Friday, February 20, 2009

Not Even a Competitor


When the local youth here at CAC started calling me "the Faster Pastor", none of them had any idea that other ministers elsewhere in the world were already called by that nickname. Neither did I.

When I first set up my blog, it was just www.dougjoseph.net. My real name. At the start, it was not the blog of "The Faster Pastor" (although the youth were already calling me that, especially Brother Rusty). When I began to incorporate into the design of my blog the kids' "k-e-w-l" moniker for me, I continued to use the same domain as always.

Today one of the youth, Sister Amanda, said, "I tried to get to your blog by typing "fastorpaster.com" but I got something else." I thought, 'Hey, I wonder if my nickname is available in either .com, .net, or .org?' I said to the youth, "It's at www.dougjoseph.net, but I will try and see if any of the other domains are available."

None of them are available (none of the big three).

But you should see the website and read the story of the real, original "Faster Pastor" in the UK! I never knew he existed until today. I'm not a cheap imitator or a "knock-off." I'm not even a competitor.

I do ride, and I am a member of Azusa Street Riders (a Oneness, Apostolic, Pentecostal motorcycle ministry), but when it comes to the motorcycle ministry of the guy you're about to meet, I'm not even close. Are you ready for this? Here you go. Enjoy!

http://www.fasterpastor.com/

Did I mention the website yet?

http://www.fasterpastor.com/

In case you missed it, here it is again:

http://www.fasterpastor.com

I'm not even a competitor.

PS: By the way, I just sold my big honkin' 1400cc Suzuki Intruder and downsized to a 650cc Yamaha VStar Classic. It's nice, now! We're planning to join with many other Azusa Street Riders later on this year (end of September, early October) for a cross-country ride (basically, the path will be from wherever one lives ... to St. Louis, MO) for the United Pentecostal Church International's annual General Conference. Bro Adam (from CAC) will be joining me, and several others (mostly other UPC ministers from WV). We'll be meeting up with other ASR riders as we go. It's going to be a blast. Brethren, if you ride, sign up with ASR now! It will be (as the kids say) "k-e-w-l."

Chicken a la Benedum - Recipe Summary

The above pic is not of the actual dish; it's just some photo I found that looks pretty close to what the actual dish looks like.

Chicken a la Benedum

(This recipe serves about 4 to 6 people.)

Ok, you may or may not have read the narrative version of the Chicken a la Benedum recipe. But for the benefit of all, here is the summary version of the delicious recipe:

Ingredients:

  • 3 or 4 chicken leg quarters (using 4 requires a very large non-stick skillet)
  • 1/2 large jar of spaghetti sauce
  • 1 can of creamed corn
  • 1 cup of chopped onion
  • 1 cup of chopped green bell pepper
  • About 3 oz. of Coca Cola to sweeten and darken the mix a little
  • About 10 slices of pepperoni, choppsed into small pieces
  • 1 package of spaghetti noodles
  • Optional: Your choice of mushrooms

(Note: The amounts on all the following spices should be "enough to suit your taste.")

  • Garlic powder
  • Oregano
  • Thyme
  • Sage
  • Salt
  • Black Pepper

(Note: Following optional -- but not really!)

  • 1 loaf of Italian bread, sliced, along with some…
  • butter
  • garlic powder
  • parsley flakes (all three above are for the bread, to make garlic toast)

Directions:

