Regarding Daily Bible Reading

A comment on using devotional guide for your quite time:

One caution in using this kind of guide, however, is the temptation to just read the story and skip the Bible reading for the day. Once this become a habbit, the believer can find his life built on inspirational thoughts instead of the Word of God– a spiritual life that is built on very shaky ground.
from Keeping Our Appointments with God (Discovery Series).

It is interesting that the quote is actually taken from devotional guide producer itself Our Daily Bread. I am still subscribing to Our Daily Bread (ODB), but rarely use it for quiet time anymore. I used to use it when I was in Indo. Back then, I found reading bible was difficult and boring, that’s why I need ODB to keep me motivated to read the bible. As suggested by the quote, I skipped the bible reading for most of the times 🙂

But now reading the bible is fun and exciting!! So nowadays I read ODB just for the fun of it not out of necessity anymore. ODB does come with useful materials once in a while, the last one that I got is “Keeping Our Appointments with God”. It contains some useful tips, thoughts and qutable quotes like:
– Devotions are a matter of our heart more than a discipline of our daytimer.
– Spending time with God is based on our relation with him.
– “It’s better to practice 15 mins a day every day, then to practice several hours on a few day”, here the author argues is better to spend short time every day than longer time but fewer days.
– Write down what you’ve learnt, prayer points etc.
And the list goes on..

Christians who shaped the world

I found the article from Australian newspaper website the Age, it is called Christians have a biblical mandate: be political. It is quite interesting article, it was written to address the argument that christians should not interfere with world issues and politics and keep their religion to themselves.

Here is the slightly edited version of the article, I’ll keep this here, just in case someone asks me: “why don’t you christians do something about the world other than just telling people about God”.

Baptist minister Martin Luther King. He really should have kept his nose out of political issues and kept his dream to himself. Why is religion getting mixed up with human rights?

Then there were those interfering archbishops, such as Desmond Tutu in South Africa and Janani Luwum in Idi Amin’s Uganda. They should have left their political leaders alone to govern as they saw fit.

Cardinal Jaime Sin in the Philippines under the enlightened rule of Ferdinand Marcos, and church leaders who opposed Pol Pot in Cambodia.

As for the likes of Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Martin Niemoller in Nazi Germany, they should have stayed inside church cloisters instead of blundering into political activism.

Closer to Australia, meddlesome clerics such as Tim Costello and Ray Cleary shouldn’t be shooting off their mouths about gambling and other social issues. Don’t they realise gambling addicts have a democratic right to sacrifice their homes and families and commit suicide if they want to, without interference from religious do-gooders?

Look at all those religiously minded laymen and women who have meddled in matters that don’t concern them. Like William Wilberforce dragging his Christian faith into the slavery issue, or the Earl of Shaftesbury interfering in the politics of child labour and other forms of exploitation. Or William and Catherine Booth meddling in issues of social and economic inequality, and founding the Salvation Army.

Then there’s Elizabeth Fry interfering in the field of prison reform; Florence Nightingale who founded the modern nursing movement; Cicely Saunders who founded the modern hospice movement; Henri Dunant who founded the Red Cross; and other meddlesome religious zealots who founded Alcoholics Anonymous, Amnesty International, Habitat for Humanity, World Vision, TEAR Fund and a host of other enterprises that can be traced to a religious motivation.

Is a world without religious interference what we really need? The resultant welfare bill would send all governments flat broke. Expediency would be more likely to triumph over conscience, and brute force over moral persuasion. There would be less of a check on the excesses of genocidal tyrants, murderous despots and ruthless pragmatists.

New Testament Christians, as Karl Barth pointed out, faced the dilemma of relating to Nero’s Rome, which in Romans 13 is a divinely ordained institution to be obeyed, but in Revelation 13 is “the beast from the abyss”. When governments invoke order at the expense of freedom, tyranny usually results. But, yes, freedom without order is anarchy.

The Christian social philosopher Reinhold Niebuhr used to say: “There is no peace without power, and no justice with power.” So a Christian has two responsibilities: to support legitimate law and order, but also to promote social justice.

Downside of Ministry Among Overseas Students

I just browsing the contact numbers on mobile phone, then I came to the number of a Pelita guy who has just left us to Indo just recently. With a sad feeling, I deleted his numbers from my mobile phone’s memory.

The hard thing being with overseas students is some of them have to go somewhere else after they have finished uni. It became easier in the past few 2-3 years as the number of Pelita people returning/or going to Spore was diminishing, but now that the Indo economic is starting to get better(I hope), no doubt that there will be more Pelitan going back to Indo.

Having them returning to Indo is a good thing, provided that they will use what they have learnt here to serve among Indonesians and they will continue to grow as christians. But I am afraid about whether they would survive as christian there, will they continue to be faithful, will they grow in their love and knowledge of Christ or they just become pew-sitters in church, or worst come worst they will fall away eaten by business of life and the tempation of greed and consumerism. I feel like haven’t done enough for them.

God is sovereign, I can commit them in prayers, who knows my fear will not turn out to be true, who knows in few years time when I meet them, I still can call them brothers and sisters in Christ.

Stuffs about design

The look of this weblog has been changed. I was playing with CSS of this blog for awhile and am still finding it unsatisfactory. I just wish I have more time to learn web design stuffs, not just the technology, but the design philosophy itself.. I sometimes envy my sister who is priviledged to study graphic design at KvB college in North Sydney.. Maybe I should take courses on web/graphic design? Would it be worthwhile? I don’t know.. I don’t think I have time anyway..

On another matter, Weblog wannabe is a weblog which design I kinda fond of, recently the author of that weblog has just lost her mom.. It’s very sad if you read the postings there..

My other part time job

I have started my other part time job as a casual Customer Relationship Manager (cool name, but it basically means telemarketer, no management whatsoever) for a company called Customcall representing a client called Acxiom/Asis.

I am working 9am to 1pm every working day. The job is very boring I must say, imagine calling up 75 people and saying the same thing again and again.. I wish I can call up people to share to gospel and being paid too! 🙂 Well, there’s always MTS, like what my girlfriend is doing at the moment. That would be worthwhile doing, wouldn’t it..

Oh well, a job is a job, as long as it brings the food to the table. I should be thankful and find joy in my meaningless life on earth, I hope Josh would bring a brighter message from Ecclesiastes this Sunday.