Israeli Government Power Juggle

Due to the Israeli Prime Minister, Netanyahu’s, unsuccessful attempt at forming a government, Benny Gantz, who won the recent election, will have his own opportunity. It is believed unlikely he will succeed and a joint government is advised. Netanyahu says he has extensively worked on a joint government plan with Gantz. Netanyahu’s legal issues, however, are the grounds on which Gantz disagrees with being co-prime ministers. Discussions of Netanyahu suspending himself and which would serve first as Prime Minister are major topics of discussion. Gantz, however, has not yet failed to form a government.

This post is a summary of the New York Times article “Netanyahu Fails to Form a Government. Israel Turns to Gantz.” 

Evangelistic Confusion

I have begun this to explain some parts of Christian evangelism that seem to be against what is right and true in Christianity. So, I must first cover what the core of Christianity is.

The Core of Christianity

The Bible states that God, who is perfect and all-knowing, made the world and everything in it. He made humans for His glory through a relationship with Him (For more on this subject, read “Don’t Waste Your Life” by John Piper). Humans sinned, which means they did wrong things and because God is perfect, He can’t be around sin, or around us. The main consequences of sin are death and separation from God. That is why there are bad things in the world.

To fix the world, God sent Jesus, who is fully God, to live a sinless life and then die on the cross and pay the price of sin; death. Because Jesus died on the cross, we can live in heaven with Him someday, are allowed to have a relationship with God, and the Holy Spirit, which is also called God’s Spirit, comes to live in us and empower us.

That is a very imperfect summary, but it covers the main points, although I would suggest reading Matthew, Mark, Luke, and/or John for yourself.

Now, on to our point. Christians, people who follow Christ, are supposed to try to be like Christ, who never sinned. To love their enemies, not murder, not steal, not lie, and be honest in their dealings. They are held to a high standard, but also recieve grace for their failings because humans are imperfect.

Evangelistic Confusion

This all seems good and right; to love people and try to do right. But when you go to church or youth group they seem to be preaching something against one of the things they’re supposed to be, aren’t they?

Christians are supposed to be “above reproach” and honest in their dealings. So why do they talk about giving people clothes and food and shelter so that they’ll be more likely to listen to Christianity? Isn’t that underhanded and kind of like a bribe? They talk more about giving them these things so that the people will become Christians than because they care about them.

I am a Christian and have grappled with this question myself. Thankfully, I believe I have been given a better answer than the one I came up with at the beginning. At first, I thought simply that we cared about giving them the things too. Which is true. But it isn’t really a satisfactory answer, is it?

The next section will (hopefully) explain how that is and isn’t a satisfactory answer.

The Christian’s Priorities

The best way to explain the answer I found is to tell how I stumbled on it.

I was beginning to see how I wanted to be when I was older and thought I should come up with some guidelines for how to be that person. I decided to choose my main three priorities so I could focus on what was important to me as a person and in my life. The three I decided on were; Authenticity, joy, and intentionality.

I also had heard about the fact that slavery is used to produce chocolate and I was considering whether I should stop eating chocolate produced by non-Fairtrade companies. I realized that I couldn’t support all the causes in the world. I had to pick and choose. So I split the causes of the world into three categories and put them in the order I believed a Christian should support them in.

Here is the order I got: People’s souls, people’s lives, and other causes of the world (such as pollution and animals). Biblically, I believe this order is correct. The state of people’s souls will affect them for eternity (literally), while their lives on Earth are just for a short while and animals are worth less than humans (see Luke 12:24 for one example of this in the Bible).

Conclusion

If the ordering in the last section is correct, then the way they talk about evangelism is perfectly correct as well. If the state of human souls is more permanent and important than the state of their lives, then doesn’t it stand to reason that when they talk about it they care more about people coming to Christ than getting their physical needs? If both are for their good, but one is for their long-term good and the other for momentary good then isn’t it more important for them to give the long-term good that Jesus has to offer?

I must address one more thing before closing, however. Many times “saving a soul” may be used as motivation for people in the church to help meet people’s physical needs. I do not agree with this method or motivation. God is the one who really saves souls and not us. We don’t “make” converts; it’s all God. This is one example of the fact that Christians aren’t perfect. We’re still humans and we still need God to forgive our sins.

I hope and pray that what I have written may help you and make clear what God wanted you to learn.

