Wednesday February 29th – the next global fast

For those that are interested, tomorrow is the next global fast.  I received a lot of positive feedback about our family’s approach to the fast last month.  If any of you try the same thing (or come up with a better idea) please leave a reply on this post and tell us about it.  If you participate in tomorrow’s fast please consider donating the money saved from the meal to Live58.org.
Here is the letter I received reminding me of tomorrow’s fast:
Good afternoon!
I just wanted to shoot you a quick email reminder that tomorrow, Wednesday Feb. 29th (leap day), is this month’s 58: Global Fast, when we abstain from food for the day in solidarity with the global poor. We have an amazing opportunity to practically align ourselves with God’s heart for the poor and live the true fast of Isaiah 58.In preparation for the fast I’d encourage you to read Isaiah 58 and meditate on the truths it contains as well as on the amazing blessings that come from obedience to God’s word.

I am grateful to be working with you in service of this great cause. I believe passionately that extreme poverty can be eliminated in our lifetime. God is awakening His people, not only to the hurt and suffering that He sees, but also to the progress that is being made. The church has everything we need to eradicate this atrocity.

This month, we are partnering with World Relief, an exceptional organization delivering emergency food relief to Kenya’s Turkana district, a region in the northwestern corner of the country. Please pray for the staff and leadership of this organization as they work tirelessly to serve our brothers and sisters in Kenya who are desperately in need of assistance due to drought and famine.

If you haven’t already, please visit the tour page and make a generous donation to this project to support the life-saving work they are doing.

Thank you again for your fervent commitment to ending extreme poverty. I look forward seeing what God does through His people this year.

Blessings,
Jonathan Bell
58: Director of Engagement

YouVersion – Why its worth writing about

I am an extremely busy father of 5 and taking the time to write a post on a Bible app is not something I ever thought I would find myself doing…yet here I am, excited to write this post.  Why? I have been a Christian for many years now but up until recently I had never read the entire Bible “cover to cover.”  I tried many times throughout the last 20+ years but never made it more than a few chapters before I got distracted with something else and lost sight of my goal.

A little over a year ago I decided to try one more time and searched for a Bible app to help me accomplish my goal.  I settled on the “bible” app freely available from YouVersion.com  A signed up for a 1 year reading plan and less than a year later I finished!  The YouVersion app made all of the difference.  I know there is no excuse for a Christian to not get around to reading the Bible so in some ways this post exposes how pathetic I am. Regardless, I thought I would share my experience in the hopes that it might help others.

So why is the YouVersion Bible app so great? Mostly because every time I think, “I wish this app did “insert cool feature here”"….it DOES!  Not only that, I tried reading the bible in many various ways over the years including on my laptop, palm pilot, Windows Mobile, iPhone, using a pocket bible, etc…all without success..until I tried YouVersion’s Bible App!

What motivated me to finally go ahead and share my experience is an email I received from YouVersion yesterday asking me to tell my friends about the app:

1 in 17 iOS and Android devices have already installed the Bible App™. Know what that means? 16 in 17 haven’t.

You can read about their goal to get the Bible App into the hands of the other 16 HERE

If you’ve made it this far you can just skip the rest of this post and check it out for yourself at http://youversion.com/mobile
or you can keep reading below to see some of the cool features (screenshots straight from my iPhone):

Continue reading

Make your fast count…

Hope everyone survived the fast yesterday!  Now that you have saved some money by not eating for one day, please consider donating the money you saved to help end extreme global poverty!

You can join the OurSearchforTruth.com team and help us raise money to purchase mosquito nets for children in Thailand at this link:

http://my.live58.org/momentum/team/653

(You will have to click the “Join” button in the top right corner if you are not already a member of Live58.org…don’t worry, only takes 10 seconds and it’s free)

 

Live58 Global Fast: Our Family’s Fast

Join the movement to end extreme poverty Well, we just fasted dinner and everyone is still alive ;-)

Below are some pictures from our “meal”. We called the kids up for “dinner” tonight and sitting on the table were dishes filled with money representing the money we usually spend on dinner.

