Archive for September, 2009

Stop Gossip In Its Tracks

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Gossip and slander is a cancer root in a church that needs to be nipped as soon as it is uttered, but all too often we fall into the trap of going along with it. Perhaps it is our curiosity on what might be said about another good or bad, or perhaps it is just our flesh seeking the desires of the flesh. Whatever the reason, we need to not let it grow.

I bring this up because I watched “The Preacher’s Wife” with Denzel Washington (Dudley the Angel) last night. I had been resisting watching this movie for some time because the trailer makes it out to be something it is not. However, I happened upon it the other day and what I saw was good and intrigued me so I thought I would watch and see. I was pleasantly surprised. Yes, there are some Hollywood fumbles in it as it gets the theology wrong about angels. But I can look past that and see the movie for what it is.

That said, there was a moment in the movie shortly after Dudley first meets the pastor he is sent to help and receives the cold shoulder where he inadvertently begins something that could be gossip or slander. The scene went something like this (and I am doing this from memory so I might not get all of the words right, but the intention is).

Dudley: You know Pastor Biggs?

Vendor: You mean this man (points to a picture of the vendor and the pastor).

Dudley: Does he strike you as stubborn.

Vendor: When my wife was in the hospital for her surgery he was there every night.

Dudley: But I…

Vendor: And he baptized all five of my children. (Takes money out of the cash draw, takes the pizza back, and handles the money back to Dudley). Now, you go and get out here.

This scene was a brilliant example of exactly what we should do when we hear gossip or slander especially when it is about the leadership of our churches. We should stop it in there tracks. We should say something along with the Vendor like this:

Someone: Come here.

You: What?

Someone: Did you hear about what the pastor did?

You: Are you kidding me. My pastor who has dedicated so much to enriching my life with Christ.

Someone: Yeah, but I heard that…

You: No yeah buts, that’s the man that baptized my kids, prayed for me when I was down, and has always been there for me when I needed a hand no matter how much was going on his life. Now, you take what you have and get.

This is the way we all should be and a stellar example of what Jesus would want. Just take a look at what the Bible says about gossip.

13 At the same time they also learn to be idle, as they go around from house to house; and not merely idle, but also gossips and busybodies, talking about things not proper to mention.

- 1 Timothy 5:13-14

Let us all strive to not gossip or slander, but to take up what the vendor in this movie did and defend those who labor so hard amongst us for our benefit.

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Get Out Of Jail Free

Saturday, September 19th, 2009

I read this article on ABC News site and I was amazed. Have a read yourself as I have included the text.

Get Out of Jail Free: Monopoly’s Hidden Maps

It’s a story that will forever change the way you think of the phrase, “Get Out of Jail Free.”

After years of Boardwalk and Park Place, Monopoly gets a makeover.

During World War II, as the number of British airmen held hostage behind enemy lines escalated, the country’s secret service enlisted an unlikely partner in the ongoing war effort: The board game Monopoly.

It was the perfect accomplice.

Included in the items the German army allowed humanitarian groups to distribute in care packages to imprisoned soldiers, the game was too innocent to raise suspicion. But it was the ideal size for a top-secret escape kit that could help spring British POWs from German war camps.

The British secret service conspired with the U.K. manufacturer to stuff a compass, small metal tools, such as files, and, most importantly, a map, into cut-out compartments in the Monopoly board itself.

“It was ingenious,” said Philip Orbanes, author of several books on Monopoly, including “The World’s Most Famous Game and How it Got That Way.” “The Monopoly box was big enough to not only hold the game but hide everything else they needed to get to POWs.”

British historians say it was effective enough to help thousands of captured soldiers escape.

So how did a simple board game end up in a position to help out one of the most powerful military forces on the planet? Silk and serendipity.

Silk Maps Were Key Escape Kit Elements

Of all the tools in a military-grade escape kit, the most critical item was the map. But paper maps proved too fragile and cumbersome, said Debbie Hall, a cataloguer in the map room at the Bodleian Library at the University of Oxford in Oxford, England.

For hundreds of years, even before World War II, silk was the material of choice for military maps, Hall said, because it wouldn’t tear or dissolve in water as easily as paper and was light enough to stuff into a boot or cigarette packet. Unlike maps printed on paper, silk maps also wouldn’t rustle and attract the attention of enemy guards, she said.

