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Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Acquiring Wisdom

That night God appeared to Solomon and said to him, "Ask for whatever you want me to give you." Solomon answered God,..."Give me wisdom and knowledge, that I may lead this people."--God gave Solomon wisdon and very great insight, and a breadth of understanding as measureless as the sand on the seashore.

2 Chronicles 1:7-8, 10; 1 Kings 4:29

WISDOM is the ability to make good decisions based on proper discernment and judgment. KNOWLEDGE in this verse, refers to the practical know-how necessary for handling everyday matters. Solomon used his wisdom and knowledge not only to build the temple from his father's plans, but also to put the nation on firm economic footing.

God's offer to Solomon stretches the imagination: "Ask for whatever you want me to give you" (2 Chron. 1:7). But Solomon put the needs of his people first and asked for wisdom rather than riches. He realized that wisdom would be the most valuable asset he could have as king. Later, he wrote wisdom "is most precious than rubies; nothing you desire can compare with her" (Prov. 3:15). The same wisdom that was given to Solomon is available to us; the same God offers it.
How can we acquire wisdom?
First, we must ask God "who gives generously to all without finding fault" (James 1:5).

Saturday, April 14, 2007

First Alumni Meeting


Even I wasn't able to be in this meeting, I thought of blogging it.
Last March 25, 2007, Metanoia alumni met at Greenbelt Starbucks to get connected and plan for an upcoming outreach on December. As far as I know, the meeting went well since a lot of alumni came.
Check out the pics!!!
Meeting pictures (you have to be a member to view the pics)

Friday, April 06, 2007

Laughing All the Way Home

Death is frightening. It comes as a thief to steal away our life's breath, our existence, our loved ones and everything that signifies hope. Death is our enemy because we were meant to be forever in love with life. In the first garden that had sheltered us, protected us, and so delighted us, we were allowed to walk lovingly with the Life-giver, the Lord God who created us, until in our desire to listen to another voice and know more, be more, and have more, we forfeited our right to life.
So Jesus entered a different garden to face this terrible foe. The conflict, as the song says, raged within him, around him, and through him for he had to decide whether or not to die his own singular death. It was all he needed to do to free us and return to us the hope of eternity with the Life-Lover. There were questions we can only imagine. Was death such a price to pay for another? Would there be any value in this sacrifice? Could he show us what lay beyond the final blackness? And then there were the millions of griefs to bare...the sorrow of broken promises, the fragmented humanity, the pitiful fruits of disobedience. True knowledge broke his heart to pieces. Then it was time. Once to face the judgement hall, once to see the scorn, once to feel the hatred of hearts bearing no compassion or shame, Jesus went as a man with a boulder on his back. He did not run or flee; he climbed, he stumbled and he pulled his tortured and bloodied body through the streets and up a hill as those choking in death's grip looked on, unaware of the offering's purpose. And there were more questions.