Archive for the ‘General’ Category

WWJD? vs. DWJWD

2018/08/15

What Would Jesus Do?

Last Sunday’s New Testament reading (08/12/2018) was from Ephesians 4. According to the Revised Common Lectionary, the reading was Ephesians 4:25-5:2, Rules for the New Life. At the church I attended and served as Lay Reader, I first read Ephesians 4:17-24, The Old Life and the New.

. . . surely you have heard about him and were taught in him, as truth is in Jesus. You were taught to put away your former way of life, your old self, corrupt and deluded by its lusts, and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and to clothe yourselves with the new self, created according to the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness. . . . be imitators of God, as beloved children, and live in love, as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us . . .

This passage reminded me of WWJD. “What would Jesus do?” became popular, particularly in the United States but elsewhere as well, in the 1990s and as a personal motto for adherents of Christianity who used the phrase as a reminder of their belief in a moral imperative to act in a manner that would demonstrate the love of Jesus through the actions of the adherents.

Note the word ACTIONS in the above description. I have thought of this often over the last few decades and have come to the conclusion that thinking about WWJD in a particular situation is not good enough. I began to think there should be an extension of this, something more proactive vs. just thinking about WWJD.

I now think of this saying as DWJWD, do what Jesus would do.

Love the Lord your God and your Neighbor as Yourself

2018/05/14

Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength. The second is this: Love your neighbor as yourself. There is no commandment greater than these.
Mark 12:30-31 (NIV)

Shirley Erena Murray (born March 31, 1931) is a New Zealand hymn lyrics writer.  Her hymns have been translated into several European and Asian languages and are represented in more than 140 hymn books around the world.  In addition to New Zealand, they are particularly used in North America.  In 2001, she became a member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for “services as a hymn writer”.  In 2006, she became a fellow of the Royal School of Church Music.  She received an honorary doctor of literature degree from the University of Otago in 2009.  The same year, she was named a fellow of the Hymn Society in the United States and Canada.

Her hymn ‘Community of Christ‘ begins “Community of Christ, who make the cross your own, live out your creed and risk your life for God alone.”  The full second verse is “Community of Christ, look past the Church’s door and see the refugee, the hungry, and the poor. Take hands with the oppressed, the jobless in your street, take towel and water, that you wash your neighbor’s feet.”

This verse reflects Matthew 25:35-45 (NIV) which says: “For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me. … Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.”

Eugene H. Peterson, author of ‘The Message‘, paraphrases this same Matthew 25 passage:  “Then the King will say, I’m telling the solemn truth: Whenever you did one of these things to someone overlooked or ignored, that was me — you did it to me. … Whenever you failed to do one of these things to someone who was being overlooked or ignored, that was me — you failed to do it to me.”

What have you done for your neighbor lately?

Perfect is the Enemy of Good

2017/02/11

A widely accepted interpretation of “The perfect is the enemy of the good” is that one might never complete a task if one has decided not to stop until it is perfect: completing the project well is made impossible by striving to complete it perfectly.  An alternative interpretation is that attempts to improve something may actually make it worse.  Neither the Shakespeare and Voltaire constructions suggest perfection, only improvement, lending support to this interpretation. Earlier, Aristotle, Confucius and other classical philosophers propounded the related principle of the golden mean, which counsels against extremism in general.  The Pareto principle or 80–20 rule is a 20th-century analogue.  For example, it commonly takes 20% of the full-time to complete 80% of a task, while to complete the last 20% of a task takes 80% of the effort.  Achieving absolute perfection may be impossible and so, as increasing effort results in diminishing returns, further activity becomes increasingly inefficient.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perfect_is_the_enemy_of_good

I was trained as an Electrical Engineer and spent much of my career as a Computer Programmer and later as a Webmaster.  Now, after retirement, I volunteer in several ways: one as Treasurer of a nonprofit and as Database Coordinator for another nonprofit.  Although many times I am paid for my web work, my nonprofit rates are very reasonable.

We strive for “perfect” when we are balancing our checkbooks but on some rare occasions it just doesn’t balance and we have to trust the bank more than our own math so we make an adjustment entry.

When dealing with name and address data, it would be nice to spell a person’s name correctly but due to illegible handwriting, that may not be possible. I often lookup the Zip+4 to verify an address.  If the post office (now called the Postal Service) can’t find it in their database, maybe the street name is misspelled or an apartment number is missing.  Given whatever information is currently on hand, that has to be “good enough” and we trust that a letter will be delivered.  If not, the postal service will return it to the sender marked Undeliverable as Addressed. Even if the address is 100% correct, the recipient may have moved and the letter may be returned with a notation of No Forwarding Address or Forwarding Time Expired. In these cases, we may settle for “good enough” and drop that person from the mailing list.

