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Information Blog

June 2005 - Updated Monday through Friday with occasional Sunday special

     
 
Christian Depression

One of our readers wrote in reply to the article on depression: “I really appreciate what you had to say about that chat room you came across. Although I agree with you that all depression can be cured by God, so can blindness. I love God with all my heart and most mornings He is the only reason I choose to roll out of my bed... I would like to know more of what you think on the subject of depression; also if you have ever struggled with it or if you have studied more than just by the Internet.”

My reply:  I have tried to avoid getting too much into the literature about depression. Most of it is, as I alluded to, a trap for getting us to try to overcome it by some other method than by faith. But in reading all literature, including the Bible, I see depressed people. Others see “melancholics,” but then everyone loves to make their own psychology. I have always struggled with depression. Ever since I figured out the world was not a nice place, in fact. I tried many methods to deal with it, the first being to become hardened by sin. This happened at an early age. I didn’t do anything real bad, but my heart did. It hated God and anything that brought him near. I fled. Of course, I became suicidal. But God intervened in a wonderful way, showing me the hell that awaited if I died without repentance. I repented and knew the love of Jesus Christ. I have known Christ for 34 years now. About the only thing that really cheers me up nowadays is preaching the gospel and praying to our wonderful God and Father. I was about four years ago on anti-depressants for a short while during a horrible period of time. It worked, but made me un-emotional and uninvolved in the gospel. I shook it all off, have deep emotions and now I’m ten times the threat to the kingdom of darkness than I was before. Praise be to the Name of Jesus Christ!

If you want a real charge, read some good biography on Martin Luther (the German reformer, not the American social reformer who has a similar name for some odd reason). There is also a recent movie on his life. Also, read Hebrews 12 keeping in mind much of what the author is talking about are things that cause depression. Let us be free of those things that encumber us. Jesus said to the rich man sell everything you have and give the money to the poor, and come follow him. He was encumbered. Therein lies our true riches: to be able to think of the things of Christ first and always before ourselves. This will assure our hearts before God (1 John 3:19, in context).

God bless you and keep up the good fight of faith.

Chris Simsonson  6/30/2005

 
Common errors concerning faith #1:

1. “Faith is believing in things even when common sense tells you not to” - from ‘Miracle on37th Street,’ old movie about Kris Kringle/ Santa Claus. This is silly talk. If common sense tells us that gravity causes us to sink in water, and yet we believe that we can walk on water, something is seriously wrong, unless we walk on the water. If we believe there is a pot of gold at the end of a rainbow, then let us prove there is. Santa Claus is fiction. If we teach our children enough fiction, then we can change the world, right? Wrong. Truth is, Jesus walked on water. Why? Because he created water. His creation is real. He is real. We may not like it, but that’s the way it is. Real faith believes there is a God and that he rewards those that diligently seek after him. We better make sure it’s the right God we believe in. Most ‘paths to God’ lead to death. Faith is believing in things even when we feel they are not right, because they are real nonetheless. There is a judgment day, and there is a reward for the righteous and punishment for the wicked. Common sense or no. (To be revisited)

Chris Simonson  6/29/2005

 
The poor need food and clothes, or Christian Garage Sale II

When Jesus said to the rich young man, “Go, and sell everything you have and give the money to the poor,” He meant, “Go, and sell everything you have and give the money to the poor.” In a country with a superabundance of everything, we have modified the gospel to say something it does not say. Accordingly, we have altered this portion of the gospel to mean something else. We give our clothes, furniture, T.V. sets, computers, appliances, cars, and more, once we have failed to sell them for hard cash, to the Salvation Army or the hospice so they can sell it. God knows what they do with the money. God knows what we do with the money. Which brings us to the subject of love of God vs. love of money. What do we do with the money we make from garage sales? This is the test of faith, not saying with the lips, “I love God, and I love my neighbor.” Period. If we have failed to understand the simple gospel, then we are bound to fail at love or anything else demanded by God, including holiness.