“Initially, they had some problems printing on silk,” Hall said. “It’s quite technically challenging.”

But then MI9, the British secret service unit responsible for escape and evasion, found the one British company that had mastered printing on silk: John Waddington Ltd., a printer and board game manufacturer that also happened to be the U.K. licensee for the Parker Bros. game Monopoly.

“Waddingtons in the pre-war era was printing on silk for theater programs. For celebration events for royalty and that kind of thing,” said Victor Watson, 80, who retired as chairman of the company in 1993. “It made a name for itself for being able to print on silk.”

He was just a child during the war but said his father Norman Watson, president of the company at the time, worked with British secret service to embed the maps in Monopoly games.

He said a secret service officer named E.D. Alston (known around Waddington as “Mr. A.”) used to come by to place the orders in person.

“Because he was in the secret service, I never knew who he was,” Watson said.

ht monopoly ww2 090917 main Get Out Of Jail Free

Maps, Compasses, Tools Hidden in Monopoly Boards

Watson said his father formed a small division of the company that first printed silk and rayon maps for the British military and later embedded escape kits in hundreds of Monopoly games.

Before leaving for missions, British airmen were told that if they were captured, they should look for escape maps and kits in Monopoly boards and other games delivered by charity groups. They were told that “special edition” Monopoly sets would be marked with a red dot on the free parking space.

Watson said that in addition to the concealed compass, tools and maps, real bank notes were hidden under the fake money.

During the war, the Official Secrets Act prevented anyone involved from disclosing the plan, and Watson said his father was concerned that the company could be targeted by the Germans if they were tipped off

“It was very special and very secretive,” Watson said, adding that he didn’t learn about the company’s role helping the military until years later.

Different Maps for Different Regions

Waddington printed six different maps that corresponded with regions surrounding six different German camps, Orbanes said. Monopoly kits bound for a camp in Italy, for example, would include a map of Italy and Italian currency (lira).

To make sure each set reached its destination, the secret service devised another code.

“Each game was pinpointed as to the camp it would go to,” Orbanes said. To innocuously tag each board game, a period was added after different locations on the board.

A period after “Mayfair,” for example, meant that the game was intended for Norway, Sweden and Germany. And a period after Marylebone Station meant it was a game destined for Italy. (It being a British version of game, London streets replaced the Atlantic City streets used in the original American version.)

ht ww2 monopoly 090917 mn Get Out Of Jail Free

Hundreds of Thousands of Silk Maps Helped POWs Escape During WWII

While “Mr. A.” may have been responsible for bringing the war to Waddington’s door, map experts credit another MI9 officer, Christopher Clayton Hutton, with hatching the master plan.

“He put two and two together,” Hall said, adding that Hutton was likely not alone in implementing it. “He was the first who had this idea to get maps into camps concealed in board games. It looks innocent, they wouldn’t arouse any suspicion… it just looked like someone was being charitable.”

Hall and others familiar with the Monopoly maps say not wanting to compromise the integrity of the Red Cross, the secret service created fake charity groups to smuggle the games into the German camps.

Barbara Bond, Pro-Chancellor at the U.K.’s University of Plymouth who is writing a book on silk maps, said Monopoly games weren’t the only vehicles used to conceal escape maps. Decks of cards, the board game Snakes and Ladders and pencils also concealed maps for prisoners.

“There was a whole industry going on,” she said.

During the war, hundreds of thousands of silk maps were used to help prisoners escape. And she said it marked a change in the way the military viewed POWs.

During World War I, she said, “If you were captured in battle that was it.”

But after Winston Churchill and others shared their experiences as POWs, she said, the perception of them changed.

“The POWs could still do a job,” Bond said. “Not only was it their duty to fight if they were captured, it was their duty to escape.”

The silk (and rayon) maps and the clever ways they were distributed, she said, reflected that philosophy.

All ‘Special Edition’ Monopoly Sets Destroyed

Though silk maps from that era exist in libraries, homes and museums around the world, none of the original rigged Monopoly sets still remain.

After the war, everything was destroyed, Watson said.

But though the games themselves are gone, their legacy is a source of pride for the makers of Monopoly, past and present.

