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Mewbourne Oil Company Celebrates 60 years

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Staff reports

On June 1, Mewbourne Oil Company (MOC) marked six decades in the oil and gas industry. Founded in 1965 by Curtis Mewbourne, the company began its journey in the Permian Basin before expanding operations into the Anadarko Basin in 1976. Today, MOC employs more than 800 people and has grown into one of the largest oil and gas companies in America.

“Mr. Mewbourne was a great man and a brilliant oilman. He would be delighted to see our growth and success, which has been driven by the talent and dedication of our great people, said MOC President and CEO Ken Waits. “We continue to see incredible opportunities in the Permian and Anadarko basins and believe our future has never been brighter.”

The company is still privately-owned by the Mewbourne family six decades after it as created, and Waits said Mewbourne remaing “committed to the business and the long term success and well being of its’ owners, employees, partners and stakeholders.”

To commemorate this milestone, the company hosted celebrations for all employees, recognizing and honoring many with service awards for their invaluable contributions.

“I am incredibly proud of Mewbourne Oil Company’s accomplishments and stability over our remarkable 60 year history,” Waits said. “I am confident we will have many more of these celebrations in the years to come.”

For more information about Mewbourne Oil Company, visit www.mewbourne.com.

Survey Says

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Ty Houghtaling

I received an email with a survey for evangelical pastors from a church curriculum provider the other day. In it, I was asked how often a Gospel presentation was offered at my church. Generally speaking, we offer an invitation to accept the Good News every Sunday. On occasion, there has been a Sunday where an invitation wasn’t offered to accept the message of Jesus. Church leaders can get fearful, maybe fearful is too strong of a word, of confronting non-church people (non-followers of Jesus) with the Gospel. There is pressure on pastors and church leaders to keep from running people off with the confrontational message about sin and our need for a Savior. Supposedly, many churches don’t even use terminology like “sin”, “salvation”, or “you must be born again”. The message of “love God and love people” (a critical message of Christianity) is typically what resonates with churches that are uncomfortable with evangelism. The survey I took brought up these types of concerns. I am nominally aware of the trends of churches and the concerns of pastors who do not wish to offend people due to the confrontational nature of Jesus’ message of forgiveness and transformation. The truth is, the Gospel message is confrontational. And, until a person can admit their sins and repent of those sins against God and then, by faith, believe in Jesus as the one God sent to die on our behalf, salvation isn’t possible. I accepted that message a long time ago and I am not ashamed of that message. I will continue to present it to anyone willing to consider it for it is the power of God for salvation (Rm 1:16). What are your thoughts? Are the concerns over the church’s invitation to respond to the Gospel at the end of a service merited? Why or why not? Email me at ty@fbcartesia.org and maybe we both can make sharing the Good News about Jesus easier and more effective. (FYI “Repent of your sins”: Mt 3:2, Rv 2:16, Mt. 4:17, Mk 1:15, Ac 2:38, Ac 3:19, Lk 13:3; “be born again” Mt 3:3, 2 Cr 5:17, Ez 36:26-27, Ti 3:5, 1 Pt 1:23, Rm 6:4, Ep 2:4-5, 1 Jn 5:1, Ja 1:18; “salvation” 2 Co 6:2, Rm 13:11)

County settles social media censorship lawsuit

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Christina Holt
Hobbs News-Sun

Government entities, including the Lea County Sheriff’s Office, use social media platforms like Facebook and Instagram to give out information and engage with the public.

However, it is important to note these public entities are typically restricted from deleting comments or blocking users from its public social media pages under the First Amendment.

This is exactly what Jason Sanchez of Texas claimed was done to him by LCSO, leading to a lawsuit which ended in a settlement agreement of Sanchez receiving $50,000.

Sanchez filed the lawsuit through his attorney Benjamen Gubernick against Lea County Board of Commissioners in January, claiming his civil rights under the New Mexico Constitution and First Amendment of the United States Constitution were violated.