Instead of eating we read and discussed Isaiah 58 and then we discussed Live58′s mission.  We explained what extreme poverty is, we talked about malaria and mosquitoes, and we asked who would like to participate in the Live58 Global fast (Discussed in yesterday’s post).  We explained to the kids that they could eat food if they wanted to but if they would like to participate in the fast by skipping dinner then they would be helping to provide kids in Thailand with mosquito nets and medicine to protect them from Malaria.

I thought this approach went over really well and felt like the dinner made an impression on all of our hearts…not just the kids. We were able to make our first donation to Live58 from the money saved!  Here is what dinner looked like tonight:

58: Global Fast – Tomorrow! (January 25, 2012)

Join the movement to end extreme poverty
Friends,
Please consider joining me and others around the world in the Live58 Global Fast on January 25th.  This is a monthly event to help raise money to support organizations that may be able to eliminate extreme global poverty in our life time…if enough of us take action!  You can read about it and sign up if you are interested by clicking on the “I’m In” button at this link:

http://my.live58.org/tour

If it’s way past January 25th when you read this..no worries, just try the link above and sign up for the next month’s fast!  Hope you will join the global church in this effort! Blessings, BoB

PS – Right now they are focusing on mosquito nets for Thailand but you may be reading this months after I write this so click on the link above and see how you can help now.

Ending Extreme Global Poverty

I received an email a couple months ago from Compassion International giving me a heads up about a new movement to completely eradicate extreme poverty globally.  That email included this YouTube video:

The premise of the movement is that global poverty CAN be eliminated in our lifetime and that God has called us to do it in Isaiah 58.

You can learn all about the movement at http://www.live58.org/

I strongly encourage you to check out the site and get involved.  They have just kicked off their Global Impact Tour:

How Can You Get Involved?You can live 58: by taking action to Fast, Shout, Unite, Give and Celebrate or sign up to join 58:.

 

Halloween – Why Our Family Doesn’t Participate…

Sick of Halloween?

Sick of Halloween?

I enjoyed reading the post by Kyle and I enjoyed Drew’s response as well – both found here.  However, I have a different perspective that I feel compelled to explain. (I originally wrote this post October 13, 2009….I just reread it today, October 3, 2011, and my opinion has not changed.  I have updated some of the statistical data to bring it current but, so far, no one has presented an argument that has swayed my opinion on this subject.)

My perspective has little to do with religion or my Christian faith….although I do have a different perspective than Kyle and Drew for religious reasons, as well, which I will include in “part 2″ of this post. Continue reading

God’s Global Purposes – A message for “good” Christians

I thoroughly enjoyed this week’s message at North Point Community Church in Alpharetta, GA but more importantly, I realized that the intended audience was people like me….people that have been so focused on God’s personal and moral law that we have been distracted from understanding and participating in God’s global purposes.  The message is a call to “good Christians”….great, you are living right….but what about the Ninevites? Continue reading

Christmas – Why our family participates (despite the pagan influences)

GrinchThis post is in response to Drew’s recent post called “Pagan Christmas” but you should also read my previous post on Halloween before you read this post if you want a complete perspective.

I agreed with most everything Drew said in the first paragraph.  There are, of course, many variations on the history depending on the source you reference but I didn’t see anything in Drew’s first section that I hadn’t read before and I have no additional comments.  It’s the paragraph that starts with “I have a few friends” that I would like to comment on:

(Drew’s words are in red and mine are in green)

I have a few friends that don’t celebrate Halloween in regards to its pagan nature and see no value in it. Even though Halloween brings communities together, makes kids laugh, multiplies candy, belittles evil, and is fun, celebrating such a holiday appears to question their moral Christian principles.

