Monday, December 21, 2009
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THE BELL |
Sunday, November 22, 2009
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Singing In Heaven |
One of the things we will do when we get to heaven will be singing.
Isaiah 38:20 "The Lord was ready to save me: therefore we will sing my songs with stringed instruments all the days of our life, in the house of the Lord."
Beloved we are in the house of the Lord because He was ready to save us when we knew that was what we needed and wanted. And that is the reason for singing. Singing Praises to God.
That is the reason we come to sing to you here. Because Jesus has put a song in our hearts and the song just has to come out.
There is no sound of music in hell. Only in the Lord's house will there be singing and we will be able to sing with joy and we will never stop singing.
Beloved is there a song in your heart today? There can be. Jesus wants to come into your life, into your heart, and give you a song.
There is nothing that pleases the Lord more than to hear His people singing HIS song in His House.
The beat of the world is not pleasing to God, nor to His people. Only the song of songs is the one that pleases Him.
People who live in a land where God is not honored and believed have no song. The Indian in the jungle rain forest has his type of music, the beating of the drum, and the rattle of seeds. Then Jesus comes, and there is music, beautiful heavenly music.
Only a God of Love gives beautiful music.
Beloved wouldn't you like to have a song to sing in the house of the Lord?
Just open your heart, your life to Jesus and let Him come in and take over in your life today.
While we sing Just As I Am, just say to Jesus from your heart. "Jesus, I believe you died for me and are ready now to save me and make me yours. I believe you really died for me and I thank you.
Mountain Villa Health Center
05/20/01
El Paso, TX
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Just As I Am |
- Just as I am, without one plea,
but that thy blood was shed for me,
and that thou bidst me come to thee,
O Lamb of God, I come, I come. - Just as I am, and waiting not
to rid my soul of one dark blot,
to thee whose blood can cleanse each spot,
O Lamb of God, I come, I come. - Just as I am, though tossed about
with many a conflict, many a doubt,
fightings and fears within, without,
O Lamb of God, I come, I come. - Just as I am, poor, wretched, blind;
sight, riches, healing of the mind,
yea, all I need in thee to find,
O Lamb of God, I come, I come. - Just as I am, thou wilt receive,
wilt welcome, pardon, cleanse, relieve;
because thy promise I believe,
O Lamb of God, I come, I come. - Just as I am, thy love unknown
hath broken every barrier down;
now, to be thine, yea thine alone,
O Lamb of God, I come, I come.
Text: Charlotte Elliott, 1789-1871
Music: William B. Bradbury, 1816-1868
Tune: WOODWORTH, Meter: LM
Listen to it at hymnsite.com
Friday, November 20, 2009
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Insights Into The Past |
Here is a letter my dad wrote that talks about his roots, where he came from, and how he and my mom came together and decided to become missionaries. I thought it might be interesting to share here.
Dear Daughter:
It has occurred to me that perhaps you have wondered about us, your parents. How we came together and why we became missionaries. I would therefore like to give you a little insight into my past and reasons why we do what we do.
I was born in Muskegon Michigan. My dad was a foreman in Lakey Foundry and in charge of the core making and setting department. He was a very hard working man. When we were very small my mother tells me that my dad almost died of pneumonia. It was then he quit smoking. While we were young children, we went first to the Methodist Church downtown. Then we moved to the Heights and went to the Baptist Church. We didn't have a car, but went with the Wabaldas in their car to Lake Harbor (Michigan).
It was there my folks heard Oswald J. Smith of Toronto and there they heard the gospel and there they accepted the Lord as their savior. We went to church faithfully every Sunday.
My mother was born in Winnoa Minnesota, and her dad had a large orchard there at Sugarloaf Bluff. They were Presbyterians and my grandfather was an itinerant lay pastor and traveled preaching in Iowa and Minnesota. He took sick and died when my mother was a young lady, I believe. My mother went to work in St. Paul and drew designs for a tomb stone manufacturer... angels and etc. Their name was Janke, later changed to Yankee due to World War 1. My father learned the foundry business in Glasgow, Scotland and was a foundry man all his life. They were married and went to Waukasha Wisconsin, and then on to Michigan and Lakey Foundry.
Jean was the first child and the smart one of the family. Peggy and I (twins) came two years later (1918). Peggy and I went to school together, hand in hand, right up to High School. She was very timid and especially afraid of bugs. I was afraid of snakes, although we never saw any in the city.
We went to church and had a happy family relationship. I liked to play a lot and get dirty an awful lot. But still, I thought I was the best boy there could be. I would surely go to Heaven. I had never done anything really bad, or even a little bad.
A group of men lead by Dean Pennet formed a boy's club. The Christian Boys Alliance. They had a sports program, and we in the Heights were the Heights Tigers, and played Baseball. We had to attend a boy's meeting in the Dutch Reformed Church every other Friday evening and when we were present for three times, we got a pin with C.B.A. It was one of the happiest days of my boyhood when I got my PIN. I was thirteen years old.
Then, one Friday I got to the church a half hour early and began playing hide and seek in the rooms of the basement of this big church. I ran down the hall and into a room. There were about fifteen boys and men there, praying for the coming meeting on their knew. They thought I had come for the same purpose, so I was trapped. It was my first encounter with real honest to goodness Christians.
I left that meeting shocked. And for the next two weeks remembered the things I had done. I remembered the dime I took out of my mother's purse. The following Friday evening the speaker spoke on Isiah 1:18, "Though your sins be as scarlet, they will be as white as snow." I left the meeting that night filled with a peace and joy that has never left yet and never will.
We didn't have television and for a long time without radio, as radio was new and very expensive. Antennas had to be long and complex. So, I would sit on the piano bench with my mother and we would sing the best loved hymns, and I will always remember the wonderful wonderful times I had then.
As time went on I did graduate from High School, and took my old bike my father had, and went to work for Western Union Telegraph as a messenger boy. Four years I was there, and it was there I began to grow in my Christian life. I made a good friend of Kirby Johnson.
