Showing posts with label Cultural Commentary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cultural Commentary. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 27, 2022

An Understanding Heart

 Therefore give to Your servant an understanding heart to judge Your people, that I may discern between good and evil. For who is able to judge this great people of Yours?

1 Kings 3:9
 
The death of President Franklin Roosevelt abruptly thrust Harry Truman into the presidency. He traveled to Capitol Hill to address Congress, and at the end of his speech he said: “As I have assumed my heavy duties, I humbly pray Almighty God, in the words of King Solomon: ‘Give therefore thy servant an understanding heart to judge thy people, that I may discern between good and bad; for who is able to judge this thy so great a people?’ I ask only to be a good and faithful servant of my Lord and my people.”
[1]

Tuesday, January 8, 2019


"Without morals a republic cannot subsist any length of time; they therefore who are decrying the Christian religion…are undermining the solid foundation of morals, the best security for the duration of free governments".
Charles Carroll, signer of the Declaration of Independence

Friday, April 20, 2018

The King and the Poisened Well




Today's life line has to do with trail blazing, walking the road less traveled, and doing what is right despite the difficulty.

The following parable was written by an unknown author. There are several versions of it on the web and I have taken the liberty to adapt a version here for your consumption. Hope you enjoy.

THE KING & THE POISONED WELL
There was once a wise king who ruled over a vast kingdom. He was feared for his might and loved for his wisdom. Now in the heart of the city, there was a well with pure and crystalline waters from which the king and all the inhabitants drank. When all were asleep, three witches entered the city and poured seven drops of a strange liquid into the well. They said that henceforth all who drink this water shall become mad.

The next day, all the people drank of the water, but not the king. And the people began to say, "The king is mad and has lost his reason. Look how strangely he behaves. We cannot be ruled by a madman, so he must be dethroned."

The king grew very fearful, for his subjects were preparing to rise against him. He had a difficult choice: risk being destroyed by his beloved subjects or drink from the poisoned well and become mad like them. So that evening, he ordered a golden goblet to be filled from the well, and he drank deeply. The next day, there was great rejoicing among the people, for their beloved king had finally regained his reason.

--Author Unknown

How many times in your life have you allowed yourself to do what is ordinary for the sake of comfort? Some people drink poison every day just to fit in with the crowd.

Well they say that the path of the righteous is narrow and long. It is beset by all sorts of obstacles, barriers, and evils that threaten to knock you off of the path. If you value your social role, status, possessions, relationships, or even your own life more than righteousness, then you will go the way of the king in the parable. You will drink from the well again and again in life. However, if you will risk standing out, risk being different, risk it all for love of righteousness, there is a greater reward.

Let your light shine and dim it for no one and nothing. You only have one life to live and one chance to get it right.
source:  http://manueljwbpsyd.blogspot.com/2010/04/parable-of-king-and-poisoned-well.html

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

John Denver The Box 1973



This poem The Box was written about 1912 by Lascellas Ambercrombie -





Kindly Do Not Touch.

Once upon a time, in the land of Hush-A-Bye,
around about the wondrous days of yore,
they came across a kind of box,
bound up with chains and locked with locks
and labeled "Kindly do not touch; it's war."

A decree was issued round about, and all with a flourish and a shout 
and a gaily-colored mascot tripping lightly on before. 
Don't fiddle with this deadly box, or break the chains, or pick the locks. 
And please don't ever play about with war.

The children understood. Children happen to be good
and they were just as good around the time of yore. 
They didn't try to pick the locks or break into that deadly box.
They never tried to play about with war. 

Mommies didn't either; sisters, aunts, grannies neither. 
They were quiet, and sweet, and pretty in those wondrous days of yore. 
Well, very much the same as now, not the ones to blame somehow
 for opening up that deadly box of war.

But someone did. Someone battered in the lid.
and spilled the insides out across the floor. A kind of bouncy, bumpy ball 
made up of guns and flags and all the tears, and horror,
and death that comes with war.

It bounced right out and went bashing all about,
bumping into everything in store. 
And what was sad and most unfair was that it didn't really seem to care 
much who it bumped, or why, or what.....or for.

