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	<title>Blind Faith</title>
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	<description>A weekly devotional thought, written by a blind minister.</description>
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		<title>Just the Right Time</title>
		<link>http://edski52.wordpress.com/2008/09/14/just-the-right-time/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Sep 2008 21:54:02 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Religion]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Blind Faith (No. 37, 2008) Did you ever wonder why God did all those things recorded in the Bible so long ago, and not today? After all, instant news coverage and mass media of all kinds can get the word out worldwide in a flash, these days. But, consider the problems God avoided by calling [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=edski52.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2628241&amp;post=49&amp;subd=edski52&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Blind Faith</strong>  (No. 37, 2008)</p>
<p>	Did you ever wonder why God did all those things recorded in the Bible so long ago, and not today?  After all, instant news coverage and mass media of all kinds can get the word out worldwide in a flash, these days.  But, consider the problems God avoided by calling Noah when he did, instead of in the fictional, contemporized setting posed in an e-mail message I received recently:</p>
<p>
<blockquote>NOAH<br />
      In the year 2008, the Lord came unto Noah, who was now living in the United States, and said, &#8220;Once again, the earth has become wicked and overpopulated, and I see the end of all flesh before me. Build another Ark and save 2 of every living thing along with a few good humans.&#8221; He gave Noah the blueprints, saying, &#8220;You have 6 months to build the Ark before I will start the unending rain for 40 days and 40 nights.&#8221;<br />
      Six months later, the Lord looked down and saw Noah weeping in his yard &#8211; but no Ark. &#8220;Noah!&#8221; He roared, &#8220;I&#8217;m about to start the rain! Where is the Ark?&#8221;<br />
      &#8220;Forgive me, Lord,&#8221; begged Noah, &#8220;but things have changed. I needed a building permit. I&#8217;ve been arguing with the inspector about the need for a sprinkler system. My neighbors claim that I&#8217;ve violated the neighborhood zoning laws by building the Ark in my yard and exceeding the height limitations. We had to go to the Development Appeal Board for a decision. Then the Department of Transportation demanded a bond be posted for the future costs of moving power lines and other overhead obstructions to clear the passage for the Ark&#8217;s move to the sea. I told them that the sea would be coming to us, but they would hear nothing of it. Getting the wood was another problem. There&#8217;s a ban on cutting local trees in order to save the spotted owl. I tried to convince the environmentalists that I needed the wood to save the owls &#8211; but <i>NO GO!</i> When I started gathering the animals, an animal rights group sued me. They insisted that I was confining wild animals against their will. They argued the accommodations were too restrictive, and it was cruel and inhumane to put so many animals in a confined space. Then the EPA ruled that I couldn&#8217;t build the Ark until they&#8217;d conducted an environmental impact study on your proposed flood. I&#8217;m still trying to resolve a complaint with the Human Rights Commission on how many minorities I&#8217;m supposed to hire for my building crew. Immigration and Naturalization are checking the green-card status of most of the people who want to work. The trades unions say I can&#8217;t use my sons. They insist I have to hire only Union workers with Ark-building experience. To make matters worse, the IRS seized all my assets, claiming I&#8217;m trying to leave the country illegally with endangered species. So, forgive me, Lord, but it would take at least 10 years for me to finish this Ark.&#8221;<br />
      Suddenly the skies cleared, the sun began to shine, and a rainbow stretched across the sky. Noah looked up in wonder and asked, &#8220;You mean you&#8217;re not going to destroy the world?&#8221;<br />
      &#8220;No,&#8221; said the Lord. &#8220;The government beat me to it.&#8221;<br />
		(Author unknown)</p></blockquote>
<p>Looks like God&#8217;s timing was just right, all along!</p>
<p>	God always does his work at just the right time.  Creation occurred at just the right time.  God&#8217;s salvation of Noah and all humankind through him happened at just the right time.  Moses broke the bonds of slavery for God&#8217;s people and led them on their journey to the home God promised, at just the right time.  God&#8217;s most loving and gracious work through Jesus Christ came at just the right time.</p>
<p>	A recurring theme of Sunday School and Sunday evening Training Union lessons as I was growing up &#8211; perhaps as you were growing up, too &#8211; was God&#8217;s perfect timing for revealing himself to mankind.  We studied the history of the patriarchs (Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and their descendents), the kings of Israel (Saul, David, Solomon, and the monarchs of the divided kingdoms of Israel and Judah), and the prophets.  In each era, God&#8217;s people were presented with new insights into God&#8217;s love, justice, mercy, and care.  God continually revealed himself, as much of himself as people were able to comprehend.  Then, we learned, God did something brand new, just when human conditions were best ready to receive his most complete, personal revelation.  In what would become known as the first century B.C., areas we call Europe, Asia, and Africa were united as never before by the power of the Roman Empire.  Pax Romana, the Roman peace, quelled previously incessant wars of conquest in large areas of three continents.  Earlier conquests by Alexander the Great had brought a common language, Greek, to much of those lands.  The use of Greek was so universal that the most widely read version of the Hebrew scriptures (our Old Testament) was the Greek translation, the Septuagint.  Trade and commerce flourished, and roads and shipping made travel all over the world, from Brittan, to India, to Ethiopia much easier than any time before.  So, we learned, at just the right time Jesus was born into the world.</p>
<p>	One Bible verse was paramount for teaching that Jesus was born at the right time in history: &#8221; You see, at just the right time, when we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly.&#8221; (Romans 5:6 NIV)  Certainly, the Roman world facilitated followers of Jesus taking the good news of his love and grace across major distances in the years immediately after his earthly ministry.  It was the right historical, chronological time for God to reveal himself through his Son, Jesus Christ.</p>
<p>	But God acts at a far more important &#8220;just right&#8221; time for each of us.  The Greek word for <i>time</i> in Romans 5:6 does not refer to time on the calendar, but to time that is ripe and bursting with meaning and possibilities (Greek &#8211; <i>kiros</i>).  It is, indeed, &#8220;just right&#8221; time for each person who encounters the subject, Jesus, regardless of the time in history.  Another contemporary translation, with a couple of verses added to the context, indicates clearly that what God did through Jesus always comes to each of us today at just the right time, when we need him most: &#8221; Since we have been made right with God by our faith, we have peace with God. This happened through our Lord Jesus Christ, {2} who has brought us into that blessing of God&#8217;s grace that we now enjoy. And we are happy because of the hope we have of sharing God&#8217;s glory&#8230;. {6} When we were unable to help ourselves, at the moment of our need, Christ died for us, although we were living against God.&#8221; (Romans 5:1-2, 6 NCV)  We encounter today the same Jesus who rose from the dead 2000 years ago, historically, and he is with us in the moment of our most intense need, whenever that may occur for each of us.</p>
<p>	God&#8217;s timely presence through time was stated well in a Psalm written almost 3,000 years ago: &#8221; I know the LORD is always with me. I will not be shaken, for he is right beside me. {9} No wonder my heart is filled with joy, and my mouth shouts his praises! My body rests in safety.&#8221; (Psalm 16:8-9 NLT)</p>
<p>	What time is it in your life?  What do you need, right now? God is always at work, revealing himself in the marvels of creation, in obedient love and service of his faithful people, and in the written and living Word, the Bible and the eternal Son, Jesus Christ, and what he can do in your life.  Not even government red tape can thwart God&#8217;s grace, which is just right for you, right now!</p>
<p>	- J. Edward Culpepper, Ph.D.</p>
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		<title>Like a Stunned Hummingbird</title>
		<link>http://edski52.wordpress.com/2008/09/04/like-a-stunned-hummingbird/</link>
		<comments>http://edski52.wordpress.com/2008/09/04/like-a-stunned-hummingbird/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 05 Sep 2008 02:14:01 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Religion]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Blind Faith (No. 36, 2008) Another bird-on-deck parable: When my wife, Sherron, and I had our deck built, we replaced large floor-to-ceiling double windows with a triple-wide patio door leading onto the deck. The expanse of glass both floods the den with natural light and offers a broad view of the deck and sights beyond. [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=edski52.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2628241&amp;post=47&amp;subd=edski52&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Blind Faith</strong>  (No. 36, 2008)</p>
<p>	Another bird-on-deck parable:</p>
<p>	When my wife, Sherron, and I had our deck built, we replaced </p>
<p>large floor-to-ceiling double windows with a triple-wide patio door </p>
<p>leading onto the deck.  The expanse of glass both floods the den with </p>
<p>natural light and offers a broad view of the deck and sights beyond.  A </p>
<p>pleasant feature right outside the window on the deck is a potted </p>
<p>salvia plant.  We always have salvia there, because its brilliant red </p>
<p>blossoms are favorite feeding stops for hummingbirds.  Elsewhere in the </p>
<p>yard, we have tree-form hibiscus plants, with double crimson blossoms </p>
<p>that also are natural hummingbird diners.  As a result, we get to enjoy </p>
<p>frequent visits by hummingbirds with different patterns of coloration.  </p>
<p>Our favorites are the ones with green feathers on their backs, black </p>
<p>wings and heads, and gray across the breast.  Sherron is always excited </p>
<p>to report visits by hummingbirds to the salvia, clearly observable from </p>
<p>the den, as they hover amazingly for their in-flight draughts of </p>
<p>nectar.  We have even been buzzed a time or two by hummingbirds when we </p>
<p>were outside, apparently at their mealtime.</p>
<p>	Last Sunday, we were finishing cups of coffee after lunch when </p>
<p>Sherron spotted a hummingbird at the salvia, letting me know that we </p>
<p>had a visitor.  Just a couple of minutes later, we heard a sharp THUD </p>
