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The mindset of new college freshmen August 19, 2008

Posted by questcollegeministry in news, young adults, youth culture.
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It’s that time of year again.  Every August, Beloit College publishes the Mindset List.  The list provides set of things that are, and often have always been, true for people who are entering college that year.  The goal of the Mindset list is to provide a look at the cultural touchstones that have shaped the lives of students who are beginning college.  To the rest of us, it also serves as a reminder of the changing frame of reference of the younger generation.  Here are some highlights from this year’s list:
·        The class of 2012 has grown up in an era where computers and rapid communication are the norm, and colleges no longer trumpet the fact that residence halls are “wired” and equipped with the latest hardware. These students will hardly recognize the availability of telephones in their rooms since they have seldom utilized landlines during their adolescence. They will continue to live on their cell phones and communicate via texting. Roommates, few of whom have ever shared a bedroom, have already checked out each other on Facebook where they have shared their most personal thoughts with the whole world.
·        It is a multicultural, politically correct and “green” generation that has hardly noticed the threats to their privacy and has never feared the Russians and the Warsaw Pact.
·        Sammy Davis Jr., Jim Henson, Ryan White, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Freddy Krueger have always been dead.
·        Harry Potter could be a classmate, playing on their Quidditch team.
·        Since they were in diapers, karaoke machines have been annoying people at parties.
·        GPS satellite navigation systems have always been available.
·        Gas stations have never fixed flats, but most serve cappuccino.
·        Universal Studios has always offered an alternative to Mickey in Orlando.
·        Grandma has always had wheels on her walker.
·        WWW has never stood for World Wide Wrestling.
·        Clarence Thomas has always sat on the Supreme Court.
·        Schools have always been concerned about multiculturalism.
·        Wayne Newton has never had a mustache.
·        IBM has never made typewriters.
·        Roseanne Barr has never been invited to sing the National Anthem again.
·        There has always been Pearl Jam.
·        The Tonight Show has always been hosted by Jay Leno and started at 11:35 EST.
·        They may have been given a Nintendo Game Boy to play with in the crib.
·        Authorities have always been building a wall across the Mexican border.
·        Lenin’s name has never been on a major city in Russia.
·        Macaulay Culkin has always been Home Alone.
·        Their parents may have watched The American Gladiators on TV the day they were born.
·        Caller ID has always been available on phones.
·        Soft drink refills have always been free.
·        Windows 3.0 operating system made IBM PCs user-friendly the year they were born.
·        Muscovites have always been able to buy Big Macs.
·        The Hubble Space Telescope has always been eavesdropping on the heavens.
·        Michael Millken has always been a philanthropist promoting prostate cancer research.
·        Off-shore oil drilling in the United States has always been prohibited.
You can read the whole list here.

The full extent of humility August 11, 2008

Posted by questcollegeministry in Bible, Quest, christianity, following God, spirituality.
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Last week at Quest we continued our discussion about humility.  This time, we looked at a couple of well known stories.  First we talked about Jesus turning water into wine at the wedding in Cana, and then we discussed Jesus feeding of the 5,000.  While these stories are talked about often, we don’t always look at them from the perspective of humility.  However, once you start thinking about how you can see humility in action in these stories, you can see it at work on several levels.

Here is some of what we talked about:

