Musings on science, the Bible, and fantastic literature (and sometimes basketball and other stuff).
God speaks to us through the Bible and the findings of science, and we should listen to both types of revelation.
The title is from Psalm 84:11.
The Wikipedia is usually a pretty good reference. I mostly use the World English Bible (WEB), because it is public domain. I am grateful.
License
I have written an e-book, Does the Bible Really Say That?, which is free to anyone. To download that book, in several formats, go here.
The posts in this blog are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. You can copy and use this material, as long as you aren't making money from it. If you give me credit, thanks. If not, OK.
The posts in this blog are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. You can copy and use this material, as long as you aren't making money from it. If you give me credit, thanks. If not, OK.
Showing posts with label Muslims. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Muslims. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 14, 2017
Sunspots 630
Things I have recently spotted that may be of interest to someone else:
Christianity: Relevant and other sources report that the US Government is rounding up Christians from Iraq and sending them back, which is probably putting them at risk to their lives.
Benjamin L. Corey tells us 5 things that he wishes conservative Christians knew about Muslims.
Food: The Associated Press tells you more than you knew about cucumber sex and edible cucumbers.
Listverse reports on 10 foods, most of which are regularly eaten elsewhere, but are banned in the US, for various reasons.
Health: UnDark reviews a book about the US health care system, and seriously questions the use of "system" and of "care," in describing it.
Statnews.com reports on a study that indicates that even a small amount of regular alcohol consumption causes some brain damage.
History: Listverse tells us about 10 American inventions that changed the world, mostly for good.
Politics: Wired reports that President Trump may be taken to court for blocking some users from his Twitter account, because they disagree with him, on free speech grounds. He IS the President, after all, hence his Tweets may be, legally, a public forum. (The courts may rule otherwise.)
Science: According to a review in Scientific American, some fish can solve fairly complex problems, and can use tools.
Scientific American also reports that asking someone for a favor, through e-mail, is not as effective as asking in person.
Listverse tells us how different colors affect our behavior.
Listverse also describes 10 geological oddities, all of them rather large.
Image source (public domain)
Labels:
500 or more views,
alcohol,
color,
cucumbers,
Donald Trump,
e-mail,
fish,
food,
geology,
Healthcare,
immigration,
inventions,
links,
Muslims,
sex,
Twitter
Wednesday, March 29, 2017
Sunspots 619
Things I have recently spotted that may
be of interest to someone else:
Christianity: A Christianity Today writer tells us why Down Syndrome children are valuable.
Fox News reports that some Muslim refugees are converting to Christianity, in Europe.
(and health) From a blog: "What I'll say to my Children if I'm Diagnosed with Alzheimer's." (Thanks to a regular reader for the link.)
Ethics: A Sojourners article says that President Trump's lies are putting us on the brink of a moral crisis. The article notes other lies from other Presidents, but claims that Mr. Trump's lies are bolder, more frequent, and, apparently, deliberate.
History: The History Blog reports on a toilet seat that was made nearly 2,000 years ago.
Listverse tells us 10 interesting things about trains. (Some of these are about Japanese trains.)
Humor: (sort of) Listverse tells us 10 stupid things that the CIA did years ago.
Politics: FiveThirtyEight and other sources, including Scientific American, indicate that President Trump's recent roll-back of environmental regulations affecting coal won't have much effect -- the coal industry, and coal miners, aren't going to be helped significantly.
Image source (public domain)
Christianity: A Christianity Today writer tells us why Down Syndrome children are valuable.
Fox News reports that some Muslim refugees are converting to Christianity, in Europe.
(and health) From a blog: "What I'll say to my Children if I'm Diagnosed with Alzheimer's." (Thanks to a regular reader for the link.)
Ethics: A Sojourners article says that President Trump's lies are putting us on the brink of a moral crisis. The article notes other lies from other Presidents, but claims that Mr. Trump's lies are bolder, more frequent, and, apparently, deliberate.
History: The History Blog reports on a toilet seat that was made nearly 2,000 years ago.
