Showing posts with label IE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IE. Show all posts

Monday, November 16, 2015

The Elusive One-ness with God

John 15:6
The Voice (VOICE)
If anyone does not abide in Me, he is like a branch that is tossed out and shrivels up and is later gathered to be tossed into the fire to burn.
On Hindu New Year I went to the BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir (temple) in Chino Hills. Hundreds of people were out for the festival of the feeding the gods. I was assured by one of the elders that this branch of Hindu is monotheistic. Tucked between patterns of lotus blossoms, peacocks, and intricate lattice work, thousands of exquisitely carved figures in formal poses, each unique, adorned the white marble interior as well as the red sandstone exterior of this beautiful temple. He went on to explain that these represented those who through many reincarnations and endless effort had achieved perfect harmony with the one God. They no longer had to suffer the endless reincarnations but were living with God. Looking through their literature in the adjacent gift shop, I found that these magnificent achievers are (lesser?) gods. Their lives are full of high adventure trying to help those still on earth escape their corporal bondage. Behind golden doors are the extremely beautiful gods and goddesses clothed in gold, scarlet, and bejeweled all over. On this blessed New Year’s Day (Diwali), beautifully arranged as an offering on steps in front of each of these gods lay an almost endless supply of the best Indian foods, all vegetarian, of course. Every inch of the Mandir was permeated with the delicious aroma of curry.
Martin Luther wrote of his experience in trying to achieve this oneness with God, “When I was a monk, I read mass daily. I weakened myself with prayer and fasting so much that I couldn’t have kept it up for much longer. Yet all of my efforts couldn’t help me in the smallest temptation. I could never say to God, ‘I have done all this. Look at it, and be merciful to me.’ What did I achieve with all this striving? Nothing; I merely tormented myself, ruined my health, and wasted my time. Now I’m forced to listen to Christ’s judgment on my works. He says, ‘You did all this without me. That’s why it amounts to nothing. Your works don’t belong in my kingdom. They can’t help you or anyone else obtain eternal life.’

“So in this passage, Christ has passed a terrifying judgment over all works—no matter how great, glorious, and beautiful they might appear. If these works are performed apart from Christ, they amount to nothing. They may appear to be great in the eyes of the world, for the world considers them excellent and precious. But in Christ’s kingdom and before God, they are truly nothing.”[iii]

Thank You Lord for Your infinite sacrifice to make me holy in Your sight, to fit me to be united with You forever in Your home. Thank You for taking my life and having Your Spirit live Your life in me.


[i] https://www.gg2.net/newImage/original/1357118117_04_Mandir_3.jpg
[ii] http://www.baps.org/Data/Sites/1/Media/LocationImages/LocationPhotos/43GuidedTour_001.jpg
[iii] Luther, Martin By Faith Alone 1998 ed. James C. Galvin pub. World Bible Publishers, Iowa Falls, Iowa, on the reading for November 2

Saturday, November 14, 2015

I need your counsel!

1 Corinthians 10:25-29
GOD’S WORD Translation (GW)
25 Eat anything that is sold in the market without letting your conscience trouble you. 26 Certainly, “The earth is the Lord’s and everything it contains is his.” 27 If an unbeliever invites you to his house for dinner, and you wish to go, eat anything he serves you without letting your conscience trouble you. 28 However, if someone says to you, “This was sacrificed to a god,” don’t eat it because of the one who informed you and because of conscience. 29 I’m not talking about your conscience but the other person’s conscience. 
I took a group from my church on a tour last Thursday. We visited the local Hindu temple on their new year, Diwali. I noticed that some of the people were very, very nervous on the whole tour. In the Indian food market near the visitors’ center I purchased some food. The sellers looked very shocked when some of our group asked if any of their food had meat in it. To my knowledge, any good Hindu is a vegetarian. The food is all marked “Swaminarayan Vegetarian”. Some of my group looked very nervous in the market. I didn’t understand what was making them so nervous. In the car on the way home I opened the Masala Papdi and passed it around. Some took it and enjoyed it. Others wouldn’t touch it. After a while one of the nervous ones said, “Did you read the statement in small print at the bottom of the label?”

It reads “This package contains sanctified, vegetarian cuisine prepared and offered to the divine image of God in accordance with the dietary beliefs of the Bochasanwasi Shree Akshar Purushottam Swaminarayan denomination of the Hindu religion.”

