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The Elephant in the Living Room

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Categories: food for thought

We all tend to look at life through filters.

I think it’s inherent in us to look at the world around us and try to make sense of it. We call this a “worldview.” It’s always interesting to me to talk with other people who have a different worldview than I do, because if nothing else, it reminds me that I don’t have everything figured out.

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Sunday Meditation: Convinced in Our Own Minds

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Categories: Meanderings (look it up), Sunday meditations

One person has faith that he may eat all things, but he who is weak eats vegetables only. The one who eats is not to regard with contempt the one who does not eat, and the one who does not eat is not to judge the one who eats, for God has accepted him….One person regards one day above another, another regards every day alike. Each person must be fully convinced in his own mind….I know and am convinced in the Lord that nothing is unclean in itself; but to him who thinks anything to be unclean, to him it is unclean. (Rom. 14: 2-3, 5, 14, NASB, emphasis mine)

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Here’s to Not Sucking Nearly as Much

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Categories: music, random stuff

Just a progress report…since I wrote this post last week, I have not missed a day practicing the guitar.

In just five days of playing consistently, I suck less at guitar than I did before.

Plus, my callouses are coming back.

I know this because there is pain in the fingertips of my left hand as I type this.

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Democracy and Citizenship

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Categories: food for thought, Meanderings (look it up), politics? oh puh-leeze., Rantings

This post has been on the burner for several months, and I haven’t really made mention of anything political since the last presidential election (mainly because that’s not what this blog is about). But in just watching the unfolding of current events (including the health care debate), and continuing to ponder what the church’s role should be in such things…I think it’s time to write.

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Delaying Destiny

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Categories: moments of truth

I was just kidding about that last post. I wrote this one right after, just saved it for posting later, for the humor effect. 🙂

I wasn’t kidding about being a procrastinator, though. Although I’d have to say that like most of us, I’m a bit selective in what I procrastinate on. And while sometimes that’s just normal human stuff, sometimes the things we put off can tell on us. What we are avoiding can tell us what’s going on in our souls.

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If I Had a Video-Cam Thing I Could Have Posted This On Failblog…

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Categories: What the heck was THAT?

…but since I didn’t have one, I’ll just tell you what happened.

I was in line at the grocery store the other day. The guy in front of me was probably in his ’80s, driving one of those sit-down electric shopping carts. It was obvious that he was having problems. He moved very slowly; he would stand up (sort of) to do something, maybe to help put his sacked groceries back in the cart, or point something out to the cashier. I say “sort of” because it was impossible for him to stand up straight; in fact, standing up for him meant being doubled over in half, so he looked like the letter “L” set on its end. He’d sit back down a moment, then get back up. It took the poor guy about five minutes to do anything.

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Everybody’s Broken

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Categories: Meanderings (look it up)

Don’t exactly know why I was thinking about this, but it is a truth that has become more real to me as my journey progresses:

Everybody’s broken.

No, this isn’t a “downer” post. Honest, I’m not depressed. See, I’m smiling: 🙂

But it’s true. Not only were we all born with a fallen nature, but in a world filled with fallen people it is literally impossible to walk through this life without sustaining some kind of wounding–whether it be physical or emotional. For those who will chose it, we spend a good part of our life in some process of recovering from those wounds. For others, sadly, their brokenness dominates them throughout life. But it’s important to understand and remember this idea, not just on a philosophical “nobody’s perfect” level, but as a truth that affects our actions.

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Sunday Meditations: Psalms of Ascents

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Categories: Sunday meditations

For this installment of the bi-weekly Sunday Meditations, I have a slightly different approach than normal. For the past few days, several passages from the “psalms of ascents” (Ps. 120-134) have been rolling around in my head and heart. Yesterday, I read them all the way through.

The “psalms of ascents”, as this set of 15 psalms is called, were traditionally sung by Jewish pilgrims as they walked the long ascent several times a year to the City of Jerusalem. They are songs to accompany “ascending the hill of the Lord.” I love these psalms because as I read them through, it’s as though I can feel my own soul being lifted up; taken together, they form an upward progression. (It is surmised that they were once one psalm, set in parts like Psalm 119 which comes immediately before them.)

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