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286815 Posts in 27568 Topics by 3790 Members
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58471  Fellowship / You name it!! / Re:Would you hire someone with a disability? on: October 21, 2005, 07:19:51 PM
Being disabled myself, I am no longer able to run a business. I did however at one time operate a contractor business and a remodeling business of which I had hired one man with epileptic seizures to install insulation and drywall. Another man that was educationally handicapped due to a mental deficiency to do electrical installations. Another person that had early stages of MS to paint houses.

I currently employ a young lady that is also educationally handicapped as my house keeper (she just happens to be my daughter).

If I had it to do again I would still hire them. Everyone of them were hard working and very dedicated to their jobs.

58472  Prayer / Prayer Requests / Re:~John 3:16~ on: October 21, 2005, 02:00:45 PM
Amen, prayers said. May he be able to return real soon.

58473  Theology / Prophecy - Current Events / Re:Prophecy and Drought, Earthquakes, Famine, Pestilence, War, and Strange Weath on: October 21, 2005, 01:57:20 PM
Quote
Hurricane postpones another homosexual party

Quote
Note; The poor babies, they need to start praying for their salvation. The Lord is coming soon, and will find them wanting....

AMEN!


(They're not getting the message though.)

58474  Theology / Prophecy - Current Events / Re:Prophecy and Drought, Earthquakes, Famine, Pestilence, War, and Strange Weath on: October 21, 2005, 11:05:22 AM
Moderate quake shakes western Turkey, 15 hurt
20 Oct 2005 23:57:07 GMT
Source: Reuters

ISTANBUL, Oct 21 (Reuters) - A moderate earthquake shook western Turkey early on Friday, causing slight damage to several buildings and resulting in 15 casualties from the ensuing panic, the local governor said.

The Kandilli earthquake observation centre said the tremor, at 0:40 a.m. (2140 GMT), measured 5.9 on the Richter scale and its epicentre was in the Aegean Sea off the coast of Seferihisar in Izmir province.

Izmir Governor Oguz Kagan Goksal told the CNN Turk television channel 15 people had been taken to hospital as a result of heart attacks or jumping from buildings during the quake.

The roofs of five buildings, three of them empty, had been damaged in the tremor, he said.

Residents gathered in parks and open areas after the quake, and the local council made public announcements telling them not to go back into their houses, CNN Turk said.

Turkey is criss-crossed by seismic faultlines and experiences frequent tremors. Some 18,000 people were killed in a powerful earthquake which shook northwest Turkey in 1999.

Authorities decided to close schools in the Izmir region on Friday as a result of the quake, the channel said.

58475  Theology / Prophecy - Current Events / Re:Gorilla uses tools on: October 21, 2005, 12:19:56 AM
I disagree with the "Intelligent Design" theory in that it still attempts to use the old earth age theory and many other such things as evolution theory does.

As for animal intelligence versus plant intelligence ....

Animals do have a certain amount of intelligence that plants do not. They are able to learn through trial and error to some degree where plants do not use this technique for learning. Animals can also learn to some degree through mimicing people.

I have seen dogs that watched people turn a door knob and pull a door open that swings toward them, then the dogs did the same thing. When left on their own cognizance a dog can and will push a door open but does not pull one open that swings inward toward the animal.

None of an animals ability to do these things proves evolution at all. It proves that God provided these animals with a certain level of learning intelligence.

58476  Theology / Prophecy - Current Events / WWII pilot in glacier on: October 20, 2005, 09:27:54 PM
 WWII pilot in glacier

21oct05

FRESNO: A frozen body believed to be that of a World War II pilot has been found protruding from a glacier in California 60 years after his plane crashed.

Two unidentified climbers spotted the frozen head, shoulder and arm of the body -- that is 80per cent encased in ice -- while climbing the remote Sierra Nevada glacier on the 4178m Mount Mendel in Kings Canyon National Park.

