Just a Little Silly Humor!
Just thought I would lighten the load for everyone with a little silly humor i found:
Everyone be sure to comment and let me know your thoughts on this! Also, if you have some other good silly humor stuff let me know.
ranting, raving, and ruminating the issues of life!
Just thought I would lighten the load for everyone with a little silly humor i found:
Everyone be sure to comment and let me know your thoughts on this! Also, if you have some other good silly humor stuff let me know.
Recently I have been teaching through the book of Nehemiah on Wednesday evenings. It has been a true challenge and joy. This book gives us such a wonderful reminder of how God works in our world and in His people. John MacArthur says, "Nehemiah is a book about dreaming big dreams, about solving monumental problems, about the power of prayer, about standing strong in the face of harsh opposition, and about motivating people and leading groups to do great works for a great God." The book of Nehemiah truly speaks to all of the great needs facing us today. As I continue to study this rich book there are several things that should stand out and speak powerfully to us in our current times. Throughout the next several blog entries I'll be sharing some of these things.
Allow me to start where the book itself starts, with the man Nehemiah. Nehemiah must have been a unique and intriguing man. However, we get very little from the Scriptures about the make up of his personality. The Scriptures do tell us that he was a Jew and the cupbearer for King Artaxerxes during the time of the Babylonian captivity. Moreover, the Scriptures give us wonderful insight into his heart, character and integrity.
It goes without saying that anyone who stood in the unenviable position of king's cupbearer was an individual who possessed at least a high enough level of integrity to earn the king's trust (As cupbearer Nehemiah was the one who tasted the king's food and drink testing it for poison). One might argue that Nehemiah possessed such integrity because his life depended on it! While this may have been the case to a certain degree(Nehemiah 2:2), I believe his integrity was ultimately the result of his deep-seated faith in God.
It is this faith that drove Nehemiah to brokeness and contrition when he discovered that his homeland laid burned and in ruin. It is also this faith that gave Nehemiah the courage to ask the king to allow him to return to Jerusalem to rebuild the city. Nehemiah was a man who saw the great need of his people and the great sin of his people against God. Although he easily could have continued living a life of ease and comfort as a member of the king's court, his concern was for something greater than himself. He developed a burden for change.
Today, more than ever, we need individuals of character like Nehemiah who will look beyond their own comforts, desires, and pleasures in this life and will see the ruin that exists as the result of God's people once again falling captive. No longer captive to the Babylonians, Persians, Assyrians, etc., rather captive to selfishness, lust, materialism, greed, covetousness, and so forth. We need leaders cast from the mold of Nehemiah who will allow themselves to be broken before God and cry out for true change. We need "Christians" who once again care enough about God's people, plan, and purposes that with great courage will hear the voice of God, step out on faith, and become an instrument of change! Are you a Nehemiah?
As I have contemplated and analyzed last night's Presidential debate I have found myself continually perplexed by what I watched. I am fully aware that the great pressing concern of Americans right now is the economy. I also believe our national defense is a high priority. What absolutely puzzles me though, is the fact that neither candidate spoke (nor did they in the first debate) to me. That is, neither spoke to Evangelical Christians.
It's clear both candidates were attempting to hit hard on the hot button issues that interest swing voters. I'm also aware that the majority of the questions were asked from audience members. Nonetheless, it appears the candidates have either forgotten or taken for granted a great part of the voting public. My guess is that they feel they can sidestep many of the toughest questions each would be faced with as president, the "moral" questions.
Both campaigns would like to believe that since their candidates are not being forced to speak to these issues, the issues have somehow faded off the scene and out of existence. Thankfully, some are still raising these tough questions. In fact, the day before the debate George Weigel of, Newsweek, reminded us of some of these tough, yet very important questions in his article, Dangling Conversations: Posing the Moral Questions Facing the Next President. Here are his questions:
ON MATTERS OF FOREIGN POLICY
1. This past April, Pope Benedict XVI spoke at the United Nations of the "duty to protect" and described it as the litmus test of political legitimacy. Does the United States have a moral obligation to act, alone or in concert with others, when governments manifestly fail in their "duty to protect"?
2. Religiously-shaped moral conviction plays multiple, dynamic roles in 21st century world politics. Very few people at the Department of State, the Department of Defense, or the Central Intelligence Agency understand this. What will you do to change that?
3. Forget the chatter about "preemption." The correct term, within the classic just war tradition, is "the morally justified first-use of armed force." Do you think the first use of armed force is ever morally justifiable? Is so, when? If not, why not?
4. What role does distorted religious conviction play in creating the dangers we face from terrorists? How can American public diplomacy address those convictions?