The only way to come out of Babylon, is to come out of her now. If we do not understand that the riches of this world are not to be lusted after, then we are bound for hell. If we understand that the longing for riches is a temptation and a snare, then we can at least beg for mercy and repent as needed. If we have a garage sale, let us put the money toward feeding the poor. We do not have poor here where I live, except the drunks and the welfare frauds. This does not stop me from seeing to it that the real poor are fed and clothed. A corollary: Quit buying useless junk in the first place. It weighs heavily against faith. Where your put your treasure, your heart follows. No exceptions to that. “Make to yourselves friends of the unrighteous mammon, so when this fails, they may receive you into everlasting habitations. If you have not been faithful in the unrighteous mammon, Who will commit to your trust the true riches? And if you have not been faithful in another man’s things, Who will give you the things that are your own?” Check it out, Luke 16. Jesus is here talking about eternal life, not a sweeter deal in this present life.

Chris Simsonson  6/28/2005

 
Calvin’s Reply

"However, even though I had done all the things prescribed by the Christian leaders, and admittedly had short periods of calm, I was still far away from having a good conscience before God or man. For, whether I descended into myself or lifted my mind to thee, O God, extreme terror seized me: terror that no sacrifices or satisfactions could cure.

The more closely I examined myself, the sharper the stings of conscience; to delude myself with oblivion the only solace remaining. But, still, with nothing better being offered, I continued on my first course, when, suddenly, I discovered a different doctrine that had started up; not one that led us away from the Christian profession, but one that brought us back to its fountainhead, and, as it were, clearing away the dross, restoring it to its original purity. Offended by this novelty, I listened only unwillingly and at first, I confess, vigorously and vehemently resisted. This because, such is the stubbornness and audacity of men to persist in a course once undertaken, it was almost impossible for me to admit I had spent my whole life in ignorance and error.

One subject in particular made the new teachers disgusting to me: the loss of reverence for the Church. But, when I opened my eyes and allowed myself to be taught, I found that my fears were unfounded: that there was no disparagement of the Church’s majesty at all. For the new teachers reminded me that there is a great difference between dividing from the Church and attempting to correct the faults by which the Church herself has been contaminated. They spoke highly of the Church and desired to pursue unity. And to make sure they were not playing games with the term “Church,” they showed it was nothing new for antichrists to rule the Church in place of pastors.

To prove it, they presented not a few historical examples, and for all appearances their efforts were the edification of the Church. In this respect they could be categorized with many of Christ’s servants whom we (the Roman Church) ourselves included in the catalog of saints. And what about their increasing verbal attacks against the Roman Pontiff, who was reverenced as the ViceRegent of Christ, the successor of Peter, and the head of the Church? They justified themselves thus: Such titles are empty threats and, like bogeymen, should not terrify truly pious men, who should not be afraid to look at and sift out the reality from the nightmare.

It was when the world was plunged in ignorance and laziness, as in a deep sleep, that the Pope had risen to such preeminence; certainly not because he was appointed by the Word of God nor ordained by a legitimate act of the Church, but of his own accord: self-elected. Accordingly, the tyranny he imposes upon the people of God is not to be accepted, if we desire to have the kingdom of Christ safely in our midst." –from John Calvin’s reply to Sadoleto, 1539.

Chris Simonson  6/27/2005

 
Lie not one to another, seeing that ye have put off the old man with his deeds; Colossians 3:9

Pretend Christians will practice such wonderful piety before the camera, but let them come under temptation! If we have malice or envy or wrath etc. against a brother, we should confront him as instructed by our Lord (Leviticus 19:17-18, Matt. 18:15-17). When we tell the truth in love, we love. When we lie, we lie. The old man loves the lie that he is O.K. Other old men pat him on the back and tell him he’s doing well for himself (Psalm 49:18). All the while they are sinking down to hell (Psalm 49:17). Those in fellowship should not have to resort to such duplicity. However, I am not talking about manipulated confessions or snooping into other people’s privacy. This is condemned all ’round (Leviticus 19:16, 1 Thess. 4:11, 2 Thess. 3:11, 1 Tim. 5:13, 1 Peter 4:15, etc.). But if we have ‘put off the old man,’ we should not have to resort to false piety.