It bumped the children mainly. And I'll tell you this quite plainly,
it bumps them every day and more, and more, and leaves them dead,
and burned, and dying, thousands of them sick and crying. 
Cause when it bumps, it's really very sore.

Now there's a way to stop the ball. It isn't difficult at all. 
All it takes is wisdom, and I'm absolutely sure
that we can get it back into the box,and bind the chains, and lock the locks. 
But no one seems to want to save the children anymore.

Well, that's the way it all appears,
cause it's been bouncing round for years and years.
In spite of all the wisdom 'wiz since those wondrous days of yore 
and the time they came across the box, bound up with chains

and locked with locks, and labeled "Kindly do not touch; it's war."

Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Chicago_When All the Laughter Color My World


                                                                                                                                                              "When All The Laughter Dies In Sorrow"

When all the laughter dies in sorrow
And the tears have risen to a flood
When all the wars have found a cause
In human wisdom and in blood
Do you think they'll cry in sadness
Do you think the eye will blink
Do you think they'll curse the madness
Do you even think they'll think
When all the great galactic systems
Sigh to a frozen halt in space
Do you think there will be some remnant
Of beauty of the human race
Do you think there will be a vestige
Or a sniffle or a cosmic tear
Do you think a greater thinking thing
Will give a damn that man was here

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Forgiveness

"Forgiveness is choosing to pardon those who hurt us. It is not excusing ,forgetting or pretending. It's just not allowing them to hurt us again.  Do not punish them.  Leave that to God. Be kind and break the cycle of retribution and replace it with Grace."

**taken from Denison Forum on Truth and Culture 9/14/16

Thursday, August 18, 2016

The Angels Are Crying In Heaven Tonight


Peter Noone & Natalie Noone - The Angels Are Crying In Heaven Tonight
It was getting dark
Across the park,
When I saw her sitting there,
A little girl who must have lost her way.
The night was clear and I could see
The tears welled up in her eyes.
She didn't say a word,
She just kept staring at the sky.
I asked her why she was so sad,
And did my best to make her laugh
And when she finally spoke,
Her words took me by surprise. She said:
(REFRAIN):
The angels are cying in heaven tonight
Their hearts are so heavy,
They've got tears in their eyes.
The angels are cying in heaven tonight
'Cause they can't understand,
Why we can't find the light.
She said they cry for all the lies we live with everyday,
And for all the children sick and in the rain.
For the noble dreams that somehow seem to always be in vain,
And for the the gentle hearts who still believe in the miracle of faith.
It seems so strange that a little girl could know so much about a troubled world,
But now I see, she had to be an angel in disguise.


Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Bill O'Reilly: Talking Points; The Immigration Crisis

There are some very common sense suggestions here. Not so sure if or how this would work, but at least it's a start to a very serious situation.

The Factor's Plan to Solve the Immigration Crisis
By: Bill O'ReillyJuly 1, 2014
Talking Points has come up with a plan to solve the immigration crisis that is fair, humane, and can be implemented quickly.

Number one, in order to stop the border madness, President Obama must demand that Mexico police its own borders. That means stopping tens of thousands of illegal aliens from crossing into Mexico from Guatemala. Not a hard thing to do if you post the military at border check points.

In addition, the Mexican army must patrol the border with the USA stopping the human smugglers and border intruders. On the other side of the border, the American army will also be patrolling to back up the U-S Border Patrol at the hottest spots like the Rio Grande Valley in Texas. The National Guard should have been ordered to the border a long time ago. Its presence alone would inhibit people from paying the smugglers. It would also inhibit drug trafficking.

If Mexico does not cooperate on its borders, President Obama should issue trade sanctions against that country quickly. Mexico is the primary reason we have so much immigration chaos and it's time our federal government acted responsibly to hold that country accountable. We here on the Factor have called for Americans to boycott Mexico. No traveling there. Don't buy their stuff until they stop the massive corruption that has enveloped the entire country. Mexico should allow American planes to conduct surveillance in its air space to pinpoint illegal immigration camps and stop the flow of folks. Strong action by President Obama is needed right now and the Mexican government would respond to any threat of trade sanctions.

