“Pornography is the drug of the millennium and more addictive than crack cocaine.” … And while most people may think of men when they picture purveyors of pornography, women are joining their ranks in droves. A big part of the problem – for both men and women – is the easy accessibility of porn. Thanks to the Internet, it’s not even necessary to leave your house. Anonymity feeds temptation.
A survey conducted in 2003 by Today’s Christian Woman found that one out of every six women, including Christians, admits struggling with an addiction to pornography.
Full story here.
The increase in female porn consumption is based on the increasing percentage of woman who were children during our Internet porn culture. That culture continues. The acceptance and consumption of porn is a trend that will likely strengthen unless and until large numbers of people openly speak out against it. The effort begins at home. Our culture ever increasingly emphasizes and encourages the sexualization of youth. It’s not uncommon to see grade school girls wearing skin-tight clothes and overtly sexually suggestive branding, e.g. Victoria’s Secret short shorts with JUICY in block print across the buns. It common for teenage girls to dress in skin-tight and/or low-cut clothes. It’s practically accepted as normal for young females to leave little to the imagination. What only two generations ago was considered virtue is now deemed a social liability by many.
Reforming our culture starts with reforming our relationships at home. A girl should not learn that she is loved and valued by how much “skin she has in the game.” Daughters learn much of their worth and sense of self from their father. Are we raising daughters of Eve, princesses of the living God, or are we aiming to raise “cool” and popular girls in a porn saturated culture? God grant us the wisdom to love and guide our daughters in our small, daily decisions. Are we raising sons who value and look for Godliness in girls, or do they see their father ogling the short shorts? Do they know from our computer caches and histories the internet pages being visited in supposed secrecy? The sin of the fathers visits itself on the next generation. Rot and disease spreads and infests. Our struggles are not just our own. God give us the strength to raise a better generation.
A loyal servant to the North Korean government, until NK police beat his wife and forced abortion in her 8th month of pregnancy because she had the audacity to complain about the policies of Kim Jong-il. They fled to China. She died shortly thereafter of cancer. Through the loving witness of a missionary, Son Jong Nam put his faith in Christ.
Instead of rejecting God and the land of his birth and his countrymen, he embraced Christ and devoted his life to giving words of hope to his suppressed countrymen. Returning to North Korea to preach the good news of Jesus Christ, Son Jong Nam was repeatedly imprisoned and abused. Now reported tortured to death by the communist regime of Kim Jong-il. Full story here.
Martyred at age 50 for spreading the gospel. He enters his reward.
Momma’s Rhapsody …
The all too natural prayer …
Unnatural
I mentioned in a comment to a post below how I work with a number of ministries and regularly review third-party internet postings about/to particular Christian ministries. There is one consistent theme – the more a ministry adheres publicly to fundamental, Biblical teaching, the more vitriolic and spiteful and numerous are the online postings. They are often vulgar, grotesque, and insulting. It’s not enough to disagree with our Christian beliefs or even enough to do so in a vulgar and insulting manner. No, as often as not, they misrepresent or twist basic beliefs or actions. Certainly some of such misstatements are the product of ignorance, but the pattern is so consistent and prevalent that I suspect much if not most of it is deliberate and malicious.
I want to argue. Indeed, at times I would like to grab the scoffers and mockers by the throat and give a good squeeze, but that would be denying the fundamental virtue of a life lived in Christ. At times like that, I find it difficult to willfully follow the teachings of my Lord Jesus Christ. The insults and arguments don’t bother me too much, however, it’s how I’m supposed to respond that bothers me. We are called to love and to pray for the scoffers and mockers. It was for the lost and depraved that Christ died. It is to the lost that Christ sends us. In their anger and hatred of Christianity they are to be pitied for not only do they ignore Christ’s warnings to the peril of their eternity, they live now with their face turned away from their Creator, the God of all the heavens and Earth who loves them. They’re missing out on living a life buoyed by the Holy Spirit, supported by the love of Christ, and living with a hope for eternity.
God give me the strength to love and pray for those who mock and scoff at the faith I’ve put in your Word.
