JumboBody

not all those who wander are lost…

Slain Korean Hostage was Killed for Refusing to Convert

Published in Missions September 4, 2007

Pastor Bae Hyung-kyu, a true witness of the Lord Jesus Christ in both word and deed.

HT: http://www.christianitydaily.com/template/articleenn.htm?code=wor&id=2255

Slain Korean Hostage was Killed for Refusing to Convert

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A missionary’s farewell

Published in Missions June 12, 2007

Paul Hiebert, a renowned missiologist, anthropologist, and missionary to India was my missions professor during my seminary years. I learned so much from this man about missions. He was invited to deliver a commencement speech for the seminary’s graduation services but he passed away to be with the Lord only a day before the actual date. His words below are truly penetrating. There is much much Godly wisdom in this short speech: …view entire post

1954: I sometimes forget my own past

Published in Faith March 9, 2007

1954 Taegu or Daegu. It’s so easy to forget the past. I forget sometimes that all of my grandparents, uncles, and my parents were born in this city. I forget sometimes that my parents were both a pre-teen and a teenager in 1954. I forget sometimes that my grandfather was a pastor and a translator for the American GI’s that were there during the Korean War only a few years earlier. I forget sometimes how much my parents had suffered before I was born and yet were able to overcome. I have been trying to picture what it was like to have lived the life my mother did. Here I tried to reflect: http://www.jumbobody.com/blog/?p=29.

The following pictures were taken by an American Christian as a young man. They are truly amazing:
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Thanksgiving and giving thanks to God

Published in Faith November 23, 2006

I have not been able to blog as of late. I’m teaching three classes, trying to work on my dissertation, and of course trying to be faithful to my church. So here’s a quick post on what I am thankful to God for: my family.

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Japan and Thailand, Missionary Friends, and Short-Term Missions

Published in Missions July 8, 2006

Here are some recent thoughts (or more accurately some prayer topics) on Japan and Thailand, two seminary friends who are now missionaries to both countries, and short-term missions.

One: I was recently made aware of a statistic that 70% of all foreign tourists to Thailand are men. |inline

The Greatest Graduation Speech Ever

Published in Other June 17, 2006

When I graduated from college, our commencement speaker was the new First Lady of the United States - Hillary Clinton. I don’t remember much about her speech (in fact, I don’t remember much from those years), but I do remember clearly the first time I read the speech below. My brother-in-law is graduating from college today and I dedicate this post to him. It has truly been great seeing you grow to be a man of God. Congratulations to all the graduates.

And now, the greatest graduation speech I have ever heard or read:

(Postman has written some very insightful books, including one of my favorites “Amusing ourselves to death”.)

MY GRADUATION SPEECH by Neil Postman |inline

An honest atheistic assessment

Published in Blogosophy June 14, 2006

Consider what one atheistic philosopher has to say about a fellow philosopher who is also an atheist: |inline

Advice to Christian Philosophers + Advice to Christian Apologists

Published in Ministry, Blogosophy March 2, 2006

There are times when I am studying and I wonder: Why am I doing this? What is a minister doing in a graduate program in philosophy?

I am much more interested in discipleship than in philosophical logic, yet I spend a lot more time thinking about the latter. I am much more interested in justification in terms of atonement before God than notions of epistemic justification, yet I spend a lot more time thinking about the latter. It’s not that I don’t love philosophy, I do. I just love ministry more. |inline

A Woman’s Question

Published in Other February 14, 2006

Happy Valentine’s Day.
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A WOMAN’S QUESTION

Do you know you have asked for the costliest thing
Ever made by the hand above?
A woman’s heart, and a woman’s life–
And a woman’s wonderful love. |inline

Blogosophy, Dennett, and the Heretic

Published in Blogosophy January 26, 2006

Blogosophy is philosophy done via blogs or over the internet. Hence, the blogosopher takes a very difficult and slow moving subject and tries to do it over a very fast medium. The biggest difference in my opinion between blogosophy and philosophy is that in the former the focus is primarily on the conclusion of an argument with very little (or quick pieces of) justification for the premises whereas in the latter the focus is primarily on the premises of an argument and what conclusions follow from such. This is precisely why philosophy is slow, long, and arduous while blogosophy tends to be quick, sometimes informative, and of course much easier to pull off. There are plenty of professional philosophers who blogosophize quite well, but most blogosophers are those with no training in philosophy. Hence what counts as blogosophy varies greatly in terms of philosophical quality. Anyways, what follows is a little bit of blogosophy based on an interview with Daniel Dennett.

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