Tagged with bible

Why Jim Morrison and the Bible are Still Consumed

Jim Morrison Hotel

I love the music that comes from the mid to late 1960′s to mid 1970′s in the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison, Eric Clapton, Janis Joplin, Pink Floyd and many more.  It was at the very height of the Vietnam War, the civil rights movement, and a time of great growth and pain in our country and the world.  The music of that time was filled with passion… to the point of death in many cases.  It was psychedelic, spiritual, religious, real.  It was a world that I can only read about from the perspective of history.

The other day while Deb and I were driving over to Georgia (see Welcome to Our Living Room // Friday Feet) we were listening to an iPod playlist and Peace Frog by The Doors came on and we started talking about what the song meant.  Not at all an uncommon conversation between us when we listen to music together in the car.  Deborah’s first reaction was who can fully know what any of Morrison’s songs meant and then it hit me, this is exactly why we still study the Bible today.  People still listen to and marvel over Jim Morrison’s music because it isn’t simplistic and easy to figure out.  You can just listen to it but you have to dig deep to understand the meaning of some of The Doors songs.  That’s what makes their music great and part of history, you can listen to one of his songs over and over and still not grasp its full meaning.

I know this may be a big stretch to some who don’t care for The Doors music, but there is no denying that Jim Morrison is one of the all time greatest song writers and muscians in pop history, so if that is the case, how much greater are the riches provided for us in scripture?  This may be totally off in left field to compare Jim Morrison’s works to a body of 66 books of God’s glory, but that is how my mind is able to wrap around the unimaginable hugeness that is the Bible.

Scholars for centuries have examined every letter, every translation, every Greek, Hebrew, and Latin meaning and yet, there is still more to be discovered.  It is 66 books together that were written so that a child could understand and comprehend and a Biblical scholar could spend a life getting to know and still not fully grasp its greatness.  To gain a better understanding, you have to dig in deeper.

Anyone can listen to Peace Frog but do you understand it from a casual listen?  Go listen to the song or read the lyrics.  What do you think it means?  You can come up with a guess but there is far more to the song than just one listen can gather, not to mention the actual guitar work or all the history that goes into a piece of work like this.  Without explanation or some research, grasping its full meaning may be difficult (especially while you are driving around in your car in 2009, a long time after 1970).

Like scripture and poems that tell a story, you can casually read through them and get a brief understanding.  Some of the parables Jesus told were not the easiest to comprehend without some research into the culture of the time or history that surrounded the time.  If it was all so easy and simple to understand I doubt people woud disect each chapter word for word centuries after it was written.

Peace Frog was originally called Abortion Stories, changed by guitarist Robby Krieger, and the lyrics came from poems Morrison wrote (he wrote several books of poetry along with his music).  One of the more well known lines of the song comes from his childhood.

Indians scattered on dawn’s highway bleeding
Ghosts crowd the young child’s fragile eggshell mind

This seems to be tied to a bad car crash Morrison witnessed when he was 4 years old while on vacation with his parents. (Jim claims that the souls of those people [killed in the car crash] combined with him at that point on some level.)  Morrison accounted it this way in An American Prayer, a work of poetry and music released years after his death in 1971:

Me and my mother and father and a grandmother and a grandfather were driving through the desert, at dawn, and a truck load of Indian workers had either hit another car, or just I don’t know what happened but there were Indians scattered all over the highway, bleeding to death.”

“So the car pulls up and stops. That was the first time I tasted fear. I musta’ been about four €” like a child is like a flower, his head is floating in the breeze, man.

Some of the song could be related to the race riots of the late 1960′s when The Doors were at their height or possibly the demonstrations of the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago, both of which happened around the same time as the assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr., on April 4, 1968, and Robert F. Kennedy on June 5/6 (shot on the 5th and died on the 6th).

There’s blood on the streets, it’s up to my knee
She came
Blood on the streets in the town of Chicago

“Blood in the streets of New Haven” looks like it came from when Morrison was arrested after taunting Police during a concert in 1967.  When he was arrested a riot ensued in the arena and poured out into the streets of New Haven.