Sanchez is a former resident of Eddy County and maintains a Facebook page currently called “Eddy and Lea County Exposed.” This page was previously named “New Mexico Exposed” and “Eddy County Exposed,” according to the lawsuit.

The purpose of the page is to “monitor corruption and encourage good government in New Mexico,” the complaint read.

Sanchez used the “New Mexico Exposed” Facebook page to comment on a post in September 2024 made by LCSO regarding how drivers in Lea County should not drive while intoxicated.

The post was an attempt to expose hypocrisy and corruption within LCSO, according to the lawsuit.

“Regular citizens are disciplined for drunk driving while the misdeeds and vices of leaders … are overlooked and swept under the rug,” the lawsuit read.

The comments Sanchez posted did not contain threats or profanity, nor did he disclose personal information of any deputy or LCSO family members, according to the complaint.

After making the comments, Sanchez learned the New Mexico Exposed page was blocked by LCSO and subsequently, his comments were deleted. He then filed his lawsuit and settled in January 2025.

Since the settlement in January, Lea County Manager Corey Needham signed a new social media policy for the county turning off commenting for all posts effective April 1.

“ … social media remains a tool for disseminating accurate and timely information while minimizing the risk of misinformation, inappropriate content, or non-compliant interaction,” the policy read.

The county opted to disable public commenting on all county-run social media.

Since commenting on a Lea County social media posts is no longer an option to ask questions or bring up concerns, the public will have to either call, email or directly message to the post.

Commenting was allowed prior to April 1, as indicated by the “Our Lea County” Facebook page. The comment section was previously open and treated as a designated public forum.

Christina Holt’s email is reporter3@hobbsnews.com.

State to spend millions on abandoned oil wells

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Adrian Hedden
Artesia Daily Press
ahedden@elritomedia.com

Abandoned oil and gas wells could cost New Mexico more than $200 million and take a decade to clean up, according to a report issued by state economists as lawmakers debate what to do about the problem.

Wells are typically abandoned by operators when they are no longer financially viable, as older wells generally produce less oil and gas. The environmental community fears the wells leach chemicals into the land and air, risking public health and the environment if not remediated.

To do that, operators pay into state bonds when wells are drilled – currently about $25,000 per well or up to $250,000 for “blanket bonds” to cover multiple wells in a tiered system depending on the number of wells owned by a company across New Mexico.

But that money does not usually cover the full expense, at current cost rates for construction and materials to plug the well, remove surface disturbance and remediate the land back to its natural state, read a June 24 report by the Legislative Finance Committee.

So, the state picks up the bill.

The report was presented to committee members during their June 24 interim meeting, held between legislative sessions for lawmakers to consider policies. The authors detailed how and why wells are abandoned and remediated, and suggested the industry should be held to higher financial requirements.

Stephanie Joyce, a committee program evaluator who presented the research, said the average cost to plug and remediate a single well was estimated at about $163,000.

“The state faces significant and growing financial liabilities for oil and gas well cleanup,” she said. “Wells aren’t built to last forever.”

Concerns were voiced by Jim Winchester, president of the Independent Petroleum Association of New Mexico – a trade group that represents smaller producers he said would be disproportionately impacted by the increased requirements for well-plugging.

“Industry has long been very concerned over plugging abandoned wells,” he said. “We recognize that problem and want to fix it.”

Winchester said the state’s Oil Reclamation Fund – created in the 1970s and funded by energy companies that pay into the fund for reclamation of abandoned sites – should be adequate when combined with current bonding rates.

He said the fund was “robbed” in the last 15 years by lawmakers to pay for other state expenses, meaning up to “a billion dollars” were taken away from well-plugging. Winchester admitted he had no hard data to back up his estimate.

“It is the Legislature that has swept these funds and allocated them elsewhere,” Winchester said. “That’s broken the trust with industry.”

