Friday, March 30, 2012

This Is What Enrages Me About the Health Care Debate

I don't think I am as tough as Jim West when I write, but he captures my very feelings.

Via Zwinglius Redivivus

The imbeciles in Congress; the lifers at the Court; and the inhabitants of the Executive branch are ALL covered by the very insurance they would deny the vast majority of people in this country.
Each and every one of us, taxpayers all, deserve what our employees (government dole-recipients) receive.  From the welfare-ites at the low end of the economic ladder to the highly paid elected and appointed government drains, we’re paying for them all. 
Meanwhile we have to pay for our own insurance too.  It’s sickening and enraging.
It’s time for health care to be nationalized.  Socialized medicine- that’s what we need- so that we get what these self centered ‘officials’ get.



In China They Love Eggs… Boiled… In the Urine of Boys…

Thursday, March 29, 2012

John Piper to step down as pastor of Bethlehem Baptist Church

John Piper has been an inspiration and example to many young pastors throughout his years as pastor of Bethlehem Baptist Church.  Now it has been announced that the church's elders are letting Piper go to a greater ministry, away from the tasks of being a pastor.


Bethlehem Baptist is one step closer to commissioning John Piper from the local church pastorate to greater involvement with Bethlehem College and Seminary and to a wider ministry nationally and internationally through Desiring God.

The Bethlehem elders are announcing to the congregation their candidate for Associate Pastor for Preaching and Vision and, God willing, John Piper's eventual successor as the church's senior pastor.

Yet another pastor who is giving up, or being forced to take leave of pastoral life, and being pushed/induced into academic life. Among those in this group are N. T. Wright, Rowland Williams, and John Piper seems to be joining this trend.

 But to be fair, this is not something that the elders are pushing Piper to do, rather, Piper also wants to do:
There is an ever-increasing pull on my life to be involved in ministry outside Bethlehem. Much of this feels strategic to me for the cause of Christ. While I felt competent and energized to formulate plans for the structures of Bethlehem, this outside pull was secondary. But I sense that this is changing. It seems to me that the Lord is saying: "You have led Bethlehem to this point; it is time to hand off the internal leadership labors to another; I have a few other things yet for you to do."
Well, I hope that the Lord gives him a lot of years, so he can fulfil what he feels that  the Lord has called him to do.


Wednesday, March 28, 2012

An Apologetic Reading Plan for Beginners

Via Apologetics315
Are you new to apologetics? Perhaps you're wondering where you should begin your reading. Because there are so many apologetics books out there—many which may be heavy reading for those new to apologetics—it would be helpful to have a sort of "top 10" reading plan for apologetics beginners.

The ten books on the reading plan below are selected specifically for the beginner in apologetics. They are on the list because of their accessibility and their quality of content. The order is provided as a progressive reading plan for those just getting started. Working through this list should give the novice a good foundation before moving on to more advanced titles.

1. The Case for Christ by Lee Strobel
All of Lee Strobel's books are required reading for two reasons. First, they are good introductions to the subject and provide a good overview of the material from some of the best scholars in their fields. Second, the writing style is very accessible, taking you alongside a journalist in his investigation of the evidence for Christianity. In this particular title, Strobel focuses on the life and identity of Jesus.

2. The Case for a Creator by Lee Strobel
This book is just as readable as The Case for Christ, but this one delves into the evidence for the Creator. Another thing that makes this good reading for the beginner is this: whatever areas you find particularly interesting can be pursued further by reading the sources interviewed in the book.

3. The Case for Faith by Lee Strobel
In The Case for Faith, Strobel moves from making a positive case for Christ and a Creator to defending Christianity from some common criticisms and objections. This one deals with the hard faith questions such as the problem of pain and suffering and issues of doubt. Again, all three of the Lee Strobel books are a great starting point for the beginner.

**Interlude: Watch the The Lee Strobel Film Collection
At this point, now you can take a break from your reading and actually watch a series of three DVDs that are about an hour each. These excellent documentaries follow the same content as the books, along with interviews with experts and specialists. This is a great refresher for what you have read and also makes for a great small group resource and a DVD to lend to a friend.

