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Life in this wonderful and scary place

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     The world we live in is a beautiful and wondrous place.  Just look at the sky at sunset.  The light is refracted at just the right angle to paint the sky with purple and pink.  The same sky above us that, most days, is blue with fluffy white ice clouds over a vast sea of green that blankets the land.  The summers are warm.  The spring and fall especially, are my favorite times of the year.  The spring, when we get the first warm days after a long cold winter.  The fall, when the air gets crisp and I can put long pants and a sweater on for the first time after the long hot days of August. And we, as humans, are perfectly adapted to live through all these seasons through the tools that we have been given. I believe that the creatures of the Earth, including us, are even more amazing than the astounding Earth itself.  Think how complex an ant is.  How social it is.  How it lives and eats with a tiny digestive tract made of muscle and acids, directed by a simple brain. It is perfe

The Deep

It is not light shining in darkness That has brought me to weep. But the darkness itself In which I used to sleep. In a fathomless black cloud Floating adrift, inside. Wrapped in a shroud Utterly mystified. Falling down again and again Against the current of knowing Far from its peace to gain An invisible river overflowing. Pity my soul divided Between wrong and worse And not knowing how one-sided Was my angry curse: "You don't exist", I screamed. Into the blackness I bellowed. In return the light beamed, But the bitter pill, I swallowed. Unaware of my state, I fell deep Into the confusion of man And troubled at night, I could not sleep And on and on it ran. So were my teens - So close to being my whole life So lost in the in-betweens And riddled sick with strife. But the greatest miracle happened I plunged so deep into darkness, Into the pit of the heart without end As the mockers, they picked

What is the balm for a youth-obsessed culture?

      We live in a youth-obsessed culture here in the United States.  It wasn't always this way.  In the 1950's, advertisers realized that if they targeted the young, they could possibly have life-long customers.  The younger the consumer, the longer the company would be able to sell their product.  Television, which had just arrived in everyone's homes, was the perfect platform for this new marketing strategy.  But showing young, beautiful people buying their products they could influence the entire tv-watching public.  It is a strategy that has been ubiquitous ever since.  Now as television is slowly dying to subscription services and the Internet, advertising corporations haven't missed a beat targeting young consumers, especially the millennial generation.  They are actually having a bit of trouble doing this, I have heard, because millennials see right through shallow attempts to convince them of the need for products so they have switched to marketing through humo

Evolved Capitalism: Capitalism Led by Peoples' Spirits, Not the Dollar, Can Save America

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     I wrote a post the other day based on some statistics I had read recently that said that 99% of products purchased by Americans were discarded within 6 months.  And the average American consumer buys 53 times as many products as the average buyer in China.  That it would take 3 Earths to supply all the natural resources consumed if everyone in the world consumed as much as Americans.  And we are busy exporting this "free market" to the rest of the planet.  I think it is not a stretch to say that our lifestyle of consumption and waste, along with military intervention to protect our investment interests overseas, is fueling the radical anti-American sentiment around the world.  Capitalism is too closely tied to our democracy.  In fact the dollar owns our democracy.              I am arguing for Evolved Capitalism.  And it is something we can bring about right now, something that growing unarticulated in the hearts of the Millennial generation. Something that has bee

If the United States Is Stuck In the Cycle of Consumption, Why Don't We Just Stop the Merry-Go-Round and Get Off?

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   I read an article recently that said that 99% of products purchased by Americans were discarded within 6 months.  And the average American consumer buys 53 times as many products as the average buyer in China.  It would take 3 Earths to supply all the natural resources consumed if everyone in the world consumed as much as Americans.  It is a cycle inherint in our culture.  Without the cycle of consumption and waste, our economy would crumble.  Advertisers take every opportunity to exploit the glut of consumerism in America, as we are fed hourly with the lie that we need the newest, latest and greatest thing.  And conversely, our old things are worthless.  If you are looking for the contemporary "Great Harlot" of Revelation 17, the "new Babylon," I think we need not go any further than our front yards. Perhaps an often missed point of Revelation is not to look for the evil in the world and pine away for the ultimate relief of external tyranny, but rather to look

How is a simpleton the ultimate hero?

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     One of my favorite movies is "Forrest Gump" from 1994, starring Tom Hanks.  You may think that is a strange movie to have as a favorite, but it is full of wisdom. Stranger still. Because Forrest is a man born in the 1950's who by society's standards, would be considered "simple," a dullard.  Though they don't specifically say it in the movie, he has a low IQ.  Hardly the hero we would hold up in our Western Society, so concerned are we with achievement and being the best and the brightest.  But buried in the movie is a wonderful message.  Forrest, though born with this deficit, is encouraged by his mother who focuses on the good in him and teaches him not to dwell on his limitations.  Only to accept life as "a box of chocolates - you never know what you're gonna get," as he famously repeats over and over.  So our dull hero, not knowing his limitations, perhaps too dull to comprehend that he has any, goes from one amazing success to a

What If Infinity Was Not a Concept, But A Reality Written On Our Hearts?

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     "I don't really understand myself, for l I want to do what is right, but I don't do it. Instead, I do what I hate," Paul famously says in Romans.  He goes on to talk about how his sin is uncovered by the Law (the regulations in the Jewish scriptures), but all the Law can do is show us our sin.  We cannot, by force of will, always do what is right on our own.  But if we live in the Kingdom of God our hearts are changed and we begin to seek out what is right in the freedom that it provides.  It is a gentle process, and it takes a long time - a lifetime. We are not used to this sort of slow change in our society, where all gratification must increasingly be instant. It goes against the grain. I really liken it to the theology of the Kingdom that is popular in my church - that the Kingdom is at once already here and not yet.  It is substantively present, but its realization is a process.      This discrepancy is not a problem in the view of eternity.  Where tim