The Passing of Our One-Eyed Friend

November 30, 2008

While home theater sconces are really not our style, we probably will be buying light fixtures soon, and it’s looking like a television purchase may be nearer in our future than expected.  Our current television died last night – instantly, without warning. :(   Michael’s been wanting a flat-screen for a while, but we had no good reason to buy one.  We had a perfectly good television (and a gift from dear friends, to boot).  So maybe this will be a good excuse to invest in one.  On the other hand, they’re still pretty pricey, even for one that isn’t really any bigger than what we had.  So, we’ll see.  Anyone have any great insights on the best place to buy one, or how to find a good deal?

Decorating

November 30, 2008

With the sale of the house approaching, I’m taking a closer look at decorating options.  For example, window coverings.  I am not a big fan of blinds.  (Except for wooden or bamboo blinds.  I like natural materials.)  But so many houses seem to come with blinds already installed.  I prefer real curtains, or Roman shades.

Likewise, most houses seem to come with carpeting everywhere (because it’s cheap, I guess).  That’s one thing that’s really exciting about our house.  It has carpet in part of the office, but that’s it.  Everything else is hard-surface floors.  And all of the ground floor, apart from the kitchen and bathrooms, is real hardwood. :)   (Most of the trim is stained wood, too.)

So…I’ve been trying to sort out what I like and where to get it.  I discovered that I really like the fabric that good-quality painters’ drop cloths are made from, so I might someday cover sofa cushions with those.  (New, not used and covered with paint!)  They’re pretty inexpensive as compared to upholstery fabric.  Now to find some inexpensive crate-style furniture. :)

Crazy (and a Contest)

November 28, 2008

I cannot believe that there are people who stand in line for hours in the cold, early in the morning, just to be the first one into a store so they can snatch up a Tickle Me Elmo, or a Cabbage Patch doll, or whatever the toy of the year is.  Crazy!  My sisters and their friends (who joined us for Thanksgiving) have gone out to do some Black Friday holiday shopping, but even they did not go out early this morning.  They left at about 1:30.  :)   Me, I think I will do my shopping online, where I don’t have to fight with traffic!

Did you brave the traffic and other crazy shoppers this morning?  Did you buy something that you’re keeping secret for Christmastime?  (Or have you made a secret purchase in the past?)  Enter it at Ebillme’s Shop and Confess contest for a chance at $33,000 worth of prizes.  (And please enter my blog address as the referrer, if you do.  Pretty please?)

Moving, and Moving, and Moving…

November 27, 2008

One thing that our family is thankful for this Thanksgiving is that all of Mom and Dad’s stuff is now here!  After three moving truckloads, we are all exhausted, and very much appreciating the rest of today! :)   Dad and the girls loaded the truck at their end (where the old house is), drove four hours here, and we all unloaded it, on Saturday/Sunday, on Monday/Tuesday, and again on Tuesday/yesterday.  The exhaustion doesn’t seem to have acted as appetite suppressants for anyone, though – we all ate plenty!  :)   Turkey, and stuffing, and potatoes, and sweet potatoes, and rolls, and green beans, and corn, and cranberry sauce, and rolls, and pie.  Yum!

Does God intend…? part 2

November 24, 2008

In my last post, I promised viable explanations for 2 Peter 3:9 and 1 Timothy 2:3-4.  So, let’s take them one at a time.

The first thing to note about 2 Peter 3:9 is that we rarely hear the whole thing – or even a full sentence – quoted.  Typically, we hear, “God is not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.”  This is actually only half of a thought.  The full verse says, “The Lord is not slack concerning His promise, as some count slackness, but is longsuffering toward us, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.”  See, if you read the verses immediately preceding this one, Peter is addressing the accusation that had been made that God wasn’t really keeping His promise to return, because He hadn’t done so yet.  Important to note in the immediate context is the word “us.”  He is longsuffering “toward us.”  Who is “us”?  Well, who is the letter written to?  “To those who have obtained like precious faith with us…” (1:1)  So the simple explanation here is that God is not willing that any of His elect will perish!  (As a friend very cogently pointed out today, if she stands up in church and makes an announcement that she wants everyone to come to her birthday party, she doesn’t mean everyone in the whole world; she means everyone in the church where she is making the announcement.)

On to 1 Timothy 2:3-4.  This one is a bit trickier, but I think that a careful look at the context yields a viable interpretation for this one, too.  The passage reads, “For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior, who desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.”  Let’s look at the context.  What is the “this” in the first phrase?  Back up for a moment, to the beginning of the chapter:  “Therefore I exhort first of all that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and giving of thanks be made for all men, for kings and all who are in authority, that we may lead a quiet and peacable life in all godliness and reverence.”  Then we come to verse three, where we began.  I think it quite possible that the “all” here refers to “all kinds.”  As in, men of humble means, kings, others in authority, etc.  Now, before you start arguing that “all” means “all,” period, and that it cannot be taken any other way, scoot on over to chapter six, verse ten.  Same writer, same letter.  “For the love of money is the root of all kinds of evil…”  Most translations render it this way – “all kinds.”  This is the very same word used in chapter two, verse four!  Obviously, that does not necessarily mean that “all” in 2:4 means “all kinds,” because the word does often just mean “all.”  It does, however, demonstrate that those “in the know” linguistically see “all kinds” as a legitimate meaning of the word.

To further solidify these “takes” on these passages, let’s see what else the same writers had to say about God’s sovereign election.  Peter refers to his readers as the “elect” according to God’s foreknowledge.  (1 Pe. 1:2)  (This word “foreknowledge” is the noun form of the same word used in 1 Pe. 1:20 in calling Jesus “foreordained.”)  In chapter two, verse eight, he says that those who stumble over Christ are “appointed” to their disobedience.   And again in chapter nine, His people are “chosen.”  Again in 1 Peter 5:13, the church is “elect.”

And what about Paul, who wrote to Timothy?  Where shall we even start?  Paul wrote Romans 9, which clearly spells out that whom God wills, he hardens.  In Ephesians, he says that God “chose us” (1:4) and that he “predestined us to adoption as sons…according to the good pleasure of His will” (1:5).   Again in verse 11, we are “predestined.”  To Titus, he mentions “the faith of God’s elect.” (1:1)  This is just a sampling.

In short, it’s clear from their writings as a whole that both of these writers believed that God either elected (chose) a person to believe in Christ or not.  Why would they then each contradict themselves in one small phrase?