This is just one song by Morrison. He was said to be an intelligent and capable student drawn to the study of literature, poetry, religion, philosophy and psychology and of course went on to have a successful career as an American singer, songwriter, poet, writer and film maker after graduating from UCLA.  But, even when Morrison was alive and people could actually ask him what a song meant you couldn’t figure out how his mind worked, only he could (and that might be a stretch).

morrison-hotel-cover

That was a mere mortal man who died at age 27.  As great as he was, how much greater can a collection of 66 books of law, history, poetry, and prophecy be than that?  I know, kind of a strange analogy but how can you get your mind around something so O-mazing and huge as the Word of God.  Relate it to something comprehendible in our own time and space.

In the days of the old testament and even when Jesus taught his disciples he often spoke about things beyond their comprehension and understanding and to help them understand he related the stories to things, places, and people they all knew so they could start to grasp the meaning.  How do you describe something like the beauty of the Garden of Eden or Heaven or a “new heaven and new earth”?  In this life we can’t fully grasp His greatness but we have been given a lot of material to study in the mean time.

Come
And let him who hears say
Come
Who ever is thirsty, let him come
and whoever wishes, let him take the free gift of the water of life
Yes, I am coming soon.

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The Truth in the Bible Still Survives from 1895 to Today

The Book of Mark

Bible Published in 1895

Title page of bible from 1895

Title page of bible from 1895

1896 in History :: So what was going on in 1896?

Tonight we start the first part of a series of studies on how to study the Bible, called Journey Bible Class.  Yesterday I picked up a Bible at a local store specifically to start using tonight, but I have about 30-35 Bibles here in my office so I guess I could have used one of those but I was looking for one in particular.  One I have here in my office is this one Bible published in 1895 I picked up after someone threw it away back when we were in the book business. The Bible I picked up at the store yesterday was a relatively nice leather covered Bible but it made me think about this one I have that was published more than 100 years ago.

It is far from fragile and you can flip through the pages, look at the illustrations and everything you do with a Bible purchased today… but… in it’s time, this Bible must have cost a small fortune.  It took more than 100 photographers and a huge number of editors and all the other people to put this 1895 Bible together.  It weighs about 6-8 pounds, is a hard cover, has tons of illustrations, and is even referenced and includes commentary, wow.

You can read it very well on the photo, but if you look on the blank page it has, written in pencil,

Oct the 6 1896

Presented To.

Mary Jane Williams.

By

G.E. Th Williams.

and on the inside it still has a cross stitched book mark that says “I love Thee With All My Heart”.  Of course if you flip through the pages you will see that the scriptures are the same in this book published in 1895 as in the book I purchased yesterday.  The history of this Bible is incredible to me.  I am holding in my hand something that is tangible evidence of a God’s word being passed on from person to person more than 113 years ago.

I took these photos today when I got to work.

