The Forty-Five
Monday, March 02, 2026
On Worry And Concern
Sunday, March 01, 2026
A Year Of Kindness (IX): David And Mephibosheth
Of all the stories of kindness that may exist in the Old Testament, the one that comes most clearly to my own mind is the story of David and Mephibosheth.
The story itself is in 2 Samuel 9. We find David at the height of his kingship. The kingdom of Israel has been unified after a civil war. His enemies abroad have been defeated. God has made a covenant with him that man of his lineage will sit on the throne of Israel forever. This is prior to his series of sins that results in adultery, murder, civil war, and the death of some of his children. He was, as the saying goes, at the top of his game.
At this moment, he calls for a former servant of Saul, a man named Ziba. "Is there not still someone of the house of Saul to whom I may show the kindness of God?"
It is likely (although not recorded) that at this moment David is remembering his friend Jonathan, the son of King Saul, who at great personal risk to himself supported David against his father. He likely remembers Jonathan telling him during the time when King Saul was pursuing him to kill him "You shall be king over Israel, and I shall be next to you. Even my father Saul knows that." (1st Samuel 23:17). David is now king over Israel but Jonathan is long gone, killed by the Philistines and his bones buried.
One wonders if Ziba hesitated for a moment - after all, ancient dynasties were not kind to potential heirs or even those that sheltered him. Perhaps with a trace of nervousness in his voice, he replies "Well, there is one. He is lame in his feet though." - as if to suggest that he represented no threat into the king.
The king asks further "Where is he?" Again, perhaps a bit of nervousness in his voice as Ziba replies gives him a location (in the house of Machir the son of Ammiel). In Lo Debar, which literally translates as "nowhere".
David commands him to be brought.
One can only imagine what was going through the mind of Mephibosheth as he slowly walked his way in the presence of the king. A crippled son of a defeated dynasty, it was likely drummed into his head from his early youth that he was to hide everything about his heritage. He would have known the fate of defeated dynasties (everyone did). It is likely that he lived in some level of fear of discovery, hoping that he could simply disappear in the location of Nowhere.
And now, the king calls him.
One can imagine the scene: King David on his throne, his guards and advisors around him, appearing every inch the chosen of the Lord. A slow cadence of clicks from a cane or walking stick comes through as Mephibosheth enters the hall with Ziba. Mephibosheth slowly gets down (he is lame, after all), prostrates himself in front of David, and waits.
"Mephibosheth" says the king.
"Here is your servant" replies Mephibosheth.
What was going through David's mind at this moment? How much of his friend Jonathan does he see in his friend? Does he remember the good times in Saul's court, Jonathan saving his life, Jonathan seeking him out in his distress and reassuring him?
The next words out of David's mouth were likely not at all anticipated by Mephibosheth - or any one else.
"Do not fear, for I will surely show you kindness for Jonathan your father's sake, and will restore to you all the land of Saul your grandfather; and you shall eat bread at my table continually." (2 Samuel 9:7) Later on, David re-emphasizes the fact: "As for Mephibosheth,", said the king, "he shall eat at my table like one of the king's sons". (2 Samuel 9:11b).
This was not the response anyone expected. No-one in their right mind kept defeated dynasties alive as the chances were that they still had supporters. At best, Mephibosheth might have expected exile from Israel. Instead, he is offered wealth and privilege and recognition and a home in the capital of the kingdom.
And so it was that Mephibosheth, the lame son of a defeated dynasty, came to eat at the king's table like any other of his sons while the estates of his grandfather Saul were farmed in his name (that part did not last of course; David was a pretty bad judge of character overall and took the false word of Ziba in his retreat from Jerusalem. Mephibosheth remained faithful though, not eating or caring for himself until David was restored to power. See 2 Samuel 16: 1-4 and 19: 24-29 for more details).
Every day, effectively for the rest of his life, Mephibosheth was a living example of the kindness of David to everyone who sat at that table.
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The lessons are, I trust, not too hard to glean from this. Replace the name of David with "God" and the name of Mephibosheth with "Your Name Here", and this becomes reflective of the grace that God grants to all of the saved every day: we, the failed children of rebels, marred by sin and scars often of our own making, living in our own version of Lo Debar (Nowhere), are invited to eat at the table of the King along with His own Son.