Yet, New Mexico Commissioner of Public Lands Stephanie Garcia Richard said oil and gas companies must be held liable over state taxpayers for the cleanup.

She said the State Land Office Garcia Richard leads, managing operations on 13 million acres of State Trust lands, forced companies to plug 700 such wells since she took office in 2019.

“I think most companies are starting to take us seriously when we say they need to honor the terms of their leases and clean up after themselves,” she said.

How many abandoned wells are left?

The report estimated there were about 60,000 currently active wells that will need to be plugged in the future in New Mexico.

While operators typically plug their own wells, the report read, the state’s Oil and Gas Division was forced to plug about 1,000 abandoned wells in the last 20 years – about 5% of all wells plugged in the state during that time.

“However, the number of wells the division is authorized to plug has consistently outpaced its plugging efforts,” read the report.

As of the report’s release, the division – which functions as New Mexico’s lead compliance agency for the oil and gas industry – had gained the authority to plug 700 wells it found to be abandoned, but expected a future need to plug 1,400 more wells believed inactive.

Authority to plug a well is gained by the state when it determines the site is abandoned and issues a notice of violation. A hearing can be held and if the well is still in violation, and the operator does not plug it themselves, the state will take on the work.

About 3,000 wells in New Mexico were producing “extremely small quantities” of oil and gas, the report read, meaning they would likely need to be plugged soon.

The estimated cost of plugging just the currently identified abandoned wells was $208 million, the report read, rising to $468 million for the rest of the inactive wells and to more than $1 billion for those close to the end of their lifetime.

In total, the report estimated between $700 million and $1.6 billion to be New Mexico’s “current and near-future” liability. Federal grants could offset some of the expense, Joyce said, through the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act signed into law by former President Joe Biden in November 2021.

So far, New Mexico has gained $55 million through the act, she said, and is eligible for another $100 million in the coming years. The money helped the division plug some of the wells, Joyce said, but meanwhile the cost ballooned from about $30,000 in 2019 to the $163,000 reported recently.

Solutions or an ‘attack’ on industry?

To solve this purported dilemma, the report said lawmakers should clarify the definition of “abandoned” or “orphan” wells, assess higher financial assurances for low-producing wells, and allow the Division to block transfers of older, low-producing wells to smaller operators it believes are unlikely to meet the requirements.

Under the report’s other recommendations, which also called on the division to publish a monthly list of abandoned wells, a low producing well would be defined as one generating less than 750 barrels of oil equivalent (BOE) per year and the definition for inactive wells would be expanded to include those producing less than 180 BOE per year.

A barrel of oil equivalent is a unit of measurement that combines oil and natural gas. One BOE is a barrel of oil – about 42 gallons – or 6,000 cubic feet of gas.

Sen. Steven Lanier, (R-2) of Aztec, who represents an area located among the aging natural gas fields of the northwest San Juan Basin, said the report was “biased” and amounted to a false criticism of the state’s oil and gas industry.

It’s a business that produces about half of New Mexico’s budget each year and generated more than $13 billion in state and local revenue in fiscal year 2025, according to the New Mexico Oil and Gas Association.

Lanier said all that was under “attack” by the report and those who produced it, putting the state’s economy at risk.

“Fortunately, my colleagues and I recognized the source of this misleading report – self-serving ‘climate warriors’ once again trying to further their radical progressive policy goals without regard for the damage they would do to our state’s economy,” he said.

Managing Editor Adrian Hedden can be reached at 575-628-5516, or @AdrianHedden on the social media platform X.

Independence Day, July 4, 2025

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Galen Farrington

“… it was the epoch of belief…”

Charles Dickens

It is often stated that the highest standard that delineates the greatest literature is its lasting human value and we all remember the words beginning the second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence: “We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” And the Great Experiment had been delineated on paper as the moral foundation of the Constitution.