There was a time of a real working of God in our young peoples meetings, and we were busy almost every night. A revival came to our church and many many people came to know the Lord. Among them was Kirby Johnson, and from that time we were always together even though he lived on the other side of town. We planned to be missionaries. Then came World War II.
I was working in the employment office of Lakey Foundry. I worked long hours and was called in the first draft. The medical report was that I had a heart murmur. I was rejected and heartbroken. Kirby went. He had his training here in El Paso, Ft Bliss.
It was just before that, that my father, on the way to see the foot doctor had a collision with the train and was killed. I took on the care of my mother. A year or two passed, and I received the news that Kirby had been killed in the Battle of Italy. I was heartbroken.
Soon after, I was called up and passed, and went into the Army. I was shipped to Ft McClellen in Alabama. We shipped out of Boston Harbor a week or two before Christmas.
After two years in Germany and seeing the Lord's hand of protection over me, I determined that I would go to Bible school Moody's was filled, so I went to the Kansas City Bible College.
I had been a confirmed bachelor and after three years there I felt the need to get married and the Lord helped me in this decision. I shall ever be grateful to the Lord for bringing Gladis into my life. She too was interested in missions. She graduated a year before I did, and went to Toronto for medical training, and I finished. We were married in Muskegon Michigan at my church on June 4, 1949 and went off to Ecuador on July 9, 1950.
We looked forward to ministry and to family. We prayed to the Lord and when Shirley came to bless our union we were so happy and thanked the Lord for her. We dedicated her life to the Lord, and she was such a lovely girl. Later Billy came and was with us for three days and went to be with the Lord. He was a little red-headed boy. I was very sad for us, but then Gracie came to bless our home and we were thrilled to have her. She was so sweet.
From here you know pretty well what happened, our travels, etc. So how come we decided to become missionaries? Well, the Lord laid upon our hearts the needs of the peoples of other lands and the Bible gave us the commandment to "go ye into all the world and preach the gospel." We heard missionaries from GMU and the Lord had impressed this upon us so clearly. We trusted the Lord for support and went out with promised support of one hundred dollars per month.
The Lord has been faithful to us and has blessed our ministry. We have never lacked any good thing. He supplied the needs for the schooling of both of you, and many many times protected us while flying over the jungles.
If we had it to do over again we would still do it all again. Yes, there have been many heartbreaks and many tears, and there still are. We are confident that the Lord will keep his promise concerning you both. I hope this long epistle will answer some of your questions.
We love you very very much.
Sincerely
Dad
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
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Interesting Bat Facts |
- Bats are the only mammals capable of actual flight.
- In general, bats are not dangerous. Like any other mammal, they can carry rabies, although less than 1 percent of all bats are infected with the virus. More people die annually from dog attacks, bee stings, lightning and household accidents than from bat-transmitted rabies.
- Bats do not get caught in people’s hair. Bats that swoop near people are usually after insects such as mosquitoes.
- A single little brown bat can eat 1200 mosquitoes in an hour.
- There are almost 1,000 different species of bats in the world. This adds up to one-fourth of all existing mammals.
- Only 3 species of bats feed on animal blood. These vampire bats prefer to drink cattle blood and are only found in Latin America.
- The smallest bat is the size of a small mouse; the largest, a fruit eater, has a 6-foot wingspan.
- Bats have varied diets: 70 percent eat insects; many tropical species eat fruit or drink flower nectar; some bats even catch frogs and fish.
- Echolocation system of the bats is such good that the bats can hear the sounds of insects, changes in air flow, caused by the vibration of wings of insects and even the ripples on surface of ponds, caused by tiny stink fish.
- Fossil findings witness that the bats hovered in skies as long as 55 millions years back. The ancient bats were completely similar to the modern bats.
- Most people think that the bats resemble rodents, but in fact, their nearest relatives are primates.
source: DEP
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
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Bat Houses |
If you would like to retain a family of bats for their excellent insect control abilities, why not consider building or installing a bat house? Bat houses, much like bird houses, provide artificial roost sites for bats. They have been widely used in Europe for over 60 years. Much has been learned in recent years about bat roosting preferences. The following factors are critical to the success of bat houses: maintaining suitable temperature ranges, the distance to food and water, the size and shape of inner roosting spaces and the roughness of clinging surfaces.
Bat house designs range from simple and small-scale to large and complex. If you're interested, The Bat House Builder's Handbook is packed full of plans and information. The small bat house (see the how-to) provides only one size roosting space and accommodates fewer bats. The large bat house (see the how-to) provides many roosting options and is ideal for larger nursery colonies of females and young.
Below are tips for constructing and installing a bat house:
- Use the roughest sides of the wood on the inner areas of the house. It is also a good idea to horizontally groove inner surfaces for footholds or attach non-metal screening to provide toe holds. This is also important for landing areas below the entrance.
- Caulk all outside seams to limit air flow. This helps trap the bats’ body heat inside the house. Sealants approved for aquarium or kitchen use are best.
- Place tar paper or dark shingles on the top and 4 to 6 inches down the side to increase inside temperatures. Nursery roosts often require temperatures of 90 degrees F or more.
- A dark stain also helps increase the temperature.
- Hang houses 10 to 15 feet above ground. South and southeast exposures are best for providing maximum thermal gain. Bats prefer houses that get at least 6 hours of sunlight a day.
- If possible, protect the house from prevailing winds and provide an unobstructed approach.
- Bat houses attached to the sides of buildings have had the greatest reported success. Free-standing poles in open areas also work, but tree-mounted houses generally remain unused.
