After Having COVID-19


My personal thoughts and opinions concerning this virus are,

First, we cannot stay isolated and sheltered forever.

This shelter at home and hide from the virus strategy is untenable in the long run. America’s vast wealth has sustained us for these several months but there has been a cost and it cannot continue.


Second, the longer we shelter the worse will be our recovery.

I understand that I am not a doctor, but I am convinced that the longer we isolate from others, the weaker our immune systems become. Sooner or later we will be forced out of our homes and from behind our masks and when the day comes, we will be more vulnerable than ever to colds, flu and illnesses we never dreamed of making us sick before. No amount of vitamin c and other immunity enhancers can take the place of our body’s own immunity defenses. They become compromised by hyper-cleanliness. When we come out of this shelter mode, we are likely to see a spike in illness and death from those common things we used to brush aside.


Third, A vaccine is not our enemy.

Thank God for vaccines that protect us from smallpox, polio, tuberculosis and etc. I am thankful for the medical expertise of those who have created these vaccines and pray for a quick and effective vaccine for COVID-19. I do not believe, however, that such should be mandatory. Those who choose to be vaccinated will be, effectively protected. They cannot be harmed by those who choose not to be vaccinated. The only one at risk is the one who has elected not to be vaccinated. A greater risk, in my opinion, is the issue of personal liberty.


Marvin McKenzie

In The Fields

My Covid Chronicles


My Covid Chronicles


July 3, 2020

We received word that Mrs.___________________ leading the ________________, tested positive for COVID 19. I offered to pay for motels for the team as they were in Washington and I was under the impression that they would be required to quarantine for 14 days. I learned later two of the girls had also tested positive and that the team decided to drive back. They canceled their summer tour.


July 5, 2020

I informed the families of our church that there had been positive COVID 19 and asked them to consider not going. They all chose to attend.


July 6, 2020

_____________________ ate dinner with Anita and me.


July 7, 2020

_____________________ mentioned a sore throat.


July 8, 2020

I was very light headed and weak legged after my workout. I didn’t think that much about it because it happens. It just lasted longer than normal. Also, I took a long nap in the afternoon.


July 9, 2020

I was so tired after my workout that I laid right down and slept several hours. I remember thinking that maybe I was having some sort of heart trouble. I was very weak and tired.

________________________________ had trouble preaching in the evening because of his throat.


July 10, 2020

I chose not to work out and felt fine throughout the day.

Speaker's sore throat seemed better.


July 11, 2020

Returned home. Felt fine.


July 12, 2020

I felt fine through the day but I did caution people in the church to practice social distancing more than usual

__________________ sent me a text informing me that his dad had COVID and that he got it from camp.


July 13, 2020

_______________________ called me this morning and confirmed the same. He said that he came home with a sore throat “and other COVID symptoms” and was concerned so he stayed home from church. He was able to get a test for COVID up in Everett and it is positive. He and his wife are going to go camping for two weeks to isolate themselves.

No word from them about contact tracing.


July 16, 2020

I received a message from Pastor ________________________ that he had tested positive for the COVID 19 virus. I was on my way to Anacortes to celebrate my son's birthday. I called him and we decided not to come at this time. When I got home I then made an announcement to our church that we would be returning to strictly online, FM, and tabernacle services until the 26th of July. This is an attempt to isolate due to COVID. The ladies' garage sale is supposed to be this weekend. So many of those who would have participated in it were involved either directly or indirectly that we had to cancel that too. My understanding is that Mrs __________________ went to be tested. I also heard that A____________________ was tested. Neither have gotten their results yet. So far from those who were at the camp: my wife, and I have had head or chest cold symptoms but no fever. S_____________, A_____________________ and R__________ had low grade fevers for less than 24 hours. Those who were in contact with those who went to camp and have had symptoms are, R_____________________ who drove R___________ home, Mrs O____________________ and Mr H____, 


July 19, 2020

I preached all day with no trouble. Felt fine with perhaps a slight cough.


July 20, 2020

We began our “isolation vacation” as Caleb called, it feeling fairly well. We went to Rapjohn and kayaked in the evening.


July 21, 2020

I had a cough but we went for a bicycle ride. 15 miles out and back. I could tell at the turn around point I was getting tired. By the time I got home, I did not feel well. Chose not to eat. Thought I had like a heat stroke. Used icepacks and a cool bath to cool down. 


July 22, 2020 

Slept 19 hours and could have slept a couple more.


July 23, 2020

I was feeling fairly well. I went on a shorter bicycle ride but I got chills at the turnaround. The ride back to the car was miserable. Anita drove us home while I slept. Did not eat tonight either.


July 24, 2020

Home with long naps. High temps and then swings to cold. Bad cough. I tried to see my doctor but he would not see me unless I had a COVID test. Cough is bad at night.


July 25, 2020

I went to Good Sam ER for the COVID test. They said my lungs sounded clear. Bad cough through the night.

