The Sky is Falling: Buy Toilet Paper!

“There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body.”
- 1 Corinthians 15:44

Every age in history has those moments when it seems the sky is falling and destruction is upon us. What is to be our response?

Buy toilet paper!

The first great run on toilet paper came in Japan in December 1973. The world-wide oil shortage led to all out panic. In Japan, consumers were buying as much as a year’s supply of the white sheets of cleansing. Johnny Carson made a joke about it on “The Tonight Show” and the panic spread to the United States.

We have had several runs on toilet paper since. Most recently, under the looming shadow of COVID. We once again saw empty shelves almost as blank as the masked faces of the needy consumers standing before them. I could detail many more instances, but I’m already on my second sheet, and you never know when you will run out.

But why toilet paper? You don’t have to have toilet paper to survive. It doesn’t save a life. It doesn’t feed a family. It is not even very good for treating a wound. All it is really good for is blowing your nose or cleaning your derriere! And there are other ways to do both!

However, I think it speaks to a higher calling. In the same way young children (and adults) find so much humor in passing gas, belching, body parts and sexuality. It comes from embarrassment that we are dependent on all of these for life. Let’s be honest, we are embarrassed by the fact we have a temporal body that requires crude processes. And we will make a run on the grocery store to try and avoid any further degradation we might have to suffer.

C. S. Lewis wrote in Reflections on the Psalms (1964) about how humanity is regularly surprised by the circumstances we find ourselves in, “It is as strange as if a fish were repeatedly surprised at the very wetness of water. And that would be strange indeed: unless of course the fish were destined to become, one day, a land animal.”

His point was that we ARE meant for something more. We find ourselves surprised by our circumstances because we were meant for more than this temporal world. We are embarrassed by our own bodily functions because we were meant for more than this temporal body. We are humiliated by our weaknesses, failures, ineptness, neediness and limitations because we were meant for an eternal perfect world. We were never meant to find satisfaction in this world, because we have a greater destiny before us.

No amount of toilet paper will clean up the mess and make a world where humanity can find satisfaction. It might give us comfort for the moment. It might make things easier. It might play to our sensitivities and help hide our embarrassment, but it won’t solve the conundrum of humanity: satisfaction can not be found in this mortal vessel. It can only be found outside this temporal world in Christ. Because, at some level, we all know that, we are embarrassed of the frailty of mortality.

When the sky falls, we can make a run on toilet paper. Or we can focus on who we are in Christ. As Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 15:44, “There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body.” We get to chose which one we will live for this day. Flesh or Spirit. Only when we live for the Spirit will we find satisfaction in our lives. It is in the Spirit we are a “chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, His own special people.” (1 Peter 2:9)

© 2026 Warren Martin. All rights Reserved.

Old Dry Bones

“…work out your own salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God who works in you both to will and to do for His good pleasure.”
- Philippians 2:12-13

I have, in my vast collection of stuff my children will struggle with when I’m gone, a mammoth tooth. It came from my Grandad. He was an engineer/bridge inspector for Santa Fe Railroad and during the installation of a new bridge they came upon a site that contained mammoth remains. He did the right thing and reported the find. In gratitude, the authorities allowed him to keep a tooth from the find. It speaks to life on earth that once was and is no more. But what about life that is not, but could be?

Ezekiel 37 is an extraordinary account where the prophet is caught up by the Spirit of the Lord and taken to a valley filled with old dry bones. As the chapter states, they were “very dry.” Ezekiel is asked by the Lord, “‘Son of man, can these bones live?’ So I answered, ‘Oh Lord God, You know.’” (v. 3)

Ezekiel is commanded to prophesy to the bones, “O dry bones, hear the word of the Lord!” And before his eyes and ears a rattling of bones began, and they were joined together. Sinews connected them and flesh covered them. He was commanded again to prophesy breath into them, “Thus says the Lord God: ‘Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe on these slain, that they may live.’” (v. 9)

The Lord then tells Ezekiel to take what he has seen and prophesy that God says, “I will put My Spirit in you and you shall live…” (v. 14)

Many people fear verses like Philippians 2:13 which calls us to “work out our own salvation in fear and trembling;…”. However this should have more to do with awe and respect than questioning and doubt.

What we often miss in Philippians 2:12 is it doesn’t end in verse 12. It has a semicolon at the end, meaning clarification of what I just said follows. And in verse 13 we are told, “…for it is God who works in you both to will and to do for His good pleasure.” In other words, what we are to “work out” is what God “works in”!

We are the old dry bones of Ezekiel’s vision. There should be fear and trembling. The fear of never experiencing eternal life. Insuring that we do. The trembling of our old bones being brought together. The fragmented pieces of the life we have lived and messed up being worked together for our good (Romans 8:28). And the new life we have breathed into us by the Holy Spirit to make us new creations (2 Corinthians 5:17). It should make us tremble. It is one of the few times we can actually utilize the word “awesome” in truth.

The problem is we tend to focus on what we are “working out”, when what we are called to focus on is Christ “working in” our lives. If what we are doing is not an out-flowing of what Christ is working in our lives, then there should be fear and trembling because it will never meet God’s standard.

