Thursday 27 February 2014

God's Will ≠ Success

Read this off http://www.kevinathompson.com/dangerous-assumption-gods-will/ which was on my Facebook newsfeed. A fantastic short article by Kevin A. Thompson on God's Will.

I've bold-ed, italicized and centre-aligned the essential, take-away parts of this post. Here goes:

~~~~~~~

He made all the right decisions. He dated slowly, chose wisely, did everything I asked of him in pre-marital counseling, and despite all his wise choices, his wife left him just months into the marriage.

She made all the right decisions. Three job offers were on the table. Her knowledge and ability was recognized by everyone. She prayed, sought wise counsel, and made the best decision she knew to make. Within the year the company failed and she was without a job.

There is a common assumption regarding God’s will. It’s the belief that success is the ultimate sign of choosing correctly. It’s the belief that if you make a decision which honors God, God will honor you with success. It’s a dangerous assumption.

I hear it as people are:

- Debating which job to take. The assumption is that if they chose the right one they will be happy, make money, and experience tremendous success. (See: How Tyler Wilson Made a Good Decision that Cost Him Millions)

- Choosing a spouse. Choose the right one and the marriage is guaranteed to make it.

- Making faith decisions. If they obey God, they assume everything will turn out for the best.

In part, this is true. In the end, God will use everything for our good. Yet the end is a long way off, and between now and then we are not guaranteed health, wealth, and success.

As a matter of fact, it is very possible to make a wise choice and have a bad outcome.

As much as we want to control our lives and guarantee outcomes, they are rarely controllable and never guaranteed.

Of course there is a general principle that good choices lead to good consequences and bad choices lead to bad consequences. Some of life is controllable and some outcomes are guaranteed. Addictions will not end well. Disobeying God rarely benefits in the short-term and will never benefit us in the long-term.

Yet making good choices does not guarantee an outcome we will love. Praying, listening to wise counsel, reading the Bible, and doing everything in our power to make a wise choice does not mean a new job will be easy, that a marriage will be perfect, or that doing what the Bible says will lead to a reconciled friendship or popularity. (See: Karma or Grace)

The best example of this might be a popular verse. For many people, Jeremiah 29:11 is a life verse. The promise of God is that He has a plan for us—a plan to prosper us and not to harm us, a plan to give us a hope and future. It is a tremendous verse.

But do you know the context of Jeremiah 29? It’s in relation to God’s people being in exile. God is reminding His people that even as they suffer, He has not forgotten them. It’s a verse of great hope, but it’s a verse which shows that hope will not come immediately. They would spend 70 years in exile. Entire generations would pass before this verse would be fulfilled. The verse is often the exact opposite of what many people assume about God’s will. (See: How We Respond to Suffering)

Remember, God’s will was for John to be exiled, Paul to be jailed, Jesus to be executed. Why do we assume God’s will for us is to have a great job, a happy wife, and a large bank account?

We have a responsibility to do everything we can to make wise choices and obey God’s commands. However, our obedience will not guarantee immediate success. We are guaranteed that when we obey, a day will come in which we will never regret it.

Obey. And if suffering or failure follows your obedience, don’t be too quick to assume you have chosen wrongly. You obey and leave the outcomes to God.

~~~~~~~

Tuesday 25 February 2014

Man & Nature

Beautiful cartoon-ish video with an interesting perspective which heavily uses hyperbola and satire to illustrate mankind's heinous relationship with nature.

Monday 24 February 2014

The invisible man

Found this mind-blowing picture from this website: http://www.sliptalk.com/2014/02/17/invisible-guy/#.UwrS4GKSw2h.

When you see it, you'll be *MIND-BLOWN*
If you're wondering what's so mind-blowing about this picture...read on and you'll find yourself scrolling back to find out why...haha

Chinese artist Liu Bo Lin is the real invisible man. Using his body as a canvas, he fuses himself into the picture.

On the job for 9 years and counting, I really wonder if his works pay him well. Yes, his works has garnered international acclaim but I also really wonder if his Master's Degree had a huge part to play in his creative art form.

Meet 刘勃麟, the master of art and camouflage...

Liu Bo Lin camouflaging with a rack of magazines
Some of his works can take up to 10 hours to get ready. My gosh. You thought those model photoshoots were time-consuming? You have yet to meet Liu Bo Lin.

The preparation...
  
The outcome.
Imagine this: You are a cleaner of an auditorium or event hall. Late one night, after an event, there you are, all alone, cleaning the floor and chairs in the auditorium, whistling to yourself as you sweep in each fragment of litter. It's late and everyone has left and you suddenly see this...

Is there someone there?
Dammm..I think it'll scare the life out of me. Haha! If he's not an artist, he'd make a perfect horror shoot too. LOL.

Blending into the great wall of China
Well, a good beginning doesn't mean he had a good ending. Pictured below is him - the invisible man - getting arrested.

Invisible man's mugshot in jail.
Now you know what's so mind-blowing about the first picture? Haha. Yep, keep an eye out for detail.

Saturday 22 February 2014

Controversial Advertising Technique

Getting your competitors to advertise for you...A brilliant and witty advertising approach, albeit a little unethical.

This 1minute 17seconds video on DHL's "Trojan Mailing" advertising technique is indeed an ingenious one.

Thursday 20 February 2014

To love at all is to be vulnerable

Found this on this webpage...http://theunboundedspirit.com/this-comic-about-love-will-touch-your-heart/. Fantastic depiction of the vulnerability and beauty of love.