January 4 Following Mormon abandonment of polygamy, Utah admitted as 45th state
January 5 German physicist Wilhelm Roentgen’s discovers x-rays
January 7 Fanny Farmer publishes her 1st cookbook
January 18 British troops occupy Kumasi, West Africa
January 29 Emile Grubbe is 1st dr to use radiation treatment for breast cancer
February 8 Western Conference forms of Midwestern U, later renamed Big 10 Conf
February 18 Cave of Winds at Niagara Falls goes almost dry for 1st time in 50 yrs
February 23 Tootsie Roll introduced by Leo Hirshfield
March 1 Battle of Adua: 80,000 Ethiopians destroy 20,000 Italians
March 8 Volunteers of America forms (New York City)
March 20 Marines land in Nicaragua to protect U.S. citizens
March 25 Modern Olympics began in Athens, Greece
April 4 Announcement of Gold in Yukon
April 6 1st modern Olympic games open in Athens Greece [3/25 OS] American, James Connolly, wins 1st Olympic gold medal in mod history
April 15 1st Olympic games close at Athens, Greece
May 4 1st edition of London Daily Mail ( penny)
May 6 22nd Kentucky Derby: Willie Simms aboard Ben Brush wins in 2:07.75
May 14 Lowest U.S. temperature in May recorded (-10 degrees F-Climax, Colo)
May 15 Tornado kills 78 in Texas
May 18 U.S. Supreme Court affirms race separation (Plessy vs. Ferguson)
May 27 Tornado hit St. Louis, killing 255 and leaving thousands homeless
June 6 George Samuelson leaves New York harbor to row across Atlantic
June 15 Tsunami strikes Shinto festival on beach at Sanriku Japan 27,000 are killed, 9,000 injured, with 13,000 houses destroyed
June 26 1st movie theater in U.S. opens, charging 10 cents for admission
July 8 William Jennings Bryan “cross of gold” speech at Dem convention
July 21 National Federation of Afro-American Women and Colored Women’s
July 28 City of Miami incorporated
August 16 Gold discovered in Klondike, found at Bonanza Creek, Ala
August 20 Dial telephone patented
October 1 Yosemite becomes a National Park
November 1 1st bare women breast (Zulu) to appear in National Geographic Mag
November 14 Power plant at Niagara Falls begins operation
December 8 Start of Sherlock Holmes “Adventure of Missing 3 Quarter”
December 25 “Stars and Stripes Forever” written by John Philip Sousa
December 30 Stanley Cup: Montreal Victorias beat Winnipeg Victorias, 6-5
December 31 25th auto built in US [thanks]

Don’t think my Bible is going to be around in 2133 but I guess it could be.  So if those items above are facts of history, how far back do we go before we don’t think these things actually took place.  We have buildings in this country that go back to the 1600-1700′s, China and Japanese history goes back a pretty good ways, and so does Israel and the history spoken about in this book.

Of course we as human beings selectively choose what we believe as truth. Perhaps today this poem I wrote below is what truth is.

What Do We Believe is the Truth

Truth is all relative.
Truth is what we make it to be.
Truth is fluid.
Truth is adjustable.
Truth is changing.
Truth is false.

Truth is love.
Truth is faith.
Truth is belief.
Truth is alive.
Truth is sacrifice.

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Royals Pitcher Scott Sullivan Asks What’s Your Story

This morning we had a special guest, Scott Sullivan, speak during our normal Tuesday morning meeting.  Sullivan was a pitcher (one of those great “submarine pitchers” I love to watch) for the Cincinnati Reds (1995-2003), Chicago White Sox (2003), and finished his career with the Kansas City Royals (2004).  As usually is the case with those who have been through the riggors of MLB, he had quite a story to tell, but he made the point that we all have stories to tell, good and bad.

What many of these stories have in common is where each of them were in their life during their career and where and how God has taken them to the point where they are right now.  All of us are always a work in progress but through circumstances and situations in each of our own lives, we have made it to the point we are today.  The question is what are we going to do with the time we have left?  Sullivan suggested a book that has meant a lot to him, Stu Weber’s Tender Warrior, and left us with three questions to think about and discuss.  They are:

1. What is Your Story?

Each of us has a story if we are still living and breathing.  If you are a Believer, that story is called your testimony, and as a Believer, each does have a testimony.  Have you ever written down your testimony?  Some may scoff and write down a few brief sentences, but some of us took many years to come to our decision and our testimony is not just one event or thing that happened, it is years of work and living that got us to the point we are at today.

If you are not a Believer specifically, you still have your own story to tell.   What has shaped your life up to this point.  Is it people, friends, family, where you live, how much money you have or don’t have, what car you drive?  I would encourage each of us to put some thought into what exactly is our story.  What were the specifics that got us where we are today.

2. What Do You Want Your Legacy To Be?

Each of us will leave a legacy in one form or another.  We may not have a sphere of infulence like a major league ball player, politician, or holywood star, but each of us will leave behind the story of our life.  What do you want that to be?  Do you know?  If you do, how are you moving in that direction to fulfill that part of your life.