  • Boil meat in pot 30-45 min: In a large pot, completely cover the chicken leg quarters with water, and bring to a boil (using a high heat if they were frozen, or a medium heat if they were fresh). Take note of when the water actually comes to a boil.
  • Transfer to skillet, and save broth… After the leg quarters have been boiling for about 30 or 45 minutes or so, turn off the heat and remove the meat, placing it into a large non-stick skillet. (Save the broth in the boiling pot.)
  • Note: You can either de-skin the meat at that point, or leave the skin on. (De-skinning reduces fat content. Leaving it on adds flavor, and lets the individual eater have his or her choice.)
  • Cut some or all of the meat apart (separating leg from thigh) to make it easier to arrange them in the skillet. Ladle out some of the steaming hot broth (from the large pot) into the non-stick skillet (covering the meat less than half way up.)
  • Add/Spice/Season: Liberally cover the meat with garlic powder and oregano, and add some thyme and sage, as well as salt and black pepper (to taste). Add the chopped onion and chopped green bell pepper. Pour in the spaghetti sauce and the creamed corn. Also pour in a little Coca Cola. Finally, toss in the chopped slices of pepperoni. At this point you can optionally add your choice of mushrooms.
  • Cook all this on a medium-high or high heat--turning the chicken pieces over occasionally, as needed--until the meat shows as done when you slice down to the bone on the thick parts. As the sauce reduces, if it gets too dry, just add a little more broth from the pot used for boiling. If you cover it with a lid, it will cook faster, need checked or turned more often, and may not need as much broth added.
  • Spaghetti noodles: Prepare spaghetti noodles separately: Cook up a batch of spaghetti noodles (al dente, of course).
  • Garlic Toast: Don't even think about not having lots of garlic toast (sliced Italian bread covered with butter & garlic powder, sprinkled with parsley flakes, and toasted in the oven).
  • Presentation: The delicious meal is served by laying down a bed of spaghetti noodles covered with your delicious sauce, and topped with a scrumptious piece of the chicken, and bordered by the garlic toast. Shake on some Parmesan cheese, if desired. Mmmmmm, Mmmmmm. Serves 4 to 6 adults.

Teachers Try to Censor This Girl's Pro-Life Speech



Really do like the above video of a 12-year-old Canadian girl's pro-life speech (an entry in a speech contest). And you should read the good article (on the American Family Association's One News Now news service) entitled "Preteen pro-life speech goes viral"

There is also a good article about this on World Net Daily entitled "12-year-old steals day with pro-life speech." They supertitled the article with "The Kids Are All Right" and subtitled it with "Teachers threaten disqualification, but girl chooses to speak against abortion."

Furl? How about Hurl?!

So, I was reading some article and the "bottom-feeder bar" asked me if I "Digg-it" or if I want to "send it to del.icio.us" or... if I want to "Furl"? I'm thinking, with all the sad news of how bad things are getting, someone should invent a new choice. Instead of "Furl" how about "Hurl"... as in chunder, toss one's cookies, throw up, etc, etc ad nauseum. Sigh.

Anyone else frustrated with America being conquered by socialism and marxism? And the glaring illiteracy regarding biblical truth, and the general lack of a biblical worldview?

OK, enough complaining. Do something about it. Teach your kids. As in, YOU, yourself, teach YOUR own kids. Quit thinking the church's efforts will do it for you (it's your job after all), and quit expecting it to be done short-order on weekends only. And quit blaming everyone else for teaching wrong things to your kids, unless you're willing to step up and do something about it.

I'm talking to the Christians here. Each one teach your own kids what they need to know, and prevent someone else from teaching them what they ought not think or believe. Studies show that almost 9 out of 10 kids raised in Evangelical homes are shown to be non-Christian by just one to two years after they graduate from high school. Based on my own research, I say that Apostolic Pentecostals are not doing much better in having our kids stay in truth after they "grow up." Does that make you want to "throw up?" I think any serious study of this kind of statistical failure rate among us would reveal a sad state of affairs. It's time for parents to step up to the plate.

KJV: "And, ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath: but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord" (Ephesians 6:4).

NIV: "Fathers, do not exasperate your children; instead, bring them up in the training and instruction of the Lord" (Ephesians 6:4).

Ryrie commented: "Vs. 6:4 do not provoke. I.e., do not nag or arbitrarily assert authority."

Believers Study Bible commentary has this: "Ephesians 6:4: This verse is a warning to parents not to direct their children toward the wrath of God. Rather, the parent is commanded to rear the child in the "training" (paideia, Gk.), i.e., the nurture, education, and "admonition" (nouthesia, Gk.), of the Lord. "Admonition" has the idea of "discipline" (lit., "to put in mind"), which is to remind the child of faults and duties by teaching him self-control.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Voice of Truth Radio - Family Before Ministry

In this edition of the broadcast: A wonderful interview with Metro Missionary Scott D. Grant, who has been appointed to Montreal, Quebec, Canada. In the interview we discuss (among other things) how that spouse and family come before one's ministry (in priority).