I confess I was taken aback, not from the statement on the package, but that there should be a question about food offered to idols in this Christian era. We talked a bit about it, and it was quite clear that these people had definite fear and trepidation about consuming foods that had been offered to “devils”.[ii]

We had guests over for Sabbath lunch, and I tried the masala and the concern on this group. They enjoyed eating it and expressed no feelings of any hesitations about eating it.  

I’ve read chapters 8 and 10 of 1 Corinthians enough times so that I remembered the counsel there without looking it up. However, never in my whole life, especially having lived in a Christian environment most of my life, did I expect that this would ever be an issue! Now I need your counsel! Let me know your thoughts on what my course of action should be!

Dear Lord, what a strange predicament I find myself in. I know that the offering of food to idols makes no difference to my conscience, my health, or my faith. I have found out that it does concern some others, though not many. Please give me wisdom about what is appropriate now in a Christian environment in 2015.




[i] http://www.salebhai.com/content/images/thumbs/0006356_sukhadia-garbaddas-bapuji-masala-papdi.jpeg
[ii] 1 Corinthians 10:20

Friday, November 6, 2015

Recession & Recovery

Psalm 16: 6-7 
(New International Version, ©2010)
6 …Surely I have a delightful inheritance. 
7 I will praise the LORD, who counsels me; 
   
   My parents went to Africa in the middle of the great depression. Dad taught at a small Christian college there, and Mom stayed home to look after us. Salaries were never enough, but they were frugal and educated us two boys in Christian schools. This often meant going without a much needed pair of shoes to keep us in school.
    
   Due to the political issues in Africa, I was shunted off to boarding school at the age of 12. I learned to fend for myself. After I fell in with bad company, only the grace of God kept me sober and out of jail. Because of a pharisaical, legalistic emphasis at the school, I was persuaded that I had out-sinned God’s grace and was destined for eternal punishment. A young soldier took an interest in me and my soul; and refused to give up until I came to know the real grace of a loving God.
    
   After 12 years as missionaries in Africa, my wife and I returned to the States essentially penniless but happy and content in the Lord. Decades later we own our home and have been living out of debt for many years.
[i]
   During the recent recession, my brother and both of my brothers-in-law, along with many others in the family, lost their jobs. I kept mine. Our children are all employed. Friends ask me why I didn’t retire earlier. I reply that as long as I enjoyed my job and I had the health, I’d continue working.
    
   Am I uncertain about the future? Yes! Indeed. But I am certain of one thing: we serve a marvelous God. He has blest us through 50 years of married life, through poverty but never want, through rough times but with a strong faith that the grace of God is still abundantly more than enough to meet our deepest needs. Retired now, we live comfortably with the assurance that this is but a prelude to the delightful inheritance awaiting us.
    
   Praise to You, Lord God Almighty, for the sure inheritance you have prepared for us!
  
_____________________________
[i] http://abcnews.go.com/images/WNT/abc_wn_harris_jobs_120504_mn.jpg

   

Friday, October 30, 2015

Prioritize Your Priorities

2 Peter 1:10
The Voice (VOICE)
10 Therefore, brothers and sisters, work that much harder to confirm that God has called you and claimed you. If you do this, then you will never fall along the way.
Tom came to the university with a number of Advanced Placement courses. These are classes he took while in high school with special examinations that gave him college credit for them. He also attended two math summer camps where he learned how to reason mathematically, how to prove theorems. He expressed tremendous enthusiasm for doing math and becoming a mathematician. He had learned skills that the average math major learns during his sophomore and junior years in college. Tom wanted to graduate in three years, and we worked out a program that would let him do that. In the middle of his second year at university, he took the very prestigious Putnam examination. He scored better than 80% of the best undergraduate math students in the nation.
Tom also wanted to earn a major in music. Both majors demand an unusual amount of work and practice outside of class. By the middle of his second year in college, it was becoming evident to me that he was spending a lot more time on his music than he was with mathematics. Because he had tremendous natural ability in math, he was still passing his math classes, but his mastery was slipping. He neglected his homework, which had the gradual result that his abilities to progress in math were slipping and becoming more and more anemic. In the end he graduated with majors in both fields. In music he excelled and went on to one of the most prestigious schools of music in the nation. Meantime, however, he has lost interest in doing advanced mathematics.