Listverse tells us 10 interesting things about trains. (Some of these are about Japanese trains.)
Humor: (sort of) Listverse tells us 10 stupid things that the CIA did years ago.
Politics: FiveThirtyEight and other sources, including Scientific American, indicate that President Trump's recent roll-back of environmental regulations affecting coal won't have much effect -- the coal industry, and coal miners, aren't going to be helped significantly.
Image source (public domain)
Labels:
500 or more views,
CIA,
coal mining,
dementia,
Donald Trump,
Down Syndrome,
ethics,
evangelism,
lies,
links,
lying,
Muslims,
Politics,
toilet seats,
trains
Wednesday, March 22, 2017
Sunspots 618
Things I have recently spotted that may be of interest to someone else:
Christianity: (And Politics) Christianity Today on how Hispanics, including some legally in the US, are now afraid to attend church (and for some valid reasons.)
Christianity Today also reports that recent executive orders are cutting off efforts to evangelize Muslims in the U. S. So is the attitude of white evangelical Christians, who are far more likely to fear Muslims and support the attempted travel bans than is the population at large.
Christianity Today discusses the importance of contemporary worship, and even defines it.
Finance: Listverse reports on 10 typos that led to some really awful consequences.
Health: The New York Times reports that, in Canada, people with cystic fibrosis live, on average, 10 years longer than they do in the US. The difference is mostly due to better insurance in Canada. The same report indicates that Canadians live about 2 years longer than Americans do.
Politics: (And Science) General Mattis, the newly installed US Secretary of Defense, believes that climate change is a real threat that our military needs to take seriously.
Shepard Smith, of Fox News, stated that that network had "no evidence of any kind that the now president of the United States was surveilled at any time in any way, full stop.”
Science: (And politics, unfortunately) The Weather Channel on why scientists believe that humans are contributing to climate change.
Wired warns us that the bananas many of us like to eat may soon be gone, because of the way we concentrate large agriculture on just "the best" types of plant.
FiveThirtyEight assesses the possibility of reproduction while in space, and finds that it's probably difficult or impossible for higher animals, based on very little research.
Wired has posted an amazing 4+ minute video of the surface of Mars. A longer video covers much the same material, but with on-screen captioning, so you can tell what you are seeing.
Image source (public domain)
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
Sunspots 574
Things I have recently spotted that may
be of interest to someone else:
The Arts: Listverse reports on 10 amazing objects made from ice -- some small, some quite large.
Christianity: Philosopher Alvin Plantinga on why science does not rule out miracles.
Sojourners reports that Southern Baptists, Jews, Sikhs, and Hari Krishna worshipers have come out against a zoning ruling that a mosque couldn't be built.
Computing: Gizmo's Freeware points to a free web-based video studio.
Wired says that ransomware -- making a computer or network unusable, then demanding money to reverse this -- is becoming the most common type of Internet attack. The article discusses ways to avoid this.
Politics: Some reactions from important Christians to Mr. Trump: Sojourners reports on a "called to resist bigotry" statement, signed by sixty important religious leaders. The report includes a long excerpt from an article by Russell Moore, an important official of the Southern Baptist Convention, who signed the statement. Here's the Moore article.
Science: Listverse tells us about 10 organisms (not all are animals!) that may be as or more intelligent than we are.
Sports: Congratulations to Tim Duncan. His team, the San Antonio Spurs of the National Basketball Association, did not win the championship this year. (They have in the past.) But Duncan has won more games with the same team than any player in the history of the NBA.
Image source (public domain)
The Arts: Listverse reports on 10 amazing objects made from ice -- some small, some quite large.
Christianity: Philosopher Alvin Plantinga on why science does not rule out miracles.
Sojourners reports that Southern Baptists, Jews, Sikhs, and Hari Krishna worshipers have come out against a zoning ruling that a mosque couldn't be built.
Computing: Gizmo's Freeware points to a free web-based video studio.
Wired says that ransomware -- making a computer or network unusable, then demanding money to reverse this -- is becoming the most common type of Internet attack. The article discusses ways to avoid this.