<p>against the glass of the patio door.  &#8220;What was that, the hummingbird?&#8221; </p>
<p>I asked.  Sherron got up from her chair across the den from the door, </p>
<p>and looked out mere inches from the glass.  &#8220;O, my!  Yes!&#8221; she said.  A </p>
<p>hummingbird lay sprawled out on the deck, lying on its back, its wings </p>
<p>extended and its head skewed at an unnatural angle to its body.  Its </p>
<p>tail feathers twitched erratically, either blown by gusts of wind on </p>
<p>the breezy afternoon, or involuntarily as the little bird lay in </p>
<p>obvious distress.  &#8220;I think its neck is broken,&#8221; Sherron said. &#8220;What </p>
<p>should we do?&#8221;  Although I love hummingbirds, I was not anxious to </p>
<p>incur the expense of neurosurgery and NICU veterinary care for our </p>
<p>visitor, nor did I want to make its condition worse by moving the at-</p>
<p>least-dazed bird.  &#8220;Let&#8217;s give it some time,&#8221; I replied, &#8220;and see what </p>
<p>becomes of it.&#8221;</p>
<p>	Sherron noted the time of impact.  She went out onto the deck </p>
<p>through the door in the kitchen to water other plants on the deck.  </p>
<p>While on the deck, she took a long, close look at the motionless </p>
<p>hummingbird.  From the stairs of the deck, she could see the probable </p>
<p>cause of the hummingbird&#8217;s catastrophic collision.  The early afternoon </p>
<p>light caused the door glass to reflect the deck and the sky with mirror </p>
<p>clarity.  She could not see into the den from outside.  Apparently, the </p>
<p>hummingbird had drunk its fill at the salvia, then assumed it was </p>
<p>taking a perfectly clear flight path &#8212; right into the door glass, with </p>
<p>disastrous results.</p>
<p>	Stepping back into the kitchen, Sherron  walked to the den for </p>
<p>another vantage point.  To her surprise, the hummingbird had begun to </p>
<p>move its head back and forth to one side, and to move its wing on that </p>
<p>side.  She returned to the kitchen to warm another cup of coffee for 90 </p>
<p>seconds in the microwave.  When she returned to the den, the </p>
<p>hummingbird was sitting up on its feet!  It turned its head tenuously </p>
<p>side to side.  It fluttered its wings, although it did not take flight </p>
<p>or lift from its perch on the deck floor.  The tiny bird simply sat for </p>
<p>about five minutes, seemingly trying to regain its wits.  Occasionally, </p>
<p>it would look quickly  to either side.  Then, twenty five minutes after </p>
<p>the unsettling collision, the hummingbird took a hop, its wings beating </p>
<p>at blurring speed, and it fluttered and flew away!  Sherron said that </p>
<p>she had committed the hapless bird into God&#8217;s care some time </p>
<p>before.</p>
<p>	Hear the parable of the stunned hummingbird.  It is not </p>
<p>intended to be an allegory, in which each element in the story stands </p>
<p>for some feature of the readers&#8217; lives.  Allegorical interpretations </p>
<p>are applied to almost all parables, but the entirety of the story in </p>
<p>the parable is often the most powerful message.</p>
<p>	Our hummingbird suffered its injury through no faulty judgment </p>
<p>or misconduct.  It apparently saw what looked like a perfectly safe </p>
<p>path to fly on its way to another feeding flower, or perhaps back home </p>
<p>after a satisfying meal.  But the image of open sky concealed the </p>
<p>unyielding glass, and its natural flight speed created an impact that </p>
<p>left the beautiful hummingbird stunned and utterly helpless.  </p>
<p>Fortunately, God so gifted living things with regenerative energies and </p>
<p>abilities, that after a period of anxious rest, the diminutive bird </p>
<p>resumed its wondrous hovering and flitting flight.</p>
<p>	Sometimes, calamities happen in our lives that have no ill-</p>
<p>intention, whatsoever, as their cause.  No malice, no negligence, no </p>
<p>self-serving ambition, no animosity, no lapse in judgment creates the </p>
<p>catastrophe, it just happens.  We may be left stunned, disoriented, </p>
<p>disabled, or worse.  We wonder if we can survive.  Thanks be to God, we </p>
<p>may find that some quiet moments in God&#8217;s care allow new possibilities </p>
<p>to regenerate, and our lives can resume.<br />
	A Psalm of David &#8211; who was afflicted both by trouble of his own </p>
<p>making, the ill intentions of others, and some things that just </p>
<p>happened &#8211; testifies to the secret to regaining life in the face of </p>
<p>disaster.  David wrote of the need to simply sit still in God&#8217;s care </p>
<p>for awhile: &#8221; God is our protection and our strength. He always helps </p>
<p>in times of trouble. {2} So we will not be afraid even if the earth </p>
<p>shakes, or the mountains fall into the sea, {3} even if the oceans roar </p>
<p>and foam, or the mountains shake at the raging sea&#8230;. {10} God says, </p>
<p>&#8216;Be quiet and know that I am God&#8230;.&#8217; {11} The LORD All-Powerful is </p>
<p>with us; the God of Jacob is our defender.&#8221; (Psalm 46:1-3, 10a, 11 NCV) </p>
<p> Our hearts may race anxiously as we try to sit still in God&#8217;s care and </p>
<p>trust his design and grace to restore us, but his record of restoration </p>
<p>is proven.</p>
<p>	Of course, many disasters happen due to our own wayward </p>
<p>schemes.  In the cartoons, Wile E. Coyote schemed to catch Road Runner </p>
<p>by painting an apparent railroad tunnel on the side of a rock cliff.  </p>
<p>Coyote would lay railroad tracks leading to the rock face, expecting </p>
<p>Road Runner to come speeding along the tracks, smashing into the image </p>
<p>of the railroad tunnel.  What happened most often, however, was that </p>
<p>Wile E. Coyote would chase Road Runner along the bogus tracks, </p>
<p>forgetting that the tunnel was just a painted image, and smash in to </p>
<p>the rock himself.  Or, he would think he had Road Runner cornered </p>
<p>against the rock face, only to have a locomotive emerge from a real </p>
<p>tunnel and flatten him on the tracks.  Sometimes, we set the stage for </p>
<p>our own catastrophes.</p>
<p>      We are instructed in the scriptures to do all we can to avoid </p>
<p>getting ourselves into calamitous situations we can avoid.  Paul </p>
<p>cautions followers of Jesus to wake up, to be alert, to realize that </p>
<p>dangers lurk around us, especially endangering our living consistent </p>
<p>lives that display the love and grace of Christ.  He writes, &#8221; Watch </p>
<p>your step. Use your head. Make the most of every chance you get. These </p>
<p>are desperate times! Don&#8217;t live carelessly, unthinkingly. Make sure you </p>
<p>understand what the Master wants. (Ephesians 5:15-17, <i>The </p>
<p>Message</i>)  God&#8217;s quiet care is always available, even when we get </p>
<p>ourselves into a jam.  His intention for us, though, is to be attuned </p>
<p>to his way of love and grace, and to make every effort to stay out of </p>
<p>trouble.</p>
<p>      Have you crashed and burned?  Did it just happen to you, in </p>
<p>spite of your best judgment and intentions?  Or, did you set yourself </p>
<p>up for disaster?  In either case, the most powerful restorative answer </p>
<p>comes from Psalm 46: &#8220;Be still, and know that I am God.&#8221;  Resting </p>
<p>awhile in his care may be exactly what you need to put you back on your </p>
<p>wings.</p>
<p>J. Edward Culpepper, Ph.D.</p>
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		<title>Thoroughly Vetted Faith</title>
		<link>http://edski52.wordpress.com/2008/08/28/thoroughly-vetted-faith/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 14:59:31 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Religion]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Blind Faith (No. 35, 2008) Everyone these days, from candidates for President and Vice- President to judicial appointees to school teachers are subjected to vetting, although almost no one had heard of the process a couple of years ago. Now, everyone and everything must be thoroughly vetted before any decision or action can proceed. Similar [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=edski52.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2628241&amp;post=45&amp;subd=edski52&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Blind Faith</strong>  (No. 35, 2008)</p>
<p>      Everyone these days,  from candidates for President and Vice-</p>
<p>President to judicial appointees to school teachers are subjected to </p>
<p>vetting, although almost no one had heard of the process a couple of </p>
<p>years ago.  Now, everyone and everything must be thoroughly vetted </p>
<p>before any decision or action can proceed.  Similar processes have been </p>
<p>occurring all along, but the term, <i>vetting</i>, seems to have </p>
<p>emerged as a word of the decade in recent years.</p>
<p>      I was curious about where the term, <i>vetting</i>, came from. </p>
<p> Merriam-Webster reports that the first appearance of the word in print </p>
<p>occurred in 1891, so it is not just a recent invention of political </p>
<p>pundits or security operatives.  Wikipedia explains that &#8220;&#8216;to vet&#8217; was </p>
<p>originally a horse-racing term, referring to the requirement that a </p>
<p>horse be checked for health and soundness by a </p>
<p><i><strong>vet&lt;/strong</i>&gt;erinarian before being allowed to race. </p>
<p>Thus, it has taken the general meaning &#8216;to check.&#8217;&#8221;  Vetting in </p>
<p>journalism is done by fact-checkers to assure that assertions made in </p>
<p>print are correct.  Software is vetted during development to verify </p>
<p>that the code is error-free, and that the program performs according to </p>
<p>specifications.  Stocks, bonds, and other financial securities are </p>
<p>vetted prior to committing capital to an investment.  Intelligence </p>
<p>assets are vetted to determine their reliability and usefulness.  An </p>
<p>employee may be vetted before a firm job offer is extended.  And, of </p>
<p>course, candidates at all levels of political life should be thoroughly </p>
<p>vetted before they are selected for office.  In each case, the subject </p>
<p>is evaluated for possible approval or acceptance.</p>
<p>      Another plausible etymology for <i>vetting</i> proposes its </p>
<p>root as the Latin verb, <i>vetare</i>, &#8220;to forbid.&#8221;  The contemporary </p>
<p>usage of <i>vetting</i> in this sense refers to thoroughly </p>
<p>investigating a subject and having an opportunity to veto a decision </p>
<p>before it is finalized.  Although the notion corresponds well with many </p>
<p>applications of vetting , evidence is scant to support this derivation. </p>
<p> This etymology simply cannot be positively vetted!</p>
<p>	Deciding to live as a follower of Jesus is a matter of utmost </p>
<p>importance.  The New Testament says again and again that it is a life-</p>
<p>or-death (or eternal-life-or-death)  matter.  It is a decision that </p>
<p>should be thoroughly vetted.  Part of the process is on our side, </p>
<p>deciding that the claims and promises of Christ are worthy of our total </p>
<p>commitment.  The other side of the process belongs entirely to God, </p>
<p>who, alone, is in any position to measure our response to his </p>
<p>grace.</p>
<p>	Vetting the claim of Christ on our lives draws on an abundant </p>
