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Faith column: It all starts here

Posted at 1:08 pm July 14, 2013
By Oak Ridge Today Guest Columns 1 Comment

The message of humility is foundational to the advancement of the church in this day and age. God is calling His church to take on humility. Humble is the word that we as Christians should want Christ to write over us. As I looked up the meaning of the word humble, I found such definitions as modest, low in rank, not proud, modest opinion of one’s own importance or rank. As I look for a biblical definition, this is what I like, “When you are humble, you are free from pride and arrogance, you know that your flesh is inadequate, yet you also know that you are in Christ.”

2 Timothy 3 says that in the last days men will become proud, arrogant, and boastful. It goes on to say that they also lack the power of God. Could it be that the lack of power in today’s church is because it has lost humility? Could it be that the church has put more importance on education and intelligence and less importance on the infilling and power of the Holy Spirit? [Read more…]

Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: arrogance, Christ, God, grace, Holy Spirit, humble, humility, Living Water Fellowship, Oak Ridge, pride, Rich Bean

Faith column: Letting pain be pain (Part Two)

Posted at 11:45 am July 7, 2013
By David Allred 1 Comment

Last month, I wrote about the problem Western civilization seems to have with pain as evidenced by the plethora of outlets we’ve created to avoid it. Central to part one is understanding the paradox of pain: that while pain certainly is no one’s friend, the laws at work on our planet are such that pain is everyone’s friend: Life depends on pain and without it, we wouldn’t be here.

It would be hard to maintain our humanity if we didn’t ask spiritual questions about pain. The Bible is loaded with “heroes” who did this very thing, including Christ himself, who from the cross issued the famous phrase found in Psalms 22: “My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?” Questioning in this way is not only natural, but also appears in both the Jewish and Christian texts as an affirmation of our human need to wrestle with the “why” of pain.

I have only one real issue with the questioning of God and pain in our modern world. It comes when a person has rejected the faith life because of the problem of pain and yet, simultaneously, accepts the story of evolution as a beautiful thing, despite the clearly painful history it details. I don’t believe these two world views are mutually exclusive and personally hold to both as examples of beauty rising out of pain. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: beauty, Bible, change, Christ, compassion, confession, David Allred, disasters, evolution, faith, God, High Places Community Church, human, humanity, justice, life, pain, redemption, science, storm, wisdom, world

Faith column: Storm thoughts

Posted at 12:18 pm June 9, 2013
By Dale Crank 1 Comment

As I write this, the death count is 24, happily down from 91, following the massive EF5 tornado that recently ripped through Moore, Okla. Since I used to live in that state, and traveled through that area of Oklahoma City, the video of the devastation was of places I recognized. I mourn the loss of life, the property damage, and the disruption of the lives of those who survived.

Natural calamities like this prompt many questions, many of which cannot be answered, but some of those questions reveal some of our faulty thinking as well. No one can say why God allowed this disaster; no one can say why one person was spared and another was taken. But the fact that questions like this are even asked assumes that we somehow believe that we have a right to live, or, stated conversely, that God has no right to take our lives before we have had the opportunity to live most of our “three score and ten.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: calamities, children, Christ, Christian, Dale Crank, disaster, evil, God, good, innocent, Jesus, Moore, Oak Ridge Alliance Church, Oklahoma City, sin, sinners, storm, tornado

Faith column: Letting pain be pain (Part One)

Posted at 2:19 pm June 3, 2013
By David Allred 2 Comments

I read a story once about a girl who was born without the ability to feel pain. Normal things like cuts and scrapes would go totally unnoticed. She lacked the ability to tell the difference between cold and hot, or to retract her hand after touching something she shouldn’t have. Apparently, this is an extremely rare condition in humans.

This girl was apparently so immune to pain that her mother and father accidentally burned her in the bathtub when she was a baby and that’s how they discovered she had this condition. The hot water never caused her any discomfort; it never triggered any kind of response. Prior to being diagnosed, her parents had no idea they were hurting her.

As the girl grew older, she had to be constantly looked over. Some days she would show up from playing outside with her friends, bleeding all over her clothes but totally unaware that she had been injured. She spent weeks covered in terrible bruises that she never knew she’d received. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: anti-anxiety pills, antidepressants, anxiety, art, artist, beauty, Christ, community, cross, David Allred, depression, pain, pleasure, sedated, vaccinations

Faith column: An attitude of gratitude

Posted at 10:22 am May 12, 2013
By Joseph Westfall Leave a Comment

Ephesians 5:21-33

When was the last time you said—“Thank You”?

When was the last time you said—“Please”?

When you introduce your spouse…How do you do it?

With…enthusiasm,

embarrassment,

appreciation,

a joke—

with love.

When you talk about your church, how does it sound? Are you ready to invite someone? Are you hesitant because your church doesn’t have a particular building or music? Do you hold back because you do not attend church very regularly yourself?

