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February 15th, 2010Is the Old Testament literal?
November 15th, 2009There’s so many Old Testament stories that seem like they’re mostly parables. Is the Old Testament even literal? Maybe most of the Old Testament is full of fabricated stories that Christians and Jews have used as illustrations for spiritual concepts.
For example, the biggest Old Testament story under fire right now is that of creation. There’s no way that could be literal, right? It has to be a parable used to describe a complex system of evolution over millions of years. I even have a Bible that hints at this in the footnotes.
Who do we want to ask first? Let’s start with the author of the first five books of the Bible, that Jews and Christians can agree on. I hate to start with creation, as it’s such a controversial topic, for some reason. If you want to do this as in depth as I did, pull out a parallel Hebrew-English Bible and grab a Hebrew dictionary. Familiarize yourself with the Hebrew alphabet and writing style so you know how to find things in the dictionary.
Okay, look at Genesis 1:3 – 5, particularly 5. The first thing God created was light, and separated night and day. Then, He named it one day. The Hebrew word transliterated as “yom” means “day.” Yom/day means either a 24-hour period, the light part of the 24-hour period, or an unspecified period of time, depending on context.
“God called the light [Yom]” refers to the light period of the day, obviously. But, what does yom mean in the rest of Genesis 1? The obvious answer is 24-hour period. It doesn’t seem to be midnight-till-midnight like our day, but morning-morning. The day starts at sunrise, continues after sundown, then ends as the sun rises for the next day. That’s why the day followed this progression: “there was evening, and there was morning, one day.” The first day had to be a literal 24-hour period. The day was established before the sun or earth were even created. How could a million years of evolution be referred to as a cycle of light, then dark, evening, then ending at morning, if no sources of light were in the atmosphere yet?
Then, we find in Genesis 2:2 – 3 that “on the seventh [yom] God finished His work which He had made; and He [shabbat]ed on the seventh [yom]” and “God blessed the seventh [yom], and hallowed it; because that in it He [shabbat]ed from all His work” Forgive my translating of Hebrew, I’m not exactly fluent. The important thing here, though, is not knowing how to translate the past tense of “shabbat,” but knowing that it was the Hebrew word for “rest.” This “Shabbat” is also known as “Sabbath,” a day that’s literally kept by Jews every seven (literal) days. What we find is that Moses used this language literally, rather than figuratively.
So, let’s jump forward a few thousand literal years made up of literal days, to ask Jesus. If you want to do the same thing, this time pull out a parallel Greek Bible and a Greek dictionary. In Matthew 12, first we see Jesus’ disciples getting razzed for working on the Sabbath. But, Jesus demonstrates the mercy of God that the Pharisees didn’t understand. He explains that the Sabbath isn’t a day of judgement, but a day of grace. First in regards to the disciples gathering food, then by healing a man’s withered hand. He didn’t tell them that the Sabbath wasn’t intended to be a literal day. Jesus still believed the Sabbath to be a literal seventh day.
Then, in verse 40, Jesus refers to the three (literal) days that Jonah was in the whale, and explains that it’s going to be three (literal) days after He dies that He will be risen. Clearly, Matthew 12 is an account of Jesus referencing the Old Testament in a literal sense.
So, now that we had someone in the Old Testament, and then Jesus, let’s jump ahead another few decades to the author of Hebrews. Hebrews 11 breaks it down in the easiest way to understand yet. “By faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God, so that the things which are seen were not made of things which are visible.” Seen/visible here refers to things we can observe (i.e. tangible). This is what scientists are studying. Things which are seen. Seen with the eye, or even invisible things that can be observed. God made all of this out of things which can’t be seen with the eye, or even observed. That is to say, God made every tangible substance, force, etc. out of the intangible (we might say “non-existent”).
These are just a few of many references which refer to the Old Testament as being literal. I’m going to go ahead and let you research that and form your own beliefs. I can’t force you to believe anything, I can’t even form a persuasive enough argument to sway you into believing anything. Ultimately, if you don’t see this day as a literal 24-hour period, There’s not really any reason to believe the rest of the Old Testament literally, because you’ll be stuck under the belief that it’s all figurative to explain concepts that were beyond the old Israelites or Christians’ scientific knowledge.
Low-fat Condiments
August 17th, 2009I think the food industry has the wrong idea about making low-fat foods, especially condiments. They try to create something with the same consistency and taste of the full-fat variety, but miss the target much of the time.
What I propose is this: create flavor-saturated versions of the regular product. This way, rather than decreasing the fat content, the consumer will decrease the intake. For example, instead of a 1/3 fat cream cheese, the consumer could use 1/3 as much of a full-fat 3x the flavor cream cheese. The fat intake would be the same as the low-fat. The flavor would be the same as the full-fat.
I’m sure not all products could be this way, but I’d be willing to bet that condiments especially could be made like this. Then, we just need to retrain the consumer in how much is the proper amount to eat.
