Tuesday, March 29, 2011
The Tares and the Net That Caught Fish of Every Kind
Monday, March 21, 2011
Deep Play
The Seed Growing of Itself, the Mustard, and the Leaven
Adventist Motorcycle Ministry
Hospitality and Hilarity
This address will take you to an introduction to the life and times of my uncle, Emanuel J. Sorenson, a missionary in Ethiopia and Jamaica. Once a week, for the next 20 weeks, there will be story that provides a glimpse of what missionary life was like for his family, as related by my cousin, Jane Spear.
We grew up with our home open to all visitors. There was a guest room in the house where our teacher lived, but all persons had three meals a day together at our home. This was sometimes a very trying experience for my mother because Shirley and I were slow eaters and did not find food interesting. At times, one could find crusts under the table. Or, we would excuse ourselves from the table with food in our mouths, which we deposited into the calla lilies. Not having big appetites was one thing, but not finishing the various courses of food, with many people at the table, was another. My Mother came up with a solution. On the wall appeared a large poster with the days of the month marked off. Three meals were marked off each day. One section of the chart was for my sister, and one section was for me. My Mother explained that for each meal that we finished on time, we would be awarded a gold star on the chart. One week of perfect stars would mean a special surprise. We could speculate as to this surprise. Would it be a new dress Mother made for one of our dolls? We never knew, and we never found out. Alas, neither one of us ever achieved a week of gold stars.
The Survivor
Reported by Larry Downing
Note to readers: The following quotes are not from the ADVENTIST REVIEW. Read on; the source may be unexpected.
“’At the meetings on Saturday the feeling of the spirit of God in that room was deeper than I have ever felt in my life. It was extraordinary. You walk out of it just committed to improve your lives for better.
“’We were sleeping in the extra room in their [the host’s Montreal] basement. At about 3 o’clock in the morning I just had a horrible pain in my chest. I never had a heart attack before. This was something bad….It’s going to mess up a wonderful meeting on Sunday. And there are 1,000 members of the church who are going to come to that meeting. So I knelt down at the side of the bed and I said to God, “I have a problem. Whatever this is could you please just make it go away?” And it went away. I fell asleep and the meetings on Sunday were comparable to the ones on Saturday.’” [The next day, while raking leaves in the yard, the pain returned. A trip to the hospital revealed a blocked left anterior artery.]
“’I told my doctor [about the event in Montreal], and they were so mad at me. I think God wanted the members of the church to have a great experience, and he took care of me, too.’”
“’I thought about it [the diagnosis of follicular lymphoma]. I knelt down and made a commitment to God: “I think I probably have done things in my life that you wanted me to do. And if in your judgment there’s more work that needs to be done on the other side, I’m happy to go. And on the other hand, if I can be more useful by staying in this side my preference is to stay. I don’t want to leave my kids and Christine just yet.” I felt good. I don’t think that it was in any way depressing. In God’s interaction with Adam he didn’t in nay way promise that it was going to be easy. Even if you do the right thing, there’s a log more that you need to learn—and a lot of learning comes from adversity.’”
“’I’m an optimistic person. But for the fist time in my life, with all my problems, I focused more and more on me—and it was depressing, literally. Sometimes I just wanted to quit trying to learn and speak and write again and just go into my basement and build furniture. I learned an important lesson from this. I learned that focusing on my own problems does not bring happiness. God didn’t say, ‘Okay. For those with problems it’s okay to focus on yourself. And for those who don’t have problems, I want you to focus on helping others.’ even in dire times God does not exempt me from his commandment to focus my life on others, because it transforms hardship to joy.’”
“’I believe that God is our father. He created us. He is powerful because he knows everything. Therefore everything I learn that is true makes me more like my father in heaven. When science seems to contradict religion, then one, or the other, or both are wrong, or incomplete. Truth is not incompatible with itself. When I benefit from science it’s actually not correct for me to say it resulted from science and not from God. They work in concert.’”
We expect to read words like the above in the Adventist Review or other religious journal, but in FORBES? Come on! But here they are. You can read them for yourself in the FORBES March 14, 2011 issue. The quotes are from Clayton Christensen. The article is “The Survivor,” pp. 72-85. And who is this guy? To answer, here is how the article begins: “Clayton Christensen, 58, is one of the most influential business theorists of the last 50 years. The Harvard Business School professor’s 1997 book, The Innovator’s Dilemma, introduced in elegant terms the notion of ‘disruptive innovation,’ which explains how cheaper, simpler or unexpected products and services can bring down big companies like U. S. Steel, Xerox and Digital Equipment.” Christensen is also a Mormon who, as one of ten, is responsible for the Mormon Church in the northeast quadrant of North America. His job: to visit the cities where the churches in the stake come together and to learn how to be better Mormons.
In the article, as told to David Whelan, Christensen, his children, his physicians and FORBES respond as Christensen recounts his story and his response to the heath events that have affected his life: his dealing with diabetes, the heart attack, the diagnosis of cancer, a detached retina and a stroke—the last four all within a three year period!