4. Holman QuickSource Guide to Christian Apologetics by Doug Powell
Now it's time for something different. This odd-shaped and colorful book (with more graphics than words) will introduce you to the wide landscape of apologetics by outlining, diagramming, and illustrating all of the key arguments for the existence of God, the reliability of the Bible, the beliefs of other world views, and common objections. This is very helpful in providing visual categories for the content you are taking in. If certain things you have read up till this point have been overly academic, then this book will give you a sort of pictorial overview. This is also useful as a "primer" on the key topics and helpful to establish a bird's eye view. Illustrations of the ideas are also great for sharing with others what you have learned.

5. Love Your God With All Your Mind by J.P. Moreland
Ok, so you have taken in some of the key content and ideas that Strobel presents in the "Case for" series. But what does intellectual engagement look like? What does it look like to "love God with all your mind"? In this book you'll be challenged to live a vibrant life of intellectual engagement with your faith. This is a classic book that every apologist should read, and that's why it finds itself firmly in the foundational books recommended here.

6. Tactics: A Game Plan for Discussing Your Christian Convictions by Greg Koukl
Information without application results in stagnation when it comes to apologetics. That's why it's time for a good dose of Tactics, which will train you not only to use apologetic content in everyday life, but it will also train you to be a better, more critical thinker. This is another "must read" book, and mastering its contents early in your apologetic studies will put feet to your faith.

7. The Case for the Resurrection of Jesus by Mike Licona & Gary Habermas
The resurrection of Jesus is central to Christianity. This book equips you to understand and defend the resurrection from an historical perspective. Not only does the book have useful diagrams, summaries, and an accessible style, but it also comes with a CD-ROM with interactive software for teaching you the material. This is an essential book for the apologist.

8. Is God Just a Human Invention? And Seventeen Other Questions Raised by the New Atheists by Sean McDowell and Jonathan Morrow
Now it's time to look at some of the most common objections that have come against Christianity since the rise of the new atheism. There's no better book at dealing with these in a concise yet dense way, while providing additional reading suggestions and introducing some of the key apologists that deal with these questions. If you really want to master this material, consider taking part in the Read Along project for this book.

9. I Don't Have Enough Faith to Be An Atheist by Geisler & Turek
Geisler and Turek have authored a great apologetics book that also takes a step-by-step approach to showing that Christianity is true—and it's filled with lots of information. This gives the growing beginner a ton of good content, while strengthening the framework of a cumulative case for Christianity. This book will help to grow your overall general apologetic knowledge as well.

10. On Guard by William Lane Craig
Finally, it's time to dig deeper into some of the more philosophically rigorous arguments with William Lane Craig. On Guard is, in essence, a shorter, more concise and accessible distillation of his weightier apologetics book Reasonable FaithOn Guard has illustrations, argument maps, and sidebars which aim to make the material easier to grasp and engage with. This book will introduce the newer apologist to Craig's time-tested arguments for the existence of God and the resurrection of Jesus. While it is still not light reading, this will serve the reader well before moving on to more advanced material. Highly recommended.

So what's next? If you've worked through this list, well done! You might want to dig a little deeper by going through the great apologetics textbook by Douglas Groothuis: Christian Apologetics: A Comprehensive Case for Biblical Faith. You can study this book in depth with the Read Along program here. After that, then delve into the topics that have interested you most in your reading. Do this by reading books by the experts that Lee Strobel interviewed or the apologists that have been referenced in Is God Just a Human Invention.

Final Note
As stated before, there are a lot of apologetics books out there. However, if you begin with these, you will have a pretty good foundational understanding of the landscape. From here you can (and should) do deeper study in areas of interest. While this is no definitive list (I'm sure those commenting will have their own suggestions), it should be a great place to get started.

Friday, March 23, 2012

Maybe the Lutherans were right, Jesus is everywhere!!!!

I am not Lutheran, although I share many things with them, but I don't think I can ever be one. I don't think, however, that since they believe in Sacramental Union, aka Consubstantiation (even though they may complain to me for using the term), they would not object of this website. 

Well, having said that, there's a website that documents all the places where people see Jesus. The site is hilarious, if not irreverent, nevertheless, it shows how people are so ignorant of Jesus' power, and the Bible.

