Christian thoughts

Random thoughts from a Christian perspective. Everything from family, religion, politics, outdoors, etc. Let me know if there's a topic you want me to address!

Name:
Location: Kansas City, Kansas, United States

I live in K.C. with my wife, Kim, and our 5 kids (which we homeschool). I've been a believer in Jesus Christ since 1993.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Significance of Christmas

Christmas is upon us again. Every year we put up the decorations and buy the gifts. We make cookies and pies and special breads and put out the hard candies and candy canes. Christmas songs play over the radio and on CD players. The Salvation Army volunteers ring their bells next to their trademark red kettles, collecting donations for the needy. We hurry through the busy weeks leading up to the 25th of December and barely give a thought to the Child whose birth the holiday was intended to celebrate. And why should we? What was, or is, the significance of the birth of a baby in first century Palestine?
From the beginnings of human history mankind has been in rebellion against the God who created and sustains him. Yet, rather than violating His perfect justice by merely winking at this treachery, God made a plan by which His wrath may be satisfied and His mercy shown to some of His special creatures. In this plan, made within the Trinitarian Godhead, the Father sent the Son to earth by means of the intervention of the Holy Spirit. A young woman in Palestine who had never had relations with a man became pregnant with the most unique child ever conceived. This child had a fully divine nature and yet was fully human as well. Skeptics sometimes opine that many pagan religions have stories of gods coming down and seducing women and that children sometimes resulted from these illicit liaisons. The primary difference is that these children had mixed natures. Only Jesus was fully divine and fully human. Another difference can be found in the fact that these divine-human unions resulted from the unbridled lusts of the pagan gods for the women of earth where this occasion was brought about by the plan of God to bring the way of salvation to mankind.
In order for the plan to be accomplished, Jesus had to have a full human nature and a full divine nature. He had to be fully human in order to fully represent mankind in the sacrifice He was to make. In order to bring comfort to man, he had to suffer the sorrows and pains of being man. He had to be fully divine in order to have the capacity to atone for the rebellion and wickedness of those he came to save from the wrath of God. In order to satisfy the infinite wrath of God, He had to be infinite God.
In the birth of Jesus on that night in Bethlehem the unthinkable occurred. The infinite, transcendent God of the entire universe left His throne in Heaven and condescended to cloak Himself in the limited and weak flesh of man. He did this in order to become the high priest that can relate to man in all his afflictions and to be the perfect sacrifice to satisfy the holy and righteous wrath and judgment of God. This is the miracle of Christmas. Take some time to think about it this week.
God bless you.

Christmas Music-Fest

Well, we had our annual Christmas Musicfest at our church last Sunday evening. It was a great time of fellowship. Our family sang Angels We Have Heard On High while my daughter Elizabeth accompanied on the piano. It went pretty well with the exception of the antics of the two youngest (Isaiah and Hannah). Kim was holding Isaiah and I had Hannah standing in front of me with my arms around her. In one hand I had the hymnal and in the other I held the microphone. As we bagan to sing, Isaiah started pulling on Faith's barette in her hair. As Kim turned to get him farther away, he reached behind her and started grabbing music off a music stand. She turned him back to the front and he started pulling on Faith's hair again and then began kicking the microphone stand, making a loud "thump" with each strike. While this is going on behind me, Hannah is slowly doing the limbo under my arm. At one point she was on her knees looking up at my watch like a mechanic inspecting a transmission on a car. She then continued on under my arm and out of my grasp, heading for the steps. We finished just in time for me to catch her before she ran off into the crowd. It was hilarious! Our pastor had introduced us as the "Von Viens family singers," but I noted at the conclusion that we would not be seen performing at Carnegie Hall anytime soon.

Monday, December 12, 2005

Latest news and a couple misc. updates

Well, I got a phone call on Friday (12/2) and found out I've been selected as one of the ten panelists for the Midwest Voices column in the Op/Ed section of the Sunday Kansas City Star for 2006! Woo-Hoo!! I go downtown to sign my first freelance contract and get my photo taken. Now the entire Kansas City metro area gets to experience what my friends, family and co-workers have had to put up with for years...my opinion! I'm really excited and am looking forward to this opportunity (the $75 per article won't hurt either). I figure I'll be doing one about every ten weeks and will see about being able to post them on my blog after they've been published.
Now for the updates...the venison from my buck is very tasty indeed. Very little noticable "gaminess." We've had roast, stew, chili, steaks and venison chunks in gravy over noodles. My wife does an excellent job of cooking it and my kids eat it up.
I ended up only going out one time during the regular rifle season due to schedule issues but still have the extended season in January to fill my doe tag.
I've put my resume in with Brooks Brothers men's clothing to run the new store they're putting in about 15 minutes from my house but I haven't heard back from them yet; but my Regional Manager at Jos. A. Bank has expressed an interest in getting me into management there. We'll see how things go, but I'd really like to be doing something else within the next 6 months. This two-jobs stuff is wearing on me and is cutting into my family time.
Beginning this Sunday I'll be teaching a 6-week course at our church on the prayers of the Gospels and the later New Testament (N.T. minus Paul). I'll try to get some notes posted regarding that as time allows.

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Life Issues

I originally came across all this on the Stand To Reason blog. Peter Singer (bioethicist at Princeton of all places -- former haunt of the likes of Jonathan Edwards) published an article in Foreign Policy titled "The Sanctity of Life" wherein he attempts to dismantle the Pro-Life position.
Read Mr. Singer's article here
and then read a response by Scott Pruett here.