When you talk politics or city government, do you appear distraught? Are you constantly griping about the way things are in the world today? Are you still upset that you have not won the lottery!? [Read more…]

Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: attitude, Christ, church, faith, God's Kingdom, gratitude, Joseph M. Westfall

Guest column: Did God initiate the invention of the atomic bomb?

Posted at 12:49 pm May 5, 2013
By Myra Mansfield 1 Comment

Y-12 Plowshares Protesters

Pictured above are the three anti-nuclear weapons protesters who broke into the Y-12 National Security Complex on July 28. From left, they are Michael Walli, Megan Rice, and Greg Boertje-Obed.

I hear the siren. It’s noon on May 1, the first Wednesday of the month. What a coincidence, as I sit at my computer reading the Washington Post article “The Prophets of Oak Ridge.” It mentions that siren and reveals the circumstances of the Y-12 security system breach last year. The article links Oak Ridge’s first known prophet, John Hendrix to the nun, painter, and drifter who made national news.

I think to myself, “God WAS responsible for the creation of the atomic bomb….and there ARE real prophets in Oak Ridge – still today!”

“What?” your mind must be responding, as you wonder how I could think such a thing. Well, if you’ll stick with me, you’ll see the path to my conclusion. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: Adolf Hitler, atomic bomb, Bible, breach, Christ, God, Jewish people, John Hendrix, John Hendrix Memorial Prayer Walk, Myra Mansfield, nuclear weapons, Oak Ridge, prophet, Sister Megan, The Prophets of Oak Ridge, violence, war, Washington Post, weapons, WWII, Y-12 security

Faith column: This ‘High Tech…Low Touch’ world of ours

Posted at 12:11 pm April 14, 2013
By Craig Kallio Leave a Comment

Occasionally while holding our grandson in my lap as he begins to drift off to sleep, he will look up into my face with all the inquisitiveness of any four-year-old. Slowly and gently, he will reach upward to touch my nose, lips, and eyebrows and with his tiny fingers begin to explore what to him must seem like a vast terrain of the unknown. My eyes follow his, and then unexpectedly I begin to experience the kind of bonding that develops when one gazes intently into the face of another. This small gesture of a child touched my soul in a way I didn’t anticipate, much different than, for instance, shaking someone’s hand, even of family and friends.

A book came out some 30 years ago called “Megatrends,” which predicted a major shift in the world, in one instance characteristically described as “high tech…low touch.” The more technologically advanced we are, the less is our interpersonal connectedness. We see evidence of this today in our relationships with one another, especially in the fracturing of the traditional family and the steady decline of meaningful interaction within households. This brings to mind how important it was for Jesus to gather his disciples around a table and be able to look into the faces of those whom he loved dearly. The next time we gather with family and friends around the table, take a moment to gaze into the faces of those around us. There is something magical and perhaps even mystical about what happens to us when we are intently focused on the face of another, especially when we remember it is one shaped in God’s own image.  [Read more…]

Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: bonding, Christ, Craig M. Kallio, Easter, family, God, high tech, interaction, Jesus, low touch, Mary Magdalene, Megatrends, St. Stephen's Episcopal Church

Faith column: Dimensions of the Resurrection

Posted at 1:12 pm March 24, 2013
By Curtis D. McClane Leave a Comment

Resurrection

On several occasions, I have stood beside empty tombs or graves. I have seen the incredulous, empty stares of shocked family members forced to bury a loved one. Many times the death has been untimely and seemingly unfair. It is hard to make sense of death. But its pain can be absorbed by the promise of resurrection. The apostle Paul reminds us that everything truly stands or falls on the resurrection.

This holiday (holy-day) comes around annually. It is never on the same Sunday, and sometimes I am amazed at either how early or how late it is for that particular calendar year. Teachers and students eagerly anticipate its appearance on the calendar for Spring Break. Though hardly ever on the same date, it comes around like clockwork. But its annual appearance is obscured by the fact that it falls in line with a host of regular holidays. We often know that it comes around spring time, and before Mother’s Day. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: baptism, Christ, Christians, Curtis D. McClane, death, Destiny Dimension, Easter, God, Highland View Church of Christ, Hope Dimension, Impact Dimension, Jesus, New Testament, Paul, Resurrection, Wager Dimension

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Classifieds

Availability of the draft environmental assessment for off-site depleted uranium manufacturing (DOE/EA-2252)

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announces the … [Read More...]

Public Notice: NNSA announces no significant impact of Y-12 Development Organization operations at Horizon Center

AVAILABILITY OF THE FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FOR THE OFFSITE HOUSING OF THE Y-12 DEVELOPMENT … [Read More...]

ADFAC seeks contractors for five homes

Aid to Distressed Families of Appalachian Counties (ADFAC) is a non-profit community based agency, … [Read More...]

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