Why discuss this? Some ministers of the Gospel make the mistake of thinking that simply because God Himself comes before spouse and family, that ministry must also. Such is a terrible mistake, and the Bible as a whole neither teaches nor allows for this error.

Check out the latest Voice of Truth radio broadcast, just posted yesterday, at: cac.us.com/voiceoftruth

A new broadcast is posted each week.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Rocky Walking After 5 Years!

One of our church members, Bro. Jim Starkey, has a friend that he raised like a son. The younger man, Rocky, was bitten by a very poisonous spider about five years ago, and the poison caused a terrible infection that left Rocky paralyzed from the chest down. He has not walked at all for five years.

Rather, that is he had not walked in five years, until after God worked a miracle following a 40 day fast that Rocky completed.

Rocky had read somewhere that demonstrating your faith - by (1) giving, (2) praying, and (3) fasting - would touch God. He began to demonstrate his faith in this way. Rocky had completed several 21 day fasts, and each time he regained something (for instance, the ability to lift himself out bed, etc). He declared to his "Dad" (Bro. Starkey) that he just knew that when he completed this 40 day fast, he would be able to walk.

One of the things he had regained earlier was the ability to stand. As he completed the 40 day fast, he began to stand each day, in the yard. On the third day after the fast, the Spirit spoke to him and said, "Envision yourself walking in your mind, and you will be able to walk." He said, "I don't understand." The reply was something along these lines, "Your spirit and your natural body are connected in your mind. Envision it by faith and it will happen. You have to walk in spirit before you can walk in the natural."

Rocky envisioned himself walking, and then he began to walk. Mind you, there have been five years since he walked. Surely his muscles were atrophied. But he and a witness with him testified that he did not walk like a semi-paralyzed person (who would use the upper body to pick up the legs), but rather he walked like a normal man. He did have braces on, and they actually hindered him some. The next day his legs were so sore he could not touch them, for the pain. Mind you, previously, he had no sensation at all!

On the day he walked, after a while he started counting steps. He counted 154 steps taken after he started counting! He is anxious for the soreness to go down so he can walk some more. Praise the Lord Jesus!

09 WV YC -- A Video Diary (Part 1)


We thank the Lord that at least 16 people were filled with the Holy Ghost at the 2009 WV Youth Congress in Summersville, WV, February 12-13. Praise the name of Jesus!

Here is part of my video diary of the event. Part 1 consists of Thursday night. Look here later on for Part 2, which will show Friday night, including the main service and Friday Night Madness at the gym.



Here are some photos I snapped while at the event:














Monday, February 9, 2009

Google Grants "Latitude" to Track Friends, Family

I have a "love-hate" relationship with Google. When they're providing me free services that I really enjoy [and not invading my privacy] then I love it. Whenever they allow for invasion of privacy, I hate it. The following is somewhere in the middle, but serves as an ominous reminder that Google has access to the data.

Google has just released free software that enables ordinary people to track each other using their web-connected cell phones. The new software is called "Latitude." It makes it a breeze to know the location of your friend or family member (by way of encapsulating an accessing of GPS data).

Technically speaking, it uses cell tower triangulation, which means it seeks the three cell towers closest to the person in focus (scary, no?) and combines the data to show where that someone is. (Again, scary, no?) It is available on phones with Internet capabilities, although it does not work on iPhones (yet, but they say that is coming soon). This is being marketed as a tool to help parents keep tabs on their children, but it can be used to find anyone willing to be found.

Check out:
Latitude video on CBS website
Google Latitude on CNET

And Don't Forget Google's Fleet of Camera Cars



In a related tidbit, you may not know that Google also has a lot of "camera cars" all over the place, taking pictures everywhere. These vehicles have special cameras mounted on top, and they are piloted by contracted drivers. (By the way, they don't all look the same. They're being made from many different models of car. Below is just one example of a model that is being used.)