In fulfillment of Ezekiel’s prophecy, through “fear and trembling” and awe, God is able to rattle the bones, bring them together, connect them, clothe them in flesh and breath new life into them. We only have to respond to God’s word. God works in us to give us new life. He works in us to make us complete for His good pleasure. Working out our salvation is simply working out what God has worked in to our lives. Allowing the living Lord to live through our lives.

It is not working out “how to be saved,” but rather working out the fact that you are saved. Working out what He has worked in! Allowing His work to transfer from within us to the world around us. Allow the living Lord to work out what He is working in our lives. Truly the only word that can capture that in any way is AWESOME!

© 2026 Warren Martin. All rights Reserved.

Wisdom and Folly

“Whoever is simple, let him turn in here!”
- Proverbs 9:4&16

Have you ever had a thought go through your head that stopped you in your tracks? A thought that left you contemplating, “Where in the world did that come from?”

I believe in every minute of every day we have up to 4 voices in our head. All speak in the first person. Every thought begins with a version of “I should…” or “I will…” or “I want…” or “I…”. But most people think the only voice in their head is their own.

There is no doubt the first voice is my own. And unfortunately, I tend to be obsessed with it. I also know there are many times in my life God has spoken to me. Not once has He begun with an audible voice from the heavens declaring, “Warren, this is God!” Yet, I know I have experienced His word in my mind and life in very real ways. However, there is a third voice. It also shares in thoughts that begin with “I”, and it is from the evil one. Neither does he announce himself by saying, “Warren, this is Satan!”

Everyday, all three are throwing thoughts into my mind for consideration. The reality has been illustrated ad nauseam in popular media with the iconic image of a man with an angel and devil on his shoulders. This is not a recent illustration. In Proverbs 9, we are introduced to the way of Wisdom and the way of Folly. What is interesting is they both speak in the same voice. In verse 4, Wisdom says, “Whoever is simple, let him turn in here!” And then offers sound advice. In verse 16, Folly says the exact same thing and offers corruptible advice. And thus is the way of the Deceiver.

As spiritual creations, the Spirit speaks to our mind. But so do the spirits of deception. This is why Paul tells us in 2 Corinthians 10:5, we are to “bring every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ.” He also tells us in Romans 12:2, “And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.”

We are not meant to take our thoughts as they flow through our heads. For Wisdom and Folly are constantly calling us simple minded creatures to “turn in here.” We are to take captive our thoughts. Align them with God’s word, and only follow through or give freedom to those thoughts that come from Wisdom—the Lord.

There is nothing we can do to stop a thought entering our head. Whatever you do, DON’T think about a red faced monkey with purple hair and a banana stuck in its ear. You couldn’t even understand that sentence without having the thought. The world is the fourth voice that cast thoughts into our minds as I just did.

Having a thought is meaningless. Giving the the thought residence in our mind, contemplation in our heart and action in our being; that is of consequence.

It is why Paul talks about the importance of the mind in every single book he authored in the Bible. And his advice is sound, “Finally, brethren, whatever things are true, whatever things are noble, whatever things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of good report, if there is any virtue and if there is anything praiseworthy—meditate on these things.” (Philippians 4:8)

My challenge this week is to spend time thinking about what I’m thinking about. Take every thought captive. Compare it with the word of God and only hold to those thoughts which are in obedience with Christ. To be transformed through the renewing of my mind. And to meditate on the One Voice in my head that is true, noble, just, pure, lovely, of good report, virtuous and praiseworthy.

© 2026 Warren Martin. All rights Reserved.

A Field of Purpose

“He who tills his land will be satisfied with bread, / But he who follows frivolity is devoid of understanding [Literally ‘heart’].”
- Proverbs 12:11

In his famous motivational speech "Acres Of Diamonds”, Russell H. Conwell (1843-1925) details the parable of a Persian farmer named Ali Hafed. He is a content man until one day he is visited by a Buddhist priest who tells him all about diamonds. Ali becomes obsessed with finding diamonds himself. He sells all he has, moves his family into rental houses and goes off looking for diamonds.

Ali crosses much of the world in his quest. Runs out of money. His family is dispossessed and he eventually commits suicide on a beach in Barcelona. Meanwhile, the man who bought Ali’s farm notices one day watering the camels a shiny rock in the stream—a diamond. Thus is discovered the Golconda diamond mine, one of the largest diamond mines in the world, sitting under the farm Ali Hafed once owned.

The point of Conwell’s parable (i.e. not historical) is all of us have acres of diamonds to mine right where we are if we just take the time to look for them. And I couldn’t agree more!

Proverbs 12:11 tells us, “He who tills his land will be satisfied with bread, / But he who follows frivolity is devoid of understanding.” The word understanding literally means “heart”. And that is the problem. Many of us find that our heart is not where we are, it is obsessed with what we don’t have.

Like Ali, we sell all we have, disconnect from those we love and wander the landscape trying to find our acres of diamonds. And like Ali, we usually find ourselves destitute and without hope. Have you ever noticed how many times the Bible tells us to remain, stand still, be at peace, stand firm, be still, etc. Most of the time we only hear people preach and tell us to “go”. And there are times to go, but the disciples were not given that command until after they were told to remain where they were.