And what about the undocumented aliens who are already here? First they all must register at their local post office within three months providing name, age, family members, country of origin and address in the USA. Every illegal alien adult must do that. If they don't, it's a felony. They go to a federal prison upon conviction. Once the foreign national registers, he or she is sent a tamper-proof ID card allowing them to apply for working papers. They can apply to be citizens and their applications will be placed behind those applying legally.

Under my immigration plan, the feds have the power to immediately deport anyone whom they feel is undesirable for criminal or social reasons. Also, the aliens could not receive entitlements although their children could. If an immigrant cannot find work he or she is deportable up to Homeland Security to make that decision.

So there's no amnesty. There's a vetting process but there's also hope that a hard-working, honest, foreign national might build a life here. But no guarantee. It is a fair plan that would put a severe dent in a problem that has been vexing America for decades.

The rules for full citizenship would be tough and it would take a long time but in the end that kind of immigration plan would strengthen the country and show the world we are a humane nation but not a soft one.

Friday, June 13, 2014

To Hell And Back

Ever wonder why when people say they had a "near-death experience" they all go to heaven? This intrigues me. Why is it that no one ever has a near-death experience and goes to hell? Well, that is where the woman in this video, Tamara Laroux claims she went . She shot herself in the chest, died, and went to hell, but God rescued her from hell and took her to heaven for a glimpse of it, before returning her spirit to her body.

 I don't know what to make of this woman's story. Surely she did not die. Scripture says in Hebrews 9:27 we only die once. But she definetly experienced something very powerful. She truly believes she experienced the love of Jesus so much so it changed her life. God chooses many ways to call His children to Himself. This just may have been one of them. 



Monday, June 9, 2014

How To Begin Your Week

More books have been written about Jesus than about any other figure in history.  More people have committed their lives to him than to any other religious leader.  More people attend church services in America than go to football games.  We were designed for the kind of intimacy with God that our first parents knew in the Garden, so our hearts will always yearn for him.  Our longings to be loved, accepted, and wanted all stem from this fact.  Our world is broken, not because our longings are wrong, but because we try to satisfy them everywhere but in God.

 Here's a good way to start the week: give yourself the gift of a few minutes with the One who loves you.  Begin with a moment of worship, as you "enter his gates with thanksgiving and his courts with praise" (Psalm 100:4).  Now ask the Spirit to show you a longing in your heart that you are trying to satisfy outside of Jesus.  Name it, and ask Jesus to meet it.  Now do whatever you sense his leading to do—be still, read Scripture, take a walk, listen to worship music.  Let the Great Physician heal that pain in your heart.  Ask the One who fed the 5,000 to feed your soul.

And he will.


source: 
Dr. Jim Denison, President
Mar 24, 2014
Denison Forum on Truth and Culture. 


Choose Life

For one glorious day a pro-life billboard towered over Planned Parenthood’s pathetic little abortion feeder with the simple but powerful message, “Choose Life = No Regrets.” There was only one problem: The billboard was on Planned Parenthood’s property.
Adams Outdoor Advertising had leased the billboard space but forgotten about Planned Parenthood’s addendum forbidding any pro-life messaging.

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Call Him Crazy or Call Him Lord- Who Do You Say He Is?