Due to systemic limitations on women’s rights and opportunities, Abigail Adams wrote in a letter to her husband, John Adams, dated March 31, 1776, in which she advocates for women: “… I desire you would Remember the Ladies, and be more generous and favorable to them than your ancestors.” She would become disappointed with the Declaration’s final wording.

Thomas Jefferson’s final document as presented July 2, 1776, to the Continental Congress declared United States independence. It was reviewed, and except for the major revision eliminating the slavery grievance against King George III, was accepted; the Congress wanted no mention of slavery due to the document’s position on human rights.

Ralph Trembly’s famous lithograph (1817) placing most of the 56 signers in one location to ratify the Declaration of Independence pictures a fictitious event as the delegates arrived in Washington on horseback during the five months after the actual Aug. 2 signing. The final signature was that of Thomas McKean (Delaware) in January 1777. Now the Declaration was complete with all signatories, and a second printing was commissioned by the United States government with Mary Katharine Goddard accepting the contract. As a result, her name is the only female signature to appear alongside those of the Founding Fathers.

Although not the first to sign the new Declaration, John Stockton was the first of five delegates from New Jersey to put pen to paper. But Mr. Stockton was also the only signer to sign an affidavit to promise not to meddle in the American affairs during the Revolution and align with British interests as a condition for his release from a New York prison (he was a prisoner of war). His five harsh weeks spent in prison resulted in a two-year health recovery.

John Dunlap printed approximately 200 original Declarations that were read to the colonialists. Twenty-six remain today with the most recent discovery as the result of a $4 purchase at a flea market. In 1989 a flea market patron purchased a framed picture. Upon arriving home, he cut out the picture and found an old document that was an original Declaration of Independence. He later sold it at auction for just over $8.1 million.

The Declaration of Independence became the inspirational model document outlining civil rights in America. When Abigail Adams asked her husband to “… Remember the Ladies …” it may be construed that women’s suffrage was born. When a free, nine-year-old Black boy heard the reading of the Declaration for the first time in front of the Philadelphia statehouse, James Forten decided to devote his life to “… uplifting his fellow Black Americans ….” His lifelong goal was to seek equality for all, regardless of color. It may be argued that Forten was this country’s first civil rights activist.

This Independence Day take time to read the first two paragraphs (there are five sections of the Declaration: preamble, statement of human rights, list of grievances, denunciation of the British and conclusion) of the Declaration and decide for yourself if Government is living up to the Founding Fathers’ lofty goal of “… deriving (its) just powers from the consent of the governed …”

There is no doubt that the Declaration of Independence is one of America’s great pieces of literature due to its lasting human value that makes this country the greatest of all the over 200 countries of the world.

May God continue to bless America.

Galen Farrington is a resident of Alto, NM and contributor to the Ruidoso News. He can be reached at gcf88345@gmail.com

Hair braiders to be able to practice without a cosmetology license

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El Rito Media News Services

ALBUQUERQUE — Starting July 1, hair braiders will be exempt from the requirement of a cosmetology license to practice hair braiding due to the recently signed “Exempting Hair Braiding from Provisions of the Barbers and Cosmetologists Act.”

Four State House Representatives — Rep. Janelle Anyanonu (D-Albuquerque), Rep. Harold Pope (D-Albuquerque), Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero (D-Albuquerque) and Rep. Pamelya Herndon (D-Albuquerque) — sponsored the bill.

The bill would open up the opportunity for many black people to start small businesses in New Mexico, stimulating the local economy, Herndon said.

Many braiders learn how to braid from their communities or family members, Herndon said.

According to MiLady, the average total cost of attending a cosmetology school in New Mexico is $15,874.

“Why would you pay thousands of dollars for a license when you learned the craft outside of school?” Herndon said.

Eyebrow threading, despite also being exempt from licensure, must occur in a licensed establishment, according to the bill.

Nwamaka Tutman, a University of New Mexico student who braids hair herself, worked alongside Herndon during her time as part of the New Mexico Legislative Internship and became the face the bill would represent, she said.

