Blizzards are grrreat!

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Blizzard conditions bring refreshment to my soul.

Not because you get to take time off . . . Not because nothing is going on . . . Not because . . .

Blizzards are just inspiring.  They remind me of life without predetermined boundaries.  Most days you wander through a picturesque landscape.  You have to dodge trees, skirt mud puddles and evade insects.

In a blizzard there are no indications of barriers.  You just plow ahead slowly — not so fast you will hurt yourself if you hit somethin — not so slow that you freeze.

I can imagine what is out there.  I can picture a beautiful plain or a high mountain.  My imagination can fun wild.

So, you’ve got to love those blizzards. 

Now, if I just didn’t have to clean up after all that snow!

Words, words, words.

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Glancing through CBC.CA!

There is a section on their homepage called “diversions”.  When you just need to sit back and see the world from a new (and often wierd) perspective, this is the place to go.  Check out the following:

ANAHEIM, California (AP) – Pluto is finally getting some respect – from wordsmiths.

“Plutoed” was chosen 2006 Word of the Year by the American Dialect Society at its annual meeting on Friday.

To “pluto” is “to demote or devalue someone or something” much like what happened to the former planet last year when the General Assembly of the International Astronomical Union decided Pluto did not meet its definition of a planet.

“Our members believe the great emotional reaction of the public to the demotion of Pluto shows the importance of Pluto as a name,” said society President Cleveland Evans. “We may no longer believe in the Roman god Pluto, but we still have a sense of personal connection with the former planet.”

The rest of the article goes on about words like “murse” and “flog”.  The one most interesting to those of you with philisophical and theological minds is “truthiness” defined by television satirist Stephen Colbert as “truth that comes from the gut, not books.”  A few decades back we had “true truth” from Francis Schaeffer which would be the almost opposite — truth that is given by God and not just how we feel after having jalapeno peppers and beans!

Interesting factoids!

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Since when has the term factoid become so accepted?   Since we decided that sound bytes were enough to encompass all that there is to know about a subject?  Since songs were shortened for air play on radio stations?  Since bumper stickers now sum up great works of philosophy?

Having asked the question, I do like the summary statements that stick in your brain.  The factoids of life!

Like — “By perseverance even the snail made it to the ark.”  (Spurgeon)

Any others?

What characterizes a sabbath?

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I’m sitting at 10:00 on Saturday.  In front of my computer.  Intentionally thinking about Sabbath.

Today is my day off, and I thought I would see what it would be like to make this day “Sabbath”.  For years Sunday has been my Sabbath.  But working in a church and planning committee meetings and other church ativities tends to wear down the edge on “rest”.

So, intentionally, I’m thinking about how this day should go.  I’ve thought of fasting, but the examples in the Old Testament of Sabbath tend to have feasting attached.  I’ve thought of visiting non-Christians, but Sabbath is generally a time to be together with other believers.

Of course, when change was needed in a nation, a sacred assembly (a Sabbath of sorts) was called and a fast invoked.  And surely healing is a part of what Jesus did on Sabbath (reaching out to the broken ones of society). 

So the question arises.  If Sabbath is, as found in Genesis 1 and 2, a day of rest — what does it mean to rest.  And is this rest just individual or is their a commuity aspect to it.

Lots of good books written on this subject.  Jill has finished Mark Buchanan’s book called “The Rest of God.” — not available today at Amazon.com, but I saw it at a Christian bookstore recently.  Some very good thoughts there. 

Come along with me.  Let’s see where this goes!