<p>supply of credible witnesses.  Jesus, himself, offered complete </p>
<p>transparency for his disciples to vet him for faith.  He told them </p>
<p>during a time of severe criticism from religious leaders opposing him, </p>
<p>&#8221; Don&#8217;t you believe that I am in the Father and the Father is in me? </p>
<p>The words I say are not my own, but my Father who lives in me does his </p>
<p>work through me. {11} Just believe that I am in the Father and the </p>
<p>Father is in me. Or at least believe because of what you have seen me </p>
<p>do.&#8221; (John 14:10-11 NLT)  Jesus appealed to the disciples&#8217; first-hand </p>
<p>experiences of his words and deeds to authenticate who he was and why </p>
<p>he was worthy of their faith.  Peter also cites Jesus&#8217; public ministry </p>
<p>to vet him for the crowd at Pentecost: &#8220;People of Israel, listen! God </p>
<p>publicly endorsed Jesus of Nazareth by doing wonderful miracles, </p>
<p>wonders, and signs through him, as you well know&#8230;. This prophecy was </p>
<p>speaking of Jesus, whom God raised from the dead, and we all are </p>
<p>witnesses of this&#8230;. So let it be clearly known by everyone in Israel </p>
<p>that God has made this Jesus whom you crucified to be both Lord and </p>
<p>Messiah!&#8221; (Acts 2:22, 32, 36 NLT)  Other witnesses provide documentary </p>
<p>support and eyewitness accounts to verify Jesus&#8217; qualification as Lord </p>
<p>and Savior.  Paul submitted this report: &#8221; I passed on to you what I </p>
<p>received, of which this was most important: that Christ died for our </p>
<p>sins, as the Scriptures say; {4} that he was buried and was raised to </p>
<p>life on the third day as the Scriptures say; {5} and that he was seen </p>
<p>by Peter and then by the twelve apostles. {6} After that, Jesus was </p>
<p>seen by more than five hundred of the believers at the same time. Most </p>
<p>of them are still living today, but some have died. {7} Then he was </p>
<p>seen by James and later by all the apostles. {8} Last of all he was </p>
<p>seen by me&#8230;.&#8221; (1 Corinthians 15:3-8a NCV)  The strongest vetting </p>
<p>sources are the people who know the subject best.  John, the &#8220;Beloved </p>
<p>Disciple,&#8221; certainly was one of Jesus&#8217; closest associates, and he </p>
<p>openly presents the facts of who Jesus was and the significance of who </p>
<p>he is: &#8221; The one who existed from the beginning is the one we have </p>
<p>heard and seen. We saw him with our own eyes and touched him with our </p>
<p>own hands. He is Jesus Christ, the Word of life. {2} This one who is </p>
<p>life from God was shown to us, and we have seen him. And now we testify </p>
<p>and announce to you that he is the one who is eternal life. He was with </p>
<p>the Father, and then he was shown to us. {3} We are telling you about </p>
<p>what we ourselves have actually seen and heard, so that you may have </p>
<p>fellowship with us. And our fellowship is with the Father and with his </p>
<p>Son, Jesus Christ.&#8221; (1 John 1:1-3 NLT)  John&#8217;s more complete report is </p>
<p>available in the gospel that bears his name.  Book after New Testament </p>
<p>book vets Jesus as the only one deserving our total commitment, as well </p>
<p>as detailing the cost-benefit analysis of surrendering our lives to </p>
<p>him.</p>
<p>	We may remain tentative &#8211; some might say fickle &#8211; about our </p>
<p>commitment to Christ as we continue to vet him.  Doubts and questions </p>
<p>may cloud our side of the vetting process.  God&#8217;s side of the process, </p>
<p>however, is always crystal clear.  His vetting of us is supremely </p>
<p>important, and only God does it with perfect justice, combined with </p>
<p>grace and love.  God&#8217;s vetting of us is always for the purpose of </p>
<p>leading us to eternal, right, loving relationship with himself.  David </p>
<p>welcomed God&#8217;s vetting, and faithfully sought its intended result: &#8221; </p>
<p>Investigate my life, O God, find out everything about me; cross-examine </p>
<p>and test me, get a clear picture of what I&#8217;m about; See for yourself </p>
<p>whether I&#8217;ve done anything wrong — then guide me on the road to eternal </p>
<p>life.&#8221; (Psalm 139:23-24, <i>The Message</i>)  Our most pervasive </p>
<p>departure from God&#8217;s way is to assume that we can manage to save </p>
<p>ourselves on our own terms.  God&#8217;s examination lays such designs bare, </p>
<p>guiding us away from our own hubris to the only authentic saving faith </p>
<p>in Jesus Christ.  True faith seeks God&#8217;s vetting and his veto before we </p>
<p>fall prey to our own misplaced confidence in ourselves.  Paul sought </p>
<p>God&#8217;s vetting in this sense: &#8221; God forbid that I should boast except in </p>
<p>the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world has been </p>
<p>crucified to me, and I to the world.&#8221; (Galatians 6:14 NKJV)  Those </p>
<p>words inspired one of Isaac Watts&#8217; most cherished hymns, <i>When I </p>
<p>Survey the Wondrous Cross</i>.  Written in 1709, almost two centuries </p>
<p>before anyone wrote about vetting, verses 2 and 4 of the hymn </p>
<p>magnificently express a desire for God&#8217;s careful examination of our </p>
<p>faith, and the faithful relationship to which we should aspire:</p>
<p>
<blockquote>      Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast, Save in the </p>
<p>death of Christ my God:<br />
      All the vain things that charm me most, I sacrifice them to his </p>
<p>blood.<br />
      Were the whole realm of nature mine, That were a present far too </p>
<p>small;<br />
      Love so amazing, so divine, Demands my soul, my life, my all.<br />
      (Isaac Watts, <i>When I Survey the Wondrous Cross</i>, 1709)</p>
</blockquote>
<p>	How well will your faith stand thorough vetting?  If you have </p>
<p>questions or doubts about God&#8217;s love demonstrated in Jesus Christ, </p>
<p>consult the documentary reports in the Bible, or talk with someone who </p>
<p>has both done the research and has personal experience as a faithful </p>
<p>follower of Jesus.  What will vetting by God&#8217;s Spirit reveal about your </p>
<p>faith, your actions, your attitudes, your life?  Allow God to guide you </p>
<p>in the only way to authentic life, faith in Jesus Christ.</p>
<p>- J. Edward Culpepper, Ph.D.</p>
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		<title>100!</title>
		<link>http://edski52.wordpress.com/2008/08/21/100/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Aug 2008 14:20:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>edski52</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Religion]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Blind Faith (No. 34, 2008) Permit me a moment of celebration. This week&#8217;s Blind Faith is the 100th episode of the weekly devotional series! I am thankful for fellow Sunday School members who were the first readers. I am humbled by others who have subscribed after receiving forwarded e -mail devotionals. I continue to be [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=edski52.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2628241&amp;post=43&amp;subd=edski52&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Blind Faith</strong>  (No. 34, 2008)</p>
<p>	Permit me a moment of celebration.  This week&#8217;s <i>Blind </p>
<p>Faith</i> is the 100th episode of the weekly devotional series!  I am </p>
<p>thankful for fellow Sunday School members who were the first readers.  </p>
<p>I am humbled by others who have subscribed after receiving forwarded e</p>
<p>-mail devotionals.  I continue to be eager to hear from you, as you </p>
<p>have inspirational thoughts to share, or issues concerning following </p>
<p>Jesus in today&#8217;s world, or questions about what the Bible has to say to </p>
<p>a contemporary situation or in a particular passage.  I continue to </p>
<p>pray that God will direct my writing and that he will use these </p>
<p>devotionals to draw you closer to Christ, fellow believers, and other </p>
<p>people.</p>
<p>	If <i>Blind Faith</i> was a TV show, reaching the 100th episode </p>
<p>would mean that it would be generally marketable for syndication.  </p>
<p>Instead of being broadcast by only the original network, syndicated </p>
<p>shows may be aired by multiple channels, at all times of the day and </p>
<p>night.  Some syndicated shows are rerun so many times that many viewers </p>
<p>can identify the next lines of dialog and the plot of the episode from </p>
<p>any three or four words they might hear.  Somehow, I don&#8217;t think that </p>
<p>will ever be the case with episodes of <i>Blind Faith</i>!  So far, no </p>
<p>reruns of my words have appeared in this space, although several </p>
<p>favorite Bible passages have been repeated.</p>
<p>	Such things as key Bible passages <strong>should</strong> be </p>
<p>rerun until they are easily brought back to mind.  A regular part of </p>
<p>the curriculum in English when I was in elementary school was </p>
<p>memorizing classic poetry.  Two poems that everyone learned were Psalm </p>
<p>23 and Psalm 100.  I honestly do not recall the psalms being taught in </p>
<p>the school classroom as they might have been treated in Sunday School.  </p>
<p>No elementary education was thought to be complete without learning </p>
<p>these and other ancient poems.  Knowing them was considered every bit </p>
<p>as important as knowing the mythological Greek and Roman pantheons.  </p>
<p>Once upon those times, almost everyone could recite Psalm 100 upon </p>
<p>request.</p>
<p>	In celebration of 100 <i>Blind Faith</i> devotionals, Psalm 100 </p>
<p>seems especially appropriate.  First try to recall the psalm in the </p>
<p>familiar King James Version.  (Can you do it without looking at the </p>
<p>page?)  Then we will ponder what it says:</p>
<p>
<blockquote>Make a joyful noise unto the LORD, all ye lands.<br />
      Serve the LORD with gladness: come before his presence with </p>
<p>singing.<br />
      Know ye that the LORD he is God: it is he that hath made us, and </p>
<p>not we ourselves;<br />
      We are his people, and the sheep of his pasture.<br />
      Enter into his gates with thanksgiving, and into his courts with </p>
<p>praise:<br />
      Be thankful unto him, and bless his name.<br />
      For the LORD is good; his mercy is everlasting; and his truth </p>
<p>endureth to all generations.<br />
	(Psalm 100 KJV)</p></blockquote>
<p>(Could you recite it?  Why not refresh it in your memory right </p>
<p>now?)</p>
<p>	Psalm 100 is a marvelous song of celebration for God&#8217;s merciful </p>
<p>care and grace.  Shouting for joy is a universal human response when we </p>
<p>experience thrilling surprises, or exciting victories, or happy </p>
<p>discoveries.  Singing adds to the expression of joy.  Psalm 100 reminds </p>
<p>us that God&#8217;s perfect goodness and his gifts of loving care are </p>
<p>continual reasons for bursting forth with shouts and songs of </p>
<p>thanksgiving and celebration.  When we remember that we are not self-</p>
<p>made men and women, but everyone of us is God-made, our joyful praise </p>
<p>becomes rightly directed to God, and may not degenerate into blowing </p>
<p>our own horns.  As James reminds us, &#8221; Whatever is good and perfect </p>