US park rangers are working with military officials to excavate the body.

The team includes an expert from the Joint Prisoner of War Accounting Command, which recovers and identifies military personnel who have been missing for decades.

"We're not going to go fast," national parks spokeswoman Alexandra Picavet said.

"We want to preserve him as much as possible. He's pretty intact."

Park officials believe the serviceman, who is wearing a US Army Corps parachute, may be part of the crew of an AT-7 navigational training plane that crashed on November 18, 1942.

The wreckage and four bodies were found in 1947 by a climber.

58477  Entertainment / Animals and Pets / Re:A War Dog's Faithful Friend on: October 20, 2005, 08:13:39 PM
That story, Pastor Roger, brough tears to my eyes. Cry  Thank you, for the story. I loved the last part, "Scout. IRAQ WAR DOG."

I liked that part, too. Many such heroes are often forgotten and never heard of.

God provides us in many ways with these heroes.

58478  Entertainment / Laughter (Good Medicine) / Re:Spooky Video on: October 20, 2005, 07:43:41 PM
does he chew bubba gaum? Grin

I don't know about that but I'm sure he'ld be glad to chew on Bubba.

58479  Theology / Bible Study / Re:Devotions for Teens on: October 20, 2005, 07:41:57 PM
  How To Shine

By: Matt Crawford
Matt@tddm.org

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"If you extend your soul to the hungry and satisfy the afflicted soul, then your light shall dawn in the darkness, and your darkness shall be as noonday."
(Isaiah 58:10)

So often we forget the things, which should be the fruit of our salvation. Things that go beyond our prayer time, our Bible study, our "ministry" as we know it  --things that work repentance and humility in our hearts for God in a way that no other "religious" practice could come close to. We forget the basic concepts of easing the yoke for others, helping the poor, and going out of our way -- sacrificing -- to comfort the afflicted.

Even before Christ began his public ministry, John the Baptist preached repentance to the people to prepare their hearts for the Lord that was to come. When they asked him what they should do, his first reply was "let him who has two coats give to he who has none." And the Bible makes it clear that John's only purpose was to fill in the valleys, to level the hills, and to make straight the path of the Lord. The hearts of the people needed to be set in repentance, producing fruit accordingly, so that they would be ready to accept Christ's words in their heart when he arrived.

So often is a "life-enhancing" gospel of personal fulfillment, joy, and love preached, we set aside and forget the righteous and pleasing deeds God requires. "Share your bread with the hungry," "bring to your house the poor who are cast out," "when you see the naked, cover him" (Isaiah 58). Yet, if John the Baptist, who was full of the Spirit from birth, was supposed to ready the people's hearts for Christ by calling them to such deeds, do we who profess Christ is supposed to ignore the heart of God while claiming to be His children?

Like all God's pleas or requirements, the call to "extend your soul to the hungry" is meant to bring us goodness, not to deprive us of it. For the scripture goes on to say that our light shall dawn in the darkness, and even our darkness shall be as the noonday. The work that such action will wrought in our heart is so profound that even in our bad moments, at our darkest times, we will shine like the sun at it's brightest of the day.

58480  Theology / Bible Study / Re:Devotions for Teens on: October 20, 2005, 07:41:04 PM
  The Journey

By: Steve Self
Steve@tddm.org

><> §«:*´`³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`³¤³´`*:»§« † »§«:*´`³¤³´`*:»§«:*´`³¤³´`*:»§ <><

Jesus answered by telling a story. "There was once a man traveling from Jerusalem to Jericho. On the way robbers attacked him. They took his clothes, beat him up, and went off leaving him half-dead. Luke 10:30 (The Message)

Too many people are in the same condition as the guy in this story.  They are naked, beaten, bloody, bruised and left half-dead.  But this assault isn’t something that’s happened physically, it is emotional and spiritual and all of it is hidden under a façade of happiness, it’s hidden under a mask of being ‘ok’.  The church should be a place where that mask can be taken off so that some trustworthy people can see this pain.  When that happens they can clean and bandage these wounds and nurse you back to health.

