January 9, 2007

  • The Divine Rescue

         I’d like to try a slightly different style for this entry. I’m going to tell you a story that came to me today. I highly recommend that you consider the meaning of the story for yourself before reading past the dotted line.
         Once, three men went diving in the ocean. It’s not really important why they were there, but it is important that they didn’t realize that a storm was coming. When the storm hit, they became disoriented and couldn’t get back to their boat. Their boat driver, realizing the peril of his customers, radioed the coast guard for help.
         In flew a helicopter to search for the lost divers, and to rescue them if possible. After finally locating the tired, freezing, and nearly drowning divers, the helicopter dropped a rope. The first diver grapped on and tried to pull himself up. He made it halfway up the rope before finding that he lacked the strength to reach the helicopter. He fell back into the waves and drowned.
         The second man, seeing that the rescue attempt would clearly not work, decided to swim to shore himself, and disregard the coast guard team. He saw no value in contined attempts at rescue by helicopter; he saw that it would never work. His body washed up on the beach a few days later.
         The third and last diver, in despair, tried only to keep afloat. The pilot of the helicopter knew that the man couldn’t climb the rope himself, so he sent a crew member down the rope with a harness. The rescuer helped the diver into the harness, and both were raised into the helicopter — into safety.

    ———————————————————————————-

         The meaning of this story is really not terribly complicated. The diving trip represents life, and the storm represents sin. The three divers represent three responses to life and sin. The first man tried to climb his way to safety without the help of the rescuer, and he died. The second man gave up on rescue, and he died as well. The third man realized he had no hope apart from his rescuer, and he waited and believed that this rescuer would find a way to save him from his impending doom.
         How like our own lives! When the storms of sin come our way, how do we react? Do we rely on our own strength to resist temptation, and to do the “right thing” and please God? Or do we simply give up on God when it gets rough, and try to forge our own path through life?
         The way we ought to react is as the third man. He didn’t trust himself, knowing he was too weak to save himself; he didn’t give up on his rescuer, because he saw that it was his only hope, and that without hope he might as well drown; instead, he waited for his savior to come and pull him out of the water, from which he was helpless to lift himself.
         Do you react that way? When you’re in a storm, do you wait on your Savior? Do you trust Him and depend on Him as your only hope? Indeed, Christ is our only hope for salvation. Praise God!

     

     

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December 31, 2006

  •   Sorry about being gone so long…I’ll be back for good (for now) on Thursday, so perhaps you can expect some new stuff then. Until then, a picture from my vacation at Myrtle Beach…

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    A picture of my niece on vacation…

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    And a trial of a new feature…

December 20, 2006

  • Discovering Hope 01

    Warning: This blog is not for people with short attention spans, illiteracy, or a high risk of liver disease!

    Actually, I’m joking about the liver disease thing. I’ve been working on some upgrades to my Discovering Hope blog. I’ve also put up a new post today, which I highly recommend you check out. There’s a new place on the right side of the page where you can sign up for email updates, which I hope some of you will use…It’s kind of sad that that blog has my best work, but nobody reads it.

    I’ve also launched the podcast, gotten it hosted on podomatic.com, and gotten it approved and into the iTunes directory. Unfortunately, still working out issues with iTunes.

    So be honest, here: if you actually do read my other blog, how often do you read more than the first two paragraphs before you get bored or distracted?

    Working on an article about communion…hopefully, I’ll be able to finish that while I’m out of town next week. I’ll be leaving Friday and will be back the next weekend; then I leave again on January 1st and will return on the 5th (Passion Conference ’07, anyone?).

December 17, 2006

  • Someone from Pennsylvania evidently really likes my site. They’ve visited it several times per minute all day. My ClustrMap in the corner is going to look really crazy tomorrow…

    WHOEVER YOU ARE, PENNSYLVANIA STALKER, PLEASE LEAVE A COMMENT OR ELSE STOP VISTING MY SITE SO MUCH!

December 15, 2006

  • Once again, since I haven’t finished writing my next deep theological thing (you can laugh at the “deep” and “theological” parts of that phrase), I present to thee, my loyal readers, a slight diversion commonly known as [drumroll] <i>a game!</i>

    Post a quote from a movie that relates to the previous quote of a movie…it’s kind of a Whose Line Is it Anyway sort of game. Basically, adressing your preceding commenter with a movie line. For example:

    “Side effects may include, itching, sneezing, coughing, dry mouth, trouble breathing, and, in rare cases, death.” (Joe, Joe Somebody)

    “Do you always start conversations off this way?” (Wesley, The Princess Bride)

    “Do not underestimate the power of the force!” (Darth Vader, Star Wars)

    So try to have a bit more continuity to it all…


    Random notices to follow:

     - There is actually a post below this one. See the blue bar? Click the title on that and a post will magically appear!