Began taking, Quercetin (2000 mg/day), iodine (5mg/day)



July 26, 2020

Still isolated. Cough continues. Temperature swings continue. Nothing too high - 99.9, then down to 95.

Began taking zinc and vitamin a


July 27, 2020

The cough was much improved overnight. No temp swings today.


July 28, 2020

Slept well with no coughing episodes. Still have slight congestion. Coughed up a small amount of phlegm with color for the first time in the morning. No temperature swings

Test results for COVID returned positive. I was advised to self-quarantine for 7 days or 72 hours from my last high temperature, whichever is longer.


July 29, 2020

My chest became heavy with congestion about an hour before bedtime. I took a full dose of NyQuil at bedtime. No coughs through the night. I had a slight amount of congestion and cough when I woke up but it was slight.

Smell and taste have, for the most part, returned.


July 31, 2020

Congestion around bedtime continues to be a problem. I am taking a full dose of NyQuil before I go to sleep. I have not had to take Ibuprofin or Tylenol for several days. I nap still feels good but I am not exhausted all day. I have been noticeably lightheaded yesterday and today, perhaps more so today. I think that is the result of so much NyQuil in my system. 


August 1, 2020

I took NyQuil again last night. Although a cough had returned, my chest did not feel as heavy. I woke up, however, with some heaviness and have been coughing up quite a lot of phlegm this morning.


August 5. 2020

I was released from quarantine yesterday. I feel very well except for slight congestion in the center of my chest. It feels like about the size of a softball. It also makes me have to force my voice a little bit to speak. Some people would probably I spoke a little less anyway. :-)


August 6, 2020

I slept for the first time without NyQuil last night. It was no trouble at all. I think I felt less groggy this morning. Today the "softball-sized" area of congestion is gone but I have a general and persistent cough. I continue to feel like I have to force out enough air to speak.


August 7, 2020

By afternoon yesterday, my cough was fairly persistent. I considered taking a half dose of NyQuil at bedtime but resisted. I feel maybe 90-95% this morning. Very slight cough. My left ear is plugged.


August 8, 2020

It was July 8, a full month ago, that I first had a symptom for the COVID-19. Today I am going to declare myself fully recovered. I may still be slightly weakened, but symptoms are gone.


Praise the Lord.


Marvin McKenzie

In the fields

The Tale of Two Kingdoms

Matthew 22:15-22

John 19:1-15

 

You will notice that the conflict in each of these texts is between two kingdoms.

 

Several years ago, I listened to a series of lectures on World History by an accomplished professor of history from Columbia University. He told of a student he once had who was from South Korea. This young man said that his goal was to become an accomplished historian and then write the first recognized history, from a pro-Korean bias.

The professor told the story to illustrate that history, all history, is an art.

History is true. But since no one living saw it happen, historians take the clues they find in written documentation, archeological digs and anthropological studies to paint their pictures of history. It is their perception of what happened, not actually what happened.

 

I had not been a Christian very long when I was invited to attend a prayer breakfast where the keynote speaker was a noted Christian anchorman from a Portland News Channel. He made a statement I never forgot but took decades to understand. He said that there is more proof that Jesus rose from the dead than that Alexander the Great ever lived. 

Wow.

Yet the majority of the world would not question the history of Alexander the Great but doubt the resurrection of Christ.

His statement is accurate because, comparatively speaking, there is very little reliable documentation of the life of Alexander the Great and thousands of pieces of documentation on the resurrection. We have written records of Jesus’ resurrection that date back to as close as 100 years after the fact. But all of the documentation concerning Alexander the Great rely on just a hand full of sources

Herodotus

Livy

Thucydides and

Tacitus

There are only a handful of their works surviving, they are all copies of copies hundreds of years after the originals, and even they were not eyewitnesses to the histories they wrote.

In one case the historian was a teacher in a school. Nearing his death, and not wishing his predecessor to have the library of his works, he willed them to family, who simply stored them in a basement. Centuries later someone discovered them and. Realizing their value, set out to publish them again. However, being stored in a negligent way for so long they were severely degraded. Rather than allowing them to remain as they were, this person “filled in the blanks” and unfortunately did not leave indications of what was original and what was his work. When historians study this work today they can only guess at what was the original author’s and what was added.

 

Some years ago, I heard a series of lectures of retired history professor from the University of Oklahoma, Rufus Fears. He said in one of his lectures that historians today debate the actual date of the Declaration of Independence, this despite the fact that both Thomas Jefferson and John Adams died on the 50th anniversary of the 4th of July, and acknowledged it as such. If historians can’t agree on something some near to us, and so well documented as that, I suggest that we ought to accept any written history as simply a work of art.

 

The point

Church history happened. But the histories you read are all just works of art the historian's perception of what actually happened. Most Baptist history extant was written by those who hated them. 

