What else, I am about to take my mom's Buick to see if someone wants to buy it, yay. John Harden wants to buy my old Civic from me, we'll see what he thinks about it. Also, I found Pandora.com. It is a radio thing. Just go to the webpage and type in an artist or song (since it is Christmas you can put holiday after the text you search for and it finds Christmas music similar to it) and after type in something it will boot up a radio station that is custom designed to fit with and complement the stuff you put in. As you listen you can check whether you like a song or not or the band etc and the station gets smarter and smarter concerning your likes and dislikes. I love it love it! Also, I casually searched for some good online commentaries on the Bible and here is David Guzik's commentary on most books of the Bible, I think it is really good so far. I guess that is about it for now. Here is an assignment I just finished up for OT Survey.
Joe Lang / BIB1110 / PAA#5 / December 04, 2007 / Box: 5 / Row B
Passage: Joel 2:12-13
Principle: God’s primary and foundational interest is always in our heart, our heart’s condition towards Him.
Explanation: An explicit statement of “rend your heart, not your garment” directs us to evaluate our hearts before our clothes and other outward expressions of our heart’s condition. An implicit explanation is that Joel’s exhortation when considering the Day of the Lord is not for outward expressions like sacrifices and obedient actions. Instead his focus, while considering the final judgment of men’s lives! is on their hearts.
Application: (application extends further than an isolated relationship with God and includes our relationships with the people God commands us to love) We need to evaluate ourselves the same way that God evaluates us; we need to try to consider internal matters, matters of the heart before we consider external matters. A very specific application is a family situation concerning my wife’s family taking action towards a cousin of my wife’s. They keep thinking of actions to take and ask if people think it is right or wrong. The application is to make sure you didn’t miss the foundational step of evaluating the heart first, even if it only requires double checking. I think that some of the courses of actions they want to take stem from unhealthy resentment they have in their hearts. Of course I hope this isn’t the case but regardless I think the principle is applicable here because you (the family) can’t skip the step of checking your (their) hearts’ condition. Before they continue asking what is right or wrong to do they need to ask if their heart’s conditions towards the cousin are right or wrong. Then they might be better suited to further consider external actions. Application = Before I ask if an action of mine is right or wrong (godly) I need to ask if the motivating condition of the heart is right or wrong (godly).
Passage: Habakkuk 3:16-19
Principle: Who God is and His presence in our lives is a more than abundant source of joy.
Explanation: Habakkuk knows that God’s majesty, power, wisdom, mercy and grace etc are not diminished by people’s, or even by his own, experience of difficult trials in life. God is still who He is so you can still rejoice; God loves you yesterday, today and tomorrow. Rejoice. Habakkuk did and we can/should too.
Application: Be joyful because of who God is. We derive happiness from things in life and eventually may tend to think that these things are sufficient sources of joy. We need to guard against thinking that things in life can ever come close to proving the joy we have in God. That means several things apply to our lives. Even though we are happy or content we still need to regularly bring focus onto who God is regardless of our own circumstances and rejoice. When we aren’t happy we can remember that while our lives change, they ebb and they flow but God doesn’t and we have that unchanging source of joy in Him. Phil 4:4
Passage: Psalm 1:2
Principle: We glorify God by delighting in and meditating on His Word (“His law”).
Explanation: What do I delight in? The man blessed by God delights in God’s Word. A man’s heart will not remain empty because it was made to be filled. Psalm 1 says that the blessed man fills his heart with the Word which he delights in. It also says that he meditates on God’s Word constantly. That means he thinks about God’s Word and doesn’t just read it. This (thinking) is how God’s Word is put into action in our lives… living close to God like a strong tree bearing its fruit in season.
Application: I have to recognize God’s Word for what it is and how great it is. God didn’t give us His Word in the same sense that a technical writer sends a manual on operating a VCR. God’s Word has the aroma of God’s loving touch still rising up from its pages. God loves us and His Word is a testimony of that, its worth delighting in every time I think about it. I need to think about God’s Word constantly (this is an illustrative hyperbole of course of how often I need to rely upon God’s Word and think about it). The water by the tree in Psalm 1 never dries up and my reliance upon God should never diminish either. That means I can consider God’s Word before I act, before I assume, before I believe; it has to be foundational to my worldview. That will require my meditation as long as I live because I will never exhaust the blessing God can provide from His infinite love. (Personal Application Assignments require thinking and are an application.)