“I think that legislators were able to sympathize with me because they saw me frequently while I was shadowing Rep. Herndon, and because I was wearing braids I did myself,” Tutman said.

Herndon felt “very proud” that Tutman adopted this role, she said.

“There are many people in college that rely on braiding hair to eat. We rely on it to pay bills, pay groceries, to do other things, and it’s really important that we are able to do that without legal implications,” Tutman said.

The bill will enable hair braiders to start businesses with the skills they have learned through their communities, Tutman said.

“It provides greater economic freedom by allowing people to practice their skills and removes unnecessary barriers to doing so,” Tutman said.

Outside the African American community, there are ways that other communities may benefit from this bill, Tutman said.

“Some of the people sitting in the committee have Native ancestry, and they have said that they can see themselves benefiting from the bill too, because they also wear their hair in braids. Braids are attached to the cultural identity.” Tutman said.

The Board of Barbers and Cosmetologists expressed a strong opposition to the bill, citing concerns that lowering professional standards increases the risk of harm to clients due to misuse of chemical hair products that could cause scalp burns, allergic reactions and other serious health concerns, according to a document from the New Mexico State Legislature.

Carcinogenic ingredients were found in 10 of the most popular synthetic hair braiding products, according to a Consumer Reports study that was published Feb. 27.

Products and techniques used in braiding are unlikely to seriously harm clients, Herndon said.

“I’d never heard of anyone dying because they got their hair braided,” Herndon said.

Prior to the passage of this bill, it was difficult to get your hair braided as a Black person in New Mexico, Tutman said.

New Mexico is the 37th state to exempt hair braiders from licensure, according to the Institute for Justice.

Herndon felt happy that New Mexico recognizes “a culture and a business that can exist,” she said.

“We can sit in a salon like our counterparts in other states and have that experience of self-care we deserve,” Tutman said.

Sedillo barn gears up for weekend

Ruidoso Downs Racetrack

Fire Powwer, S Super King, Alamos all favorites to win

Veteran trainer Tony Sedillo hopes to dominate this weekend’s trials for the Zia Futurity and Zia Derby.

The Friday and Saturday qualifying races at Ruidoso Downs are for New Mexico-bred quarter horses running 400-yards. There are 12 Futurity trials for 2-year-olds on Friday and four Derby trials for 3-year-olds on Saturday with first post time at 1 p.m. both days.

The Zia Derby and Zia Stakes will run July 19, while the Zia Futurity and Juvenile are run July 20 as part of Zia Weekend, showcasing New Mexico-bred quarter horse racing.

“Our horses are ready,” Sedillo said. “We’ve been very fortunate with our state breds so far this year. We’ll just need some racing luck.”

Two of Sedillo’s fastest 2-year-olds, S Super King and Fire Powwer, finished one-two in the $216,000 New Mexico Breeders Futurity at Sunray Park on May 24. S Super King beat his stablemate by a nose.

“It was an exciting race,” Sedillo recalled. “Fire Powwer was closing fast and just missed. I was very pleased with both horses. I would think that Fire Powwer is going to like the extra distance of 400-yards this weekend.”

Fire Powwer, ridden by jockey Luis Martinez, is listed at 2-1 odds on the morning line for Friday’s second race while S Super King is the 5/2 morning line pick in the 10th race. Omar Iturralde will ride. Both horses are owned by CHR Racing’s Juan Ramos and will be making their first local start of the season.

Sedillo is just as hopeful for Saturday’s Zia Derby trials as the horse to catch appears to be Alamos, winner of the $202,000 Mountain Top Derby at Ruidoso Downs June 14. The gelding has won three of four local starts for Tungsten Racing’s Marcelino Gonzalez and is 2-1 on the morning line. Alamos is No. 5 in race five.

