Dear Lord, Have mercy on our souls this week. Amen |
Monday, April 30, 2012
Monday, April 23, 2012
Shame - A Poem
One of my wonderful friends wrote this poem, and upon reading it, I immediately asked if I could post it on my blog; she graciously obliged. Take some time to think through this one, especially if you can relate to this story.
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Saturday, April 14, 2012
Fearfully & Wonderfully Made - 3
Dear Journal,
When
I first read that “God opposes the proud” or that “pride comes before a fall,”
I thought that this opposition must be painful indeed. I sought to avoid this
secondary fall at all costs. However, this week I have come to realize that in
the midst of my pride, the most gracious thing God could do is to oppose my
self-centered plans. Fearfully and
Wonderfully Made points to the muscular system to illustrate this point.
Dr.
Brand once had a patient whose neck muscles twitched with such violence that
“every few seconds his chin smashed into his right shoulder” (Brand Yancey, p. 189). The man’s story was a sad one, but Dr. Brand’s key point
focused more on the dysfunction of a muscle. You see, the muscle itself does not cause the impairment, but the nerves that cause it to act
independently from the body. The parallel drawn between the
autonomous actions of a muscle in a physical body and the self-serving actions
of a member of Christ’s body, are certainly striking. Yancey and Brand
skillfully paint this picture in the book:
Labels:
Anatomy and Physiology,
Biology,
Book,
God,
Holy Spirit,
Jesus
Fearfully and Wonderfully Made - 2
Dear Journal,
Today was a difficult day; I was stressed about everything from my summer job to family strife. However, when I picked up Fearfully and Wonderfully Made God immediately reminded me of His peace that passes all understanding. As the book recounted Dr. Brand’s first secret encounter with the amoeba, I too could feel the chilly, sterile air of the laboratory scented faintly with formalin.
Today was a difficult day; I was stressed about everything from my summer job to family strife. However, when I picked up Fearfully and Wonderfully Made God immediately reminded me of His peace that passes all understanding. As the book recounted Dr. Brand’s first secret encounter with the amoeba, I too could feel the chilly, sterile air of the laboratory scented faintly with formalin.
The lab is quiet as I take a seat and peer
down my scope; it is just me and the organisms. No one yells or fights—there is
no voice to hear but that of my own thoughts and of the Holy Spirit. It isn’t
hard to imagine what these organisms look like: I saw them for myself last
semester in Introduction to Biology (ironically, my sample was also taken from
the campus lake). As I gaze at the wonderful, wiggling world through my
microscope, I can hear the words of Jesus from John 4, “a time is coming when
you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem”—indeed I worship Him in my imaginary lab.
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
Fearfully and Wonderfully Made
(Below is a journal exerpt sharing some of the wonderful ways God and Anatomy and Physiology have been working in my life. I hope you enjoy.)
Dear Journal,
I am both excited and awed by the book Fearfully and Wonderfully Made by Philip Yancey and Dr. Paul Brand - and I've only read one chapter and the preface!
First off, I was intensely excited by the "boyish enthusiasm for the grandeur of the human body" Dr. Brand conveys (Brand & Yancey, p.15). His heart mirrors my own in that way. From the moment I began reading my high school Anatomy and Physiology textbook, (ironically with the same title) I fell in love with the intricacy, efficacy, and beauty of God's divine knitting project. (Psalm 139:13)
Dear Journal,
I am both excited and awed by the book Fearfully and Wonderfully Made by Philip Yancey and Dr. Paul Brand - and I've only read one chapter and the preface!
First off, I was intensely excited by the "boyish enthusiasm for the grandeur of the human body" Dr. Brand conveys (Brand & Yancey, p.15). His heart mirrors my own in that way. From the moment I began reading my high school Anatomy and Physiology textbook, (ironically with the same title) I fell in love with the intricacy, efficacy, and beauty of God's divine knitting project. (Psalm 139:13)
Book Review: It's (Not That) Complicated
It’s (Not That) Complicated: How to Relate to Guys in a Healthy, Sane, and Biblical Way by Anna Sofia Botkin
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This book is like a ray of light in the dark, confusing world of cross-gender relationships. I would encourage any young woman to read this book, especially if you feel confused about communication with the opposite sex and how to have meaningful guy-girl friendships without them spiraling into the quasi-romances so popular today.
Monday, April 2, 2012
Some Fun From Catalog Living
From Catalog Living
Despite a couple glasses of wine and mounting peer pressure, Shelia the chair was determined to keep her clothes on. |
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