<p>comes to us from God above.&#8221; (James 1:17a NLT)  So every good thing </p>
<p>that happens today and every day is a loving gift from God, and is </p>
<p>deserving of our happy shouts of thanks an a never-ending song in our </p>
<p>hearts, praising God.  Whether the gift is an opportunity to write </p>
<p>something others may read and thus think more about God, or if it is </p>
<p>some simple joy of sharing life with family or friends, or if it is a </p>
<p>happy sense of accomplishment of some task, we have ample reasons for </p>
<p>singing a song like Psalm 100 to God.</p>
<p>	While I love the grand language of the King James Version of </p>
<p>Psalm 100, modern translations help to connect the psalm a bit more </p>
<p>naturally to my daily experiences.  If I consistently cultivate the </p>
<p>attitude toward God, myself, and life in general expressed in the </p>
<p>modern God&#8217;s Word Translation (God&#8217;s Word to the Nations Bible Society, </p>
<p>1995) of Psalm 100, I could become a closer follower of Jesus and a </p>
<p>better friend to everyone around me:</p>
<p>
<blockquote>Shout happily to the LORD, all the earth.<br />
      Serve the LORD cheerfully. Come into his presence with a joyful </p>
<p>song.<br />
      Realize that the LORD alone is God. He made us, and we are his.<br />
      We are his people and the sheep in his care.<br />
Enter his gates with a song of thanksgiving. Come into his courtyards </p>
<p>with a song of praise.<br />
      Give thanks to him; praise his name.<br />
The LORD is good. His mercy endures forever. His faithfulness endures </p>
<p>throughout every generation.<br />
      (Psalm 100 GWT)</p></blockquote>
<p>	No matter what kind of day you may be having, remember that </p>
<p>everything good that happens is God&#8217;s gift of love for you.  Singing a </p>
<p>happy song and thanking God for his good care can change your </p>
<p>perspective on the day.  The psalm reminds us to fill each day with </p>
<p>service, worship, thanksgiving, truth, joy, faith, and humility.  A </p>
<p>life filled with those attributes calls for a celebration!</p>
<p>J. Edward Culpepper, Ph.D.</p>
<p>P.S. Thanks for continuing to read and forward <i>Blind Faith</i>.  </p>
<p>Thank you, God, for each reader, and for the opportunity each week to </p>
<p>write.</p>
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		<title>Start Strong, Finish Strong</title>
		<link>http://edski52.wordpress.com/2008/08/14/start-strong-finish-strong/</link>
		<comments>http://edski52.wordpress.com/2008/08/14/start-strong-finish-strong/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Aug 2008 14:26:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>edski52</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Religion]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Blind Faith (No. 33, 2008) &#8220;Start strong, finish strong.&#8221; Applications of that sage advice appear in fields as diverse as sports, weight control programs, public speaking, creative and technical writing, and many others. Amazing sprints to the finish in this year&#8217;s Olympic races have won gold medals by hundredths of a second. Intense desire to [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=edski52.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2628241&amp;post=41&amp;subd=edski52&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Blind Faith</strong>  (No. 33, 2008)</p>
<p>	&#8220;<i>Start strong, finish strong</i>.&#8221;  Applications of that </p>
<p>sage advice appear in fields as diverse as sports, weight control </p>
<p>programs, public speaking, creative and technical writing, and many </p>
<p>others.  Amazing sprints to the finish in this year&#8217;s Olympic races </p>
<p>have won gold medals by hundredths of a second.  Intense desire to win, </p>
<p>or to bring a project to a successful conclusion often fuels a strong </p>
<p>finish, but getting off to a strong start can be more difficult to </p>
<p>achieve.</p>
<p>	When Snoopy sat at his typewriter to begin another novel, he </p>
<p>always began with the cliché` worst-opening-line for a book, &#8220;It was a </p>
<p>dark and stormy night&#8230;.&#8221;  The line is the actual beginning of  the </p>
<p>1830 novel, <i>Paul Clifford</i>, by British novelist Edward George </p>
<p>Earl Bulwer-Lytton.  His first paragraph has become infamous for </p>
<p>exemplifying florid, ostentatious, self-contradictory writing.  Its </p>
<p>reputation became so widespread that it inspired professors in the </p>
<p>English Department of San Jose University  in 1982 to launch an </p>
<p>international literary parody competition, the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction </p>
<p>Contest.  Entrants are asked to submit bad opening lines to imaginary </p>
<p>novels.  Although Bulwer-Lytton also wrote <i>The Last Days of </p>
<p>Pompeii</i> (made into a movie three times), and originated phrases </p>
<p>such as &#8220;the pen is mightier than the sword&#8221; and &#8220;almighty dollar,&#8221; his </p>
<p>place as a cultural icon is secured by the satirical contest and that </p>
<p>almost never credited opening line, &#8220;It was a dark and stormy </p>
<p>night&#8230;.&#8221;</p>
<p>	Far more positive accolades have enshrined the opening lines of </p>
<p>Charles Dickens <i>A Tale of Two Cities</i> as paragons of how to start </p>
<p>a novel: &#8220;It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.&#8221;  </p>
<p>Dickens (a contemporary of Bulwer-Lytton) goes on to construct a </p>
<p>paragraph deftly foreshadowing the themes of oppression and freedom, </p>
<p>death and resurrection, privilege and squalor portrayed in his </p>
<p>historical novel set during the French Revolution.  Dickens both starts </p>
<p>strong in the novel and finishes strong.  The last lines of <i>A Tale </p>
<p>of Two Cities</i> are, &#8221; It is a far, far better thing that I do, than </p>
<p>I have ever done; it is a far, far better rest that I go to, than I </p>
<p>have ever known.&#8221;</p>
<p>	Getting off to a strong start can make a profound difference.  </p>
<p>Opening lines can seize attention, powerfully directing the reader&#8217;s </p>
<p>interest to the major theme of all that is to follow.  The Bible starts </p>
<p>with a loaded theological affirmation that resounds through all the </p>
<p>subsequent pages: &#8220;In the beginning God &#8230;.&#8221; (Genesis 1:1, all </p>
<p>versions)  Much of our theology is encapsulated in those four words.  </p>
<p>Before anything else, God was present, and God&#8217;s work of creation </p>
<p>underlies all that follows.  God is the principle character, acting </p>
<p>throughout the book to create, sustain, and redeem what he has made.  </p>
<p>The Bible&#8217;s strong start foreshadows God&#8217;s desire to bring us, the ones </p>
<p>created in his image, into loving relationship with himself and one </p>
<p>another.</p>
<p>	The Bible finishes strong, too.  After telling the story of </p>
<p>mankind&#8217;s rebellion against God, and our futile quest for good fortune </p>
<p>and glory on our own terms, it tells about the gracious solution </p>
<p>provided by God, himself, in Jesus Christ.  God enters humanity, born </p>
<p>as a baby in Bethlehem, teaches and demonstrates his love in the </p>
<p>ministry of Jesus, and vanquishes sin and death by his crucifixion and </p>
<p>resurrection.  Many of the closing pages implore us to follow Jesus&#8217; </p>
<p>way of life, loving God and one another as he did.  The strong finish </p>
<p>voices a faithful anticipation of the eternal, perfect  presence of </p>
<p>Christ in the consummation of God&#8217;s Kingdom, along with an all-</p>
<p>sufficient prayer for the interim: &#8221; Come, Lord Jesus! {21} The grace </p>
<p>of the Lord Jesus be with all.&#8221; Amen. (Revelation 22:20b-21 NCV)  If we </p>
<p>begin with the recognition that God is before all else, and finish with </p>
<p>seeking to be with Jesus and to spread his grace to all, we can achieve </p>
<p>the strong start and the strong finish God wants for us.</p>
<p>	Since failing to start strong is more often our downfall, the </p>
<p>Bible offers some encouraging opening lines to some of the individual </p>
<p>books in the collection.  Psalms, a favorite source of comfort and </p>
<p>inspiration, starts with a strong description of the conflicting ways </p>
<p>of life we face, and an affirmation of the one we should follow: &#8221; </p>
<p>Blessed is the man Who walks not in the counsel of the ungodly, Nor </p>
<p>stands in the path of sinners, Nor sits in the seat of the scornful; </p>
<p>{2} But his delight is in the law of the LORD, And in His law he </p>
<p>meditates day and night.&#8221; (Psalm 1:1-2 NKJV)  Coming about halfway in </p>
<p>the Bible, this strong start to Psalms helps to reorient our thoughts </p>
<p>to what God has in mind for us to do.</p>
<p>	Several New Testament books begin with strong statements of the </p>
<p>core of our faith and our actions that should result from staking our </p>
<p>lives on such a faith.  John picks up the theme from the opening lines </p>
<p>of the Bible in Genesis, intrinsically weaving the story of Jesus into </p>
<p>the beginning of all things in God: &#8221; In the beginning was the Word, </p>
<p>and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the </p>
<p>beginning with God.  All things came into being through him, and </p>
<p>without him not one thing came into being. What has come into being in </p>
<p>him was life, and the life was the light of all people. (John 1:1-4 </p>
<p>NRSV)  John&#8217;s gospel continues to develop the theme of Jesus as the </p>
<p>origin of life, and the only One  through whom we may find life again, </p>
<p>after losing ourselves in rebellion against God and one another.  Lest </p>
<p>we forget, a book for second-generation followers of Jesus starts with </p>
<p>a recapitulation of God&#8217;s history of loving us and inviting our </p>
<p>faithful love in return, epitomized in the ministry of Jesus: &#8220;In the </p>
<p>past God spoke to our ancestors at many different times and in many </p>
<p>different ways through the prophets. {2} In these last days he has </p>
<p>spoken to us through his Son. God made his Son responsible for </p>
<p>everything. His Son is the one through whom God made the universe. {3} </p>
<p>His Son is the reflection of God&#8217;s glory and the exact likeness of </p>
<p>God&#8217;s being. He holds everything together through his powerful words. </p>
<p>After he had cleansed people from their sins, he received the highest </p>
<p>position, the one next to the Father in heaven.&#8221; (Hebrews 1:1-3 GWT)  </p>
<p>Hebrews starts with strong reassurance that no other voice calling for </p>
<p>us to follow can lead us more authentically to him than that of Jesus.  </p>
<p>John scores another strong start with his first letter, setting the </p>
<p>focus on the profound effect Jesus had on John and his colleagues, the </p>
<p>relationship Jesus invites us to have with himself and fellow </p>
<p>followers, and the task we are to assume as believers in him: &#8221; That </p>
<p>which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen </p>
<p>with our eyes, which we have looked at and our hands have touched&#8211;this </p>
<p>we proclaim concerning the Word of life. {2} The life appeared; we have </p>
<p>seen it and testify to it, and we proclaim to you the eternal life, </p>
