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Sumthin' Just Ain't Right Here 12-03-08 05:51pm CST
I try to avoid the culture wars. I really do. I think they're a distraction from our real business of saving lost people. However, I couldn't but be bemused by an article in today's Trib about homosexuals adopting children, with special reference to the new Arkansas law banning said practice.

Quoth the article, "[The law's] real objective. . . is to bar same-sex couples. . . from raising children--even if it means youngsters who desperately need families will wait longer." So, apparently the problem is that the US is full of parentless children who will remain parentless unless the homosexuals ride to the rescue. So that's why everybody I know who tries to adopt has a real cheap and easy time adopting, right?

Um, no. Ironically enough, the lesbians who were the human-interest lead had to go to Vietnam to adopt a two-year-old with a cleft palate. Let's be real here. There will be MORE than enough people looking to adopt, whether or not homosexuals are allowed to.

Then, we read down through the rest of the article and find out that the shortage is actually of FOSTER parents, not people who want to adopt. Well, duh. Everybody knows that foster parents are hard to come by. The question is, how many homosexuals foster parent? Nobody knows, but, according to the article, "[The Donaldson Adoption Institute] concluded that a national ban on gay adoptions could add $87 million to $130 million to foster care expenditures annuallly."

Let's run the numbers here. Also according to the article, there are 129,000 children in the US in foster care. Let's say it costs $10,000 for the state to maintain such a child. Let's also say that the cost to the state of barring homosexuals will be $100 million--a moderately lowball estimate. Using those numbers, there are 10,000 homosexual foster parents right now. That would make homosexuals foster parents at something like three times the national rate. I find that utterly incredible.

Now, do I think that a homosexual would make a worse foster parent than a Muslim? Truth be told, I don't know. I do think, though, that there's some slanting going on in the reporting.
tom_bombadilThe media would like us to believe that it's a choice between decent homosexuals and heterosexual rapists and chlid molesters. Um, hello! What happened to all the people out there not engaged in sexual immorality? What happened to the godly couples wanting to adopt? What happened to older women who wanted to raise children when they had none of their own? Some homosexuals may make decent parents, although it would seem to me that letting homosexuals, especially gay men, adopt kids would just be asking for trouble. 
rainoutthe media continues to make me angry -- they "control" the mindsets of too many Americans! I do not buy what they're selling! 
meditationisa) The meter does track the original song, 'cuz it's 7.6.4.6.4.6.8.6. ;-)

b) Gotta love bias in reporting. 
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Does anything ever happen quickly? 12-01-08 07:49pm CST
When I'm playing a particular computer game and reading the online chatter about it, one of the usual topics of interest is how quickly the game can be beaten. People want to take as little real time or as little game time as possible to win. I'm not a hardcore blitzer, but I have to admit: it's kind of cool to conquer half of Europe in five turns.

That Beat The Game mindset can be a a big problem in real life, though, particularly if you happen to be a preacher. When I first set out on my own, there were days when I was extremely disappointed because of how slowly things were moving. I felt like I was doing everything I could think of to advance the cause of the kingdom, yet the kingdom was not advancing.

Because I'm soooo much smarter now, all of two years later, I can see several big problems with my perspective then:

- Just because you do the right thing doesn't mean that others will do the right thing. Real human beings are not the same as armies on the computer screen. Just because you tell them to do something, and even provide all sorts of amazing reasons why, is no guarantee that they will do it. None of us can command. We can only hope to influence, and even that is often just a hope.

- It's not about any of us. It's about God. Sometimes, I wonder what God thinks when He looks inside my head and sees all of my plans that I think are so perfect. How arrogant of me to think that my wisdom or my efforts are what matter! I am not the builder. I am the tool. The marvel of it all is that God can use such flawed instruments to accomplish His purpose.

- Good does come in time, because God does accomplish His purpose. Only God can know what effects our actions will have. That's why He tells us to do certain things and avoid others--because He knows what will happen. It's up to us to continually do what is right. All we know is that His word will not return to Him empty, but that's all we need to know.

For instance, when I came to Joliet, there were two young ladies in the church here who had not obeyed the gospel. For years, I prayed for them, preached sermons for their benefit, taught them in Bible classes, and did everything I could think of to encourage them. No result that I could see. Two weeks ago, as I was going out on Thanksgiving vacation, Josh agreed to fill in for me. I suggested that he preach a David Banning sermon about how young people can work usefully in the church. He did. Both girls obeyed the gospel because they heard the sermon and knew they wanted to work for God.

Now, who gets the credit for that? Me, for recommending a sermon without a clue about the effect it would have? Josh, for preaching a sermon another man originally wrote? David, for writing that sermon, probably without an evangelistic thought in his mind? We all know better.

I rejoice that those two girls came to Christ, but I rejoice just as much that it happened the way it did. Life is too complex for any of us to figure out, or manipulate, or control. All we can be sure of is that God will work His will, in His way, in His time. To Him be the glory in the church and in Christ Jesus, throughout all generations, forever and ever.