     I have been and always will be a Christian. I have always lived with the knowledge that I have absolutely no doubt in my mind I will enter heaven when I die.
I will do so, not by my own worthiness, but only through the merits of Jesus Christ, my Savior, who paid the price for my soul’s redemption through his death on the cross. I have lived with my faith all through childhood always knowing it was there, but not until adulthood have I studied it and embrace it as truth.
      There are many who have different views of Jesus. Muslims believe He was born of a virgin, lived a sinless life, ascended to heaven and will return to our planet at the end of history--but they do not believe that he was divine. Many Buddhists and Hindus view him as an enlightened teacher. Many Jews see him as a brilliant rabbi. My view is similar to that of the great CS Lewis. “Either this man was, and is, who he said he is; the Son of God: or else a madman, liar or something worse. You can shut Him up for a fool, you can spit at Him and kill Him as a demon; or you can fall at His feet and call Him Lord and God.”
       I choose the latter because I believe the bible is not only a collection of historical facts that have been verified by archeology and paleontology; I also believe it to be the inspired revelation of God. A guidebook ,of sorts, for living life to it’s fullest, a refuge when in pain, suffering, and mourning, standards for our conduct, guidelines for knowing right from wrong, and principles to live by to help us in a confused society where so often "anything goes."  The plan of God for man and creation is truly awe inspiring.  I refuse to believe I am some meaningless creature evolved here out of some sponge. I can’t. There has to be more. I AM more. I am a child of the king! I believe my presence here on earth is proof of that. He is more than you and I can ever imagine.  For me, the answers to life and the universe have the all been laid out for us by the Christian God. Studying and reading His scriptures has brought me to a new level of understanding in His plan for us all. It is truly a fascinating story and I encourage you to read it. Start with the Gospel of John or the Book of Romans. It will blow you away.  In Jesus I have found my answers. I look forward to the day I go to heaven. You may ask, "What does she know about Heaven, anyway? Has she ever been there? I will answer by saying, "No, but I have a very good Friend who has. He’s been there and came to earth to tell us about it and someday He will return” . Will you be ready?

For more on my thoughts of this you can read my blog here:  http://bubalas-view.blogspot.com/p/my-faith-journey.html

Friday, May 23, 2014

Defend The Cross

The american atheists organization wants the "Miracle Cross" removed from the 9/11 National Museum. Well, isn't that special.  I feel compelled to say this: The museum is operated by a non-profit independent corporation and is not state sponsored. The cross is being displayed as a relic of the 9/11 attacks with no religious attachment whatsoever. Just two steel cross beam artifacts found in the rubble that have great historical significance to the event and our country.
 Atheists, when they look at it and since  they do not believe in God are free to see two steel beams. That's it. Christians are free to see a symbol of their Saviors triumph over death and evil and their hope in His promises, mercy and grace. To each his own. 
Atheists wanting to have it removed in the first place is an oxy-moron. If they want it removed, they obviously  believe it represents the death of Jesus, thus acknowledging His existence by wanting it removed. Why should it threaten them so?  If they didn't believe in Him all they would see is two steel beams.  I could go one, but now I pissed myself off by allowing space on my blog mentioning them. 

Sunday, May 18, 2014

Why I Am Pro-Life - Written by Cole Jeffrey

Thank you Mr Jeffrey.


When I expressed my pro-life views in the debate, I was accused of imposing my “religious beliefs” on women. Even though I never mentioned religion, the other debaters assumed that since I was pro-life I must also be religious. Though I am a Christian, my pro-life stance is not based on a “the-Bible-tells-me-so” attitude. You don’t have to be religious to be pro-life. In fact, I’m convinced it’s the only rational position for someone who believes in science and human rights.

The central issue in the abortion debate is human rights. If a fetus is not a person, it has no legal rights – it’s simply a part of a woman’s body, and she should be free to remove it just like a cyst or tumor. However, if a fetus is a person, then it has legal rights – including a right to life. No one, not even the mother, can take away that right.

But how do we know whether a fetus is a person or not? What counts as personhood? Is it an innate quality, or is it developed later? In my opinion, there are only two reliable criteria for determining personhood, and those criteria rest on scientific and medical evidence. The first criterion is the presence of life, and the second is the possession of a human genome. If something is a living organism and possesses a human genome, then it is not someTHING but someONE – a person with a right to live.
When we attempt to determine the personhood of a fetus, we need to start with this question:
Is a fetus a living organism?
image
The answer, quite simply, is yes. No biologist would dispute the claim that a fetus is alive. In biology, there are seven criteria for determining whether something is a living organism, and a fetus meets all of those criteria:
Like all living organisms, a fetus maintains an internal equilibrium by producing various chemicals and bodily effects (homeostasis).
Like all living organisms, a fetus is organized, meaning it is composed of at least one cell.
Like all living organisms, a fetus has a metabolism – it can transform chemicals into cellular components and break down complex substances for energy.
Like all living organisms, a fetus can adapt to changes in its environment.
Like all living organisms, a fetus develops reproductive features.
Like all living organisms, a fetus responds to stimuli.
Like all living organisms, a fetus grows.

