Friday, August 30, 2013

The best praise

Advice for parents:  train your children in goodness with this simple suggestion.

Thursday, August 29, 2013

First generation faith

(cont'd)

Author Rod Dreher (The Little Way of Ruthie Leming) as a teenager
rejected his parents' Christianity along with their small town point of view, but he chose genuine faith later - on his own, starting with an experience in the cathedral of Chartres, France.  


photo:  destination360.com

He sensed there that God was challenging his view of reality, the one overwhelming impression that stayed with him after that first trip to Europe.  It's not a common track to faith, but God doesn't shrink from using whatever you give Him to work with.   Rod eventually became Catholic.

So where does he stand today?  From his blog last week:  

"I pray that the choice is never put to me, but if I am ever forced to make that choice [between serving the state or God], I will always and everywhere choose God, without apology. I am a Christian first, and an American second."

He is a first generation Christian.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Small town, good life

(cont'd:  The Little Way of Ruthie Leming)

Author Rod Dreher contrasted his life with that of his sister Ruthie and saw, from the position of adulthood, things of value that he didn't notice as an awkward teenager.  Her friends, teaching colleagues, children she'd taught, all came to honor her life when she died.  News spread, and there was food, a cleaned house, her daughter's car fixed, all there when the family came home drained from the hospital.

He had to take note that Ruthie's family had a "deep bench" of meaningful connections.  In their big city life, his own family had friends but not deep roots.

That's where stories like this usually end.  Roots are better, the rebellious boy comes back home.  But it's not the end of this story.

Some of that discontentedness he felt as a boy was due to genuine failures among the hometown people, including Ruthie, and he doesn't flinch from telling that part of the story.

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Home in small town USA

It sounded like a sentimental, mushy story line.  But Erik Metaxas strongly recommends the book.  That carries some weight for me, so I read The Little Way of Ruthie Leming and I'm glad I did.

Conflicted feelings abound because the author left his small Southern hometown young  - he rejected everything about it and couldn't wait to get away. He gladly left his family and the town, went to the Big City, and built a career.

His sister Ruthie loved the little hometown and its people, and they loved her.  She stayed and raised her own family close to them.   When cancer took her life at the age of 42, it drew her brother Rod (the author) back into the environment he abandoned and he saw goodness in the community that he'd never appreciated.  

He brought his family back to the small town.  He says:  "The familiar used to feel oppressive; now it feels comforting.

Monday, August 26, 2013

Travel + $100k

Jauntaroo.com is a two-year-old travel website that matches your interests and budget to travel destinations.  Travel websites, it seems, is a crowded field so Jauntaroo has come up with something to catch your attention:  "Best Job Around the World" as Chief World Explorer.

They're partnering with organizations to include some altruistic features.

The job starts next January and will pay $100k/year.  Jauntaroo will share expenses of your travel with the localities, who will of course also benefit from the resulting publicity.  If you get this job, you will write stories about your adventures for the website.

It may be the best job opportunity ever - for someone.  Hopefully I'll remember to check in to the website and follow the unfolding of this job.

Friday, August 23, 2013

ACT perfect score

Three of Eden Prairie MN high school seniors earned a perfect ACT college placement test score of 36 points.   One of these students, Ella Johnson, was interviewed.  She was excited and blessed, she said, to get the perfect score, and she shared some tips with future test-takers.

When asked if she had anything else to add to her interview, she said, " Colossians 3:17."  It's from the Bible:  "and whatever you do [no matter what it is] in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus and [in dependence] upon His person, giving praise to God the Father through Him."

She's a great student who knows that there are greater things than being a great student.

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Jobs / Kutcher

First there was the biography, now there's the biopic of Steve Jobs that came out last week.  A legend in his own time, Jobs came up with many technology break-throughs and co-started that icon of Silicon Valley, Apple Inc.

Steve Wozniak was his partner in the starting of Apple Computer.  He hasn't been shy about his opinion of the film:  he thinks it was too easy on Jobs.  

According to Rotten Tomatoes, Ashton Kutcher delivered a "compelling performance" as Steve Jobs but the movie didn't do too well on its opening weekend and the critics haven't been especially kind.


Kutcher / Jobs
photo:  digitalspy.com


Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Christians a target

Christianity has had a significant presence in Egypt since the first century A.D.  Today, 10% of the population is Christian, around 8 million people.  Violence toward their homes, churches, and shops has escalated during the current conflict.


photo: Catholic World Report

Something like sixty churches have either been burned or attacked, "and the people are scared," says Father Rafic Greische, Catholic spokesman.  Many believe that the organization Muslim Brotherhood is behind the attacks.