“Since Charles Darrow created Monopoly in the 1930s, the game has had a rich and interesting story. The use of Monopoly by the British government to sneak maps, money and supplies to prisoners of war during World War II is a little-known, but important part of our history,” said a spokeswoman for toymaker Hasbro, Inc. “We are always honored when this iconic game becomes an important part of the fabric of a family’s, or a country’s, history and memories.”

In the 1970s, Watson had the chance to meet a few former POWs who actually used Wadddington’s maps to escape from a prisoner camp at Colditz Castle, near Leipzig, Germany.

“It was really exciting,” he said. Although it’s impossible to know precisely how many prisoners escaped with the help of the hidden maps, experts estimate that about 35,000 members of the British, Commonwealth and U.S. forces who were taken prisoner during the war returned to Allied lines before the end of the war.

“We reckon that 10,000 used the Monopoly map,” Watson said.

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12 Things You May NOT Know About Me

Friday, September 18th, 2009

I saw this on the Trey Morgan blog and thought this was a neat idea. So, here we go.

1. My Favorite Movie: (Uh…there are a few…)

  • Comedy – Galaxy Quest
  • Action – Iron Man
  • Drama – Ever After
  • Sci-Fi – Star Trek (the new movie)
  • Series – Star Wars
  • 3D Animated – Wall-E
  • Fun Movie – A Knight’s Tale
  • Chick Flick – The Notebook

2. My Favorite Restaurant:

  • Of All Time – Texas de Brazil (The best restaurant created).
  • Steak House – Saltgrasse
  • Mexican Food – Abuelos
  • Pizza – Ti Amos (although you guys just can’t make real pizza here in the south)
  • Deli Style Food – NYPD
  • Fast Food – Whattaburger

3. Bands/People/Shows I Have Seen Live In Concert:

  • Tina Turner (before I was saved)
  • Wayne Watson (first christian concert)
  • Carman (volunteered as an usher to help with offering and was fun)

4. Preachers That Are Currently Mentoring Me Through Materials (Books, CDs, Podcasts, Videos, etc):

5. The Coolest Places I’ve Ever Been:

  • Disneyworld
  • Sea Island, Georgia
  • Montreal, Canada

6. Some Places I Want To Visit One Day:

  • The Bible lands
  • Neuschwanstein Castle, Bavaria Germany (with my wife because this is her favorite castle)
  • Hawaii
  • The West Coast
  • Egypt (to see the pyramids)
  • Greece and Italy (to see the ruins)
  • Israel (to see where Jesus walked)

7. Some Things I Want To Do One Day:

  • See the Holy Lands
  • Preach God’s Word
  • Take my family to Disneyworld
  • Take my family on any vacation (as I have not been able to yet)
  • Be in a movie

8. Things I LOVE To Do Now:

  • Spend time with my family (playing games, watching movies, whatever)
  • Dating my wife
  • Talking with my wife
  • Play the Wii
  • Play board and card games (but so hard to get people to play)
  • Attend Church (just for the fun of it!)
  • Listen to my kids play music
  • Read to James

9. Some Things I Want To See Before I Die:

  • I want to see God.
  • I want to see my kids grow up to serve the Lord
  • I want to see another planet (I know pie in the sky, but I really want to see one)
  • I want to see space up close (again pie in the sky, but I would love to travel in space)
  • I want to see Christian films take it up a notch and become the A-List movies
  • I want to see my whole family (full extended and everyone) saved
  • I want to see God heal people in my shadow

10. Some People I Would Love To Hang Out with for a Day:

  • Jesus Christ
  • Kenneth Copeland
  • Kirk Cameron
  • Bill Earley (it would be great to spend a day hanging out with my pastor)
  • Sarah Palin (I think she would have been a great vice-president)

11. Some Things That Keep Me In Awe:

  • That God loves me. He really really loves me.
  • That God forgives me.
  • That my wife loves me. She really reall does. I many times don’t feel worth of her love.
  • That my kids are awesome.
  • That God is moving in my family’s lives

12. Something you may not know about me…

  • I met Vicky, my wife, in college when I was chasing everyone else and not really knowing what I wanted. She asked me out and I was taken. Although she thought I was trying to politely bail out because my first response was “I don’t have any money.” This was because I was raised that the man paid and since I had no money I could not pay. She offered to pay and I accepted. My father told me when he heard that Vicky was paying, “To marry that girl” and I did! When we were at Pizza Hut, my father had loaned me some money to pay for it but Vicky would not have it. She insisted on paying to the point of stealing the check and running up to the cash register to pay. From then to til now, I have been in love with her.