However for important things, we should go the extra mile, striving for “perfect”.  I recently sent out over 100 year-end IRS tax statements and one was returned, not with Forwarding Time Expired, but with their new address because they had recently moved.  I immediately put the letter in a new envelope and paid 49 cents a second time to mail it because it was important.  Had this been a postcard advertising my church’s Christmas Concert held over a month ago,  “good enough” would not be to ignore the returned postcard but to take the extra time to update that person’s address in the church records.

I am well aware of the 80/20 rule, especially in nonprofit work; 20% of the people do 80% of the work.  Sometimes I think that 10% of the people do 90% of the work.  I don’t mind contributing my time and effort to my church or a nonprofit if there are others that are also willing to help with a project.  However, if I get “stuck” doing the whole thing myself, I sometimes charge them at my nonprofit rate which is lower than the current value of volunteer labor.
Ref: https://lambertdrl.wordpress.com/2011/04/02/monetary-donation-vs-value-of-volunteer-time/

What are your experiences?

August and Augustine

2016/07/25

The original Roman year had 10 named months Martius “March”, Aprilis “April”, Maius “May”, Junius “June”, Quintilis “July”, Sextilis “August”, September “September”, October “October”, November “November”, December “December”, and probably two unnamed months in the dead of winter when not much happened in agriculture.  Augustus Caesar clarified and completed the calendar reform of Julius Caesar. In the process, he also renamed this month after himself.

Augustine (Aurelius Augustinus) was born in the year 354 AD and became one of the greatest theologians of Western Christianity.  Augustine prospered in Rome, and was eventually appointed chief professor of rhetoric for the city of Milan, at that time the capital city of the Empire in the West.  In Milan, Augustine met the bishop, Ambrose, and found him to have reasonableness of mind and belief, a keenness of thought, and an integrity of character far in excess of what he had found elsewhere.  For the first time, Augustine saw Christianity as a religion fit for a philosopher.

By contemplating spiritual realities, directing one’s attention first to one’s own mind and then moving up the ladder rung by one to the contemplation of God, one acquires true wisdom, true self-fulfillment, true spirituality, and union with God, or the One. Augustine undertook this approach, and believed that he had in fact had an experience of the presence of God, but found that this only made him more aware of the gulf between what he was and what he realized that he ought to be.

Meanwhile, he continued to hear Bishop Ambrose. And finally, partly because Ambrose had answers for his questions, partly because he admired Ambrose personally, and chiefly (or so he believed) because God touched his heart, he was converted to Christianity in 386 and was baptized by Ambrose at Easter of 387.

After his conversion, Augustine went back to his native Africa where he was ordained a priest in 391 and consecrated bishop of Hippo in 396. It was not his intention to become a priest. He was visiting the town of Hippo, was in church hearing a sermon, and the bishop, without warning, said, “This Church is in need of more priests, and I believe that the ordination of Augustine would be to the glory of God.” Willing hands dragged Augustine forward, and the bishop together with his council of priests laid hands on Augustine and ordained him to the priesthood. (The experience may have colored Augustine’s perception of such questions as, “Does a man come to God because he has chosen to do so, or because God has chosen him, and drawn him to Himself?”) A few years later, when the Bishop of Hippo died, Augustine was chosen to succeed him.

Augustine was a diligent shepherd of his flock, but he also found time to write extensively.  His surviving works (and it is assumed that the majority did not survive) include 113 books and treatises, over 200 letters, and over 500 sermons. His work greatly influenced Luther and Calvin, to the point where for a while Roman Catholic speakers and writers were wary of quoting him lest they be suspected of Protestant tendencies

Here is a question for you to ponder: “Does a man come to God because he has chosen to do so, or because God has chosen him, and drawn him to Himself?”

Keep Calm and Pray Long

2016/05/07

In 1775, the first Continental Congress called for a National Day of Prayer and in 1863 Abraham Lincoln called for such a day.  The official United States National Day of Prayer was established in 1952, enacted in 1988 by congressional legislation to convene the first Thursday of May, annually.  For 65 years, our nation has recognized this special day!  This is a day when people are encouraged to spend time in prayer and meditation or attend one of the thousands of prayer gathering held across our nation. This year’s event was themed around Isaiah 58:1:

“Shout aloud!
Don’t hold back!
Lift up your voice like a trumpet!”

