Saturday, January 31, 2009

The true message of Jesus

Posted: 30 Jan 2009 09:42 PM CST

“Jesus’s teaching consistently attracted the irreligious while offending the Bible-believing, religious people of his day. However, in the main, our churches today do not have this effect. The kind of outsiders Jesus attracted are not attracted to contemporary churches, even our most avant-garde ones. We tend to draw conservative, buttoned-down, moralistic people. The licentious and liberated or the broken and marginal avoid church. That can only mean one thing. If the preaching of our ministers and the practice of our parishioners do not have the same effect on people that Jesus had, then we must not be declaring the same message that Jesus did.”

- Timothy Keller, The Prodigal God



Blogger's note:
This is so true. Very interesting. Straight dead on. Nail in the head...
I hope and pray one days churches will realise this and turn all things to point to the centre of Christianity - the Christ Himself...

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Haha :p

As seen from Shein's personal message in MSN

"i wanna get married xD"

You're right, girl.

I wanna get married too.
Someday, somewhere with someone.

If God wills it.

The feelings of love is wonderful.
Pleasantly sweet with a tinge of hopeful innocence. Pure, virgin and gentle with such godly beauty.

Oh which lady would resist being in love with a man and be loved?
Which man would resist to share his heart with a woman?
Love between man and woman, created by God since the genesis.

Adoring one another, seeking purity of one another, with the man protecting and nurturing his significant half while the woman tends after her man with beautiful meekness and gentleness. Both reflect their faithfulness in one another as how God intended it to be, as wonderful as He made the union between man and woman to be.

Maybe I have someone in my mind now, maybe I don't...
But as tempting as sweet forbidden fruits, I would choose to wait upon that time and use my time of singleness as a gift to serve and to nurture.
And let God continue to weave His own plan for my 'happily ever after'. For who else understands the beauty of love between man and woman more than the Creator Himself?

"i wanna get married"

How cute :p



Blogger's note:
Something to reflect for myself.
Something to break the loneliness in this room.
Something for 'shiok sendiri' (self-entertain).
Something for time-out from my typing work.
Something for me to mesmerise the wonderful feelings of being in love and to anticipate the best of such experience to come.
Something to remind me of how God created the union between man and woman.
Something to...
Something to...
Something to...

*wink*

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

"My house is shabby, but it is comfortable." By Lee Wei Ling

The writer of the following message is Ms. Lee Wei Ling, daughter of Singapore's Minister Mentor, Lee Kuan Yew. Like her father, she is a brilliant scholar and is currently, the Assoc. Professor and director of the National Neuroscience Institute.

***

In 2007, in an end-of-year message to the staff of the National Neuroscience Institute, I wrote:

'Whilst boom time in the public sector is never as booming as in the private sector, let us not forget that boom time is eventually followed by slump time.

Slump time in the public sector is always less painful compared to the private sector.' Slump time has arrived with a bang.

While I worry about the poorer Singaporeans who will be hit hard, perhaps this recession has come at an opportune time for many of us. It will give us an incentive to reconsider our priorities in life.

Decades of the good life have made us soft.

The wealthy especially, but also the middle class in Singapore, have had it so good for so long, what they once considered luxuries, they now think of as necessities. A mobile phone, for instance, is now a statement about who you are, not just a piece of equipment for communication. Hence many people buy the latest model though their existing mobile phones are still in perfect working order.

A Mercedes-Benz is no longer adequate as a status symbol. For millionaires who wish to show the world they have taste, a Ferrari or a Porsche is deemed more appropriate.

The same attitude influences the choice of attire and accessories. I still find it hard to believe that there are people carrying handbags that cost more than thrice the monthly income of a bus driver, and many more times that of the foreign worker labouring in the hot sun, risking his life to construct luxury condominiums he will never have a chance to live in.

The media encourages and amplifies this ostentatious consumption.

Perhaps it is good to encourage people to spend more because this will prevent the recession from getting worse.

I am not an economist, but wasn't that the root cause of the current crisis - Americans spending more than they could afford to? I am not a particularly spiritual person. I don't believe in the supernatural and I don't think I have a soul that will survive my death. But as I view the crass materialism around me, I am reminded of what my mother once told me: 'Suffering and deprivation is good for the soul.'

My family is not poor, but we have been brought up to be frugal.

My parents and I live in the same house that my paternal grandparents and their children moved into after World War II in 1945. It is a big house by today's standards, but it is simple - in fact, almost to the point of being shabby.

Those who see it for the first time are astonished that Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew's home is so humble. But it is a comfortable house, a home we have got used to. Though it does look shabby compared to the new mansions on our street, we are not bothered by the comparison.

