2025: The Year in Review

Here’s another yearly review with the categories in no particular order.

Dust in the Wind

June15dust2025b

This was a crazy year in El Paso as far as dust storms go. Living with these is just part of life here, but the frequency and intensity was on another level. Many long-term El Paso residents were telling me that it’s the worst they had seen. Turns out, it has been the most severe year for this since the 1936 Dust Bowl.

We took Clark across town to the eye doctor in the middle of one of these storms. It got so bad that I had to slam on the brakes while driving down the highway—I literally could not see beyond the hood of the car.

Let’s hope next year is not quite as windy/dusty.

See also: Feeding on the Wind

Shade Tree Mechanic

I’m allergic to car payments and expensive insurance, so I still drive the 2002 Crown Vic that we bought back in 2013. This, of course, means more repairs than a newer car. Thanks to internet forums, a Facebook group, AutoZone, and YouTube I was able to diagnose and do three repairs for the cost of parts (these repairs happened in the final three months of 2025).

The first issue was a weird noise that turned out to be a worn-out Idle Air Control (IAC) valve. The second issue caused an engine light and stalling—it made me wonder if it I was going to make it home from the auto parts store. An EGR valve replacement solved that problem. Last, but not least, my car door lock started making a machine-gun sound when locking. I replaced the lock actuator, which was the most difficult repair. I had to remove the door panel and reach into the door.

I have jokingly told my wife that if we replace enough parts we’ll end up with a new car.

Church/Ministry

I’ve spent several months this year preaching through 1 Corinthians. We’ve studied Hosea and are now on Ecclesiastes for our Wednesday night prayer meeting/Bible study. As always, it’s a blessing to study, preach, and walk with my people through God’s Word.

One of my favorite Sundays of 2025 happened a few weeks ago. I had the blessing of baptizing one of the children in the church that had put her faith in Christ. Another long-time attendee was baptized on that same day (she had been a believer for years but had not yet taken this important step).

It was another year of watching my beautiful wife lead worship and watching my son enjoy church life.

Speaking of church: we will be celebrating the 45th anniversary of Apollo Heights Baptist Church as soon as we get back to El Paso.

Family

Mare Cris and I celebrated 13 years of marriage this past March. We are thankful for His continued goodness, strength, and grace. I think of this proverb as time keeps flying by:

Fathers can give their sons an inheritance of houses and wealth, but only the Lord can give an understanding wife. -Proverbs 19:14

Clark turned 7, completed first grade at his nearby elementary school, and began second grade back in August. He continues to excel academically—he brought an all-A’s honor roll and perfect attendance certificate home a few days ago (seems he inherited his mom’s intellect). He has made new friends and lost a few teeth along the way.

May was a bitter-sweet month. My dad’s twin brother, my Uncle Neil, passed away. I flew in for the funeral and was able to celebrate my nephew’s high school graduation while I was in town. I was reminded that time flies and life is a mist.

We have continued to fly over to Alabama during the holiday season and summer. We always look forward to time with extended family and friends.

Note: You can see more of our photos on my Instagram account. We post most of our family pictures there (Mare Cris does most of the posting, but they are cross-posted on my account).

Books I Read

The Bible. This was not my first time to read the whole Bible, but this year I used an app on my phone called ReadingPlan. I used a five-day plan, which has two weekly off days built in. I found this approach made it easier to stay consistent.

Sage: A Man’s Guide Into His Second Passage, by Chris Bruno.

Bruno, a missionary-turned-therapist, argues that men heading into and beyond midlife should pursue the status of “sage”: a man who has found peace with God, himself, and his life. This allows him to mentor other men into wholeness and spiritual maturity:

At the end of your life, your greatest contribution to the kingdom of God will not be the wealth you have accumulated, the successes you have achieved, or the power you have acquired. Your greatest legacy will be found in the recovery of the glorious masterpiece God has written into your life and putting it on display for all to know the Master. That, my friend, is the true measure of a man. Pp. 24-28

Bruno strikes me as a fascinating man. I am a little leery of the abundance of the psychological jargon he uses and some of the authors he quotes. Having said that, I found this book to be full of insights and useful content for personal reflection. I also found his writing style to be both enjoyable and compelling.

The Imperfect Disciple: Grace for People Who Can’t Get Their Act Together, by Jared Wilson

This is the first time I’ve read one of Jared Wilson’s books, though I’ve followed him on social media for some time. I really enjoy Wilson’s sense of humor, much of which is expressed through self-deprecation. But what I enjoyed even more was this grace-filled approach to discipleship.

I want to write a discipleship book for normal people, for people like me who know that discipleship means following Jesus—and we know that following Jesus is totally worth it, because Jesus is the end-all, be-all—but we often find that following Jesus takes us to some pretty difficult places. -page 14

This book resonated with me as one who has struggled with self-doubts, failures, etc. Wilson is transparent about similar experiences in his own life, which makes him a very relatable author.

De-sizing the Church: How Church Growth Became a Science, Then an Obsession, and What’s Next, Karl Vaters.

Years ago, I read Vaters book entitled, The Grasshopper Myth: Big Churches, Small Churches and the Small Thinking that Divide. I found it very encouraging as a small church pastor.

Vaters has consistently challenged the notion that large congregations are superior to smaller ones. He is not against mega-churches, but he does argue that the church growth movement has created an obsession with numbers that is neither healthy nor biblical:

When everything has to be measured, we end up comparing ourselves to others. It’s inevitable. Measurement is comparison. And when we compare the size of our church or ministry to the size of others, we’ll find that either we’re bigger than they are and be filled with pride, or smaller and be filled with shame. -p. 108

De-sizing the Church challenges the reader to not see numbers as the end-all, be-all and to consider other ways of assessing a church’s health and effectiveness.

