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Monday, 06 April 2009

  • eat your veggies, read books.

    it (books and veggies) will save your life.  al mohler sez:

    http://almohler.com/blog_read.php?id=3556

    and they (veggies) are supermen in edible form.  they save your life. some trusted pals have joined me on an intrepid journey of which i am too embarrassed to talk about here, but can i just give the final update:  vegetables are as spinach to popeye.

    oh, and did anyone see the cover for last month's times magazine?   "The End of Excess: Is this Crisis Good for America?" hmm....finally catching on are we?  it's taking a global recession for people (both believers and un-) to realize the hand-to-mouth way of life isn't such a bad way to go. i
    n fact, it's healthier. when all is stripped away, can we really see that nothing in this world is meant to satisfy the way the love of Christ indwelling in us is supposed to?  According to Time, this current economic crisis is a...

    "...healthy and necessary part of a vibrant, self-correcting economic system..."

    so the reason this crisis is so great is because it is creatively destructive.  it'll enable us to become a nation of excess once more (which we still mostest definitemostest are) so that we can buy/sell/eat/consume until we can bring ourselves to the brink of financial disaster again.  the american dream livesSSSSSS! (pump fists)

    tongue in cheek. (tongue and cheek?)

    i also have a crazy story about bugs i should put in xanga.  i have 14 bites from an unknown source and the number is climbing everyday.

    edit*: this post makes me sound like a cynic!  i guess it's true to an extent - i'm finding that part of growing up is confronting a lot of disillusionment about the way i used to imagine the world should be. but never fear.  our hope lies elsewhere not of this world  .  anyhow purple cow, maybe it's the mood i'm in, but i suspect my insect entry will be a lot more cheery. 

    edit again*: xanga is becoming my brain dump blog.  i feel a little bit spastic when i write in here.  it's quite fun!   

Sunday, 16 November 2008

  • busyness.
    by C.J. Mahaney 11/12/2008 10:27:00 AM

    Lazy? Not me. I’m busy. Up early, up late. My schedule is filled from beginning to end. I love what I do and I love getting stuff done. I attack a daily to-do list with the same intensity I play basketball. Me lazy? I don’t think so!

    Or at least I didn’t think so. That is, until I read about the difference between busyness and fruitfulness, and realized just how often my busyness was an expression of laziness, not diligence.

    I forget now who first brought these points to my attention. But the realization that I could be simultaneously busy and lazy, that I could be a hectic sluggard, that my busyness was no immunity from laziness, became a life-altering and work-altering insight. What I learned is that:

    • Busyness does not mean I am diligent
    • Busyness does not mean I am faithful
    • Busyness does not mean I am fruitful

    Recognizing the sin of procrastination, and broadening the definition to include busyness, has made a significant alteration in my life. The sluggard can be busy—busy neglecting the most important work, and busy knocking out a to-do list filled with tasks of secondary importance.

    When considering our schedules, we have endless options. But there are a few clear priorities and projects, derived from my God-assigned roles, that should occupy the majority of my time during a given week. And there are a thousand tasks of secondary importance that tempt us to devote a disproportionate amount of time to completing an endless to-do list. And if we are lazy, we will neglect the important for the urgent.

    Our Savior understood priorities. Although his public ministry was shorter than one presidential term, within that time he completed all the works give to him by the Father.

    The Father evidently called him to heal a limited number of people from disease, raise a limited number of bodies from the dead, and preach a limited number of sermons. As Jesus stared into the cup of God’s wrath, he looked back on his life work as complete because he understood the calling of the Father. He was not called to heal everyone, raise everyone, preach copious sermons, or write volumes of books.

    While we must always be extra careful when comparing our responsibilities with Christ’s messianic priorities, in the incarnation he entered into the limitations of human life on this earth.

    So join me over the next few days as we discover the root and nature of laziness, so that we might devote ourselves to biblical priorities and join our Savior in one day praying to the Father, “I glorified you on earth, having accomplished the work that you gave me to do” (John 17:4, ESV).

Tuesday, 11 November 2008

  • dude.

    editing my own papers from college is humbling.
    especially the ones i wrote at the eleventh hour. 
    the arguments don't make logical [or crazy] sense.  i used such wordy words, it reads like i wrote "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz" and just
    thesaurus'ed every other word.  i'm trying to go back and edit some of the papers i wrote to send them out to grad schools along with my apps.

    and it's

    awful.

    and i'm probably exaggerating, but, these papers stink.
    the logic behind each paper is so simple, yet i take forever to get
    to the point. it's like i'm saying, "apples grow on trees, but so do bananas.
    bananas grow in bushels and are green and get yellow when ripe.
    therefore, consequently, per contra, badonkadonk, that's why apples grow on trees."

    tra la laaaaaa. tra lalalalalalaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

    oh, i know why i took 3 pages to explain a one sentence argument!


    because

    i didn't have time

    to think

    of anything else

    to write

    so i

    chose to

    ramble instead.

    hahaha. i think my m.o. was---->confuse professor with many words and repetition and weird logic.  expect A+!!


    ........right-O.

Monday, 27 October 2008

  • dare to be like daniel.

    John Macarthur recently wrote an article on his blog Pulpit Magazine called "Dare to Be Like Daniel."  He talks about Daniel's integrity, refusal to compromise, dedication to maintaining a pure faith.  I thought this was really cool because Tim asked me the other day who my favorite Bible character was.  After thinking about it for a second, I said Daniel.  I think it's definitely true that we often choose people to look up to that we desire to be more like, that we are sometimes most intimidated by those whose strengths are our weaknesses.  Some of the reasons I chose Daniel were: 1) his faith in the strength of the Lord to sustain him, 2) his group of godly friends who were as zealous for God as he was, 3) his prayer life.  But after reading JMac's article, I'd like to add integrity + godly persistence on the list too.

    Daniel is one cool man. 

Saturday, 19 January 2008

  • trends 2007-2008.



    1) digital photography: mm...more of like an ongoing trend. more people seem to be taking it up as a serious hobby.
    2) 1950s entertainment: dangerous book for boys, daring book for girls, deceptively delicious [cookbook], audrey hepburn [life magazine tribute]
    3) musicals: high school musical 1 + 2, wicked, jersey boys, etc.
    4) museums: balboa park, body exhibit, dead sea scrolls, art galleries <these count...>
    5) gerber daisies: a cute and colorful birthday and "thinking of you" flowers.
    6) "resolutions": at least a lot of the people i've talked to have mentioned making resolutions based off of things that they've already working on rather than discrete goals for the year.
    7) ibm laptops: apple too, but i feel like that's not really a trend more than it is domination. haha. anywho, lots of close buds and church friends have one of these.
    8) wii: rockband, wii tennis.

    i know there's so much more: food, clothing, movie, music, etc. a lot come to mind, but none that are specific to the year 2007 and the little of 2008 come to mind. strange to think that a year from now, some of these trends might stay, but most likely there will be a lot more new ones.  i didnt bother putting up fashion/interior design things up because those fluctuate/recycle more than the usual trend.

    change, change, change. its comforting to know that we stand on something a lot more lasting--that is, Christ and His gospel [you knew it was coming].

    ps: can you think of any more? i really tried to think of good ones, but i came out emptyhanded.

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i_sTeP_a_LiL_FuNnY

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