Cooking with Pooh
Posted in Humor on December 28th, 2007 by brandon – 2 Comments
Mewwy Chwismas to all!
In the morning I am off to Kansas for Christmas with Erin’s family.
This also means I get to go to Springfield on Sunday!!! I get to *hopefully* see some friends I haven’t talked to in a while.
Well, back to Numb3rs Season 3 (thanks Erin
)
I came across this gem tonight and I thought I would pass it on to all my readers. If you don’t like poo jokes, then let this pass.
http://diarrheasong.blogspot.com/
Oh and you might recognize this from Parenthood.
There seems to be a lot of boycotts going on. From the AFA (American Family Association) boycotting Ford and Target to the boycott of the upcoming film The Golden Compass the church has been getting a lot of publicity around this. Note that when I say “church” I mean the Christianity that is portrayed in the media.
Lets look at these boycotts.
First I mentioned the boycott of Ford and Target by the AFA. These boycotts are about basically the same thing. The AFA has called Ford out for supporting the “homosexual agenda.” Target has added benefits packages for domestic partnerships. Its obvious that they don’t like supporting homosexuals at all.
The other boycott is about The Golden Compass. Kurt has posted about this in depth so I will defer to his take on this boycott. To put it in one sentence: The movie is an adaptation of a series of books that support an atheistic worldview.
While these are boycotts of completely different things, they are similar in that they are pushing their own agenda. These groups see something they don’t like and want to cut it out of culture all together. This is something that mainstream Christianity is doing well. If we don’t like something, lets make the same thing and throw Jesus in to Christianize it.
I’m exaggerating of course.
Actually, I’m quite surprised that The Chronicles of Narnia isn’t a response to The Golden Compass.
In a culture where we can listen to a Christian radio station, go to Christian school or a Christian job and then come home to Christian television and read our Christian books and newspapers, we have completely isolated ourselves from society. We now see it fit to tell others to live the same lifestyle of shelter and imprisonment. I think we have taken Paul’s instruction to the Philippians too literally (Philippians 4:8).
Why do we feel the need to tell others how to live? Am I doing the same thing by asking and suggesting that we don’t?
We are all born with the ability to think and discern. Why don’t we encourage that?
Questions are hard; answers are easy. I guess if we can’t get an answer quickly, we should cast lots or wait for someone to come off a mountain with a new law for us to blindly obey.
Next time something is boycotted or a cause is formed, please think about what it represents.