“It’s a quick turnaround after winning the Mountain Top,” Sedillo said, “but the horse is telling us he’s in great form. It was a nice stakes win and this horse has developed into a nice 3-year-old.”

A former All American champion trainer, Sedillo says the strength of his barn this season has been with state-bred competition. “Sometimes that’s just the way it works out,” he said. “We’ve had years when the barn has done well with open horses too. But for now, we’re having success with the breeds.”

Let’s celebrate!

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Debbie Nix

The very best thing about family gatherings like fourth of July is the abundance of food, especially if you opt for potluck style. Have you noticed that family, church or holiday gatherings have a unique rhythm when it comes to the menu? We seldom ever actually plan the menu, but nothing is ever duplicated or left out. Every family has an aunt Marie that makes the best mayonnaise potato salad and tangy coleslaw and a cousin Dorothy that you can count on for her mustard potato salad. My mom’s scalloped potatoes were always in high demand, and I was known for my Jack Daniel’s baked beans. Then when we got to the serious part of the menu, my dad’s slow cooked barbecue pork ribs, well, let’s just say, they were an all-time family favorite.

The big meals, lunch and dinner were always assumed and easily counted on but breakfast happens to be my favorite meal and seemed to be easily forgotten. Once everyone started to roll out of their makeshift beds on the porch and sleeping bags all over the den floor they realized they were hungry. When my home began to be the family gathering place, I made sure to have something easy to serve for these hungry relatives. Two of my all-time favorites are chile relleno casserole and French toast casserole. Preparation is all done ahead and ready to pop into the oven in the morning. See if these favorites make your life easier.

Chile relleno casserole

Fry 2 pounds of sausage until crisp.

Add one small, diced onion, sauté until soft.

Add two small cans of diced green chile.

Put into a plastic container, refrigerate.

Whisk eight eggs, three cups of milk, two tsp.

baking powder, two tsp. salt, one tsp. pepper.

Put into a plastic container, refrigerate.

Have one package of grated long-horn cheese on hand.

In the morning, mix up eggs again, oil a 13 X 9 inches Pyrex pan.

Layer 1/3 of egg mixture, sprinkle 1/3 of grated cheese, top with sausage mixture.

Add the remainder of egg mixture then another 1/3 of the cheese. Bake covered at 350 degrees for 40-45 minutes or until set to the touch. Pull foil off to let brown the last five minutes. Top with remaining cheese. Serve with sour cream and salsa on the side.

French toast casserole

Whisk eight eggs, three cups of milk, one cup of brown sugar,

one tsp. cinnamon, one tsp. vanilla. Butter a 13 X 9 inches Pyrex pan.

Cut two loaves of Sara Lee cinnamon raisin bread into two-inch cubes.

Place it into buttered pan. Pour egg mixture slowly over top.

Press bread down so it all gets soaked with egg mixture.

Cover and let sit in the refrigerator overnight.

In the morning, bring out of refrigerator and pop into the same oven as your chile relleno casserole. Bake covered at 350 degrees for 40-45 minutes until set. Don’t over bake. Pull foil to let top brown the last five minutes. Serve with butter, chopped pecans and warm maple syrup. These can be staggered on two racks on the middle rows in your oven if the two pans won’t fit side by side.

The only thing you might want Aunt Marie to bring in addition to her potato salad is a fresh fruit salad to round out your fourth of July brunch.

Debbie Nix, longtime Ruidoso resident,

Lifecoach and foodie

Lifecoach@zianet.com

Artesia girls’ basketball camp breaks attendance record 

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JT Keith 

Artesia Daily Press

jtkeith@elrtiomedia.com

Artesia girls’ basketball coach Candace Pollard held her second Summer Basketball Camp at The Bulldog Pit from June 25-27.

Girls played basketball on both courts at The Bulldog Pit Wednesday through Friday. Kindergarteners through fifth-graders and sixth- through ninth-graders showed up to the camp and worked on their basketball skills.

