white working class - and while this sentiment may be more prevalent among his people  - they are not alone in this sentiment. This crosses over to other ethnic groups, classes, and peoples -  we all do this to some degree. And if we don't blame the government for our problems, we blame our misfortune on our family tree, schools, neighbors, the weather - everyone and everything, but ourselves. To blame ourselves would require us to attack the one monster that we don't want to fight: pride. 

While communities foster this thinking, we also do this as fallen human beings - it's in our nature. When I was taking counseling classes years ago, one of my professors would say that the seed of change is to admit that "my biggest problem is me."

While there is much to think about and learn from Vance's book, this is what I took away from it: before you start looking outside of yourself for the source of your troubles, take a good hard look at yourself. You probably won't like what you find, but confronting yourself and your troubled heart will lead to the change that will truly transform your situation and your life.

Sunday, June 28, 2020

Cautionary Words

"We cannot extend the mastery of government over the daily life of a people without somewhere making it master of people's soul and thoughts." - Herbert Hoover (31st President of the United States)

Friday, June 26, 2020

How We Act...Has Eternal Consequences

"But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh. For the desires of the flesh are against the Spirit, and the desires of the Spirit are against the flesh, for these are opposed to each other, to keep you from doing the things you want to do. But if you are led by the Spirit, you are not under the law. Now the works of the flesh are evident: sexual immorality, impurity, sensuality, idolatry, sorcery, enmity, strife, jealousy, fits of anger, rivalries, dissensions, divisions, envy, drunkenness, orgies, and things like these. I warn you, as I warned you before, that those who do such things will not inherit the kingdom of God." - Galatians 5: 16-21

Note that the Apostle Paul does not place any conditions on these sins or "works of the flesh." The standard remains despite the circumstances. Pray for God's grace and strength in your life to live according to the Spirit. We are incapable of doing that ourselves.

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

The Light of the World

If I haven't mentioned it already, I'm reading through the book of Job. The book is interesting because you have to be careful about how you quote it. For example, while Job's antagonists' speeches are in the Bible, it doesn't mean that what they are saying (in the context in which they are saying it) is biblical. John Piper does a nice job discussing that here.

In view of this, I appreciate how Job uses the metaphors of light and darkness in chapter 24 to provide insights into sin and righteousness. Specifically, I was reading verses 13-17:

“There are those who rebel against the light,
    who are not acquainted with its ways,
    and do not stay in its paths.
The murderer rises before it is light,
    that he may kill the poor and needy,
    and in the night he is like a thief.
The eye of the adulterer also waits for the twilight,
    saying, ‘No eye will see me’;
    and he veils his face.
In the dark they dig through houses;
    by day they shut themselves up;
    they do not know the light.
For deep darkness is morning to all of them;
    for they are friends with the terrors of deep darkness."

In this passage, Job reflects the sins of the 10 commandments: You shall not murder; you shall not commit adultery; you shall not steal. He describes these sins as walking in darkness, against the light of God's righteousness. The ESV Study Bible provides this insight:
These verses are linked together by a play on the senses of the word "light" and its related vocabulary. Job begins by describing those who rebel against the light as those who oppose wisdom and righteousness - not knowing its ways or walking in its path (v.13). Job then describes how the manner of life is revealed in the light of day and the dark of night: the murderer gets up before it is light to pursue injustice and continues to prowl around at night (v.14); the adulterer assumes that in the twilight his actions will go unseen (v.15); thus they each bring ruinous effects on other households at night, while seeking to guard themselves during the day (v. 16). Job implies that their reversal of the typical times of sleep and labor (deep darkness has become morning) is itself a manifestation of the fact that they do not know the light and instead have chosen foolishly to become friends with the terrors of deep darkness (vv. 16-17).
As I read this passage and the commentary, it occurred to me that I started this blog over two years ago with this imagery in mind. There is something about darkness - about late night hours "after midnight" - that tempts us to sin. In the darkness we find cover - or we think we do - to do things we would not likely do in the light of day. That temptation can be tempered by seeking God before midnight, before the darkness lures us into sin, so that we do not "rebel against the light" but instead find comfort and solace in the Light of the World.

