Sunday, February 22, 2009

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Balance



A good woman provides balance for your life.

Monday, February 9, 2009

The Messiah of the University

The University (not just mine) has their own Messiah. In almost religious fervor, here are some celebrations centered around the birth of Charles Darwin:

Thurs. Feb. 12, 7 p.m.
Singing His Praises: Darwin and His
Theory in Song and Musical Production
Join Betty Smocovitis from UF’s zoology and history
departments for a lighthearted look at Darwin’s life
and work through song and film. Discover the issues
and controversies of Darwin’s Theory of Evolution and
new insights into his work and the relationship between
science and American popular culture.

Sat. Feb. 14, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.
Darwin Day
Curious about evolution? Here’s your chance to
explore the subject with Florida Museum research
and collections staff. See “missing link”
displays of fossils and specimens that
illustrate evolution in action. From 2:30 to 4
p.m. join Museum curators Jon Bloch, Steve
Manchester, David Reed and David Steadman
for an evolution symposium to discover the
science behind the theory. Florida
Museum curator Bruce MacFadden will
moderate the session.

Friday, January 23, 2009

The Seventh Day Adventist Church started the Creationist Movement

In my Systematics and Behavioral Ecology class, I was presented with a paper published in a BBC (British Broadcasting Company) publication. It was about the theory of evolution and Charles Darwin. During the discussion it mentioned the fact that the Seventh-day Adventist Church started the creationist movement. I was shocked. I was like there is no way that we did that. About a hundred years ago we were no more than a drop of water in the ocean compared to say the Baptists, Methodists, or Catholics. So I must say I was skeptical of this Brit's report that we were the founders of the creationist movement. Furthermore, I have never heard us make this claim and it seems to me to be a good thing to say to other people about our church.
But this one statement by Ellen White kept coming to my mind as I thought of SDA's and their relationship to the Creationist movement, "Had the Sabbath always been sacredly observed, there could never have been an atheist or an idolater. {PP 336.1}" So maybe we did...

So I did a little research and it appears to be true in many respects. George Mcready Price a Canadian adventist school teacher wrote a pamphlet and some books on Geology declaring that a flood caused all the fossilization that we see today. Unfortunately some of Price's statements were not all substantiated by lab science. Price was consulted by William Jennings Bryan in the Scopes trial. His pamphlet was read by many in different faiths. His work eventually led to the founding of several creationist oragnizations. One of them is our own GeoScience Institute.

The quote begs a second go round, " "Had the Sabbath always been sacredly observed, there could never have been an atheist or an idolater. {PP 336.1}"

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Adaptation



We are the product of our environment. Well not entirely, but partly. A water lily is nothing without a swamp. Moths fly in the night (most of them do). Some trees grow on virtually nothing. The water Ouzel (American Dipper) sings in the middle of fierce rapids and frigid blizzards. There are beautiful colored butterflies in the desert. Flowers grow in mud.

But it is not all good, the swamp is mostly gunk and slime (not a scientific description). The night is dark and when scary things happen. The crags and cliffs and precipices and crevasses are ominous. The torrents and rapids are relentless and brutal. The blizzard claims the lives of all, except a few hardy things. The desert is mostly sand and wind. The mud is brown and dirty.

Each of the good things has in it something special that can respond to the environment in a way that will make its little world better. Likewise we as Christians, can have something in us that helps to make the dark cold world we live in better. Something inside us. It is a force greater than natural selection. It is the gospel. Through the gospel we can make any area we live in bright.

It is true then that we are a product of our environment. We cannot help it. But we are able to choose whether we will be part of the bad part of the environment or the good. There are mosquitoes in the forest and there are butterflies.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Boula-Boula

This recipe comes from The Joy of Cooking



BOULA-BOULA

Simmer in boiling water until tender:
2 cups of grean peas
Puree them through a fine sieve or in a blender
Reheat and add:
2 tablespoons sweet butter
Add:
2 cups canned green turtle soup
1 cup dry sherry

Heat --> but do not boil the soup. Spoon soup into heated cups. Top each serving with:
2 tablespoons whipped cream
Place briefly under broiler. Serve at once.


With a name so cool as Boula-Boula, I expected something great. To my dismay, turtles and 2 tablespoons of whipped cream were involved. Basically, you are eating fat and salt that is green and slimy. Therefore, for those of you who might gasp at the ingredients and consider the possibility of a turtle soup guzzling apostate. Consider it not so. I would like to present to you a reality that we may find useful. Namely, we Christians are a lot like Boula-Boula. We bear the name of the greatest servant of humanity that ever lived -- Christ. But we are often, upon closer inspection, only green slime. By God's grace, we can truly live up to our name and send an alternative recipe to the Joy of Cooking 2.0 that includes a more appetizing list of ingredients.

Friday, January 2, 2009

He Read An Awful Lot



"John Milton was probably the last person to read everything that was ever published."

Dr. David Calhoun of the St. Louis Covenant Theological Seminary.


Really good lectures, you can tell he knows what he is talking about. It is just like he is talking about sports, fishing, cars, butterflies =), or outdoorsing. In other words, it is very natural. A true master of his subject. He was trained at Princeton. They are free. They come from a Presbyterian perspective. Click the links to check them out.

Ancient and Medieval Church History


Reformation and Modern Church History