Kittens
Our cat had her babies yesterday. Our outdoor cat gave birth to her three little ones inside our house on our bed buried between two pillows. I guess it was a quiet, warm, and protected location, but that choice of location also had me at the laundromat late last night washing our gigantic, two-ton comforter in the super-sized industrial washing machine. The place was empty, but I was able to catch the Diane Sawyer special about the 50th anniversary of The Sound of Music. Woohoo! The mama and kitties are doing fine.
Eddie Vedder
Have you listened to "Even Flow" by Pearl Jam lately? I really think that became the title of the song because it's just about the only word that the producer could understand when Vedder sang it.
Primitive Church
Question: Shouldn't a primitive church have to use primitive tools? Where is the line drawn? I drove by a primitive church property a couple of days ago and they were cutting the grass with a modern zero-turn lawn tractor. Where's the man-powered, whirling-blade push lawn mower?
T-Shirt Fail
Anyone else see the problem here? I mean, I see what they were going for, but a little more thought should have gone into this design before it was put on a shirt.
Pizza Hut
In other news, it looks like someone drove through the wall at Pizza Hut. Never a dull moment in New Boston!
"With the kind You show Yourself kind, with the blameless You show Yourself blameless." 2 Samuel 22:26
Thursday, March 19, 2015
Tuesday, March 03, 2015
January/February Reading
- Creating Community - Andy Stanley & Bill Willits
- Why Church Matters - Joshua Harris
- The Hobbit - J. R. R. Tolkien
- The Definitive Guitar Handbook - Rusty Cutchin
- Mere Christianity - C. S. Lewis
- The MacArthur New Testament Commentary: Matthew 8-15 - John MacArthur
- The Screwtape Letters - C. S. Lewis
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Top Ten Books Read for 2014
- Deep and Wide - Andy Stanley
- A Life Observed - Devin Brown
- Nine Marks of a Healthy Church - Mark Dever
- Communicating for a Change - Andy Stanley & Lane Jones
- The Source of My Strength - Charles Stanley
- The Grand Weaver - Ravi Zacharias
- 7 Men and the Secret of Their Greatness - Eric Metaxas
- Pursuit of God - A. W. Tozer
- With Calvin in the Theater of God - John Piper & David Mathis
- The Hobbit - J. R. R. Tolkien
December Reading List
- Nine Marks of a Healthy Church - Mark Dever
- Communicating For A Change - Andy Stanley & Lane Jones
- Deep and Wide - Andy Stanley
- Pursuit of God - A. W. Tozer
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Wednesday, December 03, 2014
November Reading List
- The Business of Heaven - C. S. Lewis
- A Year with G. K. Chesterton - Kevin Belmonte
- The Ball and the Cross - G. K. Chesterton
- The Great Divorce - C. S. Lewis
- Breakout Churches - Thom Rainer
- The Horse and His Boy - C. S. Lewis
- The Hobbit - J. R. R. Tolkien
On another note, I read the first five books of the Bible (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy) over the past three months. I began September 1 and finished at the end of November. I was reading at a slow pace, a little each day. My point is this: you can read the Bible. It doesn't take that long. Begin today!
Saturday, November 08, 2014
Fear
I picked up the paper this past Wednesday, and found the Opinion page. After reading four articles, I realized they all had a common theme: fear. Four fears in four articles: fear of pain leading up to death, fear of shattering comfort zones, fear of racism, and fear over ebola. Was this a deliberate grouping by the newspaper? I don't know, but it really matters not.
Some fears are worked for evil (such as demonstrated in the racism article I read). Other fears are used for good and are useful for life.
Where does fear come from? Is it caught or taught? I can only answer "both".
G. K. Chesteron wrote the following in Tremendous Trifles:
Some fears are worked for evil (such as demonstrated in the racism article I read). Other fears are used for good and are useful for life.
Where does fear come from? Is it caught or taught? I can only answer "both".
G. K. Chesteron wrote the following in Tremendous Trifles:
"Fairy tales, then, are not responsible for producing in children fear, or any of the shapes of fear; fairy tales do not give the child the idea of the evil or the ugly; that is in the child already, because it is in the world already. Fairy tales do not give the child his first idea of bogey. What fairy tales give the child is his first clear idea of the possible defeat of bogey. The baby has known the dragon intimately ever since he had an imagination. What the fairy tale provides for his is a St. George to kill the dragon."
So, how do you help young children to grow and develop in this fear-filled world? How to you teach them to overcome their fears? Allow me to offer a few suggestions.
- Read to them, and don't stick only to the soft, pansy children's literature. Read the classic fairy tales from the Grimms. If you're really daring, find a copy of Roald Dahl's book of fairy tales. Read The Chronicles of Narnia, the Harry Potter series, or even St. George and the Dragon. As you read, you will have the opportunity to teach them when (not if) they ask questions.
- Let them watch good movies, like the three from The Chronicles of Narnia. Watch Percy Jackson. "Oh, that's too scary for my kids." Are you sure it is not too scary for you? Watch it with them so you can be a good parent and guide, commending the good, pointing out the bad.
- Read the Bible to them. Teach them a whole different fear, and not a bad one at that--the fear of the Lord. "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge" (Proverbs 1:7).
- Teach them to know Jesus. As the old saying goes, "No God, know fear; know God, no fear."
