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Monday, August 22, 2005

The Weight of Your Words

ABC Television has a new reality show called "Brat Camp." The show takes place in the high desert of central Oregon and is part of "Sage Walk", an actual therapeutic wilderness program for at-risk teens.

According to their web site at www.SageWalk.com, it's a highly structured and intense intervention program for troubled teens between the ages of 13 and 17 who may be experiencing emotional, academic and/or behavioral problems.

One of the episodes shows how they handle bad language. Most of the kids curse with almost every sentence when they get there. But when a student uses profane language, they must pick up a stone and place it in their pocket.

Each time they use bad language, they must pick up another stone. It's challenging enough to trek through the desert with 50 or 60 pounds of gear, but it gets even harder when you're carrying all those stones.

The calm, well-trained and intuitive instructors explain that we must learn to understand the "weight of our words."

The Bible says, “Words can bring death or life! Talk too much, and you will eat everything you say.” (Proverbs 18:21 CEV) Your words matter. They can do great good or great harm. And once they've been uttered, they can never be called back. That’s why we should be careful how we chose them. 

 

Thursday, August 18, 2005

Needs of People Today

 According to a Gallup poll, there are six needs people have today:
  1. To believe life is meaningful and has purpose
  2. To have a sense of community and deeper relationships
  3. To be appreciated and respected
  4. To be listened to and heard
  5. To feel that one is growing in faith
  6. To have practical help in developing a mature faith

Are you having these needs met in your life?

Do you know where to go to find these things?

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

Poll: Most in U.S. reject moral absolutes, biblical worldview

Poll: Most in U.S. reject moral absolutes, biblical worldview

By Michael Foust<br>Baptist Press

Aug 10, 2005

 

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)--Barely a third of all Americans believe in absolute standards of right and wrong, and far fewer hold to a biblical worldview, a new poll says.

 

The poll by The Barna Group, a Christian research organization, shows that only 35 percent of Americans believe in absolute standards of morality -- that is, believe that right and wrong do not change with time or circumstances.

 

Thirty-two percent of Americans say that morality depends on the situation and the circumstance, while 33 percent say they do not know if morality is absolute or relative. The poll involved interviews with 1,002 adults in July.

 

Moral relativity is often reflected in such statements as "that might be true for you, but it's not true for me" and "who are you to judge?"

 

"The fact that only 35 percent of all Americans believe in moral absolutes provides some frightening insight into our culture and the future of this country," Craig Vincent Mitchell, instructor of Christian ethics at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas, told Baptist Press.

 

"This statistic translated means that most people are willing to do whatever they can get away with. ... With so many rejecting the idea of moral absolutes, it is only a matter of time until our society collapses. A moral society is a happier society and a more successful one. An immoral society is one that destroys itself and its citizens."

 

But despite the outward rejection of moral absolutes, people still believe in absolutes "when it involves them or what belongs to them," Mitchell said.

 

"It is also interesting to note that most people who reject moral absolutes believe that Hitler was evil," he said. "No one believes that Kenneth Lay did the right thing for his employees or investors when he was the CEO of Enron. In other words, what people say or profess is often one thing, but what they really believe is another."

 

Polls consistently show that a majority of Americans consider themselves to be Christians. But despite that, only five percent of Americans hold to a biblical worldview, the Barna poll showed.

 

Barna defines a biblical worldview as believing that: moral absolutes exist; the source of truth is the Bible; the Bible is "accurate in all of the principles it teaches"; salvation is by grace alone; Jesus lived a sinless life; believers have a duty to witness; Satan is real and not just a symbol; God is the "all-knowing, all-powerful maker of the universe who still rules that creation today."

 

"Our studies consistently show that churches base their sense of success on indicators such as attendance, congregant satisfaction, dollars raised and built-out square footage," Christian researcher George Barna said in an analysis on his website. "None of those factors relates to the kind of radical shift in thinking and behavior that Jesus Christ died on the cross to facilitate. As long as we measure success on the basis of popularity and efficiency, we will continue to see a nation filled with people who can recite Bible stories but fail to live according to Bible principles."

 

Mitchell said that despite what some say, America's rejection of moral absolutes will not make it "more difficult to preach the Gospel." Deep down, all people know that God exists and that they are sinful, he said.

 

"What all this means is that we need to preach the whole Gospel clearly so that men can respond to the truth," Mitchell said. "We first need to give the bad news, that all men are doomed to an endless eternity in hell because of their sin. Then we need to give the good news of salvation through Jesus Christ. Preaching only about the love of God gives no one reason to come to Christ, because they believe that if God is so loving then He will not send anyone to hell.

 

"People may deny the existence of moral absolutes, but deep down, when they are alone, they will admit the truth to themselves. Many is the atheist who denies the existence of God, but still fears Him."

Monday, August 08, 2005

Animals in the Flock

Every church has three animals in the flock - sheep, goats, and wolves. 

 

The job of Biblical leadership is simple:


Love the sheep.

Convert the goats.

Kill the wolves.

Sunday, August 07, 2005

Planting Your Spiritual Garden

 When you plant this garden, may God richly bless you in your sincere endeavor.

Plant three rows of squash:
1. Squash gossip
2. Squash criticism
3. Squash indifference

Plant seven rows of peas:
1. Prayer
2. Promptness
3. Perseverance
4. Politeness
5. Preparedness
6. Purity
7. Patience

Plant seven heads of lettuce:
1. Let us be unselfish and loyal
2. Let us be faithful to duty
3. Let us search the scriptures
4. Let us not be weary in well doing
5. Let us be obedient in all things
6. Let us be truthful
7. Let us love one another

No garden is complete without turnips:
1. Turn up for church
2. Turn up for meetings, in prayer, and Bible study
3. Turn up with a smile, even when things are difficult
4. Turn up with determination to do your best in God's service.

Wednesday, August 03, 2005

What You See is What You Get

According to recent Nielsen statistics, the average American watches four hours of television a day. In the average American home the TV is on seven hours and 40 minutes per day. Like it or not, we Americans are filling our minds with whatever we happen to watch on television:

 

Age 18, the average American child will have seen 20,000 violent acts on TV, including 16,000 murders.

 

In one year, the average American child will watch 20.000 commercials.

 

By age 65, the average American adult will have viewed 2,000,000 commercials on television.

 

Sixty-four percent of all television programs feature sexual content [most of it contrary to biblical values].

 

Seventy-one percent of prime time shows include such sexual content, as do 83 percent of programs watched by teenagers.

 

According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, “The average American adolescent will view nearly 14,000 sexual references per year [on television],” yet only one percent of an< these will deal with “birth control, self-control, abstinence or risk of pregnancy or STDs” ….

 

Makes you wonder if what we are watching as “entertainment” comes back to haunt us on the “News”.



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