Photos

    📷 blog challenge | Day 17: intense

    A large Tucson Police S.W.A.T. vehicle

    📷 blog challenge | Day 16: oof!

    a cat sitting in an awkward position

    📷 blog challenge | Day 15: red

    For the past few years we’ve been going to the fair that occasionally pops up at the Tucson Outlets. It’s pretty fun!

    A Ferris wheel 

    📷 blog challenge | Day 14: statue

    Someone figured out how to combine art, whimsy, and self storage. Someone should win an award.

    A statue of a man carrying colorful boxes, some of which have fallen on the ground, next to a sign advertising “Extra Space Storage”

    📷 blog challenge | Day 13: glowing

    I couldn’t find a good picture for yesterday’s challenge: “panic”. But I think this is a great one for today. I took the picture last year a few days after Christmas.

    The glowing flame of a red candle.

    📷 blog challenge | Day 11: retrospect 🚲

    Since Christmas I’ve been slowly turning a 1982 Univega Gran Turismo frame into a super fun everyday bike. It’s a love-project that comes from my grandpa to my dad to me.

    Bicycle frame of a 1982 Univega Gran Turismo.

    📷 blog challenge | Day 10: cycle 🚲

    Picture of a 2020 Giant Stance 2 mountain bike on the back of an SUV

    The Belt of Truth and Problem of Identity

    I’ve been thinking about the intersection of truthfulness and identity this week. Partly because I’m preparing a Sunday School lesson for tomorrow which includes the Belt of Truth from Ephesians 6, and partly because on Wednesday I got to hear my buddy John Besson give a sneak peak of his and his wife’s forthcoming book, Trading Faces. It’s all about the identities we cling to and live by.

    Ideas about truth and identity aligned for me when I found this thought-provoking article by Steve Rathje: Why People Ignore Facts: When it comes to reasoning, identity trumps truth. Rathje argues that our need for “identity-consistent beliefs” is often more important to us than “accurate beliefs.”

    This is an insightful and important point, and Rathje backs it up with proof. For example, he tells how people are even willing to lose money just to avoid reading articles that challenge their beliefs. In one experiment, folks had to choose between reading opinions they agreed with for a chance to win $7 or reading some opposing opinions for a shot at $10. Nearly two-thirds chose to lose the extra money. And it didn’t matter which political party they belonged to, people “were equally likely to avoid information they disagree with.”

    So how do overcome this and get yourself and others to be more open to the truth, even when it might conflict with a core-identity? That answer, according to NYU professor Jay Van Bavel, who is quoted in the article, is that we need to make truth seeking a core part of our identity. In other words, if you want to be a truth-seeker, believer, and practitioner, you’ve got to embrace truthfulness as a part of who you are.

    This is where the armor of God comes into play. What Van Bavel suggests is exactly what God does for us in Ephesians 6 when he tells us to put on the whole armor of God, the first piece of which is the belt of truth.

    “Finally, be strong in the Lord and in the strength of his might. Put on the whole armor of God, that you may be able to stand against the schemes of the devil…. Stand therefore, having fastened on the belt of truth.” (ESV)

    A more literal translation is something like wrapping your waist/girding your loins with the truth, like a solider getting ready for battle. This is illustrated in this great infographic from The Art of Manliness. The soldier takes the extra material from his tunic, wraps it around his core, and thus increases his mobility, strength, and protection.

    a soldier who takes the extra material from his tunic that hangs below his knees and secures it around his waist

    When we wrap our core with the truth, we increase the mobility, strength, and protection of our hearts—mentally, emotionally, relationally. But there’s a problem sneaking in the background. If your core identities are built on lies, adding truthfulness to them will be an ineffective way to build them up because truth tends to take them down. It exposes them for what they are.

    Consider how many core-identities consistently over-promise. They tell us we can find our deepest meaning and satisfaction in life by being a mom, a student, a good employee, or whatever else. And so we act accordingly. We pour everything we have into these things. But these weak identities are like a rusty buckets. They sort of hold water but because they are cracked, weakening, and full of holes, every time you pour in your energy into them, what happens? All that effort keeps leaking out. Your kids act out and get hurt. The exam you studied for wasn’t even important. The team you are on at work made you look bad.