Chris Simsonson  6/24/2005
 
For which things’ sake the wrath of God cometh on the children of disobedience. Colossians 3:6

The wrath of God is as real as the love of God. They are not opposing sides of God. God is pure and holy. His wrath and his love are One. He is against all ungodliness of ungodly men that they have committed in their ungodly ways (Jude 15). God’s wrath isn’t coming because he just needs to vent. He hates fornication, uncleanness, inordinate affection, evil concupiscence, and covetousness. He doesn’t merely get steamed up about it. He plans his vengeance against such whom refuse to submit to his holiness (Psalm 7:11). “The children of disobedience” must therefore be very evil; not good persons who just don’t happen to believe in Jesus.

No, God brings his wrath to bear upon those who practice wickedness and we don’t have to pretend there are many so-called Christians who practice things worthy of death. These terrible words are written so that we might flee from the wrath to come and find shelter in the Rock of Ages. We find shelter at the crucifix where man judged God to be evil, and where God submitted to this insanity on behalf of those who thus crucified his Son. God does not punish the wicked because of nothing. Popular, but erroneous, theology teaches that God punishes the wicked solely because he does not “believe in Jesus.” He can be a good man and do good, but God sends him to hell because he rejected Jesus.

This just does not line up with scripture. Check out Romans 2. The corollary to this false teaching is that the “believer” can do any amount of evil and yet he is justified because he “believes in Jesus.” We who are saved are always thankful that Christ delivered us from sin itself, and the effect of sin, death. The mystery of iniquity doth work, but so does the mystery of godliness. We who are delivered always rejoice that God has not appointed us to wrath but to obtain salvation through Jesus Christ our Lord (1 Thes. 5:9)

We should always keep in mind that the wrath of God is perfect, consuming the wicked. We should always keep in mind that we need to seek the ways of the Lord through the mystery of godliness, that is, God in Christ, Christ in us. We should rejoice that God has saved us apart from any good works on our part, and yet, we should fear lest we take this lightly and depart from faith. Praise be to our God for his vengeance which he takes on the ungodly! Praise be to our God for his mercy which he bestows upon the vessels of his mercy! May we partake of this inestimable gift. (To be continued)

Chris Simonson  6/23/2005

 
Colossians 3:5 (continued)...fornication, uncleanness, inordinate affection, evil concupiscence, and covetousness, which is idolatry:

Do we need to explain these? Fornication is a nasty word. We have other, shorter, words to replace it. Yet, this is the way of the flesh. Uncleanness is much tied to fornication. The marriage bed is undefiled and holy before God; all other sexual pleasures are unclean. The unclean mind cannot find pureness; but, all things are defiled. Evil concupiscence means the lust that burns in men’s minds due to their love of the things of this world. Covetousness drives it all, for the love of money is the root of all evil. It is no wonder therefore that it is seen as worship of a false god. This is a very short list. However, it shows us the nature of the things of the flesh.

The flesh that surrenders to fleshly lusts is driven by the fleshly mind. Notice that these “members which are upon the earth” are all tied to desirable fulfillment of the bodily functions. Christians who are covetous are on the same list as perverts who lust after strange flesh? This cannot be. As many of us who are in Christ should therefore kill these things as noxious and predatory things. We should ignore the world that says to be tolerant of these things. Better for us to have never been born. But we have a new life in Christ that says, “I am crucified with Christ, nevertheless I live, yet not I, but Christ who lives in me” (Galatians 2:20). (To be continued).