Ok, now it is your turn.

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Keeping An Oath

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

A good friend of mine wrote a great article about marriage and keeping your oath. I know from personal experience how important this is and how much my friend has walked through with fire to get to where he is–a great marriage. Hope over and have a read (Click Here to read it).

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Defying Gravity

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Ok, I don’t usually post things about Television shows but since my favorite show might be on the chopping block, I thought I would at least say something.

Defying Gravity is a space drama show that is about so much more than just astronauts in space. Granter there are some quirks and things that are not exactly the best. But this is the shows first episodes of the first season. And if we look past those couple of things (most of which just make it more an adult drama than a complete family friendly one), this show has a great premise and kept me coming back for more and not just because I am a Sci-Fi Geek!!

Here is the shows premise:

Four women and four men hurtle through space with nothing to do for six years and eight billion miles, except maybe solve a powerful and awesome mystery. Maybe, just maybe, some of them will even hook up. How cool is that?

Defying Gravity is a sexy, provocative thriller set in the very near future against the backdrop of our solar system, in which the eight astronauts from five countries undertake a mysterious six-year international space mission on the spaceship Antares.

They can’t run from karma, however, as their past actions reveal intimate and interconnected relationships that have a strange effect on the present. As the astronauts travel towards Venus, we travel into their past with flashbacks to earlier years from the grueling selection and training process. What could have happened?

Maybe there is something to this fate thing after all.

The biggest thing that catches you is the characters and the listed mystery as to what is really going on that the crew is unaware of. And this mystery slowly unravels over the eight aired episodes (the latest five of total eight episodes can be watched on HULU). If you haven’t been watching hop over to HULU and watch.

For those who may already be watching, ABC has announced that they have not canceled the show nor have they given up on it. Just with their fall premieres starting, they are looking where the remaining produced 5 episodes that round out season 1 can be aired (read article here). They have not decided on a season 2, which is why everyone needs to be watching

Visit Defying Gravity’s official site on ABC.

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A Most Interesting Story

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

You may have heard this before because it has been around for a bit. But I thought it was worth sharing again

A man sat at a metro station in Washington DC and started to play the violin; it was a cold January morning. He played six Bach pieces for about 45 minutes. During that time, since it was rush hour, it was calculated that thousands of people went through the station, most of them on their way to work.

Three minutes went by and a middle aged man noticed there was musician playing. He slowed his pace and stopped for a few seconds and then hurried up to meet his schedule. A minute later, the violinist received his first dollar tip: a woman threw the money in the till and without stopping continued to walk. A few minutes later, someone leaned against the wall to listen to him, but the man looked at his watch and started to walk again. Clearly he was late for work.

The one who paid the most attention was a 3 year old boy. His mother tagged him along, hurried but the kid stopped to look at the violinist. Finally the mother pushed hard and the child continued to walk turning his head all the time. This action was repeated by several other children. All the parents, without exception, forced them to move on.

In the 45 minutes the musician played, only 6 people stopped and stayed for a while. About 20 gave him money but continued to walk their normal pace. He collected $32. When he finished playing and silence took over, no one noticed it. No one applauded, nor was there any recognition.

No one knew this but the violinist was Joshua Bell, one of the best musicians in the world. He played one of the most intricate pieces ever written with a violin worth 3.5 million dollars.

Two days before his playing in the subway, Joshua Bell sold out at a theater in Boston and the seats average $100.

This is a real story (verified by Snopes and the Washington Post article). Joshua Bell playing incognito in the metro station was organized by the Washington Post as part of an social experiment about perception, taste and priorities of people. The outlines were: in a commonplace environment at an inappropriate hour: Do we perceive beauty? Do we stop to appreciate it? Do we recognize the talent in an unexpected context?

One of the possible conclusions from this experience could be: If we do not have a moment to stop and listen to one of the best musicians in the world playing the best music ever written, how many other things are we missing?

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Bible Facts

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

For today’s post, I got shocked and inspired by Trey Morgan’s (““What Bible Translation Do You Like?”). The reason is that he listed two Bible facts. They are:

  • The bible is the best selling book in the world?
  • The bible is the world’s most shoplifted book?