Google's official policy is that their drivers are not to go on private property, but some of their drivers have said that does not match what they were told. I read one report in which the driver said he was told simply to go out and take pictures of stuff. Evidence abounds on the 'net of many instances in which a Google camera car went onto private property, having driven straight past posted signs to keep out, and the cars have taken photos of private residences on private driveways. It seems that Google may be of the "private" opinion that privacy is a thing of the past. All the while promising to respect your privacy.

Check out:
Google Camera Car Detail
Google Streetview Camera Car Fleet Set to Invade America
One Google Camera Car Follows Another

Friday, February 6, 2009

Senate Refuses to Remove Discriminatory Language

The powers that be are cramming the so-called "stimulus" package through so quickly, and there is so much detail buried within it, that Americans and institutions concerned about what's being proposed and passed ... hardly have time to read it before the vote!

In a very disheartening alert message just posted by Jay Sekulow (general counsel for the American Center for Law and Justice) on the ACLJ website, Jay wrote:

I want to let you know about an important - and disappointing - vote that's just occured in the U.S. Senate.

As you know, we supported an amendment put forward by Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC) that would have invalidated language included in the stimulus measure that prohibits higher education facilities that accept federal stimulus funds from permitting religious groups and organizations from using those facilities.

Tonight, the amendment failed. Here's the final vote: 43 Senators voted in support of the amendment - 54 against. That means that the discriminatory language remains in the stimulus bill.

For a breakdown of the Senate vote, click here.

This is a very disappointing development. What’s most troubling is the fact that a majority of the Senate supports a discriminatory provision that prohibits religious activity from taking place in college and university facilities nationwide that take federal stimulus funds. If this language remains in the stimulus package that’s ultimately approved by Congress, we will challenge this provision in federal court by filing suit. This provision has nothing to do with economic stimulus and everything to do with religious discrimination.
To read the second half of the alert, click here.

Obama’s Apology (Good'un @ Doug Wead's blog)

Found a good article. I like this guy, Doug Wead -- so far anyhow.
Click here: Obama’s Apology

President Obama apologized for the tax problems of his recent nominees, and just in time.

Fawn Follows Beagle Home, Through Doggie Door

I can just hear the conversation between the dog and the deer.

Dog: Hey, little one what ya doin' all by yourself?

Deer: Well, my mom was hit and killed by one of those big square things that roll really fast down the black strip.

Dog: So, what ya gonna do?

Deer: I dunno, but I sure am hungry and scared!

Dog: Hey, why don't ya just come home with me? My mom will feed ya!

Deer: OK, so what's it like at your place?
A fawn followed this beagle home -- right through the doggie door -- in the Bittinger, MD area. The owner came home to find the visitor had made himself right at home. This hit the 6 o'clock news big time.




Note: Thanks to my friend, Lorren Godwin (an Elder at our local church) for forwarding this to me. (This story is circulating via email; author unknown. If you are the author, please let me know.)

Why Google is the Go-To Gorilla


Blogging is the new free press. "Google the Gorilla" provides all the modern counterparts for the ancient tools -- ink, printing die / printing plate, etc -- for your new printing press.

Google is always one step ahead. Everywhere that you decide you need to be (each decision made individually), you find that Google is already there. I searched out a good free tool for blogging, and settled on Blogger. Google now owns them. While previously using a different blog software tool (VineType), I had already searched for a good monetization tool, and I chose Google's AdSense service. Also I had searched for a good feed-burner tool, and decided that http://www.feedburner.com/ was the choice for me. Google had just bought FeedBurner at that time. Now my blogging tool, my ad service, and my feed burner are all owned by the same company and all working well to integrate. As the kids would say, "Kewl."

It does not end there. Need mapping? Google. Need a shared event calendar? Google. The list is not endless, but pretty long.

Wherever you decide you need to be, Google is already there. They are "The 800 Pound Gorilla" is this media-rich, info-dense age.