The 105 campers in attendance broke last year’s record of 80.

The camp had two sessions, with the kindergarteners to fifth-graders from 10 a.m. to noon and the sixth- to ninth-graders from 1-3 p.m.

Pollard said that breaking the camp into two sessions allowed her to give each kid undivided attention.

“Fundamentals are at the core of everything we do,” Pollard said. “At this age group, we must keep it enjoyable for them. If they have a ball in their hand, that is what we want.”

Pollard said that many of the kids started coming to the camp in kindergarten and continued up to the ninth grade, and she can see improvements in their game as they grow taller.

“It is crazy because when they start,” Pollard said, “they are shooting on the small basketball goals. And as they get older, they can shoot on the big baskets. It is a big deal when a kid can make it in the big basket.”

Pollard said she came to this camp when she was a kid and looked forward to attending every year.

“I’m trying to emulate what I learned as a kid at this camp,” Pollard said. “I am trying to get kids excited about basketball; this was my favorite time of the year, coming to camp.”

Pollard said her main goal is to instill a love for basketball in the kids she is coaching, she wants them to get better – and she is passing along her knowledge to them.

What a country

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David Grousnick

What a country is America! As Erma Bombeck once wrote, “You have to love a nation that celebrates its independence every July 4th, with family picnics where kids throw frisbees, the potato salad gets soggy, and the flies die from happiness.”

I want to invite you to consider the phrase “The pursuit of happiness.”

It’s a phrase with which every school child is familiar, I hope. But what a phrase, a phrase that is foundational to our national identity and part of the introductory insistence of our Founding Fathers’ Declaration of Independence.

“Happiness” is an extraordinary “demand” for political revolutionaries. Equality. Democracy. Liberty. Freedom. Those are what we expect from our fiery ancestors.

But life, liberty . . . and “the pursuit of happiness?”

No matter how intellectually gifted, how democratically on fire, or how socially revolutionary, at some crucial point, at some heart of our humanity, all we want to do, all we want to feel, all we want is to be happy. No wonder Jesus started one of his most famous sermons with a litany of “Happy (blessed) are those who . . .” (Matthew 5:1-12).

Perhaps the greatest sadness of Martin Luther, the simple monk who brought the hurricane winds of reformation to the entire continent of Europe, was that towards the end of his long and momentous life, he confessed that he could count on the fingers of one hand the days of complete happiness he could remember.

Luther measured “happiness” by the length of days. But happiness does not come neatly packaged in 24-hour increments.

Happiness comes in unexpected spurts and momentary bursts. Happiness is woven into the tapestry of our life as an infusion of grace. Happiness is not something we “find.”

Happiness is something we cultivate on a daily basis, not for itself, but as part of a larger mission, a mission which, joyfully, sometimes gifts us with an unexpected bumper crop of happiness.

In the eighteenth century, when that “pursuit of happiness” phrase was coined, the buzzword “happiness” was loaded with meaning and merit.

While Enlightenment figures applauded the pursuit of life, liberty, and the “pursuit of happiness,” another Enlightenment figure, the founder of Methodism John Wesley, equated “happiness” with the way to “holiness.”

His phrase was “holiness is happiness,” and over 70 of his sermons referenced and recommended “happiness” as the goal of the Christian life.

But for Wesley “happiness” means more than “feeling good.” “Happiness” means “pleasing God.”

In 1 Thessalonians 1:1-10, Paul makes an important distinction. It’s a distinction many people never make their whole life long.

It’s a distinction between living one’s life trying to “please people” and living one’s life to “please God.”

Paul has no interest in living to please people. Paul seeks the stamp of “approval” from none but God. Neither offering flattery to others nor gaining praise for himself is part of Paul’s mission. Paul’s mission lays out what matters most: Pleasing God!

Enjoy pleasing God in your life so that your happiness will abound and flourish! And have a great 4th of July celebration weekend!!