Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Musician Beethoven Was Poisoned!

Beethoven. World-famous musician. For 2 centuries, his death was a mystery. Beethoven suffered from severe depression, irritability, and abdominal pain. He longed that someone will discover his illness so that the "world may be reconciled to him." In 1994, 2 Americans discovered the cause of his death - lead poisoning. The thing is it didn't come to him lump sum. It came to him slowly until it killed him. More likely, the poison came from eating contaminated fish or drinking excessive wine. But the lead killed him slowly and quietly—one little bit of poison at a time.

That's also how bitterness and unforgveness can destroy a soul. What keeps wounded relationships to heal is when we keep "prideful bitterness" inside our heart. Little by little, day by day, this bitterness and unforgiveness can poison our relationship with God and others.

Over the years, I found that I had my share of disappointments with people that turn to bitterness. So I'd always seek God for strength and His Word for guidance. As always, God's Word shines brilliant light on my own darkness. "If you forgive others for their transgressions, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive others, then your Father will not forgive your transgressions” (Matthew 6:14-15). “For judgment will be merciless to one who has shown no mercy; mercy triumphs over judgment” (James 2:13).

Friend, don't let bitterness and unforgiveness poison you slowly. The poison kills. Hebrews 12:14-15 says, “Pursue peace with all men, and the sanctification without which no one will see the Lord. See to it that no one comes short of the grace of God; that no root of bitterness springing up causes trouble, and by it many be defiled…” We all need to forgive not only for the sake of others, but also for ourselves.

Monday, August 28, 2006

Angel! Angel! Angel!

A most significant gift I can give to my daughter Angel is to develop her to move from dependency to true freedom. My problem is this: she's only 3 and she already wants to be free! She's so active and restless. You leave her unguarded, she'd move far somewhere alone! You know the feeling. Always, my little "angel" makes up with her beaming smile and sparkling eyes! Kikindat pa!

Sunday, August 27, 2006

Life Bible School is Cybermissions

I just founded a new international, interdenominational mission - the Life Bible School International (LBSI). It's a ministry to the "greater Body of Christ," not just to a particular local church. Check its newly launched website -- www.lifebibleschool.com. Cybermissions is the use of computers and the internet for the crosscultural communication of Christ's Gospel. It involves the use of web pages, email, chat rooms, blogs, and internet cafes for Bible and theological training, counseling and support of pastors, missionaries, and leadership development. LBSI is cybermissions. Right now, in its pioneering stage, LBSI is doing Bible training to almost 150 students, composed mostly of Filipinos, with some coming from Liberia, Africa and Philadelphia, USA. Please do pray for this new "baby."

Some Quotes on Spirtuality and Technology


These days, much of my spirituality is aided by technology. I'm not alone. Today, the www has indeed become a partner to faith development in the lives of millions of people throughout the world.

Here are some selected thoughtful quotes concerning the relation between technology and spirituality.

*****

"There is no answer outside the human being. The machine's hidden agenda turns out to be our own agenda...There is no capability of the computer that can't be made to look good in one light and bad in another. Which light should we choose? Only the light -- and the darkness -- emanating from the human heart. At the end of the twentieth century it scarcely seems possible to stand in this light and this darkness without worrying deeply about the terms of our inner pact with the computer." - Stephen L. Talbott (Author of 'The Future Does not Compute")

*****

"I do believe we are in the midst of a transition - intimated by the Internet - towards a more collective thinking, where the individual psyche becomes a component of a larger group mind. "This doesn't mean we stop existing as individuals, but it could mean we become more fully aware of every other living being, much in the way a coral reef's individual organisms respond to one another as if they were part of the same, single body." - Douglas Rushkoff (Author of 'Cyberia')

*****

"Technology is part of nature. It's an extension of human consciousness. Ironically the portals that technology open to us are generally portals that we could open without technology, if we knew how. I think that we are fully capable as human beings of having a global brain and of communicating with each other as parts of a single great organism. But either we really haven't developed those skills, or else we've lost the ability to use them. Back in tribal days, people didn't see themselves as individuals; they saw themselves as parts of a little organism.Well, being one part of an eight-billion part organism is much harder to come to grips with. In a way, technology is a test run." - Douglas Rushkoff

*****

"Late twentieth-century machines have made thoroughly ambiguous the difference between natural and artificial, mind and body, self-developing and externally designed, and many other distinctions that used to apply to organisms and machines. Our machines are disturbingly lively, and we ourselves frighteningly inert." -- Donna Haraway (Author of 'The Cyborg Manifesto')

*****

"(David)Chalmers thinks it quite possible that AI research may someday generate--may now be generating--new spheres of consciousness unsensed by the rest of us. Strange as it may seem, the prospect that we are creating a new species of sentient life is now being taken seriously in philosophy.