Chris Simonson 6/22/2005

 
Mortify therefore your members which are upon the earth; Colossians 3:5 (continued)

What a weird word: “Mortify.” And yet, we have no modern equivalent. It means, “put to death.” Because we are dead in Christ, it makes sense to put to death everything that argues against the principle that we are already dead. The main obstacle to faith is our own fleshly desires. Our fleshly mind, our fleshly pursuits, all cry against faith that says, “Ye are dead.” The only solution: Kill them all. When Jesus said, “If your hand offends you, cut it off and throw it from you,” he was referring to this very thing.

This is harsh, so we have to be reminded over and over again that we are already dead in Christ and have great hope that we shall appear with him in glory. Otherwise, we should fail from the pursuit of holiness. How apt to pursue the things of the fleshly mind is the body of flesh! “Your members which are upon the earth” refers to our fleshly body. We were once held by these things because we had no faith that we could be holy through Jesus Christ; but because we have found a new life, we have power to become the sons of God. This involves a lot of mortification. (To be continued)

Chris Simonson  6/21/2005

 
Christ Will Appear.

His appearance has nothing to do with a secret rapture. It will be as though the heavens split open and roll back as an ancient scroll, and thus the earth will no longer be under the curse of corruption. The present earth will simply flee away from the face of the Almighty. The appearance of Christ is thus. Many downplay the magnitude of his second coming. They confuse by saying there is a secret second coming part A, then a different second coming part B and maybe a final wrap after the millennium part C. The Bible teaches that the revelation or appearance of Christ is the final and huge and only coming of Jesus Christ. The wicked will cry for the mountains to fall upon them to hide them from the face of Jesus Christ. The living righteous will be changed, in a twinkling, to be like him. Those who are asleep will come with him. So shall we be always with him, in his glory, revealed with him as his brethren and the children of his Father, our God. Such things are beyond description, but let us nonetheless hope in them, for they are promised to those of us who have faith. (To be continued)

Chris Simonson  6/20/2005

 
Preaching pro-life does not lead to eternal life - Part 2
What is the Gospel we should preach?

The bible says to preach about Jesus and Him crucified. Warn the lost of eternal damnation for all those who reject Christ. Speak of eternal life to those who will listen. Tell them of the law of Moses if they claim to have no sin. The Lord has always blessed and strengthened those who preach His gospel. What other message is there for the lost than how to be found in Christ?

In Paul’s day there were Christians being slaughtered in Jerusalem; the Church was being persecuted. Paul, did not protest against the Roman government, or organize a ‘‘save the persecuted Church’’ march, or encourage the gentiles to publicly preach against such atrocities; instead he preached the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and among the brethren he took up offerings for the persecuted and poor saints in Jerusalem. Likewise, in Jesus’ time there was the issue of Roman occupation and brutality towards the Jewish people; Jesus did not start a movement against Roman brutality; instead he chose the road of obedience to God, which led to the cross.

Strong delusions have come upon the modern church to keep them from preaching the Gospel of Jesus Christ; God promised in the Scriptures that this would occur. The love has grown cold as a result, not only for Jesus but for our own brethren which are being systematically led astray. I am not advocating the horrible sin of abortion in any way, but you cannot humanly reason morality with the lost. They must first come to Christ by the means of the gospel and only through the direct conviction of the Spirit can they turn from their sin. The pro-life gospel is just one in a list of delusions that ultimately sound right and good, and may have moral principles behind them but they do not save one from eternal death.

Steven  6/17/2005
 
Preaching pro-life does not lead to eternal life - Part 1

The pro-life movement has united many denominations together along with some of the cults and Catholicism; many of these groups flat-out reject Jesus Christ as Lord and they add works to salvation. Those in the movement who peach a pro-life-gospel mix take it upon themselves to go beyond what is written in the Gospel, as if God somehow forgot to include anti-abortion sentiments in it for these modern times.

