Day 126
Yes, it is, so happy that.
I work two part-time jobs, as indicated by my two timecards. The fact that both places of employment are located in the same building is extremely convenient: I just switch timecards in and out all day long. My upstairs job is mundane and predictable – I go through the tax returns of private foundations in Wisconsin and extract information pertinent to non-profit organizations looking for funding.
Ok, you can wake up now.
My downstairs job can be a little more random (not during spring break, per say, but during certain times of the semester, well . . . ). When I work at the info desk on the first floor, my duties consist mainly of answering directional and research questions. These can range anywhere from “Can you help me find this article?” to “Do you have any Bibles?” to “How much is everything in the US worth?” to “Do you know where I can buy hemp-flavored cigarettes?” (Yes, those were actual questions.) I also am capable of helping with basic technical issues – paper jams in particular – and of course, answering the phone.
“Raynor Library Information Desk.” Yawn.
My former roommate works at the University of Louisville in a really cool office. She gets to answer the phone like this (around fifteen times a day):
“Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism.”
You understand my jealousy.
Onward.
1 John 3:1 “Behold what manner of love the Father has bestowed on us, that we should be called children of God!”
We aren’t born into this world children of God, as many false teachers love to preach – we are born separated from him by the greatest of chasms, and only through faith in his Son’s death in our place and resurrection is that gap closed. Then, not only are we saved from hell for all eternity; we also have the incomprehensible privilege of becoming his children.
The response to this truth should not be pride, like the little kid who boasts, “My dad is bigger than your dad.” Instead, the fact that the God who holds the universe in his hand loves me lavishly enough to call me his child should be intensely humbling as I consider who I am before the Holy One.
I’m a sinner, a rebel, a former enemy. And due entirely to the merits of Jesus Christ, I’m a child of God.