<p>which was with the Father and has appeared to us. {3} We proclaim to </p>
<p>you what we have seen and heard, so that you also may have fellowship </p>
<p>with us. And our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus </p>
<p>Christ. {4} We write this to make our joy complete. {5} This is the </p>
<p>message we have heard from him and declare to you: God is light; in him </p>
<p>there is no darkness at all.&#8221; (1 John 1:1-5 NIV)  As the last lines of </p>
<p>the Bible say, we are to extend Jesus&#8217; grace to people around us, </p>
<p>inviting them to share the joy of real life through faith in </p>
<p>Christ.</p>
<p>	Start strong, finish strong.  The good news is that Jesus </p>
<p>continually offers a new start, overcoming our botched beginnings with </p>
<p>the strength of his grace and love.  Find a beginning and an end of a </p>
<p>book in the Bible that gives you new hope and strength for living as a </p>
<p>faithful follower of Jesus.  Make them your prayer for starting and </p>
<p>finishing your day.  Start with Jesus, finish with Jesus.  The start </p>
<p>and finish of your day can&#8217;t get any stronger than that.</p>
<p>	J. Edward Culpepper, Ph.D.</p>
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		<title>Big Rocks First</title>
		<link>http://edski52.wordpress.com/2008/08/07/big-rocks-first/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Aug 2008 15:45:54 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Religion]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Blind Faith (No. 32, 2008) d Modern parables that have true &#8220;staying power&#8221; don&#8217;t come along very often. Illustrations abound in speeches and sermons, but pithy, striking images that can vividly imprint themselves in your mind and easily reappear when life presents situations addressed by the parable are much more rare. One I have always [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=edski52.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2628241&amp;post=39&amp;subd=edski52&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Blind Faith</strong>  (No. 32, 2008)</p>
<p>d
<p>	Modern parables that have true &#8220;staying power&#8221; don&#8217;t come along </p>
<p>very often.  Illustrations abound in speeches and sermons, but pithy, </p>
<p>striking images that can vividly imprint themselves in your mind and </p>
<p>easily reappear when life presents situations addressed by the parable </p>
<p>are much more rare.  One I have always loved has been replaying in my </p>
<p>mind since last week&#8217;s <i>Blind Faith</i> dealing with What Really </p>
<p>Matters.</p>
<p>	Last week I wrote that visions of Olympic gold, or images of </p>
<p>people desperately trying to salvage truly important items after </p>
<p>earthquakes, floods, and other disasters may cause us to ask of our own </p>
<p>lives, &#8220;What really matters?&#8221;  Loving God, demonstrating God&#8217;s grace to </p>
<p>others, and following Christ, whatever the cost were the items I </p>
<p>highlighted among what the Bible says really matters.  But many other </p>
<p>important concerns &#8211; from home and family, to work, to self-improvement </p>
<p>- quickly and persistently demand attention.  How do you deal with the </p>
<p>competing demands?</p>
<p>	Setting priorities correctly touches everything we do at </p>
<p>church, home, work, school, or wherever we spend our time.  Stephen </p>
<p>Covey tells about one of his associates attending a time-management </p>
<p>conference where the seminar leader presented this memorable modern </p>
<p>parable.  It has been repeated in countless sermons, speeches, and </p>
<p>online postings since Covey included it in his book, <i>First Things </p>
<p>First</i>.  Stephen Covey, himself, has demonstrated the parable </p>
<p>numerous times.  The following version is slightly shortened and edited </p>
<p>from the book:</p>
<p>
<blockquote>      One day an expert in time management was speaking </p>
<p>to a group of business students. As he stood in front of the group of </p>
<p>high-powered over-achievers he said, &#8220;Okay, it&#8217;s time for a quiz.&#8221; </p>
<p>Reaching under the table, he pulled out a wide-mouthed gallon jar and </p>
<p>set it on the table next to a platter covered with fist-sized rocks. </p>
<p>&#8220;How many of these rocks do you think we can get in the jar?&#8221; he asked </p>
<p>the audience.</p>
<p>      After the students made their guesses, the seminar leader </p>
<p>said, &#8220;Okay, let&#8217;s find out.&#8221; He put one rock in the jar, then another, </p>
<p>then another&#8211;until no more rocks<br />
would fit. Then he asked, &#8220;Is the jar full?&#8221;</p>
<p>      Everybody could see that not one more of the rocks would fit, </p>
<p>so they said, &#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
<p>      &#8220;Not so fast,&#8221; he cautioned. From under the table he lifted </p>
<p>out a bucket of gravel, dumped it in the jar, and shook it. The gravel </p>
<p>slid into all the little spaces left by the big rocks. Grinning, the </p>
<p>seminar leader asked once more, &#8220;Is the jar full?&#8221;</p>
<p>      A little wiser by now, the students responded, &#8220;Probably </p>
<p>not.&#8221;</p>
<p>      &#8220;Good,&#8221; the teacher said. Then he reached under the table to </p>
<p>bring up a bucket of sand. He started dumping the sand in the jar. </p>
<p>While the students watched, the sand filled in the little spaces left </p>
<p>by the rocks and gravel. Once more he looked at the class and said, </p>
<p>&#8220;Now, is the jar full?&#8221;</p>
<p>      &#8220;No,&#8221; everyone shouted back.</p>
<p>      &#8220;Good!&#8221; said the seminar leader, who then grabbed a pitcher of </p>
<p>water and began to pour it into the jar. He got something like a quart </p>
<p>of water into that jar before he said, &#8220;Ladies and gentlemen, the jar </p>
<p>is now full. Can anybody tell me the lesson you can learn from this? </p>
<p>What&#8217;s my point?&#8221;</p>
<p>      An eager participant spoke up: &#8220;Well, there are gaps in your </p>
<p>schedule. And if you really work at it, you can always fit more into </p>
<p>your life.&#8221;</p>
<p>      &#8220;No,&#8221; the leader said. &#8220;That&#8217;s not the point. The point is </p>
<p>this: if I hadn&#8217;t put those big rocks in first, I would never have </p>
<p>gotten them in.&#8221;</p>
<p>(Paraphrased from Stephen R. Covey, A. Roger Merrill, and Rebecca R. </p>
<p>Merrill, <i>First Things First</i>, Free Press, 1996, pp. 88-90)</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Identifying the big rocks, gravel, sand, and water allusions in your </p>
<p>own life is helped greatly by the vivid visual image of the </p>
<p>parable.</p>
<p>	One big rock, according to Jesus, is setting our highest </p>
<p>priority as living the way God designed us to live.  The Bible verse I </p>
<p>have quoted most often in these devotionals states Jesus&#8217; teaching </p>
<p>clearly.  In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus said, &#8221; The thing you </p>
<p>should want most is God&#8217;s kingdom and doing what God wants. Then all </p>
<p>these other things you need will be given to you.&#8221; (Matthew 6:33 NCV)  </p>
<p>Food, clothing, and personal appearance are some of the sand and gravel </p>
<p>Jesus mentioned specifically just before he called for putting the big </p>
<p>rock of living responsibly as a citizen of the Kingdom of God in our </p>
<p>lives first.</p>
<p>	Paul had an impressive resume`, which he recited on several </p>
<p>occasions.  He was highly educated in the best schools.  He was a full </p>
<p>Roman citizen.  He was a respected religious leader.  His star had </p>
<p>blazed brightly among his contemporaries when he was a young man.  But </p>
<p>Paul would certainly have called all these laudable factors in his life </p>
<p>just more sand and gravel, (actually, he called them something much </p>
<p>less!) when compared to the essential rock of Jesus Christ in his life. </p>
<p> Another of my favorite passages of scripture conveys Paul&#8217;s testimony: </p>
<p>&#8221; I once thought all these things were so very important, but now I </p>
<p>consider them worthless because of what Christ has done. {8} Yes, </p>
<p>everything else is worthless when compared with the priceless gain of </p>
<p>knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. I have discarded everything else, </p>
<p>counting it all as garbage, so that I may have Christ {9} and become </p>
<p>one with him. I no longer count on my own goodness or my ability to </p>
<p>obey God&#8217;s law, but I trust Christ to save me.&#8221; (Philippians 3:7-9a </p>
<p>NLT)</p>
<p>Jesus seems to recognize how constantly we are tempted to fill our </p>
<p>lives with what we think of as the &#8220;nitty gritty&#8221; matters of life, many </p>
<p>of which simply turn out to be gravel and sand.  As important as </p>
<p>families, homes, jobs, financial security, education, and all our other </p>
<p>daily concerns may appear from our point of view, if we fill our lives </p>
<p>with those concerns first, we may not find room for our relationship </p>
<p>with Christ.  But if we miss following Jesus, we miss foundation-sized </p>
<p>rocks that will sustain us all the way through eternity.  Jesus was </p>
<p>clear about this with his disciples: &#8220;Then Peter said, &#8216;We&#8217;ve left </p>
<p>everything to follow you.&#8217; {29} Jesus said to them, &#8216;I can guarantee </p>
<p>this truth: Anyone who gave up his home, wife, brothers, parents, or </p>
<p>children because of the kingdom of God {30} will certainly receive many </p>
<p>times as much in this life and will receive eternal life in the world </p>
<p>to come.&#8217;&#8221; (Luke 18:28-30 GWT)</p>
<p>	Can you identify the big rocks that need to go in your jar?  </p>
<p>What about sifting out all the sand and gravel that always wants to </p>
<p>fill your jar prematurely  A little of this, a little of that, and soon </p>
<p>no room is left for what really matters, personally following Jesus and </p>
<p>loving others the way he does.  But get those rocks settled, and other </p>
<p>concerns will snug up around Jesus&#8217; kind of love very well.</p>
<p>	J. Edward Culpepper, Ph.D.</p>
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		<title>What Really Matters</title>
		<link>http://edski52.wordpress.com/2008/07/30/what-really-matters/</link>
		<comments>http://edski52.wordpress.com/2008/07/30/what-really-matters/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Jul 2008 18:22:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>edski52</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Religion]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Blind Faith (No. 31, 2008) &#8220;Going for the gold&#8221; will seem to be all that matters when the Olympic Games begin in just a few days. Thousands of athletes worldwide have invested countless hours in training and have sacrificed countless personal relationships striving for their goal. They stand to gain wealth and adulation for winning, [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=edski52.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2628241&amp;post=37&amp;subd=edski52&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Blind Faith</strong>  (No. 31, 2008)</p>
<p>	&#8220;Going for the gold&#8221; will seem to be all that matters when the </p>