3. What is Your Plan to Finish Strong?

None of us are destined to stick around for very long.  Some longer than others but either way, we are not long for this world.  How can we finish our lives out strong.  Do we have a plan, or do we care?  I think it may be harder for those of us who are for the most part healthy, relatively young-ish (maybe at heart), and feel like we are full of life to really appreciate the time we have left and make a conscious decision to finish out strong.

I think about Richard Quick and what he is going through right now in his fight with a Malignant Brain Tumor, or my mother-in-law who did the same thing.  What is our plan to finish strong and live the rest of the life we have been given with conviction, purpose, and with a plan, to at some point hear what Jesus said in a parable in Matthew 25 where He said:

His master replied, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant! You have been faithful with a few things; I will put you in charge of many things. Come and share your master’s happiness!’

Thanks Scott for making your way over to our side of the world (funny how these Tuscaloosa, Alabama people end up down here in Auburn, and we are thrilled) and thank you for giving us a few words of encouragement to think about.

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The Internet is The Church’s New Drug of Choice

The Internet can be many things to many people.  Can it be the drug of choice today or is that to harsh a term to describe what we as a society have done with the Internet?

Most of the time we have a negative connotation associated with a “drug”, but drugs can be just as positive as negative, especially when one company has promoted their product as the “wonder drug” of all time.  One legal definition puts it like this:

Some governments define the term drug by law. In the United States, the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act definition of “drug” includes “articles intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease in man or other animals” and “articles (other than food) intended to affect the structure or any function of the body of man or other animals.

This is one of those random blog posts I couldn’t decide if I wanted to dive into or not, but I am going to do it anyway.  I started writing this several weeks ago but it culminated this week with a conversation I had with the worship leader (photo shown above) here and moved into the finer point of Calvinism (if only we actually had time to just sit and discuss these things).  And that is… what is the Internet doing to fellowship and how does it change how we read Hebrews 10:25 (in context) that says: “25 Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one another€”and all the more as you see the Day approaching.”

If you are reading my blog and are not a Believer, then insert “social skills or socializing” in place of fellowship, but for the rest of us, what does it mean to move our worship and other networking (i.e. fellowship) to the Internet?  This is what I envision when we combine the greatness of the Internet with the Bride of Christ.  Something totally awesome if I can still use that phrase, but how careful are we to not be slowly creating a generation of Internet only Believers that don’t know how to, want to, or even care anything about fellowship?

The ultimate online church campus right now is lifechurch.tv but this week I was really excited to watch the initial launch of the iCampus for NewSpring as posted on ChurchCrunch (read NewSpring Church Launches iCampus BETA).   I was so excited to see NewSpring launch a full blown service that I could sit here in my office and watch Sunday evening from a church in Greenville I have never been to (but will in about a month) and feel like I was part of the service, but was I really part of the service?

The questions that ran through my mind when talking to other about where the church is going through technology goes something like this:

  1. What about those Believers who really don’t like to fellowship in the first place, or worse, highly dislike it?  To say “they should” is what I would equate to saying a gay Christian just shouldn’t be gay (from Anne’s post Why is being gay a sin?).  Can we look at the issue seriously and not just say “because the Bible said so”.  I know that, but that often doesn’t change a person’s behavior or attitude.
  2. How do we fulfill Hebrews 10:25 online?  Can we fulfill Hebrews 10:25 through only online means?
  3. Can we effectively fellowship with others online?  I have gotten to know quite a few people online I have never met in person?
  4. What about those church-a-phobics (that would be the opposite of church-a-holics)?  How do you get people in the building when they highly dislike (hate) the thought of “going to church” but will engage online?
  5. What intentional steps do we take to move from online fellowship to discipleship?  Are we being intentional about the steps we take to pull people to our online venues in the name of Christ?

These are just a few, but serious questions to me, and quite personal.  I have asked myself these and many other questions for many many years and I will continue to try to find where technology fits into God’s kingdom.  It is not just something the church can ignore, or misuse.  In some respects, it is the future of the Church.  Thoughts?