Chicken a la Benedum


Note: This story was originally written and posted on 12/7/2007, back when I was using a different software for blogging. The Benedum family has since added a third child. (Praise the Lord for blessing our church families with children.) Also, the above pic is not of the actual dish; it's just some photo I found that looks pretty close to what the actual dish looked like. :-)

I did not go bonkers over Italian food until I came to West Virginia. But they do it really well here! Now, I'm a big fan of Italian food. Clarksburg, WV is an Italian food mecca. Annually, the city hosts the West Virginia Italian Heritage Festival. Now, after having lived in the state for a combined 14 years or so, I'm already an honorary (adopted) West Virginian. But I cannot yet say I'm a "bona fide" expert Italian chef. However, to hear the Adam Benedum family tell it after eating this dish I invented the other night, I should be up for the nomination.

It all started when I got a hankering (that's a southern word for a strong desire, a yearning) to have some homemade Cajun Gumbo. That's a delicious chicken-&-okra-&-whatever-else stew, based on a dark roux dissolved into chicken broth, to thicken and flavor the broth. (As you may know, I was born in San Antonio, Texas and raised in Shreveport, Louisiana. Now we all know that Louisiana is the home of Cajun Country, and delicious Cajun cuisine. I don't use the word cuisine lightly. Cooking great Cajun food is literally an art form, and some expert Cajun chefs are paid big bucks to do it right.)

To make Gumbo right, you gotta boil chickens. Well, I went to the store to buy chickens and other needed ingredients. They had fresh chicken quarters ("leg & thigh") on sale ($0.62/lb.), and so I bought leg quarters instead of whole chickens. Quarters have a good mixture of meat (dark meat and medium meat, if that's a term?) on them, so one can make just as good a Gumbo with them as with whole chickens.

Anyhow, it so happened (a day or two after the grocery shopping trip) that we invited Adam & Brandy Benedum and their family (they have two cute boys) over for dinner. He is a great brother in our local church who's been helping me a lot around our house, over the last few weeks and months. When we arrived home, I knew there wasn't enough time to complete any Gumbo that night, but I wanted to get the lengthy Gumbo process started anyhow--while trying to figure out whatever else we could cook up for that night's dinner.

I put all 10 pounds of meat on to boil. After the quarters had been boiling for about 30 or 45 minutes or so, I got this idea to invent something. I was winging it. Well, leg-quartering it, actually. Into a huge Teflon skillet I deposited about three of the leg quarters that I plucked out of the boiling pot. I cannot remember if I de-skinned them at that point, but I think I left the skin on. They would have been easy to de-skin then, since they had been cooking for some time. (De-skinning reduces fat content. Leaving it on adds flavor, and lets the individual eater have his or her choice.)

I cut one or two of them apart (separating leg from thigh) to make it easier to arrange them in the skillet. I ladled out some of the steaming hot broth (from the chickens boiling in the big pot) and gave it to the orphans in the skillet. (Covering them less than half way up.) I liberally covered them with garlic powder and oregano, and added some thyme and sage, and salt and black pepper. I added 1 cup of chopped onion and 1 cup of chopped green bell pepper. Then I poured in 1/2 large jar of spaghetti sauce, and 1 can of creamed corn. I wanted corn in the dish, and knew the cream would help thicken the broth. I also poured in about 3 oz. of Coca Cola to sweeten and darken the mix a little. I chopped up about 10 slices of pepperoni into small pieces, and threw those in, too.

I cooked all this on a high heat--turning the chicken pieces over occasionally, as needed--until the meat showed as done when I sliced down to the bone on the thick parts. As the sauce reduced, if it got too dry, I just added a little more broth from the boiling pot.

We cooked up a batch of spaghetti noodles (al dente, of course), and we made lots of garlic toast (sliced Italian bread covered with butter & garlic powder, sprinkled with parsley flakes, and toasted in the oven).

