A.A. Meeting Tonight

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Alcoholics Anonymous is an international mutual aid fellowship of men and women coming together with the stated purpose of staying sober and helping other alcoholics achieve sobriety. It was founded in 1935 by two drunks, Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith of Akron, Ohio. Though it originally grew out of a Christian organization called the Oxford Group, a non-denominational movement modeled after first century Christianity, Bill and Dr. Bob soon wisely saw the value of keeping A.A. from being identified as a religious group. Though founded on biblical principles, it continues today as a mutual aid fellowship of admitted alcoholics who are agreed that they can no longer manage their lives without the help of others and a higher power, however they might want to identify that being. That “higher power” has been the key to it’s success in that no one has to commit themselves to any particular God, religion or denomination. No one has to receive Christ or become a Christian, though I’m sure many have. That kind of language is not found in any of the movement’s literature.

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A different kind of Christian

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Only the steps should go down instead of up.

I am firmly convinced, now, more than ever, that the 12-step program as originally adopted by Alcoholics Anonymous, is closer to capturing the true essence of a Christian’s attitude and relationship to God Alcoholics Anonymous and to others than anything taught or modeled in our Christian churches at least in my lifetime. If all Christians were 12-step Christians, all of the ugly traits that have wrapped themselves around Christianity in this culture in the last 40 years would never have come about.

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#3 Top 5 Most Viewed Catches of All Time

Over the last five days of 2017, we will be looking at the Top Five most viewed Catches of all time. Today … Number Three.

Number three on the list of Top Five Most Viewed Catches Of All Time was originally posted on July 31, 2017.

I Still Believe

For people like us in places like this

We need all the hope that we can get

   – James Paul Goodwin and Michael Been

th-13As believers who have been rescued from the stereotype, we share a strong sense of passion for the possible, knowing there never was a night or a problem that could defeat a sunrise or a hope. As the unstoppable Helen Keller put it, “The world is full of suffering. It is also full of overcoming it.”

We all experience long and hard trials that are frustrating and disappointing. Even so, as Martin Luther King Jr. said, “We must accept finite disappointment, but we must never lose hope… If you lose hope, somehow you lose the vitality that keeps life moving, you lose the courage to be – that quality that helps you go on in spite of it all.”

Hope is a spiritual commodity that is available to all believers. Hope is not based on circumstances. One of our readers shared with me a scene from the new World War II movie, Dunkirk. Two soldiers are pinned down in a fierce firefight when one peers out to sea with his binoculars. “What do you see?” said the other. “Hope,” was the reply, because he was seeing a fleet of ships coming to their rescue. That is actually a hope realized. The circumstances are telling them something different from what they are currently experiencing. But real hope — the biblical kind of hope — is what operates when you don’t see anything through those binoculars but an empty sea, and yet your heart still believes. Real hope is a solid substance that is in your heart regardless. It is hope in the unseen.

“Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1). Faith gives hope substance. It is the solid evidence in our hearts on which our hope rests. Hope by itself is no more than a wish, but hope based on faith is a solid reality. “For people like us in places like this,” hope grounded in faith is just what we need.

I Still Believe

by Michael Been and The Call

I been in a cave for forty days

Only a spark to light my way

I wanna give out, I wanna give in

This is our crime, this is our sin

But I still believe, I still believe

Through the pain and through the grief

Through the lives, through the storms

Through the cries and through the wars

Oh, I still believe

 

And flat on my back out at sea

Hopin’ these waves, don’t cover me

I’m turned and tossed upon the waves

When the darkness comes, I feel the grave

But I still believe, I still believe

Through the cold and through the heat

Through the rain and through the tears

Through the crowds and through the cheers

Oh, I still believe

 

I’ll march this road, I’ll climb this hill

Upon on my knees if I have to

I’ll take my place up on this stage

I’ll wait ’til the end of time for you like everybody else

 

I’m out on my own, walkin’ the streets

Look at the faces that I meet

I feel like I, like I want to go home

What do I feel? What do I know?