Politics: Some reactions from important Christians to Mr. Trump: Sojourners reports on a "called to resist bigotry" statement, signed by sixty important religious leaders. The report includes a long excerpt from an article by Russell Moore, an important official of the Southern Baptist Convention, who signed the statement. Here's the Moore article.
Science: Listverse tells us about 10 organisms (not all are animals!) that may be as or more intelligent than we are.
Sports: Congratulations to Tim Duncan. His team, the San Antonio Spurs of the National Basketball Association, did not win the championship this year. (They have in the past.) But Duncan has won more games with the same team than any player in the history of the NBA.
Image source (public domain)
Labels:
animal behavior,
Basketball,
Donald Trump,
ice,
links,
Miracles,
Muslims,
ransomware
Wednesday, February 03, 2016
Sunspots 559
Things I have recently spotted that may
be of interest to someone else:
The Arts: The Piano Guys have fun, lots of it, with Pachelbel's Canon, here, and here (these are wildly different).
.
Christianity: BioLogos has a post on "Do Dinosaurs Go to Heaven?"
Christianity Today reports on the Morocco Declaration, the result of a meeting of many Muslim leaders, and some Christians, which Declaration ends thus: "it is unconscionable to employ religion for the purpose of aggressing upon the rights of religious minorities in Muslim countries."
Relevant asks why so many Christians are afraid of non-violence.
Ken Schenck has posted on what the Bible says about adultery.
Finance: ListVerse tells us how to launder money, or at least how criminals do it.
Health: (or Neurobiology) ListVerse told me 10 things that the brains of babies can do - I didn't know about them, and you probably don't, either.
Wired reports on the difficulty of replacing the lead-containing water pipes in Flint, Michigan.
History: Listverse discusses 10 important battles, where the winners were actually worse off after winning.
Politics: In Sojourners: Why Liberals win the Culture Wars (Most of them, anyway).
Science: ListVerse has listed the 10 most important medical breakthroughs of 2015. I surely learned some interesting things from that list.
Wired reports on an insect that eats toads, gruesomely.
Image source (public domain)
The Arts: The Piano Guys have fun, lots of it, with Pachelbel's Canon, here, and here (these are wildly different).
.
Christianity: BioLogos has a post on "Do Dinosaurs Go to Heaven?"
Christianity Today reports on the Morocco Declaration, the result of a meeting of many Muslim leaders, and some Christians, which Declaration ends thus: "it is unconscionable to employ religion for the purpose of aggressing upon the rights of religious minorities in Muslim countries."
Relevant asks why so many Christians are afraid of non-violence.
Ken Schenck has posted on what the Bible says about adultery.
Finance: ListVerse tells us how to launder money, or at least how criminals do it.
Health: (or Neurobiology) ListVerse told me 10 things that the brains of babies can do - I didn't know about them, and you probably don't, either.
Wired reports on the difficulty of replacing the lead-containing water pipes in Flint, Michigan.
History: Listverse discusses 10 important battles, where the winners were actually worse off after winning.
Politics: In Sojourners: Why Liberals win the Culture Wars (Most of them, anyway).
Science: ListVerse has listed the 10 most important medical breakthroughs of 2015. I surely learned some interesting things from that list.
Wired reports on an insect that eats toads, gruesomely.
Image source (public domain)
Labels:
adultery,
culture wars,
links,
Muslims,
neurobiology,
non-violence,
Pachelbel's Canon,
Politics
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
Sunspots 548
Christianity: The Difference Between (a non-religious site) differentiates between faith and belief.
Health: National Public Radio debunks some ideas about flu shots.
Politics: The Washington Post's Michael Gerson says that coming down hard on Muslims is used as propaganda ammunition to recruit followers.
Relevant has an article on What the Bible says about how to treat refugees.
Science: Wired reports on how hints from termite mound design can cut energy consumption in our buildings.
Wired also reports on a high-tech repair of a cracked elephant's tusk.
The BBC reports that pigeons are able to detect breast cancer in human X-rays.
