February 26, 2007

Free books and a good quote

I found a wonderful gem. I've never read much by John Piper before. I discovered this evening that he has several of his books online. Most of them can be found at desiringgod.org. For the rest of them follow this ink and find Piper's name on the list. I absolutely love when authors put their books online. It shows me that they desire to teach others more then they desire to make money. Anyways, while I was exploring these books I noticed that Piper's book Desiring God had a chapter on money. Out of curiosity I read through the chapter. Here is my favorite section from that chapter. He clearly illustrates something the point that we need to be giving our resource up for God's kingdom. Very nice.

The mention of"war" is not merely rhetorical. What is specifically called for today is a "wartime lifestyle." I have used the phrase "simple necessities of life" earlier in this chapter because Paul said in 1 Timothy 6:8, "If we have food and clothing, with these we shall be content." But this idea of simplicity can be very misleading. I mean it to refer to a style of life that is unencumbered with nonessentials-and the criterion for "essential" should not be primitive "simplicity," but wartime effectiveness.

Ralph Winter illustrates this idea of a wartime lifestyle:

The Queen Mary, lying in repose in the harbor at Long Beach, California, is a fascinating museum of the past. Used both as a luxury liner in peacetime and a troop transport during the Second World War, its present status as a museum the length of three football fields affords a stunning contrast between the lifestyles appropriate in peace and war. On one side of a partition you see the dining room reconstructed to depict the peacetime table setting that was appropriate to the wealthy patrons of high culture for whom a dazzling array of knives and forks and spoons held no mysteries. On the other side of the partition the evidences of wartime austerities are in sharp contrast. One metal tray with indentations replaces fifteen plates and saucers. Bunks, not just double but eight tiers high, explain why the peacetime complement of 3000 gave way to 15,000 people on board in wartime. How repugnant to the peacetime masters this transformation must have been! To do it took a national emergency, of course. The survival of a nation depended upon it. The essence of the Great Commission today is that the survival of many millions of people depends on its fulfillment.5

There is a war going on. All talk of a Christian's right to live luxuriantly "as a child of the King" in this atmosphere sounds hollow-especially since the King himself is stripped for battle. It is more helpful to think of a "wartime" lifestyle than a merely "simple" lifestyle. Simplicity can be very inward directed, and may benefit no one else. A wartime lifestyle implies that there is a great and worthy cause for which to spend and be spent (2 Corinthians 12:15).

Winter continues:

America today is a save-yourself society if there ever was one. But does it really work? The underdeveloped societies suffer from one set of diseases: tuberculosis, malnutrition, pneumonia, parasites, typhoid, cholera, typhus, etc. Affluent America has virtually invented a whole new set of diseases: obesity, arteriosclerosis, heart disease, strokes, lung cancer, venereal disease, cirrhosis of the liver, drug addiction, alcoholism, divorce, battered children, suicide, murder. Take your choice. Laborsaving machines have turned out to be body-killing devices. Our affluence has allowed both mobility and isolation of the nuclear family, and as a result our divorce courts, our prisons and our mental institutions are flooded. In saving ourselves we have nearly lost ourselves.

How hard have we tried to save others? Consider the fact that the U.S. evangelical slogan, "Pray, give, or go" allows people merely to pray, if that iS their choice! By contrast the Friends Missionary Prayer Band of South India numbers 8000 people in their prayer bands and supports 80 full-time missionaries in North India. If my denomination (with its unbelievably greater wealth per person) were to do that well, we would not be sending 500 missionaries, but 26,000. In spite of their true poverty, those poor people in South India are sending 50 times as many cross-cultural missionaries as we are.6

The point here is to show that those who encourage Christians to pursue a luxuriant peacetime lifestyle are missing the point of all Jesus taught about money. He called us to lose our lives in order that we might gain them again (and the context is indeed money-"What does it profit a man, to gain the whole world and forfeit his life?"- Mark 8:36) . And the way he means for us to lose our lives is in fulfilling the mission of love he gave us.