  • Jesus is humble in the way that he responds to his mother’s request.  When Mary learns that the wedding feast is out of wine, she knows that Jesus can take care of the problem.  Jesus responds by asking why she has come to him because his time had not yet come.  (John 2:4).  While he seems to be indicating that it isn’t time for him to start his public ministry yet, he honors his mothers request.  This demonstrates humility because he is willing to do what Mary asks, even though it might not match his timing for doing things publicly.
  • This is a big miracle.  Jesus isn’t just turning a pitcher of water into wine.  He has the servants fill 6 jars, each holding between 20 and 30 gallons.  In other words, he is creating somewhere between 120 and 180 gallons of wine.  Yet he does it very quietly.  The only people who knew what had happened were Jesus, Mary, the servants who filled the water jars, and Jesus’ disciples.  Almost no one even knew that there was a problem with the wine running out, let alone that the problem had been fixed.  Even if he didn’t want to actually broadcast the miracle, Jesus could easily have said something like “I’ve got this taken care of, you don’t need to worry about it any more.”  That is what a lot of people would have done.  It is easy to want people to know what we have done, even if we don’t want them to make a big deal about it.  But that isn’t being humble.  Jesus shows true humility.  He doesn’t even create a miracle that everyone will know about, even if they don’t know who did it.  Instead, he takes care of the problem in a way that no one will recognize what actually happened.
  • In the feeding of the 5,000, we see a similar thing.  Jesus takes 5 loaves and 2 fish, and very quietly turns them into enough food to feed everyone.  He doesn’t announce what he is doing.  He doesn’t tell the people who are eating where the food came from.  It is only the disciples (and possibly only Philip and Andrew) and the boy who donated the lunch that knew what was going on.  We again see Jesus not trying to take any kind of credit for the miracle.  Instead, he performs the miracle in a way that people won’t know what he had done.
  • Jesus even goes one step further.  Once the people figured out what Jesus had done, they recognized that he must be “the Prophet who is to come into the world,” and they wanted to make him a king by force.  (John 6:14-15).  Jesus responds to this by running away from the crowd and withdrawing to a mountain by himself.  Here we see humility taken to the extreme.  Jesus isn’t just trying to avoid public attention for his miracle.  When the people respond by trying to force honor on him, he doesn’t let them.  Often, even when we try to be humble, when people try to make a big deal out of what we have done, we eventually respond by saying “yeah, you’re right.  It is kind of a big deal.”  We allow people to give us honor, even though we weren’t actually looking for it.  Jesus demonstrates the ultimate in humility by refusing even that honor.

Jesus doesn’t just act humbly.  He is humble.  When he does big, impressive miracles, he isn’t looking for credit or honor from people.  Even when people try to give him that honor anyway, he still refuses it.

Often, even when we are acting humbly, we are still hoping that someone will notice what we have done and to give us some credit for it.  The truth is, as long as we are hoping that we will receive credit, even if we aren’t actively trying to get it, we are not truly being humble.  Yet if we are trying to be like Jesus, we should try to be humble like he was humble.  And that means not caring about whether or not we receive credit for the things we have done.

Being saved from our sins August 7, 2008

Posted by questcollegeministry in Bible, books, faith, following God, spirituality.
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I’ve started reading Crazy Love by Francis Chan.  I’m about 1/3 of the way through the book, and I really like it.  I’ll blog more completely about it once I’m done, but there was something I read just as my train was pulling into the station this morning that really struck me.
 
He said, “Lukewarm people don’t really want to be saved from their sin; they want only to be saved from the penalty of their sin.” (Chan, Francis.  Crazy Love.  (Colorado Springs, Colo.: David C. Cook), p. 68.)
 
This got me thinking about the difference between being saved from our sins and being saved from the penalty of our sins.  The American Evangelical church often puts the emphasis on Jesus’ work in taking on himself the penalty for the sins of everyone.  It is clear from the Bible that Jesus did this, and that if we have faith in Jesus we no longer have to pay the penalty for our sins.
 
I think that the problem comes when we begin to think that the penalty is the only thing the Bible means when it says that Jesus will “save his people from their sins.“  There is so much more to it than that.  Being saved from the penalty of sin is certainly a part, but only a part.  It also implies that we will be saved from committing the sins in the first place.  It means that we will be saved from the consequences in the next world, but it also means that we will be saved from the consequences of our sins in this world.  
 
