Friday, May 1, 2015

MILITARY FAMILY DAY, April 2015


Rev. Rodney Wood leads prayer for Military Family Day in the Louisiana State Senate.
Photo by Senate Communication Office


Rev. Rodney Wood and Senator John Alario on Military Family Day, 2015
Photo by Senate Communication Office



Louisiana Legislative Black Caucus Prayer Breakfast

It was my privilege again this year to pray at the Louisiana Legislative Black Caucus Prayer Breakfast, which was held at the Hilton Hotel here in Baton Rouge. I am very grateful to Rep. Katrina Jackson, chairwoman, and to the members of the Black Caucus for including me in this annual event in which there is fervent worship of our Lord with a focus on prayer to Him. 

Black Caucus Chairwoman Rep. Katrina Jackson
and Former Senator Charles Jones

Senator Sharon Broome
Pres. Pro Tem of the Senate

Rep. Marcus Hunter

Rep. Regina Barrow

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Rodney Wood sent you a video: "Pete Maravich - GREATEST BASKETBALL PLAYER EVER (ESPN NBA DOCUMENTARY)"

Rodney Wood has shared a video with you on YouTube
Pete Maravich - GREATEST BASKETBALL PLAYER EVER (ESPN NBA DOCUMENTARY)
Pete Maravich - GREATEST BASKETBALL PLAYER EVER (ESPN NBA DOCUMENTARY)

NBA Hall of Famer "Pistol Pete" Maravich was a spectacular showman who helped open up the game of basketball in the 1970s. After a legendary college career at Louisiana State, he played 10 productive seasons in the NBA, earning five trips to the NBA All-Star Game and one league scoring title.

Maravich wasn't the first player to dribble behind his back or make a deft between-the-legs pass. But his playground moves, circus shots, and hotdog passes were considered outrageous during his era and, perhaps because he cultivated a freewheeling image, some basketball purists felt he was more style than substance. But Maravich produced huge numbers, first as the all-time leading scorer in NCAA history and later as a potent force for both the Atlanta Hawks and the New Orleans Jazz.

Maravich holds nearly every major NCAA scoring record, including most career points (3,667), highest career scoring average (44.2 ppg), most field goals made (1,387) and attempted (3,166), and most career 50-point games (28). And he accomplished all this without the benefit of the three-point basket, which wasn't introduced into the college game until the 1986-87 season.
©2015 YouTube, LLC 901 Cherry Ave, San Bruno, CA 94066

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

The Man Who Held God in His Arms


Dear friends,

I well remember the first infant that I ever held in my arms:  Holland Pryor Greene, the newly-born daughter (October 24, 1973) of our friends Tom and Cathy Greene.  While sitting in that light brown, wooden rocking chair at Tom and Cathy’s house with Bec kneeling close at my side, I was afraid to move, even the slightest bit, as I held this tiny, greatly treasured little girl in my arms.  (As I was writing this, I decided to see if I could find that picture.  As you can see, I found it!)

So what prompted me to reflect once again, as I have many times before, on that marvelous moment with little Holland (now Mrs. Breaux Nader of Baton Rouge) over forty years ago in the Greene home?  My return to that rocking chair came as I was pondering the experience of a brother of ours who also once held an infant in his arms.  I am of course speaking of  that dear, old saint Simeon.  
 
It happened, on a certain day in the Lord's temple, that as Simeon was looking about, he suddenly caught sight of the long-long-awaited One – the Deliverer!  What he saw was not a young man striding across the temple floor with the bearing of leadership about him.  No, what captured his eye was an infant, a newborn who was being carried in his young mother's arms as she and her husband had come, in obedience to the Law, to present their infant Son to the Lord.  I have tried to imagine how the old saint must have felt as he made his way toward the mother and father and their baby.  And when he approached them, what did he say?  "May I hold the child, please?"  Was that what he said?  His lips must have quivered with each word.  His aged eyes must have glazed.  His hands surely must have trembled with the kind of fear that one has when he is about to hold something very, very precious.  As he carefully, gently received this cherished infant from his mother, Simeon fully understood that he was holding the Promised One of whom Moses and the Prophets had spoken and who had been the expectation of Israel for centuries upon centuries.  But what  our dear old brother could not have known was this:  he was actually cradling his Creator.  The Infant in his arms was the Infinite.  Simeon was holding the One who holds the entire universe.    

Concerning our brother Simeon’s identity, the Scriptures only tell us that he "was a man in Jerusalem," although some scholars believe that he was a priest. However, there is something of great importance that Dr. Luke makes strikingly clear about our dear brother.  Luke says that “the Holy Spirit was upon him” and that “by the Spirit” he had received a personal revelation that he would not die before seeing the Messiah and that “he came in the Spirit (that is, in an extraordinary Spirit-given state such as that of the Apostle John in Revelation 1:10) into the temple.”  Simeon, the man in Jerusalem, was a man of the Spirit!   And the Spirit had formed his character – he was “righteous and devout” – and had filled his heart with longing – he was “looking for the consolation of Israel.” 

In the 1970’s, some of you were among the millions of university students all over America (and in other countries) whom God was calling into the blessed life of the Spirit.  Oh, what great days those were!  We could look at one another and see that the Holy Spirit was forming our character, even as He promised He would.  And He was stirring our hearts with such a love for our Savior that we were constantly “looking for” Him to appear “in the clouds” with His holy angels and all the saints of heaven!

What the Holy Spirit was doing to us, all those years ago, is very well summed up in that one descriptor of Simeon:  he was “devout.”  What does this mean?  In the Greek, we have a combining of terms meaning “well” and “take hold.”  To be devout is to “take hold well” of God – to embrace Him well! 

Brothers and sisters, as some of you may know, on Monday, February 2nd, Christians all over the world will be celebrating “The Presentation of Our Lord” and will be returning with Simeon to that moment when he held God in his arms.  May the Holy Spirit so work in your heart and mine that not only on Monday but on every day we will embrace Him well.   Today we can hold Him in our hearts; one day soon we’ll hold Him in our very arms!   

In the love of our Savior,


Rod and Bec

Sunday, December 14, 2014

2014 - Thankful to Be in our Lord's Service

Bec and Rod at Top of the Louisiana State Capitol
During 2014 Session of the Legislature


2014 Session of Louisiana Legislature


Grateful for the Privilege of being a Contributing Author
 to this work, which was edited by Chuck Garriott

Langham Preaching - TANZANIA
Rev. Elkana Gonda (Country Coordinator), RW,
and Rev. Tony Swanson, long-time African Inland Mission leader
in Tanzania, who has handled all of the administration
for our seminars since 2006