Just recently we met some members of local fellowships while we were out preaching; they had signs typifying mutilation and others were passing out flyers about abortion. No one has ever been saved by preaching pro-life. It is only through the Gospel of Jesus Christ that one may come to salvation; there is no other name by which men can be saved. No one has ever been saved by the name of ‘‘morality’’. In fact, I don't see any of the pro-life doctrines spoken of in the Gospel of Jesus Christ. For years I have carefully watched men come out and represent the pro-life gospel platform, and my observation is that this leads to sectarian, dogmatic distortion of the Gospel, in which they self- righteously justify their iniquities. They think that if they stand out there holding up a grotesquely hideous picture of someone else’s sin, it somehow overlooks their own.

Now I am not saying that the genocide of the 45 million innocent, defenseless, unborn children is not grievous beyond reason and does not attract the Lord’s wrath, but is this issue pre-eminent over the Gospel? Certainly not.

Steven  6/16/2005

 
Reply to a Seminarian Part 2

Someone else replied: Why would there be something wrong with it? How could you possibly cut out that part of the gospel message? People must be confronted with that. Paul certainly minced no words about the truth of God's curse with the false teachers. (Gal 1:6-10) - Joe

-------------------------------------------------------------

To Joe,

I agree. If one does not preach about sin and the consequences thereof, then one turns the grace of our Lord Jesus into lasciviousness and blasphemes the work of the cross. The law itself shows us our wretched and defiled hearts before Christ and thus is a schoolmaster to drive us towards the grace of Christ, repentance and forgiveness of sins.

" But before faith came, we were kept under the law, shut up unto the faith which should afterwards be revealed. 24. Wherefore the law was our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith." Gal 3:23-24

It is God's very kindness that leads us to repentance. Through the greatest demonstration of love, the cross, the forgiveness of sins came to all those who would confess and repent and turn from their vile conditions.

To answer your question from my perspective of who teaches otherwise, it generally is the seeker-sensitive churches in which have brought the lost in among the flock in an attempt to evangelize them and lead them to Christ; whom have had to change the gospel as not to offend those who signed the card saying that they are now a believer, or made some sort of verbal confession, but lack the substance of repentance and obedience which is the result of the conviction of the Holy Spirit. Thus, this nullifies their so-called confession of faith.

This actually seems to be pretty commonplace in today's Christianity. The New Testament church never made a practice to bring the lost in, but went out to the lost, warning of coming judgment, hell and eternal damnation through the power of law of God.

Lord willing, the next time we see Joe Preacher out on the street we should shake his hand and thank him for being obedient to Christ, by the preaching the true Gospel, and then commit ourselves to pray for him.

Steven   6/15/2005

 
Reply to a Seminarian Part 1

Well, Sir, let me spell out my point to the best of my feeble abilities: Let's say I am Joe Preacher, you know that guy out there with a lazy eye and a fifty-yard stare, standing on some chair in a metropolitan area, preaching the Gospel of Christ. I talk about hell, and the reality of such a place for those who would reject Christ. I even throw in a little of Moses' law, you know, thou shalt not have any gods before me, thou shalt not covet, lie, commit adultery.... etc. Would you, from the perspective of one who can read Greek and Hebrew, ( which I respect... probably would come in handy next time I run into the watchtower minions and they insist that they have Greek scholars )... would you consider this effective?

Steven  6/14/2005

 
Church Buildings

Recently I came across an email that Gospel for Asia sent out to update its subscribers. In the email K.P. Yohannan states, "Without a building, congregations are often attacked in their makeshift meeting places. At the same time, opponents of the Gospel ridicule the believers by saying, 'Our gods have a building; the Christian god doesn't."

We, by faith, hope for an everlasting building that God has constructed and in which Jesus is preparing each of us believers a room. (John 14:2) Jesus said, "My kingdom is not of this world. If My kingdom were of this world, then My servants would be fighting so that I would not be handed over to the Jews; but as it is, My kingdom is not of this realm." (John 18:36) God is spirit, those who worship him, worship in spirit. So whether this is done outdoors, under a canopy, or within a building; our God does not have a building. (John 4:21-24)

We who believe are the temples of the Holy Spirit, God has many buildings. (1 Corinthians 6:19) The God of the Heavens is not identified by any structure, He is identified by His Saints; and where they are, He is also. (Matthew 18:20)

After putting our trust in God, are we now to put our trust in buildings?