    The problem with inviting truthfulness to a leaky bucket identity situation is that it will expose ourselves as more vulnerable that we pretend to be. And without an better alternative, our only option is fear and despair. That’s why the more common response is denial: ignore the problem and try to keep the bucket full by working harder and faster. This may work for a while, but eventually the bucket totally breaks or you do (burnout, panic attacks, etc.)

    Weak core identities require willful ignorance and self-deception, lest the truth expose them for what they are and then they fall apart. That makes the suggestion of adding truthfulness to your core identity a false hope.

    Thus says the LORD: “Cursed is the man who trusts in man and makes flesh his strength, whose heart turns away from the Lord” (Jeremiah 17:5).

    So what’s the solution? It’s a fundamental change of core-identities, with God at the center. God accomplishes this by reconciling our relationship with him in Christ—the one who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life (John 14:6)—so that instead of fighting him and trusting ourselves, he becomes our chief end and ultimate happiness, and as such, we can then draw from his infinitude of blessings and strength. Forever.

    You make known to me the path of life; in your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore. (Psalm 16:11)

    The truth is that without Christ, we resort to self-protective ignorance and deception. But when abiding in God becomes our ultimate purpose and deepest happiness, we naturally become truth-seekers instead of truth-deniers.

    That’s why Paul can say:

    “Finally, be strong in the Lord and in the strength of his might. Put on the whole armor of God, that you may be able to stand against the schemes of the devil…. Stand therefore, having fastened on the belt of truth.” (Ephesians 6:10-11, 14)

    When we put on the armor of God and stand in the strength of his might, the truth is not an accessory, we wrap around our rusty-bucket identities. Instead the truth becomes a natural and essential part of how we live in Christ.

    For with you is the fountain of life; in your light we see light. (Psalm 36:9)

    In Apple Maps you can get directions and travel estimates via different transportation modes, including bicycle.

    In Apple Calendar you can set your travel time to an appointment based on location and transportation mode, but not including bicycle.

    Why no bike? 🚲

    a screenshot of Apple Calendar's travel time selection featurea screenshot of transportation modes in Apple Maps

    📷 blog challenge | Day 8: language

    Body language and symbolic communication all on one hilarious door.

    A bathroom sign of a man squeezing his knees together

    📷 blog challenge | Day 8: yonder

    a view of water flowing from the dam at Hetch Hetchy in Yosemite National Park

    📷 blog challenge | Day 7: panorama

    6 panorama pictures stacked in a square

    📷 blog challenge | Day 6: well

    At our Bible study tonight, one of the kids requested that we sing It Is Well With My Soul

    Though Satan should buffet, though trials should come, let this blest assurance control, that Christ has regarded my helpless esstate, and has shed his own blood for my soul.

    Picture of the hymn It Is Well with My Soul

    📷 blog challenge | Day 5: forest + bonus haiku

    I took this pic of a giant tree growing on top of a ginormous California Redwood stump.

    What appears to be a big tree growing out of the stump of a California Redwood

    O how we can stand
    On the shoulders of giants
    Long after they’ve gone.

    Getting ready for a wedding! Genesis 2:18.

    Flowers and fabric arch for a couple on their wedding day

    Can you do tent camping with a family of seven? Yes! And if you survive the night, everyone looks so sweet and comfy in the morning.

    family in sleeping bags in a tent

    The world can feel very big sometimes.

    A little animal on the ground at an outdoor restaurant

    Tonight’s sunset.

    Tucson sunset.

    A picture of Mo’s. We try to go whenever we visit Oregon.

    2012 Chevy Express under the starry, starry skies.

    And yet, just outside the restaurant was this sign pointing us the way home to Arizona.

    a sign pointing the way to various cities named Florence

    The Golden Nugget reached 225,000 miles this summer. I’m thankful for all the adventures our family has had in this van.

    2012 Chevy Express under the starry, starry skies.
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