Based on this evidence, there is no reason not to view a fetus as a living organism. As Dr. Hymie Gordon, the Chairman of the Mayo Clinic’s Department of Genetics, explains it, “By all the criteria of modern molecular biology, life is present from the moment of conception.” However, just because a fetus is living is not enough reason to view it as a person. It must also be human, which brings us to our second question:

Is a fetus human?

Once again, the answer is yes.
According to the laws of biogenesis, every species reproduces its own kind. Alligators give birth to alligators, bacteria give birth to bacteria, chickens give birth to chickens, and dogs give birth to dogs. No dog will ever give birth to an alligator, and no chicken will ever give birth to a bacteria. It’s biologically impossible. Every organism can only reproduce its own kind.

Based on this scientific fact, it should be evident that when a human male’s sperm fertilizes a human female’s ovum, the resulting embryo cannot be anything other than human. If you doubt that, just look at the genetics. Every adult human possesses a unique genetic code that consists of 23 pairs of chromosomes. A fetus possesses this code as well. Therefore, since the fetus possesses a human genome, it cannot be anything other than human. This is not a subjective opinion; it’s a scientific fact. As Dr. Jerome Lejeune, the “father of modern genetics” puts it, “To accept the fact that after fertilization has taken place a new human has come into being is no longer a matter of taste or opinion … it is just plain experimental evidence.”

Of course, someone might object by claiming that DNA doesn’t make something human since biological samples like toenail clippings and pieces of hair also contain human DNA. Though it’s certainly true that a toenail clipping does contain human DNA, there are two obvious differences between a toenail and a fetus.

First, the DNA in a toenail matches the person it came from. If a geneticist removes a cyst from a pregnant woman, she will find that the DNA contained in the cyst matches woman’s DNA. However, if she examines the fetus’s DNA, the geneticist will find that it is not identical to the mother’s. Every fetus possesses its own unique DNA that shows it is not part of the mother the same way her bodily organs are.

Second, a toenail is not a living organism. Unlike the fetus, it does not meet the biological criteria for determining life.

A fetus is alive and human? So what?

Scientific evidence makes it clear that a fetus is both living and human. This is beyond dispute, and has nothing to do with religious beliefs. “That the most partially formed human embryo is both human and alive has now been confirmed … We are the first generation to have to confront this as a certain knowledge,” writes the atheist and activist Christopher Hitchens.

Nevertheless, most abortion activists refuse to accept this evidence because it would lead to the conclusion that a living human organism is a person with rights. Consider this statement by abortion activist Joyce Arthur:

“Ultimately, the status of the fetus [as human] is a matter of subjective opinion, and the only opinion that counts is that of the pregnant woman. For example, a happily pregnant woman may feel love for her fetus as a special and unique human being … But an unhappily pregnant woman may view her fetus with utter dismay, bordering on revulsion.”

Similarly, MSNBC host Melissa Harris-Perry created a controversy recently when she claimed the answer to the question “When does life begin?” is not provided by science, but by a mother’s “powerful feeling.” According to Harris-Perry, a woman’s emotional state trumps scientific and medical opinion.

Let’s suppose, for a moment, that these ladies are right – the personhood of a fetus is not determined by objective scientific evidence; it’s a subjective concept. If this is the case, though, then why isn’t the personhood of children (or even adults) a subjective concept as well? Why can’t a mother kill her newborn child if she suddenly develops a “powerful feeling” that the child is actually a nonliving, nonhuman burden for her?