Image source (public domain)
Wednesday, October 21, 2015
Sunspots 543
Things I have recently spotted that may
be of interest to someone else:
The Arts: An article in Relevant that says that true art points to God.
Christianity: Relevant tells us that we, who can read this, are rich, and indicates how rich we are.
An essay on the virtues of old hymns, by a worship leader who used to disrespect them.
Ken Schenck finishes a series on the sacraments. He affirms the usefulness of several sacraments, and suggests some other activity that may bring some people closer to God. "But God can use anything to transform us."
Computing: Wired tells us how a young mother was one of the most important pioneers in computer programming, and in the US Space Program.
Gizmo's Freeware has published a list of the best free Android apps.
Gizmo's Freeware has also noted a free utility for clearing the Windows print cache, without having to re-boot, etc.
Politics: Benjamin L. Corey says that the Bible commands us to bless Muslims, as well as Israel, and gives Biblical evidence.
Science: (sort of) NPR reports on how astronauts use the toilet, with a video (you won't see anything that you shouldn't) to explain what happens.
Sports: A video of an amazing football reception.
Image source (public domain)
The Arts: An article in Relevant that says that true art points to God.
Christianity: Relevant tells us that we, who can read this, are rich, and indicates how rich we are.
An essay on the virtues of old hymns, by a worship leader who used to disrespect them.
Ken Schenck finishes a series on the sacraments. He affirms the usefulness of several sacraments, and suggests some other activity that may bring some people closer to God. "But God can use anything to transform us."
Computing: Wired tells us how a young mother was one of the most important pioneers in computer programming, and in the US Space Program.
Gizmo's Freeware has published a list of the best free Android apps.
Gizmo's Freeware has also noted a free utility for clearing the Windows print cache, without having to re-boot, etc.
Politics: Benjamin L. Corey says that the Bible commands us to bless Muslims, as well as Israel, and gives Biblical evidence.
Science: (sort of) NPR reports on how astronauts use the toilet, with a video (you won't see anything that you shouldn't) to explain what happens.
Sports: A video of an amazing football reception.
Image source (public domain)
Labels:
art,
computing,
hymns,
links,
Muslims,
sacraments,
worship,
worship music
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Sunspots 512, part 2
This blog typically posts a selection of links each Wednesday, entitled "Sunspots." That was true yesterday.
Some important web pages have come to my attention, and here is another edition of Sunspots, annotating them.
FiveThirtyEight, which is not a religious site, but examines various statistical matters, considers the question of religion among prisoners in the USA. The professed religion of prisoners has significant differences from that of the population at large, and the article considers possible reasons for such differences.
Relevant interviews a missionary to Muslims, who points out that Christians have reacted strangely to ISIS/ISIL/whatever. The death of Coptic Christians was widely publicized, but the deaths of larger numbers of Muslims, also by ISIS, has not been. The missionary also said that ". . . prior to the breakout of ISIS . . . missions agencies and churches were actively teaching that Coptic Christians, Chaldeans, etc. are not real Christians and needed to be converted by evangelical missionaries in order to become 'real believers'!"
Two articles, here and here, on contraception, in Christianity Today. They get below the surface, for example pointing out that Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood, was not in favor of abortion. The articles indicate that it's a complex matter, and some simple answers aren't logical, or don't take the facts into account. One of them refers to an article in Atlantic, by a pro-lifer, on the question of whether the so-called pill is an abortifacient or not. This article, also, avoids pat answers. (If you are interested, I have posted on abortion, sticking mostly to what the Bible says, and not considering the medical and scientific questions, but such matters as whether abortion really is murder, according to the Bible.)
Christianity Today also reports that most evangelical Christians say that the Bible is not the major source of their opinions on immigration to the USA. (Only about 10% said that it is.) The article does not suggest a correct position on the matter, but just considers what is influencing us. Why am I not surprised by the result?
Thanks for reading. You should find any of these articles to be thought-provoking.
Some important web pages have come to my attention, and here is another edition of Sunspots, annotating them.