My wife and I are some of those friends and yes, we see no value in Halloween.  I address each of the reasons Drew gives as “even though”s in my Halloween post so I am not going to redo that here.  Halloween does not make me question “moral Christian Principles”, it just provides an excellent opportunity to practice them.  ;-)   Please read my Halloween post for a full explanation.

I wonder if the Church had decided to incorporate Samhain (pagan holiday) and Christ’s birth if some Christians would be more apt to celebrate the holiday of Halloween.

The church has already done that…its called “All Saints Day”.  The answer is no, it didn’t make me more apt to celebrate Halloween.  Just because the church sanctions an event doesn’t mean it is worth celebrating or not worth celebrating.  We have to decide for ourselves what we should participate in.  Many churches now celebrate Halloween…in fact, all of the churches I went to growing up celebrated Halloween in some form or another.  I decided to stop ‘celebrating’ because I thought the issues through for myself and my conclusion is fully explained in my Halloween post.

Note: In my Halloween post I don’t mention ‘pagan origins’ as one of the five reasons why I don’t participate….”I am not nearly as interested in the history of Halloween as in what it means today” – the same applies to Christmas symbols and traditions.

It does seem that Christmas (probably due to its commercial push and the multitude of Christian sheep corralled into the stalls of justification) is viewed primarily as a Christian Holiday, and therefore most Christians can celebrate the holiday without a sered conscious.

A sad ChristmasI have to confess (regarding the seared conscience), my wife and I have struggled with whether or not to celebrate Christmas for several years.  Christmas has become such a commercial enterprise and Santa has nearly completely replaced Christ as the focus of Christmas, at least in the malls, public school plays, and around the office.  Christmas was not celebrated by the early church and many of the symbols of Christmas can be traced back to pagan rituals.  To be honest, my wife and I are still sorting this out and don’t feel like we have reached closure (mostly because we don’t agree yet…usually means I’m wrong but rationalizing in my mind so I don’t have to see things the way they really are or the way God sees them).  We actually got rid of the Christmas tree a couple years ago and didn’t celebrate Christmas, at least not in the traditional way.  We simply read the Christmas story and tried to focus on helping others (like the original Saint Nicholas).   My family still enjoyed Christmas and it was nice focusing on others but I felt like there wasn’t as much joy and happiness in my home as previous years.  I decided the following year to start celebrating Christmas again for the inverse reasons of why I don’t celebrate Halloween.

I started off my post about Halloween by explaining that even if I didn’t have religious reasons I would still not celebrate the holiday.  The opposite is true of Christmas.  Even if I wasn’t a Christian, I would still see the value in a holiday that celebrates love, family, giving, friends, happiness, beauty, etc.  The whole tone of Christmas is nearly the opposite of Halloween.  I wish I had a picture of some houses in my neighborhood from earlier this year.  One in particular was covered in symbols of evil – demons, zombies, decapitations, blood, and ghosts.  Now, just months later, that house is not decorated at all, but the house next door is decorated with beautiful lights, a smiling Santa Claus, and other symbols of friendship, love, and happiness.

NewPerspectiveDon’t get me wrong, I don’t agree with the materialism, deifying a magical Santa, or other facets of ‘X-mas’ that draw our attention away from Christ.  However, the reason I decided to continue celebrating Christmas and the reason we have put up a Christmas tree this year is because for me personally, Christmas draws my attention back to Christ.  When I see a Christmas tree I think of Christ.  When I sing the famous Christmas carols I think of Christ.  When my family gathers and shares gifts with each other I think of Christ.  I think we each have to ask ourselves:

1.  What are our motivations for the things we do?

2.  What is valuable and worth supporting?

3.  Do we believe what we plan to do will glorify God.

For this reason, I am not upset when someone else chooses to celebrate Halloween, or Christmas, or Hanukkah, or whatever.  If they believe their motivations are right, that there is value in observing the holiday, and that observing it edifies God, then who am I to disagree…it is between them and God.  For me, I can celebrate the birth of Christ (labeled as Christmas) confidently with those 3 questions in mind…I can not do the same for Halloween.