     - If this is your first time at this site, or if you haven’t done so yet, please click “First Time Here?” for orientation.


    Discovering Hope podcast featuring my voice: GOOD or BAD idea? This is the intro to my first episode (the rest is still being cut and edited)…

December 10, 2006


  •  
      
     Blessed are the Sick, for They Shall Seek a Healer   
     




    Ok, so that’s not exactly one of the beatitudes, but I thought it would be a good phrase to jump this entry off. I’ve been looking around me and seeing a lot of Christians who are doing very well. Everyone’s life seems to be fine, nobody has any real problems, and we all seem amazingly content with the state of things. This, I think, is a serious problem.

    You see, the people around me (heck, even me!) don’t look sick, and nobody is anything like broken. Some people might just think we’ve somehow mastered living properly and learned how to not make any serious mistakes. I have another perspective, though. As one of these people who don’t appear sick, I’m pretty sure everyone is just ignoring their symptoms.

    As a Christian, I know perfectly well that everyone sins, and that everyone is poisoned by the sinful flesh they live in. if this is the case, we’re all sick — so why don’t we look sick? Perhaps we’ve merely forgotten to see the symptoms. Our sickness is so common, we hardly notice it. We know there’s no real cure except death and glorification, so why continue to take notice of sin? It seems old fashioned to live a life of penitent confession. It seems depressing, don’t you think? Wouldn’t you much rather just focus on the joy, and peace, and love that Christ brought us? Who cares about sin when you’ve got Jesus?

    I think that, while focusing only on the happier aspects of life in Christ may be a reasonable, attractive, and even honest approach, it lacks some degree of reality. Sin is still just as real and just as serious for saved people as it is for unsaved people — and it should be treated accordingly. I was listening to Derek Webb’s podcast recently, and Derek was talking about music. He said that Christian music often talks all about the happy, joyful things about being a follower of Christ, but leaves out the difficulty and hardships. He says that it’s only a half-truth, and that a half-truth is just as good as a lie. Half-truths are misleading, and have the same effects as lies would.

    There’s another reason we as Christians should look seriously at our sins: it’s that people don’t like self-righteous people. People can’t relate to people that look like they’re perfect. What kind of witness are you to people who know they’re fallen and broken if you don’t look anything like them? In my experience, people listen to people who are like them. They don’t listen to the advice of people who have never been where they are. A self-righteous person doesn’t seem like the kind of person who could possibly understand what the broken person is going through, so whatever solution they offer will likely be disregarded.

    On the other hand, someone who really sees their sin for what it is — a terrible offense against the Almighty, worthy of eternal damnation — will be a more humble person, and the kind of person that real people can relate to. We’ll be able to level with people completely, because we know that we’re in the same boat as they are without Christ’s propitiation.

    Have you ever noticed how salespeople aren’t always the most likeable people? You know they’re just there to sell you something and tally up their earnings. They’re professionals who were hired to sell you a product, and consequently, they might have a hard time being convincing. This is how a lot of people see Christian evangelists — as salespeople for Jesus. They see us as some brainwashed hypocrites reading a script, and it doesn’t seem to them that we really care about the product. Sometimes, Christians just want to make a sale, and that’s how they act.

    Now, have you ever had a friend tell you about some product they used (not that I advocate the treatment of god’s gift of salvation as a “product” — this illustration shouldn’t be over-applied)? They’re not on the payroll of general mills; they’re just telling you about the cereal they really liked. They’re not being coerced to tell you where to get cheap clothes; they’re telling you because they discovered this great outlet mall when they had trouble paying for clothes like you do. They’re telling you about this Jesus character because they know what it’s like to be guilty, drowning in your sin — they’re not trying to sell a product; they’re trying to offer a solution that works!

    Last but not least, I’d like to point out the reality of the law. God gave the law to people for a specific reason: so they’d know what they’re supposed to do, and what they’re not supposed to do — and then that they’d realize how totally screwed up they are. Realizing the state we’re in ought to motivate us to seek god. If we were ok people who could make it through life just fine on our own, we wouldn’t need saving. However, if we see ourselves as hopeless on our own — which we are — we’ll be compelled to seek the cure for the disease that consumes our hearts.