Knowing and Doing the Will of God. JI Packer

I found this book in my dad’s basement last year. I like Packer’s writing, so I brought it home as my daily devotional for 2025. This book seems to be a collection of his writings from various publications. I was a joy to read.

Books I Wrote

I had the opportunity to write/publish two books when I was a missionary in the Philippines. The second, Learning the Hard Way, was published in 2010. All this to say it’s been fifteen years since I have attempted to publish a book. I never would have imagined publishing two in one year, but that’s what happened in 2025.

Preaching for Life: A Pastor’s Journey of Biblical Proclamation is a project I started working on in 2024. I could summarize this book as things I wish I knew when I was first called to ministry and when I first started preaching.

Knowing God’s Will: Discovering His Plan for Your Life came together quickly a few months after I published the preaching book. I hope this book helps people seek the Lord’s will for their lives.

Consider this verse as you head into 2026:

Commit your actions to the Lord,
    and your plans will succeed
. -Proverbs 16:3

Happy New Year!

2023: The Year in Review

It’s time for me to post another yearly review:

Cost of Living

2022 was the year that expensive stuff kept breaking (like my car and my teeth). We didn’t have as much of that this year, but the overall cost of living presented a challenge for us. I’m sure many of my readers can relate: the average American Family spent about a thousand dollars a month more in 2023 than in the previous year just to maintain the same standard of living.

I’m not mentioning this to complain or to dwell on problems. I’m simply writing it down so that some day I’ll look back and remember God’s faithfulness through the challenges.

Church/Ministry

A few things come to mind when I think about ministry this year.

  • I have continued to preach through the Gospel of Matthew. This may be the most enjoyable sermon series I’ve ever done. I always say that I hope the congregation gets a fraction of what I receive from studying when they hear the sermons.
  • I mentioned that a good friend of mine, a retired pastor, joined our congregation last year. He also started a new Bible study (“Sunday School” class) last year for some of the younger families that have been attending our church. It has gone really well, and we’ve had more young families get involved with our church. We’ve also seen growth in our children’s ministries.
  • We had good turnouts for both Vacation Bible School and Trunk or Treat. Vacation Bible School resulted in children putting their faith in Christ and getting baptized. Our children’s ministry in general has had a great year.
Vacation Bible School (June 2023)

Clark: from Prekindergarten to Kindergarten

Clark “graduated” (completed) prekindergarten back in June. We were very happy with the school, so we enrolled him for kindergarten. It turned out that one of his best friends and one of his teachers from prekindergarten ended up his class this year. We also discovered that one of Clark’s new teachers is an Alabama Crimson Tide fan (not a common thing for a native-born El Pasoan). This school year has gone really well so far.

Breakthroughs

I didn’t mention this in last year’s review post, but Clark had a bit of bumpy start to prekindergarten last year. There were several days that he didn’t want to listen to his teachers and disrupted the classroom. I had to come to the school a few times to “persuade” him to behave.

But something clicked when we returned here in January of 2023 from our vacation in Alabama. He brought home a bad conduct report early that first week and I took away one of his favorite toys. We’ve used this punishment before, but it’s as though that day he finally made the connection between cause and effect. He’s only brought back one or two bad conduct reports from that day all the way through kindergarten this year.

Another breakthrough started in January: Clark’s speech, which had been a bit delayed, seemed to transform overnight. He began formulating longer sentences, asking more complex questions, and mastering all kinds of verbal skills that he was unable to do in previous months. Cris and I have been both astounded and relieved by this.

Clark has also continued to grow in his strong points, such as letters, numbers, and reading. He’s an amazing kid and I’m so thankful to be his dad!

Dual Citizenship

Mare Cris completed her path to American citizenship back in 2017. That was a long, expensive process and we were grateful for it to be finished.

This year we had an opportunity to acquire dual citizenship for both Mare Cris and Clark. The Philippine Consulate General of Houston Texas did an outreach here in El Paso back in April (this event was sponsored by one of the local Filipino-American groups). We were able to send some documents to them ahead of time, then finish other steps while the representatives were here in El Paso. My wife and son are now dual citizens of both America and the Philippines.

We’re not sure exactly what this benefit will mean for them. It should at least make future visits to the Philippines that much easier (no need for any kind of visa when you are a citizen of the Philippines).

A Season of Death

For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven: a time to be born, and a time to die . . .

Ecclesiastes 3:1-2a

Late August and the following weeks brought what I can only describe as a wave of death to our lives. It began with our family in the Philippines–one of my wife’s paternal relatives passed away. Then a young mother in Alabama we were good friends with died in a car accident. My wife’s maternal grandfather passed away next. This was followed by the death of yet another young mother–a church member who died within weeks of being diagnosed with cancer.

All of these deaths happened within about a month. The before-mention moms were both in their 30’s and had young children. These losses are still hard for us to wrap our minds around. I’m thankful for God’s grace, strength, and comfort.

Family

Mare Cris and I celebrated 11 years of marriage back in March. She grows in grace and beauty every day. We are still partners in life and ministry and we wouldn’t have it any other way.

We have continued to enjoy watching Clark grow up. The time goes by quickly!

This year’s cold and flu season has not hit us as hard as it did last year (so far, at least). We are grateful for that!!

We also continued a tradition we started last year: visiting my family in Alabama during July and Christmas time (instead of Memorial Day and Thanksgiving). This has allowed us to build great holiday memories with family without disrupting Clark’s school routine.

I’ll leave you with this quote from A.W. Tozer. I think it is fitting since we are bidding farewell to another year:

May you have a blessed, God-honoring 2024!