Most of the world and much of Singapore will lament the economic downturn. We have been told to tighten our belts. There will undoubtedly be suffering, which we must try our best to ameliorate. But I personally think the hard times will hold a timely lesson for many Singaporeans, especially those born after 1970 who have never lived through difficult times. No matter how poor you are in Singapore, the authorities and social groups do try to ensure you have shelter and food. Nobody starves in Singapore.

Many of those who are currently living in mansions and enjoying a luxurious lifestyle will probably still be able to do so, even if they might have to downgrade from wines costing $20,000 a bottle to $10,000 a bottle. They would hardly notice the difference.

Being wealthy is not a sin. It cannot be in a capitalist market economy.

Enjoying the fruits of one's own labour is one's prerogative and I have no right to chastise those who choose to live luxuriously. But if one is blinded by materialism, there would be no end to wanting and hankering. After the Ferrari, what next? An Aston Martin? After the Hermes Birkin handbag, what can one upgrade to? Neither an Aston Martin nor an Hermes Birkin can make us truly happy or contented. They are like dust, a fog obscuring the true meaning of life, and can be blown away in the twinkling of an eye.

When the end approaches and we look back on our lives, will we regret the latest mobile phone or luxury car that we did not acquire? Or would we prefer to die at peace with ourselves, knowing that we have lived lives filled with love, friendship and goodwill, that we have helped some of our fellow voyagers along the way and that we have tried our best to leave this world a slightly better place than how we found it?

We know which is the correct choice - and it is within our power to make that choice.

In this new year, burdened as it is with the problems of the year that has just ended, let us again try to choose wisely. To a considerable degree, our happiness is within our own control, and we should not follow the herd blindly.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Sigh...

I read something interesting this morning:

“The wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, reasonable, full of mercy and good fruits, unwavering, without hypocrisy.” Galations 3:17

Let me highlight that again.

“The wisdom from above is (1) first pure, (2) then peaceable, gentle, reasonable, full of mercy and good fruits, unwavering, without hypocrisy.”

I couldn't even get the first one right
=.=



Woe on me, sinner...

Hiatus

It has been a difficult period of time. Many things happened, from a point of my future to a point of my health. I do not want to raise unwanted panic and attention by telling all but rest assured, God has been in control (and He always is) and I am now safe and sound, alive and kicking (healthy and pink - err... not there yet)

I need time to straighten things out, to adapt to new change after that point of event.

I need someone...

I need God.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

I just can't resist to share my today's devotion. Hope you all benefit from this...

From Doctrine to Duty

“I, therefore, the prisoner of the Lord, entreat you to walk in a manner worthy of the calling with which you have been called.” - Ephesians 4:3

There can be no right living without right principles.

Imagine someone saying, “I have some extra money lying around. I think I’ll send a large check to the government.” Absurd, isn’t it? But every year, honest wage-earners fill out forms and give part of their income to the government. Why? It’s not because they are generous but because there is a law— a doctrine—that says they have to.

Unless people know the reason for what they should do, it’s unlikely they’ll make a commitment to do it. Paul understood that, so he always taught doctrine before duty. “Therefore” in Ephesians 4:1 links the doctrine of chapters 1—3 to the duty of chapters 4—6. Doctrine and duty are inseparably linked; duty always flows out of doctrine. Right living is based on right principles. Paul told the Colossian church, “We have not ceased to pray for you and to ask that you may be filled with the knowledge of His will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding” (1:9). For what purpose? “So that you may walk in a manner worthy of the Lord” (v. 10). Spiritual knowledge, wisdom, and understanding make up the pathway of a worthy walk.

When pastors teach duty without teaching doctrine, they weaken the Word of God because they’ve eliminated the motive. They may be able to stir up emotions, but that brings no long-term commitment. The pastor’s responsibility is to teach the truth of God, and the hearer’s responsibility is to obey it. Of course, the source of God’s truth is His Word: “All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness; that the man of God may be adequate, equipped for every good work” (2 Tim. 3:16-17). Knowing the Bible well is our means of equipping ourselves for a righteous life.

As we think about our worthy walk, let’s avoid emotionalism and legalism, and instead focus on living what we learn from a thorough and personal study of God’s Word.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Step into 2009

Happy new year to all!

Well to be honest, this is the most unsignificant new year I ever been through. Guess my pain from my fYP has dampened my mood to look forward into 2009. But no worry, peeps! I'll be fine. I just need help that's all.

So, that means I'm also not in the mood for resolutions. In fact, my initial plan to usher into the new year is to pray. However, it got a little disrupted by some drama my sister and her friends got themselves into.

Car, police roadblock, scratch another car, IC left behind, 'hit-and-run', drama king of a policeman...

Lazy to explain but all ended well, thank God for that.

If there is such thing as new year wish, I only wanna wish that I can get outta this FYP quicksand...

Happy 2009 again!