- Bat houses placed near water or wetland areas often are most successful. Installing a bat house before April improves the chance of occupancy. Don’t be discouraged if bats do not immediately move into their new home. It is not unusual for a house to stand empty for at least a year before it is used.
source: DEP
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Small Bat House |
A - Roof 4" x 14"
B - Upper front 12" x 20"
C - Lower front 12" x 10"
D - Back 12" x 36"
E - Spacers (1) 2" x 12", (2) 2" x 30 1/2"
Staple 1/8" mesh (HDPE plastic) netting to back and front 2 sections. Make sure mesh extends to bottom of back.
Caulk all pieces and assemble with drywall screws to prevent wood from splitting. Apply additional caulk to outside joints as needed.
Apply dark stain to exterior surfaces and use tar paper or shingles on the roof and the top half of the bat house to increase interior temperatures.
source: DEP
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Large Bat House |
A - Roof 6" x 28"
B - Front 24" x 28 3/4" (cut slots for vents, 5" above bottom edge)
C - Back 24" x 36"
D - Spacers 1" x 2" (4) 26" long, (2) 31" long, (2) 28 3/4" long
E - Partitions 1/4" thick, 3/4" apart, 26" long
F - Sides 4" x 28 3/4" x 31" (angle-cut top edges)
Use 1/2" exterior grade plywood for front and back sections; 1/4" for all partitions. Sides are 1" x 6" stock.
Staple 1/8" mesh (HDPE plastic) netting to all partitions and the back panel. Apply caulk to all joints.
Begin assembly by screwing the back to the sides. Attach 31" spacers to inside corners.
Place a partition on top of the spacers to within about 1/2" of the roof. Put the next set of spacers (26") on top of the partition and screw into the first spacers.
Repeat for remaining partitions ending with 28 3/4" spacers (flush to roof line). Screw front to sides. Make sure roof angles are aligned.
Screw roof in place and caulk all exterior joints.
Scratch or roughen the front near the vents to provide a toe hold for bats landing on the box.
A dark stain should be applied to all exterior surfaces and tarpaper or shingles to the roof and upper half of the house to increase interior temperatures.
source:DEP
Monday, October 26, 2009
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About Bats |
Bats are furred, warm-blooded mammals with body lengths of 3 to 6 inches and wingspans ranging from 8 to 16 inches. The bones in a bat’s wing are similar to those in human arms and hands. The fingers are extended and connected by leathery, elastic skin that grows from the sides of a bat’s body. Their thumbs are free from the wing membrane and have claws for grasping.
Bats have good eyesight and rely on vision for long-distance orientation. For short-distance navigation and catching food at night, they use echolocation. This sonar system helps bats, like dolphins, locate targets and background objects from the echoes of ultrasonic sounds. These ultrasonic sounds are given slowly when a bat is foraging and quicken as the bat pursues and captures an insect. Detection, pursuit and capture of an insect take about 1 second.
Bats are mostly nocturnal and almost always feed "on the wing." They use their wings, the skin around their tails and their mouths to catch insects in flight. Bats are the only major predators of night-flying insects, making them beneficial to man in several ways. They consume many agricultural pests such as cutworm and corn borer moths, potato beetles and grasshoppers. Mosquitoes and similar "people" pests are eliminated much more efficiently by bats than by birds or expensive bug zappers.
source: DEP
Sunday, October 25, 2009
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Bats In The Belfry |
We will travel to the west coast of Ecuador, along the great Guayas river. It is here where the large banana farms are located. It is warm and wet. There are small towns scattered along the river. We will take a small boat crowded with people, freight and animals.
Our destination is a small village where, we will accompany Abe Dyck in an evangelistic week of meetings. The church there was a small church with very uncomfortable benches. They had one small light bulb that hung over the pulpit. That was the only one in the place. The electric company charged not by the amount of electricity used, but by the bulb. Electric meters were hard to come by.
This was a small and poor village where there were a good number of believers. Gladis and I would supply the music and Abe would do the preaching.
Seven o'clock came and there was a good crowd that night. The Lord had blessed the meetings. Abe was in the middle of his message and preaching with all his might. Then, the devil, afraid to lose a few souls came in. He came in AS A BAT!
This bat came in to the light to try to get the bugs and flies that were around the bulb. He came diving in right at Abe, and Abe would duck. It was really something. Everyone was watching Abe and the bat, and Abe was having difficulty trying to keep on the subject. I was praying that the bat would leave, but it kept on diving at the light.
We had to close the meeting for the night.
Sometimes when you most desire to talk to someone about the Lord something comes up to hinder. The devil has his bats. But God is able to work in spite of the hindrances. When this happens, praise God and keep on going.
Children's Minute
Nov 26, 2000
Monday, October 19, 2009
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GMU Kids |
By paths they have not known I will guide them. I will turn the darkness before them into light, the rough places into level ground.
Isaiah 42:16
photo by Bill Gibson
Our parents lived and worked in many different places throughout the country. We spent 3 months with our parents in the summer and 3 weeks over Christmas. In case you're wondering, I'm the one wearing cowboy boots.
Sunday, October 18, 2009
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Don't Be Afraid |
Do you sometimes at night feel afraid?
I do.
There was a time when we were strong, young and able, when we weren't afraid of anything. We thought we could handle anything. Young people feel this way.
Now, however, we aren't so sure. There are so many dangers out there, and in here. We aren't as strong as we were. We are afraid of things beyond our control, and we don't have control of everything as we ought to.
Where can we go for help?
There is a place to go and something you can do about it.
Nehemiah 4:14, "Do not be afraid, remember the Lord."
Nehemiah was building a wall. There were a small number of His people working on it. They were rebuilding. All around them was the enemy. They were great in numbers and they didn't want that wall built. They threatened Nehemiah and his workers. They were afraid. Nehemiah had a word from the Lord.
"Don't be afraid, remember the Lord."
The message for us today is to remember the Lord. He is the almighty one. He is with you. If you are on the Lord's side, He will fight for you. All you need to do is to watch and work, and fight if you have to. God is on your side.