Amen.
jlmanagerExcellent thoughts. 
wifeletI think it's all you. :) 
tom_bombadilIt was good for me to read this. Does David post his outlines online? 
marlaI think I'm good with our 15 snowflakes, but thanks for the advice :-D 
rundrummerrunAmen. It's so humbling to see how God consistently uses the less-than-sharpest tools in the shed throughout scripture to accomplish His awesome purposes. May we all have the humility to do the tasks given to us with all the might He's given us! 
dederichSo happy to hear about this!! And sometime, when you are with Gramma, maybe you could enlighten her on that idea about how life is too complex for any of us to manipulate or control! hehe 
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Arkansas and evolution 11-06-08 10:06am CST
I'm certainly no scientific expert, so I don't know how valid this is, but I was thinking interesting thoughts this morning. Everybody, whether creationist or evolutionist, believes that every living human is a descendant of one, or at most a very few, ancestors. Those ancestors then interbred with siblings, first cousins, etc., to eventually produce the human race we have today.

Now. . . how did that work, exactly? All DNA contains flaws, and the more closely related two parents are, the more likely it is that their offspring will possess serious defects. If you start off with just two sources of genetic material, sooner or later, that gene pool will get so shallow that all the creatures it produces will have three heads and flippers. That's why incest is such A Bad Thing.

So, if we all started from one mated pair, how come we don't all have three heads and flippers?

The creationist answer is easy. God created Adam and Eve to be genetically flawless. Their offspring could interbreed with each other without introducing crippling mutations. Only as the human genome has aged have those deadly flaws been introduced.

To be honest, I can't think of what the evolutionist answer might be. Their human ancestors don't get to start out with new, flawless DNA, because they had to evolve from Homo erectus or whatever. In addition to the new, good mutation that made them smarter and human, they had to be carrying the old, bad, mutations that made interbreeding with Sis such a bad idea. If those flawed genes were recessive, about 25% of the human race would have started off with serious health problems. If those flawed genes were dominant (and it's equal odds either way), EVERYBODY would have begun with serious health problems (Huntingdon's chorea, anyone?). That does NOT sound like a good recipe for winning out in the survival of the fittest.

Is there an evolutionist answer to this? Anyone?
mister_c...........I don't know 
whipsmile"because i don't want to believe in God and therefore i believe in an unsound theory..." 
sildaeEwww. I'm anti interbreeding with your sis. But in all seriousness, that's occurred to me before, and I've never come up with a good answer. 
quinners24Maybe we just need to add another couple millions years to solve it. All the ones with serious health problems died off, and the strong survived. Then the population was diverse enough to avoid that downfall. 
marlaI just did something that reminded me of you. And that is clean out my fridge. The chili only had TWO-TONED mold, as opposed to your four- or five-toned macaroni and cheese... 
marlaThen again, I only had it in there 6 weeks or so, not an entire school year. HAHAHAHAHA 
tom_bombadilThat's is the evolutionist's official answer. But the idea of information poses a serious problem for the evolutionist. He's using a keyboard with two keys: copy and delete. It's hard to write a story (or a genome) using only those two keys. 
jlmanagerGreat title. 
edanThe answer is that you are obviously misguided in your line of questioning. Evolution is no longer debatable just like man-made global warming. 150% of all scientists agree so stop this illegal line of thinking right now 
sjbI'm sorry, but how does Arkansas fit into this discussion? =-) 
graminatorHas your wifelet wounded you yet for that comment? 
ladymustang_08Wait a second about what? haha. yeah its not fun! 
kendraluluI'm glad you had a good trip. I just saw the pictures; looks like you had a lot of fun. :) 
marlaHave I mentioned lately how much I love Isaac Watts? Check out these last two verses to 'Am I a Soldier of the Cross:'

Thy saints in all this glorious war
Shall conquer, though they die;
They see the triumph from afar,
By faith’s discerning eye.

When that illustrious day shall rise,
And all Thy armies shine
In robes of victory through the skies,
The glory shall be Thine.

Wow. 
mister_cI wanted to let you know that this morning I had the distinct honor of baptizing both Danielle and Dominique this morning. 
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Cross-post from the hymn group 10-31-08 06:32am CST
Readers of both, feel free to disregard one.

Endure Until the End

With battered helm and sharpened sword,
So often tried before;
The soldiers of the wounded Lord
March forth to holy war.
His will has shaped a grand design
To order and defend;
He shouts along the battle line,
"Endure until the end!"

We war against a horde of foes
Conceited in their might;
We find no shelter from their blows,
No victory in sight.
But shield to shield, the ranks fight on
Till darkness shall descend;
Our triumph rises with the dawn;
Endure until the end.

We must not fail for want of breath
Nor waver in the strife;
The clash of arms is to the death,
The prize, eternal life.
Our King prepares the joys of peace
For which His hosts contend;
Till then, our struggle cannot cease;
Endure until the end.