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Here I Am Lord… Now Send Somebody Else

I love the title to this book, it is so accurate to the way I think sometimes.  I want to dive in head first in the deep end from the 50 meter platform and forget that once you get to the bottom, you actually have to swim back up to the surface to breathe.  It is 3pm and somehow, I am about the only one left here, and now I am starting to get some productive work done (except right at this very second of course).

I have officially been here for about two months now and I can’t think of any place else I would want to get in the car and drive to work in the mornings.  Although I have been in the work force for 15+ years now, I feel like a baby when it comes to “ministry’ work, but am learning at a crash course pace.  It is quiet at times and panic stricken at others.  This job is totally different than anything I have done before and I am loving the chance to learn so much about the bride of Christ, and most of that is getting to know the people here and across the Internet that make up the church body.

[INSERT 2 CRAZY HOURS HERE]

…and boom… just like that a quiet afternoon went into a totally different environment.  Maybe that’s why I like it, it is always changing and always challenges to meet.

What I love about this book title is the tag line that goes with it.

how God uses ordinary people to do extraordinary things

There is nothing extraordinary about anything I do when compared to what skills and talents other people have been given as well.  We have each been given our specific skills and talents by God (someone told me yesterday their’s was sarcasm), but there will always be someone who is more talented in the same areas, and someone less talented in those same areas than I am.  All throughout the Bible God used regular ordinary people to do His work, Moses being the all time great example.

I work with some great, talented, ordinary people, that are determinied to do God’s work as best as they possibly can, and I love that.

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Us Lefties are Doomed Once Again :: Quips

Deb loves to point out all the niceties about living with a south paw (and there are many).  She clipped this graph out of the USA Today more than 10 years ago and I just found it going through some of my old photos this past weekend.

Once again I am shown what a right handed world we live in.  Everything from increased cancer risk to playing in sports, we are more likely to be doomed from birth.  Yes, even scripture talks about us left handed people, but the Bible calls us out more as the privileged ones (haha).

  1. Judges 3:15
    Again the Israelites cried out to the LORD, and he gave them a deliverer—Ehud, a left-handed man, the son of Gera the Benjamite. The Israelites sent him with tribute to Eglon king of Moab.
    Judges 3:14-16 (in Context) Judges 3 (Whole Chapter)
  2. Judges 20:16
    Among all these soldiers there were seven hundred chosen men who were left-handed, each of whom could sling a stone at a hair and not miss. Judges 20:15-17 (in Context) Judges 20 (Whole Chapter)

Although I can’t imagine 700 left handed people chosen at one place to do anything, but must have been a heck of a party.

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Separating Our Lives Between Life and Faith in God

faith and culture whiteboard

That is the basic question of this blog post. Why do we tend to separate the faith part of our lives and everything else? This doesn’t have to be real deep but I would suggest that there are some good reasons for doing so. If you don’t read any farther than this, just go to the comments below and answer the question posed in the title.

I started looking at the two main blogs I author, a faith blog (called Damascus), and one called My Life in LA (now combined into this one blog), and started thinking about how and why we often separate or put up barriers in our life between our Christian beliefs and faith, and our secular or culturally driven part of our life. This is not a new discussion, just comes up from time to time and I thought this time I would write it down.

We All Live Our Faith and Cultural Life Differently

If you say you don’t, I would love to hear from you, because I think if we take an honest look at ourselves, we all do this in one form or another. We try not to, and we try to keep our beliefs alive in everything we do, not just on Sunday morning, but it isn’t always easy. It isn’t always easy because we, for the most part, live in the society and culture of our time. Most of us don’t live in a closet.

We can’t escape it, if we are alive and breathing, most of us have a cell phone, or an Internet connection, or cable TV, or a car, or a washer/dryer, or own an iPod and listen to Coldplay, or all the other things that we tend to collect by being alive in this world today. Notice the arrows on the top of the whiteboard.  We do exchange these from one to the other, but we also put God in the square box too.