The Band I Want to Start (with mp3s)
August 12th, 2009Okay, so you may know I’m interested in starting a band. I figured I’d give ya’ll a little inspiration as to what I was envisioning. I’m normally inclined to make hip hop, but my favorite genre is electro house. What I really want to make is electro house / hip hop / funk / electronica / dance music.
On the popular side of things, the new Black Eyed Peas album, “The E.N.D.” and LMFAO’s album, “Party Rock,” are very similar to what I want to make. I included a few songs by them to provide an example of some of their music. LMFAO has a lot of better songs for example, but I picked this one because it’s mostly clean.
Black Eyed Peas — I Gotta Feeling:
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LMFAO — La La La:
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As far as electro house music is concerned, look up MSTRKRFT, Justice, Daft Punk, Bloody Beetroots’ “Romborama,” and other similar acts. As far as electro-funk, Chromeo is the best example I can think of, along with DJ Mehdi.
Anyways, there isn’t much, or maybe even ANY Christian music in this market. Justice is sometimes listed as Christian, but I don’t really see why. The closest I can find in the Christian music world is Family Force 5’s new remix album, “Dance or Die with a Vengeance.” Also, the upcoming Washington Projects album, titled “Light Up the Dark,” will be cool, but not really include as much electronica as I plan on using. For posterity’s sake as well as to big up the Washington Projects, here’s their latest single.
Washington Projects — Light Up the Dark:
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Horizon Fellowship of Summerville
August 8th, 20093D Typography — Grace
August 3rd, 2009Toots & The Maytals — Funky Kingston (feat. Bootsy Collins & The Roots)
August 2nd, 2009Okay, so Bootsy is one of my favorite funkers of all time. Of course, if you know me, you already knew that. But, that’s not even how I found this song. I found it by listening to Toots & The Maytals. And, as luck would have it, Bootsy was featured on my favorite Toots song. “Toots, Roots & Boots” as the song says.
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Replacing the DC Power Socket on Powerbook G4
July 30th, 2009Powerbook G4 Power Connector Replacement : Screaming Light Studios
Last night, both the power socket on the side of my computer and the plug on the end of my AC/DC adapter broke. I’ve known this was a bad design since I bought my laptop 4 1/2 years ago. So, I went online and found this guy’s advice on putting a generic power socket on, and followed it today. It took me a while, but I got it. My brother helped solder and my dad helped with advice, and I’m pleased to announce that my computer is powered up and working better than ever. On top of fixing the annoying plug that came unplugged every 10 seconds, I also eradicated a case buzz I used to get on my aluminum laptop shell. Also, while inside, I cleaned some stuff up and my trackpad button works better, as does my bluetooth card.
Mission accomplished.
Hungry… Thirsty… Curious…
July 30th, 2009Recently, someone from church told me his testimony. He was a druggie, and his drug dealer invited him over one night. He thought his dealer was going to give him free drugs, but instead they were having a Bible study! The dealer led him to the Lord, and he became part of the Jesus Movement. It got me thinking though. Are we ready for another “Jesus Movement” type thing?
I’m not sure, to be honest. I think my generation is ready for something. Most of them don’t know what yet, though. They look for it in everything. I can see a lot of similarities between my generation and the hippie generation. They felt a void, and tried to fill it. We feel a void, and we try to fill it. The hippies tried everything — free love, drugs, alcohol, and music — anything they could to escape the burdens of life and to attempt to find meaning in their life. Likewise, take a look at anything that exemplifies my culture and generation. Live-in dating relationships are commonplace. Everyone wants love without commitment. Alcohol and drugs are extremely popular. Listen to any of our popular music. Most of it’s about love and/or sex without marriage, alcohol, or whatever else. Bisexuality is the new rage, as people don’t feel satisfied with what they have, they move on and try other stuff.
Young men and women of my generation are hungry. We’re thirsty. We want life abundantly. We want the truth. We’ll let the generation before us stick to what’s prim and proper; we want the ugly, nasty truth.
It’s this kind of openness that leaves my generation open to God. I’m hoping with all my heart that my generation will see a movement toward God, the only One who can fulfill our needs and desires for fullness.
I think the church needs to be more accepting of my generation. The ugliness exists. Deal with it. In fact, I literally mean, “deal with it.” Don’t just try to push us away. Don’t just let us in and pretend what we’re doing is okay. Tell us what’s what. That’s what we’re thirsty for. If you don’t do it, our curiosity will leave us prey for false teachings. My generation needs something. If the church doesn’t give them the truth, they’ll easily fall for deceit.
Hmm…
July 29th, 2009Getting a beautiful portfolio to work on here is proving to be more of a chore than I had hoped for. Hopefully it won’t be too long before I figure something out that will do the trick. The wordpress plugins that other people have made don’t seem to do what I want them to do. It’s starting to look like I might have to write my own plugin. Hmm…