In my own life I have a major career in mathematics; I also have commitment to the cause of Christ. I have faith that by the grace of Christ I am saved and will “graduate” into heaven. Peter’s concern is that I run the danger of not putting enough effort into God’s calling in my own life and thereby losing interest in my eternal destiny, to the point that I turn away from my eternal salvation.
Lord, help me invest sufficient time and effort in following You to confirm that You have “called me and claimed me”.





[i] http://www.topuniversities.com/student-info/careers-advice/what-can-you-do-mathematics-degree

Monday, September 7, 2015

ISIS

2 Timothy 3:12

 The Voice (VOICE)

 Anyone wishing to live a godly life in Jesus the Anointed will be hunted down and persecuted.


[1]
 Sylvia mentioned that some long time friends had sent us an email about ISIS troops going methodically to Christian homes in Qaragosh, a town they recently entered, and beheading their children. Here is a portion of the email.

 ISIS is systematically going house to house to all the Christians and asking the children to denounce Jesus. He said so far not one child has. And so far all have consequently been killed, but not the parents. The UN has withdrawn, and the missionaries are on their own. They are determined to stick it out for the sake of the families even if it means their own deaths. They are very afraid and have no idea how to even begin ministering to these families who have seen their children martyred. Yet he says he knows God has called them for some reason to be His voice and hands at this place at this time.

Even so, they are begging for prayers for courage to live out their vocation in such dire circumstances. And like the children, accept martyrdom if they are called to do so. These brave parents instilled such a fervent faith in their children that they chose martyrdom. Please surround them in their loss with your prayers for hope and perseverance.

One missionary was able to talk to her brother briefly by phone. She didn't say it, but I believe she believes it will be their last conversation. Pray for her too. She said he just kept asking her to help him know what to do and do it. She told him to tell the families we ARE praying for them and they are not alone or forgotten -- no matter what. Please keep them all in your prayers.

Naturally it shocked and saddened me that people could be so barbaric in this enlightened age. I wondered if possibly this might be an exaggeration of an already terrible condition. I looked up ISIS on Snopes[i] to see if what I was reading was simply a very nasty “urban legend”. They list the truth of the story as “Undetermined” and “Mixture”. The two sites listed below tell more of the story. The original report was apparently sent out in August of 2014 by Sean Malone of Crisis Support International and was intended only for Sean’s immediate correspondents. Snopes does include a heart rending photograph of a child beheaded in Syria in 2013. You may want to look at the article first alone and decide whether or not you want your children to see it.

Needless to say it appears that the twenty-first century may have its own Holocausts, Gulags, and Rwandas.

Heavenly Father, my heart is revolted, angered, and saddened by the news I hear. I can only cry out “Come quickly, Lord Jesus!”






[i] http://www.snopes.com/politics/war/isis.asp, and   http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/prayer/seanmalone.asp




Thursday, August 27, 2015

Preparing for a Crown

1 Corinthians 9:25 
(New International Version, ©2010)
25 Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last, but we do it to get a crown that will last forever.

In 2011 an opportunity opened to present a paper at a mathematics education conference in South Africa. I wanted to go to South Africa again. Friends I would like to see live there. Places I would like to visit, some for the first time and some just to enjoy seeing again, beckoned. Having been born there and grown up there, I feel it’s almost like going home.
However, everything about the trip was expensive. It was possible that I could get some financial support from the university for going if I presented a paper at this conference. Furthermore, the trip would probably become partially tax deductible if I presented a paper there. So I decided to present a paper. I wrote up a proposal and e-mailed it in. The response was enthusiastically positive.

After that I spent a great deal of time researching my topic. I spent time in the university library using current periodicals. I spent hours looking on the Internet. I went over what I had been doing in my own classroom and worked to get things organized into a presentable form. Finally, I started writing the paper I planned to present. This took more time than even I had reckoned it would. Naturally, I didn’t want to stand in front of the group and sound under-prepared. 

What did all this time and effort gain me? Fifteen or twenty minutes of presentation; polite applause; an entry on my curriculum vitae; some financial support; pleasant memories, and that’s all.

Lord, help me to be as diligent spending meaningful time preparing for the time I will get to present myself before your throne!


