Motivational


A number of weeks back, our Senior Pastor, Rev. Kenny Fam, spoke on the titled topic centred around the following verses:

7Have nothing to do with godless myths and old wives’ tales; rather, train yourself to be godly. 8For physical training is of some value, but godliness has value for all things, holding promise for both the present life and the life to come.

– 1 Timothy 4:7-8

I finally found the time to download the sermon recording from our church website and reviewed that sermon again.

In the beginning of the sermon, Rev Kenny mentioned an article written by Richard Foster and published in Christianity Today. I was rather intrigued by Rev Kenny asking us to ponder over which category of Christian we were that Richard Foster had described in his article.

Were we:

  • well-intentioned Christians who have exhausted ourselves in church work and found that our lives were not substantively changed by our efforts.
  • immersing ourselves in multiple social-service projects, outside the church, and realizing after some time, that these efforts left little lasting imprint on our inner life.
  • Christians who had a practical theology thus not experiencing any growth in their spiritual lives.

(more…)

Was spending the evening planning the last session of the Alpha Course and surfing the Web for a traditional satay man to order from. I don’t know about you but after spending a couple of hours perusing various websites reading reviews and looking at photos of delicious satay, I was struck with a craving for satay.

Feeling extra ravenous because I’d skipped dinner earlier, I called a friend from church and arranged to meet at the Adams Road Food Centre for their satay and “teh alia” (ginger tea).

The satay quest turned out to be a bomb because the stall was closed. Perhaps, it may have been that a lot of frustration, anger, pride and <substitute whatever emotion you think is appropriate here> had been building up in me or that it had been a while since I truly shared with someone about what i was feeling or thinking these last few months but the evening turned into one of soul-baring and sharing.

The topics we covered ranged far and wide from the frustration we were feeling (or rather I was feeling with church and its leaders) to how problems seemed to be cropping up in various aspects of church-life. At the end of that 5 hour conversation which eventually ended at 3am, I was left with a number of questions which I’ll have to think about and explore for myself. With things churning in my heart and brain, I turned to the occasionally used source of inspiration and comfort, the music of Chris Tomlin.

With the iPod set to shuffle, the first song seemed especially poignant given this evening’s tone of the conversation. Thought I’d share the song with you.

Video courtesy of Youtube.

(more…)

A different version of the story that I came across on the Internet used in a previous post. This one purports to be an account of a classroom encounter between a student and his professor discussing the existence of God. I’ve seen it in various forms but here’s a version I like best:

The university professor challenged his students with this question. Did God create everything that exists?

A student bravely replied, “Yes, he did!”

“God created everything?” The professor asked.

“Yes, sir,” the student replied.

The professor answered, “If God created everything, then God created evil since evil exists, and according to the principal that our works define who we are then God is evil.”

The student became quiet before such an answer.

(more…)

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