The website is http://stuffthatlookslikejesus.com/, where the author gathers pictures of Jesus, and some of the virgin Mary, where people assume they are present on rocks, X rays, MRIs, even in turtles' bellies. Yes, you read me right!!!

So if you want to have some fun for a couple of minutes, at the expense of others, check it out. 

Fox News enjoys portraying believers as ignorants

This is totally disgraceful. How can Christians come to believe that their loved ones can communicate with us through a potato chip?

The dead don't communicate with us, period. Some want to be very pastoral by feeding people false hopes and feeding them fantasies. We must tell them the truth, Christianity does not believe in such nonsense.

If this people are thinking such things, I am sorry, they have never read the Bible, and not even understand it a bit.

Shame on you Fox for portraying believers are ignorants.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Atheists don’t own reason

By Tom Gilson

The new atheists--participants in the contemporary anti-religion movement led by Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, the late Christopher Hitchens, among others--are working overtime to tell the world that reason favors atheism, and atheism alone. Richard Dawkins leads hisFoundation for Reason and Science. Sam Harris is founder and chair ofProject Reason. The upcoming March 24 Reason Rally in Washington, D.C. is the new atheists’ latest and most visible attempt to send the message that reason belongs to the atheists.
For years, though, knowledgeable critics have been calling attention to new atheist’ rational fallacies, emotionally loaded rhetoric, and illegitimate, selective use of evidence. It’s time now to add that up together and recognize what it means: the new atheists have no business proclaiming themselves the defenders of reason, simply because they don’t practice it competently.

“Far from being the defenders of reason, atheists are among the chief offenders against it,” writes Tom Gilson. (Nikki Kahn - THE WASHINGTON POST)
Of course that’s not what the new atheists want us to believe. It is religion, they say, that is the antithesis of reason. Sam Harris assures us in “The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason” (p. 55) that “faith is what reason becomes when it finally achieves escape velocity from the constraints of terrestrial discourse-constraints like reasonableness, internal coherence, civility, and candor.”
What happens, though, when we examine the new atheists’ own “reasonableness” and “internal coherence”?
Sam Harris debated William Lane Craig last April on whether atheism or theism (roughly defined as the belief in one God) provides a better explanation for the existence of moral truths (transcript here). Opinions may differ as to which of them held the more defensible position. What can hardly be disputed, though, is that Craig showed up with logical arguments, at least one of which, if sound, would completely destroy Harris’s atheistic explanation for morality. Harris conspicuously ignored this, and indeed virtually all of Craig’s logic. He devoted one 12-minute segment to rhetoric depicting Christianity in the most negative light possible, and suggesting that we should therefore conclude that Christianity is wrong. It was what logicians would describe as a fallacious appeal to emotion with respect to the question being debated and to the points Craig had raised.
In his best-selling “The God Delusion,” Richard Dawkins devotes an entire chapter to unscientific anecdotes supporting his belief that a religious upbringing is abusive to children. (See also “Religion’s Real Child Abuse.”) Actual science shows exactly the opposite: spiritually engaged teens are healthier than others on multiple dimensions. Such abandonment of science is surprisingly irrational for the man who was formerly Oxford University’s Professor for the Public Understanding of Science.
But rational and logical errors are pervasive throughout “The God Delusion,” so much so that University of Florida philosopher Michael Ruse, an atheist, would endorse Alister and Joanna Collicutt McGrath’s“The Dawkins Delusion?” by saying, “‘The God Delusion’ makes me embarrassed to be an atheist, and the McGraths show why.”
These are, unfortunately, not isolated examples. The American Atheists, for example, co-sponsored a billboard in Harrisburg, PAjuxtaposing half of a sentence from the Bible with an inflammatory, racially charged image of slavery. In doing so they combined at least two rational errors: the fallacious appeal to emotion and imagery, and the “straw man” fallacy of misrepresenting their opponents’ position; for although the quoted phrase, “Slaves, obey your masters,” is troubling on the surface, the Bible’s supposed endorsement of slavery is not what atheists allege it to be.
As Glenn Sunshine shows in his chapter in “True Reason: Christian Responses to the Challenge of Atheism,” Christianity has in fact been history’s major force for the freeing of slaves. Immediate abolition was realistically impossible in New Testament times: The Romans would have treated it as insurrection, and the inevitable bloodshed to follow it would have produced greater evil than would have been alleviated by abolition. The injunction to “obey” was thus temporary and contextual. It was also tempered with instructions to masters to treat slaves reasonably, as fellow human beings. Eventually slavery “virtually disappeared” from Europe under Christianity’s influence, as social historian Rodney Stark stated in “For the Glory of God: How Monotheism Led to Reformations, Science, Witch-Hunts, and the End of Slavery” (p. 299).
Failures in the practice of rational reasoning such as these are all too common among the New Atheists. They charge Christianity with being unreasoning or unreasonable, but too often they do so as they have done with slavery: use incomplete evidence or demonstrably invalid reasoning.
From my observations, it adds up to this: the new atheists’ difficulty with valid, responsible reasoning is widespread and systemic. Far from being the defenders of reason, they are among the chief offenders against it. It’s time we called them on that.
Tom Gilson is a writer and missions strategist blogging atwww.thinkingchristian.net, and the managing editor of the collaborative e-book “True Reason: Christian Responses to the Challenge of Atheism.”