Thursday, June 18, 2020

T.S. Eliot, Culture, and the Church

T.S. Eliot was a world-renowned, Nobel Prize-winning English (but American born) poet. He died in 1965 leaving a legacy of beautiful, influential literature.

I read Eliot as an English major in college ("The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,," "The Waste Land"), but I don't remember reading any of his work after he became a Christian. It's possible that we did and I don't remember, or the secular college I attended considered those of lesser artistry and left them out. Regardless, I was perusing an old bookshelf at home and found a collection of his poems. I started reading his explicitly Christian poems and I found them poignant and relevant for today. 

In 1934, in addition to witnessing the march of fascism and communism across Europe, he bemoaned the declining interest in God and religion. Churches were more empty than full, and there was a growing sense among the populace that faith was becoming irrelevant in the modern age. This decline has continue in Europe to a point where secularism has become the predominant belief system.

When my parents immigrated from Germany to the U.S. in the mid-50's they were amazed and pleased at how religious the American culture was. By 1956-57, Germany was already a post-Christian nation with churches having more value as historic sites than places of worship. Unfortunately, my parents now in their 80's and having been in America for over 60 years, are seeing the post-Christian culture overtaking this country as well. Fewer and fewer people are attending church and Christianity is more and more seen as an impediment to progress, instead of a bulwark against sin and beacon of hope.

Eliot shares his view with us as he observes 1930's England; in many ways, he's holding up a mirror to us.

Choruses from "The Rock" - 1934

The Eagle soars in the summit of Heaven,
The Hunter with his dogs pursues his circuit.
O perpetual revolution of configured stars,
O perpetual recurrence of determined seasons,
O world of spring and autumn, birth and dying!
The endless cycle of idea and action,
Endless invention, endless experiment,
Brings knowledge of motion, but not of stillness;
Knowledge of speech, but not of silence;
Knowledge of words, and ignorance of the Word.
All our knowledge brings us nearer to our ignorance,
All our ignorance brings us nearer to death,
But nearness to death no nearer to God .
Where is the Life we have lost in living?
Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?
Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?
The cycles of Heaven in twenty centuries
Bring us farther from God and nearer to the Dust.

I journeyed to London, to the timekept City,
Where the River flows, with foreign flotations.
There I was told: we have too many churches,
And too few chop-houses. There I was told:
Let the vicars retire. Men do not need the Church
In the place where they work, but where they spend their Sundays.
In the City, we need no bells:
Let them waken the suburbs.
I journeyed to the suburbs, and there I was told:
We toil for six days, on the seventh we must motor
To Hindhead, or Maidenhead.
If the weather is foul we stay at home and read the papers.
In industrial districts, there I was told
Of economic laws.
In the pleasant countryside, there it seemed
That the country now is only fit for picnics.
And the Church does not seem to be wanted
In country or in suburb; and in the town
Only for important weddings.




Sunday, June 14, 2020

The Temptation to Belong

I finally got around to reading The Hideous Strength by C.S. Lewis. I read the first two books of the Space Trilogy years ago, but never read the final book. I'm about 3/4 of the way through it. For those who never read it, it's a story about that revolves around the lives of a married couple Mark and Jane Studdock and an ostensibly scientific institute, the N.I.C.E., which is a front for a sinister supernatural forces. Lewis weaves a tail of good versus evil as only he can. 

Today, I was struck by a passage that reminded me of a struggle in my own life and I think one that many struggle with as well: the desire to belong. I remember as a kid and young adult wanting to fit in, to find a group that would accept me, to be part of the "in" crowd. I don't think this desire is inherently sinful. We are made to belong. In the end, Christians will be part of a single group, a single tribe, a single people who will spend eternity together sharing in the joy of the presence of God. As Christians, we are commanded to love one another and consider each other as brothers and sisters in Christ. Now, we should be striving to belong to one another under the lordship of Jesus Christ. And wanting to be part of a club - bowling league, baseball team, a geneology club, a Ford club - is a good thing, too. The joy of commaderie is a gift from God. 