Acts 1:4, “And being assembled together with them, He commanded them not to depart from Jerusalem, but to wait for the Promise of the Father… [i.e. Holy Spirit].”

I find we are so ineffectual as the body of Christ simply because we are so focused on going and doing, that we take off and try to do it under our own power. We are too impatient to wait on the Holy Spirit to move in our lives.

Many have neglected tilling our own land. Devoting ourselves to learning and growing in the grace and knowledge of Christ until He moves and calls us to follow. Do you realize Paul was a Christian for 14 years before he truly began his ministry? (Galatians 2:1) He spent 3 years alone in Arabia being taught by Christ and growing in grace and knowledge. He was tilling the field where the Lord had put him and found satisfaction in the Bread of Life. He also found his purpose.

We all have a field at our current place in life. The question is what are we to do in that field. I don’t care if it is in corporate America, small-town USA, or a mission field in Africa. We are called to till the field. What that primarily means is: “And you will seek Me and find Me, when you search for Me with all your heart.” (Jeremiah 29:13)

Those are the acres of diamonds we should all be looking for everyday. They are right where you are today. They are ready to be mined and brought to the surface if we will just seek Him with all our heart. And when we do so, we will also discover our field is a field of purpose.

That purpose might be to go forth. It also might be to stand firm, remain and minister where you are, but the purpose will never come before we take the time to till the field. Without that we have no heart for God’s plan.

My challenge this week is to till the field God has placed me in until I find satisfaction in the Bread of Life. That is the first step into developing a field of purpose.

© 2026 Warren Martin. All rights Reserved.

Kill the Clown

“There is an evil I have seen under the sun. / As an error proceeding from the ruler, / Folly is set in great dignity,…”
- Ecclesiastes 10:5-6

One summer about 8th grade or so, I went to church camp in the Sacramento Mountains of New Mexico with my brother. Our youth minister was my new stepfather. It was my first, but not my last, organized rebellion.

Camp was going great. Up in the mountains, doing outdoors stuff, everything I loved…except they had a clown. A literal clown in full clown regalia: face painted, orange wig, outlandish coveralls and large shoes. I’ve never liked clowns.

The clown would randomly show up at different times for some sort of demonstration no one understood. He would leave balloons or a written message, do some kind of trick or give a hug. Never speaking a word. It was annoying!

I tolerated it for the most part, till he started showing up during archery, free time, when we were playing games or any other time we actually enjoyed what we were doing. He would stop everything and do something annoying, which none of us understood.

So, my brother and I did the most natural thing imaginable—rebellion. We started small. Popping the balloons he left behind. Changing the messages he left or destroying them. Getting other campers to mock and disrupt whatever he was trying to do. This led to a reproof from the camp leaders. A guilt trip. No matter how we felt we should respect what they were doing.

Thus, my brother and I decided to write our manifesto. It was simple. We found some shoe polish, snuck out and wrote over all the church buses, “Kill the Clown!”

Apparently, we crossed a line. After a few group meetings trying to guilt the responsible parties into a confession failed, a search was done, the shoe polish was found, and Byron and I were toast. All the havoc being caused by the stepsons of one of the lead youth ministers.

We were informed the clown was supposed to represent Jesus. I knew then, things were not going to go well. After apologizing to my stepfather, youth group, the entire camp and spending the day washing all the buses by hand, I definitely felt we had NOT been entirely forgiven.

Part of me felt they should give us camper of the year awards. The clown was supposed to represent Jesus and we had treated him the same way Christ was treated on Earth. We had made it a real practical lesson. You might be surprised to know I didn’t win any camper awards that year.

Let’s be honest; no one really likes clowns. We have to teach our kids to trust clowns, even while we are trying to teach them not to trust strangers. What’s stranger than a clown?

What is my point? I was wrong. Period.

However, I also believe the camp was wrong. We try to get so creative in our presentation of the Gospel that sometimes we become foolish. We get so abstract in our ideas and celebrate our creativity that we miss the opportunity to teach truth. Creativity is great! However, when creativity (or creation) becomes more important than the Great Creator, “Folly is set in great dignity.” (Ecclesiastes 10:6) And that is error.

Kids don’t need an abstract idea of Christ. They need the concrete truth of love, grace, forgiveness, life, mercy, peace, joy and purpose found in Him. They don’t need to be entertained, they need eternal life.

Adults are no different. We just think we are smarter and have a higher level of comprehension. We like to be entertained too. But in our hearts, we are truly looking for much more. It can only be found in one place—abiding in Christ.

I’m challenged this week not to be a clown. Not to share abstract concepts to try and communicate my faith in a creative way just to be creative. But to allow Christ to work through me in concrete ways to minister to others in my life. People need real answers for the real world. As Paul talks about in 2 Corinthians 11:3, what matters is the "simplicity that is in Christ.” I pray Christ would work through me this week to be real.

As a side note: I still hold the belief my brother and I were right in our rebellion and should have received camper of the year awards! Just saying (tongue in cheek).

© 2026 Warren Martin. All rights Reserved.