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Unsolicited Advice for Life, Work, Work/Life and Lifework 
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11 Thoughts (plus Subthoughts) After a Week in Penang for a Spiritual Conference

1. We were having lunch with K & S (& S) before driving back to KL today. 
I ordered a cheeseburger. It was the kind of burger that’s served on a plate, with sides of fries and slaw, and impossible to fit into your mouth fully assembled. 
I took off the top bun and placed it on the plate Adeline was using to feed Seth. (Seth likes bread.) 
When she noticed it, Adeline said: 

Why is there a burger cover here? 

Burger Cover. That’s the word of the day. 

- 1.1. What’s “burger cover” in Malay? “Penutup burger”? “Tudung burger”? “Topi burger”? 

2. Catching up with “old friends” proves to me again that everything turns out right when you’re seeking what is right in your life and lifework. Grace makes up for your missteps (and others’ missteps against you) and God guides you in a good path. 
Even if it’s not the nice upward-trending linear graph you’d envisioned at the start. 

3. “Old friends” I met who are in a better place in life than I’d last seen them: D. E. K. S. 
I thank God. 

4. We are still singing “There’s Gonna Be a Revival in This Land”. 

- 4.1. That was the first search result on YouTube. Please don't blame me. 

5. No one can tell me what on earth “revival” is, in any measurable, achievable way. 

- 5.1. Hence “revival” will never be here, but will remain like the pot of gold at the rainbow. 

- 5.2. Maybe the journey is more important than the destination, so the pursuit of revival is good enough, in a pragmatic sense? 

- 5.3. I can’t stand that much pragmatism. 

6. Some parts of Penang look like Singapore. Is it an “island” thing? 

- 6.1. I love the idea of having a beach just a short drive away at all times. 

- 6.2. The Klang River just doesn't cut it. 

7. Penang char koay teow is good. Penang ho chien is better. Both are better than any you’ll find in KL. 

- 7.1. Penang food generally is better than KL food. How annoying to have to concede this. It must be how Windows fanboys feel about Mac. 

8. All KL drivers need to watch this video: 

 

- 8.1. All Penang drivers need to watch it twice. 

9. The "love of the world" in you is proof that the "love of the Father" is not in you [http://bible.cc/1_john/2-15.htm]. Yet God “so loved the world" that he gave his only begotten Son [http://bible.cc/john/3-16.htm]. 
Obviously, loving the people in the world is worlds apart (heh, I pun) from loving the constructs of these same people. 

- 9.1. If the “world” (kosmos in Greek) is the “ways or systems that people construct”, then perhaps the “world” is also in the church, and some Christians are inadvertently “loving the world”? 
When they say and believe: 
“You have to pray one hour a day.” 
“If you’re not jumping up and down, you’re not passionate enough for God. (I mean, he died for you - can’t you just jump up and down a little bit?)” 
“You have to pray loud or it doesn’t work.” 
“You have to pray quietly or it isn’t authentic.” 
Ad nauseam. 

10. It really is more fun to coast along at a “sensible” speed on the highway, rather than driving exactly at the speed limit. 

- 10.1. The little time lost is way worth the exponential increase in the quality of ride and conversation. 

- 10.2. I have a habit of praying in tongues when driving on the highway. 

- - 10.2.1. In between conversations, that is. 

- - 10.2.2. I hate the “charismatic kosmos” that keeps charismatics [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charismatic_Movement] blind to certain things, while at the same time deluding them into thinking that they see more clearly than others, in these matters. 

- - - 10.2.2.1 Maybe it’s because I love the charismatic people, that I hate the charismatic kosmos. 

- - - - 10.2.2.1.1. Yes. 

11. True religion is a powerful force for liberation. 

- 11.1. False religion can be a powerful force for control. 

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Filed under  //   advice   charismatism   Christians   church   community of faith   delusion   false religion   friends   funny   grace   gratitude   love   Penang   redemption   religion   thoughts   wisdom  

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Christian janitor died saving Muslim students - CNN.com

He is a national hero because he saved the life of many girls," said Shahbaz Bhatti, minister of minorities in the Pakistani government. "As a Christian, a person of minority, he stood in front of the Taliban to protect the university.

Was it worth it? I don't think he considered that question.

I think he just did what a man had to do in that situation.

A moving story that will bring on the tears.

Some find martyrdom while trying to kill innocents. Some find martyrdom while trying to save innocents.

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Filed under  //   Christians   girls   International Islamic University   man   martyrs   Muslims   Pakistan   religion   Taliban   terrorism  

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The obsession to not speak bad words is not the same as the passion to speak good words. @chongy

The mistake of this ankle-deep wrangling over Christians and profanity is that it misreads a significant cultural shift—one deeply grounded in intellectual conviction—as a rebellious or apathetic flavor of the moment. No doubt, many a young Christian at university has slipped into colorful language almost involuntarily, without having a well-considered justification for his new vocabulary. Only in a few instances does it require moral courage to utter the word “fuck.” But to imply that most Christians who swear do so out of lapsed scruples, and can be pricked back into conscientiousness with a quick devotional from their favorite journal of “progressive culture,” is to profoundly misunderstand the change that has prompted so many of them to dismiss the petty social preoccupations of their forbearers.

The paragraph above is a mind test. If, after reading the para, you only recall *one particular word* from it, you need to expand your mind a wee widdle bit more ;).

I remember when Dilbert used the cuss phrase "Jeepers Cripes", Scott Adams received angry letters at his profanity.

Adams responded that he became afraid that because of his choice of words, "Gosh" would "darn" him to "heck".

If you ask me, profanity is to take the sacred and treat it commonly. Those who make mountains out of molehills when someone drops the F-bomb, have sex as their god, in my opinion. More accurately, they worship the god of antisex. Which is the other side of the coin of sex obsession.

(Thanks @chongy for the link!)

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Filed under  //   Christians   commentary   culture   language   opinion   profanity   society   weird   world  

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