The Historical Jesus and Apologetics (with special mention of Albert Schweitzer)


By Sebastian Moll
Theological Faculty
University of Mainz, Germany
March 2012

“If the existence of the historical Jesus could be refuted, Christianity would lose much, but by far not everything.”
Who said it?
A: Rudolf BultmannB: Paul Tillich
C: Albert SchweitzerD: Dietrich Bonhoeffer

The answer is C. In his famous work “Geschichte der Leben-Jesu-Forschung” (first published in 1906) Albert Schweitzer comes to the above stated conclusion. This short essay obviously cannot comment on the question whether his conclusion is in itself right or not. Instead, I would like to point out a feature of Schweitzer’s theology which is often missed: his concern with the historical Jesus is motivated by an apologetic agenda.
This idea first entered my mind when I read a comment by Schweitzer on the history of the early church: “It should be remembered that between Paul and Origen Christianity was led by men of average minds – with the exception of the Apologist Justin.” Maybe it took a Patristic scholar to notice this fascinating statement. Of all people Schweitzer picked Origen, whom he values as the defender of Christianity against the philosopher Celsus, and Justin, that is, the Apologist Justin, whom he clearly distinguishes from the author of the Dialogue with Trypho. (Schweitzer does not actually deny the identity of the two, but he finds it hard to believe that one man should have written two so different pieces of work.)
This remark made me wonder. Then, in a letter to his friend Martin Werner, I found these remarkable lines by Schweitzer:
“I believe to be able to show that when thinking dares to think to the end, it will get to the absolute ethics of Jesus and to mysticism. This is the decisive factor to me. The deepest beliefs of Christianity are logically necessary.” If this is not a line by an apologist, then what is?
As recently pointed out again by Pope Benedict himself in his outstanding work on Jesus, the Christian faith is based on “history which took place on the face of this earth.” This is a distinctive characteristic of Christianity, which it does not share with every other religion. In fact, this feature proved to be an apologetic challenge from the earliest beginnings of Christianity. How do you combine universal religious thinking with the idea of a singular event in time and space? What about people who lived before that event? Or about those who lived in different parts of the world? This is the challenge that men like Justin and Origen took up in their apologetic works. In order to make Christianity more acceptable to his pagan audience, Justin identified the historical Jesus with the logos, the rational force operative everywhere and at all times, thereby justifying the Christian adoration for Jesus, but at the same time downplaying his importance, as it was possible to be in touch with the logos without being in contact with the historical Jesus.
With this brief, and certainly superficial, summary of Justin’s Apology in mind, it becomes understandable why Schweitzer showed so much appreciation for him. In a way, Schweitzer has a very similar agenda. What the logos is to Justin, the will is to Schweitzer. The ethical will of Jesus is the universal concept which everybody can get united with through mysticism (s. a.), and this is what constitutes Christianity in the eyes of Schweitzer. The ethical will was in the world, in us, before the appearance of the historical Jesus – just as the logos already existed before the incarnation. Jesus represented this ethical will in truth and perfection, and thus his appearance helped establishing this ethical will within us. However, his appearance was not a conditio sine qua non.
This is, again in daring brevity, the apologetic concept of Albert Schweitzer. As stated in the beginning, this is not the place to examine the sustainability of his system. But it is important to realize that even for a man like Albert Schweitzer, known as the incorruptible champion of the quest for the historical Jesus, it is not enough simply establishing historical results. He may have contributed to the ‘destruction’ of the traditional image of Jesus, but his real aim was to show that we do not really need it.

