Blog

  • OYB March 13

    Today´s reading:
    OT: Numbers 19, Numbers 20
    NT: Luke 1:1-25
    Ps: Psalm 56
    Pr: Proverbs 11:8

    Today´s notable verse:

    10 In God, whose word I praise,
    in the LORD, whose word I praise-
    11 in God I trust; I will not be afraid.
    What can man do to me?

    Psam 56:10-11 (NIV)

    Anyone who has kept up with the events of my life over the past several days will understand why these verses have special significance to me, especially right now.

    The One Year Bible Blog asks:

    What verses or insights jumped out for you in today’s readings?

    Noted above… I apologize for today’s brevity; things are rather hectic!

  • Arizona Now Has The Edge

    According to the Official Arizona Cardinals web site, Edgerrin James, formerly of the Indianapolis Colts, has agreed to a 4-year contract:

    The Arizona Cardinals Football Club has agreed to a 4-year contract with running back Edgerrin James. In accordance to team policy terms of the deal were not disclosed.

    This deal is important for me for a couple reasons: one, obviously, as a Colts fan, I am disappointed to see one of the team’s best running backs (and a decent person all-around) leave, and two, living in Saint Louis, I’ll be very interested to see what this move does for the hometown team’s NFC West Division. Kurt Warner, with a good receiving corps and now one of the game’s best RBs – along with a good defense – could mean that a new sheriff could be coming to town in the West. We’ll see…

    I’ve always been in the school of thought that the Colts’ offense is as balanced, diverse, and potent as it is because of the caliber of James’ play: running, receiving, and blocking; few RBs can do all three as well as Edge. But, I’m sure the Colts’ management knew this day was coming (as with the Faulk trade that brought James to Indy in the first place), and have a plan in mind to deal with it.

    Some people are upset that James would leave Indy to go to a supposedly non-contender like Arizona, simply for the money; however, the owners view all aspects of football as a business, and why shouldn’t the players? In modern professional sports, we are long past the era of the true “franchise” players. Rare is the player – especially the super-star – who starts and ends his career with the same team (in any sport).

    James has done nothing but produce on the football field for the Colts, and had done so quietly and without glory-hogging. For that, I will be eternally grateful and will always have great respect for Edge. He has always demonstrated that his desire is to provide for his family and to give back to his community, while maintaining his ability to enjoy his life after his football career is over. This contract is likely his last, and if going to Arizona will allow him to continue to pursue his goals, then I say: more power to him, and best of luck with Arizona.

  • OYB March 12

    Today´s reading:
    OT: Numbers 16:41-50, Numbers 17, Numbers 18
    NT: Mark 16
    Ps: Psalm 55
    Pr: Proverbs 11:7

    Today´s notable verses:

    He stood between the living and the dead, and the plague stopped.

    Numbers 16:18 (NIV)

    I read this line and immediately thought of Christ. God had sent a plague to deal with the rebellious and grumbling Israelites. Aaron took incense into the midst of them to make atonement for their sin – just as Christ became the atonement four our sin; the plague stopped – just as we are saved from the plague of sin in our lives.

    The next day Moses entered the Tent of the Testimony and saw that Aaron’s staff, which represented the house of Levi, had not only sprouted but had budded, blossomed and produced almonds.

    Numbers 17:8 (NIV)

    God here is either demonstrating a lack of ambiguity to the point of absurdity, or else revealing a glimpse of His sense of humor/irony. Either way, He made His will obvious, and left no room for doubt or contention. I just find humor in the imagery of Aaron’s staff sprouting, budding, blossoming, and bearing almonds!

    Cast your cares on the LORD
    and he will sustain you;
    he will never let the righteous fall.

    Psalm 55:22 (NIV)

    Just a continuation of my thoughts from yesterday. I thank God that He has proven these words to be so true in the circumstances of my own life!

    The One Year Bible Blog asks:

    What verses or insights jumped out for you in today’s readings?

    As has become usual, Mike and I focused on the same verses!

  • Polls: As Worthless as the PDFs They’re Written On

    So, I keep hearing this Bush 37% approval rating number thrown around.

    Yeah, about that: it comes from an AP-IPSOS poll (.pdf file) taken 6-8 March. The poll has some interesting internals (I’m particularly fond of the cluelessness revealed by the 77% who believe it “likely” that civil war will break out in Iraq), but the telling number is this demographic (found on page 10 of 13):

    Total Republican: 39
    Total Democrat: 51

    Now, I can’t find the actual numbers from, say, the 2004 elections with respect to votes cast by party affiliation, but if I remember correctly, registered voters were evenly split (and Republicans may have even had a slight advantage). Still wonder why that approval rating number looks so low?

    Via RealClearPolitics.