What of a Second?

What is the value of a second? Which merits another question; what of fifteen seconds? A minute? Five, ten, fifteen minutes? A half-hour? An hour?

A day? A week? A month? A year? A lifetime?


God has given us these things. We only get one life but God has given us years, months, weeks, days, hours, half-hours, minutes, and seconds. A second is a gift from God. Seconds are gifts from God. Every second is a gift from God.

What should we do with these gifts? These seconds? What can we do with a mere second?

We can do what we were made to do. What were we made to do? I will share a quote from John Piper.

“[We were made to live with] a passion to glorify God by enjoying and displaying His supreme excellence in all the spheres of life.”

Don’t Waste Your Life by John Piper


Every second, we should enjoy God. Every second, we should glorify God. Not ourselves.

I have struggled with wanting glory for myself. A recent sermon pointed out my flaw. I want people to like my writing, to praise that I’m writing a book, and to like me.

“Live in the moment.” It’s a common saying. Here is what I want us to do. “Live in the enjoyment of God every moment.”

Changing the World

What does it take to change the world? In the “Do Hard Things” conference by the Harris brothers (which I highly recommend), they end with demonstrating various movements; snapping, rubbing, clapping, etc, and ask the audience to do them together. What was a snap, rub, clap, was, becomes “raining inside.”

Our small contributions might not seem like much, but when we put them all together, we can do something great. Like changing the world.

In light of that, I would like to share how teens and young adults are changing the world in a mass force.

I am part of the “Young Writers Workshop” under the “Rebelution” and “Do Hard Things.” One of the instructors, still a young adult herself, has just signed a book deal and we are going to do something about it. Dust, by Kara Swanson, is a retelling of the famous tale Peter Pan.

What are we setting out to do? We are going to change the world. But right now, at this moment, we have two goals; rally around Kara and make this one of the best-selling books in her market.

Kara has only published a few books and a young, unestablished, Christian author’s first couple books don’t often make a splash despite the fact that Kara specializes in marketing. If Dust became a big-seller, other young authors might have a better chance at getting published. Expectations for teens and young adults would also be changed and that would change the world.

Expectations often define people. For example, the Rosenthal–Jacobson study. In the study, certain students in a school were pronounced “bloomers.” The bloomers were expected to grow and have better performance throughout the year. Teachers were told to expect much from the “special” children, and sure enough, they delivered. However, the “bloomers” were in fact chosen randomly and the expectations were the cause of the growth!

As I firmly believe, we ARE the future and being the future, expectations that affect us, affect the future. Expectations change us and therefore, will change the world.

How will we make Dust a best-seller? We’re only teens. A group of young writers is promoting Dust on blogs (hint: you’re reading one). We plan to pre-order Dust, read it, and then review it. Do you see where we’re going? And you can be a part. You and I can change the world.

A Place to Belong

This is a short story about a teen girl who feels she doesn’t belong and the place she feels she might.

She sat with her headphones in. A typical teen. Not if you looked closely. Her thoughtful expression was turned to the screen as simply a place to rest her eyes upon, her melodious Christian music, and her thoughts were far from typical. There were several unusual parts of her surroundings we must mention. She sat in one row of four van benches, surrounded by other teens and country music. Most of the teens sat unbuckled in the moving van while the driver controlled the music and texted.

 

This was unusual for her due to reasons we do not have time or space to expound upon. The girl was using the headphones to block out the noise of non-Christian music. She had never expected a mission trip to be the place where she was exposed to such. She had also supposed a group of Christians to be the ones following seatbelt laws. She didn’t fit in here. Once, she had supposed she must; for if not of the world, we ought to be of another as Christians, right? Her assumption was incorrect, where she was sitting at the least. She did not fit in there. They were on their phones consistently, laughed at things she didn’t, had no problem with breaking rules, and acted more immature than she had imagined. They didn’t seem to care what others thought of them, as a group they acted upon (in her opinion) base instincts, but the next moment they cared to the utmost. This pack of animals teased and tortured her while she continued to smile and socialize, judge and hold herself aloof. They seemed to regard her in the light of a no-nonsense “saint” at the end of the trip. She was neither, but they never knew her.

 

She sat with her headphones in as she typed on a laptop. Perhaps more similar to a typical teen. If you looked closely, you would see she was writing comments and interacting with other young Christian writers, the headphones dangling from her ears playing Narnia movie soundtracks. I belong here, I fit in. She thought and smiled.