"Though (Alan) Turing generally shied away from such metaphysical questions, his 1950 paper did touch briefly on this issue. Some people, he noted, might complain that to create true thinking machines would be to create souls, and thus exercise powers reserved for God. Turing disagreed. "In attempting to construct such machines we should not be irreverently usurping his power of creating souls, any more than we are in the procreation of children," Turing wrote. "Rather we are, in either case, instruments of his will providing mansions for the souls that he creates."

*****

"My view is...that some machines are already potentially more conscious than are people, and that further enhancements would be relatively easy to make..." - Marvin Minsky (the father of Artificial Intelligence)

*****

"I no longer worry about dying, but I do worry about dying before my computer is proud of me. In the future there will be man, woman, and machine. Three slightly or grossly - different ways of thinking. Carbon life with its emotion, uncertainty and analogue processes complemented by the far more deterministic and precise machine. The machine will be able to conceptualise the future by running incredibly complex models to predict the outcome of any action or decision. It's the ultimate mix = analogue + digital, random + chaotic, intuition + modelling. Perhaps my computer will envy me my imagination and intuition." - Peter Cochrane (head of British Telecom's Multimedia research division)

Monday, August 21, 2006

Learner, not Learned

Schools, churches, governments and society in general need leaders who are learners, not learned. Not "know-it-all." I'm an academic. I hold masteral and doctorate degrees. But don't believe everything I write or say just because I wrote or said it. Remember, the Bible says the best each human being will ever have is to "know in part." No one in this world will ever "know it all." Only on the other side will our darkened glasses be changed into a perfect vision. So, be warned: test everything against God's Word, your experiences, your observations. Let the Holy Spirit guide you always in your knowing.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Refreshing Moments

I remember while working at my computer, deep in writing, I glanced outside my window. I saw a bird. I became the bird. No separation. For a startling moment, I was the bird. And also the sky hovering. Suspension of time and self. Problems dissolve for a while. And then back to earth where I came from. Refreshing moments.

Tithing vs. Giving

Here's a teaching article from www.truthortradition.com on tithing. Which practice do you subscribe to? Do you agree with this article? Something to think and pray about.

Tithing vs. Giving



FAQ: Most churches I have been to teach rather emphatically that Christians should “tithe,” that is, give 10% of their income to their church. I have even heard some ministers say that if you don’t tithe, God will not bless you. What does the Bible say about financial giving?

“What does the Bible say?” is always the “bottom line” in life, but that vital question needs a qualifier: “To whom?” The Bible, the Word of God, most certainly does speak about financial giving, and a good case can be made that it is one of the five most basic activities for a Christian, the others being prayer, Bible reading and study, fellowship with other Christians, and telling others the Good News about Jesus Christ.

The question must be: “What does the Bible say to Christians about financial giving?” Why? Because what God says to Christians about financial giving is different than what He said to the Jews of the Old Testament about it. The sad news is that today very few Christians understand the difference, and, as a result, many are unnecessarily living under emotional and financial stress. For a more detailed exposition of this subject than we can set forth in this FAQ, I recommend our audio teachings The Joy of Giving, and Financial Stewardship: God’s Heart Concerning Money and Possessions as well as a book we carry titled The Tithing Dilemma, by Ernest L. Martin.

And, as is so often the case in examining a biblical issue, that takes us to the subject of the administrations in Scripture. Unless we understand what parts of God’s Word are written to Jews, what parts are written to Gentiles, and what parts are written to Christians, we can neither understand nor apply its truths in our daily lives.

We are currently living in what the Bible calls the Administration of the Secret (Eph. 3:9), which began on the Day of Pentecost (Acts 2:1ff) and will conclude with the Rapture of the Church (all living and dead Christians meeting the Lord in the air—1 Thess. 4:13-18). The primary curriculum for Christians (i.e., people born again of God’s incorruptible seed) is found in the Church Epistles: Romans, 1 & 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, and 1 & 2 Thessalonians. It is there that we must look to find God’s specific directions for us today, and the issue of financial giving is given two chapters worth of ink in 2 Corinthians 8 & 9.