Matt Simonson  6/13/2005

 
The Evolving jesus

Today’s Jesus is not yesterday’s Jesus. Nor is it the Jesus of the Bible. It is a conglomerate of historical and imaginative images which men instill into their brains, hoping for heavenly blessings (or at least money). This effort of evolving jesuses seems to please God - at least according to the clergy. The modern church has been overrun with Darwinian doctrines as men naturally selected the specious Jesus of their choice. And this all seems to be O.K. with the pastors and priests, as long as the present-day adaptation of specie (mammon) survives in the marketplace. Unlike the real Jesus, these Petri-dish jesuses change with the culture.

The anthropological/psychological Jesus is but one such clone. This religious icon resembles a Hindu pluralistic god more than an historical Jesus who said, “Narrow is the gate and strict is the way that leads to salvation.” When the disciples were given the charge to go and preach Jesus to make more disciples, they weren’t told to adapt Jesus so he would fit right in. Jesus didn’t fit in with the Jews; why should he fit in with the Gentiles? And yet, the present-day Jesus is a pluralistic, universal, ecumenical binding agent more suitable for laboratory experiments than a deliverer from this present evil world. Jesus told us to beware of false Christs.

If one thinks he can spot mutations of Jesus easily just because he ‘has Jesus in his heart,’ he is probably already in the La Brea tar pits of deception. We are told by the real Jesus to be on the alert and pray always, because we do not know our hour of visitation. Peter says our adversary goes about like a devouring lion. I’ll take the unchanging Jesus, the Ancient of Days, who does not need to adapt himself to this world. He made the world in six days - I don’t think I need to figure out how he needs to evolve to suit its whims and vanities!

Chris Simonson 6/10/2005

 
This sounds like new age holistic Christianity

“It is no longer considered correct to view addiction as a moral problem; now it is viewed as an illness. I believe this shift in attitude came about through a growing sense of human compassion and the understanding that judgment and blame have no place at all in an enlightened societal response to problems of addiction. This understanding is clearly true, and a sign of progress in societal altitudes....Through the body we are connected to the earth, and through our spirit we are connected to God. Our soul is capable, if healthy, of having a harmonious connection to both God and the earth. Modern psychology recognizes that the human mind or soul has a conscious part and an unconscious part and that the unconscious part is strongly influenced by the needs and passions of our earthy bodily nature and is therefore not free...”

(From ‘The Doctor Speaks’, by Phip Incao, LILIPOH Autumn 2004, pg 29, A magazine devoted to earth worship and other witchcraft.)

Chris Simonson  6/09/2005

 
I am not a Baptist II

I read about religion in order to know my enemy;
I read the Bible in order to know my God.

I read that Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus,
Spending lives in search of knowledge
Knew not God, nor knew His Son.
Latter Day, Seventh Day, many more that way
Read the stuff their leaders give them
But always pass by simple Scripture
Always learning but never coming
To the knowledge of the truth.
Luckily for me I’m not running
For office therefore not needing
Letters of recommendation nor letters Recommending,

but honest letters Helping others to look around them
Perhaps by feeling for God will find Him
Not in logic, one, two, three we have it
But in true repentance leading
To the knowledge of the truth.

Chris Simonson  6/08/2005

 
I am not a Baptist

When President Nixon was defending himself, he was quoted as saying, “I am not a crook.” Actually, he was a Quaker. President Bush is a United Methodist. However, I heard George defend Muslims saying in so many words that Allah is the same as the Father of Jesus Christ. Christians aren’t supposed to say that unless they are Mother Teresa. And if they did, their pastor should take them aside and explain the simple gospel to them, for the millionth time. I am not here to explain the gospel to George or to the rest of his ken. I am here to exalt in the freedom I have in Jesus Christ. When I am asked, “What church do you belong to?” I can honestly say, “The church of Jesus Christ.” That’s not what people are asking, of course, but then again, their religion consists of a long list of do’s and don’ts ascribed to by their denomination.