    If you don’t realize how horribly evil you are, how can you understand how much you’ve been forgiven? If you don’t think you’re sick, you’ll never appreciate what the medicine does for you. I used to take medication for depression, and after taking the medication for a while I started to think I didn’t need it anymore. I was doing fine, so i might as well not take it. See, I didn’t think I was sick anymore, so I didn’t think I needed medicine anymore — that’s a problem!

    In reality, our sickness is never quite healed — not in this life, anyway. So if we ever feel as if we’re healed, we’re obviously not seeing things properly. Indeed, having been ultimately saved from our disease often causes us to forget we have a disease at all, but we must remember that without the cure — without Christ — we’re hopeless and as good as dead already. We cannot let ourselves be lulled into a false sense of wellness!

    I suppose I’d like to conclude this with a sort of phrase of summary: if you don’t constantly understand the extent and severity of your sin, you surely won’t begin understand the extent and severity of God’s grace! It is for this reason, then, that we must see our sin: that we might be better worshippers of our heavenly Father!

    This article was reposted from another blog. Minor spelling and grammar corrections were made.

December 5, 2006

  • So here’s a game I found out about…

    You Google your name + a verb, and post whatever the web results say on your blog. For example, “Caleb is”…

    Caleb is distinguished from the sons of Juda.

    Caleb is an arrogant, misogynistic defrocked priest.

    Caleb is the only human being capable of merging with the First.

    Caleb is adorable. **

    Caleb is thankful to be part of Gods Answer to your prayers.

    You get the idea…you can pick lots of different verbs, and make them fun and random…

    Caleb likes to sleep in the cat tunnel.

    Caleb hates meatloaf.

    Caleb said, “what a clownish man this is.”

    Caleb doesn’t remember ever fighting with his parents about really, really stupid things. *

    Caleb does his best to mimic a nearby goat.

    Caleb thinks a party is in order. *

    Caleb forgot all about owning a ranch. *

    Caleb decided to rename it “Pepsi-Cola,” and advertised his new soft drink.

    Caleb remembered very little of what happened next.

    Caleb looked confused.

    Caleb stopped at the street corner.

    Caleb killed Melanie Foster.

    Caleb helped our hearts to grow.

    Caleb became interested in acting after watching Les Miserables.

    Caleb pulled out his Tesla Cannon and pointed it at the largest drifting fireball in the air. *

    Caleb made his way onto the stage of life.

    Caleb died in 1745.

    Caleb typed Kalendar and it just stuck.

    Caleb realized that he was dreaming…

    Caleb stopped typing random things…(no, that wasn’t from a search)

    Now you try it, and send me a link!

    Yeah, this is probably just because I didn’t have anything really worthwhile to say…

    * True sentences.

    ** Very true sentences.

    EDIT:
    I bet my teachers would disagree with this assesment:

    You paid attention during 100% of high school!

    85-100% You must be an autodidact, because American high schools don’t get scores that high! Good show, old chap!

    Do you deserve your high school diploma?
    Create a Quiz

December 2, 2006

  • Happy Christmas-month, everyone!

    I was thinking of saying “Happy holidays!” but decided my Christian readers might be too offended.

    Um…I can see why non-Christians might be offended by “Merry Christmas” if they don’t like Christmas. Also, I understand that Wal-Mart might value the business of the wealthy Ebenezer Scruge. However, I really don’t understand why so many Christians are so offended by the phrase “Happy holidays.” It’s not anti-Christian, and it’s not inappropriate. There are several holidays in December besides Christmas. It’s not as if anything bad is being said about Christmas, and it’s not as if Christmas is being left out. Why be offended?

    I was listening to a radio show the other day that was talking about how stupid the “happy holidays” thing was. The host was saying that most people wouldn’t be offended by “Merry Christmas,” so people should stick to that phrase. A caller asked, “Isn’t it just absolutely silly to be offended by two little words like that?” “Exactly my point!” the host declared. “Well then, sir, why are you so offended by the phrase, ‘happy holidays?’”

    I just don’t get it. You can say “Merry Christmas!” and your local department store can say “Happy holidays!” or “Happy Chrismahaunaquanzika!” and we can all stop being so incredibly touchy about it.

November 24, 2006

  • Still Thankful?

    Why isn’t everyone asking what we’re thankful for today? Why is it that Thanksgiving is just about the only day of the year that people seem thankful for everything?
    Well, that’s not entirely true, actually…some people aren’t thankful for even one day of the year.