FiveThirtyEight, which is not a religious site, but examines various statistical matters, considers the question of religion among prisoners in the USA. The professed religion of prisoners has significant differences from that of the population at large, and the article considers possible reasons for such differences.
Relevant interviews a missionary to Muslims, who points out that Christians have reacted strangely to ISIS/ISIL/whatever. The death of Coptic Christians was widely publicized, but the deaths of larger numbers of Muslims, also by ISIS, has not been. The missionary also said that ". . . prior to the breakout of ISIS . . . missions agencies and churches were actively teaching that Coptic Christians, Chaldeans, etc. are not real Christians and needed to be converted by evangelical missionaries in order to become 'real believers'!"
Two articles, here and here, on contraception, in Christianity Today. They get below the surface, for example pointing out that Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood, was not in favor of abortion. The articles indicate that it's a complex matter, and some simple answers aren't logical, or don't take the facts into account. One of them refers to an article in Atlantic, by a pro-lifer, on the question of whether the so-called pill is an abortifacient or not. This article, also, avoids pat answers. (If you are interested, I have posted on abortion, sticking mostly to what the Bible says, and not considering the medical and scientific questions, but such matters as whether abortion really is murder, according to the Bible.)
Christianity Today also reports that most evangelical Christians say that the Bible is not the major source of their opinions on immigration to the USA. (Only about 10% said that it is.) The article does not suggest a correct position on the matter, but just considers what is influencing us. Why am I not surprised by the result?
Thanks for reading. You should find any of these articles to be thought-provoking.
Labels:
abortion,
contraception,
immigration,
ISIL,
ISIS,
links,
Muslims,
prisons,
religious preference
Thursday, February 12, 2015
What's wrong with the political left/with the political right in the US
Before getting into the problems of the left and right, here’s the biggest problem, for all of us:
█ We forget that the Good News of the Gospel is far more important than any current news that we can hear, see, or read about.
Who won the game, which celebrity or politician got caught doing what, who got shot, who got elected, what laws were passed, what natural and man-made disasters occurred, what acts of terrorism happened, are insignificant beside that Good News!
But there are other problems with the two most widely held political viewpoints in our country:
Problems with the Left
The Left:
█ seems to ignore Biblical teachings on sex and marriage;
█ tends to treat any lack of acceptance of homosexual activity, or of people who practice such, as hatred (See here for more on homosexuality);
█ seems to believe that no one who is receiving “welfare” is in that position because they have made bad choices;
█ tends to want to weaken property rights;
█ believes government action is the solution for almost any problem, although government is often inefficient, costs lots of money, and may not respond as it is supposed to.
The Left also:
█ Often acts as if it believes that businesses and manufacturers are intrinsically evil;
█ Often acts as if it believes that labor unions are right, and have always been right;
█ often dismisses concerns about jobs and living space, in order to protect endangered species that are probably doomed to extinction, no matter what we might do;
█ favors government-run healthcare, even though there are problems with it, in other countries;
█ usually believes that it is wrong to interfere with a woman’s right (under Roe v. Wade) to have an abortion, and that abortions should be publicly funded, even though abortion may be murder, and some abortions are for frivolous reasons – the fetus is the wrong sex, or the woman wants to go on a ski vacation. (For more on abortion, see here.);
█ tends to be suspicious of police and other law enforcement bodies;
█ sometimes acts as if Christianity wasn't a special religion, the only one offering an effective cure for sin, and a relationship with the King of the Universe.
█ sometimes seems to ignore the rights of Christians, and favor other groups.