Fear is a reality--the good, the bad, and the ugly. Don't run from them; face them in the strength of the Lord.
Friday, November 07, 2014
Worldviews
Search the world over, and you find basically seven major worldviews. Each of those seven worldviews are intrinsically different. Each one as something that drastically separates it from the other six. The seven big worldviews are theism, atheism, pantheism, panentheism, deism, finite godism, and polytheism.
You may think, "Big deal! So there's different beliefs out there. It doesn't really matter what you believe as long as you sincerely believe it. Their all equally valid and true. Right?" WRONG!
Logically, only one worldview can be true, which means the other six must be false. You may interject at this point, "Wait a minute. Who cares about logic?" Well, if you're not interested in what's logical you may as well start talking about a square circle or a one-end stick. Actually, forget about communication at all because all language is based on logic.
Now, let's delve into the seven worldviews and briefly define and describe them.
Theism
Theism is the belief that an infinite personal God exists (theos=god). Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are great examples of theistic worldviews.
Atheism
Atheism says that no god exists (a=no, theos=god). This universe is all that there is; there is nothing beyond. Some famous atheists include Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzche, and Jean-Paul Sartre.
Pantheism
Pantheism claims that the universe is god, and god is the universe (pan=all, theos=god). There is no separation from creator and creation; it's one and the same. Hinduism, Zen Buddhism, Christian Science, and most New Age religions fall into this worldview classification.
Panentheism
Panentheism simply says that god is in the universe, kind of like a brain is in a body. So the universe is god's body. Panentheism also claims that god is in the constant process of changing., which is sometimes referred to as process theology. Some notorious panentheists are Alfred North Whitehead, Charles Hartshorne, and Schubert Ogden.
Deism
Deism is the view that holds that god is beyond the universe, but not in it. Miracles are denied. A god created the universe, but then he left it to manage itself. Sometimes this is described as the clock-maker religion: god wound up the clock and just let it run on its on. Some well-known deists include Francois Voltaire, Thomas Jefferson, and Thomas Paine.
Finite Godism
Finite Godism is similar to Deism in that it claims a god outside of the universe, but he is also involved in the universe. However, as Deism would say that god is infinite, Finite Godism says that he is limited in his nature and power. Miracles are denied. Some who have held this belief are John Stuart Mill, William James, and Peter Bertocci.
Polytheism
Polytheism says that there are many gods, but they are finite or limited in their nature and power. The gods are active in this world. Some well-known representatives in this camp are the ancient Greeks, Mormons, and Wiccans.
I know I have been very brief in the descriptions, but I want to emphasize the major differences in the worldviews. If Theism is true, then logically the other six must be false. For example, God cannot both be infinite and finite at the same time. That violates the law of non-contradiction. He can't be both personal and impersonal, involved and uninvolved, beyond the universe and not beyond the universe, able to perform miracles and not able to perform miracles, changing and immutable. All worldviews cannot be true.
You may think, "Big deal! So there's different beliefs out there. It doesn't really matter what you believe as long as you sincerely believe it. Their all equally valid and true. Right?" WRONG!
Logically, only one worldview can be true, which means the other six must be false. You may interject at this point, "Wait a minute. Who cares about logic?" Well, if you're not interested in what's logical you may as well start talking about a square circle or a one-end stick. Actually, forget about communication at all because all language is based on logic.
Now, let's delve into the seven worldviews and briefly define and describe them.
Theism
Theism is the belief that an infinite personal God exists (theos=god). Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are great examples of theistic worldviews.
Atheism
Atheism says that no god exists (a=no, theos=god). This universe is all that there is; there is nothing beyond. Some famous atheists include Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzche, and Jean-Paul Sartre.
Pantheism
Pantheism claims that the universe is god, and god is the universe (pan=all, theos=god). There is no separation from creator and creation; it's one and the same. Hinduism, Zen Buddhism, Christian Science, and most New Age religions fall into this worldview classification.
Panentheism
Panentheism simply says that god is in the universe, kind of like a brain is in a body. So the universe is god's body. Panentheism also claims that god is in the constant process of changing., which is sometimes referred to as process theology. Some notorious panentheists are Alfred North Whitehead, Charles Hartshorne, and Schubert Ogden.
Deism
Deism is the view that holds that god is beyond the universe, but not in it. Miracles are denied. A god created the universe, but then he left it to manage itself. Sometimes this is described as the clock-maker religion: god wound up the clock and just let it run on its on. Some well-known deists include Francois Voltaire, Thomas Jefferson, and Thomas Paine.
Finite Godism
Finite Godism is similar to Deism in that it claims a god outside of the universe, but he is also involved in the universe. However, as Deism would say that god is infinite, Finite Godism says that he is limited in his nature and power. Miracles are denied. Some who have held this belief are John Stuart Mill, William James, and Peter Bertocci.
Polytheism
Polytheism says that there are many gods, but they are finite or limited in their nature and power. The gods are active in this world. Some well-known representatives in this camp are the ancient Greeks, Mormons, and Wiccans.
I know I have been very brief in the descriptions, but I want to emphasize the major differences in the worldviews. If Theism is true, then logically the other six must be false. For example, God cannot both be infinite and finite at the same time. That violates the law of non-contradiction. He can't be both personal and impersonal, involved and uninvolved, beyond the universe and not beyond the universe, able to perform miracles and not able to perform miracles, changing and immutable. All worldviews cannot be true.
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