According to some pro-choice activists, a fetus is not a person because it is dependent on its mother while a child is not. For them, independence counts as a mark of personhood. But let’s consider that logic. From a biological perspective, there is little difference between the dependency of a fetus and the dependency of a newborn. Though the newborn is no longer living inside the mother’s body, it is still completely dependent on her (or a surrogate) to meet all its biological needs. In fact, the complete and utter dependency of newborns is so obvious that Peter Singer, a Princeton bioethicist, argues mothers should be allowed to kill their newborn children. “Many people find this [idea] shocking,” Singer says, “yet they support a woman’s right to have an abortion  … From the point of view of ethics rather than law, there is no sharp distinction between the fetus and the newborn baby.”
Hopefully, most people will be appalled by Singer’s claim. Yet, his logic is consistent with the premise that dependency robs a living human being of his or her right to live.

If we accept Arthur and Harris-Perry’s claim that the personhood of a fetus is a subjective concept, then there is little to prevent us from eventually accepting Singer’s claim that the personhood of children is also a subjective concept. Once we reach that point, though, where will we stop? What traits do adults possess that make them worth respecting as people? Ultimately, there does not seem to be much difference between the logic of abortion activists and the logic of the Supreme Court when it ruled in the infamous Dred Scott case (1857) that African Americans, though human, belonged to an “inferior order” and therefore had no legal rights.

If we reject the notion that personhood is determined by a very simple formula (life + humanity = personhood), then we must find an alternative definition of what makes someone a person. The question is, however, whether we can find any definition that provides a reliable, objective basis for human rights. I don’t believe such a definition exists.

Friday, May 2, 2014

Sunday, April 27, 2014

"You Can Save Your Soul: In 140 Characters or Less"


"You can save your soul: In 140 characters or less." So headlines USA Today. The subtitle explains: "Indulgences will be offered via Twitter." The story announces that Pope Francis "plans to grant plenary indulgences by Twitter during the World Youth Day 2013" which starts next week in Brazil. So, what are "indulgences"? Why would the pope offer them via Twitter? Why does any of this matter to the rest of us?

The Catholic Encyclopedia defines "indulgence" as "a remission of the temporal punishment due to sin." The article explains that an indulgence is not permission to commit sin, pardon of future sin, or exemption of any law or duty.

Here's how the theology works: First, the sinner confesses his sin through the "sacrament of penance." The guilt of his sin and its eternal punishment are then removed, but the temporal punishment required by divine justice remains. However, Jesus' death and the merits of the saints have created the "treasury of the Church," a depository from which indulgences can be granted to remove temporal punishment. In response to good works on the part of the sinner, the Church can dispense such indulgences.

The upcoming World Youth Day is an opportunity for participants to receive indulgences, but those who cannot travel to Brazil would miss their chance. However, if they participate in World Youth Day broadcasts or perform other spiritual acts, they can now receive indulgences. These will be made available to the pope's nearly 7.5 million Twitter followers in all languages.

Indulgences have been a significant bone of contention between Catholics and Protestants for centuries. The Catholic Encyclopedia clearly states, "Least of all is an indulgence the purchase of a pardon which secures the buyer's salvation or releases the soul of another from Purgatory." Nonetheless, under the rule of Pope Leo X(1475-1521), such sales to finance the building of St. Peter's Cathedral became common. Johann Tetzel was especially infamous for his promise, "As soon as a coin in the coffer rings, a soul from Purgatory springs." Martin Luther's objection to this corruption sparked the Reformation.

Here ends your theology lesson. Why is this issue important whether you're Catholic or not? As a Protestant, obviously I do not affirm the doctrine of indulgences. But as a Christian, I'm glad that so many people are seeking to know Christ and make him known. More than 300,000 have already registered for this year's World Youth Day; their theme is "Go and Make Disciples of All Nations," from Matthew 28:19.

Christians can disagree on matters of faith and practice while agreeing that the world needs Jesus. Someone told Dwight Moody, the famous evangelist, "I don't like your soul-winning methods." Moody said, "I don't like them much, either. What are yours?" The man admitted he didn't have any. Moody replied, "I like mine better than yours."

Would he like yours?

Source: http://www.denisonforum.org/cultural-commentary/775-you-can-save-your-soul-in-140-characters-or-less

Monday, March 24, 2014

A Good Way To Start The Week....