There are also some pertinent verses in other Epistles, and the message of Scripture to Christians is that because of the finished work of Jesus Christ, we do not live under the Mosaic Law, during which tithing was instituted and commanded as part of the Law. Therefore, tithing as a commandment of God has no relevance to believers today.

At this point, it is important to distinguish between tithing and giving. Although tithing per se is not relevant to Christians, giving most certainly is. As a member in particular of the Body of Christ, each Christian is to determine in his own heart how much he gives and where he allocates his resources among his brothers and sisters in Christ (2 Cor. 9:7). The Epistles metaphor by which material giving is strongly encouraged is that of sowing and reaping—the more you sow, the more you reap (2 Cor. 9:6). “Tithing” is never mentioned.

We are working on a booklet on this subject, and it may be titled, In Response to a Blessing, because that is the biblical basis for giving. Under the Law, Jews were to give out of their produce, that is, what the Lord had provided for them. Just like the Word says, “We love God because He first loved us,” so we give because God has given to us. When we understand what God has done for us in Christ, and that the material blessings we have come from Him, and that He promises to bless us back for what we give, giving cheerfully is a joy.

Even in the Old Testament, believers understood that when they gave to God, they were opening a door, if you will, for Him to bless them in return. This is, of course, still true, but the idea has been distorted by some Christians who teach that one must give to God before God can bless him. Thus, too many Christians are giving in order to get. No, God always gives first.

Also, He does not specify just how He will bless us. If we sow, we will reap accordingly, but it may not be money for money, etc. Some Christians have become disillusioned about giving because when they gave money to their church, etc., they did not receive money back. They may have even failed to notice the blessing that God did give them. When we give in response to a blessing, and not so that we will get blessed, we can be cheerful and contented givers.

Making known the truth about this subject is critical, because the vast majority of Christians are told, and thus believes, that it is God’s will for them to “tithe,” which means to give one-tenth of what they earn. Many of the more “fundamental” Christian groups are adamant about this, and accompany this exhortation with a warning that failure to tithe will result in consequences of various kinds, usually having to do with a lack of prosperity.

In many groups, this has become little more than ecclesiastical extortion, with church leaders using the lever of people’s sincere desire to do what God says is right to squeeze money out of them. Such leaders proclaim that what God says is right is that you give at least ten percent of your income—to their organization. As a result of such pressure, financial giving has, for too many Christians, become a joyless, mechanical act of “bribing” God to avoid the consequences of not giving, and an attempt to earn His favor (something they already have!).

For many other Christians who once gave cheerfully, financial giving is no longer an act at all. They have stopped doing it altogether, either because they got sick and tired of the pressure being applied to them, or they really could not afford to tithe, or they saw the money they gave misused and feel that they were cheated when they did give.

Neither of these attitudes—giving joylessly or not giving at all—is biblically right, neither is the will of God, and both are therefore detrimental to a believer. That fits with John 8:32, where Jesus said that experientially knowing the truth, that is, practicing it, will make one free. Conversely, error regarding the Bible (the truth) will put people in bondage. And financial giving is a category in which countless Christian people are being subjected to the bondage of guilt and put through an emotional wringer they do not deserve.

If you feel that the above describes you, take heart, because you can be set free by the truth of God's Word. Then you can also share with others the treasure you have found. In our economically driven world of today, having the right attitude about money and material things is a huge asset in life. Knowing and practicing what God's Word says about financial giving will enable you to experience the joy of giving, and it will enable others in the Body of Christ to experience the joy of receiving and therefore having their needs met, so that together we can reach out with the Good News of God to a dying world.

A study of the Old Testament will show that tithing was instituted as part of the Mosaic Law to Israel. Some Christians point to Genesis 14 and/or 28 in a misguided attempt to prove that tithing was instituted prior to the Mosaic Law and is therefore relevant to Christians today. Their rationale is that because Abram gave ten per cent of the spoils of war to Melchisedek, and because Jacob chose ten per cent as the amount to give to God for watching over him on his journey, this is the prescribed amount God would have all people give. This is not sound biblical scholarship.