But I still believe, I still believe

Through the shame and through the grief

Through the heartache, through the tears

Through the waiting, through the years

For people like us in places like this

We need all the hope that we can get

Oh, I still believe

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#4 – Top Five Most Viewed Catches Of All Time

Over the last five days of 2017, we will be looking at the Top Five most viewed Catches of all time. Today … Number Four.

Number four on the list of Top Five Most Viewed Catches Of All Time was originally posted on August 12, 2014.

Lucy Pearson, Hubcap Queen

If you’ve ever driven through the southwestern United States you undoubtedly have encountered the quirky and bizarre, from reptile villages to snake pits to dinosaur replicas, there is something about the desert that attracts the peculiar. That’s why I wasn’t that surprised to find on our drive to the mountains last weekend that Pearsonville, California 93527 was the “Hubcap capital of the world.”  Continue reading

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#5 – Top Five Most Viewed Catches Of All Time

Over the last five days of 2017, we will be looking at the Top Five most viewed Catches of all time. Today … Number Five. 

Number five on the list of Top Five Most Viewed Catches Of All Time was originally posted on August 12, 2014.


The Last Laugh

Today, the world mourns the death of its funniest man, who, in the end, couldn’t find that last laugh that might have prevented him from taking his own life. He assumed so many personalities except the one he needed the most – himself. He was uncomfortable in his own shoes, so he got used to everyone else’s, and for that reason, he had a huge amount of compassion for people from all walks of life, in all situations. No one could stand in someone else’s shoes better than Robin Williams.

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Merry Christmas from the Fischers

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Dear Catch Community,
‘Tis the season for family, and we want to wish all of you, our extended family, a very merry Christmas. We are so glad to be a part of you, and have you be a part of us. Our stories have blended together all year as we consider all the many ways God has made Himself known in our lives through His Holy Spirit.
We always like to say that we are “Yours for the Journey,” and that journey has brought us many adventures this year, but more than anything, it has brought us together. Our story — your stories — continue on as we look forward to how God’s grace will be woven through them all, because ultimately, it is all His story told through us. What an incredible privilege we have. If you look at it that way, it’s hard not to be excited about finding out how God will manifest Himself in 2018.
During this Christmas season, we are so thankful for each and everyone of you. Without you, The Catch wouldn’t be possible.
Jesus is the reason for the season, and you are the reason for The Catch. Thank you for being such an important part of our family. And so we want to wish you a very Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
Yours for the Journey,
John, Marti, Anne, Chandler, Christopher, Elizabeth and Joci
 In 2017, people from 128 different countries around the world accessed The Catch. Would you like to help us reach more people in 2018? Here are 4 things you can do today to make a difference.

 

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Born to die

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Dark clouds hide the sunlit sky

In a barn a baby cries

Does He know He’s born to die?

Rest now while your trials are few

Only your Father knows why

Dark clouds hide the sunlit sky

In the town a baby cries

On a hill a Savior dies

Dies of His own free will

He can tell you why

            – from the song, “Born to Die” by John Fischer

We are all born to die, but not as deliberately as this one. We are born to die in that we are all born into sin and the punishment for sin is death. It’s the law of entropy. The minute we are born, we start dying. The only thing separating us from birth and death is 70+ years. That is what we call “life” but we mustn’t be fooled into thinking that life is the big deal. Life is a wonderful thing, but it’s in short supply. Life is here to show us how to die. This is why Jesus was always talking about eternal life. That’s true life. Eternal life is what takes us beyond this realm. Eternal life is what we will have forever.

We die by putting our faith in Christ who died in our place. That’s why He came. To be the first fruits out of death into life — life eternal. This is why we focus so much on the death of Christ, because He busted the death barrier with the resurrection. Only the Son of God could go from death to life and take us with Him.