The Stuff We Collect, Does It Help?

Does all this stuff help our faith or hurt it, or does it even matter? There are several sects of society you can look at and see them living without the modern conveniences we have created, like the Amish, Buddhists, Monks, or even parts of Islam and Orthodox Jews.

My wife and I work part time at a thrift store and the sheer volume to “stuff” that we see come through the building is just mind boggling. All the things that were nice and expensive in its day, now discarded as useless and worthless to someone (a new found treasure for others). I often look at how much goes the way of the dumpster and I am amazed at what a consuming society we are now.

My Reasons Why We Separate Our Faith Life

I am sure everyone could have 100′s reasons or answers to this question, but I thought I would just write a few down. I actually think in some ways, it is not a bad thing to separate our faith based lives and our cultural lives. Take my reasons for doing so on my two blogs. I separated the subjects on my blogs basically in faith, and non-faith posts. The non-faith based blog is about my life, so why wouldn’t it include my faith? With blogs at least, you are writing to a specific audience.

Although you do want one to cross over into the other, the people reading this blog probably don’t want to read about photography and farm equipment, or where I am doing my next photo shoot. Likewise, the people interested specifically in photography do not want to read my “Jesus posts” (as a friend of mine recently put it), but either can make the choice to go from one to the other.

Does this mean my heart for the Lord is not in my other blog, certainly not. That is the key, even if we are engaged in a culturally relevant church group, or a college football game, examine where your heart is, that is what is important to the Lord, not how we draw lines in our visible or public life.

A Quick Top Ten of Separating Faith and Culture

  1. We separate our live out of convenience for ourselves
  2. We want to fit in to our society
  3. We don’t think about it and just go with the flow
  4. We separate on purpose for reasons we deem important
  5. Money (because money is always on the list)
  6. To reach people across the faith isle
  7. Our friends who are not Believers
  8. Stuff (all the things we collect)
  9. Embarrassment (not wanting to look like a Jesus freak)
  10. Government or power requirement

I put in that last one because we still have to recognize that there are part of our world today that still do not want people of faith to be able to express themselves. The Summer Olympics in Beijing China are a good example. The Catholic church is allowed, under specific rules, but that is about it. North Korea, parts of Africa, and other hot spots around the world require people to separate their faith from their culture.

And yes, I would even argue here in the United States we are required to separate our faith from our society. Not in an oppressive manner at all, but through the separation of church and state, parts of our culture in the U.S. today require a parting of the ways.

That is certainly not an all inclusive list, or a comprehensive look at the issue, but some quick thoughts for a Saturday morning. So how do you separate your life?

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How to Save Your Own Life, in 8 Easy Steps

This week I have been doing a job in our business I don’t normally do, packaging book orders. This is normally Deb’s job but she is still in Colorado so I took a stab at it to try not to get to far behind. Looking at each individual book title before it leaves is not something I am familiar with, and although I do know what books we have in our store, some of the titles really crack me up, like this one.

As I was looking for this book, How To Save Your Own Life in Eight Steps, I was truly amazed at how many book titles we have listed that are “how to” books. Are we now a society of “how to’s” as given by someone else, it appears so. I know many of these do have some value to people, but there is a “how to” for everything now.

Just for fun, I decided to pull our “how to” books and list them below. The vast selection of subjects was fascinating to me. Maybe to you as well. This is a partial (yes not total) list of our “how to” titles. I just love skimming the title below.  Looking through the titles tells me I have a vast amount of knowledge just sitting on our shelves to help me, some of these are rather comical, if not all of them.  But, I can see that there is always a how-to book on something, especially when it comes to improving your life in some form or fashion.  I think I will stick with the one how-to book I know doesn’t have some kind of bias or ulterior motive of some kind (not that any of these below do that).