[1] http://www.epicprivatejourneys.com/assets/images/africa/southern-africa/south-africa/africa-south-africa-hero1.jpg

Monday, August 3, 2015

A Reluctant Colporteur

Deuteronomy 6:9
Complete Jewish Bible (CJB)
and write them on the door-frames of your house and on your gates.

When I graduated from high school, Dad expected me to earn my way through college. The first two summers I worked as a student colporteur. This was probably the hardest work I ever did. My first summer, I worked in Mufulira in Zambia with my best childhood friend, John Raitt. He was an old hand at this and spent a day training me and then was around for the rest of the summer to encourage me, answer my questions, and provide support. He owned a motorbike, so we could get out and see and do things on weekends, etc. The second summer I worked alone in Ndola, Zambia.

Christianity was at its very lowest ebb in my life those two summers. So, unlike John, I had no real spiritual experience to buoy me up. Christ was only real to me as an unforgiving, accusing judge who was waiting to burn me up and rid the world of my bad influence. It was another whole year before I met Christ as a wonderful, loving, caring Savior.

The conference had both full-time colporteurs and student colporteurs. The full-timers had a number of perks that students did not. We were not allowed to sell the most popular, money-maker volumes, in case we undercut the full-timers. Student colporteurs had a contract that stipulated a combination of a certain total number of hours canvassing and a certain monetary value of books sold. If we met both criteria, then our college expenses were met by our earnings. If we only partially fulfilled the criteria, then the amount paid to the college was prorated accordingly.
We were required to work methodically from door to door, not missing a single home in our assigned region in the city. Once in a while I would come to a home with a mezuzah attached to the door-frame of a house. It contained a parchment with several verses from the Jewish Bible and was attached there as prescribed by this text from Deuteronomy. At such a house I was usually met with a very cold reception, most probably because of my preconceived, fatalistic attitude, and I never made a sale there.

Since that time I have come to know a number of Jews personally; I have stayed in their homes and eaten at their tables. We have shared our life and faith experiences with each other and respected the challenges we each face.

Maybe we don’t have portions of God’s instructions physically attached to our door posts or gates, but we would do well to think about them as we come and go.

Our God, thank You for loving and caring for us and encouraging us to remember You even in the simple things like walking into or out of our doors.




[i] https://caroleconnolly.files.wordpress.com/2014/02/doormezuzah-500pix.jpg

Friday, July 31, 2015

The Big Tree and the Sabbath

Hosea 14:6
The Voice (VOICE)
    She’ll send out shoots until her beauty is like the olive tree and her fragrance like the cedars of Lebanon.

Down the dirt road that ran in front of our house stood a magnificent lone pine tree. We always referred to it as the Big Tree. Its trunk was almost big enough to carve a tunnel for the road to go through. The branches spread out in every direction from a point about ten feet (3m) off the ground. Some reached more than 30 feet (10m) high. Others spread horizontally and every other angle to about the same length. The tree had hundreds of large round cones that were filled with hard-shelled nuts.


[1]
When we were kids there was hardly a day when we didn’t run, walk, or ride our bikes down to the Big Tree. Initially it took us a fair amount of exploration, trial, and error to find out how to get up the first ten feet to where the great limbs branched out in all directions. But after several days of rediscovering the route to the branching, we could run up it in a flash, our bare feet gripping the rough bark to support us.

From the level of branching we had no trouble climbing to the farthest points on almost all the branches. We quickly learned that we had to beware of the branches when they became too thin to support our weight. For years we spent several hours a day climbing the various branches and traversing from one branch to another. There was an endless number of ways to get around the tree.

The branches became too thin to reach most of the cones directly, but the nuts they contained were too delicious not to try. Besides climbing we would stand on the ground and throw branches or stones at the cones. When we succeeded in knocking a cone down, we would gather around and break the cone open and pull out the nuts. Then we would each find a couple of rocks, place a nut on the bigger one, and hit it with the smaller one to break it open and feast on the nuts. Often we would hit the nut too hard, and it would either shoot off and get lost in the grass or be crushed into tiny fragments. At other times we would hit a supporting finger and get up and jump around and around, holding the injured finger and crying out in pain. Of course, many nuts were just hollow shells especially if the cones were rather old.

Mom taught us not to eat in between meals. The prohibition came with strong religious backing. However, she seemed to turn a blind eye when we ate the pine nuts we had worked so hard to obtain. Our parents also had very strict ideas about what activities were allowed on Sabbath and which weren’t. For some reason that I never understood, climbing trees was forbidden. We could take Sabbath hikes up the mountains and scale the naked cliffs and rocks, but climbing trees was taboo.