5. What is the responsibility of the United States to help ensure that the new Iraq is safe for all its religious communities? What is the moral responsibility of the U.S. government toward displaced Iraqi Christians, many of whom have fled the country?
ON MATTERS OF DOMESTIC POLICY
6. Do you consider homosexuality the equivalent of race for purposes of U.S. civil rights law?
7. Is any public defense of classic biblical sexual morality a de facto act of intolerance and discrimination against gays?
8. Should Roman Catholic and evangelical social service agencies working with orphans be legally required to consider gay couples on an equal basis as foster-care providers? How about as potential adoptive parents?
9. Does the increasingly assertive role played by federal courts in adjudicating hotly contested questions of public policy threaten the moral fabric of American democracy, by taking serious decisions out of the hands of the people and their elected representatives? Are we becoming morally lazy in allowing the courts to decide so many issues for us?
10. Are you at all concerned that the trajectory of Supreme Court jurisprudence over the past six decades risks driving religiously informed moral argument out of our public life?
11. What is the moral balance to be struck between sensible work on climate change and the aspirations of the Third World poor, many of whom live in countries dependent on high-carbon-emission technologies for economic development?
12. How would your administration foster a culture of savings and personal financial responsibility in the United States?
13. What role, if any, should Washington play in elevating our national cultural life? Does it bother you that pornography is a major American export, and if so, what might be done about that?
14. What, if any, is the moral difference between a Supreme Court decision that puts unborn children outside the protection of the laws and a Supreme Court decision that once put black Americans outside the protection of the laws?
15. Does the ability to reprogram adult cells so that they function like embryonic stem cells change the moral character of the debate over stem cell research?
ON MATTERS OF CHARACTER
16. For what are you willing to risk your popularity, and perhaps your re-election?
17. Are you prepared to dismiss a subordinate who may be a friend, but who is manifestly not up to the requirements of the office to which you appointed him or her?
18. Can you live with able subordinates who are prepared to tell you, "Mr. President, you're wrong"?
19. There are things a president cannot tell the American people. But are there circumstances in which you would deem it your responsibility to mislead the American people? To deny what you know to be true? To affirm what you know to be false?
20. Who are your moral heroes?
In a recent Newsweek article, a Religious-Right Revival, Lisa Miller suggests that Republican presidential nominee, Senator John McCain's selection of Alaskan Governor, Sarah Palin as his veep candidate has sparked a renewal of enthusiasm among the traditional religious right. Miller notes that a new, younger generation of evangelicals have moved beyond the traditional hot button issues of abortion and same sex marriage to issues more in tune with the mainstream such as "global warming, Darfur, illiteracy, human trafficking, preventable disease", etc. While this shift in cares among the "new" evangelicals is really no surprise, since these are the issues pertinent to their generation. It is the driving force behind this shift in concerns suggested by Miller that I find attention grabbing. Where as traditional evangelicals have been primarily motivated by things such as the preservation of the freedom to propagate the Gospel of Jesus Christ to all people, upholding the sanctity of human life, and restoring the traditional family. Today's younger evangelicals are "Eager to help care for the planet, these Christians are building bridges between left and right, between the secular and the devout, even among subscribers to different holy books. These "new" evangelicals, according to the mainstream press, are exciting now because they're politically powerful."
Did you catch it? Their primary motivation is the planet! Now do not misunderstand me, I care for our planet. I believe our planet is very important. In fact, I happen to think it is the most important planet in our universe. I also, understand that we have a God-given responsibility to be good stewards of this planet. However, what I do not understand is why these new evangelicals have made preserving planet Earth the great calling of their generation.
I suspect several contributing factors. However, allow me to touch on what I believe to be the one that tops the list and concerns me most, a diminished view of the authority of the Bible. Miller reported that "of the 60 million white evangelicals in this country, 60 percent of them believe the Bible is literally true." This suggests that 40 percent of them do not believe the Bible to be authoritative for their lives (It is probably not to great a stretch to also suggest that the majority of the 60 percent is made up by traditional evangelicals). Since so many of the younger professing evangelical Christians are not looking to the Bible as the primary basis for the development of their worldview, they must look to other outlets such as pop culture and the mainstream media to form their views. This is why they have developed a distorted non-Biblical outlook that sees taking care of the planet more important than reaching souls with the Gospel. It is also precisely why these evangelicals have put aside the "divisive religious rhetoric" and have no problem uniting with followers of distinctly different faiths. Is it any wonder they have become politically powerful? Unfortunately, in becoming so they have compromised the long standing identity of evangelical Christians in America and undermined the decades of hard work, prayer, and action so many faithful traditional evangelicals have given.