An extreme kindness, one might think.
Grace. Rather amazing.
Saturday, February 28, 2026
February 2026 Grab Bag
It is genuinely hard for me to believe that it is already the end of February. The year is 1/6th past already, and I feel I that I have both seen profound change and nothing has happened at all. It strikes me both as odd and completely normal.
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Our lease has come up for renewal at New Home 2.0. There are more options now: Month to Month, 9 Month, 12 Month, 15 Month. Our rates have not gone up in two years, which surprises me a bit to be honest, given that one hears so often about the housing market being impacted even here. We have gone ahead and elected to extend for another 15 months, which puts out past midyear 2027 if for no other reason than to lock in the rate; at this point there is no indication that we would move before then unless something significant happened (it always might, of course), and I would rather run the risk of that than have my rent go up, especially in these rather inflationary times.
Besides, even with The Ranch likely closing, we are still no closer to a permanent landing point than we were before. And, the thought of moving again is not attractive at this time.
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There is no word on contingencies falling off The Ranch yet. The process of notification is underway regardless - one way or the other, we need to be ready.
Beyond that, the things I need to plan are getting a storage locker and finding a mover to get the last stuff out of the barn.
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In what appears to be a reversal of the last 6 years, my travel agenda largely falls off after June (with a single flight in August for my hike). I have effectively dropped from at least one flight somewhere a month to no flights currently on calendar (see exception above) until possibly the Christmas holiday.
I do not know that I mind that, but I know that at some point it will be a definitive change.
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It is shocking to me that I only returned from Japan three weeks ago. Like normal, it feels like a lifetime ago.
Odd how time works. In some ways - other than the pictures, obviously - it feels as if I never went. How quickly ordinary life takes back over.
Friday, February 27, 2026
An Extra Nickel And A Parking Lot Penny
Some weeks ago I found myself at a local store procuring a needed item. I was using cash as in this case, the timing of the purchase along with the event would make it highly suspect as to what I had done and when I had done it if I had used a credit card (a fancy way of saying perhaps I failed to plan). The item, when rung up, came up to X dollars and 99 cents. I put in my appropriate amount of cash.
Instead of getting a penny back, as I have for my entire life, I got a nickel back. The screen read "Total tendered: $X.05".
Welcome, I realized, to the world of the life without the penny.
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This was not the first time I had seen this, of course. "Exact change is appreciated" comes up more and more at stores that accept cash. I had at least one cashier dig out of the previously known as "penny jar" to make up the difference. I had another cashier do as I had seen here, effectively enter an overpayment as "received" so they could give me a nickel.
I wonder how long until "the penny jar" becomes an archaic phrase, to be trotted out in movies about previous eras where the young of that day will look and marvel.
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Japan, interestingly is still very much a cash society. Like us, they have small change: 1, 5, 10, 50, 100 Yen coins (also 500 Yen coins, but those are not nearly as common). Like us, Japan has tax on everything.
Japan takes their small change very unseriously in one sense: the 1 yen coin, for example, is made of aluminum and is considered virtually useless. For a traveler, they collect like pocket lint if you spend enough time in a combi-ni (convenience store).
For better or worse, they seem to have come up with a unique solution. 1 Yen and 5 Yen coins are apparently the most desirable to place in offering boxes at Shinto Shrines and Buddhist temples.
It certainly helps clean out the pockets at the end of a trip.
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This past week as I was crossing a parking lot, I stumbled across a beat up penny in the parking lot.
The penny was scarred and had some kind of gunk on parts of it - but still clearly a penny, so I picked it up and popped in the cup holder of my car to allow it to dry.
While pennies may be disappearing, a penny saved is still truly a penny earned.
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
2026 Japan: Tokyo At Large
Because we spent most of our time training, I do not have a lot of "tourist" pictures to show of Tokyo proper.
The view from our hotel room. The building in the center sits squarely in front of Mt. Fuji:
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
2026 Japan: Dinners (III)
A third set of Japanese dinners.
A restaurant near our hotel. I do not know that it had a particular speciality.
Starters: Pickles and fish:
