I'm literally at my keyboard rolling on the floor. It's hard to do that and type. I just read a rousing article about a breakthrough find of "the most ancient child ever discovered" being "no more than three years old when she died about 3.3 million years ago."1
Words escape me. According to the article "she belongs to the primitive human species known as Australopithecus afarensis and has been dubbed Lucy's daughter, after the iconic fossil of an adult female from the same group discovered in 1974" and "confirms the accepted view that Lucy and her clan walked upright."2 Amazing! I'm so glad we know who our ancestors really are now. My family tree is complete. Do these people actually remember the real find behind Lucy. Answers in Genesis reminds us, "According to Richard Leakey, who along with Johanson is probably the best-known fossil-anthropologist in the world, Lucy’s skull is so incomplete that most of it is ‘imagination made of plaster of paris’."3 Nice. That's concrete evidence if I've ever seen it.
But here's the real dagger in the chest that just shatters my faith. According to scientists, "the child, most probably a female, and also called the Dikika girl, appeared to have been buried quickly by sediment during a flood, soon after she died."4 Hmm... sounds kinda familiar. I wonder what kind of cataclysmic flood could have buried a human being alive in seconds?
Yea, she makes me laugh. I think I kinda look like her picture.
Friday, September 22, 2006
Lucy's Daughter Makes me Laugh
Labels: currently reading
Posted by Josh Via at 8:02 PM 2 comments
Wednesday, September 13, 2006
You Smell
It's a scientific fact that we smell like the things with which we keep company. At least, if it's not it should be. Every lost traveler who has ever stopped in at the Quickie Mart for directions knows this is true. Every Starbucks morning junkie will tell you this is a fact. Well, if they don't, their friends can tell you. What denotes the worthiness of each smell though?
To some the Starbucks smell ranks right up there with the local landfill and the Quickie Mart next to God's bakery. The first few times I went to Uganda, Africa, I came really close to vomiting because the smells were so potent. It was the smell of 50 Ugandans crammed with me in a 12 passenger van, all of whom had probably never used deoderant, not because they didn't want to, but because it would require about a week's worth of pay. But this last time that I traveled there, something changed in my perception of the stench. Because my heart was finally in tune with their drive.
Being in a van with stinky Ugandans whose hearts are totally devoted to Jesus Christ and who have given their lives to His kingdom work in spite of political unrest, economic disaster and religious persecution changes the way you smell things.
I love how Paul put it in 2 Corinthians 2:14-16, "But thanks be to God who always puts us on display in Christ and spreads through us in every place the scent of knowing Him. For to God we are the fragrance of Christ among those who are perishing. To some we are a scent of death leading to death, but to others, a scent of life leading to life."
Why does the world so often hate us as followers of Christ when we carry the very scent of Christ? Because they don't understand that smell. To them it is a stench worthy of nothing more than to be thrown out with filth and rotting vermin. BUT, to the 3000 souls that come to Christ every summer in Uganda, Africa with my dad's ministry, they are "a scent of life, leading to life."
.josh.
Labels: Bible journey, devotional thoughts, Uganda
Posted by Josh Via at 11:41 AM 0 comments
Failure to Choose is a Choice
This week we have been on vacation with my family, the Vias. Our annual tradition is to spend a week with the entire Via family at Smith Mountain Lake in Virginia. This year, we rented a house with direct access to the lake as usual, only with four grand babies in the picture (our Areyna and Ezekiel, Jonathan and Kelly's Cana, and Jeremiah and Jenn's Ella) the house had to be ginormous. (Of course ginormous is a real word. I make up real words all the time). Indeed, it was. A room for every married couple. We like it that way.
Over the years I've come to realize that the key to surviving a Via family vacation consists of two things. One, you definitely need a good pair of goggles for treasure hunting under boat docks. Without this essential ingredient, your vacation will have been found wanting. And two, unquestionably you need butt loads of food.
Without failing, every year it seems that the junk food outweighs the real food 3 to 1. And I don't think that's an exaggeration. Nor do I think it is any less consistent with the growing trend of the majority of the American population. We Vias are just doing our part to keep these statistics accurate. Regardless, junk food dominates on our vacations.
As I was reading Scripture one morning this week I came across an interesting verse in 2 Chronicles. Yea, I know what you're thinking - the boring book with all the hard to pronounce names. Well, I guess I'm just a boring guy, but believe it or not as I was reading through it I found some extremely not-so-boring stuff. Chapter 12 talks about a king named Rehoboam who was supposed to be a godly guy, but, well, wasn't. Verse 14 says, Rehoboam did what was evil, because he did not determine in his heart to seek the Lord.
Did you see it? As soon as I read that verse, it was like fireworks going off inside of me. I finally realized what the problem is with most of my generation who call themselves Christians but live like hell. The state we find ourselves in is exactly where Rehoboam found himself. It's the state of non-determination. Too often, many of us have never determined in our hearts to seek the Lord. We don't usually wake up one day and decide to live our lives in contradistinction to God. We often don't make a conscious decision to live like hell, but in our failure to determine in our hearts to choose to seek the Lord, that's exactly what happens.
We are the Rehoboam generation. We are people who think that we can get by with never making a conscious decision to follow Christ with everything that is in us. So, in our failure to choose, we essentially choose evil. There's no middle ground.
Remember the junk food at the Via vacations? Most of the time, I don't have to think about eating junk food when I'm on vacation. You know what? It just happens. It happens because it's there and it's there in abundance. You know what would have to happen for me not to eat junk food on vacation? One of two things. First, I would either have to starve myself (of which the probabilities of this happening are about as certain as the probabilities of Madonna becoming a nun). Or second, I would have to make a conscious choice to eat the right kinds of foods. UREEEEKA! (Thank you Nintendo's Duck Tales). I could determine in my heart to eat right. I could determine in my soul to choose watermelon over ho-hos. I could determine in the deepest darkest bowels of my heart of hearts to choose a peach over a box of cheese nips. But, if I choose not to choose the right food, guess what? Junk food happens. Thats just the way it is.
Now, this is what has happened to our generation of choose nots. We think that by not determining in our hearts to seek the Lord, we can play it safe in the middle ground. But, there is no middle ground. There is no safe zone. By not choosing God, we choose evil. By not determining to follow God, we follow evil. By failing to choose Christ, we choose the enemy.
"The focus of your objective, therefore, is to be purified so that it is concentrated and right, and is to be directed toward Me (God), despite all the various circumstances that may come between you and your objective." - Thomas à Kempis, The Imitation of Christ.
Labels: Bible journey, devotional thoughts, family, Quotable
Posted by Josh Via at 11:25 AM 0 comments