Please join me today as I take you on an unusual photo gallery.

Looks nice, right?

Gosh, what could have happened?

Ugh, this is starting to look bad!

Really, really bad.

I think this could be the end.
So what’s the moral of this story? Well, cameras and oceans don’t play nice together, so one should be careful (or possibly avoid altogether) standing in waist deep water with a strong current. But that’s free… And so is this: it’s better to confess than to get caught!
Monthly Archives: June 2007
This Is What I Want; That Is What I Do
Imagine X and Y. Two different goals. Neither of which are bad. And neither one is universally better than the other.
Say, for example. I decide that I want X.
X is great. X is good and worth attaining.
I tell my friends I want X. I tell my family the same. I announce that I want X and I’m going to work to get there.
But I act like I want Y. I implicitly do things that lead to Y.
Does this mean I implicitly want Y? Does this mean I am hypocritical in announcing my desire for X? Does this mean that I’m confusing everyone with different words and actions?
What do you think?
This and That: Adding Jesus to What I Already Have
In college, a friend of mine spent a summer in Nepal. She came back with so many great stories and illustrations about people in general. She told stories of people who would believe in Jesus along with the rest of their gods. It was an incomprehensible addition. I thought, “How could you add another religion that doesn’t mesh with what you already believe.” It didn’t make sense. Adding a god that said, “I’m the ONLY way to heaven” didn’t seem congruent with a belief that said, “Be good and you’ll reach nirvana.”
And so I was baffled, and felt pride because my culture was smarter than them. We all knew that wasn’t possible. We Americans are better.
But I doubt that assessment is so true after all. It seems like American Christianity goes something like this: “Yea, I believe in God. And yea, I’m going to heaven and have fun here along the way.” The correlation between Americans and Nepalese isn’t the type of idol we serve, but the existence of important personal idols. Whereas the Nepalese add elements of religions, Americans add Christianity to narcissism and greed. We say, “Sure I believe in God and He has changed my life,” but so many of us would be hard-pressed to describe the change without a large degree of bs and hand-waving. You see, we’ve taken on Christianity like another god in our harem. We seek create a philosophy that is most pleasing to ourselves, while we forget that is not a logical nor reasonable thing to do.
So I ask, “Have you added Christ to your stable of gods?”