Too often, followers of Christ focus almost exclusively on getting to heaven and how wonderful it will be once we get there.  When we do that, it becomes easy to forget that we should be having an impact on the world we are living in, here and now.  If we are truly following Jesus, we should try to do everything we can to erase the affects of sin in the world we are currently living in, not just in the next one. 

Band or ice cream? August 6, 2008

Posted by questcollegeministry in humor.
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Here’s a little fun for your morning. I came across this quick little 10-question quiz. It will provide you with a name, and all you have to do is guess whether it is the name of a discontinued flavor of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream or the name of a band that can be found on Myspace. I got 50% right. You can take the quiz here.

Enjoy.

It’s a crime I tell you August 5, 2008

Posted by questcollegeministry in humor, news.
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According to this article, Reginald Peterson recently walked in to a Jacksonville, Florida, Subway restaurant and ordered a spicy Italian sandwich.  The worker preparing his sandwich aparently forgot to include the sauce.  Peterson must have thought that this was a crucial part of his sandwich.  So he did what anyone in his position would do.
 
He called 911.
 
He demanded that officers come to the restaurant and force the workers to make his sandwich correctly.  Amazingly, the police did not hurry to Subway to address the situation.  So Peterson did what anyone else would do.
 
He called 911.  Again.
 
This time police did show up.  They tried to calm Peterson down and explain the proper use of 911.  When that effort failed, Peterson was arrested for making false 911 calls.
 
I’m not sure which is more incredible to me, the fact that somebody actually thought “I can’t believe they messed up my order; I’m going to call the police,” or the fact that the police actually showed up.

Not a means to an end August 4, 2008

Posted by questcollegeministry in Bible, Quest, christianity, following God, spirituality.
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At Quest recently, we have been talking about humility.  It is kind of a difficult topic.  We all recognize humility when we see it in others.  But putting humility into practice in our own life is more difficult.  Sure, we can take actions displaying humility, but acting humbly and being humble aren’t quite the same.
One of the reasons, and perhaps even THE reason, why God values humility is because God himself is humble.  God, the creator of the universe, could certain demand that people follow his will.  In fact, he could force us to if he wanted.  But he is humble enough to allow us to choose whether or not we want to follow him.  I can think of no greater display of humility.
Similarly, Jesus displays humility throughout his life.  At the very beginning of his ministry, when he was at the wedding in Cana, his mother knows that he has the power from God to solve the problem with the lack of wine.    Yet Jesus is reluctant to display that power.  When he does become involved, he does it in the way that will result in the least uproar and attention to himself. 
Just a few chapters later, after the feeding of the 5,000, the people want to make Jesus into a king.  Not only is this not what Jesus wants, John 6:15 tells us that he went to a mount all by himself so that the people wouldn’t be able to do it. 
 
We can also see this humility in the story of Jesus washing his disciples’ feet.  This point is particularly driven home when John tells us that Jesus took this action at the moment when he know that God had put all things under his power(John 13:3).   Jesus is aware of his power, and it is at that moment that he acts humbly.
When we discuss humility, we often focus on the rewards of humility.  For example, there are several places where Jesus tells us that those who humble themselves will be exalted, and both James and Peter tell us that if we humble ourselves, then God will lift us up.  However, as soon as we start focusing on the rewards, humility simply becomes a means to an end.  People want to be exalted, and they see acting humbly as the way to get to that end within the kingdom of God.
I am convinced that this kind of thinking misses the point.  Humility isn’t a means to an end.  It is the end itself.  A truly humble person doesn’t care about being exalted.  That kind of attention and recognition is something that others do.  The humble person isn’t looking for it, and is probably embarrassed when it happens.  Someone who is trying to be exalted by being humble isn’t really being humble.  We shouldn’t be trying to be humble so that we can be exalted.  Instead, we should be trying to be humble because Jesus is humble, and our goal should be to try to be as much like Jesus as possible.  If we are successful, we will be exalted because we have become more Christ-like.  However, at that point we won’t care about it because humble people aren’t interested in personal honor or glory.