When people get hurt like this, emotionally and spiritually, they can become afraid, embarrassed, and scared.  Satan somehow takes this situation and places blame on the victim.  Unfortunately too many victims begin to believe him.  They believe they somehow caused this to happen to themselves.  These circumstances can be anything from neglect, abandonment, physical or emotional abuse, even rape.  That is not the whole list, but hopefully you get the idea.

I want to point out a couple of things in this passage you might not have seen before.  Notice is says the guy is going on a journey; this journey is the same as a person’s life. Life is a journey as you grow.  Then it says “on the way”, too many people who have been hurt believe they were born with these issues and the associated pain that goes along with them (another lie from Satan).  He was attacked.  He didn’t ask for it, he couldn’t have seen it coming; it happened and was over with before his brain could process it.  Don’t look back and say, “If I had just (insert phrase here) then it wouldn’t have happened or I could have stopped it.”  You couldn’t have stopped it any more than the guy in this story.

I said the church should be the place where we can show our wounds and get help and healing.  Too often we try to pretend everything is ok, but let me leave you with one last thought.  The church is not a place for perfect people; if you are perfect then you don’t belong in church.  The church is a hospital for sinners.  The cool thing about the church is that we are not only patients, but we can be part of the medical staff as well.  Don’t go to church and hide this pain, find someone who can help you work through it, there are people available.  After all, not getting help in church is like getting a broken arm and going to the hospital hoping to get help, but all the while you’re wearing a thick coat and acting like everything is fine.  It’s time to let the doctors do their job.  You can quit hurting, you can be fixed and you can be whole.  God promises us that, all you have to do is accept His help.

58481  Theology / Bible Study / Re: Sermons4Kids on: October 20, 2005, 07:38:38 PM
God is light; in him there is no darkness at all. 1 John 1: 5  The LORD is my light and my salvation-- whom shall I fear?  Psalm 27: 1

I'm sure that most of you know what this is.  It is a night light.  Sometimes our parents put one of these in our room so that we won't be afraid.  Are any of you ever afraid of the dark?  When I was a boy, one of my jobs was to take out the trash every day.  Sometimes I would put it off too long and I would have to take out the trash after it was dark.  If I heard a strange sound, I would sometimes set a world speed record getting back to the house!

Are you ever afraid when there is a storm?  Are you ever afraid of the thunder?  One night last week we had a thunderstorm. The next day I was talking to one of my students at school and she told me that she and her brother had been frightened by the thunder so they went and got in bed with her mom and dad.  I think that all of us have times when we are afraid.  We have probably all gone and gotten in bed with our parents during a storm.

Sometimes there are dark and lonely nights in our life.  We aren't sure what is ahead of us or what is behind us and we often feel afraid.  Sometimes there are storms in our life and we are afraid.  When we are afraid, we have a light to make us feel safe.  That light is Jesus.  The Bible tells us that "God is light and in Him is no darkness."  The Bible also says, "The Lord is my light and my salvation, whom shall I fear?"  In the dark and stormy days of our life, we have Jesus to be with us.  If  Jesus is with us, we don't have to be afraid!

Dear Lord, help us to remember that when the dark and stormy nights come into our life, you are there, and we have no need to fear.  Amen.

58482  Theology / Bible Study / Re: Sermons4Kids on: October 20, 2005, 07:37:47 PM
His divine power has given us everything we need for life and godliness through our knowledge of him who called us by his own glory and goodness.  2 Peter 1:3

Look at what I have this morning. How many of you have ever seen one of these? Did you know that these knives have been around for over 100 years? In the late 1800's, a knife maker in Switzerland named Karl Elsener designed a pocketknife that he called the Soldier's Knife. He sold it to the Swiss Army in October 1891 and soon they were being sold not only in Switzerland, but around the world. They became even more famous in the 1940's when they were shipped to the United States to be sold on U.S. Army bases. In fact it was American soldiers who gave them the name by which they are known today, the "Swiss Army Knife."