<p>Olympic Games begin in just a few days.  Thousands of athletes </p>
<p>worldwide have invested countless hours in training and have sacrificed </p>
<p>countless personal relationships striving for their goal.  They stand </p>
<p>to gain wealth and adulation for winning, or penury and anonymity for </p>
<p>losing their games.  Many stories will be told of families, larger </p>
<p>communities, and even nations sharing dreams of Olympic competition, </p>
<p>offering tangible and emotional support for the athletes&#8217; quests.  Too </p>
<p>many stories will uncover athletes and trainers so blinded by Olympic </p>
<p>gold that they abuse themselves, the rules of their sports, and the </p>
<p>spirit of the Olympics by using steroids and other performance-</p>
<p>enhancing drugs.  These sad tales lay bare the widespread obsessions </p>
<p>with winning and commercial success.  For some, winning is the only </p>
<p>thing that matters.  And Olympic silver medals are not acceptable to </p>
<p>some people.  For some athletes and nations, Olympic gold is worth any </p>
<p>cost.  But, does it really matter?</p>
<p>	Competition for headline space will continue to come from </p>
<p>disasters across the nation and around the world.  People lambasted by </p>
<p>the Sichuan province earthquake in China, or the Big Sur and Yosemite </p>
<p>wildfires in California, or the landfall of Hurricane Dolly along the </p>
<p>Rio Grande in Mexico and Texas, or the floods in Iowa and Missouri </p>
<p>reacted to the catastrophes with amazing similarity.  Sifting through </p>
<p>the ruins of their homes and lives, many pled for an opportunity to </p>
<p>retrieve whatever personal treasures they could find intact.  Many were </p>
<p>barred from their homes for days and weeks at a time, sometimes finally </p>
<p>being allowed as little as a 15 minute window in which to snatch the </p>
<p>few items of value they could locate.  The tragedy is that the scenes </p>
<p>are certain to continue being repeated following other disasters.  In </p>
<p>such a situation, what really matters?  Disaster victims universally </p>
<p>talk about grabbing family photo albums, or Grandmother&#8217;s quilt, or </p>
<p>sensitive papers, or collections of love letters.  Some people put </p>
<p>themselves at grave risk in order to salvage some representation of </p>
<p>their identities.  You don&#8217;t usually find anyone saying that they just </p>
<p>had to get their stereo, or some trophy or even their golf clubs.  What </p>
<p>really matters seems to be people-to-people links, symbols of intimate </p>
<p>and meaningful relationships.  A news crew almost always finds someone </p>
<p>saying, &#8220;We&#8217;ve lost everything!  But we can rebuild, and we can get new </p>
<p>things.  We&#8217;re thankful to be alive, and that&#8217;s all that matters.&#8221;</p>
<p>	Ambitious striving to achieve worthy goals, charting a new </p>
<p>course after surviving a disaster, or facing temptations to find </p>
<p>shortcuts to either pursuit all raise the crucial question, &#8220;What </p>
<p>really matters?&#8221;  Understanding what really matters is important for </p>
<p>keeping everyday decisions about material things, relationships with </p>
<p>other people, personal integrity, and our awareness of how our actions </p>
<p>affect our fellowship with God in proper balance. The Hebrew prophet, </p>
<p>Micah, offered a concise catalog of what really matters: &#8221; The Lord has </p>
<p>told you what is good. He has told you what he wants from you: Do what </p>
<p>is right to other people. Love being kind to others. And live humbly, </p>
<p>trusting your God.&#8221; (Micah 6:8 <i>International Children&#8217;s Bible</i>)  </p>
<p>Micah doesn&#8217;t prescribe a sure-fire training regimen for winning </p>
<p>Olympic goal, or for recovering from natural disaster, but the </p>
<p>principles will equip anyone for taking on those challenges or any </p>
<p>others.</p>
<p>	Jesus thought and taught that what Micah said was on target for </p>
<p>what really matters.  Some other rabbis were actually trying to lay a </p>
<p>trap for Jesus, looking for a self-justifying shortcut for religious </p>
<p>obligations (see Matthew 22:35-40, Luke 10:25-27), when one of them </p>
<p>asked, &#8220;What is the greatest commandment?&#8221;  Jesus&#8217; answer could be </p>
<p>prefaced with &#8220;What really matters is&#8230;.&#8221;  What Jesus said was: &#8221; Love </p>
<p>the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind, </p>
<p>and all your strength.&#8217; {31} The second command is this: &#8216;Love your </p>
<p>neighbor as you love yourself.&#8217; There are no commands more important </p>
<p>than these.&#8221; (Mark 12:30-31 NCV)  The answer is simple and direct.  </p>
<p>What really matters is to shape everything we do by demonstrating our </p>
<p>love for God and for other people.<br />
	Jesus also explained how we are to maintain the disciplined </p>
<p>life that will lead us to what really matters.  It simply means </p>
<p>following Jesus.  No exotic religious rites, no austere lifestyle, no </p>
<p>macrobiotic diet, no &#8220;Ten Keys to Success.&#8221;  What really matters is </p>
<p>simply &#8211; and radically &#8211; to follow Jesus.  Here is what Jesus said:</p>
<p>
<blockquote>Then he said, so everybody could hear, &#8220;If anybody </p>
<p>really wants to share my way of life, let him have no regard for his </p>
<p>own welfare, and let him risk his life every day and walk the way with </p>
<p>me. Whoever puts his own life first shall lose it. But whoever lays his </p>
<p>life on the line for me shall come out on top. For what has a man </p>
<p>gained if he gets the whole world, and his own life is broken or </p>
<p>destroyed?&#8221; (Luke 9:23- , <i>Te Cotton Patch Version</i>)</p>
<p>&lt;</p></blockquote>
<p>/p&gt;</p>
<p>Shortcuts, extreme training, and many other paths may lead to golden </p>
<p>results, but if Jesus is not at the center of life, it doesn&#8217;t really </p>
<p>matter.  Only by following Jesus &#8211; all the way to our own cross, if </p>
<p>necessary &#8211; will we reach genuinely the best life we can live.</p>
<p>	What goals are you clamoring to reach?  What drives and </p>
<p>disciplines your life?  What significance do you attach to material </p>
<p>things, relationships, and personal ethical values?  What really </p>
<p>matters to you?  If you honestly seek to make your answer, &#8220;Jesus,&#8221; </p>
<p>that simple answer will lead you to the most challenging and the most </p>
<p>rewarding life you can possibly live.  What really matters to you?</p>
<p>	J. Edward Culpepper, Ph.D.</p>
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		<title>God Cares</title>
		<link>http://edski52.wordpress.com/2008/07/24/god-cares/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Jul 2008 14:44:58 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Religion]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Blind Faith (No. 30, 2008) Some days start out brimming full of God&#8217;s blessings. A recent Saturday morning was one of those days. We awoke to surprisingly mild temperatures, in spite of several scorching afternoons in a row and a sweltering forecast for later in the day. We checked to see if breakfast on the [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=edski52.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2628241&amp;post=35&amp;subd=edski52&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Blind Faith</strong>  (No. 30, 2008)</p>
<p>	Some days start out brimming full of God&#8217;s blessings.  A recent </p>
<p>Saturday morning was one of those days.  We awoke to surprisingly mild </p>
<p>temperatures, in spite of several scorching afternoons in a row and a </p>
<p>sweltering forecast for later in the day.  We checked to see if </p>
<p>breakfast on the deck seemed tolerable.  That&#8217;s when the blessings </p>
<p>began to flood over us.</p>
<p>	First, Although the rising sun peeked under the canopy of shade </p>
<p>offered most of the day by the gingko tree, a filtering haze, then a </p>
<p>puffy cloud held the temperature nicely within our comfort zone.  Most </p>
<p>mornings the intense sun makes the table too hot for comfortable </p>
<p>dining, especially with a hot cup of coffee.  This Saturday morning was </p>
<p>a delightful mix of sun, natural shade, a slight breeze, and a </p>
<p>generally inviting summer morning at treetop level in God&#8217;s gorgeous </p>
<p>creation.</p>
<p>	Second, we decided to have blueberry pancakes for breakfast, </p>
<p>out on the deck.  These would not be just any Aunt Jemima blueberry </p>
<p>pancakes, though.  These would feature blueberries fresh from our own </p>
<p>blueberry bushes, visible in our yard from the deck.  We had no </p>
<p>blueberry crop at all the past two years, due to drought and a late </p>
<p>killing freeze.  This year, we thanked God all through the Spring for </p>
<p>adequate rain, moderate temperatures, and prolific blossoms that </p>
<p>promised an abundant blueberry harvest.  Blueberries are one of God&#8217;s </p>
<p>nicest creations, growing on bushes that serve as beautiful hedge </p>
<p>plants, with magnificent scarlet displays of foliage in the Fall, and </p>
<p>sweet blueberries to eat.  Picking them from our own yard is an extra </p>
<p>blessing.  We thank God for a fine crop this year, and we will enjoy </p>
<p>blueberries from the freezer on harsh winter days to come.</p>
<p>	We were reveling in God&#8217;s blessings of the day and the </p>
<p>blueberries when the further reminder of God&#8217;s care began to play out </p>
<p>before us.  Several days ago, my wife, Sherron, spotted a robin family </p>
<p>in the branches of the gingko tree.  Their nest is cradled in a fork of </p>
<p>a branch that extends far over the deck.  A branch above offers shade </p>
<p>and cover for the nest.  One morning, Sherron saw a parent robin land </p>
<p>in the tree, with a worm dangling from its beak.  Her viewing angle and </p>
<p>the sunlight filtering through the leaves backlit a baby robin beak </p>
<p>bobbing up to receive the wriggly breakfast.  She watched similar </p>
<p>feedings over the next several days.  While we were having our </p>
<p>exquisite blueberry pancakes out on the deck, she saw a baby robin hop </p>
<p>up onto the top step of the stairs to the deck.  It was still fluffy, </p>
<p>its feathers not yet fully developed.  The little robin looked </p>
<p>confused.  It flexed its legs several times, finally hopping a step or </p>
<p>two.  After a few minutes, it issued a plaintive call – not yet a robin </p>
<p>song.  Sherron said that the baby robin seemed to spot us, studying us </p>
<p>carefully.  Finally, the little bird appeared to devise a plan.  The </p>
<p>robin hopped over to the edge of the deck, between two of the railing </p>
<p>stiles.  With a clear path out over the yard, the robin took one more </p>
<p>hop, and launched itself into the air.  Sherron lost sight of its </p>
<p>flight – but she didn’t find the little bird crumpled on the ground, </p>
<p>either.</p>
<p>      A little later, Sherron walked down the sidewalk away from the </p>
<p>deck, and heard some fluttering underneath an azalea.  As she </p>
<p>approached the azalea, she heard the plaintive call again.  Suddenly, </p>
<p>she found herself dive-bombed by the protective parent robins, both of </p>