I suppose (once again) it’s all the Church’s fault.

We are the church.  It’s our fault as individuals.  We have encouraged the whole process all along by singing about Santa, buying gifts beyond our means and with wrong motivations, and submitting to the political correctness of the media and the marketing schemes to promote consumerism.  No worries though…the bible doesn’t forbid or require us to celebrate Christmas so there is nothing to lose.  If Christmas is eventually completely lost in materialism and emptiness it doesn’t change the reality of Christ. If we lose Christmas we have lost nothing.  If we lose Christ we have lost everything.

“Glory to God in the highest and on earth, peace and goodwill towards men.”

Merry Christmas, BoB


Merry Christmas

Constructive Discussions about Truth

Constructring our "worldview"

Putting together the pieces of our "world view"

I had a conversation with a dear friend of mine the other night…a friend that is struggling in his pursuit of truth.   I value his opinion and his passion for  truth but I frequently find myself worried about him and what conclusions he will come to as he redefines his world view.  I am worried because I know the importance of our worldviews in determining the decisions we make and the outcomes we experience.

So what does that have to do with “constructive discussions about truth”?   Everything!!

Currently “Our Search for Truth” is slanted heavily towards a Christian worldview because  the current participating authors happen to be various varieties of Christians.  However, the goal of this site is not to sit around talking in Christianese.  The goal of this site is pursuing truth by sharing our different perspectives and worldviews.  It is my belief that when multiple people’s perspectives rub against each other the friction that is created by their differences exposes misperceptions and the truth is ultimately revealed.  The Truth is what remains when all options are explored and all lies are exposed.

As a Christian I am frequently a witness to conversations where fellow Christians seem threatened or irritated by a non-Christian’s disbelief or their differing world view.  Instead of responding with understanding and patience they judge, belittle, preach, or otherwise offend the nonbeliever.

Now before the “anti-Christians” get too excited about pointing their fingers in agreement with my last statement they need to be honest with themselves and admit that they are often just as guilty of destroying any opportunity for rational discussion.

Constructive Discussion?

What do you mean you think Halloween is evil?

For example, go to YouTube and find a “Christian” or an “Atheist” video.  You won’t have to look far before you find an Atheist writing horrible, aggressive expletives meant to demean and ridicule the Christian.  Then, right above or below their comment will be the immature Christian saying something like “You’ll burn in hell for that” or maybe something slightly nicer like “Repent and God may have mercy on your soul” (as if they know God is on their side in the discussion) – here are 32,000 examples.

For Christians:

ixoye_fishWhere does God stand on this issue?  The Bible says that God did not send his son into this world to condemn the world but to save the world through Him.  The Bible also says that God loved us while we were yet sinners….meaning God loved us before we liked Him, acted like Him, or thought like Him.  The Bible portrays a Jesus that hung out with sinners, went to social events with “non-believers”, encouraged prostitutes to start over and give life another try, and as someone who always befriended the poor, down-trodden, and even the people that most everyone hated (like tax collectors).  Where are the Christians that serve that Jesus?  Where are the Christians that welcome uncomfortable conversations filled with opposing truth claims?

For non-Christians:

newatheismsymbolBut what if you are an atheist or agnostic (or a believer in some other religion) and don’t really care what the Bible says or what Jesus was like?  Does that give you free liberty to purposely offend (or avoid) Christians every chance you get?  Now I can’t speak to “non-believers” on any particular moral grounds since, as some would argue, they have no moral system to leverage as a foundation.  But, from what I understand of the “new atheists” they believe that there are intrinsic universal values (that have nothing to do with a creator) that tell us right from wrong and that form the basis for a humanistic code of ethics.  Does your personal code of ethics (or conscience) lead you to believe it is better to try to understand others or does it lead you to believe you should drown out all ideas contrary to your own?