One day a missionary family from the Congo visited us. Their two kids, Tom and Lucy, were just our ages. We felt we had to show them our greatest treasure, the Big Tree. Of course, once we were at the tree, we couldn’t resist climbing and showing off our skills even though it was the Sabbath. I climbed way out on a branch that ran parallel to the ground and crossed the dirt road. As usual, when I got to the end of this branch, I took a good hold on the branch with both hands and flung myself off the end. The usual result was that I would hang there briefly, suspended above the earth, and then drop the few feet to the ground. This time the little branch I was holding onto snapped off, and my right hand hit the ground first trying to break my fall. It worked, but it also broke my arm and hurt worse than I could ever remember hurting before.

On the way to hospital Dad, who usually said very little, asked pensively, “Do you think this happened because it was Sabbath?” Mom, who usually expounded at length when I did something wrong, was silent. I did have four weeks to be constantly reminded of my indiscretion by a hot and itchy plaster cast.

Lord, sometimes You ask us to do or not do something, and we don’t understand why. Then You watch us pensively as we disregard Your request and reap the results that You were trying to shield us from. Thank You for Your forbearance, forgiveness, and rescue.

__________________________________
[1] This is not the Big Tree, but the Big Tree was shaped something like this one. This tree grows near our home.

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Airport Fog Expedites Journey

Isaiah 41:10
The Voice (VOICE)
10     So don’t be afraid. I am here, with you;
        don’t be dismayed, for I am your God.
    I will strengthen you, help you.
        I am here with My right hand to make right and to hold you up.

The landing lights of the Nairobi International Airport stretched straight off into the distance as our East African Airways flight banked into the final approach. I had gotten on the flight in Musoma, Tanzania, on the eastern shores of the mighty Lake Victoria. We had landed in Mwanza, Tanzania, on the south shore and then Entebbe, Uganda, on the west, and now we had flown to Nairobi where this flight ended, and the well over a hundred people on board were very anxious to disembark.
I entertained several fears. It was December, and I was en route to Lusaka, Zambia, and a Christmas road trip with my parents to Rhodesia and South Africa. Due to their apartheid policies, these two countries were black listed in Tanzania. I wasn’t sure how much trouble we would have getting back into Tanzania where we were serving as missionaries. Sylvia and our four month old Esther had flown to Malawi earlier with the mission pilot. I had remained at Ikizu Secondary School in Tanzania to finish up the academic year.

More immediate misgivings were how I would get a room tonight in Nairobi and then get back to the airport early in the morning to catch the next flight from there to Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and then on to Blantyre in Malawi and finally to Lusaka.

Suddenly the jet engines roared to full throttle and the plane started to climb. We were in a cloud for a little while and then the sky went black as we leveled off above the clouds.

After a quarter of an hour, I said to the man sitting next to me, “We’re flying round in circles.”

“How do you know?” he asked skeptically.

“I’ve seen Venus come by the window several times.”

“I know nothing about the stars.” He said flatly.

We flew for an hour more before the voice of the pilot cracked into life from the plane’s speakers, “We were lined up to land when the fog settled onto the runway. We’ll fly around for another half-hour and then, if the fog doesn’t lift, we’ll have to fly to Dar es Salaam before we run out of fuel.” Mild cursing came from many up and down the aisle.

Twenty-five minutes later my seat mate asked me, “Are we still flying around in circles?”

“Yes,” I responded. We were all very tired and lapsed into silence again. About a quarter of an hour later I added, “We’ve been flying in a south-east direction for about five minutes now.”

He cussed quietly. About ten minutes later the pilot announced that we were headed to Dar es Salaam. We would land in about an hour and a quarter. The airline would put us up in a hotel for the night, and they would try and arrange transport back to Nairobi in the morning. He apologized for any inconveniences this might cause us. Loud and fluent cussing went up and down the aisles.

As far as I know, I was the only one on that plane who was rejoicing. I would get a good night’s rest at the airline’s expense, and they had just solved my problem of how to get onto the Blantyre bound plane in the morning.

Lord God, thank You for using an inconvenient natural event to aid me in my quandary. Thank You for always being ready to help in large matters and in small.