As for the enthusiasm of traditional evangelicals with relation to Governor Palin, there are many things that make her attractive. There is her so called "maverick" reputation, the fact that she is young and a woman, or even the fact that she is a faithful wife and "hockey mom" of a traditional family. However, what I believe makes her most attractive to traditional evangelicals is the fact that she is a conservative evangelical Christian who is shaped by a Biblical worldview. She has been an agent of change in a state where leftist environmentalists have thrived. She led her state in making great contributions to the country regarding the production of oil and other natural resources. She obviously is not a part of the new breed of evangelicals who are focused on saving the planet, and for that I am thankful. We do not yet know enough about the governor to know exactly what kind of an evangelistic passion she possesses, but I have a hunch she like her fellow traditional evangelicals values the saving of human lives for eternity far more than saving the planet.
Hello everyone, Please alow me to apologize for not posting anything new for several months. Life as a pastor often becomes so demanding that generally simple things, such as blogging, become difficult to fit in to a busy a schedule. Nevertheles, today I just had to make time.
For years I have been reading Charles Spurgeon's, Morning and Evening, daily devotional book. I've tried several other devotionals but none have proven to be nearly as rich as Spurgeon. This morning's read was such an encouragement to me that I felt compelled to share. Here it is:
The Bible has no shortage of episodes in which God chose the services of a juvenile to further His purposes. Instantly, the names Joseph, Samuel, David, Josiah, and Mary come to mind. When we think of such historical figures from the Ancient Text we often are unaware or simply forget that so many that God used to impact the world were indeed just kids. Perhaps we fail to make bigger of this because we find so few instances where kids are making a difference in the world today. Let's be honest, almost all we hear these days regarding young people centers around disrespect and dilinquency. However, regardless of how dark things may appear there is always a glimmer of light that shines. In this case, such a glimmer of light bares the name Austin.
Austin Gutwein is the twelve year old founder of "Hoops of Hope," an organization he started three years ago with the purpose of helping the 15 million kids in Africa orphaned by HIV/AIDS. Austin was interested in many of the same things most nine year old boys in America are. At the top of the list was making his school's basketball team. This was until he watched a video that showed children who had lost their parents to the awful epidemic of AIDS. Austin says he "realized these kids werent any different from me except they were suffering. I felt God calling me to do someting to help them." So what did he do? He quit worrying about making the team and started making a difference. "I decided to shoot free throws and on World AIDS Day, 2004, I shot 2,057 free throws to represent the 2,057 kids who would be orphaned during my day at school. People sponsored me and we were able to raise almost $3,000. That year, the money was used by World Vision to provide hope to 8 orphan children."
Since its inception just three years ago, "Hoops of Hope" has seen thousands join Austin by shooting freethrows to raise money. Thus far the ministry has raised over $160,000 which has provided food, clothing, shelter, medical care, and a school for those orphaned by AIDS in Zambia. Austin has set a goal for his organization to raise $150,000 this year to build a medical lab in Sinazongwe, Zambia. The lab will provide much needed testing and medication for parents affected by the horrific disease.
How refreshing it is to hear of a young man heeding the call of God and making a difference in this destitute world. What is God calling you to do? Has he placed a burden upon your heart for someone, some people, or some country that is hurting and in need? You too can make a difference, no matter what your age! Just go do it!
Hoops of Hope Links:
http://www.hoopsofhope.org/
What a wonderful experience we had ministering on our Mexico trip! These are just a few of the photos I took demonstrating the ministry in which we were engaged. Our efforts were really two-fold. First, we spent our mornings and early afternoons at First Baptist, Fabens doing various tasks such as, cleaning, painting, repairing windows, organizing closets and storage facilities, and prayer walking and canvassing the niegborhood. Second, during the evenings we crossed the border and held preaching revival meetings along with bible schools at churches in three border towns.
In addition to the opportunity of getting to unite with other Christians and exercise a common passion for taking the "gospel to every creature", the trip provided a refreshing means of meeting believers living in a distinctly different culture, speaking a distinctly different language, yet serving the same distinct Jesus! Throughout the trip we were able to minister to over three hundred people through our bible schools. Six adults came to faith in Jesus and many folks in the churches responded by filling the alters to pray for their unbelieving neighbors. Praise God for His bountiful goodness to us!
In closing, allow me to say a special thanks to those of you who lifted us up continually in prayer during the trip. Your prayers were certainly warranted and felt. May God grant you a great big blessing!
God Bless,
Pastor Joey
© Blogger templates The Professional Template by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008
Back to TOP