<p>them squawking warnings not to bother their apparently reluctant flier. </p>
<p> We monitored the little robin&#8217;s plight through the day, hoping that we </p>
<p>might sight it back in the gingko branches, but we never did.  Sherron </p>
<p>had another encounter with the dive-bombing parents near our fig tree </p>
<p>later that morning.  We were thankful that our yard is fenced, and that </p>
<p>the young robin seemed to be safe, watched over by two anxious parents. </p>
<p> We hoped that the grace of flight would come quickly to the little </p>
<p>bird.</p>
<p>	As the drama unfolded, I recalled Jesus&#8217; apparent appreciation </p>
<p>for birds, and for his Father&#8217;s care for them.  Jesus called his </p>
<p>hearers&#8217; attention to birds and other parts of God&#8217;s splendid creation </p>
<p>numerous times in his teaching ministry.  Once, the crowd clamoring to </p>
<p>hear Jesus was fretting about everything from economic security, to </p>
<p>family provisions, to how they could receive God&#8217;s eternal blessings.  </p>
<p>Times were hard, and they equated God&#8217;s blessings with having nice </p>
<p>clothes, plenty of food for their families, and other material </p>
<p>possessions.  Jesus gently chided them for their high anxiety, </p>
<p>illustrating the abundance of God&#8217;s blessings and his loving care by </p>
<p>references to God&#8217;s care for the birds in his creation:</p>
<p>
<blockquote>&#8220;What is the price of five sparrows? A couple of </p>
<p>pennies? Yet God does not forget a single one of them. {7} And the very </p>
<p>hairs on your head are all numbered. So don&#8217;t be afraid; you are more </p>
<p>valuable to him than a whole flock of sparrows&#8230;.&#8221; {22} Jesus said to </p>
<p>his followers, &#8220;So I tell you, don&#8217;t worry about the food you need to </p>
<p>live, or about the clothes you need for your body. {23} Life is more </p>
<p>than food, and the body is more than clothes. {24} Look at the birds. </p>
<p>They don&#8217;t plant or harvest, they don&#8217;t have storerooms or barns, but </p>
<p>God feeds them. And you are worth much more than birds.&#8221; (Luke 12:6-7 </p>
<p>NLT, 22-24 NCV)</p></blockquote>
<p>God demonstrates his sustaining grace all around us.  We can be </p>
<p>spared from much of our worry and anxiety, if we will only stop our </p>
<p>frantic scrambling for &#8220;just a little more,&#8221; and simply relax in the </p>
<p>care he provides for all creation.  The little robin in our yard </p>
<p>matters to God; how much greater is God&#8217;s care for us and how </p>
<p>overwhelming are his blessings for us each day!</p>
<p>	Of course, not every day begins with such delights as our </p>
<p>Saturday breakfast on the deck.  Some days are shrouded in storm clouds </p>
<p>from even before the time your feet hit the floor in the morning.  </p>
<p>Anxieties of every variety &#8211; economic, relational, work-related, </p>
<p>national and international, spiritual, and more &#8211; grip us and threaten </p>
<p>to drain the life out of us.  We rush through the day in a futile </p>
<p>attempt to take care of everything ourselves.  We may not take the time </p>
<p>to notice how marvelously well God takes care of his beautiful </p>
<p>creation.  But be still &#8230; breathe in that fragrant smell &#8230; hear the </p>
<p>birds singing praise to God &#8230; see the grandeur of flowers &#8230; feel </p>
<p>the warmth of the sun and the cool of the breeze.  Calm your restless </p>
<p>spirit, remembering to &#8221; Give all your worries and cares to God, for he </p>
<p>cares about what happens to you.&#8221; (1 Peter 5:7 NLT)  If God cares about </p>
<p>our little robin, the faulty flier, he certainly cares about your </p>
<p>needs.</p>
<p>	Are you having a great day today, with delightful surprises </p>
<p>continuing to give you opportunities to give thanks to God?  Are you </p>
<p>remembering to take time to enjoy God&#8217;s blessings and care, and to be </p>
<p>thankful?  If the day has you fretting and full of anxiety, have you </p>
<p>listened for a bird&#8217;s song, an unexpected joy, an example of God&#8217;s </p>
<p>goodness in the world?  Take a moment to look for them, letting God </p>
<p>quiet your spirit as you find them &#8211; because you can be certain God has </p>
<p>put them there.  If anyone asks why a smile suddenly spreads across </p>
<p>your face, tell them a little birdie told you that God cares for </p>
<p>you.</p>
<p>	J. Edward Culpepper, Ph.D.</p>
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		<title>Repetition Is the Key</title>
		<link>http://edski52.wordpress.com/2008/07/17/repetition-is-the-key/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Jul 2008 13:34:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>edski52</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Religion]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Blind Faith (No. 29, 2008) Repetition is an important key to memory. How many times have you been introduced to someone for the first time, and the new person&#8217;s name is said only once by the person making the introduction? Did the new person&#8217;s name stick with you, or did you almost immediately forget? Some [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=edski52.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2628241&amp;post=32&amp;subd=edski52&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Blind Faith</strong>  (No. 29, 2008)</p>
<p>	Repetition is an important key to memory.  How many times have </p>
<p>you been introduced to someone for the first time, and the new person&#8217;s </p>
<p>name is said only once by the person making the introduction?  Did the </p>
<p>new person&#8217;s name stick with you, or did you almost immediately forget? </p>
<p> Some memory coaches suggest repeating the new name at least three </p>
<p>times in the first minute or two after being introduced in order to </p>
<p>help retain the person&#8217;s name.  Repetition is one of the keys to </p>
<p>memory.</p>
<p>	Losing the ability to remember names, things to do, or other </p>
<p>information is a universal complaint.  Advancing age, contrary to </p>
<p>widespread assumptions, does not cause an appreciable loss of ability </p>
<p>for most people to remember.  Yes, some medical conditions and a few </p>
<p>medications can interfere with a person&#8217;s memory, but for most people, </p>
<p>the brain retains its mysterious and amazing capacity to memorize and </p>
<p>retrieve information undiminished by age.  Perhaps as we grow older, we </p>
<p>may be called upon to access some information from our memories less </p>
<p>frequently, or we may encounter a person less often, or we may hear or </p>
<p>see less clearly the things that prompt memories, reducing the </p>
<p>reinforcing repetition that may have kept our memories fresh in earlier </p>
<p>days.  Maybe we figure that life has taught us enough, so we just don&#8217;t </p>
<p>pay attention or devote much psychic energy to committing new names and </p>
<p>other information to memory.  For most people, regardless of age, </p>
<p>repetition is one of the keys to memory.</p>
<p>	For the first months after I became blind, I asked church </p>
<p>members to read the Bible texts from which I would preach in the </p>
<p>worship services.  One Sunday, I wanted to give the text a particular </p>
<p>interpretive vocal inflection.  I decided to memorize the five or six </p>
<p>verses and recite them myself.  I was surprised at how many listeners </p>
<p>seemed to pay closer attention to the memorized text.  (I wondered if  </p>
<p>some people followed me word-for-word in their open Bibles, checking to </p>
<p>see if I got all the words just right.)  Perhaps the increased oral </p>
<p>interpretation while reciting rather than reading the text helped.  </p>
<p>Memorizing the text soon became a standard part of my approach to </p>
<p>preaching.</p>
<p>	Memorizing the text also changed my own experience with the </p>
<p>sermons I preached.  In order to memorize the text, I would listen to </p>
<p>it repeatedly.  Phrase by phrase, I would have my talking computer read </p>
<p>it to me.  Then I would begin repeating the verses back &#8211; first in my </p>
<p>head, then aloud &#8211; until I was confident of being able to recite the </p>
<p>passage publicly.  During the cycle of repetition, I found that nuances </p>
<p>of the Bible text began to emerge.  The more often I repeated the text </p>
<p>to myself in preparation for preaching, the better I felt that I </p>
<p>understood those Bible verses. I began to memorize the text first, then </p>
<p>to prepare the sermon, because prayerfully repeating the text to </p>
<p>memorize it always provided opportunities for God to lead me to new </p>
<p>insight and appreciation for the text.  Repetition of the Bible text </p>
<p>became one of the keys  both to memorizing verses for public </p>
<p>presentation and  &#8211; more importantly &#8211; for that part of the Bible to </p>
<p>change my life.</p>
<p>	None of this should be a surprise to us.  From the beginning of </p>
<p>God entrusting his written word to his people, they were instructed to </p>
<p>practice repetition of his word.  In personal, family, and community </p>
<p>life, God&#8217;s commandments and guidance were intended to be repeated </p>
<p>continually so that his people would be changed by them.  When Moses </p>
<p>came down from the mountain to present the 10 Commandments to the </p>
<p>people, he first told them: &#8220;Hear, O Israel! The LORD is our God, the </p>
<p>LORD alone. {5} And you must love the LORD your God with all your </p>
<p>heart, all your soul, and all your strength. {6} And you must commit </p>
<p>yourselves wholeheartedly to these commands I am giving you today. {7} </p>
<p>Repeat them again and again to your children. Talk about them when you </p>
<p>are at home and when you are away on a journey, when you are lying down </p>
<p>and when you are getting up again. &#8221; (Deuteronomy 6:4-7 NLT)  Moses </p>
<p>went on to explain that this repetition would help them to remember </p>
<p>God&#8217;s grace in delivering them from slavery in Egypt, and his covenant </p>
<p>promise to love and to care for their needs.  Unfortunately, they </p>
<p>forgot to remember and to repeat God&#8217;s words, and wandered aimlessly </p>
<p>for forty years in the wilderness.  Centuries later, when God&#8217;s people </p>
<p>had experienced sweeping renewal of faith and national solidarity, they </p>
<p>were reminded of the necessity of actively committing God&#8217;s words to </p>
<p>memory.  Repetition is cited as one of the keys: &#8221; Listen carefully to </p>
<p>what wise people say; pay attention to what I am teaching you. {18} It </p>
<p>will be good to keep these things in mind so that you are ready to </p>
<p>repeat them. {19} I am teaching them to you now so that you will put </p>
<p>your trust in the LORD.&#8221; (Proverbs 22:17-19 NCV)  The result of </p>
<p>repetition and memorization of God&#8217;s words is clearly and poetically </p>
<p>stated in one of the first Bible verses I recall memorizing: &#8221; Thy word </p>
<p>have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin against thee.&#8221; (Psalm </p>
<p>119:11 KJV)</p>
<p>	What gets repeated in your daily routine?  Whatever gets </p>