My religion consists of finding out what God wants me to do and then either doing it, or asking for his mercy. I consider myself no Baptist, whether First, Southern, American, or Free. I compare not against Pentecostal, Evangelical, Conservative, or Liberal. Orthodox or Catholic I’m not. As Calvinist or Arminian I refused to be classified. If I am judged by others for not talking and acting like a cookie-cutter Christian, that’s because I am not a piece out of an assembly line. That is not to say I think each Christian should be independently-minded and alienated from other Christians. Quite the contrary, we should all be of one mind in Christ. Being a Baptist never helped, that I can tell anyway.

I read about religion in order to know my enemy; I read the Bible in order to know my God.

Chris Simonson 6/07/2005

 
Can you identify with this?

Kathi listened to the sermon on “our present suffering” and could identify completely. It was like the sermon was meant for her. She is in the middle of her trials. The sewer backed up last week, and the plumber charged double for after-hour rates. Then the water company said her neighborhood had to drink bottled water for the next week or so until they had repaired a leak in the main. Her clothes washer has broke down and she has to go to the laundromat until she can buy a new machine. The water heater isn’t working properly. Even the towel she dried off with this morning after her daily shower was harsh and rough because the laundry softener is some cheap watered-down brand.

She grabbed a double-double mocha lite on the way into church and it spilled out just before she got in her vehicle. At least it didn’t spill in the car. Yesterday, the mechanic told her that the water pump in her brand new SUV will have to be replaced. She has to juggle the appointment for this with her daughter’s swimming lessons. Her divorce hasn’t helped. Even though she got the house (and the in-ground pool), she has to keep up the maintenance on it. The swimming pool man is upping his rates. The gardener is upping his rate, plus she just had an automatic irrigation system installed for her new landscaping (her ex-husband never was any good with property upkeep). She is taking her daughter to WaterWorld next Saturday to see her namesake, Shamu, which puts off that trip to Hawaii. Also, her ex lost his job recently and this could be cold water on the alimony she has been using to fund all this. And to top it off, Kathi just signed up with GospelFund and has pledged support to the tune of $30/mo. The brochure said this will help the village to get clean drinking water which will stop most of the disease there.

This is almost as much as her life insurance policy. O, the suffering! What can Kathi do? WWJD? Jesus said, “When the Son of man shall come in his glory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory: and before him shall be gathered all nations: and he shall separate them one from another, as a shepherd divides his sheep from the goats: and he shall set the sheep on his right hand, but the goats on the left. Then shall the King say unto them on his right hand, ‘Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world: for I was hungry, and you gave me food: I was thirsty, and you gave me drink: I was a stranger, and you took me in: Naked, and you clothed me: I was sick, and you visited me: I was in prison, and you came to me.’

Then shall the righteous answer him saying, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and fed you? or thirsty, and gave you drink? When did we see you a stranger, and took you in? or naked, and clothed you? Or when saw we you sick, or in prison, and came to you?’ And the King shall answer and say to them, ‘Most assuredly, I say to you: in that you have done it to one of the least of these my brethren, you have done it to me.’ Then shall he say also to those on the left hand, ‘Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels: For I was hungry, and you gave me no food: I was thirsty, and you gave me no drink: I was a stranger, and you did not take me in: naked, and you clothed me not: sick, and in prison, and you did not visit me.’ Then shall they also answer him saying, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry, or thirsty, or a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison, and did not minister to you?’ Then shall he answer them, saying, ‘Most assuredly I say to you, in that you did it not to one of the least of these, you did it not to me.’ And these shall go away into everlasting punishment: but the righteous into life eternal.”