Australian electricity price high, and rising


    In Australia, we have been duped that we don't pay much for carbon, therefore, we can be taxed. This is such a wrong approach, and now the government, along with the Greens, have imposed a carbon tax. Yet, these people don't realise that we already have very high prizes. 
    Here you can read the truth about it.

    AUSTRALIANS pay 130 per cent more for electricity than Canadians, according to new research - a power premium to rise to 250 per cent once the carbon tax and locked-in price increases take effect.The research, which will be made public today, claims household charges are already 70 per cent higher than the American average, a figure that will grow to 160 per cent in two years. Japanese, British, French, Irish and New Zealanders all pay less than we do.
    The EUAA will also use the research to claim it exposes as a myth that Australian electricity is relatively cheap.The research forms the basis of a report to the Energy Users Association of Australia - which represents 100 big power users including BHP, RailCorp, Coles, the Commonwealth Bank and Brisbane City Council - and argues the way power prices are set must be urgently reformed.
    Energy Minister Martin Ferguson recently said Australians pay less than the OECD average, relying on a document called Energy In Australia 2012, which his department's Bureau of Resources and Energy Economics (BREE) published three weeks ago. The document uses electricity prices from 2009-10.
    "That data is old," EUAA executive director Roman Domanski told The Daily Telegraph last night. In 2010-11 alone the national price rose by 16 per cent; the NSW jump was 23 per cent. The numbers used to compile the document Mr Ferguson relied on put the NSW average at 18.55c/kWh. But in the real world, households are paying regulated rates as high as 28c/kWh.
    The average NSW household's annual cost for electricity would fall from $1700 to less than $700 if our prices were the same as in Canada.
    Mr Domanski said: "Add in the carbon tax from July, further network price increases and renewable energy subsidies and inevitably our prices are pushed to the point where they are challenging Denmark and Germany as the most expensive in the world." The report to the EUAA, produced by Carbon Market Economics, found Australian power prices had risen about 40 per cent since 2007 and would rise by another 30 per cent over the next two years.
    It found that, even using 2007 currency exchange rates, Australian households still paid more than those in Japan, US, Canada and the average of the EU. Carbon Market Economics' comparison of prices in 92 jurisdictions - including more than 35 countries, American states and all Australian states and territories - found NSW ranked fourth behind Denmark, Germany and South Australia. Victoria was fifth and Western Australia was sixth. The ACT was 21st.
    In explaining why BREE used figures dating back to 2009, energy manager Allison Ball said Australian Energy Market Commission data wasn't available until late 2011 and global 2011 statistics from the International Energy Agency were still not available.
    However, The Telegraph understands Carbon Market Economics used 2011 IEA figures published before Mr Ferguson claimed Australian prices were below the OECD average.
    Melrose Park mother-of-two Leanne Imbro said her family's last bill had jumped to about $700. She said she has been reassessing her children's extra-curricular activities.

    Fox news, the most biased news network EVER

    Via Zwinglius Redivivus

    Since his tragic death on February 26, Trayvon Martin — an unarmed 17-year-old African-American shot by “neighborhood watch volunteer” George Zimmerman — has become national news. Martin, a good student with no criminal record, was killed by Zimmerman on his way home from the 7-11. Zimmerman was carrying a 9 millimeter handgun. Martin was carrying a bag of Skittles and a can of iced tea. (If you are unfamilar with the story, check out our primer on what everyone should know about Trayvon Martin.)
    Martin has merited coverage by the New York Times, the Washington Post, and USA Today. The story has been covered by all three broadcast networks and extensively on cable. But there is one outlet that has barely mentioned Trayvon Martin — Fox News.
    Here’s a breakdown of the coverage of Trayvon Martin on the three major cable networks from the day of his death through today at noon:

     Fox news, the worst news network ever!!