Problems with the Right
The Right:
█ often ignores the problems of the less privileged, and wants to cut or eliminate government help for them (See Psalm 72 and Jeremiah 22 for evidence that government has an obligation to help the poor. A post here gives statistics on how much Christians are giving to the poor, and argues that being for government help makes sense, since the church is doing so little.) Often acts as if being less privileged is the fault of the poor, even though many poor people are children, or disabled;
█ often acts as if all resident non-citizens are here illegally, and are a grave economic, or social, threat to our way of life, or are out to murder us, seemingly forgetting that most of us are the offspring of immigrants, that many illegal immigrants are doing work that citizens won’t do, and that many of them live lives that are consistent with “family values.” (Note Leviticus 19:33 “‘If a stranger lives as a foreigner with you in your land, you shall not do him wrong. 34 The stranger who lives as a foreigner with you shall be to you as the native-born among you, and you shall love him as yourself; for you lived as foreigners in the land of Egypt. I am Yahweh your God.... Here’s the result of a search for “stranger” in the ESV Bible. Some of those verses also seem to be relevant.);
█ forgets that Jesus didn’t say “stand your ground!,” (with a gun) but did say “turn the other cheek.” (See here for more scripture, in a post by John Piper, who responded to a speech by the President of Liberty University, Jerry Falwell, jr., who had advocated the threat of use of privately held guns by Christians.);
█ believes that armed might is the solution for many problems, of all sorts, even though wars always kill or ruin the lives of innocent people, destroy property, harm the environment, and separate the families of those in the military (Some wars may have been, or be, just – and, therefore worth the cost. The Second World War, and perhaps other recent conflicts seem to have qualified. For more on just war theory, see here.);
█ tends to believe that the police should not be questioned, even when it is likely that they have acted illegally, or that they have violated police procedures;
█ may confuse not getting special treatment with persecution -- as in the so-called "War on Christmas." When some person, or some store, uses "Happy Holidays," rather than "Merry Christmas," that's not persecution;
█ may want to advance Christian beliefs by force of legal action, rather than by gentle persuasion and example. Example -- wanting official Christian prayer in public schools, when there may be non-Christians affected, when doing so might open the door for Muslims, Wiccans, and others to demand that their prayers be offered, and when some of the teachers who would be expected to lead prayer might not be Christians. (Currently, according to US law, student groups can pray, adults can teach Christian doctrine to students whose guardians want them to receive such teaching, in the schools, and individuals can pray privately, or bring a Bible to school, at any time.)
The Right also:
█ claims to get its ideas from scripture, when some of them come from Rush Limbaugh, Fox News, etc., and some of those ideas ignore, or contradict, the Bible;
█ acts as if it believes that labor unions are, and always have been, detrimental to the public good;
█ doesn't seem to understand that there are millions of people who work every day, but don't earn enough money from their jobs to pay for housing, clothes, food, transportation and healthcare for themselves, let alone for their families;
█ often dismisses the plight of millions of people, including many who work, who have no health insurance, and claims that our health “system” is the best in the world, in spite of the evidence;
█ believes that free enterprise can solve all problems, in spite of the evidence (the BP Gulf Oil spill, the economic collapse of 2008, the widening gap between the well off and those who are not, etc.);
█ often does not protect the environment, when we have a Biblical duty to do so;
█ tends to treat homosexual tendency as if it were homosexual activity (which, according to the Bible, is sinful) and to view homosexual sin as especially evil – more so than adultery (which is condemned in the Ten Commandments, while homosexual behavior is not), and to deny the possibility that homosexual tendency is influenced by heredity and home environment;
█ dismisses accepted scientific claims, including global climate change, (see also here), and that the earth is very old;
█ wants to cut taxes, preferably to zero, and wants to eliminate government drastically, or entirely, in spite of Biblical support for taxes, and for governments; (For a cautionary tale on the dangers of cutting taxes too much, see here.)
█ sometimes acts as if Muslims not only have a different faith than Christians, but as if all Muslims are terrorists who want to destroy those who don't agree with them. (Michael Gerson discusses such claims, and defends Presidents Obama and G. W. Bush, although he thinks President Obama's response to terrorism has not been serious enough. An article in Christianity Today is similar.)
Problems of both the Left and the Right:
█ using the Bible to find excuses for their beliefs, rather than following Biblical principles because they are right;
█ confusing their political and cultural beliefs with Christianity;
█ not seeking guidance, on issues that are controversial, from the Bible; (An article on immigration says that only about 10% of evangelical Christians say that the Bible has been the main influence on their position on immigration, for example.)