Now, I don’t know about you, but that second one surprised me. I guess I can understand why, but really? Stealing a Bible. My daughter summed up this situation best when I told them these facts by saying, “Obviously they really need it!”

So, I thought I would it would neat to post other Bible Facts. I hope you enjoy what is next.

    INTERESTING

  • The Star of Bethlehem was reported by Matthew, but at the same time Chinese astronomers recorded it, too. To the Chinese it was a bright, unknown star. ( found here )
  • The Bible is the bestseller of all times. More than 50 copies are still being sold every minute. The Bible is also the most shoplifted book in the world. ( found here )
  • Man who lived to be 969 years old . . . . Genesis 5:27
  • Sons of God married the daughters of men . . . . Genesis 6:2
  • Man who used a stone for a pillow . . . . Genesis 28:11
  • Baby had a scarlet thread tied around its hand before birth . . . . Genesis 38:28-29
  • Battle won because manstretched out his hand . . . . Exodus17:11
  • Man who was spoken to by an ass . . . . Numbers 22:28-29
  • Giant who had a bed 13ft. 6 in. long by 6ft. wide . . . . Deuteronomy 3:11
  • The women who had to shave their heads before marriage . . . . Deuteronomy 21:11-13
  • Women forbidden to wear men’s clothing . . . . Deuteronomy 22:5
  • Sun and moon stood still for a whole day . . . . Joshua 10:13
  • A woman killed a man by driving a nail through his head . . . . Judges 4:17-21
  • Men lapped water like dogs . . . . Judges 7:5
  • An army with seven hundred left-handed men . . . . Judges 20:16
  • Man whose hair weighed about 6.5lbs. at his annual haircut . . . . 2 Samuel 14:26
  • Where a ferry boat was used . . . . 2 Samuel 19:18
  • Man who had twelve fingers and twelve toes . . . . 2 Samuel 21:20
  • Man who had seven hundred wives and three hundred concubines . . . . 1 Kings 11:1-3
  • The soaking wet sacrifice that burnt supernaturally . . . . 1 Kings 18:17-40
  • Man who outran a chariot . . . . 1 Kings 18:41-46
  • The axe head that floated in the river . . . . 2 Kings 6:1-6
  • Woman who boiled and ate her son . . . . 2 Kings 6:29
  • Man killed in his chariot . . . . 2 Kings 9:24
  • Woman whose body was eaten by dogs . . . . 2 Kings 9:30-36
  • Father who had eighty-eight children . . . . 2 Chronicles 11:21
  • The sun travelled backwards . . . . Isaiah 38:8
  • Man who walked naked for three years . . . . Isaiah 20:2-3
  • Army of 185,000 destroyed in one night . . . . Isaiah 37:36
  • Man whose life was increased by fifteen years because he prayed . . . . Isaiah 38:1-5
  • The Bible that was cut with a penknife . . . . Jeremiah 36:20-23
  • Valley full of dry bones prophesied to be resurrected . . . . Ezekiel 37:1-14
  • A Harlot an ancestor of Christ . . . . Matthew 1:5
  • Man ate locusts for food . . . . Matthew 3:4

STATISTICS

    BOOKS

  • Books of the Bible . . . . 66
  • The Old Testament . . . . 39
  • The New Testament . . . . 27
    CHAPTERS

  • Entire Bible . . . . 1189 chapters
  • Old Testament . . . . 929 chapters
  • New Testament . . . . 260 chapters
    VERSES

  • Entire Bible . . . . 31,173 verses
  • Old Testament . . . . 23,214 verses
  • New Testament . . . . 7,959 verses
    WORDS

  • In the whole Bible . . . . c. 773,692 words
  • In the Old Testament . . . . c. 592,439 words
  • In the New Testament . . . . c. 181,253 words
  • It would take you approximately 70 hours to read the whole Bible out loud.
  • The longest word in the Bible is “Mahershalalhashbaz” (18 letters) which is found in Isaiah 8:1.
    • Several of the words occurring only once in the Bible:

    • Eternity . . . . Isaiah 57:15
    • Reverend . . . . Psalm 111:9
    • Grandmother . . . . 2 Timothy 1:5
    • Gnat . . . . Matthew 23:24

Most facts found on the What Saith The Scripture website.

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