Channeling my inner Bernard Cornwell, apparently. Thoughts?
i_wantobe_readyThank you Matt. I needed that thiws morning... 
rundrummerrunConsider this one disregarded. ;) 
dederichgoosebumps!! 
meditationisNice. 
genesiajHey Matt, I know it was fun hanging out with David and Heidi! Things are going well here in FL. Hopefully we'll see you guys during the lectures! :) 
leslianneMatt, mind if we print this for a wall hanging in our house? 
sildae1%? You think that many? 
sildaeLol - I liked her. I see we have even more in common than I thought. So when are y'all coming to visit us? 
graminatorAwesome ... great timing! 
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Greenspan and the free market 10-25-08 09:48am CST
Thursday's appearance by former Fed chairman Alan Greenspan had some interesting tidbits in it. I think my favorite was when Greenspan said, "Those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholder's equity--myself especially--are in a state of shocked disbelief."

For those of you who aren't econ dorks (assuming you've read this far), here's the point. Between 5-10 years ago, Greenspan, among others, had the opportunity to push for increased regulatory oversight of, among other things, the crazy financial schemes that led to the crazy mortgages that led to the late great housing bubble, where all our troubles began. Greenspan chose not to regulate. He figured that the best defense against financial cataclysm was that all those Wall Street folks would be wise enough not to do anything that would cost them their shirts five years down the road.

That doesn't sound like the human race I know. People are just not good at overriding short-term impulses in favor of long-term wisdom. That's why we have 100 people at Margaret St. on Sunday morning instead of 10,000. Nor are the people on Wall Street any wiser than people on Main Street. Just like millions of people allowed greed to blind them to the consequences of buying more house than they could afford, so too all the investment bankers allowed greed to blind them to the consequences of building financial houses of cards.

And that, in a nutshell, is why I am not a lasseiz-faire capitalist. Free-market theory only works when the participants in the market, by and large, make rational decisions to promote their own self-interest. That theory doesn't work in the real world because people aren't rational. Sometimes, the government has to step in and regulate to protect people from themselves. And to protect the rest of us from them too.
wifeletThe protecting the rest of us from them is the part that I'm most concerned about. Why is it my problem that people made a bunch of really stupid decisions?? 
leslianneFor real! I dislike how people made stupid decisions and now expect the government to step in and save them... you got yourself into the mess, you get yourself out! 
marlaAnd then there's the fact that the government is made up of people, so who's to say that their stepping in to regulate is any more rational? 
sildaeWhat can I say - 50 percent of people are below average intelligence. Folks overspending their budgets through houses and credit cards don't make sense to me... but then, I was raised by Dad, too. 
entheosgood thoughts bro. 
entheosps - I'd like to comission a hymn on Philip the evangelist. I'm feeling like a "theme song" would really be nice to have. All the Josh's of the world have "Dare to Stand Like Joshua." Hook me up with a great song about my namesake. 
entheos:-) 
kennonThis article is a pretty good response to Greenspan's comments.

I am laissez-faire precisely because almost all of the problems we are seeing right now are a direct result of non-laissez-faire "capitalism" - the housing credit market was one of the most heavily regulated markets there was, and with the US government demanding that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac give loans even to people who had no chance of repaying it, we saw exactly what happens when a government tries to control a market, which leads to massive distortions which eventually pop.

The banks were just responding to the incentives that were presented to them. They were intensely rational, given the incentive structure that they found themselves in.

Market capitalism only works when there is a real market. 
leyvaleyvanormally I would have startd daydreaming when I got to the word equity, but you made it interesting. 
dederichyou doing ok? Dan was asking about you yesterday. . . 
tom_bombadilThank you for linking that article. It's commonly misunderstood that the housing/lending markets were "free". Using recent events to criticize free markets is a little like using the failure of a helicopter design to criticize the viability of airplanes. 
kennonbut why do those banks need those rules? let them fail!

if they are "too big to fail", then they are probably too big, period.

if the market really is free, those banks that do stupid stuff like that will fail, and then people will stop investing in them. it's the "safety net" promises of bailouts and the like that continue if not directly encourage that kind of behavior.

this bubble popping was blatantly obvious to many people for a long time - obviously it's unwise to give 8 credit cards or a $400k house to a student who won't be able to pay it back! the banks did that because they knew that what is happening now would happen, i.e. lots of public money being dumped into them to save them from their own idiocy.

this is an open letter by the CEO of BB&T bank, outlining why he thought the bailout was a bad idea, as he had attempted to run his bank wisely.

the further problem is that whenever the response is "more regulation", you inevitably get the rush for pork, as evidenced by the second (i.e., passed) bailout bill which includes provisions for all manner of ridiculous things which have very little to do with helping banks.

i'm not an anarchist, there are good reasons to have a government, but the secondary effects that come from just about every single government action make them far more costly than we realize. it is extremely hard politically to overturn existing laws, and so many laws go into effect and then just sit around like so much cruft. 
ousingerhaha...but I NEVER hate OU :-) I would NEVER dress like a UT fan...that has to be unscriptural or something :) haha! 
ousinger2 UT shirts??? NO GOOD! :) I always cheer against Texas! I guess that is what happens when you grow up in Oklahoma 
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