█ refusing to consider that their position might be wrong, or to believe that another side may have some valid reasons for disagreeing (This is often because they pay attention to only one “side” in getting their news and opinions about the world. See here for the effect of this on Congress.);
█ forgetting that those in power, even those you fully supported during an election, are going to make mistakes, or perhaps even deliberately do wrong things. (They, like the rest of us, are sinful, fallible, humans.);
█ not praying for those in power, especially if they don’t agree with their positions. (The Bible says that we should, and this was written when pagan emperors, and Roman invaders, were in power.);
█ distorting the truth, or just plain ignoring it, or passing on distorted truth, lies, or slander about politicians and political positions not agreed with. (For instance, most political ads, if you can stand them, and a great deal that is passed on through Facebook.);
█ not respecting leaders, and those seeking high office, even mocking and ridiculing those in authority:
Exodus 22:28 You shall not blaspheme God, nor curse a ruler of your people.
Ecclesiastes 10:20a Don’t curse the king, no, not in your thoughts
Romans 13:1 Let every soul be in subjection to the higher authorities, for there is no authority except from God, and those who exist are ordained by God. 2a Therefore he who resists the authority, withstands the ordinance of God
2 Peter 2:13 Therefore subject yourselves to every ordinance of man for the Lord’s sake: whether to the king, as supreme; 14a or to governors 17 Honor all men. Love the brotherhood. Fear God. Honor the king. (Quotations from the World English Bible, public domain. In Peter’s time, the king, or emperor, was a pagan, who probably encouraged worship of himself by his subjects. But Peter said that he was still to be honored.)
President Obama has been the butt of all sorts of disrespectful mockery and ridicule on the Internet, on Facebook and elsewhere. President Bush was, when he was President, and, to some extent, he still is.
Does the Bible say that we have to agree with our elected leaders on all points? No. See here, and here. But disagreement should be honest, and respectful.
Most of us, whether strongly left- or right-oriented, or somewhere in the middle, agree on at least a few goals, such as:
█ Our troops should be cared for promptly and effectively, when they return;
█ Something must be done to make the Social Security program more financially stable, or to replace it;
█ The tax code should be simplified.
But our elected leaders, Congress and Presidents, don’t seem to be willing to really talk about these issues with each other, and with us, or to make serious proposals, constructively criticize, compromise, and fix these problems. (There are, of course, many other issues – make your own list – where disagreement between Left and Right means that it is difficult to even decide on worthwhile goals. That’s another problem.);
█ Most elected officials seem to be more concerned with getting re-elected than they are with acting on principle;
Reminder: the biggest problem of all, for all of us:
█ We forget that the Good News of the Gospel is far more important than any current news that we can hear, see, or read about.
Thanks for reading! Pray for our leaders:
1 Timothy 2:1 I exhort therefore, first of all, that petitions, prayers, intercessions, and givings of thanks, be made for all men: 2 for kings and all who are in high places; that we may lead a tranquil and quiet life in all godliness and reverence.
Cal Thomas, a Bible-believing Christian, and politically right-oriented columnist, warns against supposing that a Bible-believing politician will do much to change public morals. He cites scripture (Psalm 146:3 Don’t put your trust in princes, each a son of man in whom there is no help.) to back this up. He also proposes a Christian platform, namely James 1:27 (Pure religion and undefiled before our God and Father is this: to visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep oneself unstained by the world), but doubts that anyone would run on it, or win if they did.
Thanks for reading! This is a post revised from the original, which appeared in January 2015. Slightly revised on August 25, 2015, December 7, 2015, December 24, 2015, and February 8, 2016.
December 30, 2015: Ken Schenck, Bible scholar, has posted on how the different portrayals of Jesus in the Gospels seem to support various political agendas.
In this post, I have tried to quote all of the Bible passages that relate to politics in general.
