Tuesday, May 22, 2007

State Farmony

Ok, I saw this ad on Yahoo's home page today. Hilarious.



Saturday, May 19, 2007

Flexible Faith

In light of my previous post, I have come across a very insightful observation by Rob Bell in his book Velvet Elvis. He talks about the need for Christian faith to be flexible - that is the only way it will last. If you build your faith with firm, unbending brick-like tenants that can never change, then if one brick crumbles, so too does your entire faith. Here is his example...

"Somebody recently gave me a videotape of a lecture given by a man who travels around speaking about the creation of the world. At one point in his lecture, he said if you deny that God created the world in six literal twenty-four-hour days, then you are denying that Jesus ever died on the cross. It's a bizarre leap of logic to make, I would say.

But he was serious.

It hit me while I was watching that for him faith isn't a trampoline [flexible]; it's a wall of bricks. Each of the core doctrines for him is like an individual brick that stacks on top of the others. If you pull one out, the whole wall starts to crumble It appears quite strong and rigid, but if you begin to rethink or discuss even one brick, the whole thing is in danger. Like he said, no six-day creation equals no cross. Remove one, and the whole wall wobbles ...

...if the whole faith falls apart when we reexamine and rethink one spring, then it wasn't that strong in the first place, was it?"


Christians should not be threatened by the idea that evolution might be true. If faith is built on rigid, inflexible beliefs like that, all it is, is fragile.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

The Language of God

I love reading. I read a LOT. I read all kinds of books. Fiction and nonfiction. Lighthearted and heavy. Adventure books, self-help, memoirs, novels and biographies. I like to switch it up a lot just to stay interested. So with the latest book I chose, I seem to have caused myself quite a conundrum.

I just finished reading a book that caused me to question some basic things I have always believed. The Language of God is a fascinating look at evolution through the eyes of Francis Collins, one of this country's most well-respected scientists. He also happens to be a Christian. He basically lays out his belief, which he calls "Theistic Evolution" or "BioLogos," that God used evolution to create the universe. Darwinian evolution. As in, we share a common ancestor with monkeys. He believes the Big Bang actually happened. He believes the earth is billions of years old. And frankly, even though this might sound to some like liberal garbage, given his professional credentials and scientific track record and the evidence offered in this book, I'm inclined to believe him.

Having been raised in a Christian home, attended a Christian college, and been surrounded by Christians for the majority of my life, I know full well the reaction that ideas like Dr. Collins' usually get. In fact, the few times that I've mentioned this book to some friends, the responses I've gotten include a large amount of skepticism and quite vehement explanations about how evolution is directly opposed to what the Bible says. After reading this book, though, I have to respectfully disagree.

I've always had trouble understanding why the creation account in the Bible and science seemed to be on two completely different pages. No, not even different pages ... more like reading out of two different books. How is it that God would give us the brains and ability to make all kinds of amazing scientific discoveries, and then allow us to get so far off track in our quest to discover where things all began? I'm talking billions of years off track, if you take the Bible literally. This problem has always bothered me. But I never knew what to do about the apparent conflict. Enter Dr. Collins.

Though I still have a lot of unanswered questions, this book has helped me to understand how it is possible to believe what the Bible says AND what science tells us. If you are at all inclined to think about this type of thing, I'd highly recommend you read The Language of God. And when you do, let's chat. I'd be very interested to know what you think.

Oh and one last thing. While some might disagree, I think reading books like this that challenge me to really reason through what I believe and why is a good thing. But ultimately, when it comes down to it, how God created the world doesn't matter to me much. I believe he created the world. I believe he created us. I believe he loves us more than anything else he created. And one day soon I'll be with him forever and be able to ask him all the questions I want. THAT is what is important.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

Torino, Italy

Europe always brings out the romance in me.
Every single building in Torino is the Baroque style. It was beautiful.
The Po River
We stumbled upon an outdoor market selling meats and cheeses. It doesn't get any more Italian than that!
Justin eats his crepe. Mmmm ...
When your car is 2.5 feet long, you can park it however you want. My friend Ruth, who works in Compassion's Italy office.
These last two photos are from Frankfurt, Germany. If you look closely at the menu, you can see a wide variety of Rump and Loin dishes. Who's hungry?
The Opera House downtown.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Beer, baby!



Just in case you were wondering, this photo was not staged.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

"Havana Overload'

At risk of everybody going into puppy overload . . . here are some more pics of 'Harvy' when we were puppy-sitting last Saturday.


Oh how cute! Their collars match! [And their eyes, strangely enough]







She sure is cute. Darn cute!

Sunday, April 08, 2007

The new love of my life.

New camera + new puppy = lots of pictures.




Havana was just as into The Amazing Race as I was.