  • OYB March 11

    Today´s reading:
    OT: Numbers 15:17-41, Numbers 16:1-40
    NT: Mark 15
    Ps: Psalm 54
    Pr: Proverbs 11:5-6

    Today´s notable verse:

    Surely God is my help;
    the Lord is the one who sustains me.

    Psalm 54:4 (NIV)

    When my engagement ended, of all the things I went through emotionally, the one constant I knew without a doubt was that I was sustained. Through it all, I always knew that God was with me: helping me, sustaining me. As life went on from that moment, I never faced depression, or despair; I couldn’t describe my state of being in any other way than that one word: sustained. I had absolute peace that God was in control, that He had a good plan, and that He would work out even this situation for good. While there are still several things that I don’t understand, I am content knowing that I may never understand – and I know that understanding isn’t the desired end, but rather faith. I thank God for – at the very least – using this experience to develop in me absolute and utter reliance upon Him, and Him alone, to sustain me in every circumstance.

    The One Year Bible Blog notes:

    “Trial By Fire” – ever hear this term? I think this term may have gotten its genesis here in Numbers chapter 16. Korah’s rebellion caused Moses to explain how this true trial by fire would go down in verses 4 through 7

    I am reminded of Paul’s words: that our lives – what we have “built up” – will be tested by fire, and we willl all pass through. Either we will come out with the testimony of our lives refined as precious stones or precious metal, or else that testimony will be burned up like so much chaff and we will escape with naught but our salvation – our foundation of Christ:

    10 By the grace God has given me, I laid a foundation as an expert builder, and someone else is building on it. But each one should be careful how he builds. 11 For no one can lay any foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ. 12 If any man builds on this foundation using gold, silver, costly stones, wood, hay or straw, 13 his work will be shown for what it is, because the Day will bring it to light. It will be revealed with fire, and the fire will test the quality of each man’s work. 14 If what he has built survives, he will receive his reward. 15 If it is burned up, he will suffer loss; he himself will be saved, but only as one escaping through the flames.

    I Corinthians 3:10-15

    This day will be our own “trial by fire.” May what I am building be revealed to be worthy!

  • Bad Day: Update 2

    Well, I had my little own Crime Scene Investigation going on here this evening. The detective came by, got the story, and sent over another officer to take some prints and get my prints.

    Then just a little bit ago, I got my keys back, and might possibly get my cell phone back.

    I’ll be going over to Columbia tomorrow to find out if anything is wrong with my car, and hopefully to get it out of impound, and bring it back here.

    (Yes, there’s a long story here, but as a police investigation is going on, I’m not going to say anything right now.)

    Thank you all for your prayers!

    Bad Day, Bad Day: Update

  • Almost A Magical Season

    My high school alma mater almost had a magical season, but the Shelbyville boys basketball team fell to Bloomington South 46-45 in the title game of Class 4A Sectional 14.

    Class 4A No. 5-ranked Shelbyville had several chances to find a way to win its first sectional championship since 2001 and keep its unbeaten streak alive, but in the end the Golden Bears were left doing the same thing they did last season — watching Bloomington South celebrate.

    Bloomington South senior Cole Holmstrom stole the win in the final minutes then almost gave it back to the Golden Bears, but Sean Drake’s 12-foot jumper from the wing rattled off the rim and into Ben Chappell’s hands. Chappell fired a pass to Holmstrom, who raced up court and ran out the final seconds on the clock to preserve a 46-45 win.

    They finished the season 23-1.

  • Friday Ark #77

    This week’s Friday Ark has landed. I board this week with today’s post.

  • Getting Past The Deception

    The deceptively named Missouri Coalition for Life-Saving Cures (the Coalition) isn’t going to get away with their equally deceptive attempt to re-define cloning in order to pass a constitutional amendment to protect cloning.

    I can appreciate an open, honest, intellectual discussion – and I think that, generally, those actually performing Somatic-Cell Nuclear Transfer (SCNT – i.e. cloning) research espouse that intellectual honesty. For instance, as reported by the Columia Missourian, the pro-SCNT Diana Schaub, a member of President Bush’s bio-ethics committee and the political science chair at Loyola College of Maryland, says the language in Missouri’s proposed constitutional amendment to protect stem-cell therapeutic cloning is deceptive:

    I certainly agree that banning cloning to produce children is a good idea, but I disapprove of deceiving voters into thinking that embryonic stem-cell research by means of SCNT (somatic cell nuclear transfer, the common method for stem-cell research) is not cloning.”

    (Emphasis added)

    Money section:

    According to Schaub, the scientific definition of cloning is: “the asexual production of a new human organism that is, at all stages of development, genetically identical to a currently existing or previously existing human being.”

