The Case for The Bible | Evidence

I bet you thought I left yet another thing unfinished. Nope! I may get sidetracked, but sooner or later, I do get back to what I started. Sometimes it takes months, sometimes years. In this case, it has been 2.5 months since I started reading New Evidence and blogging about it.

Saturday was my first full day off after working 12 days in a row, so I spent about six hours of it getting through part one of four in this book. Part one was “The Case for The Bible”. After a bit of history explaining how we got the Bible, including the materials used to write it, some interesting things were pointed out. First of all, Christ himself witnessed to the Old Testament talking about the law, the prophets, the writings (Psalms), and the martyrs throughout the entire OT from Abel to Zechariah. (I like how that’s A-Z!)

When speaking to the historical reliability of the Bible, more interesting points were made:

  1. The unexplained is not necessarily unexplainable.
  2. Fallible interpretations do not mean fallible revelation.
  3. Make sure you understand the content of the passage.
  4. Interpret difficult passages in light of clear ones.
  5. Don’t base teaching on obscure passages. The main things are the plain things. If something is important, it will be clearly taught in scripture, and probably in more than one place. When a passage is unclear, never conclude that it means something else or opposes another plain teaching.
  6. The Bible is a human book with human characteristics.
  7. Just because a report is incomplete does not mean it’s false. Sometimes things are complimentary, not contradictory.
  8. New Testament citations of the OT need not always be exact.
  9. Context will dictate whether a word should be taken literally or figuratively.
  10. General statements don’t necessarily mean universal promises.
  11. Later revelation supersedes previous revelation. God did not reveal everything at once, but that doesn’t make contradiction.
  12. Archaeology has found evidence that proves the accuracy of the Bible.
  13. The Bible is trustworthy and historically reliable.

Translated text of the Bible compared to that of 1,000 years earlier proved to be word for word identical in more than 95% of the text. The other 5% were merely variations in spelling – nothing that affected the message. In 184 cases, evidence shows that for 2300-3900 years, the text of the proper names in the Hebrew Bible have been transmitted with minute accuracy.

Then, of course, there are the Dead Sea Scrolls.

Part two is “The Case for Jesus” – just over 200 pages. Will it be a week? Two weeks? Another 2.5 months? My goal was to finish by the end of January. I’m changing that to finish by the end of March!

Three Countries I’d Like to Visit | Part 2: Ireland

Green is my favorite color, and Ireland is so very green! I’m not the least bit Irish, either.

People are generally happy in Ireland, and they are a very proud nation, like us. I’m not sure if I count that as a great thing (depends on the nature of the pride), but good times are sure to be had in Ireland!

I don’t know how I’d get to see everything in a short time. I’d have to see castles, ancient monuments, and the Emerald Gardens for sure.

In between sight-seeing adventures, we could relax in a vacation rental like this, this, this, or this! I can pretend I’m Scarlett in Ballyhara!

Not-So-Wordless Wednesday | Snow in Colorado

Ya gotta love winter in Colorado! Especially in our area. We are at about an altitude 5800 feet in our neighborhood, which is fairly east of the foothills just at the beginning of the plains, and about 20 miles southeast of downtown Denver. It was in the 50s yesterday but quickly turned into snow in the wee hours of the morning.

I had to take Miranda to school early this morning, but I also seriously needed gas. After comparing getting gas after dropping her off to before dropping her off (about a 5 mile difference), I decided drive the one mile to get it first and also add weight to the car!

Sick Today, Gone Tomorrow

Does this ever happen to you? You feel that ache all over, and your throat starts to hurt, and you just know you’re going to be miserably sick for at least a week. But wait! You wake up the next day, and your body’s all, “PSYCHE!” You feel completely fine! I searched the internet for this, and while there were no solid answers, there were many replies stating the exact same thing happens to others. A complete mystery!

However, we all know the story of the boy who cried wolf. So I’m popping open a can of chicken noodle soup and taking my ass to bed early tonight.

Four Years From Now…

… there could be only three people living in this house: Greg, Miranda, and myself.
… Miranda will be graduating from high school.
… our dogs will be 12 and 13, and hopefully still with us.
… we will be credit card debt free!
… we will only have one car payment.
… we may be able to take a nice vacation in another country just for us.

Bring it, 2016!

Coffee Favorites

8O The very first week of the month and I botched my blog goal. I did specify daily posts Monday-Friday. So, as any employer ga-ga over goals these days would tell you, it’s okay to rework goals that you don’t feel are achievable (too easy or too difficult). That goal is now to write five posts per week. Week 1: goal surpassed! This is #6. It may be lame, but it still counts. My blog, my rules. :P

With that aside, I want to know what your favorite coffees are.