The Genesis 14 record takes place approximately 2000 years after Adam and Eve, and during all those years there is no biblical reference to tithing. Nor is there any record that Abram ever tithed as a result of some biblical law that told him to do so, and he certainly was “making money.” When he did give one tenth, it was not of the increase of his flocks and herds, which was the tithe prescribed by the Law, but rather of the spoils of war that he had gained by defeating the army from Mesopotamia.

In Genesis 28, Jacob told God that if He would keep him safe on his journey, keep him clothed and fed, and bring him home safely, he would give God a tenth of what he had. That was certainly not the Mosaic tithe, which was commanded whether or not those things happened. Both Jacob and Abram gave in response to a blessing.

Even in regard to Israel, for whom the tithe was specifically instituted, nothing was said about it until the beginning of the second year of their exodus. Prior to that, in Exodus 25, for the building of the Tabernacle, Moses instructed the Israelites to give “as their heart prompted them.”

You often hear proponents of the tithe say that surely Christians would do no less than what Jews did in the Old Testament, as if every Israelite gave ten per cent of his income. A detailed study of the tithe is beyond the scope of this FAQ, but suffice it to say that the idea that each Israelite gave ten per cent of his income (and therefore each Christian should do likewise) is far from the truth.

For example, an Israelite who had fewer than ten cattle born to him in a year did not have to tithe on them because the requirement stated that only the tenth animal that passed under the rod was to be tithed (Lev. 27:32). A farmer who had only eight cows born was therefore exempt from the tithe.

The tithe was basically on animal and agricultural products, and was paid in kind (i.e., the product itself). If one did not wish to pay his tithe in agricultural products, and decided to give money as a substitute, he was penalized and had to add a fifth part of its estimated value to the amount he paid (Lev. 27:31). Such a law was obviously not intended to encourage payment of the tithe in money.

The main purpose of the tithe was to support the Levitical priesthood. The Levites were responsible to minister to the people, and were prohibited from owning land, which obviously limited the ways in which they could earn income. God’s plan was that their support came from those to whom they ministered, much like the direction of Scripture for the Church today (1 Cor. 9:1ff; Gal. 6:6ff, etc.). The tithe also provided welfare for widows, orphans, etc.

One reason why there was no command to tithe until the Mosaic Law was that until then there was no Tabernacle (Tent of Meeting) and no Temple, no regular sacrifices commanded (the daily sacrifices alone commanded by the Law required more than 700 animals a year), and no class of Levitical priests to support. None of these would be relevant to a Christian today, even if they did exist.

Should a Christian today tithe? One is free to give 10% if he chooses, but we are not commanded to give any particular percentage or amount. Sad to say that many Christians, once misled and often emotionally coerced into tithing, stopped giving altogether when they learned the tithe is not required. 2 Corinthians 9:6 and 7 make it clear that the more generously we “sow” with the right attitude, the more abundantly we will reap.

For some believers who do not earn much, giving generously may not mean a large amount. For others, it may mean millions of dollars, and far more than 10%. Each Christian’s situation is different, and that is why God does not prescribe specific amounts that we should give, but allows us to make our own decisions. Remember, we are “fellow laborers” with Him, and He loves to work with us in determining how much and to whom we should give, and He loves to bless us with more so that we can give more. That kind of giving makes for an exciting element of the Christian life.

You may say, “Well, what about Malachi 3:6-10? That says people who do not tithe are ‘robbing God.’” Those verses have been used innumerable times to prod Christians into giving, but wait a moment—to whom is Malachi written? Well, in verse 9 of chapter 3 it says “the whole nation” is under a curse. What nation? The USA? No, the book of Malachi is specifically addressed to the nation of Israel, and more specifically to the priests (see 1:6,10-13; 2:1,7 and 8) who were badly mistreating God’s people. To use verses from Malachi as if they are talking to Christians is at best poor scholarship and at worst dishonest.

So what should Christians do about financial giving? 2 Corinthians 8 and 9 is the first place to go to find the answer to that question, and the heart of the message there is expressed in 9:7: “Each man should give what he has decided in his heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver.” If, for you, that’s ten per cent, great.

Beyond that, Scripture directs us to give to those who are genuinely ministering to our spiritual needs. When we do, we are making a sound investment in (that is, sowing into) a work that is bearing good spiritual fruit. Although there is no way we can help everyone who asks us, we are also encouraged to give to those in need, and we can seek the Lord for wisdom in doing so.

