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out with the old, in with the new

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I'm reading a book called Pure Heart: Restoration of the Heart Through the Beatitudes . The forming concept of the book is intriguing: that the Beatitudes offer healing and guidance in a couple of critical areas. First and foremost, our identity as children of God. Secondly, as children of imperfect parents. I'd always understood the spiritual aspect (as much as I could grasp such a far-reaching concept), but never the richness of the natural piece of this. As I have delved into this very personal teaching by Tom and Donna Cole, who both have come out of the homosexual lifestyle, I did a little study on this passage in Matthew 5. Lo and behold, Matthew Henry's Commentary sheds some very interesting light on this second principle. He points out that the Old Testament concludes with a curse in Malachi 4:6: He will convince parents to look after their children and children to look up to their parents. If they refuse, I'll come and put the land under a curse." (The Me...

God's definition of death

In Genesis, the Lord God commands Adam not to eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, "for in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die" (2:17b). The serpent was all over that warning, telling the woman, "You will not surely die" (3:4). And the woman saw that the fruit was delightful. She ate it, handed some to Adam, and they didn't "die"; but their eyes were opened, just like the serpent promised. He's batting 2 for 3, it appears: they didn't "die," their eyes were opened, but now what about them becoming like God, knowing good and evil? I spent an hour with my nine-year-old on Genesis 2 and 3 this morning, and it is dawning on me that God's definition of die was completely different than the one the serpent presented to the woman. The temptation he offered her was based on a cunning deception, and his understanding of her desire to be deceived. Just like my nine-year-old sometimes doesn't want to believe the...

behold, a puppy

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The conversations with Jasmine and Margy have been going on for months and months, but taking care of Pouncer and Lucy brought it all to a head: they wanted a dog... badly. And there were lots of good reasons for their argument. Jasmine would benefit from the added responsibility, companionship, and after the dog grows up, protection. A nine-year-old girl in today's world needs some protection if she's going to walk down a street, even a safe midwestern street. On my side, I pointed out all the downside challenges I could think of, knowing that one day each of them would wonder in her heart-of-hearts, "What was I thinking when I said I wanted a dog?!?" I made sure they heard my warnings, but the cry of their hearts was for a dog. Fast forward: adoption day for Esty, our new Brittany, was Thursday the 23rd. Nine weeks old, she's just getting into the gangling puppy stage. Margy and Jasmine were delighted with her. Before the sun had set, she had my heart, too. Jasm...

revisiting church

Mark Driscoll is a prophetic voice in the church today, and when he was asked to speak on his view of the church at Advance 09 early this month, it was a powerful message that should be widely heard. I offer it here for your edification. Blessings!

I hear his voice

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Fifty-three weeks ago I was sitting in this same place. I'm listening to Misty Edwards sing praises to the Lord in the way that only she can. It's the conclusion--as it was last year--to a wonderful time of listening and cleansing. Margy and I have taken a few days to break away from the hubbub of our lives to be quiet for awhile. The theme of this set-aside time has been humility. It started out for Margy with a week by Lura Lake in her father's camper reading Madame Guyon 's devotional classic, Experiencing the Depths of Jesus Christ . Then I had the urge to download some audio books from Librivox and ran into Andrew Murray 's version of the same topic, I think: Humilty: The Beauty of Holiness . Take these teachings (revelations, really, if the teaching hasn't fully taken root before) and mix in Mark Driscoll 's priestly rebuke to church leaders in his message " Ministry Idolatry " and you've got the makings of a transformational time at th...

critical thinking in the academy

I'm part of a task force that was asked to start a conversation at Minnesota State University, Mankato, about student learning outcomes. These are my notes and what I submitted. My notes: http://www.sjsu.edu/ugs/docs/GE/Area_A3.doc http://www.sjsu.edu/ugs/assessment/ge/materials/ The following Content Objectives are specific to Area A3 Reasoning about issues appropriate to the subject matter of the course shall also be presented, analyzed, evaluated, and constructed. All critical thinking classes should teach formal and informal methods for determining the validity of deductive reasoning and the strength of inductive reasoning, including a consideration of common fallacies in inductive and deductive reasoning. Courses shall require the use of qualitative reasoning skills orally and for written assignments. Substantial writing assignments are to be integrated with critical thinking instruction. Writing will lead to the production of argumentative essays, with a minimum of 3000 words...

big brother has to start somewhere

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I'm not a conspiracy theorist, but two news article I ran across in the last couple of days make me think the time is getting right for big brother to emerge in our culture. The first one that got my attention was my discovery of a collaboration between Cisco and NASA : it's called Planetary Skin . To see what I mean, watch the video on this page , and notice the expectation that all will agree that pervasive information and control of systems by who knows who is a reasonable goal. Especially interesting is the appearance of the word TRUST near the end of the video; it's not connected to anything in the narration or the video images, it's just there as the last word. And it's being launched on Earth Day in San Francisco, according this this article in Fast Company>> That was sobering, but it took on special significance as I saw an article on cnet that discussed in some detail the similar IBM initiative that was launched earlier this week. Data and analytic...