Monday, February 8, 2010

Julie and Julia

I loved the movie. Seldom do I watch such a serious, feel-good movie without somebody dying. The movie is absolutely meant for women (in my humble opinion). Still, I'm a guy and enjoyed it. Nora Ephron does a good job of depicting a life (Julia Child) while depicting a piece of an era (Senator McCarthy and McCarthyism). The acting was incredible. It hit after the movie, that a 30 something year old woman acted like a complete three year old on screen and I believed it! Amy Adams and Meryl Streep did amazing jobs.

On a deeper level, the movie was moving (duh). It depicted two loved women, who were trying to love being alive. Their way of enjoying their days became cooking. They ended up having to fight for what made 'em feel useful, successful, engaged, influential, and creative. Child fights to go to a good cooking school, fights to take and pass her graduation test, and fights to get a cookbook done. Powell fights, to keep cooking and writing. Despite discouragement from her mother and the times of "total meltdowns."

There are three things that move about this movie.
One.
Its about small things. In the grand scheme of things, cooking can mean about as much as an umbrella in monsoon. Yet, if we admit it, much of our lives are spent on small things. Things that are far from the field politics, breakthroughs in human health, and international agriculture. It is the small important things that we are built enjoy doing, to enjoy being.

Two.
Their husbands gave these ladies undying support. Yet, Stanley Tucci and Chris Messina acted like real people. They loved their wives but they didn't stop 'em from having bad days and vulnerable moments.

Three.
Most importantly movie poignantly portrayed the interplay between lives. Julia's life and ambition affected the lives of many American women in profound way, it gave joy to her family, it gave two French women a collaborator, and it allowed one book editor to quietly make history. Julie's life and ambition, gave her co-worker a little joy, her family, an adventure to be a part, of her mother something to be proud of, small crowd of internet foodies, something to think about, and to her small crowd of friends it gave them something to eat.

"Man's chief end is to glorify God and enjoy him forever."

Like Bezalel and Oholiab (Exodus 36), Heman and Asaph (1 Chronicles 6:39), Saul/Paul (Act 2), Darrell Green, Gerald Ford, Ira D Sankey, and Jessica Flannery pay attention to the small things that give you joy. God made you that way to enjoy the little things (not worship, enjoy) is to enjoy life (Ecclesiastes 9:9, 1 Timothy 6:17).

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Euthanasia and Abortion

The book "Legislating Morality" is by Frank Turek and Norman Geisler (1998). The issue that truly caught me was the connection between abortion and euthanasia. Abortion is defined by Webster-Merriam's online dictionary as "the termination of a pregnancy after, accompanied by, resulting in, or closely followed by the death of the embryo or fetus: as a : spontaneous expulsion of a human fetus during the first 12 weeks of gestation." Euthanasia is defined as "the act or practice of killing or permitting the death of hopelessly sick or injured individuals (as persons or domestic animals) in a relatively painless way for reasons of mercy."

Abortion and euthanasia have much the same reasons for being enacted. A human life is ended because the person has become inconvenient to themselves or to someone else. When a person is in so much pain that living is a trial, a person has become inconvenient to themselves. When a person has become a financial and an emotional burden to their loved one, they have become inconvenient to their friends and family.

The logical supports for abortion are much the same, the fetus (baby) has become inconvenient to the mother for financial or emotional reasons. If the fetus is a source of rape or incest, the 24 living chromosomes become inconvenient to the mother because that life acts a reminder. If the the mother is unprepared to take care of the baby, that person has become financially inconvenient to the mother. There are other reasons given for abortions, (from webmd.com) teen mothers are aware they are not mature enough to have children, having a child would not possible above the poverty line, mental or physical conditions that would endanger the mother's health during pregnancy, and the child will have birth defects or deformity.

Because a child will be hard to raise, or will have a hard life, it does not make it right to kill that child. Their is little difference between a birthed baby and a fetus. Very little changes. The baby still needs the same things whether in the womb or out of it.

Because a person is in pain, desires to die, feels a loss of control or dignity, feels like an emotional burden or feels like a financial weight, it does not mean that that person has a right to kill him or herself and no one has the right to kill them.