More books have been written about Jesus than about any other figure in history.  More people have committed their lives to him than to any other religious leader.  More people attend church services in America than go to football games.  We were designed for the kind of intimacy with God that our first parents knew in the Garden, so our hearts will always yearn for him.  Our longings to be loved, accepted, and wanted all stem from this fact.  Our world is broken, not because our longings are wrong, but because we try to satisfy them everywhere but in God.

  Here's a good way to start the week: give yourself the gift of a few minutes with the One who loves you.  Begin with a moment of worship, as you "enter his gates with thanksgiving and his courts with praise" (Psalm 100:4).  Now ask the Spirit to show you a longing in your heart that you are trying to satisfy outside of Jesus.  Name it, and ask Jesus to meet it.  Now do whatever you sense his leading to do—be still, read Scripture, take a walk, listen to worship music.  Let the Great Physician heal that pain in your heart.  Ask the One who fed the 5,000 to feed your soul.

And he will.

source: Denison Forum on Truth and Culture, Dr. Jim Denison, Mar 24, 2014 


Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Tim Tedbow's Shortest Sermon


How have you used the name Jesus Christ today? In the past, whenever I've heard someone use the Lord's name as a curse I've responded by saying "that's going to cost you." Now, thanks to Tim Tebow I have a new way to respond. Thanks Tim! 

A Washington Post reporter, Kent Babb, sent this tweet last Friday night: "In the Pat's locker room, a cameraman has a mishap and yells, "Jesus Christ!"  Tebow, in earshot, looks at the guy and says, "He loves you."  So far Babb's comment has been "retweeted" more than 3000 times.  In fact, Babb sent a later tweet promising that the first tweet was 100% true.  If you are a faithful reader of my blog, you know I like Tim Tebow.  He is a great young man, a great witness for Christ and I hope he will make a great football comeback this year.  (He had some struggles on Friday night.)  I really liked his short locker room sermon and I think he offers all of us a great suggestion.


Don't you just inwardly CRINGE when you hear someone use the name of Jesus as a curse?  I still remember the words to the old hymn that says, "There's just something about that name."  We pray "in the name of Jesus" because he told his disciples, "You may ask me for anything in my name and I will do it" (John 14:14).  Jesus said those words to his disciples after telling them that he would soon go to heaven and they would then receive the Holy Spirit.  When we pray "in Jesus name" we are asking the Holy Spirit to do for us, and through us, what Jesus would lead and empower us to accomplish.  There is great power in the name of Jesus.  That is why I loved Tim Tebow's mini sermon in the locker room.  He took a curse and turned it into the truth when he said, "He loves you."  We can too.

 
 Have you ever noticed that non-Christians use the name of Jesus on a regular basis?  Why don't you ever hear someone shout the name of Buddha, Hare-Krishna, or Muhammad as a curse?  Why do people get angry or fearful and react by speaking the name of Jesus Christ?  Could it be that deep down they know - "there's just something about that name"?  Maybe Satan is constantly looking for ways to damage or lessen the name of Jesus.  If that is the case, Christians should constantly be looking for ways to glorify Christ with our words and actions.

So...why don't all of us follow the example Tim Tebow set last Friday night?  He heard the name of his Lord misused - and turned it into something good.  A cameraman heard Tim Tebow tell him that Jesus Christ loves him.  A newsman tweeted the incident and now a LOT of people have heard Tebow's mini-sermon.

The next time I hear someone use the name of the Lord in a wrong way, I am not going to "cringe" - I'm going to speak up too.  We can speak the truth in love by saying, "He loves you."  We can smile instead of cringe because truthfully, we have all broken the Commandment and misused the name of the Lord, and we should give the same grace to others that God has shown us. 

My thanks to Kent Babb for his tweet!  I bet he didn't know that he was tweeting a sermon that will be preached by thousands in the years to come.  St. Francis of Assisi once said, "It is no use walking anywhere to preach, unless we preach as we walk."  Your walk with God will be strengthened if you think about those words and remember - there really is something about that name!

source: http://www.janetdenison.com/blog/180-tim-tebow-s-shortest-sermon