    More weird signs, from churches


    If you are in the USA, and complain about the price of Petro (Gasoline), this is why it may be so expensive

    My brother Carlos has being complaining about it, so I kind of got the idea to let him know who to complain against regarding this issue:


    The U.S. imported 532,000 barrels per day of gasoline and 141,000bpd of distillate fuels. However, during the same time frame, the U.S. exported 616,000bpd of gasoline and 1.124 million bpd (million barrels per day) of distillates. In total, U.S. refineries exported 3.1 million barrels per DAY of oil and products! (These are four week rolling averages).

    So there you go, they rather sell it to outsiders than to Americans.

    Weird signs around the world


    Wednesday, March 21, 2012

    In Search of a New Apologetic Part 1: What’s missing from Modern Apologetics?

    Posted on March 16, 2012 by lckeeney


    Apologetics is experiencing somewhat of revival. Well, maybe a better term might be “rehabilitation.” While the stereotype of the apologist as a well-coiffed white male who can bring an atheist to their knees through the power of his arguments alone is still very much alive (with good reason, I might add), there is a small minority of people (including myself) who tentatively embrace the word “apologist,” but would really like to see the word itself given a makeover.
    In a way, I feel about the word “apologist” the way I do about the word “evangelical.” Sure, it’s weighted down with a lot of baggage and too many stereotypes (some of which are deserved), but it’s also the best word to use to describe what it is that I do. The Greek word “apologia” means to “give a reason for” or “defend.” And what I do (or like to think I do, anyway) is give reasons why believing in and following Jesus is at least as reasonable as the alternative. After that, it’s up to the Holy Spirit.
    One of the reasons often cited for the comeback of apologetics is its ability to respond to the “new atheism.” According to many in the apologetics community, new atheism has co-opted the term “reason” and is claiming, in voices dripping with contempt and condescension, that the use of reason must inevitably lead to a rejection of belief in God.
    Based on what I’ve seen, I have to agree with them on this point. It’s certainly true that the more militant atheists have positioned themselves as the sole possessors of reason and commonsense (see my previous post about The Reason Rally). Many leaders of the new atheism compare anyone who believes in a transcendent God to an adult who still expects a visit from the Easter bunny. And the truly ironic thing is that the way some atheists talk about Christians is so filled with vitriol and contempt that it goes way beyond what “reason” should allow.
    Now I am not for one minute assuming that this anti-Christian rhetoric represents most atheists, anymore than Westboro Baptist church represents most Christians, but the level of vitriol in some of these blogs demonstrates what I think is one of the big weaknesses of modern apologetics. What lies behind these atheists’ hate-filled comments is not reason, but emotion—visceral anger and debilitating pain. And it is emotion that modern apologetics has historically ignored.
    I really don’t blame the apologetics community for tending to ignore the gooey, amorphous side of the human experience. The anti-intellectualism of 20th century evangelicalism, as recounted in Mark Noll’s classic The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind, effectively marginalized the intellectual faction of the local church. For the last several decades, they’ve been treated somewhat like Edward Rochester’s crazy first wife and hidden away in the attic so normal Christians couldn’t see them.
    The seeker-sensitive movement especially, with its emphasis on addressing the “felt needs” of the audience and its commitment to making Christianity as non-threatening as possible, effectively marginalized the “thinkers” within its ranks. Eventually, there was only one outlet for an intellectual’s darker side—apologetics. Unfortunately, what resulted was often an isolated culture that began to feed on itself. Rather than a celebration of all the ways in which faith speaks to and clarifies the human experience, apologetics too often became a refuge for people who simply enjoy winning an argument.
    A perfect example of this is the response to Paul Copan’s recent post at The Gospel Coalition, “Questioning Presuppositionalism.” As the title indicates, Copan’s essay is a respectful critique of an apologetic method called “presuppositionalism.” In the post, Copan both summarizes what he finds helpful about it and what he finds problematic. For the purpose of this post, it’s not important that we understand presuppositionalism itself (I’ll address that in a later post), but that we notice how people reacted.
    Based on the response, TGC readers seem to be an overwhelmingly presuppositionalist bunch. The bigger picture, though, is that not only are the comments overwhelmingly negative towards Copan’s critique, but many of them imply that there must, necessarily, be only one clear winner in the apologetic war. Evidential, philosophical, and moral apologetics are neither biblical nor valid. Apparently, apologetics is a contact sport and, as one commenter observed, “Copan effectively didn’t land a single blow.”
    Now, I am the first to admit that this kind of theological boxing is not unique to apologetics. In fact, one of the primary complaints about Christians by outsiders is that they’re always arguing with each other about something. But Copan’s article makes an important point that many of the commenters seem to miss.
    God can and does speak to unbelievers through reason, beauty, moral failure, and the existence of evil. As a cloud of apologetical witnesses can testify, God has used philosophical arguments for his existence, scientific supports for the universe’s beginning (Big Bang) and its fine-tuning, and historical evidences for the resurrection of Jesus to assist people in embracing Christ—just as God uses the preaching of the gospel (Romans 1:16) or the loving character of a Christian community (John 13:35). These are all part of the holistic witness to the reality of God and the gospel, all of which the Spirit of God can use to lead unbelievers to embracing Jesus Christ.
    What Copan is saying here is that there are many things that can work to bring people to Christ. Faith must be reasonable (contrary to what some post-modernists might say) but it must also beintuitive. It must speak to both head and heart. And, unlike a few individual apologists who are still dedicated to the Enlightenment split between intellect and emotion, many of the most insightful apologists and Christian philosophers understand this.
    There are a lot of exciting things happening in apologetics right now—and some of them doinvolve really smart Christians responding to the new atheism. But to me, the most exciting changes are the ones coming from people who acknowledge the artificial split between faith and reason and are working to heal it.
    Over the next few weeks, I’ll be taking a look at some of these new apologetic methods. Although it’ll soon be obvious that they’re not really new at all—they just needed to be revived.