I have been a FORBES reader for more than twenty years. This article is unique. We are invited into the heart and soul of a highly successful academic and entrepreneur, a man who founded a consulting firm that employees more than sixty people. He is also a man of faith and commitment. Clayton Christensen is a man who stands on a global stage. He is forthright in expressing his faith, his values, and his priorities. His story is a great read!
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
A Word of Grace for Your Monday - 8/23/10
Water Water Everywhere
This address will take you to an introduction to the life and times of my uncle, Emanuel J. Sorenson, a missionary in Ethiopia and Jamaica. Once a week, for the next 20 weeks, there will be story that provides a glimpse of what missionary life was like for his family, as related by my cousin, Jane Spear.
Splash! Splash! Splash! The chubby arms and legs were waving and kicking the water into small waves. Sisters Marie and Helen appeared at the door and put their hand over their mouths to suppress giggles. Brother Chris ran after Mama. Only sister Sophie came closer to admire her favorite baby brother. She was very fond of him, also very protective.
Jesus Radicals
The Parables of Jesus
by Sakae Kubo
This is a book first posted on Grace Connection, the Magazine. There is no printed edition. This is the first chapter. All 30 chapters will appear on the Wheel in the following weeks
THE FOUR SOILS: Mark 4:3-8
When Jesus called Peter, Andrew, James, and John, saying to them, "Follow me and I will make you fish for people," (Mk 1:18, 20) "they left their nets and followed him" and "left their father, Zebedee, in the boat with the hired men." They were so entranced with Jesus that their response was immediate. However, most people did not respond the way they had. The disciples were puzzled because to them Jesus' message and his personality were so attractive. Jesus explains using the parable of the four soils (Mk 4:3-8).
Friday, March 11, 2011
Movie Review: The Adjustment Bureau
The Adjustment Bureau deals with some deeply philosophical issues in an entertaining and engaging narrative.
David Norris (Matt Damon) is on a fast track to political success when an episode from his past dashes his hopes. But then he meets the beautiful ballerina Elise (Emily Blunt) in a men’s bathroom and falls deeply in love with her. But their love is not meant to be. It is not part of the predetermined plan for David’s life and the Adjustment Bureau is brought in to get his life back on track. David is shocked to discover that the life he thought was his choice is, in fact, nothing more than a manipulation of events according to the plan mapped out for him by the “Chairman” of the Adjustment Bureau. Of course, David is not happy about his life being manipulated – especially when it means he is not supposed to be with Elise – the person who has, for the first time in 25 years, made him feel as though he is not alone. He tries to comply with the plan but finds his love for Elise overwhelming and he decides to take things into his own hands and assert his freedom of choice.
Many Christians believe that God has a plan mapped out for everyone’s life and that God manipulates all events to bring about God’s purposes. Nothing occurs by chance. Whatever happens is as God wills it. Apart from this not being a biblical teaching, it is logically incoherent. And The Adjustment Bureau, while not explicitly mentioning God, pulls apart the implications of this naive view showing what would need to be happening behind the scenes if it was true. Others believe in some vague idea of Fate controlling things and the same implications apply.
It must be said that the story itself is actually quite simple. And it may be that the story will be of more interest to those who have an interest in the philosophical and theological issues surrounding predestination and free will. Damon and Blunt do a good job of their roles with support from members of the Adjustment Bureau that could have been more impactful.
The end of the movie tends to collapse into an insipid assertion that we can have control over our lives by asserting freedom of choice – but that could have been more subtle leaving the viewer to come to these conclusions naturally. I personally like movies that leave me suspended in ambiguity rather than doing the thinking for me (consider, for example, Inception).
Overall, I found The Adjustment Bureau to be enjoyable, provocative, and contemporary. It has suspense, romance, and intrigue. Even those who do not come from a religious background of predestinarian thinking will benefit from the idea that we can take control of circumstances and assert our freedom of choice.
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Ethnic Adventism: Boon or Bane?
Wednesday, March 09, 2011
THE PARABLES OF JESUS
by Sakae Kubo
This is a book with 30 chapters. It was first posted on Grace Connection, the Magazine. There is no printed edition. Here is the Introduction. All 30 chapters will appear on the Wheel in the following weeks
Introduction
http://adventistperspective.blogspot.com/1999/03/introduction.html
Jane Spear Remembers
1. Life Sketch of Emanuel J. Sorenson 1896-1994
http://adventistperspective.blogspot.com/2004/03/life-sketch-of-emanuel-j-sorenson-1896.html
This address will take you to an introduction to the life and times of my uncle, Emanuel J. Sorenson, a missionary in Ethiopia and Jamaica. Once a week, for the next 21 weeks, there will be story that provides a glimpse of what missionary life was like for his family, as related by my cousin, Jane Spear.
Tuesday, March 08, 2011
Wednesday, March 02, 2011
I Believe in God because…
I Believe in God because…
I have had experiences that have led me to believe that there is a spiritual dimension to life which exists outside of ourselves, and which is interested in our lives. This Spirit [God] can work through people to make the world a better place. I believe that God is always trying to communicate with people, and that there is something in each person that wants to hear what God is trying to communicate; it works for goodness in the world, not evil. (A Young Person’s Guide to Quaker Faith and Practice by Richard N. Bernard)