For a Christian, giving from the heart is all about knowing that we have a great, big, wonderful God, and also understanding who we are in Christ. Speaking of the attitude of the believers in Corinth about financial giving, Paul said: “This they did, not as we hoped, but even beyond that, first they gave their own selves to the Lord, and to us, by the will of God” (2 Cor. 8:5). As Christians, each of us has been “bought with a price.” We (let alone our material possessions) don't even belong to ourselves. When you know that you belong to the Lord, and that everything that you have belongs to the Lord, and that he is responsible to keep his promises to care for you, then you can truly be a cheerful giver.

Monday, August 14, 2006

Sing a Song Anywhere and Anytime!

Buildings can't sing. Animals can't sing. Flowers can't sing. Only you and I. Believe me, if Martin Luther is alive today, he'd also be singing and dancing too! He'll give all a Bible and a songbook. Why? Spirit-filled believers are song-filled! "...speaking to one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody with your heart to the Lord" (Eph 5: 19). When Paul wrote this, there was no centralized singing yet in church buildings! Stop and think. Christians then sing anywhere and anytime!

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Paradox

Paradox. That's God's character. Grace and discipline. Mercy and judgment. Justice and forgiveness. Exile and salvation. God has all these. Usually, His is not a straight-line communication. Not necessarily a smooth flow of logic. The problem is not with the text. It's our limited human understanding of what and how God is communicating to us.

Friday, August 11, 2006

What Are You Doing With Your Daily Supply of 86,400 Seconds?

86,400 seconds. That's our supply of life space each day. Well, I don't know about you. I let many things slip by. Each time I face a person, every time I face the new day, the challenge is so great. I am filled with thanks. I receive a gift of 86,400 seconds each day. And what could I do that would be worthy of such a costly gift?

I, As the Deer Pants

There is a song 'As the Deer Pants' which is based on the panting deer in Psalm 42. I think about it on my heart today. I think about the deer and its thirst. The deer's thirst is, for a moment, satisfied by one drink. But the thirst soon returns again. As long as the deer lives, it will thirst for water.

I thirst for worshipping and getting close to God. This thirst leads me to go to lonely places. It leads me to hear God in the most difficult moments. It also leads me to another church an hour away from home. Somehow the thirst I experience is being filled. I am wanting to taste fresh, life-giving water. The longings of my heart, that's what I'm really trying explore.

The Lord in Psalm 42 uses the panting deer to assure me that it's okey to thirst for His presence. God is pleased when I earnestly seek Him (Hebrews 11:6.). I feel peace and joy in my heart when I thirst for Him and get satisfied.

Bu it also makes me wonder at this thirst I'm having. Why is it that this thirst is only to be satisfied or quenched for a time? The more I taste and see that the Lord is good, the more my heart gets thirsty. It seems I'm thirsty and satisfied at the same time! What a contradiction.

"Then Jesus declared, 'I am the bread of life. He who comes to me will never go hungry, and he who believes in me will never be thirsty.' " (John 16:37)

"...but whoever drinks the water (living water) I give him will never thirst. Indeed, the water I give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life." (John 4:14)

The spring of living water wells up to eternal life. My thirst for the living water will not truly be satisfied until perfection comes and I see Him face to face (1 Cor. 13:10, 12). This tension between "thirsting" and "being satisfied" remains until I see Him.

Psalm 42:1-2 "As the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for you, O God. My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When can I go and meet with God?"

As The Deer
Words and music by Martin Nystrom
© 1984 Marathana Music

As the deer pants for the water
So my soul longs after Thee
You alone are my heart's desire
And I long to worship Thee

You alone are my strength, my shield
To You alone may my spirit yield
You alone are my heart's desire
And I long to worship Thee

You're my friend and You are my brother
Even though You are a King
I love You more than any other
So much more than anything

I want You more than gold or silver
Only You can satisfy
You alone are the real joy-giver
And the apple of my eye

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

13/30 Window: Youth Mission Field

Why am I working with youth (13-30 years old)? My home church released a finding about them, mostly teenagers, and why we should reach them for Christ!

THIS IS A GENERATION IN CRISIS

1 out of 11 attempt SUICIDE each year.
1 out of 10 fifteen year olds and younger have gone through family divorce in their life-time.
58% have been involved in objectionable content on the web.
40% have experimented with SELF-INJURY ("are "cutters").
Use of prescription DRUGS (Ritalin, anti-depressants etc.) by children/teens has increased substantially in the past few years.