    Somatic cell nuclear transfer, says Schaub, is the procedure for cloning a somatic cell, or body cell, and putting it into a nucleated [sic] egg (an egg in which the nucleus has been removed) and then stimulating that egg to produce cell division. The result is a clone, or an organism that has the identical genetic makeup to the donor of the somatic cell.

    In both cloning for children and cloning for cures, the initial process is the same,” Schaub said. “SCNT is a cloning technique.

    The deception, she says, is that the amendment defines cloning as involving implantation.

    “It pretends to ban human cloning in total, when in fact, it only aims to ban the cloning of a live born human child,” she said. “We should have an honest discussion about whether human cloning for research purposes, should it become possible, whether that’s a good idea or not.”

    That last sentence is the whole key: opponents of the Coalition don’t want to prohibit the vote; we simply want to have an honest discussion and a vote based on facts, not deception.

    Faced with this straight-forward statement, proponents of the Coalition can do nothing but admit their deception, and sound sophmoric doing so:

    Alex Bartlett, a panelist and lawyer who was involved with writing the initiative’s language, disagreed with Schaub’s assessment. He said the ballot language, which seeks to ban the cloning or the attempt to clone a human being, outlines very specifically what cloning is and what it is not.

    “I think John Smith on the street or Joe Blow, when they think of cloning they are thinking of creating a human version of Dolly the sheep (the first cloned animal),” Bartlett said. “We tried to get at that and that’s we were preventing.”

    Translation: we’re trying to dumb-down Missourians, in order to pass an amendment protecting the very thing that Missourians are against.

    I can think of at least two means for the Coalition to be intellectually honest:

    1. Clarify that the Initiative bans reproductive cloning, while protecting therapeutic cloning.
    2. Clarify that the Initiative does not ban cloning, but prohibits implantation of cloned embryos.

    The reason that the Coalition won’t choose either of these options is that they know that neither, having truthfully identified the intent of the Initiative, would garner the support of Missourians required to pass a constitutional amendment.

    While the Columbia Missourian gets the facts out in a mostly unbiased manner, the Jefferson City News Tribune is still getting it wrong, and reporting with bias:

    The proposed ballot measure, entitled the Missouri Stem Cell Research and Cures Initiative, includes language that would “ban human cloning,” which it defines as an attempt to implant into a woman a scientifically created embryo that did not come from a sperm and egg.

    But opponents call the title and ballot language deceptive and misleading for failing to classify a certain form of embryonic stem cell research, known as somatic cell nuclear transfer, as the scientific equivalent of human cloning.

    SCNT isn’t a “certain form” of embryonic stem cell (ESC) research; it is the form of ESC research. SCNT isn’t the “scientific equivalent” of human cloning; it is the definition of cloning – it is the method of cloning, period. These qualifier phrases clearly portray the pro-ESC research bias of the reporter, and it is against this very bias that obscures the facts that I will continue to fight. But the mis-information doesn’t stop there:

    Under that procedure, the nucleus of an unfertilized human egg is replaced with the nucleus from a skin or nerve cell. The altered egg then is stimulated to grow in a lab dish, and researchers remove the resulting stem cells.

    This last statement is wrong; missing is that the researchers can only remove (embryonic) stem cells because the result of SCNT is an embryo, and it is from this embryo – which is destroyed in the process – that stem cells are extracted.

    And on top of biased reporting, we see just plain wrong reporting:

    Not all the panelists supported the type of stem cell research likely to be voted upon in Missouri in the fall.

    Diana Schaub, a political science professor at Loyola College in Maryland and a member of the President’s Council on Bioethics, sided with opponents of the proposed November initiative. She called the ballot language a “definitional sleight of hand.”

    Yes, that’s the same Diana Schaub quoted above – very much in favor of SCNT and ESC research. The irony here is, Schaub is in favor of the research, but opposed to the language of the Initiative. Though, perhaps Schaub here is incorrectly identified as an opponent of the Initiative in order to discredit her criticism of that language?

    And in related news, the Coalition is suing a rival organization to have its web site taken down. Apparently, they don’t like being Google-bombed:

    “They’ve stolen our Web site,” said Donn Rubin, chairman of Lifesaving Cures. “They’ve stolen our codes, our pictures, our graphics” in what he alleged was an attempt to confuse Internet search engines and the public.

    In the words of Glenn: heh.

    Good luck with that…

    All sources via John Combest.

  • Bad Day: Update

    The Chesterfield Police Officer who handled my report just stopped by to tell me that my car has turned up, abandoned, in Columbia, IL.

    I don’t have any specific information yet, including what condition it is in. All I know is that the car was abandoned, and the local police had 10-hour tagged it. When the towing company came to tow the car, they ran the plates, and the wanted bulletin that the Chesterfield PO had put out on it showed up.

    The Police Investigator who is now handling my case should be by later this afternoon. I’ll keep you posted.