The delicious meal was served by laying down a bed of spaghetti noodles covered with my delicious new sauce, topped with a scrumptious piece of the chicken, and bordered by the garlic toast. Mmmmmm, Mmmmmm. We all enjoyed it immensely. Adam asked what the new dish was to be called. Well, I named it after him and his family. I don't know if Benedum sounds Italian, but the "a la" part does. :-)

Now, don't you want to come to the pastor's house for dinner? To all CAC members: You're officially invited! Just call, email, or hint to get a date and time arranged.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Children: A Blessing or a Burden?

An excellent message (and offer) from the Vision Forum (a great resource site):

Children, Blessing or Burden?
Summary: As the world faces a potential demographic winter of underpopulation, political leaders move to clamp down on babies, and liberal social commentators use the language of hatred and fear-mongering to further anti-family campaigns aimed at proponents of fruitful families, many Christians remain undecided as to whether or not babies are a blessing or burden in troubled times. This e-mail explains the controversy. It also points you to resources that will help you to better communicate to neighbors, relatives, and friends the practicality and blessing of children in tough economic times.

After more than fifteen hundred years, Japanese culture is on the verge of extinction. There are not enough children. And similar fates may be in store for France, Italy, and elsewhere. These nations and others are on the brink of a demographic implosion with far-reaching economic implications — and they know it! There are simply not enough babies being born to maintain their economies.

But they are not alone. In the United States, the birthrate has been experiencing a dramatic and steady twelve-year decline. Despite this fact, last week, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi defended her proposal that an important ingredient of the nation’s $825 billion “economic stimulus package” would include a taxpayer-subsidized effort to prevent the birth of more children. Why? She argues that children are bad for the economy. [For a more in-depth look at this international crisis, click here]

Three Key Issues Addressed

Are babies a blessing or a burden? This is a simple question, but one fraught with tremendous controversy and significant implications for nations and families.

There are really three issues on the table: First, the demographic implications of having babies; second, the practical issues concerning babies and the family during a recessionary economy (or at any time); and third — and most importantly — the scriptural foundations for a Christian worldview of the womb.

What May Happen to America and Other Nations Because of the Dramatic Decrease in Childbirth?

This first issue goes right to the heart of the present culture war: Will we be a self-indulgent nation with little regard for the sanctity of life, or will we recognize the God-ordained blessing of the biblical institution of the family with its emphasis on fruitfulness and the blessing of children?

As a nation, we have chosen the former. Now the question is this: What are the practical implications of our selfishness and disobedience? What happens to a country when the Malthusian dream is realized, and women have fewer and fewer babies?

The ultimate result is a culture-eradicating phenomenon and economic catastrophe called “Demographic Winter” — where the selfishness of a generation of families who refused God’s gift of children leads to a national birthrate that is insufficient to replace its aging population. Don Feder put it this way:

Demographic Winter is the terminal stage in the suicide of the West — the culmination of a century of evil ideas and poisonous policies.

Here is how one demographer described the imminent catastrophe that will result from declining birthrates:

The ongoing global decline in human birthrates is the single most powerful force affecting the fate of nations and the future of society in the twenty-first century. —Phillip Longman, The Empty Cradle: How Falling Birthrates Threaten World Prosperity.

This perspective may be a shocker for those raised during the libertine ‘60s and ‘70s with the message of the Pill and population control, or for those spoon-fed on a diet of Green theology in the ‘90s. It is not comfortable to radical feminists who have made the “right” of a mother to destroy her own child the highest virtue a society can embrace.

But the facts are inescapable.

Winter

And this is the subject of the documentary, Demographic Winter: The Decline of the Human Family, one of the most important and groundbreaking films of the last year, maybe of the last decade. This is the first significant film to explore the most overlooked crisis of our generation: the rapid worldwide decline in birthrates.