<p>repeated is what will stick in your memory.  It could be the rerun of </p>
<p><i>Friends</i> that you have seen innumerable times already, so that </p>
<p>you can now recite the dialog verbatim.  It could be the argument you </p>
<p>had with a loved one, which you have replayed so many times that it is </p>
<p>now etched in your memory as irreplaceably as your phone number or </p>
<p>address.  It may be the dirty joke your neighbor told you, and you told </p>
<p>a friend, and you heard your friend tell someone.  It may be the </p>
<p>oppressive tedium of your daily routine, the things you have to do over </p>
<p>and over and over every day.  Remember, repetition is one of the keys </p>
<p>to memory.  And what you remember does change you from the inside </p>
<p>out.</p>
<p>	How long has it been since you committed a Bible verse to </p>
<p>memory?  Here&#8217;s an assignment for this week.  Repeat the following </p>
<p>Bible verse every day, several times at breakfast, lunch, supper, and </p>
<p>bedtime.  Enough repetition of this one verse will cement it in your </p>
<p>memory, if it is not already there.  If you know the verse, repeat it </p>
<p>daily, anyway, so that it can exert new life-changing power.  This </p>
<p>week&#8217;s memory verse is:</p>
<p>
<blockquote>Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my </p>
<p>heart, be acceptable in your sight, O LORD, my strength, and my </p>
<p>redeemer. (Psalm 19:14 NKJV)</p></blockquote>
<p>	Repeat the verse in your mind.  Repeat the verse aloud.  Pray </p>
<p>it as a first-thing-in-the-morning prayer.  Find a friend with whom you </p>
<p>can share the verse, and repeat it to one another.  Repeat it as you </p>
<p>are going to sleep, expressing your hope and commitment for the next </p>
<p>day.  Remember, repetition is one of the keys to memory.  What else </p>
<p>will you repeat this week?</p>
<p>	J. Edward Culpepper, Ph.D.</p>
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		<title>Pay Attention!</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jul 2008 13:58:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>edski52</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Religion]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Blind Faith (No. 28, 2008) Student attitudes in school are a frequent topic of conversation with our high school teacher son. Often, any ideal of the classroom as a place where young minds eagerly seek to expand their knowledge and experience soars far above the schoolday reality. No matter how gifted the teacher might be, [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=edski52.wordpress.com&amp;blog=2628241&amp;post=31&amp;subd=edski52&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Blind Faith</strong>  (No. 28, 2008)</p>
<p>Student attitudes in school are a frequent topic of conversation </p>
<p>with our high school teacher son.  Often, any ideal of the classroom as </p>
<p>a place where young minds eagerly seek to expand their knowledge and </p>
<p>experience soars far above the schoolday reality.  No matter how gifted </p>
<p>the teacher might be, students sometimes respond with boredom, </p>
<p>indifference, or other self-serving lack of attention.</p>
<p>	Several discussions of classroom deportment reminded me of a </p>
<p>wry fictitious encounter someone wrote about how contemporary classroom </p>
<p>behavior might sound if Jesus was teaching his 12 students today:</p>
<p>
<blockquote>&#8220;Then Jesus took his disciples up the mountain and </p>
<p>gathering them around him, he taught them saying: &#8220;Blessed are the poor </p>
<p>in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of Heaven, Blessed are the meek&#8230; </p>
<p>Blessed are they that mourn&#8230; Blessed are the merciful&#8230; Blessed are </p>
<p>they that thirst for justice&#8230; Blessed are you when you suffer&#8230; Be </p>
<p>glad and rejoice for your reward is great in Heaven.&#8221;<br />
Then Simon Peter said: &#8220;Are we supposed to know this?&#8221;<br />
And Andrew said: &#8220;Do we have to write this down?&#8221;<br />
And James said: &#8220;I don&#8217;t have any paper.&#8221;<br />
And Bartholomew said: &#8220;Do we have to turn this in?&#8221;<br />
And John said: &#8220;The other disciples didn&#8217;t have to learn this!&#8221;<br />
And Matthew said: &#8220;May I go to the rest room?&#8221;<br />
And Judas said: &#8220;What does this have to do with real life?&#8221;<br />
Then one of the Pharisees who was present asked to see Jesus&#8217; lesson </p>
<p>plan and inquired of Jesus: &#8220;Where is your anticipatory set and your </p>
<p>objectives in the cognitive domain?&#8221;<br />
And Jesus wept.<br />
(Author Unknown)</p></blockquote>
<p>	We are conditioned to imagine the disciples intently absorbing </p>
<p>every word Jesus said as he taught them a radical understanding of the </p>
<p>Kingdom of God.  Several times in the Gospels, however, Jesus chides </p>
<p>them for failing to catch onto his teaching.  Only after Jesus&#8217; </p>
<p>resurrection did they recall that he had told them prior to his </p>
<p>crucifixion that he would rise from the dead on the third day.  I </p>
<p>wonder what the disciples were doing , instead of paying attention to </p>
<p>those lessons.  And what keeps us from paying attention to what the </p>
<p>Lord is trying to teach us about the love of God today?</p>
<p>	At least three examples of paying proper attention to Jesus are </p>
<p>recorded in the New Testament as models for becoming sharper students </p>
<p>of the Master.  Educators today seek to engage students with diverse </p>
<p>learning styles.  Even though a particular student may have a dominant </p>
<p>learning style )visual, auditory, tactile-kinesthetic), applying </p>
<p>multiple teaching methods often produces the best understanding for the </p>
<p>most students.  Jesus always offers lessons of his love and grace so </p>
<p>that every person can get the point.</p>
<p>	Visual learners often need to see the instructor’s body </p>
<p>language and facial expressions to fully understand the subject matter. </p>
<p>They tend to prefer sitting at the front of the classroom.  Once when </p>
<p>Jesus was teaching at the home of his friends Lazarus, Mary, and </p>
<p>Martha, he validated this approach to learning:</p>
<p>
<blockquote>As they were traveling along, Jesus went into a village. </p>
<p>A woman named Martha welcomed him into her home. {39} She had a sister </p>
<p>named Mary. Mary sat at the Lord&#8217;s feet and listened to him talk. {40} </p>
<p>But Martha was upset about all the work she had to do. So she asked, </p>
<p>&#8220;Lord, don&#8217;t you care that my sister has left me to do the work all by </p>
<p>myself? Tell her to help me.&#8221; {41} The Lord answered her, &#8220;Martha, </p>
<p>Martha! You worry and fuss about a lot of things. {42} There&#8217;s only one </p>
<p>thing you need. Mary has made the right choice, and that one thing will </p>
<p>not be taken away from her.&#8221; (Luke 10:38-42 GWT)</p></blockquote>
<p>Mary appears to have been a visual learner, sitting at Jesus&#8217; feet, </p>
<p>able to concentrate on both his spoken words and his body language.  </p>
<p>Jesus affirms her choice of methods for receiving the instruction he </p>
<p>was offering &#8212; and that Martha was unfortunately missing on that </p>
<p>occasion.</p>
<p>	Auditory learners gather and process information through </p>
<p>listening or speaking. They are best able to learn through verbal </p>
<p>lectures, discussions, and listening to what others have to say.  Jesus </p>
<p>encountered two students who were already deep in discussion, trying to </p>
<p>sort out the events of Good Friday and what they had understood of </p>
<p>Jesus&#8217; teaching up to that time:</p>
<p>
<blockquote>On the same day, two of Jesus&#8217; disciples were going to a </p>
<p>village called Emmaus. It was about seven miles from Jerusalem. {14} </p>
<p>They were talking to each other about everything that had happened. </p>
<p>{15} While they were talking, Jesus approached them and began walking </p>
<p>with them. {16} Although they saw him, they didn&#8217;t recognize him&#8230;. </p>
<p>{27} Then [Jesus]  began with Moses&#8217; Teachings and the Prophets to </p>
<p>explain to them what was said about him throughout the Scriptures. {28} </p>
<p>When they came near the village where they were going, Jesus acted as </p>
<p>if he were going farther. {29} They urged him, &#8220;Stay with us! It&#8217;s </p>
<p>getting late, and the day is almost over.&#8221; So he went to stay with </p>
<p>them. {30} While he was at the table with them, he took bread and </p>
<p>blessed it. He broke the bread and gave it to them. {31} Then their </p>
<p>eyes were opened, and they recognized him. But he vanished from their </p>
<p>sight. {32} They said to each other, &#8220;Weren&#8217;t we excited when he talked </p>
<p>with us on the road and opened up the meaning of the Scriptures for </p>
<p>us?&#8221; (Luke 24:13-16, 2732 GWT)</p></blockquote>
<p>Jesus led them to verbalize what they had seen and heard, and what </p>
<p>they understood it all to mean.  Then, as they walked, he explained </p>
<p>God&#8217;s saving grace.  They were excited to have God&#8217;s saving message </p>
<p>presented in a method that they could readily comprehend.</p>
<p>	Tactile-kinesthetic learners respond most effectively to </p>
<p>moving, doing and touching.  They learn best through a hands-on </p>
<p>approach.  Jesus set his disciples on this course of learning what he </p>
<p>had demonstrated for them.  After teaching them by both word and </p>
<p>example in the Upper Room, he gave them the hands-on assignment of </p>
<p>serving one another in the spirit of his love:</p>
<p>
<blockquote>[Jesus said,]&#8220;You call me &#8216;Teacher&#8217; and &#8216;Lord,&#8217; and </p>
<p>rightly so, for that is what I am&#8230;. {15} I have set you an example </p>
<p>that you should do as I have done for you&#8230;. {17} Now that you know </p>
<p>these things, you will be blessed if you do them.&#8221; (John 13:13, 15, 17 </p>
<p>NIV)</p></blockquote>
<p>In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus had taught that hearing and doing </p>
<p>what  he taught made the lesson rock-solid, while merely hearing it </p>
<p>often resulted in the lesson being swept away.  (See Matthew 7: 24-27)  </p>
<p>James adopted the teaching method, counseling, &#8221; be doers of the word, </p>
<p>and not merely hearers who deceive themselves&#8230;. not hearers who </p>
<p>forget but doers who act&#8211;they will be blessed in their doing.&#8221; (James </p>
<p>1:22, 25b NRSV)</p>
<p>	How do you learn best?  Do you pay attention to the lessons </p>
<p>from Jesus&#8217; love and instruction in living by grace God tries to teach </p>
<p>you?  Do you pay as much attention to God&#8217;s lessons as you do to </p>
<p>instructions about a hobby or new skill you want to learn?  For those </p>
<p>pursuits, do you attend to private lessons, extra reading, practice and </p>
<p>repetition, or rapt attention to demonstrations by a master?  Do you </p>
<p>pay that kind of attention to God&#8217;s lessons?  God offers his grace by </p>
<p>methods corresponding to your best learning style.  So, students, no </p>
<p>excuses this week!  Pay attention in God&#8217;s personal classroom.</p>
<p>J. Edward Culpepper, Ph. D.</p>
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