December 12, 2017: Mark Galli, editor of Christianity Today, has written an essay, which criticizes both the left and the right, and says that Christianity is going to get a black eye, no matter what happens. This essay was prompted by the election to fill the Senate seat of Jeff Sessions, in Alabama. It was written, and published, before the result of the election was known.
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Sunspots 508
Things I have recently spotted that may
be of interest to someone else:
Computing: Gizmo's Freeware tells us how to configure Adblock Plus (an add-in for major browsers) so that it does a better job of blocking ads.
Relevant warns of some dangers of social media. They aren't all the same ones you've already heard about.
Politics: Michael Gerson, columnist for The Washington Post, does not think President Obama's response to terrorism has been serious enough. But, he says, the President, nor the one before him, should or could have spoken against Muslims in the way that some people think that they should have.
Science: Wired reports that the Hubble Space Telescope has captured three of Jupiter's moons, moving in front of the planet's surface. Eclipsing, in other words.
Wired also tells us that the hydra, a common, but nearly-microscopic animal, is potentially immortal.
Wired also tells us how it is possible for a baby to have three parents, in the sense that she gets genetic material from all three of them.
Sports: USA Today, ESPN, and many other outlets tell us that Dean Smith, great men's basketball coach, and greater man, has passed away.
Image source (public domain)
Computing: Gizmo's Freeware tells us how to configure Adblock Plus (an add-in for major browsers) so that it does a better job of blocking ads.
Relevant warns of some dangers of social media. They aren't all the same ones you've already heard about.
Politics: Michael Gerson, columnist for The Washington Post, does not think President Obama's response to terrorism has been serious enough. But, he says, the President, nor the one before him, should or could have spoken against Muslims in the way that some people think that they should have.
Science: Wired reports that the Hubble Space Telescope has captured three of Jupiter's moons, moving in front of the planet's surface. Eclipsing, in other words.
Wired also tells us that the hydra, a common, but nearly-microscopic animal, is potentially immortal.
Wired also tells us how it is possible for a baby to have three parents, in the sense that she gets genetic material from all three of them.
Sports: USA Today, ESPN, and many other outlets tell us that Dean Smith, great men's basketball coach, and greater man, has passed away.
Image source (public domain)
Labels:
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Astronomy,
Basketball,
computing,
Dean Smith,
Facebook,
hydra,
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mitochondria,
Muslims,
reproduction,
terrorism
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
Sunspots 492
Things I have recently spotted that may
be of interest to someone else:
Christianity: A post in Relevant magazine, on how many Christians do not accept the End Times view that the Left Behind movie is based on.
Also in Relevant, a post on why Christians should have Muslim friends, real ones.
And, also from Relevant, a great post on the uses and misuses of anger.
In Christianity Today, an article about the first Protestant missionary to India (you've never heard of him).
Computing: Gizmo's Freeware has a free anti-virus utility that they rate highly.
Science: In Wired, video of an Icelandic volcano, erupting, taken with a drone.
From the BBC, a good article on keeping very accurate time. (A second is no longer a fraction of a day, by the way.) Thanks to one of my brothers for the link.
NPR interviews an expert on teenage brain development, who has some radical suggestions for high school (and later) education.
Image source (public domain)
Christianity: A post in Relevant magazine, on how many Christians do not accept the End Times view that the Left Behind movie is based on.
Also in Relevant, a post on why Christians should have Muslim friends, real ones.
And, also from Relevant, a great post on the uses and misuses of anger.
In Christianity Today, an article about the first Protestant missionary to India (you've never heard of him).
Computing: Gizmo's Freeware has a free anti-virus utility that they rate highly.
Science: In Wired, video of an Icelandic volcano, erupting, taken with a drone.
From the BBC, a good article on keeping very accurate time. (A second is no longer a fraction of a day, by the way.) Thanks to one of my brothers for the link.
NPR interviews an expert on teenage brain development, who has some radical suggestions for high school (and later) education.
Image source (public domain)
Labels:
anger,
anti-malware,
anti-virus,
computing,
end times,
links,
Muslims,
neurobiology,
time
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