If you have come to Him and asked for pardon, believing that Jesus died in your place and for your sin. Then you can rest assured that He is not mad at you, he loves you, and He will take care of you.
When you are afraid, remember the Lord.
Mountain Villa Health Center
El Paso, Texas
03/04/2001
Thursday, October 15, 2009
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Texas Aggie Jokes |
Two aggies went into the hay business. They bought hay in East Texas for two dollars per bale and sold it in West Texas for one dollar a bale. The truck driver returned and told about how great the business was, people were buying it as fast as he could get it there. So, they decided that business was so good that what they needed to do was buy another truck.
Monday, October 12, 2009
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Serious Business |
Agree with God and be at peace; in this way good will come to you.
Job 22:21
photo by Bill Gibson
To read more about Shuar history, go here.Two books that are worth reading are: Mission To The Headhunters by Frank and Marie Drown, and The Jivaro by Michael Harner
Sunday, October 11, 2009
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Counted Worthy |
In 2 Thessalonians 1:11, Paul is praying for the new believers in the church at Thessalonica. He is praying "That they would be worthy of their calling."
If we go back to Matthew 22:1-14, we will get a little of what it means to be worthy of our calling.
There is to be a great wedding feast. It is to be a feast to end all feasts, so to speak. A great event. Fancy invitations are sent out by the servants of the Lord of the feast. They are to come back with an RSVP, but none of the invited would have anything to do with it. Each was busy in his own little kingdom. Some even killed those who were sent to them.
The Lord of the Feast, the KING says everything is ready, but the invited guests are not WORTHY.
So He sends to invite any one in the highways and byways of the city. None were rich, none were what we might think of as "worthy." There were some good, and some bad. But they readily accepted the invitation and came ready and dressed properly. All except for one party crasher who came in another way, wasn't dressed for it, and was cast out.
The worthy ones were the ones who, in spite of their failure and sin, gladly received the invitation and came dressed in the proper dress. This was what was absolutely necessary to get into the feast. I rather think that when the invitation was given, the garment was also given. It was like a ticket.
The garment of worthiness represents the Righteousness of Christ that is given to the believer which makes him worthy to enter into the presence of God and to the marriage feast of the Lamb.
We will not be able to enter Heaven and the Marriage feast of the Lamb in our own righteousness, only His.
Now, those who refused had their own righteousness. They were relegios that had the Law in little boxes on their wrists, the little skullcaps on their heads, all the pomp and ceremony they could get. But that wasn't what was needed. A willing heart, and a glad acceptance to receive from the King a robe, a wedding robe that was not theirs, that came by faith, and faith alone.
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2 Thessalonians 1: 3-12 |
3. We ought always to thank God for you, brothers, and rightly so, because your faith is growing more and more, and the love every one of you has for each other is increasing.
4. Therefore, among God's churches we boast about your perseverance and faith in all the persecutions and trials you are enduring.
5. All this is evidence that God's judgment is right, and as a result you will be counted worthy of the kingdom of God, for which you are suffering.
6. God is just: He will pay back trouble to those who trouble you
7. and give relief to you who are troubled, and to us as well. This will happen when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven in blazing fire with his powerful angels.
8. He will punish those who do not know God and do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus.
9. They will be punished with everlasting destruction and shut out from the presence of the Lord and from the majesty of his power
10. on the day he comes to be glorified in his holy people and to be marveled at among all those who have believed. This includes you, because you believed our testimony to you.
11. With this in mind, we constantly pray for you, that our God may count you worthy of his calling, and that by his power he may fulfill every good purpose of yours and every act prompted by your faith.
12. We pray this so that the name of our Lord Jesus may be glorified in you, and you in him, according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ.
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The Parable of the Wedding Banquet |
Matthew 22
1. Jesus spoke to them again in parables, saying:
2. "The kingdom of heaven is like a king who prepared a wedding banquet for his son.
3. He sent his servants to those who had been invited to the banquet to tell them to come, but they refused to come.
4. "Then he sent some more servants and said, 'Tell those who have been invited that I have prepared my dinner: My oxen and fattened cattle have been butchered, and everything is ready. Come to the wedding banquet.'
5. "But they paid no attention and went off—one to his field, another to his business.
6. The rest seized his servants, mistreated them and killed them.
7. The king was enraged. He sent his army and destroyed those murderers and burned their city.
8. "Then he said to his servants, 'The wedding banquet is ready, but those I invited did not deserve to come.
9. Go to the street corners and invite to the banquet anyone you find.'
10. So the servants went out into the streets and gathered all the people they could find, both good and bad, and the wedding hall was filled with guests.
11. "But when the king came in to see the guests, he noticed a man there who was not wearing wedding clothes.
12. 'Friend,' he asked, 'how did you get in here without wedding clothes?' The man was speechless.
13. "Then the king told the attendants, 'Tie him hand and foot, and throw him outside, into the darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.'
14. "For many are invited, but few are chosen."
Friday, October 9, 2009
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Something to Smile About |
Time now for a couple of jokes published in the Flat Tortilla in the fall of 1985:
Q: What's a piano that has fallen down a mind shaft called?
A: A Flat Minor...
Doctor to Patient:
"I have bad news, and I have worse news. Which do you want first?"
"Give me the bad news first, Doc," replied the surprised patient.
"Well," said the doctor, "You have only 24 hours left to live, you have cancer."
"Wow, that's bad, isn't it? What's the worse news?"
The Doc answered, "I knew it yesterday, but forgot to tell you."
A man went to his psychiatrist. He said, "Doc, I am really worried. I've begun imagining things. First I imagine that I'm a wigwam, then next thing I imagine I'm a teepee. Do you think I'm going crazy?" The Doctor replied, "No, you're not going crazy, you're just too tense..." (tents?? ha ha)
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
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Come To Sunday School |
My mom sent me this little thing about Sunday School so that I could share it with everyone. Here it is:
Come to Sunday School because...
- Sunday School teaches the Bible, the message of God Almighty.