The purpose of these little knives was to give the soldiers an all-in-one tool which would meet their every need. It has a can opener, a screwdriver, scissors, and of course, a knife. There is a tool there to do just about anything you might need to do. There a lot of cheap imitations of the Swiss Army knife, but the real thing is still made in Switzerland. It is one of the finest pocketknives available, and is backed by a lifetime guarantee.

The Swiss Army knife reminds me of Jesus. Every day we face many difficult situations. The Bible tells us that Jesus will meet every need that we have in life. It doesn't matter what situation we may face, Jesus is the answer. There are a lot of cheap imitations out there that claim to have the answer to our problems, but the real thing is Jesus, and He comes with an everlasting life guarantee! He is the only one that can make that promise!

Don't accept a cheap imitation. Choose Jesus. He is the only one who can meet your every need!

Dear Jesus, may each of us choose you to be our "all in all" and to accept your everlasting life guarantee. Amen.

58483  Entertainment / Animals and Pets / A War Dog's Faithful Friend on: October 20, 2005, 07:31:08 PM
washingtonpost.com
A War Dog's Faithful Friend
Back From Iraq, Md. Reserve Officer Launched A Mission to Rescue the Buddy He Left Behind

By Ruben Castaneda
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, October 20, 2005; B01

Laurel lawyer John E. Smathers, a captain in the Army Reserve, returned from a year in Iraq with a broken arm, a wrecked knee and a chest full of medals.

During his tour, Smathers helped thwart a bank robbery and assisted in recovering stolen Iraqi artwork. He survived an ambush and a high-speed auto crash.

But when he got back in March 2004, he was determined to complete a final mission: to rescue Scout, a dog he and other soldiers had adopted, from the increasingly bloody streets of Baghdad and bring him to his Howard County home. Scout was resolute, loyal. So was Smathers.

For 17 months, Smathers engaged in a campaign that involved intelligence gathering, secret Iraqi contacts and a foiled border-crossing into Jordan.

Finally, in late August, Scout was driven some 280 miles from Baghdad to Basra, where he was delivered to a British woman who runs an animal shelter in Kuwait.

Within days, Scout was on the tarmac at Dulles International Airport, where he was met by Smathers, dressed in desert camouflage so the dog would recognize him. Scout scampered out of his cage and went straight to Smathers, resting at his feet.

For Smathers, it was a rewarding end to a difficult quest.

"It was frustrating. Every door I tried was getting slammed in my face," he said. "I just kept knocking. As long as Scout was alive, I'd keep trying."

Smathers, 47, was a member of the Riverdale-based 422nd Civil Affairs Battalion, attached to the 3rd Infantry Division. His unit was among the troopsthat invaded Iraq in 2003.

After U.S. forces took control of the Baghdad airport in early April, Smathers's unit needed a place to stay for a few days and settled on an old catering building. Inside, Smathers and his fellow soldiers encountered a Canaan dog about 2 1/2 months old.

"He was alone, confused, didn't know what was going on," Smathers recalled.

The unit adopted the puppy, which Capt. Kevin Guidry named Scout. When the unit left the airport for Baghdad, some 12 miles away, the soldiers took him along.

In Baghdad, the unit took over a two-story, three-bedroom house near the Tigris River. Worried about attacks by enemy fighters, the soldiers slept on the roof, their M-16s at their sides, while Scout stayed in front of the building.

"Scout was our early-warning system," Smathers said. "If someone came by who he didn't recognize, he'd start barking.''

Smathers and Scout bonded. At 5:30 a.m. most days, Scout would put his paw through the mosquito net Smathers slept inside. Smathers would awaken, and the two would run by the Tigris.