Did you participate in any way on May 5th?

Established in 1990 by Dr. John Hash and Dr. Corinthia Boone, the U.S. Capitol Bible Reading Marathon brings hundreds of believers to the West front of the Capitol to read aloud the entire Word of God without commentary over ninety continuous hours.  The public reading of God’s Holy Word calls the nation to return to God’s precepts and lays a solid foundation for the National Day  of Prayer.  On May 1st through May 5th there were 90 continuous hours of Bible reading, from Genesis to Revelation, without commentary at the U.S. Capitol.

Andy Rau, Senior manager of content for Bible Gateway, lists five of the most interesting and memorable prayers in the Bible.  Use these as inspiration as you spend time in prayer.

#5: David’s Prayer of Repentance (Psalm 51 NLT)
Convicted of a terrible sin, the Israelite King David cried out to God with one of the most moving confessions and pleas for forgiveness in all of the Bible.

#4: The Early Church Prays for Courage (Acts 4:24-31 NRSV)
Continually harassed for their beliefs and activities—even for a miraculous healing!—the early church gathered to thank God for delivering them from prison or worse.

#3: Solomon Prays for Wisdom (1 Kings 3 NIV)
If God offered to give you whatever you wanted, what would you ask for?  The Israelite king Solomon was presented with just such an offer—but he didn’t ask for any of the things you might expect.

#2: Jehoshaphat Prays for Deliverance (2 Chronicles 20:5-12 ESV)
Faced by an overwhelming force of enemies bent on his destruction, the king Jehoshaphat called out to God with a prayer that acknowledged his own powerlessness, and entreated God to intervene.

#1: The Lord’s Prayer (Matthew 6:9-13 NASB)
Jesus’ own prayer is certainly the most famous prayer in the Bible—and it’s noteworthy for being short and to-the-point.  Asked to demonstrate for his disciples how to pray, this is how Jesus responded.

As the tee shirts of the Prayer Station leaders on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol read:

KEEP CALM AND PRAY LONG

Sources:

32nd Annual Capital Region National Day of Prayer Annual Observance, U.S. Capitol Grounds, Washington DC, May 5, 2016
http://www.capitalregionndp.org/menu/NationalDayOfPrayer2016.asp

International Christian Host Coalition, CRNDP History and Themes
http://www.ichcndp.org/menu/HistoryThemes.asp

27th Annual U.S. Capitol Bible Reading Marathon
http://www.dcbiblemarathon.org

Five Biblical Prayers for the National Day of Prayer, Andy Rau, May 5, 2016
https://www.biblegateway.com/blog/2016/05/five-biblical-prayers-for-national-day-of-prayer/

Do others know you are a Follower of Jesus?

2016/04/04

Well, it’s been over 2 weeks since the time change to Daylight Saving Time and I just got around to changing the old analog clock on my fireplace mantle. Everything is so easy these days, even your cell phone knows how to adjust for Daylight Saving Time! But did you “spring forward” in your walk with God or are you still in “fall back” mode?

In March, I attended a community gathering where the guest speaker talked about their walk with God. She said she was energized by the 3-day retreat weekend she attended and has been more in tune with God ever since. She felt compelled to volunteer to give a talk about that at the gathering. She said to picture a courtroom scene where you are on trial for being a Christian and you are not allowed to testify on your own behalf.

The eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain where Jesus had told them to go. When they saw him, they worshiped him; but some doubted. (Matt 28:16-17) Thomas (also known as Didymus), one of the Twelve, was not with the disciples when Jesus came. So the other disciples told him, “We have seen the Lord!” But he said to them, “Unless I see the nail marks in his hands and put my finger where the nails were, and put my hand into his side, I will not believe.” (John 20:24-25)

Are there enough witnesses that can be called to the courtroom to testify on your behalf to convict you of being a follower of Jesus?

 

Sit Down, Get Up (at least once in a while)

2015/12/09

“Lord, you have examined me and know all about me. You know when I sit down and when I get up. You know my thoughts before I think them.”
Psalm 139:1-2 (NCV)

Believe it or not, the average American employee will sit anywhere from 7.7 to 15 hours a day without moving. Researchers are now beginning to unravel the catastrophic impact that sitting for long periods of time can cause to human health. Experts have coined the phrase “sitting disease” to describe it.