    Comparing USA health cost with other countries

    Via Zwinglius Redidivus

    Sunday, March 18, 2012

    U.S. starts to lose its academic reputation - Washington Times

    U.S. starts to lose its academic reputation - Washington Times

    It is about time the USA gets rid of the Diploma mills within its borders.

    The English education system has really benefited the entire world. Let's not waste it.

    Friday, March 16, 2012

    If you fall asleep during the day, don't worry, it's natural

    If you ever felt guilty for feeling sleepy in the middle of the day, feel no longer like that.

    New studies have found that sleeping 8 hours is abnormal!!!!


    It happens to all of us, you wake up in the middle of the night and try desperately to get back to sleep but instead toss and turn until the alarm goes off. Rather than it being simply symptomatic of a stressful work week, science suggests you might be experiencing a throwback to a default pattern of human slumber. According to mounting research, the concept of a solid eight hours sleep is a fairly recent phenomenon and it's likely that our ancestors enjoyed "two sleeps" of shorter duration, separated by time awake, as opposed to one sustained period.
     And it seems like it has not only being an abnormal practice, but a relatively new invention:

    Roger Ekirch, a professor in the Department of History at Virginia Tech and author of At Day's Close: Night in Times Past, has found a wealth of evidence to suggest that the single sleep is a modern occurrence, with "first" and "second" sleeps considered the norm since the beginning of human civilisation.
    To back this up, this is seen that in history, we have not follow a set pattern of sleeping, not even in the Bible!!!

    Though it's an alien concept to us today, references to two sleeps can be found as far back as the Old Testament and Homer's Odyssey, and, more recently, in Don Quixote and Charles Dickens's Barnaby Rudge. The period between the two wasn't always a solitary affair, with people gathering to talk, have sex or visit the neighbours. But, the introduction of affordable light sources – from candlelight to public oil lamps – blurred the distinction between daytime and night-time activities and sleep patterns soon followed.
    And blame it on the French for introducing late night partying:
    It was the Parisian nobles and courtiers of the 1630s and 1640s who were the first to popularise the concept of expanding one's activities into the night as a sign of wealth, prestige and exclusivity – beginning the modern pattern of compressed sleep with one block of rest from about midnight until about 8am.
    So, if you wake up in the middle of the night, don't feel guilty, accept it, and make a note to sleep, if you can, at least 1 or 2 hours after work, before going to sleep for good. I've been trying this lately, and has worked. Now, I don't have to feel guilty about it!!

    If only I could convince my wife and kids about it!!