Summer Days …
Northern vs. Southern Triathlon
Northern vs. Southern Triathlon
I was able to compete in two separate triathlon in June: Kerr Lake (NC, Southern) on June 6 and North Country (NY, Northern) on June 26. Both races were roughly the same distance, but were vastly different in both latitude and geography. While in no way a complete sampling, this is my comparison of the two:
Weather
Southern race was sunny and very hot (high 90’s). High humidity.
Northern race was overcast and cool (60’s – 70’s). Low humidity.
Assessment: Much much better in the northern weather — especially the run!
Major advantage to the northern race.
Terrain
Southern race was small, rolling hills.
Northern race had a hilly run course, and a huge mountain on the bike course.
Assessment: The hills and the scenery were part of the draw of the northern race.
Still, the northern race was much more difficult, and there is little chance of a PR on this course.
Advantage to the southern race.
Organization
Obviously, the organization of the race is not at all related to its location in the country. The southern race was larger with much more organization. However, the northern race had a lot more food and giveaways.
Swim
Southern race was faster and warmer. Water temperature was not wetsuit legal. Steep hill to T1.
Northern race was colder and rougher. Water temperature was about 69 degrees, making it wetsuit legal (I didn’t use one). Breathtaking scenery and crystal-clear water.
Assessment: This swim course was my reason for doing the northern race. It wasn’t my fastest swim but one of my strongest and my favorites.
Advantage to the northern race.
Bike
Southern race had low rolling hills. Despite the hot weather, it was my fastest bike course.
Northern race had bigger hills with a huge mountain in the middle. I had to push my bike up some of the steepest grades. Crazy downhill speeds.
Assessment: Northern bike was an adventure, but it was almost suicidal.
Advantage to the southern race.
Run
Southern race had small hills, but the heat was unbearable.
Northern race was more hilly, but with much lower temperatures. An added benefit for me was that a friend ran the 10K run course with me. I ended up with a PR for the run course.
Assessment: I’ll take the northern hills for the lower temperatures on the run course.
Advantage to the northern race.
Accessibility
Southern race was close to my home, accessible by an early morning drive on race day.
Northern race was available only as part of our vacation travels.
Conclusion
The northern race was much more scenic with better temperatures. However, the southern races have faster times and, most importantly, are closer to home. I will try the scenic challenges when I can, but will look first for races nearby.
God Bless America
Without God’s blessing, no effort, no person, and certainly no nation will prosper.
We continue to enjoy God’s grace. Though we systematically ignore God in our schools and in the vast majority of our public assemblies, indeed, it’s effectively illegal to corporately acknowledge God when our public institutions are in session, yet he continues to bless our nation. We practice our faith without interruption and largely without deterrence. The tax code incentivizes giving to our faith institutions. We evangelize without penalty or prosecution. The average American enjoys a standard of living unheard of in the history of mankind. Starvation is unheard of within our borders. Obesity is one of the leading if not the leading health risk. The books of the world are a click of a mouse away, and countless books are a short trip away to view for free in a library. The greatest music and best entertainment of the world are all immediately accessible. Access to education is universal. You can visit any portion of our continent with little preparation if you have the means to travel. We can visit most places of the globe and the biggest impediment in the vast majority of places are the requirements of the host country. Every community has healthcare, running water, and sanitation. We take entirely for granted those things that hundreds of millions of people world-wide only dream about having.
On July 4, 1776, the success of this democratic experiment was anything but certain. The most certain thing was that if they failed in their efforts against the then world superpower, each signatory to the Declaration of Independence would pay with his life and most likely his family’s wealth as well. Countless many have sacrificed their life so that this American effort can continue and prosper.
We are doing far too many things quite wrong now — our fundamental denial of our Creator and his relevance to how we govern and live, and from that denial pours forth a font of misfortune and evil. We threaten to unravel or squander what has been given to us. But today is not a day of mourning or lamentations, it is a day of celebration and for thanks for what our forefathers have sacrificed to create this land of liberty and abundance and for God’s blessings. By God’s grace, this nation will continue to prosper.
God bless America! Happy Fourth!
Yesterday, I went to CNN.com to get my news to balance out the fairness after reading FoxNews.com. I came across a commentary posted by a Christian blogger who was given a spot on CNN.com. I found it interesting that CNN would actually give a space to Christian commentary.