Wednesday 19 February 2014

Rise in couples who split within 5 years

Saw this on Straits Times breaking news: http://www.straitstimes.com/breaking-news/singapore/story/rise-couples-who-split-within-five-years-20140216.

Indeed it's breaking news: vow-breaking, commitment-breaking, heart-breaking news. Here's the excerpt:
"The first five years of marriage are proving a challenge for more Singapore couples - that is when partners stray, and a rising number of marriages break down. 
A study on straying couples by Touch Family Services found that slightly more than half the 164 respondents polled had affairs within five years of marriage. For one in three, the affairs happened in the first two years of married life. 
The number of marriages which ended in divorce under five years rose from 272 in 1980 to 1,268 in 2012. 
But those married for five to nine years continued to make up the largest group of divorcing couples over that period - 617 in 1980, and 2,084 in 2012."
Ohhh, do mourn the lost art of commitment, discipline, love, trust and communication. In this predominantly relativistic, hedonistic and nihilistic world we live in, things will only get worse...never better.

As we denounce the "old", "traditional" and "conventional" way of doing things without actually asking "why" at deeper levels, we're simply heading for destruction.

We live in a time where we know so much - information all at our fingertips - yet understand so little. Bless this generation Lord and may Your call in my life to see this generation turn back to you come to past soon.

I remember this phrase from the song "Gone" by Switchfoot that says:

"...we got information in the information age but do we know, what life is?
Outside of our convenient Lexus cages..."

If you're free, do give this song a listen. It's a fantastic song about life about how life is just so fleeting and what really matters in life. Here's the lyric video below :)

Saturday 8 February 2014

We were made to be lovers

Reading this book called "UN-Christian" by David Kinnaman now. He's the president of "The Barna Group" that provides research and resources that facilitate spiritual transformation in people's lives.

For this book, this organization did in-depth research on a few thousand Americans (by age group and by belief group), asking them about their experience and impression of Christianity.

Yup, this paragraph really hit me and I think it really defines what Christians are to be. It's found toward the end of chapter 6 "Sheltered". Lemme space out the sentences...

~~~~~~~

We are only asked to love, to offer hope to the many hopeless.

We don't get to choose all the endings, but we are asked to play the rescuers.

We won't solve all mysteries, and our hearts will certainly break in such a vulnerable life, but it is the best way.

We were made to be lovers, bold in broken places, pouring ourselves out again and again until we're called home.

~~~~~~~

We were made to love and to exhaust ourselves in loving - to pour and pour and pour...And we can only pour when we are filled...filled by an infinite, perfect source of love that will never run dry.

Just as I was typing this post, I came across this tweet on my twitter feed which also really spoke right to me:

"When you walk in love, you give up your right to be right."
RT @PrayInFaith 

This tweet really spoke to me because I seldom give up my right to be right. When I'm right, and when you're wrong, I make sure the right and wrong distinction is made perfectly clear.

This irks people. Yes, it's their pride that refuses to admit that they're wrong. Everyone has pride. But love triumphs all.

Showing love by giving up the argument or letting people have their way (discretionary) is a thousand times more powerful than showing them that they're wrong and driving home the right-ness of your righteousness.

Yup, this is one area I really need to work on. My unwavering adherence to my definitions and philosophies (which stands unbeaten) are sometimes a barrier to my show of love...

So help me Lord, soften my heart, lubricate it with Your perfect, unfailing, unending and steadfast love. Lemme end off with a few verses.

"Let all that you do be done in love."
1 Corinthians 16:14

"Above all, keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers a multitude of sins."
1 Peter 4:8

"Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God. Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love."
1 John 4:7-8

Tuesday 4 February 2014

God, life and heaven

If only things were this simplistic. But nevertheless, the idea behind this comic is somewhat true in the Christian context.


Sunday 2 February 2014

Do guys ever really get over their 1st girl...

Read this article "Do guys ever really get over the first girl to break their hearts?" on Elite Daily and felt it had rather good descriptions.

Here's the full article if you desire its full load: http://elitedaily.com/dating/sex/do-guys-ever-really-get-over-the-first-girl-to-break-their-hearts/. But not everything on the article sounds agreeable to.

As for this post on my blog, these few excerpts are strikingly the most pertinent illustrations for me...

~~~~~~~

I don’t believe any man ever fully gets over her. Although we know she isn't “the one", and though we know it wouldn't work out even if we tried again, she still remains the fullest memory we have of love; for this reason, she will never be entirely forgotten.

It’s not being the first love that makes the shadow haunt you long after she’s moved out of your life; it’s the love that cuts the deepest, leaving an irreversible scarring. The relationship was very emotional, fluctuating from intense love to intense distaste, to a certain feeling that can only be described as numbing.

Regardless, these girls remain a part of us for the rest of our lives. They are what we base and compare all subsequent relationships to. They are whom we compare a potential new partner to when considering a new relationship. They are the standard that all men live by as far as love and relationships go. The reason this doesn’t change is because the woman we can’t let go of no longer actually exists. Who we remember is not the woman she now is, but rather, a woman she once was.

She is a ghost we keep alive and go back to when things get difficult — the hope for better days that keeps us going.

~~~~~~~

Lemme end this post with this tweet by @thegooglefactz that I think is altogether true:

"Psychology says, you never really stop loving someone; you either never did, or you always will."