“First they stole the valuable things, and then they torched the place,” says Sami Awad, a church member who lives across the narrow dirt alley from the church. “Whatever they couldn't carry, they burned.”

They need our prayers, and they deserve that we speak up.


Monday, August 19, 2013

Must see TV

About three minutes of beauty and truth show up completely unexpectedly on reality tv.  Audiences have been surprised on reality talent shows before, so this isn't the first time for a surprise. But a group that is performing for the first time in front of an audience is not so common.

The group "Forte" performs an Andrew Lloyd Webber arrangement of a Latin prayer from the Requiem Mass, and celebrity judges join with the audience in sheer joy.

John Stonestreet has comments about it at breakpoint.org.

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Breaktime

This second week of August, I'll be taking a break - and will be back posting on Monday, August 19.  Enjoy the last month of summer!

Monday, August 12, 2013

Atheist students

Interviewed by a Christian group doing research, atheist students answered the question:  "What led you to become an atheist?"  

Their answers were often the rational/scientific objections you might expect.  But there was more. 

Many had a church background.  But it sounds, in this article from The Atlantic, like many were disappointed in their church by a lack of belief, commitment, and serious engagement with the important questions of life.  Some actually said that they would not respect any Christian who didn't try to recruit them to faith.  

Friday, August 9, 2013

Dawkins tweets

Militant atheist and Oxford professor Richard Dawkins has fans, and one of them is begging him to be quiet.

A self-described worshipper of Dawkins wants him to stop tweeting about Muslims.


Thursday, August 8, 2013

Why not to arm the rebels

Paul Johnson, famous British historian and author, has a case to make for America not arming the Syrian rebels.

While researching a new book on America's post-WWII President Dwight Eisenhower, he's found that the former general was very reluctant to intervene in global crises during his presidency. Johnson thinks this was wise because intervention usually fails to produce positive results, in his opinion, though there's often pressure from human rights activists to do something.

There's pressure to provide arms in the Syrian civil war now. But:   a) which group, if any, is democratic? b) any U.S.-backed group may fall to terrorist penetration, c) there's every chance that any weapons we provide will end up in terrorist hands.

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Middle East common ground

Finding points of common interest between Israelis and Palestinians must be challenging, but they do have a “common language: tech management.” Commerce passes the borders regularly, startups are beginning to transform the Palestinian economy, and business partnerships grow among parties of both sides.

John Chambers, CEO of Cisco, and other American tech executives also “push their Israel subsidiaries to outsource research and development projects to Palestinian startups or to hire local Arabs.”

Creating inter-connected prosperity could be a big part of the lasting peace that is in everyone's best interest.

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Cris Carter gives credit

Former Vikings Football receiver Cris Carter was inducted into the Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio, last Friday evening.  His "Hall of Fame Enshrinement Speech" was full of gratitude for the people in his life who helped him.

First mentioned was his mom who raised him and let him know that she believed in him. “Every child needs at least one adult who is irrationally crazy about him or her"  (say psychologists and people of common sense) and she seems to have been that adult for him.

Other credit went to his brothers, sisters, coaches.  Hear his heartfelt speech here.

(Ideas from Dr. Bill Bennett)


Monday, August 5, 2013

Fruit nuitrition

Maybe you've heard the argument that the sugar in fruit is still sugar, so it can be bad for you and you should not eat too much fruit.  That argument is being countered.

There are some important advantages to eating whole, fresh fruit.  You can gulp down a glass of juice in less time, but that puts a lot of sugar into your bloodstream pretty quickly.  Whole fruit's fiber slows down the absorption of that sugar.  The fiber is in the cell walls, and it slows down that absorption most efficiently if the cell walls are not ground up in the blender.

There's more depth to the case for eating fruit in this NY Times article.

Friday, August 2, 2013

Ruins of Detroit

Churches, schools, theatres, homes, it's amazing to see buildings of all types abandoned for many years now. So many treasures, so much old wealth, just gone.  It's sad and eerie.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Untypical Chinese restaurant

Jason Wang, now 25, was born in X'ian, China.  He is now co-owner and operator with his father of X'ian Famous Foods in New York. Holding a business degree from Washington University in St. Louis, he spends 13 hours a day on his feet making noodles, taking orders, and keeping the store going.

Their food is not the Cantonese style that Americans have known for decades, but a distinct style that comes from Northern China.  Authenticity, moderate prices, and a handle on both Chinese and American tastes have made the place popular.  Jason's business training seems to be guiding his choices regarding their future growth and the decision to eschew franchising.

Go here for more stories about young entrepreneurs.