  1. What is your favorite coffee you can buy at any grocery store?
  2. What is your favorite coffee shop coffee?

Some say they can drink just about any coffee as long as it “does the job”. Even if it’s bitter? YUCK! We had switched from Folgers to Maxwell House because MH is cheaper. Folgers was on sale last week, so I bought that instead. I guess I bought a different roast than I used to because this is awful! I also used lukewarm water in the coffee maker, and they recommend cold water. Why? Because cold water is fresher. Hot water sits around in your water heater for a long time. When heated more in the coffee maker, the taste of the minerals and any other sediment that might be in your water heater are intensified, thus ruining your coffee. True story. Use cold water, people. ;)

I do like the Starbucks Breakfast Blend from the shelf because it’s mild. I only buy this when it’s on sale, though. Same with any of those little bags of coffee. I really haven’t been disappointed with any of those, but they are so expensive. So I’m curious to hear what you all prefer.

Social Classes | Impact on Relationships

The Ritual Cobb Salad Lunch scene in Julie & Julia got me again. The differences in the social classes are blaringly apparent, and I can totally relate to how Julie felt sitting there with her friends who went on to have successful careers while she was stuck working for the government in a cubicle. This is the only scene those friends are in, but I’m sure they lived in nice apartments in New York, while Julie lived over a restaurant in sort of a run-down studio apartment.

I understand getting together with old friends like this occasionally, but I bet she didn’t make it a habit of hanging out with them at that point. It just doesn’t happen. Different social classes just don’t mix. Why? Lack of commonality. Why would you choose to be around those with whom you don’t have a lot in common? We generally choose to be around people of the same means and with similar situations because we understand one another.

Sometimes it’s hard when there are people in your own family who are not of the same means or with similar situations. I imagine it’s just as hard on either side of that coin. While it’s hard for those less fortunate to hear of purchases and travels, it might sometimes be hard for those more fortunate to wonder if they need to tiptoe around the less fortunate so as not to bring them down.

Truly, I am happy for those more fortunate. I know that someday, we will get there. We will be the ones traveling and experiencing great places! We just did things a little back asswards and have to fix it now. For the next three years and two months (yes, I’m counting), we won’t be doing much of anything. We have a plan, and we are not backpedaling on this one! The only really scary thing about that is the thought of a family emergency coming up requiring a road trip. 8O Heaven forbid. Everyone stay healthy and alive!!!

Semi-Wordless Wednesday

I made a goal of posting daily Monday through Friday, but I didn’t say they had to all be brilliant. :D

After washing the gray outta my hair today, I thought I’d try some pin curls. End result? I’d rather not talk about it! TIP: Do not twist before you coil it up. :P

Not-So-Extreme Couponing

I plan on getting back in the game – the coupon game – the savings game! I switched stores along the way, and then found my filing system to be overwhelming. All coupon inserts jammed into one hanging file folder. Searching for inserts by date became a nightmare! (I need them by date because CouponMom tells me where to find specific coupons that match items on sale.) So I gave up a little on the extreme couponing and just searched my store’s site for electronic coupons to load to my store card. I’ve also been searching for printable coupons just for items I need.

No more! I want to get back to grabbing a few extras when I can. If I can save 50% or more, it’s totally worth it to me to make an extra trip to a different store or even double back to the same store later in the week. I don’t have enough room in my file cabinet for more hanging files, but I remembered that I have some empty file boxes in the house (the ones with lids and handles). I picked up some more Pendaflex files and started a new system this morning before work.

I just noticed that that top page on the stack in front of the box says “Resolve to save more”! :D I think I just might!

Three Countries I’d Like to Visit | Part 1: England

I don’t think this comes as a surprise to many who know me (at least not lately). I want to see England by the time I’m 50. I may be exactly 50 – that’s alright! There will come a day when we can afford to travel, and England is first on my list of other countries I want to see. This is now part of my five-year plan. The other countries on my list (separate posts yet to come) will be part of my ten-year plan, which I haven’t started on yet.

Of course, I want to start in London and catch the top 10 attractions there. OK, I’d have to see some of the photographic galleries as well! Maybe we’d stay in a fabulous rental like this or this (or if we win the lottery, this) before heading off to explore other parts of England. Next on the list, Stratford-Upon-Avon. From there, it’s just an eight-mile drive south to Ilmington, which is where some of my ancestors are from. Then off to Wales, where more of my ancestors are from.

It’s quite a long journey back to London from Wales (about 150 miles), so a stop over in Gloucestershire to explore the Cotswolds on the way would be nice. Then back to London for a tour of Buckingham Palace before returning home with several flash cards full of photos and our heads full of memories.