How To… Do Just About Anything

How Anyone Can Stop Paying Income Taxes [Hardcover] by…
How not to worry about the love life of spiders by Tucker, Earl
How They Chose the Dead: Stories by Summers, Hollis Spurgeon
How to Arrange Seasonal Florals If You Think You Can’t …
How to be Blessable by Pat Robertson DVD
How to Be Happily Retired by Waitley, Denis; Seyfer, Eudora
How to Be Sure You are a Christian Transferable Concept 1…
How to Build Walks, Walls & Patio Floors [Paperback] by…
How to Deal With Difficult People by Braunstein, B.
How to Defend Yourself Without Even Trying by Terry Chitwood
How to do Christmas Florals if You Think You Can’t [Hardcover]…
How to Draw and Paint Characters (Clowns & Characters 62)…
How To Earn $50,000+ A Year With Your Home Computer:…
How to get a job with the Post Office: Clerk-carrier, mail…
How to Get Angry Without Feeling Guilty by Bry, Adelaide
How to Get Lost and Found in Japan (How to Get Lost &…
How to Get Out of Debt (One Hour Guides) by Thomsett…
How to Handle Grief Tracks of a Fellow Struggler by Claypool…
How to Install Paneling, Valances, Cornices, Wall-To-Wall…
How to Install Protective Alarm Devices [Paperback] by…
How to Make Love to a Man [Mass Market Paperback] by…
How to Make Love to a Woman [Hardcover] by Morgenstern…
How to Make Money in Mail-Order by Wilbur, L. Perry
How to Make Someone’s Day: 365 Ways to Show You Care…
How to make your life work;: Or, Why aren’t you happy?…
How to Make Your Own Fishing Rods [Paperback] by…
How to negotiate the labor agreement;: An outline…
How to Outsmart Your Allergies [Hardcover] by Ulene…
How to Parent by Dodson, Fitzhugh
How to Play Better Baseball by Jackson, C. Paul
How to Play Winning Bridge [Mass Market Paperback...
How to pray for your children by Prange, Erwin E
How to Prepare for the National Teacher Examinations...
How to Prosper During the Hard Times Ahead: A Crash Course...
How to Read a Play [Paperback] by
How to Reconcile a Marriage/Audio Cassette by Dobson, James
How to run a meeting by Hegarty, Edward J
How to Run a School Newspaper by Goldberg, Enid A.
How To Stay Alive And Well In The Fast Food Lane…
How to stay union free by Jackson, Gordon E
How to Succeed as an Independent Consultant by Holtz…
How to Succeed on Your Own: Overcoming the Emotional…
How to Survive Acls! (Books) by Doernbach, David P.
How to Talk So People Will Listen by Brown, Steve…
How to tell fortunes with Cards [Hardcover] by Brown…
How to think straight about psychology by Stanovich…
How to Turn Failure Into Success by Sherman, Harold
How to Turn Your Faith Loose [Paperback] by…
How to Use Shepard’s Citations [Paperback] by
How to Win Over Depression [Hardcover] by Tim Lahaye
How to Win Over Worry: A Practical Formula for Successful …
How to write a hit song and sell it by Bruce, Robert
How to Write and Publish a Scientific Paper by Day, Robert A.
How to write irresistible query letters (Writer’s basic books…

The Biggest and Best How To Book Ever

One of my favorites is How not to worry about the love life of spiders by Tucker, Earl, I had to actually take that one off the shelf and flip through it.

Anyone who knows this blog, knows where this is going. Most of us already have the biggest and best “how to” book, the Bible, but I do think their are books of interest other than just the Bible. The Bible is our book of authority, history, stories of life, instruction, and a how to of life, and it could even be called a book on “how someone else can save your own life“.

The book title caught my attention because it was a book on how to save your own life. I suddenly had a glimpse into the person who purchased this book, and wondered what they would learn or take out of the steps outlined in this title.

What is Your Favorite How To?

So, which one on the list above is your favorite? There is something for just about everyone.

What other “how to” books have you come across, which ones do you like? I am not a big “how to” person, even less of one that wants to read about it, but I am curious, so I flip (usually back to front) through many how to titles. What about you?