The article’s writer gave his opinions as to why Christians are jerks online. If Christians are to love thy neighbor, why oh why then do they act like jerks online? You could probably replace “jerks” with self-righteous and still have the same point made.
I suppose his points were valid. He explains how Christians hide behind an online identity, making it easier to be more blunt, especially since you may not know the readers. He also explains that for many it becomes an idol in nit-picking the little things that annoy us as Christians.
So why can we be jerks online? Here are some of my thoughts in no particular order:
- Young in our Christian life – You’ve heard the saying, once a ____ always a _____ (fill in the blank with anything). Although, that may not necessarily be true, there are some habits that are harder to get rid of than others. I’d like to think that as a Christian, I am repenting of all my sins and bad habits, but in reality some are still lingering. Luckily I have people in my life to remind me of them.
- Not all christians are Christians – Many people in and not in church will claim they are Christian, yet know nothing of the Gospel, much less Grace. They may find themselves compelled to show the errors of others’ ways. So it’s not fair really to stereotype Christians and lump all christians together.
- One bad seed can damage a whole crop – All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. This “all” includes Christians. There will be those who are prominent and well known Christians who will stick their foot in their mouth on occasion. How about giving them some grace too.
- Excited to share with others – As Christians we desire for everyone to realize God’s glory and are excited to share it with others. Blogging or chatting online gives an easy platform to share opinions. It allows us to be bolder and braver than what we would normally share face-to-face. But nonetheless, we want to share what we’ve come to learn about ourselves in hopes others don’t make the same mistakes.
- Truth hurts – What one persons sees as “jerky” may in actuality be the truth. Pointing out a flaw in an individual or a society is rarely ever politically correct.
- It’s not a Christian thing – So why are Christians singled out? Any time I have ever commented on a non-Christian blog or YouTube, I immediately get barraged with hateful emails and replies with so much vulgarity it would make George Carlin cringe. It is a challenge to maintain a nice attitude on a blog site when someone attacks you in such a way.
What are some of your thoughts?
We lost on Jeopardy …
Most the world did not have a World Cup team to cheer for. Major countries and several significant ones failed to even qualify, e.g. China, India, Russia. While we’re competing fiercely with each other, this Century may bring about a fundamental change in how and with whom/what we compete. I believe that by 2050, we’ll be discussing whether the robots (or manufactured people) will soon beat the world’s best soccer team in a match, if it hasn’t already happened by then. According to the NY Times, it looks like we’re already losing to the not-quite-AI machines in TV game shows, or soon will be. A virtual Vanna White may be turning placards for HAL soon enough.
‘Toured the Burj in this U.A.E. city. They say it’s the tallest tower in the world; looked over the ledge and lost my lunch.’
This is the quintessential sort of clue you hear on the TV game show “Jeopardy!” It’s witty (the clue’s category is “Postcards From the Edge”), demands a large store of trivia and requires contestants to make confident, split-second decisions. This particular clue appeared in a mock version of the game in December, held in Hawthorne, N.Y. at one of I.B.M.’s research labs. Two contestants — Dorothy Gilmartin, a health teacher with her hair tied back in a ponytail, and Alison Kolani, a copy editor — furrowed their brows in concentration. Who would be the first to answer?
Neither, as it turned out. Both were beaten to the buzzer by the third combatant: Watson, a supercomputer.
For more see: What Is I.B.M.’s Watson?
Unicorn, the other white meat
Hear All Creation
World Cup firsts …
What an exhausting win against Algeria … just when it seemed that no matter what – Dempsey’s best efforts, consistently anti-US errant refs, balls bouncing off cross bars – the USA wasn’t going to score and the game was all but over … Landon Donovan to the rescue. Phew.
2pm Saturday – USA v Ghana. Will be a difficult fight. Repeat or revenge? Ghana knocked USA out of the last World Cup. If we advance, particularly if we were to make it to the quarter finals, it would be a huge step forward for soccer in the USA. It’s a long shot, but worth dreaming. If we advance and the NFL strikes in 2011, professional soccer just might catch on here.
While Donovan to the rescue might not be anything new or unusual, this has already been a tournament of firsts for USA. Michael Bradley’s game tying goal against Slovenia was the first by a player to score a World Cup goal for a team coached by his father. Today was the first time USA scored in the third round of World Cup group, and accordingly the first time we’ve won a third round in group. USA’s finishing first in their group is a first since the first World Cup in 1930, which was played by only 13 nations, with no Germany, Italy or British teams, and no teams from Africa.