The data presented is chilling. Columnist Don Feder summarizes the important issues raised by the film (i.e., how “demographic winter” will impact many areas of our lives):

  • What will happen in the First World as fewer and fewer workers are called on to provide pensions for more and more retirees? At what point will the burden become so onerous that young workers will simply rebel and refuse to support a system that they couldn’t possibly hope to benefit from?
  • How will Russia, which is expected to lose a third of its population by mid-point of this century, defend its borders? If Russia, which occupies the largest territory of any nation, dissolves into enclaves of squabbling ethnic groups, it will destabilize both Europe and Asia.
  • Due to falling birthrates, at some point in the century, the world’s population will begin to decline. Then the decline will become rapid. We could even reach population free-fall.
  • Throughout the course of history, there is no instance of economic growth accompanied by population decline. How can an industrial society be maintained with fewer and fewer workers and consumers? [1]

This film does not pretend to be a Christian film with a biblical analysis, but it is so full of carefully-researched data that is indispensable to this critical culture battle that Christian parents around the nation need to own it, and watch it, and then watch it again.

What Does Managing a Large Household Look Like in the Real World? Can I Really Afford Children?


The Duggars: 20 and Counting!

The second major issue pertains to practicality: Assuming that children really are a blessing and the fruitful womb “is His reward” (Psalm 127:3), how does that concept work in the real world where economic resources are scarce and time is at a premium?

Sometimes people pose the question this way: “I can barely manage and afford a family with one child. How could I possibly handle three or four, let alone (gasp!) seven?”

But there is another question that needs to be asked: Are there practical, economic, and spiritual blessings for the family that flow from an economy of scale?

I believe there are. And these are precisely the types of blessings and benefits that Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar have modeled for all of us in their beautiful new book, The Duggars: 20 and Counting: Raising One of America’s Largest Families — How they do it.

From a practical perspective, this book offers definitive answers. And it is absolutely delightful, transparent, hands on, and full of humor. After reading it, you will walk away loving your own family more and will gain great ideas for household management. My wife gobbled it up:

This is a totally delightful book, easy to follow, and full of personal stories about their life as well as practical, tangible information about THEIR family which can be easily adapted into MY family, or anyone else’s. It is honest, humorous, humble, and completely in earnest. . . . You will read about their life story, from Michelle and Jim Bob’s childhood up to right now, their many businesses, their solution to laundry, education, music, and even food preparation. (Read more of Beall’s review here.)

There is a reason why this family has captured the imagination of America through their top-ranked television show, 17 Kids and Counting. They are communicating a Christ-exalting vision of home. And they are the real deal! A family that loves their children — all eighteen of them. There is so much negativism in the world, but the Duggars are using their life as a large family to show the beauty and practicality of the Christian household to a generation where many children never even experience the blessing of sitting down with their whole family for dinner.

What Does the Bible Say about the Blessing of Fruitfulness?
Does this Apply Today?


Be Fruitful and Multiply

The final issue is the most important one: What does the Bible say about having babies?

For Christians, the Bible is our standard for faith and practice. Everything necessary on the subject of having babies is found in God’s Holy Word. It is both the starting place and the “final court of appeal” for prayerful Christians who desire to make wise decisions regarding the womb.

Related issues include: Why are children a blessing? What does it mean to be fruitful? How does the Bible specifically link low birthrates to national judgment? Does the Bible promote, condone, or encourage baby banning? Is it a good idea to have babies in times of economic hardship?

These questions and others are answered in our CD, Children and the Dominion Mandate, and the book Be Fruitful and Multiply, both of which are included in this week’s special offer. If you have ever found yourself wondering how to respond to such questions, or if you have friends or relatives that disapprove of the number of children in your family, these indispensable tools will help you to use Scripture to reason through the many complex issues which are on the table.

Save 30% on Our New Collection: The Blessing of Children

The Blessing of Children Collection

The Blessings of Children Collection is available now through February 10, at the special price of $42.70 — a 30% discount. The set includes The Duggars: 20 and Counting, Demographic Winter: The Decline of the Human Family (DVD), Be Fruitful and Multiply, and Children and the Dominion Mandate (CD).

This special offer expires February 10, 2009 at Midnight (CST). Order online at http://vf.sparklist.com/t/3367123/6069831/161193/0/, or call us toll-free at 1-800-400-0022.

View The Blessing of Children Collection.