But like with everything in human life, we tend to distort what is good. We want to belong, to be part of a group - but we often want it too much; we seek entry into the group as a way to find an identity, to find life's purpose, to feed our pride, to feel superior to others...you name it and humans can distort even this good gift. Young people are particularly susceptible to this, but this temptation really knows no time limit. It haunts me even at my age. 

The passage below comes from The Hideous Strength. Mark Studdock is in a prison cell and he's reflecting on how he wound up there. How did he get involved in such an organization as N.I.C.E. or the "Progressive Element"? What did he give up to get here? What did he give up throughout his life just to belong, just be part of the "in" crowd? I can't explain all of the characters or circumstance here, but I think you'll get it - you'll see the struggle. You'll understand the regret. Most of have been where Mark finds himself. May God help use to resist this temptation, to repent when we sin in order to belong, and find our ultimate solace, identity, purpose, and belonging in Him.
With extraordinary clarity, but with renewed astonishment, he remembered how he had felt about the Progressive Element at Bracton [College] when he was first admitted to its confidence: he remembered, even more incredulously, how he had felt as a very junior fellow while he was outside it—how he had looked almost with awe at the heads of Curry and Busby bent close together in Common Room, hearing occasional fragments of their whispered conversation, pretending himself the while to be absorbed in a periodical but longing—oh, so intensely longing —for one of them to cross the room and speak to him. And then, after months and months, it had happened. He had a picture of himself, the odious little outsider who wanted to be an insider, the infantile gull, drinking in the husky and unimportant confidences, as if he were being admitted to the government of the planet. Was there no beginning to his folly? Had he been an utter fool all through from the very day of his birth? Even as a schoolboy, when he had ruined his work and half broken his heart trying to get into the society called Grip, and lost his only real friend in doing so? 

....He himself did not understand why all this, which was now so clear, had never previously crossed his mind. He was unaware that such thoughts had often knocked for entrance, but had always been excluded for the very good reason that if they were once entertained it involved ripping up the whole web of his life, cancelling almost every decision his will had ever made, and really beginning over again as though he were an infant. The indistinct mass of problems which would have to be faced if he admitted such thoughts, the innumerable “somethings” about which “something” would have to be done, had deterred him from ever raising these questions. What had now taken the blinkers off was the fact that nothing could be done.

There were no moral considerations at this moment in Mark’s mind. He looked back on his life, not with shame but with a kind of disgust at its dreariness....He saw himself making believe that he enjoyed those Sunday afternoons with the athletic heroes of Grip, while all the time (as he now saw) he was almost homesick for one of the old walks with Pearson—Pearson whom he had taken such pains to leave behind. He saw himself in his teens laboriously reading rubbishy grown-up novels and drinking beer when he really enjoyed John Buchan and stone ginger.

The hours that he had spent learning the very slang of each new circle that attracted him, the perpetual assumption of interest in things he found dull and of knowledge he did not possess, the almost heroic sacrifice of nearly every person and thing he actually enjoyed, the miserable attempt to pretend that one could enjoy Grip, or the Progressive Element, or the N.I.C.E.—all this came over him with a kind of heartbreak. When had he ever done what he wanted? Mixed with the people whom he liked? Or even eaten and drunk what took his fancy? The concentrated insipidity of it all filled him with self-pity.

In his normal condition, explanations that laid on impersonal forces outside himself the responsibility for all this life of dust and broken bottles would have occurred at once to his mind and been at once accepted. It would have been “the system” or “an inferiority complex” due to his parents, or things occurred to him now....He was aware, without even having to think of it, that it was he himself —nothing else in the whole universe—that had chosen the dust and broken bottles, the heap of old tin cans, the dry and choking places.

Thursday, June 11, 2020

On a Lighter Note

I don't know...I just thought this was so funny...the look on the mother's face is priceless: "My son is an idiot." She looks like she just realized that this kid will be living with her for the rest of her life.





This comic strip, Close to Home, is drawn and written by John McPherson.