In related news, the French team returns home ignominiously. From the Finals in 2006 to winless group play. It makes me wonder whether Zinedine Zidane paid French coach Raymond Domenech to possibly eclipse Zidane as the biggest French arse in World Cup history. The French team was a world-class catastrophe with Domenech being at the center of the team’s meltdown and also utterly lacking class in France’s closing loss to the host nation. Good riddance.
It was also an incredible day at Wimbledon … and it’s not done yet! Ironman tennis?
Forever
“No matter how great your pain is right now, it is not forever.”
I heard this quote from my pastor recently. The lesson is about our Eternal State with God himself. Forever.
We are reminded in Scripture to to focus on the forever. The problems that we encounter here and today are nothing compared to the Forever.
So we do not lose heart. Though our outer self is wasting away, our inner self is being renewed day by day. For this light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison, while we look not to the things that are seen but to the things that are unseen. For the things that are seen are temporal, but the things that are unseen are eternal. – 2 Corinthians 4:16-18
I am reminded again and again how little I know about life. I cannot even manage my own problems this week, let alone my entire life. And my life is much more fortunate than many.
How little I know.
How little we all know about life.
We look at life as if it is about to crush us down. We look at what we see, hear, and touch, and define this as our life.
We measure ourselves by our accomplishments and our pains that we encounter.
How little we know.
God has not made us for this 70-year span here on earth. We are meant to be with him. Forever.
What will life be like when finally see God? How little will we care about our day-to-days pains from here on earth?
We will have stepped out of the shadows and will finally get to experience the REAL life.
Forever!
And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God. He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.” – Revelation 21:3-4
No longer will there be anything accursed, but the throne of God and of the Lamb will be in it, and his servants will worship him. – Revelation 22:3
Happy Father’s Day
Praise God for the blessing of fathers and fatherhood.
Looking back, I always thought John Wayne movies were interesting, but didn’t really understand why so many people were so impressed by the John Wayne character. Years later, likely at some point when I was in the Army infantry, I realized my father was a whole lot like John Wayne– he was (and is) true grit, day in and day out. If he was the talkative big word type, he would have taught us to say “perseverance.” I thank God for my father and the fundamentally “male” things he always sought to instill in me and my siblings.
If I only had a dime for every time he said as a matter of course, “No Whiners” and “Quit Whining”, which worked as an answer to many questions and situations, particularly questions where there was no answer. There were myriad subsets of the “no whining” theme as well. Some were fairly creative. An “I’m hungry” spoken between meals would almost automatically elicit, “Go knock your chin against the table and you won’t feel so hungry any more.” If it didn’t involve arterial blood or bone protruding from the skin, the answer was typically “Quit your belly-aching.”
When I went out for freshman football, I asked my dad for help in practicing tackling. He grew up in Germany playing another type of football. We went in the backyard where we figured the best practice would be for him to charge at me head on with the football, kinda like a goal line stand, but without helmet or pads. I learned three things: why football players wear pads, particularly helmets; what it’s like to lose a head on collision, and how fleeting consciousness can be.
Soon thereafter my dad was hired as my highschool’s first varsity soccer coach. I eventually switched from football to soccer. Growing up through grade school, like most other
kids, I thought my dad was a giant. Smelly at times, but still, a strong giant and hands made of iron. By my senior year in high school, I had by then several years of being taller than him — nearly 8 inches taller, though I’m not sure I weighed much more. Toward the end of my senior year of soccer, when Dad entered the fray of a varsity scrimmage playing for a shorthanded opposing side, I thought I could bump or check him off the ball. I knew my height would give me leverage and I made some boisterous claim as I rushed in to bounce Dad off the ball. I did have leverage, for a moment, and quickly learned two things: a hip check does nothing to impede an elbow upwardly swinging at a high rate of speed, and despite the coolness of the then ever-present Michael Jordan tongue wag, having your tongue between your teeth and hanging out of your mouth was a bad idea in contact sports when someone else’s elbow shuts your mouth. He kept the soccer ball and I lost whatever propensity I might have developed for trash talking.