"Sometimes he'd jump into the river. I'd yank him out by the scruff of his neck," Smathers said.

At one point, Scout became gravely ill with parvovirus, a disease that leaves dogs dehydrated. For four days, Smathers and another soldier took turns administering intravenous antibiotics.

Scout and Smathers were inseparable until Smathers and other soldiers were ambushed Feb. 21, 2004.

Smathers was in a convoy of three sport-utility vehicles headed to villages south of Baghdad. The soldiers planned to assess whether villagers had enough food and water.

Just south of the city, the convoy was ambushed by fighters shooting AK-47s. The driver of the SUV that Smathers was in floored it, and the vehicle overturned at 100 mph, landing right-side up. The Iraqi translator sitting next to Smathers had been shot in the head and killed.

Smathers had braced his arms against the SUV's roof, and his left forearm had snapped.

Smathers crawled out, and the attackers left. Three weeks later, Smathers was at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, recuperating from the broken arm and a damaged right knee.

Via e-mail, Smathers kept in touch with members of his unit. One soldier wrote that for the first two weeks Smathers was gone, Scout remained outside the front door of the house, as if waiting for the captain.

Eventually, Smathers's unit left the house, and Scout was on his own. In an e-mail, a soldier told Smathers that Scout had been picked up by a dogcatcher and was going to be euthanized, but that he escaped by digging under a fence.

For four months, Smathers sent e-mails, sometimes with photos of Scout, to every soldier and civilian he knew in the area, asking if they had seen Scout. By then, Smathers was being helped by Bonnie Buckley, a Massachusetts woman who runs a Web site dedicated to helping soldiers rescue animals overseas.

On Aug. 5, 2004, a soldier sent an e-mail to Smathers and Buckley. "Guys, I see Scout almost every day," the e-mail said. "No one is taking care of him. He is looking pretty skinny, and a vet needs to look at his left eye.'' The soldier wrote that Scout hung out near the pool of a large house.

Smathers e-mailed a soldier and asked that Scout be captured, caged and taken to the Baghdad Zoo, where Smathers had become friendly with a veterinarian. Within days, Scout was at the zoo, where he would stay for a year.

Smathers couldn't get Scout out on a military flight because U.S. soldiers are not allowed to bring back animals from foreign soil, he said.

Just after Scout was taken to the zoo, Smathers cooked up a scheme: An Iraqi picked up Scout and drove him eight hours to the Jordanian border. The plan was to drive Scout to Amman and put him on a plane to the United States. But Jordanian border guards turned Scout away. Smathers's Iraqi contact had to drive back to Baghdad.

Smathers said he could not identify his Iraqi contacts because their lives would be in jeopardy if insurgents learned that they were helping an American.

Finally, Smathers said, Buckley found the British woman who runs an animal shelter in Kuwait, and she was willing to help. The woman took Scout to Kuwait, put him on a commercial flight to the Netherlands and then to Dulles, where Smathers met him Aug. 22.

Scout's life is much different now. Every Sunday, Smathers's six sisters bring their young children to his one-acre property, and the kids frolic with Scout.

Smathers is taking pains not to lose sight of Scout again. He erected an invisible fence, with an electric current, around his property and outfitted the dog with a tag that reads "Scout. IRAQ WAR DOG."
58484  Entertainment / Politics and Political Issues / Japan, U.S. discuss reduced military presence at Okinawa on: October 20, 2005, 07:18:43 PM
October 19, 2005

Japan, U.S. discuss reduced military presence at Okinawa

Associated Press

TOKYO — Japan and the United States are discussing reducing the number of Marines and aircraft flights at bases on Japan’s southern Okinawa island amid tensions caused by the U.S. military’s presence, media reports said Wednesday.

The talks are focusing on moving some F-15 flight exercises from Kadena Air Base on Okinawa to Japan’s southernmost main island of Kyushu and shifting hundreds of Marines at Okinawa’s Camp Courtney to Guam, the Mainichi Shimbun newspaper reported.