Posted by rose at 09:49 PM | Comments (1)

Praising Children

A friend of mine recently sent me this article from the New York Times about the adverse effects of praising children. A number of studies have now shown that praising children for their intelligence will actually cause them to try less in the future because they become afraid of failure. When their success is attributed to their intelligence fear of failure arises because then to fail indicates to them that they are not actually smart. Conversely, children that are praised for their effort and taught that effort is the key to success showed improved growth over their peers.

I've noticed that parents and teachers in our society feel compelled to praise children for everything that they do. Sometimes this is taken to ridiculous ends. I've also seen praise be used insincerely and manipulatively. I like how this article suggests a reasonable alternative to a constant stream of praise with encouragement the praise of effort. Kids do need to be encouraged just as adults do. I imagine that telling kids that they'll never amount to anything would be just as damaging, if not more, then telling them that they are great at everything. Instead of either, "you'll do well if you try hard", is more helpful.

Posted by rose at 09:10 AM | Comments (0)

February 22, 2007

My Secret Sin

chocolate.jpgConfession time! Recently I've been convicted about a certain little sin of mine. Unless you know me really well this one might come as a surprise to you. I struggle with gluttony. I'm not sure if the bible actually specifically mentions it anywhere but I've been convicted about my uncontrolled eating habits. I know that they don't compare at all to other people's problems with food but it's still sin. Often I don't know how to stop eating before I'm quite full and if there are sweets or yummy carbs around it's almost impossible for me to say no. I think that the only real reason that I'm not fat is that I keep the sweets out of the house and try to avoid cooking high fat meals. I've found ways to avoid temptations but not ways to say no when temptations are in front of me. The problem is that food is everywhere. I can't make vegetable soup for dinner every night because my ultra skinny husband would waste away to nothing. I imagine that this is what lust is to some men. Somehow I need to win this battle and let the Spirit's fruit of self-control satisfy me instead.

There are a few problems that I see in this kind of behaviour. First, I'm not in control of myself; the appetite controls me. I want nothing to be my master besides God. Secondly, it's not good stewardship of God's resources. We has entrusted me with a certain amount of money and I am obligated to share that where ever I can. Eating more food then I need means that others can not eat instead. Thirdly, it just not healthy. As I get older my body is pushing to put on weight and I have to fight it.

I know that some people out there think that airing dirty underwear on ones blog is tacky but I've chosen to share this about myself because I know that others have this same problem and because I want people to know that I am real.

Posted by rose at 09:23 PM | Comments (3)

February 19, 2007

I'm back

We're home! We've been away the last couple of weeks for Joel's interviews. We drove all around western Canada and it is so nice to be home now. We had a nice chance to spend time together and to visit my family. I should be a more regular on the blog again now that I'm home.

On another note, if you haven't seen the NET bible I would suggest checking it out. It is a new translation that was put together so that the bible could be more freely distributed instead of being tied down like most bible translation in copyright red tape. You can download the whole bible for free in a decent format or Posted by rose at 10:34 AM | Comments (0)

February 01, 2007

Russian Hospital is Caught Gagging Orphan Babies

I found this disturbing news story this morning. A woman was visiting a hospital when she stumbled upon a room full of orphaned babies that either had had their mouths taped shut or pacifiers taped into their mouths because the nurses didn't want to here their cries. This is so incredibly saddening. I would love to be able to go and save all of these babies. Why does nobody love them? Maybe these babies will get help now but what about all the other babies in different hospitals and orphanages that are being treated similarly. While nobody may be hearing their cries I pray that God will.

On a side note I think that this sort of thing really comes at no surprise given how undervalued human life really is in our world. Russia has the highest abortion rate in Europe only second to Romania. There are nearly 13 abortions for every 10 live births. Please don't tell me that if woman stopped having abortions that then there would be even more babies in this horrible situation. That is like saying that we should allow men to kill their wives or children when they become stressful so that they don't feel tempted to neglect or abuse them in the future. The point that I'm trying to make is that when you devalue one kind of human life all other kinds lose value as well.

Here is an article from awhile ago about the reality of abortion in Russia.

Posted by rose at 08:51 AM | Comments (2)