The End

 

Canceled Flights with British Airways

This article is a summary of the article British Airways Cancels Almost All Flights Over Pilot Strike” by Amie Tsang for the New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/09/business/british-airways-cancellations.html?action=click&module=Top%20Stories&pgtype=Homepage

Pilot strikes caused British Airways to cancel the majority of flights on the 8th and 9th of September. The British Airline Pilots’ Association is vying for more pay, even after the airline offered raises that it said would increase a pilot’s salary to £200,000 a year, roughly $246,551 in the United States of America. The airport seems to have confused the cancelations, they called off flights on another day, mistakenly expecting a strike, and contacted customers. Then, realizing their mistake, there was an outbreak from angry ticketholders who had made other plans. The British Airline Pilots’ Association has voted for another strike if the pay problem isn’t resolved by the date set.

Freshman Year Journal ~ Week 3

This will be a year to remember. I am realizing the extent of that now.

Monday was labor day. ~ Therefore, Reed and David were home and I didn’t do school.

Tuesday ~ I had a lot of extra work to finish Monday’s work as well. I didn’t quite finish but I made progress. As I did my two Math lessons, I could tell the work was progressively getting harder. I have mixed feelings about that. It was too easy and boring but I am afraid I will have a hard time grasping the concepts. Math seems to escape me while being easy, but writing is hard and seems half-laid in front of me. The way God gifts is astounding.

Wednesday ~ Tuesday and Wednesday I worked. I finished most of my school before I left Wednesday. My English assignment for this week was to write a one-page paper about culture conflicting with Christianity. I wrote “A Place to Belong” as a short story about a teen girl who doesn’t belong in one place and the place where she feels she belongs. She’s a writer like me. :) Since I had a friend coming over the next day I did two Math lessons.

Thursday ~ I cleaned my room because I did extra school the day before. Then I set it up for my friend to come over. I don’t have a bunk bed anymore so I borrowed a “mattress” from Adi’s room and put it on the floor. It was more of three pads stacked on each other, but we’ll say it was the equivalent of a mattress (Don’t worry, it was thick and comfortable).

Friday ~ I went to Speech club today (Oral communications credit). Afterward, Mom took Adi to a jump-park and I was with them. I didn’t do much school. I finished my English assignment and did some Spanish and French. The rest I did on Saturday.

Dorian who? Dorian Hurricane.

This article is a summary of the article “Hurricane Dorian Updates: Storm Pounds the Bahamas and Threatens Florida” by The New York Times with the summary author’s personal opinion interjected. ;)

Hurricane Dorian hit the Bahamas and stayed at a practical standstill; causing major damages. Southern Florida is now predicted to be out of the cone but isn’t safe from danger yet, as a slight alteration of route could easily change that. The rest of Florida holds its breath as the Hurricane moved across the ocean at around one mile-per-hour. Georgia, South Carolina, and Virginia are also predicted targets of the tearing winds and raging waters. Florida has managed precautions and damage-control after past hurricanes, therefore, their chances of devastation are predicted to be lower. The future remains to be seen by any other than God as we pray for our South-East coast.

Week 2

Due to the arrival of our new exchange student, Daniel, from Korea, I didn’t have much time to do school the week after Week One. So I completed Week Two over two weeks (No, this is not a trend. I will be completing Week Three in hopefully one week. I refuse to make it three!!). This journal is looking back over the last two weeks (and the calendar).

First Week

I didn’t do much school. Daniel and his mom arrived and we did a lot of driving around, meeting with people, and problem-solving. Since I felt I could’ve done a better job on last week’s English assignment, I did that this week. I feel that I did an amazing job on it although I could still improve. My assignment was to interview my parents and write a page essay on the cost of following Christ for my family. It was a challenge, but I used the resource of a new book I got, “Thinking On the Page, A College Student’s Guide to Writing Essays” (I think that’s the name) and wrote something I believe my parents liked.

Second Week

I spent a lot of time on a lot of things and did a lot of catching up. My Bible memory verse for the next few weeks is Psalm 139 and I memorized through half of verse five. Spelling was crazy because I forgot about it until late in the week and we were out of “TUMS” tablet so I couldn’t do my science experiment. All three boys were home for Labor Day weekend. The craziness of life…