[i] https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiwUQ8ZJ5CyGczQUOo0cQM3Hw_ARaBUxdTmfOorT48FIsUuowYQra1U5UQi5xRW1mIGoRm_3LfLQXJmSFq942yMU51p0W-3EAasMaEQSrO44s5WVJsYLIkrtwBqhSaS5JPsNzfzL6AGNnAh/s1600/IMG_4828.JPG

Friday, July 24, 2015

Reverence God--Honor the King

1 Peter 2:17
The Voice (VOICE)
Respect everyone. Love the community of believers. Reverence God. Honor your ruler.

On July 4, 2015, we attended church in Cottonwood, Arizona. For special music we heard a heart-felt rendition of “I’m Proud to Be an American,” a popular country and western patriotic song by Lee Greenwood. The musician followed it with a parallel version, “I’m Proud to Be a Christian,” that lifts up the life and death of Christ and the salvation He provides us. A church elder spoke about miracles in the church from Bible times to today. He sees the hand of God often working through the many triumphs of medical science and making them even more effective and successful. He bore witness to God’s part in his own health struggles and how he received two lungs in a transplant some six years ago. He credits the Lord for his good health today.

After a brief lunch with our friends in the church we drove up through Navajo and Hopi land toward the quaint town of Cortez in the southwest corner of Colorado. The trip took us through several hundred miles of beautiful Arizona desert, enlivened by the monsoon rains. The sky was cloudy with great thunderstorms on all sides of us. At times we went through an edge of one or another of these spectacular storms. As we drove the last twenty miles, the setting sun shone below all of these storms and illuminated everything with a golden red light. We marveled in this monumental display of God’s fireworks that couldn’t be duplicated by any manmade fireworks display.

We pulled into a Wal-Mart parking lot where we planned to sleep that night. As we got out of our pickup, we were welcomed with powerful explosions. Independence Day celebrations were just starting across the street. We pulled down our tail gate, sat on it, and for the next half-hour turned our attention to a great series of fireworks. The monsoon clouds overhead dropped occasional giant raindrops on us while the festive explosions turned the flat bottoms of these clouds into reds, greens, whites, and blues. What an unforgettable day to blend our reverence to God with honor for our ruler!

Lord, we thank You for Your healing hand, Your magnificent power in providing for us, and the unprecedented freedom we have to live our faith.


[i] https://c2.staticflickr.com/6/5295/5535799790_c321372271_b.jpg

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Days of Darkness and Mounting Frustration

Ecclesiastes 5:17-18
The Voice (VOICE)
17 So all our days we eat in darkness, with mounting frustration, suffering, and anger. 18 Then it dawned on me that this is good and proper: to eat and drink and find the good in all the toil that we undertake under the sun during the few days God has given, for this is our lot in life.
This past weekend the annual graduation at La Sierra University took place. I went down on Saturday morning and celebrated with the graduates from the Mathematics and Computer Science Department.

Before I retired, two years ago, I spent several weeks working with the department to arrange matters so an advisee would be able to finish her degree by this graduation. I had to get permission for her to substitute certain classes for required classes, etc. Everything worked out as we had planned, and she graduated precisely when she had planned to graduate. She came to me personally and thanked me for arranging everything. I congratulated her and replied, “You earned your degree. Now you have every right to celebrate!”

I started teaching mathematics in 1965 and taught until 2013. That’s 48 years of doing what I enjoyed, namely mathematics, and helping thousands of students to learn enough for their purposes in life. Many of them thanked me and told me how much they appreciated what I had done for them. Of course, there were some who hated mathematics and consequently hated me for teaching it.

The longer I have lived and labored, the more I respect Qoheleth, the author of Ecclesiastes,[ii] for his insight into the lot of humans on this earth. And I have enjoyed finding good in the daily toil in spite of the often mounting frustration and anger attached to some aspects of my chosen career.

Lord, thank You for lives You have been able to touch through my labors. Continue to use me to touch lives in my new circumstances.





[i] http://www.jeffhaanen.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/king-solomon-and-the-queen-of-sheba.jpg?w=1024
[ii] 
  Ecclesiastes 1:1; a collector of sentences or a preacher

Monday, June 8, 2015

Is All Genetic Engineering Safe?

Luke 17:26
New International Version (NIV)
26 “Just as it was in the days of Noah, so also will it be in the days of the Son of Man.