Chris Simonson 6/06/2005

 
Biometrics and 666

It’s funny, how things work out. Let him who has wisdom count the number of the beast, for it is the number of a man: 666. Biometrics does this very thing. It numbers a man. It measures him, quantifying him for identification and verification. The word ‘biometric’ is coined from the Greek meaning ‘life’ and ‘measure.’ Biometrics reduces a man to a number. The machine identifies him and the machine verifies him: Thus the machine validates him: Thus men bless the beast whose name and number is the number of a man: 666. Biometrics works off two principles:

1. Identification. This determines who a person is, according to the new science. One has to establish a person's identity doesn’t he? (Who am I?). 2. Verification involves confirming or denying a person's claimed identity. (Are you who you claim to be?). Biometrics are limited only by time and money. A person’s fingerprints and DNA are obvious measures for the database. But with the computer, the database can include a person’s spending habits, his viewing habits and other personal preferences known only to him and his hairdresser-host. Biometrics has become a part of our modern life.

Our lives our identified and verified by usernames and passwords galore. The mark (brand) has been used for many years. But biometrics uses the persons’ own characteristics to identify and verify (and validate) him. Thus, he is recognized for ‘who he is’. God recognizes us as sinners, and until we have been branded with Jesus Christ we remain under his wrath. Once reconciled to God and having become his property, we can have the same mortal fingerprints and DNA as before, but we have the promise of eternal life, neither recorded, or recordable by, modern biometrics.

Chris Simonson  6/03/2005

 
Only bad witches are ugly

“Only bad witches are ugly.” This in response to Dorothy’s, “I thought all witches were ugly!” Dorothy had it wrong. She thought that witches were all bad (this part is right), but that they were therefore all ugly. The good witch in the Wizard of Oz doesn’t look bad to us or Dorothy. She is so sweet and lovely. She is ten times better than Billy Graham even. She never stops smiling or sounding or looking like a beautiful, sweet, young grandma. So, there must be good witches and good-looking ones. Proof of this is that since the Wizard of Oz came out, there has been a proliferation of good witches, starting with the hippie movement and its free love message. Now, the churches have to look better and love more than these good-looking witches. The church’s message has to be suped-up and tuned in to the demonic harmony so espoused by the new and loving citizens of the world. Actually, this is not the true church, just a continuation of the false church. “Only false churches are ugly,” I heard a Casual Chapelite say...

Chris Simonson  6/02/2005

 
Band-Aids for Counselors

We hear all the time the wounded healed thus: “We must learn to forgive ourselves and think good of ourselves so we can help the other wounded.” Pastors become counselors to assure us of salvation and forgiveness, no matter that we fester. Therapists become counselors and make us comfortable, coming as Valium angels. Counselors abound who tell us we are loved by God and never mind the true nature of the wound. The O.T. says the pastors have led the sheep astray by giving them false assurance: “They have healed also the hurt of the daughter of my people slightly, saying, ‘Peace, peace’; when there is no peace.” Jeremiah 6:14. There is a ‘slight’ healing. A ‘somewhat’ cure. To the soul that is desperate, every bitter thing is sweet, so a Band-Aid over a festering sore and a Vicodin chaser feels pretty good. For a time. The deep healing only comes when a soul is ready to recognize the wound: Sin. In the O.T. passage above, the problem sin is covetousness. Greed has taken a nation, all of them, from the paperboy to the pope. This is the condition we face today. Many come in the name of the Lord, but they are only pill-prescribers.

These make you feel good, or feel tall so you can fit in. But the problem remains: It is greed. The sin is not dealt with because it seems that our counselors have better medicine than repentance. This way the greed can be covered up with a festive, cartoon-variety Band Aid. If we as a church or as individuals wish to be healed, we must repent of our sin of covetousness. Plain and simple. All other attempts to please God are vain. “But woe unto you that are rich! for ye have received your consolation. Woe unto you that are full! for ye shall hunger. Woe unto you that laugh now! for ye shall mourn and weep. Woe unto you, when all men shall speak well of you! for so did their fathers to the false prophets.” Luke 6:24-26

Chris Simonson  6/01/2005