- Sunday School prepares one better to face the problems of life.
- Sunday School teaches obedience and respect for parents and those in authority.
- Sunday School will give the student the opportunity to develop a personal relationship with Jesus Christ.
- Sunday School helps build strong character.
- Sunday School presents opportunities to share Christian experiences.
- Sunday School shows the student how he can be of service in this sinful world.
- Sunday School brings together those with whom you can form true friendships.
- Sunday School gives the opportunity to bring others under the message of the Gospel.
- Sunday School teaches songs of real beauty, comfort, and praise.
- Sunday School gives the opportunity to discuss spiritual problems in small groups with those of the same age.
God Says: Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom; teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. ~Colossians 3:16
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About the Roadrunner |
This beautiful Southwest bird is referred to as the "Clown of the Desert" by some as it is a very clever and funny bird to watch. He prefers to run rather than fly, and can run as fast as twenty miles per hour. he loves the hot weather. He has eye shadow around his eyes. It might just be where the fad came from.
Roadrunners love to eat small lizards and snakes. Lizards are caught in the beak then pounded against a rock until dead, then eaten.
In Mexico, roadrunner meat is sometimes eaten. They say that when God finished making the birds he had some feathers, long bones, beaks and feet left over, so he put them all together and the result is the (Paisano) or Roadrunner.
There is a story going around in Arizona that is believed by some and doubted by others that the Roadrunner can build a fence of cactus around a sleeping rattlesnake and thus trap, kill, and eat him. (See pic below.)
It is said that a stew of roadrunner meat is good for tuberculosis. It is also good for backaches, itches, boils, lung problems, and leprosy... Another health tip from your esteemed editor (smile).
Bill Gibson
The Flat Tortilla,
Fall 1985
Monday, October 5, 2009
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Play House |
Ask and ye shall receive.
John 16:24
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You might not believe this... |
You might not believe this but:
A member of Bill Ball's church in Houston showed up one Sunday in Haines, Alaska. He said, and I quote, "I brought an ice pick along to pick the ice and permafrost to see for sure if under all that ice Alsaka isn't the same size as Texas."
We did have a lovely visit with those folks!
From: The Flat Tortilla
Fall 1986
Sunday, October 4, 2009
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The Evangelical Rat |
We don't seem to see rats much any more. Have you seen a big ugly rat lately? Rats are ugly, dirty, and do a lot of damage. They love to browse around in the kitchen.
We had one in the small kitchen in the house in Riobamba. Gladis and I and Dottie Brown were in the kitchen. We closed the door, and we each got a broomstick and went after that rat. I got it cornered and poked my stick at him and he came right up the stick at me. I dropped the stick and the rat ran over Gladis' foot and she screamed and after a while I got a good swing and hit it and we killed it.
The story I have for this morning is about a rat in the church. Ray Zuercher and I went to a small country village for a service. One of the nationals was to do the speaking. The room was a nice large room. They didn't have nice pews, but benches with no backs. Along the wall there were benches and one could have the wall as a back. The walls were board on the outside and the framing was on the inside. The boards of the walls were vertical and there was a two-by-four across the middle. This was just right to lean against if you were on a bench along the wall.
The preacher was long winded. He went on and on. All the children were fast asleep on the floor, and most of us grownups were almost asleep or wishing that we were. He had been preaching about an hour when I saw a movement on the other side of the room.
It was a rat and it was walking along on the two-by-four between the backs of the people and the wall. He came around and nobody even payed any attention to it. It came creeping between the wall and the backs of those people and they didn't even seem to notice it. Around it came, then started on the wall I where I was sitting. When it got to me, I jumped up and let it pass. Everyone woke up and laughed. The preacher finished his teaching and we all went home.
I was amazed that no one ever thought to get that rat. They were so used to them that they didn't pay any attention to them.
Lesson...
You know what boys and girls? We live in a very dirty world. The people use dirty words, dirty stories, and filthy vile language is everywhere. We have gotten so used to it that it doesn't seem to move us, we don't even react. But dirty words, filthy habits, will have a very bad effect on us. We need to react to these and stay away from those who use those dirty words.
It is so common that we live with the rats and are contaminated by their filth and this is not pleasing to the Lord. Beloved keep your mouths clean and your hearts pure before the Lord your God. Close your ears to the swearing and cursing of your friends. Ask the Lord to help you every day to keep your words clean and your heart pure.
The Children's Minute
El Paso Texas
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
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From the desk of Bill Gibson |
This morning I came across a letter my dad had written several years ago. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
"Early in the morning, I get a cup of coffee and go to my little office. It is a small Morgan building on our lot. As I came out of the door, I saw a light on at my neighbor's house, and I could see my neighbor sitting at the table reading her Bible and praying. She came to know the Lord at the Bible Class and has grown greatly in the Lord. She is the secretary to the church that is next door to our park. Don, her husband, has no interest in the things of God but we are working on him.
It is amazing how God works to bring good news to hurting people! I would like to tell you about a lady at the Palisades. I saw her pacing from the hall to the group having coffee. She would move from place to place. She was the epitome of depression, distress and sad restlessness.
I had received in the mail a song, a revised version of the children's song, "Jesus Loves Me This I Know" written for senior citizens. As we sang this song, she looked at the copy I had given her and I could see her reading and drinking in every word. It was what she needed. Please pray for her. I haven't gotten her name yet.
The church next door to our park was once a great, growing church with many people, but now it is struggling and cannot support the pastor full time. He now works doing translations for businesses from English to Spanish. Mike, the Pastor, is Mexican and still studying here at the night seminary in El Paso. Cranel Lindsey, a Baptist pastor and long-time Friend, came to El Paso for a short visit and we visited Pastor Mike. He was very discouraged and we were able to encourage him. Now, we visit as often as we can, I to encourage him and he too, to encourage me and we blend our hearts in prayer together."