For everyone:

I am assuming that most people that have taken the time to read this far would agree with the 5th habit of Steven Covey’s “7 Habits of Highly Effective People”:

Seek First to Understand, Then to be Understood

He calls this concept the Principle of Mutual Understanding.  Here is the summary provided by Wikipedia for Habit 5:

7habitsofhighlyeffectivepeopleHabit 5 – Principle of Mutual Understanding: Covey warns that giving out advice before having empathetically understood a person and their situation will likely result in that advice being rejected. Thoroughly listening to another person’s concerns instead of reading out your own autobiography is purported to increase the chance of establishing a working communication.

The mission of OS4T is to “provide an open forum to share and discuss truth”.  The prerequisite for an effective forum is “working communication”.  I am hoping that as this site matures it will attract people with vast differences in beliefs that all share these four traits in common:

  • A commitment to seek first to understand before you try to be understood
  • Respect for others even when you vehemently disagree (and a willingness to agree to disagree)
  • A commitment to share and discuss with intellectual and emotional honesty.
  • A desire to pursue the truth even if it isn’t leading you where you thought it would

Back to my friend:

What does all this have to do with my friend?  Here is what is going on in my mind that has me concerned:

  1. I believe that the Bible is the inspired word of God that equips us for good works and abundant living and that its message of salvation is true.
  2. Most Christians that my friend interacts with are not open to brutally honest dialog with someone who is struggling  with tough questions about God and purpose.
  3. This is good for the Atheists and, if they are right, it helps prevent my friend from wasting time on a non-existent God….but, if the Christian worldview is true, my friend will miss out on an opportunity to experience that truth.  If I am right about the Bible being true, how will my friend arrive at the same conclusion if he comes to despise the hypocrisy, unauthenticness, and defensiveness of Christians?

For Christians:

ixoye_fishGod is not afraid of a lack of faith….He loved us while we were yet sinners….before we had faith.  God “draws us to repentance by His kindness”.  The only hope I have for my friend at this point is that he will experience the kindness of God even if he doesn’t experience the kindness of God’s people.  I am begging you, if you are a Christian reading this post, please respond with gentleness to any anger, bitterness, loneliness, frustration or confusion a person may have that lacks your same faith.  Before you “preach”…listen.  Before you judge…love.  Before you condemn….forgive.  Before you slander…pray.  Before you speak, think.  Think about who you were the moment before you submitted your life to Christ.  Think about the grace and love you experienced from God and from the person who led you to Truth.  Pass that same Grace, and Love, and Truth on to someone else…not by nagging and judging but through understanding and kindness.

We are commanded by Christ to love our enemies and to do good to those who hate us.  We don’t have to feel threatened or get defensive when someone thinks or feels differently than us. The Truth is the Truth.  The truth is not afraid of being “found”.  If you are so confident that you know the truth then why not share with others by first hearing them out and understanding them.  Once you understand them you will be better prepared to explain why you think differently (if you still do after hearing them out).

For non-Christians:

newatheismsymbolThe same goes for the Atheist…just for different reasons.  You may not be motivated by devotion to Christ to love your enemies and to respond to them with kindness but if you truly believe you are right then it seems like you would want to share the reasons why you think Atheism is the truth.  If Christians are ignorant and disillusioned in their beliefs then only rational dialog (tempered with kindness) will persuade them to see things your way.  There can’t both be a God and not be a God.  Someone is wrong and someone is right but, no matter who is right, there is no reason we can’t treat each other with respect and agree to disagree as we both pursue the same thing – TRUTH.

Blessings, BoB

PS – This post focuses on Christians and Atheists but the same thing holds true for agnostics, Muslims, Buddists, Hindus, etc.  We can share our experiences and thoughts with respect and understanding….even if we never persuade each other to our way of thinking.

LET THE CONSTRUCTIVE CONVERSATIONS ABOUT TRUTH BEGIN