This is why He was focused on the cross. He was determined. He knew it all along. He went willingly to the cross. They didn’t have to force Him down on it. They didn’t have to sit on His arms to nail His hands to the wood; He stretch His arms  out willingly. This was it. This was what He came for. The starry night, the angels’ song, the shepherd’s call, the baby in a manger — it was all for this. He knew it; we know it now, though they didn’t know it then. Peter tried to prevent it. He didn’t know yet. Jesus was born to die so He could destroy death and the power of death. He was born for the cross.

And here’s something to remember: “He can tell you why.” We need to remember that for everyone. We aren’t going to be able to help anyone get this. We don’t help people to faith, we bring them to the story. God does the rest. We don’t have to explain it all — we won’t understand it all ourselves anyway — we just need to bring people to it. He will tell them why. He told me why. He told you why. He will tell them why.

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In the human caravan

In between what was and what will beJFCHRISTMAS

He has entered history

Down the corridor of time

Across a theatre of mime

I have seen the Son of Man

In the human caravan.

         – from the song “Rejoice” by John Fischer

Where? See Him there? Or wait a minute, there He is. Or is that Him over there? Darn. I think I missed Him.

He shouldn’t be that hard to pick out, mind you. I mean He’s the Son of God, for heaven’s sake. He should stick out like a sore thumb. Well, not like He hit His thumb in the carpenter’s shop, or anything. He couldn’t have done that — He’s perfect. But wouldn’t He have a sort of glow around Him because of that? All His pictures have His face shining, or there’s a sort of glowing light that’s resting on His head or hovering just over Him. A halo. Certainly His robe would shine. He would stand out.

So I’ve been watching this human caravan for a while now and I haven’t seen anything unusual about it. It’s just a mass of humanity. Peasants, well-dressed business men, cripples, beggars, flight attendants, nurses, doctors, programmers, homeless, helpless, handsome, deformed, those who obviously have it together, those who wish they did, those who don’t wish anything at all because they don’t care, chiefs, chefs, missionaries, martyrs, bakers, candlestick makers, fishermen, Congresswomen, teachers, lawyers, ball players, those with everything and the good sense to use it, those with nothing and little sense at all.

He’s not there, at least, I don’t think we can ever find Him, now. It’s just a mass of humanity and He’s in there somewhere. He didn’t rise above it, or sink below it, or even walk beside it. He is in it. Swallowed up by it. He’s in there somewhere, but we’ll never find Him because He is indistinguishable from all the rest. He could be any one of them. He could be all of them. But isn’t that the point? He came to identify with us. He came to live inside our skin.

Keep looking. You’ll never find Him. Or, better yet, you’ll find Him everywhere.

It’s here!

JFCHRISTMAS
A compilation of John’s Christmas related Songs for the Season is now available!
Includes “Rejoice” and 8 more!
Click HERE to purchase your download.
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First to the stable

JFCHRISTMAS

In the town of Bethlehem

A king and ruler, child was born

Not too many people noticed

Just some shepherds on their farm

Plus a few hundred thousand angels

Breaking the heavens with their song

And the rocks and the mountains joined them

For their time had come

                      – from “Angels’ Song” by John Fischer

What a magnificent announcement, that some would think was wasted on peasant shepherds and no one else. A multitude of the heavenly host just for a handful of sheepherders by trade. Did you ever stop to consider that no one would have been there to witness the birth of the Son of God but a few barnyard animals had the angels not broken the silence of that quiet Palestinian night with their singing? God wanted someone there and what company He chose!

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Don’t get out much?

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Wow, I was a little lost this morning inside my head — just a little fatigue from the season, being way behind on Christmas, and wondering if I had what it takes for this day. Well, of course I have that in Christ, but that’s sometimes more a piece of knowledge than it is a feeling. Somehow I ended up on Facebook. I found some messages and in a few minutes, I connected with a bunch of people who wanted to connect with me, and it was amazing how quickly my attitude changed. I felt like I hadn’t gotten out in a long time.

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