El Paso Texas
date unknown
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Jesus Loves Me |
Here's a version of Jesus Loves Me written especially for seniors:
Jesus loves me this I know
Though my hair is white as snow
Though my sight is growing dim
Still He bids me trust in Him.
Yes, Jesus loves me,
Yes, Jesus loves me,
Yes, Jesus loves me,
The Bible tells me so.
Though my steps are oh, so slow
With my hand in his I'll go
On through life, let come what may
He'll be there to lead the way.
Yes, Jesus loves me,
Yes, Jesus loves me,
Yes, Jesus loves me,
The Bible tells me so.
When the nights are dark and long
In my heart He puts a song
Telling me in words so clear
"have no fear, for I am near."
Yes, Jesus loves me,
Yes, Jesus loves me,
Yes, Jesus loves me,
The Bible tells me so.
in Insights and Inspiration.
Sunday, September 27, 2009
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The Neglected Triplet |
Chapter 13 of I Corinthians closes with these words... "and now these remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love."
We hear much about faith and much about love but hope seems to be the neglected triplet. Dr. Armand May Nicoli of Harvard Medical school writes, "The word hope is used and heard little in our culture. Perhaps hope conflicts with our concept of a scientific world." Many books exist about faith and love, but very few on hope.
Hope is essential to sanity and a balanced outlook on life. We all need to hope, as hope will sustain us in perilous times.
Hope looks forward to something good. Faith looks to the person who has promised and hope to the thing promised. Faith is the root, hope is the fruit. Faith looks to who and hope to what. Real hope for the future is grounded in the promise of God and guaranteed in the resurrection of Christ Jesus. Hope needs to be based on reality. It is not a mere wish or strong desire.
In a world filled with fear for the future, do you have a hope? Where is your hope and on what is it based? It seems we need to examine to see if our hope is a real hope or a mere dream. The hymn writer wrote these words in his song, "The Solid Rock"
than Jesus blood and righteousness.
I dare not trust the sweetest frame,
but wholly lean on Jesus name."
Put your trust in God
His promise never fails.
"May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit." Romans 15:13
From the Flat Tortilla
October 1990
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
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The Flute Player |
May He grant you your heart’s desire and fulfill all your plans.
Psalm 20:4
photo by Bill Gibson
Sunday, September 20, 2009
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Is Anybody Listening To Me? |
Have you ever prayed to God and wondered if He was listening? I have.
The verse I have for us this morning is just what we need.
- I waited patiently for the LORD;
he turned to me and heard my cry. - He lifted me out of the slimy pit,
out of the mud and mire;
he set my feet on a rock
and gave me a firm place to stand. - He put a new song in my mouth,
a hymn of praise to our God.
Many will see and fear the LORD
and put their trust in him.
Notice, "I waited patiently for the Lord." The Psalmist cried unto the Lord and then he waited for the answer. Sometimes God answers prayer right away, sometimes later. But He always hears what you have to say as long as you are not sinning, loving evil, or doing evil.
"And He... inclined his ear and heard my cry."
Beloved, God will always hear the cry of a sincere soul. Never think He won't. He not only hears but He acts... He does something about it. He doesn't ever give promises He doesn't keep.
He will lift you out of the pit. The fear, trouble, the muck and mire of sin. And then He will put your feed on the Rock so you will stand straight and safe.
And not only does He put you on the rock, secure, He gives you a song... something to sing about, a happy joyful heart filled with His praises. And you will be a blessing to others.
What more could you want?
Beloved, you are in the pit of discouragement and despair, lonely, and sad. Jesus wants to hear your cry for help. He wants to hear your voice in all sincerity and honesty.
If you are honest with God He will be true to you and you will find safety on the rock. You will have a song in your heart, and you will be a blessing to others.
He won't do anything for you if you don't want Him to. But if you cry out to Him, and just say Lord help me, save me from this pit, then He will hear and He will do something about it. More than you have ever dreamed He could...
So... Why not ask God to pick you up right now.
Message by Bill Gibson
Palisades 8/24/06
Thursday, September 17, 2009
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Funny Church Bulletins |
Church Bulletins: Thank God for the church ladies who type them. These sentences actually appeared in church bulletins or were announced in church services:
- The Fasting and Prayer Conference includes meals.
- The sermon this morning: "Jesus Walks on the Water."
The sermon tonight: "Searching for Jesus." - Our youth basketball team is back in action Wednesday at 8 PM in the recreation hall. Come out and watch us kill Christ the King.
- Ladies, don't forget the rummage sale. It's a chance to get rid of those things not worth keeping around the house. Bring your husbands.
- The peacemaking meeting scheduled for today has been canceled due to a conflict.
- Remember in prayer the many who are sick of our community. Smile at someone who is hard to love. Say "Hell" to someone who doesn't care much about you.
- Don't let worry kill you off - let the Church help.
- Miss Charlene Mason sang "I will not pass this way again," giving obvious pleasure to the congregation.
- For those of you who have children and don't know it, we have a nursery downstairs.
- Next Thursday there will be tryouts for the choir. They need all the help they can get.
- The Rector will preach his farewell message after which the choir will sing: "Break Forth Into Joy."
- Irving Benson and Jessie Carter were married on October 24 in the church. So ends a friendship that began in their school days.
- At the evening service tonight, the sermon topic will be "What Is Hell?" Come early and listen to our choir practice.
- Scouts are saving aluminum cans, bottles and other items to be recycled. Proceeds will be used to cripple children.
- Please place your donation in the envelope along with the deceased person you want remembered.
- The church will host an evening of fine dining, super entertainment and gracious hostility.
- Potluck supper Sunday at 5:00 PM - prayer and medication to follow.
- The ladies of the Church have cast off clothing of every kind. They may be seen in the basement on Friday afternoon.
- This evening at 7 PM there will be a hymn singing in the park across from the Church. Bring a blanket and come prepared to sin.