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The Bible Now Available in the Mam Language from Bible Gateway

Bible

I read this today and was fascinated. Can you believe with all the technology’s we have today that the Bible is still be translated into other languages, wow.

If you have never checked out Bible Gateway this is an amazing site, and I would highly recommend using it as an aid to anything scripture related.

I have been using Bible Gateway for many many years now and they just keep getting better and better. Today they announced that they have released the Bible language version (MVC) for the Mam language (see Mam language Bible now available), which they say traces their lineage back to the Mayan civilization.

I know there is so much work that goes on with translating into other languages, and it is almost all behind the scene stuff that we never hear about. I recently read about a man who had spent the last 5 years of his life doing nothing but translating the Bible from English into a specific language for a village in Africa.

This was not a large language translation like Spanish, or probably Mam, but for a select group of people. I met a fellow blogger, Biscuet, the other day who is back from China for a brief summer rest and I am sure he knows the value of a Bible given to someone in their own native tongue.

Those of us in the U.S. and Europe may just take for granted that we have a Bible we can read in our own native language, but for those hungry for God’s word that don’t have a way to read it for themselves, these translations are huge, and I think very noble work.

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James Teaches About the Misuse of Riches, James 5

This is my installment for the Blogger Small Group post (on chapter 5) and there is still time for anyone to join in if they like (see Blogger Small Group Rules/Guidlelines). Right now we are five weeks into a study on James, not need to try and catch up, just start in the same place we are and post your opinions.

Re-reading the book of James over the last few weeks has been great. James always has a real world perspective and he never holds any punches. This week was James, Chapter 5, and I thought the first section was quite appropriate for the holiday weekend we just had over here in the U.S.

This is going to be a shortened version this week since we were out of town all last week but that is probably a relief over last week.

From the Book of James, Chapter 5

In this chapter James breaks up the text into two sections. The first section titled, Misuse of Riches, and the second section titled Exhortation, meaning a call to take some kind of action. Then he ends in prayer with some great examples.

Misuse of Riches, (5:1-6)

This section brought it home for those of us living here in the United States. Perhaps that is because we just had Memorial Day weekend over here, but I think even the poorest or less fortunate over here have riches that people in other countries couldn’t imagine as a part of their normal routine of life, or riches.

Sometimes I think we (as Americans) put so much emphasis on material items that we do miss the focus of how to use some of these items to further the kingdom of God. This first section talks about how much we have, yet we use it for purposes that will fade away anyway.

3 Your gold and your silver have rusted; and their rust will be a witness against you and will consume your flesh like fire. It is (E)in the last days that you have stored up your treasure!

In the NIV it refers to metals that have rusted and tarnished. Even gold and silver tarnish and are some of the most sought after metals still today. This storing up in the last days, to me, is referring to greed. How much is enough for us, how much do we actually need. Scripture tells us His salvation does not tarnish or rust.

Exhortation, (5:7-20)

I love the title to this section. Exhortation.

ex·hor·ta·tion [noun]: an utterance, discourse, or address conveying urgent advice or recommendations.

That sums up the book of James. An urgent advice or recommendation. James tells us to be patient and he then gives us the essence of patience, (v7-9), do not complain, strengthen your heart, and wait for the coming of the Lord.

James then gives us examples of patience in verses 10-13 and he ends in a prayer. This prayer is something that I have underlined in my Bible before. The need to be sensitive to others needs, and the importance of confessing our sins.

Something I take great comfort in when reading the last section is verse 16-17.

16 Therefore, (AO)confess your sins to one another, and pray for one another so that you may be (AP)healed (AQ)The effective prayer of a righteous man can accomplish much.

17 Elijah was (AR)a man with a nature like ours, and (AS)he prayed earnestly that it would not rain, and it did not rain on the earth for (AT)three years and six months.

The great Elijah, was a man with a nature like ours. A nature like ours refers to the fact that he was a sinner as well. But he prayed. The bold effect above is my doing, not scripture. That is the key to me and I love that verse. The effective prayer can accomplish much, wow.

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