[1] Don Feder, “‘Demographic Winter’ Exposes the Century’s Overlooked Crisis,” March 27, 2008, Human Events

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Origins of "OK"

This little American phrase has gone global in a huge way. People that can't speak English know how to say OK. More people across the globe commonly know how to say OK than just about any other thing, with the only likely exception being that internationally consistent, Judeo-Christian praise word, hallelujah, which means "Praise to Yahweh!" or "Praise you, Jah!" (Yahweh is the best guess of many scholars on how to pronounce the Old Testament name of God, which is often misspelled and mispronounced as Jehovah. More on that in a later post, perhaps.)

Opinions abound on how it started, but clearly it's indigenous to the USA. To cut to the chase: The O and K are initials, but not a lady's. Some historians say they were originally used as a way to deliberately misspell the initials of "all correct" (which ought to be A.C.). But many historians agree on a known connection that is believed to be the major reason that the little saying outlasted all the other odd abbreviations of the time:

The letters stand for "Old Kinderhook", which was a nickname of Martin Van Buren, the eighth President of the United States.

According to the aforelinked Wiki article: "Martin Van Buren was born in the village of Kinderhook, New York, approximately 25 miles south of Albany, the state capital, as the third of five children." And he, "was educated at common schools and at Kinderhook Academy."

According to an interesting article on NPR's site:

So if OK stands for "all correct," wouldn't it be "AC"? Not exactly, says linguist Erin McKean, who points out that the word was intentionally misspelled. Much like the way people on the Internet shorten or abbreviate words when typing, OK was misspelled on purpose.

"For instance, a lot of kids online spell "cool," "k-e-w-l," says McKean, senior editor for U.S. dictionaries at Oxford Press. "They know how to spell cool, but it just looks cooler to spell it "k-e-w-l."

It was cool in certain East Coast cities in the mid-19th century to substitute OK for "all correct." McKean says it was common for people of that day to use inside lingo -- shorthand full of puns, purposeful misspellings and abbreviations. For example, they'd use "SP" for "small potatoes," or "TBFTB" for "too big for their britches."

Other abbreviations faded into obscurity, but the word OK stuck around. One of the reasons it weathered time is because it got a boost from then-president Martin Van Buren.

Van Buren, a native of Kinderhook, N.Y., was popularly referred to as "Old Kinderhook" -- OK for short. Van Buren's 1840 reelection campaign became so heated that the word OK was widely used and abused by both sides.

In fact, to hurt the Democratic Party, an opponent started a rumor that it was former president Andrew Jackson who created OK, as an abbreviation of "all correct." The rumor implied that the rustic Jackson was a poor speller. That explanation for OK wasn't true, either, but it did have staying power. And it helped propel the use of OK even further.

So much, in fact, that it's used all around the world today.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

The Search Continues

Well, my search for which blogger tool to use continues. It has been interesting. I started off with a little known program called VineType. It's made by a single programmer. It's free for non-profit use. (The programmer is a Christian, and he's sympathetic to non-profits.) I bought a license for commercial use of it. The app didn't really work out very well for me.

So, I'm currently experimenting with the free offerings of Blogger.com, which is owned and operated by gargantuan Google. Speaking of which, I found out tonight an interesting tidbit about their name. I'm a bit of a trivia buff when it comes to etymology. I'll have to tell you some time the origin of the expression "OK." Hint: It's not from a woman's name, so quit spelling it as "okay." Anyhow, back to Google's name origin.

Obviously, the word "goggles" refers to eye pieces, and "oogle" refers to looking something over real thoroughly. Not hard to see the combination there for naming a website that's made for looking stuff up. But now think about how very many websites Google has to index. A very big number, yes? Now, we're onto something little known and rather interesting.

According to a NOVA article on the PBS website, "A Googol is 10100, or 1 followed by 100 zeroes, and is the largest named number in the West." Who knew? Some power-Geek at NOVA, apparently.

The author went on to say that, "The Buddhists have an even more robust number, 10140, which they know as asankhyeya."

Since asankhyeya translated into English means "most terrible name for a website", I can see why the bright Geeks at Google didn't choose to try to infuse that big number name into their company moniker. (Who in the West could even say asankhyeya, let alone spell it?)