This disease is easy to prevent. People who move just a little bit—even fidgeting or getting up from their desks on a frequent basis to get a cup of coffee, or taking a flight of stairs—significantly improve their health.
Source: Exercise Physiologist Sean Foy
as quoted in an E-mail from The Daniel Plan, 12/09/2015

When I worked for IBM in Poughkeepsie, NY and my parents had a summer home on Cape Cod, I would drive 6-hours to go home to the Cape for the weekend.  I found that driving long distances put a strain on my legs and I frequently stop at a rest area every couple of hours.  Even when travelling with my family I would do this; get out of the car, walk around for 3-5 minutes even if I didn’t need to go to the rest room in the state hospitality building.  In a like manner on long airline flights, I will get out of my seat and walk around, talking to the flight attendants.  At work, I sometimes just lift my legs up to horizontal and hold them there for 15-20 seconds once in a while to keep the blood flowing.  Often I take the stairs even if an elevator is available.

So, get up out of your seat, at least once in a while; you don’t want to get “sitting disease”!

Food Day — Eat Green

2015/10/20

20151020_130840_Pumpkins

And you thought these were just for decorations!

MINI-PUMPKIN SOUP

  1. Slice pumpkins and remove seeds (reserve seeds for garnish)
  2. Bake pumpkins in foil-covered dish with 1″ of water for 1-hour at 350 degrees
  3. Meanwhile, separate the seeds from the fibrous strands and soak in salt water for 15 minutes
  4. Bake seeds in toaster oven for 30 minutes at 325 degrees or until they are browned and crunchy
  5. Scrape pumpkin meat away from the skin (mini-pumpkins above made 2.5 cups)
  6. Make roux of 1/2 stick butter, 1/4 cup flour, 1 cup vegetable bouillon, 1 cup milk or half & half
  7. Add pumpkin meat, season with 1/2 t. salt, 1/2 t. ground cinnamon, 1/2 t. ground nutmeg 1/4 t. ground cloves to taste
  8. Transfer to blender and puree; if too thick, add more milk or half & half
  9. Return to roux pot to reheat or store soup in the fridge and reheat later or serve chilled
  10. Serve in small bowls; garnish with toasted pumpkin seeds and a sprinkle of nutmeg or cinnamon to taste

20151020_145759_Soup

Food Day hashtags: #greenmeal #foodday2015 #EatGreenMoCo

2015 Food Day in Montgomery County, Maryland

2015/10/16

Food Day Logo

In honor of Food Day this year (officially held on Saturday, October 24th), the Montgomery County Food Council’s Food Literacy Working Group encourages local residents to cook a fresh, healthy, vegetable-centered meal and enjoy it with your family, friends, colleagues, or neighbors. Snap and share a photo of your meal during the week leading up to Food Day and join our media campaign!

The Food Council will be tweeting, gramming, and posting on Facebook and our blog the week of October 20th to share our commitment to this effort. Please help us raise awareness on social media using the official Food Day hashtags, #greenmeal and #foodday2015, and tagging @mocofoodcouncil. Throughout October we will feature resources, recipes, and local Food Day event information on our website and Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram accounts. Please follow us and help to get others involved by sharing, liking, and retweeting our Food Day posts and photos.

Please share this widely! We’d love to see everyone- schools, farms, businesses, hospitals, governmental groups, non-profits, and individuals- participate and spread the word about greening our plates to improve our health and the health of our planet.

Follow us and share!:
Web: http://www.mocofoodcouncil.org
Facebook: facebook.com/mocofoodcouncil
Twitter: MoCoFoodCouncil
Instagram: MoCoFoodCouncil

Respecting Religious Diversity

2015/09/15

I am retired and seem to be busier than ever.  As a result, I have neglected my Blog for quite some time.  I have much to say but find no time to say it.  However, the announcement below caught my attention and I have decided to share it with you.

Terminology

MCPS — Montgomery County [Maryland] Public Schools

FCWG — Montgomery County [Maryland] Faith Community Working Group, a public-private partnership promoting social cohesion and public safety

Guidelines for Respecting Religious Diversity

“Guidelines for Respecting Religious Diversity” is a family guide that includes many Board of Education policies and MCPS regulations and procedures that address issues of religious diversity, with feedback elicited from multiple stakeholders throughout both the faith community and MCPS.  This is a historic document – never released before in Montgomery County – and perhaps the first in the nation of its kind.

The collaboration between MCPS and FCWG is a great example of the Montgomery County Model in action, and highlights how successful community led initiatives can be in building trust between various stakeholders in the community.

The Guidelines for Respecting Religious Diversity are now available online.  They are available in 9 different languages.
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/info/religiousdiversity/