- Ladies Bible Study will be held Thursday morning at 10 AM. All ladies are invited to lunch in the Fellowship Hall after the B. S. is done.
- The pastor would appreciate it if the ladies of the congregation would send him their electric girdles for the pancake breakfast next Sunday.
- Low Self Esteem Support Group will meet Thursday at 7 PM. Please use the back door.
- The eighth-graders will be presenting Shakespeare's Hamlet in the Church basement Friday at 7 PM . The congregation is invited to attend this tragedy.
- Weight Watchers will meet at 7 PM at the First Presbyterian Church. Please use large double door at the side entrance
AND MY PERSONAL FAVORITE:
- The Associate Minister unveiled the church's new tithing campaign slogan last Sunday: "I Upped My Pledge - Up Yours
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
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Shuar Family |
By the tender mercy of our God, the dawn from on high will break upon us.
Luke 1:78
Ecuador SA, 1954
photo by Bill Gibson
Often women would encourage the husband to marry a younger sister because it was more likely that they would be able to live in harmony, and when two women shared the work, life was easier.
Sunday, September 13, 2009
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Bearing Burdens |
There is a story about a lone man with a large, heavy back-pack walking along a country road. It was hot and humid and the road was rocky and steep.
He walked slower and slower and finally came to the place where he could go no further. So he took off the pack and sat on a rock, and said, " I am ready to die."
At that moment the Death Angel sat down beside him and said, "You called for me?"
The man took one look at the Angel and said, "Yes, would you help me get this back-pack off my back?"
We all have burdens we carry, whether we like it or not. Gladis gave a talk to the ladies and her topic was: Everybody Has Something.
However, we seem to think that the very rich have no burdens. Some seem never to have a problem or a burden, but they do. There are burdens money can't fix.
- There are the burdens we own.
- There are the burdens of others.
- There are the burdens people would put on us that aren't ours to bear.
In Matthew 23: 1-4, Jesus tells us that "... they tie up heavy burdens and lay them on men's shoulders, but they themselves are unwilling to move with so much as a finger..."There are a great deal of people out there who are experts in manipulating people to give.
Jesus came down in human flesh, with no burden, and said, "Come unto me all ye who labor and are heavy laden and I will give you rest." he came to take upon himself our burden of sin and guilt, and he paid with his life, and shed his blood to free us from the burdens we carry that others have put on us.
Just because we are Christians, we don't have to give to every poor man that comes begging, we don't have to give help to every sick person. We don't have to volunteer to take every burden that comes our way. We don't have to say "yes" to every one who asks. It's OK to say "no."
Jesus came to set us free.
He said, "Take my burden, my burden is light." We don't have to be burdened with the burdens that aren't ours to carry. We can exchange our our own heavy burdens for his light burden.
What is the Lord's burden? That every person will get to hear the Gospel. You can help bear that burden by prayer. You can pray for others. You can help bear the Lord's burden by using the gift that He has given you, whatever that might be ... hospitality, friendship, encouraging others, doing what you're happy doing, and you can have the blessing of the Lord while doing it.
Message by: Bill Gibson
Palisades 8/24/06
Photo: Roy McDonald
Thursday, September 10, 2009
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River Rafting In Ecuador |
While I was researching for the post about balsa wod, I found some pretty cool stuff about ancient Ecuadorian rafts and river rafting in Ecuador. I thought you all might find it interesting too, so here's what I found:
For rafting in Ecuador, the Piedra Blanca Community Ecotourism project offers something unique. It's not whitewater rafting as such, though there are parts of the river that are whitewater. In this part of Ecuador, rafting takes a different form - this is adventure rafting in replica design ancient Ecuadorean rafts.
The Manteño Huancavilca tribes of Ecuador (pre-Inca) developed this type of raft for travel and trade. Some academics suggest that these rafts were the boats used to colonise Easter Island, thousands of miles west in the Pacific.
Thor Heyerdahl replicated the design of the raft for his famous Kon-Tiki expedition (more info) to cross 13000 miles of the Pacific Ocean. We don’t go quite that far, but you might achieve 30 km a day on the Rio Zapotal when the current is running fast. The traditional raft design has not changed much in a thousand years and was used until about 40 years ago to transport cocoa and bananas to the coast and beyond.
Please note that the rafting tours are an adventurous experience offered by us. You will sleep on tents aboard the raft. Toilet facilites are not always available - this is a remote region of Ecuador. If you seek 5 star luxury, these rafting tours are not for you. If you seek an adventure, you will be rewarded with a fantastic experience.
I found this video on their website, in case you'd like to see what it might be like to take one of their tours:
Then, I discovered the Manteño Expedition. So, if you're still interested, you can visit this site at archeology.org for a story about a real life experience. There is some interesting historical information at balsaraft.com
But wait!
There's more!
I also found this video about sailing alone on the Pacific ocean in a balsa raft:
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
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All About Balsa Wood Trees |
WHERE DOES BALSA WOOD COME FROM?
Balsa trees grow naturally in the humid rain forests of Central and South America. Its natural range extends south from Guatemala, through Central America, to the north and west coast of South America as far as Bolivia. However, the small country of Ecuador on the western coast of South America, is the primary source of model aircraft grade balsa in the world. Balsa needs a warm climate with plenty of rainfall and good drainage. For that reason, the best stands of balsa usually appear on the high ground between tropical rivers. Ecuador has the ideal geography and climate for growing balsa trees. The scientific name for balsa wood is ochroma lagopus. The word balsa itself is Spanish meaning raft, in reference to its excellent floatation qualities. In Ecuador it is known as Boya, meaning buoy.
HOW DOES BALSA WOOD GROW?
There is no such thing as entire forests of balsa trees. They grow singly or in very small, widely scattered groups in the jungle. For hundreds of years, balsa was actually considered a weed tree. They reproduce by growing hundreds of long seed pods, which eventually open up and, with the help of the wind, scatter thousands of new seeds over a large area of the jungle. Each seed is airborne on its own small wisp of down, similar to the way dandelion seeds spread.