THIS IS A GENERATION WITHOUT MORALITY

By the time the average child graduates from high school, he/she will have watched 19,000 hours of TV including about 200,000 sexual acts and 1 million ACTS OF VIOLENCE.
1 in 10 high school females have reported being RAPED at some point in their life.
Fear of violence in schools is now the leading "worry" of public school teens.
48% of high school seniors are SEXUALLY ACTIVE (had sexual intercourse in past 3 months).

THIS IS A GENERATION WITHOUT TRUTH

91% say there is NO ABSOLUTE TRUTH.
75% of teens in America believe the central message of the Bible is, "God helps those who help themselves".
53% believe Jesus committed sin (40% of born again teens believe Jesus committed sin).

There you have it, count the ways why you too should be involved with the youth!

Teaching To Teach One's Self

I love teaching. In a very real sense, I teach to teach myself, to understand myself. It's like writing. To do it, I need the sensitivity of a butterfly in touching the lives of students where they are in their world. Not just theory, but real life. The many years I've taught in school, I'm glad I've always been made aware of this: Essential teaching is less "informational" and more "formational." I believe that's where true learning and life change take place.

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Yancey and Sweet

Two of my most favorite writers whose books I read nowadays are Philip Yancey (http://www.philipyancey.com) and Leonard Sweet (http://www.leonardsweet.com). I tell you no one have thought more deeply and wisely about Christianity's present-day trends than these two literary geniuses. Check them out and swim in the deep!

Meeting Again

After over 12 years, I'm back to Korea this September. To meet again my earlier missioner mentors in the person of Jin Soo Hwang and his wife Kim Kyung Ja as well as visit and speak in mission churches. It was during my seminary student days when I first met them. Together, we pioneered NPWM in the Philippines and its international partners program. We had no one and nothing then when we started. But now, NPWM has over 10 nations and cultures where it has hundreds of mission partners and mission posts from different denominations and church groups. Presently, NPWM is one of my faithful MPD while ministering in Victory and doing my writing, teaching, cybermissions, marketplace initiatives, and other pastoral/mission ministries. Pray for NPWM and for my upcoming trip to Korea. Cheers!

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Silent Rain, Noisy Rain

How do I begin? I don't know where to begin. This is a semi colon of my beginning. I sit on my chair, whittling at a computer screen. Out the window is sweet, misty rain, the water rippling down toward our house gutters. Silent rain, noisy rain. The mango tree besides got black with rain. And where are the birds, I wonder. I rarely see a dead bird around when it rains. It's like faith. Because you trust. You know things are going to be just fine.

What is God's Will in Your Life? (Part 4)

An important indicator of God's will in our lives is the "inward witness of the Holy Spirit." Scripture talks to us about the Holy Spirit who indwells any one who receives and trusts in Christ. Central to a believer's life is following the leading and guiding of the Spirit of God (John 16:13; Romans 8:14; Galatians 5:18).

It's impossible to physically prove the guidance of the "inward witness of the Holy Spirit." I say this because it's an experience that takes place within the heart of a believer. It's personal. It represents internal impressions that are not normally audible or perceivable such as wind or fire. So, such will be beyond our comprehension or ability to describe fully into words.

"I have peace inside" is a most common expression I hear from others when they talk about God's leading in their lives. It's true. The Bible supports this. Colossians 3:15 says, "Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts." Paul is saying in this verse that when you allow the peace of God to rule in your decisions, God reveals His individual will to you.

Yet this is precisely what our materially driven society finds unacceptable. For it fears fanaticism and subjectivism. But the Holy Spirit's inward witness and personal subjectivism need not be the same. In fact, they are quite different.

The challenge then that faces us is to be fully obedient to the supernatural direction of the Holy Spirit. We experience the "peace of God" when we allow the Holy Spirit to speak to our hearts and follow his guiding impulse. On the other hand, we experience restlessness and worry when we move outside of His direction.

Friday, August 04, 2006

Why I Send My Children To A Christian School

My two children - Christine (1st year High School) and Paul (Grade 4) are both in a Christian School. It's our choice. Count the ways why we send them to a Christian school.