A few months ago I was speaking to a well known Baptist pastor about the Anabaptists. He asked me, “Wouldn’t we disagree with most of what the Anabaptists believed?”  My answer, “They were just men and therefore fallible. But I am confident that they were consistently faithful to

The preservation of the Scriptures

The preservation of the soul and

The preservation of the sanctuary

 

Outside of that, the thing that separated the Anabaptists from the rest, and what got them in trouble the most, was the doctrine of separation of church and state.

 

I. THE CATHOLIC CHURCH

Was a marriage of church and state. With the Roman state as the head.

Constantine declared that there was but one universal (catholic) church and he was the head of it.

 

II. WHEN ROME FELL

The Roman Catholic Church did not. The Roman Empire fragmented into the many European kingdoms. It was a marriage of church and state with the church as the head.

Consider the history and you will see that this marriage always resulted in the persecution of those who disagreed.

 

III. WHEN THE MARRIAGE OF CHURCH AND STATE BORE CHILDREN

In the form of the Protestant Churches, they naturally followed suit.

Luther married his church to Germany

Calvin married his church to Geneva

Zwingli married his church to Switzerland

The result in every case was the persecution of those who disagreed.

 

Luther was helped out of Catholicism by the Anabaptists in Germany. He would not unite with them because he believed their premise to be untenable. He did not believe people would 

Attend services

Observe the ordinances and

Support the ministry

If the government did not force them to do it.

 

When King Henry VIII defied the Pope, he called his new church, The Church of England. It was a marriage of church and state.

 

IV. THE PILGRIMS AND PURITANS

Came to the new continent to escape the persecution of the Church of England. But they each married their church with their new state. Early continental history is filled with the persecution of Baptists (and others) by the Pilgrims and the Puritans.

 

When the War for Independence was won, the greatest contribution of the Baptists was to press for no state-sponsored church.

 

Protestants are quick to point out that there is no separation of church and state in the Constitution. Jefferson used the term in a letter to a group of Baptist pastors from Danbury Connecticut.

 

Baptists were the catalyst for the first amendment.

 

The Baptist doctrine that counters universal church is the separation of church and state.

This election season the most Baptist thing we can do is to get on our knees and pray for revival. The answer for America is not the re-election of Donald Trump.[1]

The answer for Washington State is not the election of Loren Culp.[2]

 

The answer for America is revival. And I believe revival is the rebooting of the Baptist doctrine of separation of church and state, “We have no head but Christ.”

 



[1] Although he is who I will vote for.

[2] That’s who I voted for.

The Effeminizing of America and Covid-19


The effects of effeminization in America has been a matter of concern for some decades now. 

First, there was a rush of popular musicians who manipulated their physical features to appear more feminine, and the girls loved it. It seemed like the more like girls they looked, the more the girls thought they were “cute.” The push for equal rights has made it almost shameful to be manly. To be a strong provider, to be a leader in the home, or for that matter, in the world, and to be a male, is thought of as brutish.

America’s leadership from the highest government offices, to even the pulpits, have been yielded, in many cases, to women. Some churches have recognized the problem and have attempted a resistance with “men’s advances,” “man up conferences,” and all the like. I think it is probably too little too late.

Now we have to coronavirus crisis, and it seems to me that the typical reaction is an effeminate one. Almost every governor in our country, Democrat and Republican (ironically except for a powerful woman governor - she’s more manly than many of the men leading our nation) has taken to responding to this virus like a motherly figure rather than a manly one. Their instinct has been to hover over, to fret about, to overprotect for the purpose of saving lives. It has been at the expense of liberty of life.

I understand. It’s a mom’s place to nurture and to protect, to care for her children under her wings. She weeps emotionally, bitterly at the thought of any hardship to come upon her brood. We all loved to be loved upon.

But no advance happens in the shadow of mom’s apron. Enter the role of the fathers. The masculine figure has always been one to embrace conquest. Exploration, experimentation, and discovery always come with risk, as does liberty.

·      Patrick Henry’s mother would surely have wished him to keep his thoughts “Give me liberty or give me death” to himself

·      Nathan Hale’s mother most assuredly would have rather he was never required to say, “I regret I have but one life to give for my country.”

History is filled with brave men whose mothers surely fretted for their boys.

·      Alan Shepherd, John Glenn, Neil Armstrong

·      Brave soldiers who hazarded everything for their country.

Who doesn’t think the mothers of those signers of our Declaration of Independence and thereby pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor would rather have coddled them?

No caring soul wishes another human being to contract the coronavirus, suffer, and to die from it. None of us, with any sense of decency, would knowingly or willfully infect another human being, knowing it will likely kill him or her. But there is the trouble. It will not probably kill him or her. Yes, some will contract the coronavirus, develop a complication, and die. No one wants to die before their time, but all of us will die. A few of us will die from the coronavirus. We must not allow a motherly, effeminate, emasculated fear to drive us under the apron strings and lose the precious gift of life and liberty.

 

Marvin McKenzie

In the fields

 

 

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