The seeds eventually fall to the ground and are covered by the litter of the jungle. There they lay and accumulate until one day there is an opening in the jungle canopy large enough for the sun's rays to strike the jungle floor and start the seeds growing. Wherever there is an opening, made either by a farmer or by another tree dying, balsa will spring up as thick as grass.
A farmer is often hard put to keep his food plot clear of balsa. As the new balsa trees grow, the strongest will become predominate and the weaker trees will die. By the time they are mature, there may be only one or two balsa trees to an acre of jungle.
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE A BALSA TREE TO GROW?
Balsa trees grow very rapidly (like all pesky weeds). Six months after germination, the tree is about 1-1/2 inches in diameter and 10 - 12 feet tall. In 6 to 10 years the tree is ready for cutting, having reached a height of 60 to 90 feet tall and a diameter of 12 to 45 inches. If left to continue growing, the new wood being grown on the outside layers becomes very hard and the tree begins to rot in the center. Unharvested, a balsa tree may grow to a diameter of 6 feet or more, but very little usable lumber can be obtained from a tree of this size. The balsa leaf is similar in shape to a grape leaf, only a lot bigger. When the tree is young, these leaves measure a much as four feet across. They become progressively smaller as the tree grows older, until they are about 8 - 10 inches across. Balsa is one of the few trees in the jungle which has a simple leaf shape. This fact alone makes the balsa tree stand out in the jungle.
THE PERFECT NURSE!
Nature evidently designed the balsa tree to be a "nurse tree" which would protect the slower-growing species of trees from the scorching jungle sun during their critical early years. For instance, in an area of the jungle that has been ravaged by a tropical storm or other natural disaster, the balsa trees will quickly sprout and begin to shoot up to impressive heights in a very short time. Their fast growth, and the extra large leaves they have in their early years, provide shade to the young seedlings of the slower-growing forest giants. By the time the seedlings are established enough to take care of themselves, the balsa tree is beginning to die. Undoubtedly, the balsa tree's rapid growth, fast spreading crown of first very large and gradually smaller leaves, and it's relatively short life span were intended to make it the "perfect nurse" in the jungle ecosystem.
HOW ARE BALSA TREES HARVESTED?
While nature intended the balsa tree to be a short lived nursemaid, mankind eventually discovered that it was an extremely useful resource. The real start of the balsa business was during World War I, when the allies were in need of a plentiful substitute for cork. The only drawback to using balsa was, and still is, the back breaking work that is necessary to get it out of the jungle. Because of the way the individual balsa trees are scattered throughout the jungles, it has never been possible to use mass production logging procedures and equipment. The best way to log balsa trees is to go back to the methods of Paul Bunyan -- chop them down with an axe, haul them to the nearest river by ox team, tie them together into rafts, and then float the rafts of balsa logs down the river to the saw mill.
The logging team usually consists of two native Ecuadorians, each armed with a broad Spanish axe, a machete, and a long pole sharpened like a chisel on one end for removing the bark from the downed trees. Because of the hilly terrain, an ox team may only be able to drag two logs to the river per day. At the saw mill the raw balsa is first rough cut into large boards, the carefully kiln dried, and finally packed into bales for shipment to the U.S. via ocean freighter. Final cutting and finishing of our model aircraft balsa is done right here at the factory. As a result of the balsa tree's fast growth cycle, both the quality and lightness of the lumber obtained from a balsa tree can vary enormously depending upon the tree's age at the time of cutting.
WHY IS BALSA WOOD SO LIGHT?
The secret to balsa wood's lightness can only be seen with a microscope. The cells are big and very thin walled, so that the ratio of solid matter to open space is as small as possible. Most woods have gobs of heavy, plastic-like cement, called lignin, holding the cells together. In balsa, lignin is at a minimum. Only about 40% of the volume of a piece of balsa is solid substance. To give a balsa tree the strength it needs to stand in the jungle, nature pumps each balsa cell full of water until they become rigid - like a car tire full of air. Green balsa wood typically contains five times as much water by weight as it has actual wood substance, compared to most hardwoods which contain very little water in relation to wood substance. Green balsa wood must therefore be carefully kiln dried to remove most of the water before it can be sold. Kiln drying is a tedious two week process that carefully removes the excess water until the moisture content is only 6%. Kiln drying also kills any bacteria, fungi, and insects that may have been in the raw balsa wood.
HOW LIGHT IS KILN DRIED BALSA WOOD?
Finished balsa wood, like you find in model airplane kits, varies widely in weight. Balsa is occasionally found weighing as little as 4 lbs. per cu. ft. On the other hand, you can also find balsa which will weigh 24 lbs or more per cu. ft. However, the general run of commercial balsa for model airplanes will weigh between 6 and 18 pounds per cu. ft. Eight to twelve pound balsa is considered medium or average weight, and is the most plentiful. Six pound or less is considered "contest grade", which is very rare and sometimes even impossible to obtain.
IS BALSA THE LIGHTEST WOOD IN THE WORLD?
No! Most people are surprised to hear that botanically, balsa wood is only about the third or fourth lightest wood in the world. However, all the woods which are lighter than balsa are terribly weak and unsuitable for any practical use. The very lightest varieties don't really resemble wood at all, as we commonly think of it, but are more like a tree-like vegetable that grows in rings, similar in texture to an onion. It is not until balsa is reached that there is any sign of real strength combined with lightness. In fact, balsa wood is often considered the strongest wood for its weight in the world. Pound for pound it is stronger in some respects than pine, hickory, or even oak.
Thought for Today
We need to find God, and he cannot be found in noise and restlessness. God is the friend of silence. See how nature - trees, flowers, grass- grows in silence; see the stars, the moon and the sun, how they move in silence… We need silence to be able to touch souls. ~Mother Teresa