Tokyo and Washington have been discussing realignment of U.S. military bases, and Japan’s defense chief Yoshinori Ono has said he wanted to reach an agreement by the end of October.

The realignment is part of the Pentagon’s push to streamline its overseas bases and create a more flexible military while Japan has been pressing Washington to reduce the U.S. military’s presence on Okinawa.

Crimes linked to the U.S. military are a sensitive issue on Okinawa, where more than half of the nearly 50,000 American troops in Japan are based. Three U.S. servicemen were convicted of raping a 12-year-old girl there in 1995, sparking massive protests.

Meanwhile, training of Japanese defense forces may also be moved to the U.S. Marine Corps’ Camp Hansen on Okinawa, Kyodo News agency reported.

Defense Agency officials refused to comment on the reports.

The two countries failed to resolve disagreements over a relocating Futenma Air Station on Okinawa in two-day talks last week.

Okinawa is about 1,000 miles southwest of Tokyo.



58485  Entertainment / Politics and Political Issues / Executive order sought on prayers on: October 20, 2005, 07:15:49 PM
Executive order sought on prayers
By Amy Fagan
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published October 20, 2005
Lawmakers yesterday said Christian chaplains throughout the branches of the military are being restricted in how they can pray, and President Bush should step in to protect religious freedom.
    "We're giving the president an opportunity to use the Constitution to guarantee the First Amendment rights of our chaplains," said Rep. Walter B. Jones, North Carolina Republican.
    He is circulating a letter to send to Mr. Bush explaining that Christian military chaplains are being told to use general terms when they pray publicly, and to not mention the name of Jesus.
    "This is a huge issue with many of the chaplains in the military," said Mr. Jones, whose letter has 35 lawmakers' signatures so far, and will be sent later this week.
    He cited a letter from one Army chaplain who said it was made clear in his chaplain training course that it is offensive and against Army policy to publicly pray in the name of Jesus, and he later was rebuked for doing so.
    "Much to my great shame, there have been times when I did not pray in my Savior's name," the chaplain wrote.
    Mr. Jones cited similar complaints from the Marine Corps and Navy.
    The lawmakers said chaplains of all faiths should be able to pray as they wish, since diversity is the very reason the military hired them in the first place.
    "Chaplains ought to be able to pray based on who they are," said Rep. Mike McIntyre, North Carolina Democrat. "Otherwise, it's hypocrisy."
    There has been much focus recently on proposed Air Force guidelines that some say unfairly would restrict Air Force chaplains' prayers, but lawmakers yesterday said the problem extends beyond that branch.
    "We're seeing the same pattern ... and it's a pattern of hostility to freedom of speech," said Rep. Todd Akin, Missouri Republican. "The chaplains have complained, and it's been increasing and more widespread and not only limited to the Air Force."
    The proposed Air Force guidelines say prayers should not be offered during official military staff meetings, but that a brief, nonsectarian prayer may be offered in nonroutine military ceremonies, celebrations or events. An Air Force spokesman said the guidelines are not final and that the Air Force is "still soliciting feedback."
    Army spokeswoman Martha Rudd said that branch's chaplains may speak freely if they are addressing a service of their specific faith, but in general military assemblies or services they should take a more general approach.
    "They call for a slightly different approach," she said of general gatherings. "The Army wants chaplains to show respect for all faiths."
    But Mr. Jones said it's not fair that any chaplain -- Christian, Muslim or otherwise -- should have to speak in such a way as to mask his beliefs. Mr. Jones' letter asks Mr. Bush to issue an executive order allowing all military chaplains to pray according to their faiths.
    White House spokeswoman Erin Healy said she would withhold comment on the issue until she sees Mr. Jones' letter.
    "It's astonishing to me that we're even having this conversation," said Rep. Trent Franks, Arizona Republican. "I hope the president will respond. I think he will."

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