In Altering the Blueprint: The Ethics of Genetics, “Professor Alexander McCall Smith explores the startling, and occasionally unsettling, ethical choices that humans face now that medical technology has made it possible to guide the hand of creation with increasing levels of precision and purpose.”[i] This comes from a university level course Professor Smith teaches at the University of Edinburgh in the UK.

Humans are becoming extremely resourceful in how they can modify many of the species of plants and animals that we use for our lives. Many voices are calling for avoidance of using genetically modified organisms (GMOs) in the food they eat; in the meantime giant corporations like Monsanto are trying to force the world’s farmer’s to grow only GMOs.


Even more difficult decisions are now facing us as we have the ability to breed human babies purely for “spare parts” for defective living humans. For decades in some parts of the world people have used the ability to predict the sex of their children to abort the fetus of the undesired sex. This is causing major social problems including human trafficking.

It seems that very shortly in the future we’ll be able to “enhance” our offspring by genetic engineering using the human genome. With sufficient money we may soon be able to increase the size, strength, intelligence, resistance to disease, and a host of other desirable qualities of our children. Taken to the logical end, this may mean we can produce a super-race who can tyrannize and enslave us. This dismal prospect has already been explored by some science fiction writers.

It may be that God destroyed the long-lived, super-intelligent antediluvians for extensive genetic experimentation. Christ’s prediction in our verse for today may just be trying to tell us that something like this will be an immediate precursor to His second return.

Lord, we pray with John the Revelator, “Even so come Lord Jesus!”[iii]





[i] A review of the university course taught by McCall-Smith are at http://www.amazon.com/Altering-Blueprint-Ethics-Genetics-University-Level/dp/076075019X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1433767308&sr=1-1&keywords=mccall-smith+altering+the+blueprint
[ii] http://www.theothersideoffood.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/gmos.jpg
[iii] Revelation 22:20 KJV

Sunday, May 17, 2015

Do It Right the First Time

Genesis 39:19-20
The Voice (VOICE)
19 When Potiphar heard his wife’s account, his face flushed with anger. 20 So Potiphar, Joseph’s master, put him into prison and locked him up in the place where the king’s prisoners were confined.

In the center of the university business office stood a huge work bench. No one had ever cleaned it, and the pattern of the linoleum covering of the bench could barely be seen because of the filth, grime, stain, grunge, and dirt on it. Workers had obviously spilled their Postum®, hot chocolate, or root beer while eating their greasy sandwiches on it. No one had ever even wiped it off. All of this had dried on and was camouflaged by pencil traces and erasings, ball point pen marks, and ink spills.
It was my duty to clean the business offices every night after the day crew had given up and gone home. I would start working about six o’clock in the evening and work through till midnight or much later. When I went back to my room, the offices were always thoroughly cleaned and sparkling when I got done−except for this work bench eyesore.

For well over a year I had waited for someone to say something, suggesting that the horrid thing be cleaned. No one ever did. During the work day it was usually more than half covered with the normal papers and documents of interest. It probably didn’t seem as bad to them as it did to me when I came in.

One night I finally decided I needed to do something about that work bench. I got out the best cleaning chemicals we had. I took the professional grade steel wool and went to work on it. By three o’clock in the morning I had cleaned half of it, and that half looked beautiful. I had classes in the morning, so I went back to my room and caught a few hours of sleep before my morning classes. I figured I would get the other half done the next night.

That afternoon my boss called me in. The university business manager had called him. He was furious that whoever cleaned the offices had only done half of his work. Half of the work bench was still so terribly filthy that it couldn’t be used. He had gone on and on about it until my boss was afraid he might trigger an aneurism.


[ii]
My boss was a prince of a man and extremely understanding. When I told him about the work bench and how it had never, ever been cleaned and how long and hard I had worked on it, he understood. But he knew more about human nature than I did. He recognized that people don’t look at the part well done but only on the part still undone. He taught me a great lesson. As with  Joseph, I had been doing the right thing all along, and it only rose up to bite me.

Thank You, Lord, that You read my heart and motives and understand why I do things and then respond accordingly.



[i] https://superriska.wordpress.com/2013/02/02/lessons-from-dirt-and-dirty-dishes/
[ii] http://godcenteredmom.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/mean_boss_aa035791.jpg


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