"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness-"

According to moral law, we were given the right to life by our Creator. The right to life is the first right and the most important right, upon it all other rights are based and without it all other rights have no value. Since the right to life is a right we did not give ourselves but receive, it is right that we cannot take from ourselves. Natural can and does occur. Death due to circumstance, can and does occur, but we are not allowed to take our lives nor are others allowed to take our lives from us.

This great country is against active euthanasia, voluntary euthansia, aid-in-dying, and assisted suicide. For now. As long we call abortion morally right... it still is a matter of time until we extend the same logic to the unwanted elderly population.

As a people who seek to honor God we must continue to pray and actively seek to repeal abortion laws and prevention of euthanasia.

(Obviously I am indebted to Frank Turek and Norman Geisler and their book Legislating Morality).

(Also, before birth (Genesis 25:23, Ecclesiastes 11:5) and old age are times recognized in Scripture (Ecclesiastes 12) and valued by God).

Saturday, December 12, 2009

December snows... Bring?

It's been awhile. The first semester in seminary and I slack at the oddest moments. It is has been a satisfying and slightly harrowing experience. If you can read this, you have access to a computer and knowledge of the internet. I pray you know just how blessed you are. There are those who suffer hunger daily and others who long for sunlight. Today there are slaves who long for the sun rise on them as free people. There are those who are alone and weep because of it. If any of these pains are not yours. I thank God with you. I have an awesome family. Access to a computer and health-care. I have friends who care, a school to go to and a job to work. I know Jesus as my personal Lord and Savior. I have means to fully live, and reason to peacefully die. None of this I have earned through effort. Therefore, they are all gifts. I am thankful.

December snows
Bring roots that grow.
We become grateful
For where we haven't been
and Thankful for
Life that we haven't seen
We grow deeper
This year by this year
We see the heavens clearer
Stars watch our story, with us
They wonder at our glory.


Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Happy to Believe.

I spent another amazing summer as a camp counselor at Camp Sonshine. The campers were amazing. I enjoyed being on staff because I knew that the year-round staff had been praying for this summer year-round. I enjoyed living under the covering. It say myself and my future a bit clearer. I got to know God a little better. During the school year and after graduation (Freedom!) it was hard to believe that God would provide. At camp, my faith in the fact He is working things out grew. I've always believed that God COULD provide, sometimes I am just not sure if he WOULD. Camp ended 2 weeks ago, seminary began this week and I am still believing God for a lot of things. I am happy to even believe.

Leadership is...

When a man walks in front of his horse. He tugs at the bridle. The horse has the ability to move and it responds. "If your willing then to go, then I am willing to go." The horse plods on.

The same man rides his horse. He no longer leads from the front but from the top. The horse is in full gallop; this man grasps the reigns and tugs at bridle. The horse responds, "If you are willing to slow, then I am willing to slow." The horse plods on.

Both have their risks and rewards.

Adieu.

(John 11: 7-16)

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Come and Go

As Christians, God calls out of our comfort zones to a world that needs Him. He has called us, His vessels, vine branches, and body to those without. Make no mistake, His call for us to leave where we are and share ourselves is a call unto Himself. Every time we hear God say, “Go!” We must understand that His heart cries, “Come!” He calls continually from the self-made and man-provided into the divine Presence, where we are satisfied. We must receive His trust, in the faith He gave, with joy. For in His sending, He calls and trusts us to be intimate with a new side of Himself. How sweet and vulnerable He is.

So, don’t turn away from His call when your first answer reveals the desire of your character to miss the mark. Continue to look, for it is there He offers Himself anew. There He calls you to know more of Him (Philippians 3:10-14). There, in your weakness and his strength, worship anew.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

A friend taught me.

A Friend taught me...

That while seek to teach others, I will recieve priceless lessons.

While to endeavoring teach a peer, he taught me, "the kindness we do is not always forgotten." I found this to be deeply true. The people the we are kind to, without audience or record, sometimes God allows them back into our lives. They remind us of what we did so long ago, and confirm who we are today. 

Cast your bread upon the water and you will find it after many days.

Ecclesiastes 11:1