I remember my Dad working 55 hours a week in a tool and die shop my entire time growing up, with two weeks vacation each year. I had no idea what that meant until I tried it for one summer. That summer of labor guaranteed that I would graduate from college. I also learned from observation the true grit necessary to be a blue-collar worker for decades.
He’s not afraid to let you know that blood flows thicker than water and that family always comes first. I only saw him fight once. When I was a trouble making teenager with a drivers license, one of my friends in the back seat apparently looked cross-eyed at another car. The car followed me home and a very large, belligerent man jumped out and began shoving us around, apparently looking for a fight. If he didn’t outweigh me and my two friends collectively, it was close. He was big and fortunately loud. Within seconds, my Dad was outside. He explained that I was his son and politely asked the man to leave. Unfortunately for himself, the big man declined the invitation and instead become more belligerent as he advanced upon my much shorter father. That lasted less than a minute before his attitude drastically changed and he retreated to his car to hastily depart, apparently unappreciative for the flavor of my father’s knuckles at high rates of speed.
My Dad was 5′ 9″. He claims that he’s now 5′ 8″, but I think that’s a bit of a stretch. He’s lost over an inch. And that happened fairly quickly. In his 50s, he was practicing motocross with my youngest brother. He overshot a jump at too high a speed on his KX500. Actually he overshot the landing — and came down on the back side of a hill instead of on the top. His back wheel floated out too far in front so he landed on the back of the motorcyle with the 225 pound bike on top of himself. I wasn’t there. As I recall it, my little brother didn’t have his driver’s license yet and Dad didn’t want him to worry, so he eventually got back on his feet. Drove his bike back to his truck. Loaded it and my brother’s bike and drove a good distance home. The next day, when the excruciating pain hadn’t subsided, he went to the doctor to find out he shattered a vertebrae. He’s shorter now. True grit.
I remember being the tallest kid in my class but being a fairly rotten basketball player. I remember playing basketball with my Dad, who was also a much shorter fairly rotten basketball player. I took a shot that was so far off the mark, I had to tell you it was a shot and not an arm spasm that inadvertently shot the ball into space. I also remember how, after Dad finished laughing and I continued to glower, he used that time to laugh and teach me the importance in life of not taking yourself too seriously and being able to laugh at yourself. Of course, I had a lot of source material, still do, and it was a valuable lesson I never forgot.
There are so many things I remember about my Dad teaching me about life. Hardly none of it was scripted or didactic lessons, instead, they were lessons, mostly spontaneous, derived from living life and spending time together. The best communication he showed was the time he took to be with and around us. Dad was always there when we needed him and still is.
True grit. True lessons. True love.
Thanks Dad.
Praise God for fathers who invest themselves in the lives of their children.
Zeta Beta Toddler
At 3am, our 3-year-old was walking down the hallway yelling for an ice pop. Luckily for him, mom was the one to get up first (… no surprise there). When she convinced him he couldn’t have one, he stated he wanted oatmeal for breakfast and went back to bed. Which leads to Why Having A Toddler is Like Being at a Frat Party, which comparison is as surprisingly spot-on as it is funny, to include the ever-increasing number of contributions at the end of the blog …
Looks like she and the late William F. Buckley, Jr. share something in common: Sarah Palin wants cops to leave weed smokers alone

Slovenia?! That tiny blip on the northeastern corner of the Adriatic. Scenic certainly, but the nation of 2 million wouldn’t make our top-25 list of States (wouldn’t likely make top 35). For that matter, they don’t make the top 25 ranking for FIFA either. With that said, this tiny little country clocked in at 26 in FIFA rankings; and with bodies flying everywhere, number 26 Sweden just beat number 2 Spain. Further, the trash talk might be as much or more FIFA marketing through creative interpreting. If Slovenia wins, they’re into Round 2 and we’re almost certainly not absent an English collapse. Go Algeria!

North Korea versus Brazil had a surreal feeling to me. These Korean men playing their hearts out for a brutal, personality-cult dictatorship. On the other side, the smooth Brazilians, persistent and smooth and unstoppable like a river. The Brazilian’s first goal was magical … did that really go in? How? The debate will endure whether Maicon intended that goal, unless he tells, which I hope he doesn’t.