"These commandements that I give you today are to be upon your hearts. Impress them on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when you walk along the road, when you lie down and when you get up. Tie them as symbols on your hands and bind them on you foreheads. Write them on the dorrframes of your houses and on your gates." - Dueteronomy 6:6-9

"I am much afraid that schools will prove to be the great gates of hell, unless they diligently labor in explaining the Holy Scriptures, engraving them in hearts of youth. I advise no one to place his child where the Scriptures do not reign paramount. Every institution in which men are not increasingly occupied with the Word of God becomes corrupt." - Martin Luther

"The philosophy of the schoolroom in one generation will be the philosophy of government in the next." - Abraham Lincoln

"Withdraw from a child the only divine rule of life and the result will be most lamentable. An education without a Biblical base is not education but propaganda." - Cal Thomas

"I'm going to say something now that I have never said before. In the state of California and places that have moved inthe direction they have gone, if I had a child there, I would not put that child in public schools. I've been very careful not to be negative to the public schools but, given the fact they are being taught homosexual propaganda and these politically correct post-modern views, I think it is time to get our kids out." - James Dobson

"A child's soul is what is vitally important here. And they're poisoning that... you should not let your child be lied to by a teacher at the front of a classroom." - Pat Buchanan

"No doubt a major strategy devised by the enemy of souls of men attack the heart of a free and biblically based nation --- its schools. Such a strategy would target our young because this i the major place where minds are formed today's world. Benjamin Rush, a founding father and one of the signers of the declaration of independence, wrote that if the God, the Bible, and prayer have been replace in our schools with handguns, drugs, and condoms. The result has been disastrous." - Bill Bright, Founder and Chairman of Campus Crusade for Christ

Thursday, August 03, 2006

True Friend

How can you know a true friend? Got some thoughts here .... A true friend loves through the best and worst of times.... A friend's true colors are revealed when you're down ....True friends wound us, willing to say hard truth even if it hurts ... Beware of friend who does not have courage to confront you when you need it ... Poor friends to avoid: drunkards, gluttons, lovers of money, gossips, people who entice you to crime, evil..... Proverbs 17:17, 18:24, 27:6, 1:10-19, 23:20-21, 19:4, 7, 16:28

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Creativity as Therapy

Creativity is a form of therapy. Aloneness, time to do inner work. You create to bring order out chaos. You also create to uncover the deepest secrets to yourself, to understand. No choice. The urge is to create. To escape the madness inherent in our human condition. There's a self beyond creative work. The outcome belongs to Him.

Overcoming Your Dark Side

Dark side. You have it. Everyone has it. Like the shadow sides of the moon -- disguised, unexplored, or unrecognized. Either you come out stronger or collapse as a result of it. You need to protect yourself.

Even David, a man after God's own heart, fell victim to it. The story is familiar. The divinely ordained leader of God's own people is caught in the clutches of adultery and murder. Interestingly, David's dark side endured for more than a year of denial. Self-deception. Until he was finally cornered and convicted by God's prophet. The good news is that David acknowledged his sin and dark side and took steps to overcome it.

You need to be attentive to the shadowy working of your dark side. It doesn't leave you. It's always there as long as you breathe. Any behavior, urge, or motivation that overpowers you is a possible sign indicating the presence of your dark side. With increased knowledge of it will come increased power to overcome it.

Overcoming your dark side requires the practice of spiritual disciplines. These extend opportunity for the Lord to work in your heart and life. Without a steady diet of these disciplines, the destructive effects of your dark side become stronger and more imminent. Here are some questions that could be helpful to check yourself:

Do I practice a regular time of Scripture reading and devotion beyond preparation for teaching or leading small groups?

Do I have regular time for prayer (talking heart to heart with God) outside of meals, church services, or formal ministry settings?

Do I take time weekly or monthly for meditation and reflection on Scripture, God, and my life?

Do I keep a journal (or weblog) in which I enter my deepest thoughts, passions, failures, victories, and dreams?

Do I take an extended time for spiritual reflection, such as retreat once or twice a year?

How easy it is to forget what kind of a person you really are when you neglect the "mirror" of spiritual disciplines. Consistent exposure to spiritual disciplines will provide you with the strongest arsenal to overcome your dark side rather than being controlled by it. With it, you also see things as they can be, not simply as they are.

Many Friends

My wife Imelda was upbeat this morning. She told me she's happy for having many friends. I'm happy for her, too. Friends feed her, but some others would die for want of friends. Friends may do change. Time passes by. And when you return to your friends, you see changes. You've changed. They changed too. It is committed friends over time who take away loneliness in this life.